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Ohio Lottery

- Sunday, July 21,·1~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
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.

Little Hocking,
wins '96 KC LL
baseball crown

Unique
home
business

Plc:k 3:

382

88o5

1omet1me In October. The building dellgn
package Is one of several from American BuildIng Systems which are currently available for
construction by Home Creek Enterprises,
according to Jim Clifford of the Pomeroy-baled
contractor.

Wheat futures dip on rumors
thaf wheat ~s poor quality
BV HILLARY CHURA
AP Business Writer

Wheat futures prices fell to the
lowest point in II months Friday on
views that harvested grain is infected with a fungus that makes animals
sick.
In other markets, copper and crude
oil dropped . The Commodity
Research Bureau's index of 17 commodities fell .88 point to 240.47.
Wheat futures generally drop dur·
ing harvest, which ends in August,
but prices are falling very quickly
because of rumors vomitoxin has
infected wheat from Ohio and Indiana.
Vomitoxin, which can cause animals to vomit if they ingest just a
small amount, is not uncommon but
it is believed to be severe this year
because of the wet, overcast May.
. The Agriculture Department has
said vomitoxin fears are unwarranted, but the rumors continue to plague
the crop, said William Biedermann,
research director at Allendale Inc., a
futures, brokerage firm in Crystal
Lake, Ill.
Prices have fallen about 15 percent in the past 10 trading days.
Wheat for September delivery fell
9 1/4 cents to $4.34 1/2 a bushel on

the Chicago Board of Trade. The last
time prices for the near-term contract
were this low was August 1995.
Copper futures prices ended live
days of gains because warehouse
stocks on the London Metal
EKchange- the world's largest copper market - rose for the first lime
in more than a month. The announcement came Friday morning.
The 2,675-ton build-up is small,
considering warehouse stocks have
fallen more than 30 percent since
February, but it is enough to make
traders nervous. Investors still fear
world markets will be nooded as
Sumitomo Corp. - believed to be
the world's largest copper trader tries to recover from a billion dollar
trading scandal.
The company announced in June
that its chief trader had lost $1.8 bil·
lion in unauthorized trades over a
decade, and investors worried Sum.. itumo would dump its huge stQckpiles to cut its losses.
Profit-taking also added to the fall,
said John Gross, editor qf The Copper Journal.
August copper fell I. 75 cents to
93.95 cents a pound on the New York
Mercantile Exchange. Even with Friday's loss. copper prices have'

NEW BALER • Newest addition to Ita line of
round balers Is the Claas Rollant 45 product
Wltl'll 62" wide pickup, feetu~lng the designed
aplrel bale chamber. It Is on display at Shinn's
Tractor of Gallipolis. The Rollant 45 produces
4' by 4' bales. Fourteen dimpled, steel rollers
potltloned In the fixed chamber help to pro-

Following is the livestock weekly summary, which includes direct
sales in Ohio, lndi~na and Michigan:
For the week: barrows and gilts
steady to 50 cents lower. Sows firm
to 1.00 higher.
The direct hog trade closed lower
compared with last week. Demand
and movement moderate. Movement
wu adequate early for packers to
meet kill needs, but producers were
resisting the lower market. The slower movement pushed the market firm
to higher at the end of the week.
Receipts !his week 177,500; last
week 184,000; last year 161.000.
U.S. 1-2 220-260 lbs. 58.00-60.00,
few 57.50 &amp; 60.50; plaot delivered
59.00-61.00.
Sows: U.S . 1-3 300-450 lbs.
41.00-43.00; 450-500 lbs. 43.00·
45.00; 500-650 lbs. 45.00-47.00, few
48.00.
Boars: 36.00-38.00.
Compared with last \reek: slaughter steers, heifers, and holstein steers

:~~~e::a~~~ts~:l;er~d~bsea~ce~~~

on a hve basis were unevenly steady.
Demand uneven and moderate on a
moderate movement. Eastern demand
remains good for choice cattle over
1200-1250 lbs. Feeders are becoming
selective as to the kind of cattle they
will finish as corn is a limiting ·factor.
Confirmed sales 4,800; last week
4.300: last year 3,200.
Live basis sales: equivalent to 3
percent shrink delivered to the plants,
ur with 3-4 percent shrink fob.
Slaughter steers: select and choice
2-3 1100-1350 lbs. 62.()().65.00, few
65 .50; mostly choice over 1200 lbs.
To the east 66.00-67.00. Select 1-2
1050-1300 lbs. 59.00-62.50.
Holstein steers: select and choice
2-3 1250-1500 lbs. 58.00-61.00.
Slaughter heifers: select and
·choice 2-3 950- 1200 lbs. 62.0064.00, mostly choice 64.00.64.50.
Select 1-2 900-1200 lbs. SS.00-62.00.
Carcass sales: paid on hot carcass
weights, picked up basis unless stated otherwise. ·

Kicker:
874377

Sports on Page 4

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Pertly cloudy tonight,
low In 601. TUMCI.y, J*liY
c;loudy, high ne11r 80.

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en tine
THE NEEDLE WORKS • A true family operation, The Needle
Work• of Pomeroy Is a full-urvlce embroidery 1hop wltl'la complete line of custom embroldered apparel and embroidery
designs. Owned and operated by -Alan and Jane Harrll, the 1lx
year old business recently moved from 1 family hobby room to
a storefront operation at the family residence, between C.,_.,.
and Five Points on State Route 7. (T. Hunter/T·S Phojo)

networking of the business began
with a contact the family had with a
local man who worked for a national trucking company. "That's where
our name really started to get out. We
ended up contracting work for this
~ompany, which led to other business
from individuals and businesses
nationwide," said Harris.
The Needle Works now counts
several fire and rescue squads,
schools. businesses, and ·racing teams
among it's regular custom embroidered sportswear and apparel custamers.
Other regular customers include
Middleport's Ohio River Bear Company, for which Harris designs and

. Vol 47, NO. 60
. 1 Section, 10 . . . .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 29, 1996

as

.FB.I flooded with information that
could lead to bomber's identity
By MITCHELL LANDSBERG
AP National Writer
ATI.ANTA- As the city prepares
for Tuesday's reopening of Centennial Olympic Park, the FBI says it has
been nooded with information that
could lead to the bomber who scarred
the Atlanta Games.
"We are confident that we will
solve this horrible crime," FBI
spokesman David Tubbs said Sunday
after the bureau had completed its
search for evidence in the park. A
·bomb exploded there early Saturday,
·killing a woman and injuring more
·than 100 people.
Despite the temporary closure of
the park, Atlantans and their visitors
-took to the streels and packed
Olympic competition sites Sunday,
displaying an air of defiance in the
face of terrorism.
"I am not going to let them hold
me hostage,'' Katherine Williams of
Atlanta said as she joined the crowd
strOIIi!l&amp; ,past souvenir stands a half
block from Centennial Olympic Park.
"I am going to go as freely as I
always have.".
~.I so Suoday, official$ . defended
the decision not to notify police in the
park about the bomb threat phoned in
before the blast, hut said they may
change their procedures in the future .
The Atlanta Committee for the
Olympic Games announced that the
park, the centerpiece of the
Olympics, would reopen on Tuesday
morning. Security will be enhanced,
with twice as many police as before.
And police will be empowered to
conduct random searches of visitors'
bags.
Fulton County Sheriff Jacquelyn

CONFEDERATE VOLLEY- Thll year's annu. al o•rvanca of the Battle of Buffington
- laland, Ohio'I only Civil War battle, drew .a
re..,.C:Wble Cr""'d Ja.ot _ ...... d.dua to•a.com.
. bination 'OfllWliiiit"iwi~ aliiJ""~wt*

VACATION WINNER • """"" LYCIIII,
winner of the drewlng for a four day W.catlcm during
'Vacation on Ua' promotion at Wagner Hardware, Racine..., ....., : ,
I(Yho plans on spending the vacation at VIrginia Beach, wae
sen at random from area realdentl who registered for the alv•..:!
away during the store's Juna and July lawn and garden promo-·· i
tlon. Pictur.e d with Lyona 11 store ownar Ron Wagner (right).

e"'""''

Buffington
reenactment
:draws large
audience

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,:By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff

See puzzle on page 02

m'J beJI friend anJ ~are happ'J ...

mdto/lhe lim~./
But when we' don't feel good,
our mommies call th~

HOLZER
flEALTH
HOTLINE
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1-800-462-5255

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8-a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
every day of the week.
Clleck with your physician about medication•

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AGannett Co. New1p1p1r

Olympic Park wnr
reopen Tuesday

embroiders T-Shirts and collectible
bags.
The business also specializes in
one of a kind gifts, such
sweat,
shirts, jackets, t-shirts, hats, gag gifts
and holiday items.
There is no minimum quantity fur
orders, with well over 10,000 stock
designs available to choose front
· Custom logos can also be embroi.
dered, but require a ~et up fee. · ·.
The business is closed on Thurs~
days and Sundays, and busin~s
hours are walk up or by appointmeni
at the shop's new location at 3479~
State Route 7, across from the Skate;
A-Way skating rink north bf
Pomeroy.
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abilities and power. The purpose of country," Updegraff said.
the cooperative is to help the farmer
Recently the relationship between
members to obtain a larger share of the elevators and the fanners has b!Othe food production dollar in this ken down.
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CIKI TIE CWSifiEDI fOR All YOUR IEEDSj.

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Grain trades threaten small-town Ufe:

Edwards &amp; · Sons Inc. The rumors
h~ve been circulating all week.
BUFFALO CENTER, Iowa (APJ
The United Nations agreed in - Com and soybeans are thriving in
May that Iraq could sell $2 billion another steaming Iowa summer while
worth of oil every 180 days to buy crop prices hover at record levels, but
humanitarian supplies, but a deal has . there are few smiles in this grain
been stalled on details such as where country town.
the oil will be sold, who will direct
"I am concerned that this is the
the sale, and who will oversee the dis- stuff that homicides and suicides are
tribution of food and medicine in made of," said William Peake, pasIraq.
tor of First Reformed Church of BurThe market also faltered on an falo Center, about 150 miles north of
Israel TV report that Iraqi President Des Moines.
Saddam Hussein narrowly escaped
Peake is talking about the fight
an assassination attempt . when a over hedge· to-arrive contracts bomb exploded outside one of his risky, unregulated grain trading
palaces, O'Grady said.
mechanisms that grew increasingly
Speculation is that if Saddam is popular in recent years and now
removed from power, the United threaten the financial livelihood of
Nations will lift sanctions and allow fanners and elevators across the
Iraq to sell even more oil, !hereby Midwest.
increasi~orld supplies. Several )
~edge-to-arrive co.ntracts ~
attempts have failed to remove Sad- prohtable when the ~nee of gram
dam from power since the end of the drops, such as after a btg harvest. But
1991 Persian Gulf War.
a small crop and soaring international demand have driven prices through
the roof this year, making the hedge..-,
to-arrive contracts big money losers .
In many cases, the elevators sold
fanners these contracts, then hedged
their own positions on futures markets and got hit with margin calls.
For small towns like Buffalo Center, the controversy is ripping apart
the community, pitting neighbors
against' one another.
"It's a very uncomfortable time
for many people in our community,"
said David Langer, pastor of First
Congregational Church in Buffalo
Center. "Everybody is involved one
way or another. People say it's tough
to shop because you don 't want to
bump into other people."
Grain elevdtors long held a special
place in small towns, providing both
a social and financial · lifeline to
farmers and their families. Many are
cooperatives, owned by fanners who
gain shares, or dividends, in the
business by selling their grain there
and buying fertilizer and other supplies.
.
"These cooperatives are kind of a
duce bala1 with dense outer layer• that hold
modern day extension of the old
their shape and repel moisture. For balling hay;
effott of barn-building, where all the
strew or silage, It II Ideal tor amall-to-medlumneighbors would cooperate,'' said
•lzed fanning requirement&amp;. It has top-of-theRichard Updegraff, a Des Moines
line feature~. There are numarous othar fea·
lawyer representing the Farmers Coture1, and It requlrel a low-horupower tractor
Op Elevator of Buffalo Center.
and minimal maintenance on the roller drives.
"The farmers pool their marketing

Weekly livestock report
By The Associated Press

regained ground they lost after the
Sumitomo announcement.
Crude oil dropped on the New
York Mercantile Exchange because
of continued rumors that the United
Nations and Iraq soon will finalize a
deal to allow Iraqi oil back on world

•

Super Lotto:

By TOM HUNTER
Tlme..Sentlnel St.ff

NEW MASON CHURCH- Work Ia currently
underway on a new sanctuary and Sunday
School and Fellowahlp wing for the Mason
United Methodist Church on Second Street In
Malon. The 150' x 75' steel frame structure Is
being built by Home Creek' Enterprises,
Pomeroy, and Is expected to be completed

J

Pick 4:

Exceeds
expectations
POMEROY - When one local
family added an embroidery machine
to their personal computer in early
1990, they hoped to utilize the new
machine for family sewing and hobby projects, with the possibility of
some occasional business for area
residents who needed embroidered
apparel.
Little did they know in 1990, but
six years later their small hobby has
becQme a large scale home based
business, shipping various embroidered items and apparel all over the
United States and North America.
The Needle Works, owned . and
operated by Jane Harris of Pomeroy,
recently moved from the family computer room in which it started to a
storefront operation in a converted
garage outside of the Harris' home.
With the expansion, the family
operated business has grown from a
computer and small embroidery
machine to a modern computer and
two full size, state-of-the-art industrial style embroidery machines, as
well as a long list of regular cus·
tomers which keep business rolling
along at a steady clip.
The national and international

~~!~~~~~,~

: It was a scene carried out thou)ands of times between. 1861 and
'1'865; a column of soldiers forms into
. itne and 'slowly advances on the enemy positions.
: Shots ring out as the battle 'is
joined. Interspersed with the sounils
of combat and the acrid smell of gunpowder are the barking commands of
· ~ergeants coupled with the moans of
the wounded.
Suddenly, one side apparently los. es the will to light and the battle
becomes a rout as the raider's retreat,
leaving the field littered with their
(lead and wounded and other detritus
of combat.
Such was the scene reenacted
Sunday afternoon in Portland at lhe
annual observance of the Battle of
Buffington Island.
• On July 19, 1863, 2,000 raiding
t:onfe(lerate soldiers under the command of General John Hunt Mo'llan
encountered four times that number
Qf Union soldiers near the bank ofthe
Ohio River. In the one-sided battle
th)lt resulted , more than 170 Confed-erate soldiers were killed or wounded and more than 700 captured. The
remainder, includmg Morgan,
esi:aped only to surrender a week later in Columbiana County.
· It was the only Civil War battle

ti~hile there is no fee to display at
I

Barrett said the searches would be
truly random; officers would not
attempt to single out any particular
race or age group.
'" We still hope that this will be
Atlanta's 'front porch,' if you will ,"
Barrett said today on ABC's "Gobd
Morning Amer~a." "This is still a
gal)l;riog spot. And I really suspect
that visitorswill come back here."
The blast killed Alice Hawthorne,
44, of Albany, Ga ., and led indirectly to the death of a Turkish cameraman who suffered a hea.n attack rushing to the scene. Police said when
John Hawthorne rushed to Atlanta
after hear.ing his wife had been killed
and their daughter inju~d by the
bomb, the Hawthornes' house was
liurglarized. A neighbor said a VCR
and TV set were taken.
Seventeen of the injured remained
hospitalized this morning, three in

serious condition.
·The FBI said it had assembled a .
vast array of cvidcn&lt;c that it hoped
would lead to a suspc~;t in the bombing.
In addition to fragments from the
crude pipe bomb, the hureau said it
had received more than 600 tcle·
phone cal!~ ,ofl''li,ng informaliGn
about the enine, plus numerous pholographs and videotapes.
Tubbs said the bureau was also
reviewing lilm from four surveillance
cameras that overlooked the site of
the borltbing. And an FBI lab was
analyzing the pay telephone that was
believed to have been used to call in
a bomb threat.
Authorities said they do not yet
have a suspect in the case. But Tubbs
said sketch uttists have drawn composite portraits hascd on eyewitness
Continued on page 3

Probers seek metal to
prove bomb suspicions
possibility of a missile. nor ruled out 747 is located just ahead of the front
the possibilily of mechanical failure, cargo haY., which could explain why
but were focusing on the bomb the- the cockpit voice recorder and the
EAST MORICHES , N.Y.
Investigators say a key piece of met- ory, according to the source, who night data recorder were cut off
al could prove a theory that TWA spoke on the condition of anonrmi- abruptly without any sign of trouble
II 1/2 minutes after the jetliner left
Flight 800 was destroyed by a bomb ty.
The plane exploded in a fireball Kennedy Airpott .
in the front cargo se&lt;:tion that blew
Radar continued to 1rack the
off the cockpit and first-class cabin . July 17, killing all230 people aboard.
The source said the jet apparent- plane, or a portion of it, lhrough the
A source close to the invesligation
told The Associated Press Sunday ly "flew without a front for I0 to II sky for some seconds afler the
recorders shut down .
that a piece of the plane 's aluminum seconds" after the initial blast.
Some passengers in first class
The source would not say what
coating close to the explosion would
probably tell what caused the blast were thrown out of the plane by the new evidence might have turned up
to focus investigators on the bomb
and whether the metal was pierced force of the explosion.
The source said the disaster " has lheory.
from the inside (a bomb) or the out·
a lot of similarities to Pan Am 103, " ~ No physical evidence - such u
side (a missile).
" We need that piece of sheet met- which exploded over Scotland in clremical residue from explosives-on
al" in order to declare the crash a 1988 after a terTori~t bomb went off airline debris - has been found to
in a cargo hold.
confinn suspicions of sabotage.
crime, the source said.
The electrical equipment of the
The search was being focused on
a debris field 100 feet below the
Atlantic where the ftrst wreckage settled, including first-class seats and the
front landing gear.
As divers searched the ocean Ooor
Sunday, James Kallstrom, the FBI
By PAT MILTON
Aasoclated Press Writer

IMPORTANT WORK - Although reraly directly Involved In cornbat, Civil War-era women faced 10m1 of the mo1t Important talks
of the war, caring for the wounded 1nd tending to the home tronL
!1ere, from left, Jennifer and Debbie Heldell of Stout1vllle make
handkerchiefs presumably for th1 soldlert.

fought on Ohio soil
AccOrding to several reenactors
and others, the weekend's event was
perhaps the best attended since the
reenactment was first staged.
Pleasant weather. at least by lateJuly slandards, no doubt contributed
to the turnout, where perhaps 450
spectators gathered to watch the 50plus Civil War reenactors.
Also attracting attention to the ·
event was what some perceive as the

largest threat to the Portland area
since Morgan's Raid ... a proposed
gravel strip mining operation.
The mining operation was on the
tongues of many, speclators and
rcenactors alike. Keith Ashley of the
Sons of Union Veterans distributed
letters for spectators to sign supporting the preservation ofthe battlefield
while others rafned off a 1861 model rine to earn money for the cause.
Continued on Page 3

Fa .• r e'ntry deadl·t·ne approacm·ng
: Open class entries in the · Meigs
County Fair, Aug. 11 - 1'7, are to be
made at the secretary's office on the
Rt&gt;ck Springs Fairgrounds this Friday
and Saturday.
. The office wiU be open from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days.
This is an early deadline for open
class entries. In previous years
e,ihibitors millie their entries jus! a
few days before the fair opened. The
cttange was made this year.to expedite recording procedures smce severa! sections of judging will actually
take place on the Saturday before the
fair opens.
,
·The deadline applies to all ope11
class entries with the exception of~
h&lt;lfSe pull which has no closmg

Terrorism strikes the Olympics

the .fair1 exhibiters mus( purchase
either a season or membenhip tickct.
Those tickets are currently on sale
around the county. Season 1ickets
which provide entrance to the fair'all
six days and parking privileges are
$12. Membership tickets which also
give voting privileges in the Meigs
County Agricultural Society are $13.
Offered this year for the first time
is reserved parking in specified areas.
The only time served parking can be
secured is Saturday at which ti~ the
fee is to be paid and the parking spot
selected.
Camper spotting will ·also iill
place Saturday. The fee for the week
for trailers and c11111pen is $60 aiKI
tents, $25. Camping fees do not
include entrance into the fairgrounds.

•

agcntincharge,
al
"could be thesaidthepieeeofmet·
next piece the Navy
turns over to us. We know which
Both camper and parking assign- pieces we want. ... We hope in the
ments will be made through the sec- next 24 hours we will get some·
rctary's office.
thing ...
The season passes may be purSearchers were working around
chased at Joe's Country Market, Rut~ the clock.
land: Wa&gt;d Cross Sons, Ractne,
"We're always interested in what
Baum Lumbe~, Chester; Sugar Run came off first," said Roben Francis,
Flour Mtll, S~tsher-~hse Pharmacy, head of the ~h. explaining invesPomeroy; Lmle Johns Food Mart, tigators' in !Crest in the area. "Things
Tuppers Plains and Middleport; that come off lirstlCnd to be an indiGloeckner's Restaurant, Pomeroy; • cator of what happened."
Whaley's Grocery, Darwin; Helen
Francis, who is vice cbainnan of
Baer, Syracuse; Dorsel Larkins, Long the National Transportation Safety
Bottom; Dan's Middleport; Five Board, declined to confirm or deny
Points Express, Pomeroy; Reed's the primacy of the bomb theory.
Country Store, Reedsville, and
Investigaun were speculatina that
McDonald's of Pomeroy.
the explosion was caused by a bomb
Membenhip tickets may be pur- in the front cargo section, one of them
chued It the Sugar Run Flour Mill, told The AP.
Pomeroy, or from any fait board
They bad neither discounted the
member:
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DESCA18ES WRECKAGE FIELD$ • U. S. Nttvy Relr Admiral
Edwerd K. Krlatenlan UMI a pointer tp deiCI'Ibtl the location of
the WNCk8ga flelcll from TWA Fl~t 800 during I MWI conllr·
ence Sunday at the Shereton Hotalln ~lthtowu, N. Y. (AP)

'"

�COmm~ntary

PageA2

~" Monday, July 29, 1996_:::&gt;

Monday, July 29, 1996

: The Dally Sentinel• Paot 3

OHIO Weather

j'

Thesday, July 30

The Daily Sentinel Egg farm fried for filthy work conditions . .-

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AccuWeathe,.. forecast for da\rlin,. conditions and high

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MICH.

Joan F. Carnahan

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW

General Manager

Controller

Lotion 10 lflo odlttN ,,. wo~c&lt;&gt;m.. TIIOJ' muot bo , _ thin 3110 - .. All,.,_ .,.
oubjoct 10 odltl"fflll!d mull bo olgnod lll!d /neludo ltddtwoo lll!d lolophone numbot:
No unelgned ,.,.,. will t» publleh«L L•,.,. thould Hln
Mld,..,.lng

good,..,.,

,...... not ,.~1/Ha.

Ohio Supreme Court mulls
move to new quarters
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Alloclated Press Writer
&lt;:;OLUMBUS- While state lawmakers were partying in the newly renovated Civil War-era Statehouse, some members of tbe Ohio Supreme Court
were gazing longingly at the celebration from their cramped, glass and
chrome quarters across the street.
But the idea of a renovated building of their own doesn't sit well with
some members of the state's highest court.
"When the Statehouse was restored, it was decided to do it once and do
it right," Jijstice Paul Pfeifer wrote last week in his weekly newspaper column.
"The highest court in the state should have a building that represents the
same high esteem and grand ideals the people felt when they erected the
Statehouse."
But what the court is likely to get is a retrofitted Ohio Departments Building, a 1931 structure on the Scioto River. It was the temporary home of the
House during the renovation of the Statehouse, and also houses the utilitarian
offices of the state departments of education and agriculture.
Pfeifer has no quarrel with the An Deco hallways and ground Hoor meeting rooms whose walls are covered with Depression-era murals glorifying
Ohio's history, industry, agriculture and society.
· "But the rest of the building ... is as insipid and uninteresting as a threeday insurance seminar," Pfeifer complained.
"Fans of the building point out that it's on the National Register of Historic Places, but I think so are a lot of barns with Mail Pouch ads on their
sides, and no one is suggesting we move into one of those ."
Nor is anyone arguing that the Supreme Court, now occupying about
180,000 square feet in the J970s-era Rhodes State Office Tower, needs a
new home .
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer ;aid the court, along with the Court of
Claims, needs at least 250,000 square feet. The Departments Building has
380,000 square feet.
The sticking point is the ~ost.
Moyer said fixing up the Departments Building will cost $25 millionon top of the $30 million already •pent, or in the process of being spent, on
general repairs and maintenance since 1987.
Some estimates put the price of a new building at twice that. The Statehouse, in comparison, came in at about $114 million.
" I think it would be very difficult to convince the General Assembly in fact, I know it would be - that the Supreme Court needs a new building," Moyer conceded.
_
"We could scream and shout and, perhaps, get a new building," he added.
"But then we would have the prospect of having to cut corners to save money and get a building that is not as attractive in the end."
Gov. George Voinovich, who along with Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, Treasurer J. Kenneth Blackwell and Auditor James Petro has an office in the renovated Statehouse, has made il plain where he stands on the issue.
"He will not support a new building while he is governor," said Michael
Dawson, his spokesman. "He believes it can be done for less money."
Pfeifer thinks the court is being slighted.
"I understand budget constraint~; and the desire to save money, but we
are the third branch of government and it's a shame to set our sights so low."

Today in history
By The A11oclated.Press
Today is Monday, July 29, the 21 I th day of 1996. There are 155 days
Je ft in the year.
Today 'sHighlightinHistory:
On July 29th, 1981, Britain's Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer
at St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
On this date :
In 1030, the patron saint of Norway, King Olaf II, was killed in battle.
In 1588, the English soundly defeated the Spanish Armada in the Battle
of Grav~lines .
In 1890, artist Vincent van Gogh died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
in Auvers, France.
In 1914, transcontinental telephone service began with the first phone conversation between New York and San Francisco.
In 1948. Britain's King George VI opened the Olympic Games in London .
In 1957, the International Atomic Energy Agency was established.
In 1957, Jack Paar made his debut as host of NBC's "Tonight" show.

Berry•s World

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -- The world's
largest producer of brown eggs is
accused of forcing laborers to work
10-hour shifts while paying them for
only three and a half hours, housing
workers among containers overHowing with soiled toilet paper and failing to get proper medical treatment
for workers with serious injuries.
And the U.S. government has
helped to pay for it all .
The Department of Labor recently recommended fines of $3.6 million
for the Maine-based DeCoster Egg
Farms after an investigation found
employees working an Ji ving in conditions that Labor Secretary Robert
B. Reich calls "as dangerous and
oppressive as (in) any sweatshop we
have seen. "
"Fear and intimidation kept these
workers in this unsafe, unhealthy
atmosphere and living in totally
unsanitary conditions," Reich said.
DeCoster's facilities In Turner,
Maine, where the alleged violations
occurred, have 3.5 million laying
hens producing 12 million eggs a
week with es~imated sales of over
$40 million annually. Of the 320

workers at the Turner plant, approximately half are Hispanic migrants,
many of whom do not speak English.
DeCoster also operates plants in

By Jack Anderson

and
Jan Moller
Ohio, Minnesota and Iowa.
As shocking as the investigation's
conclusions are, longtime DeCoster
watchers were not surprised. The
company has repeatedly violated
safety and other regulations over the
years. according to the Labor Department.
,
More surprising is the fact that the
(ederal government would hand the
company a deal worth millions of
dollars according to Agr:culture
Department figures.
Beginning in the mid-1980s, Congress began shelling out subsidies of
as much as $5 million per year to support the export of brown eggs to
Hong Kong. Without them, heavily
subsidized European producers and
exporters would have had the rooster's share of the market.

STiLL-..,
•

By Nat Hentoff
One of my more memorable experiences as a journalist was meeting.
in the I980s, the Israeli colonels -male and female -- who started the
Peace Now movement. It had a considerable inHuence, for a time, in
Israel as well as among some American Jews . The colonels' message
was: "A people that rules over another people cannot itself be free ."
Each of the Peace Now colonels
had fought in Israel's wars-- some in
all of them. As I listened to the
colonels in Jerusalem and later in
New York, it was clear that they were
not naive and certainly not pacifists.
In emphasizing the need for Palestinian independence, the colonels
also stressed that there must be rigid
security arrangements so that a Palestinian state could not become a
launching pad for invasions of the
Jewish state or for subversion . '
I had rarely seen such a combination of idealism and pragmatism. The
colonels were convinced that unless
the Palestinians were set free, the
· Jewish state would never entirely be
free.
The goals of Peace Now greatly
inHuenced Shimon Peres and ultimately that tough military commander and prime minister Yitzhak

Rabin. What cflanged Rabin was the
"intifada" -- the mass resistance by
Palestinians to Israel's determination
to deny them their own state.

Nat Hentoff
At the beginning of the "intifada,"
Rabin believed he could smash it by
sustained force. "Break their bones,"
he ordered his soldiers. But he came
to realize how deep and abiding was
the Palestinians' desire to rule themselves. As Ze 'ev Schiff, a widely
respected Israeli commentator said,
"The intifada was Rabin's school."
The crucial question now is
whether the new prime minister,
Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, will
have to go to the same school before
Israel can be truly secure.
Netanyahu is absolutely correct,
however, in declaring that no lasting
agreement can be made with the
Palestinians under the threat -- and
actuality --of terrorism. But granted
that Yasser Arafat is hardly a model
of trustwonhiness, Netanyahu is
playing what could be a dangerous
game in telling Israelis and the rest of
the world that Arafat's Palestinian
Authority has been weak in controlling Islamic activists and terrorists.
The Economist, however, quotes
from an article in Haarctz -- often

called the New York Times of Israel
-- about "a meeting between Mr.
Netanyahu and Ami Ayalnn. the head
of Shin Bet, Israel's security service.
Mr. Ayalon reportedly told his pnme
minister that many of Israel's recent
successes against (such sources of
terrorism as) Hamas and Islamic
Jihad cculd not have occurred with·
out the Palestinian Authority's cooperation and Mr. Arafat 's personal
authoriwtion ."
Nctanyahu apparently considers it
to his advantage to keep on implying
that the Palestinians cannot deal with
the tentlrists among them and therefore cannot be trusted to have their
own state.
Indeed, one of the prime minister's absolute preconditions for continuing the peace process is thattherc
will never be an independent Palestinian state. Thus arc the seeds of a
new intifada sewn because, as
Yitzhak Rabin learned. the Palestini ans' insistence on their liberation ~~
not going to be conquered.
Another Netanyahu precondition - while he denies he will enter into'
talks with any preconditions -- is that
Jews should be able to live anywhere
they want to in Israel. That makes
sense if Israel is gomg to continue to
rule over the Palestinians. And that\

the prime minister's intention as he
indicates there will he more and larger Israeli settlements in the midst of
Palestinian populations.
,
. Netanyahu says casually that, apyway. there was a ··natural increase"
in the settlements under the Labor
government. That's true. Most oLthc
la~ilics in the settlements have many
chtldren. and that accounts for the
·'natural increase." But Netanyahu
may well figure thai another way .to
prevent an independent Palcstinijm
state is to so increase Jewish numbers
in what would be the territory of such
a state that it will he impossiblr lo
d1slodge so many settlers.
··
Furthcnnorc. ·with the ultimate
hawk. Ariel Sharon, in the Cabinet; it
will he a virtual certainty that sctt!,c ·
ments wt II grow and override Pale&gt; tinian aspirations.
·
While in the United States, tbc
pnmc minister said staunchly: ""fy
mandate ~&gt; to meet the aspirations of
the Jews, not the Palestinians." :
Remember what the Jsra~li
colonel s said: "A people that rulb
over another people cannot itself 6c
free."
1
'
Nat HentoiT is a nationally
renowned authority on the Fi~t
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights.
t

By Jonph Spear
luted sanctions against South Africa.
Among the multifarious duties of Now it is planning to boycott Burma,
a columnist is the obligation to con- currently under the control of a dicsole and cheer the reader. It is a tatorial military regime. A~ long as
,&lt;:harge that is regarded with great ·
solemnity in this space.
When the world is spinning too
fast and you need a mood boost, you T.P. exists, .P.C. lives.
may tum to this page with the rea8. The militia movement is not
sonable expectation that you will find excluding women . Watchdog groups
an item of an uplifting nature. As a estimate that women make up I0 to
sampler, I dug out the top I 0 stories 20 percent of militia membership
in my Comfort News File:
around the country. There is an Aryan
10. The Freemen were not wack- Women's League in Fallbrook, Calif.
os. Remember the guys who set up A woman is co-leader of a patriot
their own government and holed up group called E. Pluribus Unum in
on a Montana farm for more than two Columbus, Ohio. A woman commonths and threatened to shoot it out mands the Chattanooga cell of the
with the FBI1 Well, they had good Gadsden Minutemen. And you
reason: They feared being injected thought these zanies were sexist. See.
with lethal cancer cells while incus- there's positive news everywhere.
tody. I think it is just so comforting
7. Butt Man is not alone. You ' ve
to know they weren 't lleing irrational. · heard of the person dressed like a cig9. Takoma Park is back. In past vene who's been dogging Bob Dole?
moments of glOI}'. this Maryland sub- Well, now there's a Reefer Man folurb of Washington, D.C., known as lowing Butt Man around. And a
the "Berkeley of the East," declarect Balonet' Man, and a File Man who
itself a nuclear-free zone and insti- presumably is supposed to remind

NEA, Inc.

•

•

'

ITQiedo I 7ff' I

•\ ~

,,

people of the FBI files controversy.
Keep your eyes peeled for Curmudgeon Man . He' ll have a sandwich
board that says "The Hell With
Them All " and there will be steam
blowing out of his cars.
6. Gcraldo is coming clean. In a
Newsweek article, he said he is
draftmg a contract with America in
which he vows his talk show will
shun theatric.&gt; and accent solutions.
Can you stand the wait? Geraldo
should work for the National Institute
of Standards, because lie is the yardsttck wnh which all TV noodlehcads
should be measured . Compare yourself and rejoice.
5. Israeli intelligence is spiking
Egyptian gum. An aphrodisiacal
chewmg gum ha&gt; appeared on the
racks at Egyptian kiosks, and news
~eports have linked it to 15 ca~es
mvolvrng women sexually assaulting
men. The alleged culprit: Massad the
Israeli spy agency. And you tho~ght
the CIA had the franchise on diny
tncks.
4. Tokyo might be crowded. but

..

. ,,'

IND.

.....

••
""

Mif

Joseph Spear Is a syadlcaJ
writer for Newspaper Enterprfsi
Association.
:
·I

• IColumbusIso• I

•

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':·'
(' I

· \•.

'"'

- Raymond Robert Goff, 77, Danville, died Sunday, July 28, at Overbrook
Center in Middleport.
Born Oct. 12, 1918, at Danville, son of the late Pearle and Maggie Denney Goff, he was a rural mail carrier and farmer, a member of the Danville
'Church of Christ and a World War II veteran.
. He is survived by a sister. Evelyn Davis of Salem Center; a brother, Marvm Goff of Springfield; and se'l'eral nieces and nephews.
He was proceeded in death by two brothers and a sister.
Graveside services will be Tuesday at noon at the Danville Cemetery with
Denver Htll offictatmg. Fnends ffiliY call 7-9 p.m. today at the Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland.
·
In lieu of Howers, donations may be made to the Salem Center Volunteer Fire Department, Langsville OH 45741.

·~·VA.

~"

l•-.

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VII Auociatod Pross Graph/csNet
. :.

~:. ·Today's
' '. '

weather forecast

Southeastern Ohio

.
Today ... Partly cloudy with scat.. tered thunderstorms. High near 80.
, •. South wind 5 to I0 mph. Chance of
• · rain 50 percent.
·.: . · Tonight...Mostly cloudy with scat.~. ttred thunderstorms. Low in the mid
;,·60s. Light south wind. Chance of rain
,. · 4o percent.
"'
Tuesday... Partly cloudy with scattered thunderstorms. High in the

lower 80s. Chance·of rain 50 percent.
Extended forecast
Wednesday and thursday .. .A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low mid 50s to mid 60s.
High mostly in the 70s except around
80 far south.
· Friday...A chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Low in the 50s. High
from the mid 70s to lower 80s.

'•

11 •'

·'

;. Robert A. Harden
-~,.

· &lt; · Robert Aaron Harden, 77, Syracuse died Satunday July 27, 1996 at River-

•v side Methodist Hospital, Columbus.

·
Born March 20, 1919 in Syracuse, he was the son of the late Roscoe Hand- .;;: ~n and Florence Nease. He was a retired storekeeper for Ohio Power Com·• .pany.
,,,
He was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church, where he served
~~~ as an elder, a former trustee, and Sunday School superintendent. He was a
i: Jllember of D.O.A. Lodge #124; the Ohio Power Company Veterans Asso1· ~iation; president and former member of the Southern Local Board of Educ;: · cation; charter member of Syracuse Fire Department and Emergency Squad;
and a former member of Syracuse Village Council.
"" , He is survived by his wife. Esther Keiser Harden of Syracuse; two sons
1·., and a daughter-in-law: Robert A. Harden, II of Syracuse, Jll!lleS D. and
lohnetta Harden of London; a daughter and son-in-law. Deborah K. and John
Shepley of Raeford, N. Carolina; two grandsons: Eric and Joanne Harden
of Hilliard, and Jacob Harden of London; one granddaughter, Janet Hard- en of London; two great-granddaughters: Alexa!lllria and Lauren Harden,
roth of Hilliard; two sisters and a bro_ther-in-law: Mary Lisle of Syracuse,
. Leota and Bill Kendall of Detroit, Michigan; and several nieces and nephews.
~ ' . . Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers:_Earl Fer,' rold and Morris Harden.
' ' Services will be held Tuesday, I p.m., at Syracuse Presbyterian Church,
v Syracuse, with Bill Hoback officiating. Burial will follow in Letart Falls
. Cemetery.
·
": : Calling hours wjll be observed Monday, from 6to 9 p.m., at the Ewing
J.• '

County Junior Fair

\. ·

MONDAY, JULY 29

7:30 p.m. Little Mr. Gallia County Contest - Main Stage
9:30 p.m. 1996 Gallia County Fair Queen Pageant - Main
·;· , Stage
"

,,'

TUESDAY, JULY 30

.

'Religious &amp; Senior Citizens
Night'

'

g a.m. 4-H Project Judging - Activities Building
g a .m. Goat Judging- Show Area
9 a.m. Dog Care &amp; Dog Showmanship- Tent Area
10 a.m. Dairy Show- Show Arena
•
10 a.m. Tractor Operator &amp; Safety Contest- Pulling Track
1 p.m. 4-H Cat Judging -Activities Building

..'
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... - ,.

The Daily Sentinel

' .

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"'
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Publilbtd every llftemoon. Monday throuah
frida1, It I Coon St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by lite
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· • M-btr: The A.~MX"ioted Press. and the Oh1o
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Newspaper Auoclalion.
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1be Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St. Pomeroy,
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MAILSUBSCRtPTtONS
tnoldeMolpC_,

~=
: : : .: : : : ·: :·: c..,
:· . iill: ~
•. -lllltlfle
!:!::=.=.: ::.:::::::::::::
: : :......
: : : : :_: : iS~
L:,:;;;;;;;;;
__
__,,I.
Melp

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................... 42\
Akzo ...................................... 55'1.
Ashland Oil ........................... 36'*
AT&amp;T ....................... ,.............51'4
!lank One ..............................34'!.
Bob Evana ............................13'/.
Borg-Warnar •• ,......................34 '*
Champion Ind .........................17
Charming Shop ......................&amp;'!.
City Holding ............................ 22
Fedaral~
.......................16'1.
Gannatt _....... .................... -65'4
Good~ r TAR ......................44
K-mart ................................10'1.
Landa
.............................19'!.
Umlted I ............................18'1.
Peopln Bancorp. .................. 22
Ohio Vatlay Bank ....... _......-....-36
One Vallay..............-..............34\

Roclni81l ..............................12\

Prem FIN .............................";.U
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............148\
&amp;honey'I Inc•••- ........:............t'At
Stir Bank •.••.•••.. ;...................72\
Wendy lnt'J ............................17'At
Worthlngton Ind . .•••.•••••••..;...18\

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotn ('rovldeil by Aclvnt
of Galllpolle.

.. ,...

•

DOG SHOW - 11 year old John Kraweczyn, Pomeroy, dlscuene the care of hie golden retriever with judge Jane Ellen
McGovern during Friday's Dog care 4-H judging at tht Junior Felr
Livestock/Show Arena. Krawsczyn captured grand champion
honore In the catagory. (Tom Hunter/Santlnal photo)

Dog Show winners posted

Robert Aaron Harden, 77, Syracuse died Saturday July 27, 1996 at Riverside Methodist Hospital. Columbus.
Born March 20, 1919 in Syracuse. he was the son of the late Roscoe Harden and Florence Nease. He was a retired storekeeper for Ohio Power Com·
pany. He was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian Church, where he
served as an elder, a former trustee, and Sunday School superintendent.
He was a member of D.O.A. Lodge #124, the Ohio Power Company Veterans Association, president and former member of the Southern Local Board
of Education, charter member of Syracuse Fire Department and Emergency
Squad, and a former member of Syracuse Village Council.
He is survived by his wife, Esther Keiser Harden of Syracuse; two sons
and a daughter-m-Jaw: Robert A. Harden, II of Syracuse, Jam~s D. and
Johnetta Harden of London; a daughter and son-in-Jaw. Deborah K. and John
Shepley of Raefond, N. Carolina; two sisters and a brother-in-Jaw: Mary Lisle
of Syracuse, Leota and Bill Kendall of Detroit, Michiga~: three grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by two brothers: Earl Ferrold and Morris Harden.
·
Services will be held Tuesday, I p.m., at Syracuse Presbyterian Church,
Syracuse, with Bill Hoback officiating. Burial will follow in Letart Falls
Cemetery.
·
Calling hours for family and friends will be observed Monday, from 6
to 9 p.m., at the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Grand and reserve champions in
4-H dog obedience, grooming, and
handling projects were announced by
the Meigs County Extension service,
after judging was completed late
Friday afternoon .
Winners in their respective projects were as follows:
Dog Care: John Krawsczyn, grand
champion; Bobby Rupe, reserve
champion. ·
Grooming and Handling (no experience): Joseph Rupe, grand champion; John Cooke, reserve champion.
Grooming and Handling (experi-

Ethel M. Hughes
Ethel M. Hughes, 100, Middleport, died Friday, July 26, 1996, at Columbia Blake Hospital in .Bradenton, Fla.
Born July 17, 1896. in Washington County, Va., daughter of the late John
and Luvenia Omduff Grogg, she was a homemaker and member of the First
B~ptist Church in Middleport for nearly 50 years. She married Ernest L.
Hughes on Aug. 15, 1916.
She is a survived by a daugh.ter, Lucille Owens of Bradenton; a sister,
Minnie Brown of Speedwell. Va.; four grandchildren; II great-grandchildren; three great-great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband in 1970 and by a daughter,
Virginia Ann Hughes in 1950.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport with the Rev. Mark McClung officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview
Cemetery in Middleport.
Friends may call Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

ence): John Krawsczyn, grand champion .
Dog Obedience Training (subnovice A): Sara Ervin, grand champion; Candace Fetty, reserve champion; Pamela Rupe, honorable menlion .
Dog Obedience Training (subnovice B): Sara Clifford. grand champ1on.
Dog Obedience Training (novice
A): Amber Perkins, grand champion.
Dog Obedience Training (novice
B): J0 hn Krawsczyn, grand champion.

SHS condltloama

Units of the Meigs County Emer:
gency Medical Service recorded 15
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday including two transfer calls.
Units responding included:
POMEROY
3:32 a.m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Sara McDowell, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
7:32 p.m. Sunday, Village Green
Apartments, Gina Follrod, VMH.
RACINE
11 :14 a.m. Saturday, Fifth Street,
Naomi Brinker, Holzer Medical Center;
4:47p.m. Saturday, Carmel Road,
Mary Roush, VMH. Syracuse assisted;
4:22 a.m. Sunday, Bashan Road,
Shirley Friend. VMH ;
II :49 a.m. Sunday, state Route
124, Charles Curfman, VMH;
9:31 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squad to Apple

Grove-Dorcas Road, brush fire on
Harold Rose property.
REEDSVILLE
5: II p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
department to F!&gt;rked Run State
Park, tree fire , no injuries reported.
RUTLAND
.
9:23 a.m. Saturday, Happy Hollow
Road. James Smith, Pleasant Valley
Hosprtal;
9: 17 p.m. Saturday, VFD and
squad to New Lima Road, hay wagon tire, Scipio Township VFD assisted;
10:47 p.m. Sunday, VFD and
squad to New Lima Road, hay hale
fire, no injuries.
SYRACUSE
12: II a.m . Sunday, Karr Street.
Henry Hill, HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
I L56 a.m. Saturday, Main Street
Charles Mugragc, VMH .

Reunion scheduled
The annual Parker reunion will be
held at the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School, Sunday, I 2:30p.m.

· Also, the main reenactment was
held near the park, making it more
accessible to spectators.
In addition to the reenactment. one
of the more popular attractions was
Bible school ~~et
Saxton's Comet Band, a reproduction
The Middleport First Baptist
Civil War-era band.
Church will have Bible school, Aug.
The band hails from central Ken5-9 ftom 6 to 8:30 p.m. The Jesus
tucky and consists of musicians mostExpedition is a five day expedition
ly affiliated with the University of
adventure featuring fun, crafts, music
Kentucky, according to one of the
and active Bible learning. Kids age
musicians.
four through seventh .grade are invit·
The group was formed in 1990
ed to aMend the Bible school at
and performs at more than 20 events
each year. In addition, the band was
featured in the movie "Gettysburg" rrom page 1
- dressed as Confederates.
Fairc Winds, comprised of Jane
and Eric Scites of ColumLiedheiser
one and anywhere. If we think the
bus,
performed
with song and music
information is credible, we follow up
-at
one
point
inviting
Kathleen Ward
on it''
of
Portland
(a
descendant
of ConTubbs spoke at an afternoon news
federate
General
Thomas
conference. He was joined by Atlanta
Police Chief Beverly Harvard, who "S.toncwall" Jackson ) to sign with
was grilled about a seemingly slug- them .
Civil War buffs were also given
gish response to the 911 call.
plenty
of opponu.nity to broaden
Harvard acknowledged that police
their
knowledge
of the era due to
at the scene of the bombing were nevnumerous
demonstrations
at the
er alerted about the bomb threat. As
event.
For
instance,
while
one
man
it turned out, a security guard spotted
demonstrated
the
art
of
blacka suspicious bag and notified the officers.

·case.
"From what I hear, they have no
idea who did this, " l.,ord said in an
interview from Macon. Ga. "We
,have an idea." She didn't elaborate,
Asked about the militia's complaint, 1\rbbs would only say: "We
are accepting information from any-

•'

rrom page I

smithing. David Heide II of Columbus
repaired rifles lind explained how
they operated.

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••••

Mws dpt,qJI

992-2158

OlympiC Park.. ~ontlnued
accounts. He said investigators needed to determine the authenticity of
those accounts before releasing the
sketches to the public.
- "We believe we have a number of
significant leads that we're following, " he said.
The FBI has said it [1elieves the
bomber is a white American man.
That conclusion is based on an analysis of the voice heard in a telephone
call to the emergency 911 number 18
minutes before the bomb exploded.
The caller warned that a bomb would
go off in Centennial Olympic Park in
a half hour.
Tubbs said there have been no
calls since then by anyone claiming
responsibility for the bombing. He
said authorities have not yet determined whether the attack was the
work of an individual or a group.
The attorney for a Georgia militia
member charged with stockpiling
pipe bombs said she tried to tell the
FBI and state authorities about two
people who "like to make pipe
bombs." but the officials hadn't
returned her calls.
The attorney, Nancy Lord, repne·
sents a member of the Georgia
Republic Militia who was arrested in
April for stockpiling bombs. Author·
,ities initially believed tl)e bombs
were intended for the Olympics, but
1
,later said that didn't appear to be the

'.

Meigs EMS logs 15 calls

Meigs announcements Buffington batt/e.~:ntlnued

'Gallia County Night'

, ..

lJ

Robert A., Harden

Southern High School football
~ rF•u~n~eral~-H-om~e,•P•o•m•e•ro~y~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .__, conditioning will begin Thursday at
7 p.m. at the high school in Racine,
continuing each week night thereafter. All boys wanting to play football should aJtend. For more infor'· '
mation call Coach Dave Barr at 7423149.
Auxiliary to meet
5:45p.m. Band Concert: River Valley High School- Main Stage
The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies
6 p.m. Skill-a-thon Contest - Tent Area
Auxiliary
will meet Thursday at 7:30
,, 6:30 p.m. Dog Obendience Judging (4-H) -Show Arena
p.m.
at
the
hall. There will be a
.. , 6:30 p.m. Little Miss Gallia County Contest - Main Stage
potluck
dinner
and a silent auction .
. . , 7 p.m. Truck Pulls- Track

-~ ·Gallia

•

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~/

Raymond Goff

~ ··

I

the fi shing is good. The city 's angl~s
pay $6.50 an hour to drop their Ji:n s
Into concrete tanks stocked w· h
carp. They sit elbow to elbow, s · c
dressed in the finest L.L. Bean g~ r.
and try to make their creel limil rf
one lish per hour. Now, doesn't \lwlt
make all you Ir.aak Waltons feel Jxlt.
tcr about your own little streams' I
. 3. Clinton honors ethnics. Richald
N1xo.n did it by picking an all-sthr
baseball team with players of varyj~g
nationalities at every position. Bill
did .it by attending a Chicago fod:l
fcst1val and sampling the fare · ~I
every ethnic group present. Whatc1er your culture, be hllPI!Y. Your pre1ldent cares.
·i
2. You can now vote for
America. I ask : Have you heard a'nf
news lately that is more exciting thai!
thts? All you have to do is select or¢
of the I0 semifinalists and dial hit
900 number.
·•

Joan F. Carnahan, 62, Long Bottom, died Sunday, July 28, 1996, at Cabell
Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
A homemaker, she .was born July 17, 1934, in Willoughby, daughter of
the late Lonng and Ohve Root Erdman. She attended the Kingdom Hall of
Jehovah's Witnesses at Rutland. ·
She is survived by her husband, Larry D. "Pete" Carnahan of Long Bottom; tw~ sons and a daughter-m-Jaw, David and Rhonda Carnahan of Tuppers Platns and Corey Carnahan of Long Bottom; three grandchildren and
a brother, Larry Erdman of Cleveland.
Memorial services will be held at 7 tonight at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses in Rutland.
.

IMansfield 176° l•

1,.

.I

Curl up with some Comfort News -----+-.

q.:••br~
•

Workers did not have proper pro.
tecttve equtpment, even gloves
Because of contact with dead chi c k ~
ens and feces. workers were exposed
to salmonella and other hazards. A,
a result, they were overc.\poscd to
. ammonia and .given drinkin ~ water
contatnrng cohform bacteria.
Inv~stig~tors found unhealthy
condmons tn many of the traile"
workers lived in.As many as 17 P&lt;ople were housed tn traders measuring
I 0 feet by 60 feet. Inspectois found
a backed-up toilet and eight inches of
raw sewage in one trailer's bathtub.
In another, workers were not penn 1t.
ted to Hush tot let paper. Soiled toilet
paper was placed in overflowmg
trash boxes, according to the Labor
Department.
Company chief Austin J. DeCoster
said in a statement that he was "very
disappointed " with the results of the
investigation and said he would work
to correct problems.
As bad as living conditions were .
DeCoster is accused by the Labor
Department of illegally deductinc
money from workers' paychecks t ~
pay for the housing.
"The working conditions for 4
million farm workers in America.arc
still far from what they should be ...
said Maria Echaveste, admini~trator
of Labor's wage and hour division .
"The fact that these workers not Qllly
lived in, but were forced to pay to live
in such horrible housing , · is
appalling."
OSHA officials said managers
knew of the conditions but showed no
interest in correcting the problems
They also think the company mi~eu
the agency during the investigation.
David Hener, who runs an export
management company for DcCo~cr.
says the government subsidy was discontinued last year after the Y.S.
Department of Agricultuff cxprcsi;cd
concern that there may not be adequate supplies of feed grains for laying hens. In short, Hefler told our
associate George Clifford Ill, the
government was concerned it mtght
create demand that would be diffi~uh
to fill.
When you subsidize something
~ou get more of it. Perhaps unwittmgly. the federal government subsidized worker conditions that were
fundamentally indecent.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
. are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Bibi and the Palestinians _ _ _....;,__...;_

Joseph Spear

0 1M

According to Agriculture Department numbers, DeCoster received
$14.3 million through the program
from 1991 to 1995. And through a
continuing export promotion program. DeCoster received or IS budgeted to rece1ve $962,665 , according
to the Agriculture Department.
While trying to create an overseas
market for an American product. the
subsidies may have helped to enrich
a company that was creating Third
World working conditions at home.
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration investigators found
that DeCoster managers sometimes
referred to employees as "animals ."
Workers with injuries, including one
who had a broken leg. were "taken
back to their housing and dumped.
left on their own to seek medical
aid. " according to the agency.
In 1995, one worker had three fin gers cut off when they were caught in
an unguarded belt and pulley drive .
He was promised medical help. but
the help did not arrive for several
hours, the agency said.
To prevent workers from making
long-distance calls, outside telephone
service had hecn disconnected. Workers were unable to call 911.

'l

•

I'
'••
'•
'1'
~

·!

Yoa'rt
"•rvoas

You have to make funenlf

IITIIIgemanta. You're normal.

Members of the
Meigs County Democratic Party
do endorse and enc ourage voters
of the

Southe~ Local School District
utilize their voting privilege.
Please VOle "YES" the bond issue
to he held August 6th!!!
to

on

It's not unusuel for people
to feel Ullllly When they
eat out to make funanll
ll'l'lllgeltllnt But pert of
our lOb 11 funeral
dlrac:tora Is to makt 1111111

fetlmoniat . . ..

CREMEENS
FUNERAL CHAPEL

Paid r... hy th•
Southern Loc:at Building Committee
Kim Phillips. Treasur•r
1',
•I

�•

·•

, Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

.

r Monday, July 29, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

, . ..Mondiy, July 21, 1986

The Deily 81nllnel• Pliil!t 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,

.
j

Kyger Creek L.L. Tournamenl closes ·1996 chapter

Lewis and J~~nson
U.S.

Little Hocking .gets 9..7 victory over _Coolville to capture.crown
ly 0 . SPENCER OSBORNE '
Plus, a S-0 vjctor over Syracuse night;s Kyger Creek Little League
OVP Staff Writer
Hubbard's Greenhouse in Saturday Tournament semifinal action ,
·•
Little Hocking Quality Furniture
claimed a 9· 7 win over Coolville in
.....~:::..:.::..:.;::::!...:!.=:.:.:::...:.:::::::::;.:__;___~..;_-_._=-===~=&gt; the championship game Sunday
night at the Kyger C~k Employees
Club field.
Coolville made good on its first
chance to score when cleanup hitter
Jason Putnam, with Zach Wires (he
doubled to right) and Darren Bond
"
(he reached on an infield single)
aboard, cracked Ron Delancey's 2-0
·,
pitch beyond ~he left center field
fence.
Down 3·0 going into its first at·
bat, Little Hocking imitated its
opponent when leadoff hitter
Bradley Brannon doubled to left
center. After teammates Curt Morris
and Chris Hendricks walked to load

the ba.ses, Chris Lyons lined Wires'
0- 1 pitch into ceAter field to get
Brannon and Morris home.
Coolville got some defensive sat·
isfaction when third sacker Jason
McCumber fielded Ben Gum's
fielder's-choice grounder and nailed
Hendricks at the plate for the second
out But Steve Sayre, who during his
at-bat saw Lyons tie the game at 3-3
on a wild pitch, knocked Wires' 1-2
pitch into right center to allowed
Travis Ollom and Gum to score.
Coolville caught up to Little
Hocking in the third when
McCumber, with two out and
Putnam aboard l)ecause of his single
to center, took Delancey ' s first
offering beyond the center f1 eld
fence.
Clint Sears started off the
Coolville fourth by hilling a nubber
BRANNON DOUBLES - between Delancey and the first ba.se
Little Hocking's Bradley line and beat Delancey's throw to
Brannon watches the fly ball first for an infield single. Sears, ~ho
he hit to left center field fall - moved to second on a wtld pllch
cion to the fence for a double during Brad Willis' at·bat, scored on
In the flret Inning of Sunday's Wires' single to right past the diving
Kyger Creek Llttl• League Morris at second.
Tournament title game.
That wa s enough for Little
Brannon doubled twice and Hocking to move Delancey to center
ecored twice to help Little field, bring Lyons in from shortstop
Hocking beat Coolville 9·7. to pitch, send Morris to shortstop
(OVP photo by G. Spencer and Hendricks to second. That
Osborne)

arrangement helped QFP to hold
Coolville scoreless m the rest or the
frame and force the Jumor Lancers
to strand two runners.
.
Coolville's 6-5 lead lasted unul
the bouom of th e fourth , when
McCumber's tw o throwing errors
allowed Hendn cks to rea ch and
make his way to the plate. Hendncks
also beat Putnam 's to -the -plate
throw from first to score the tymg
run . Then Little Hocking took_the
lead for good when Gum 's sacnfice
fly to left center allowed Ollom to
score.
After Little Ho ckin g retired
Coolville 1·2·3 in the fifth , Morn s
hit a sacrifi ce fly to get Gabe
Humphrey home w1th what turned
out to be the winning run and send
Brannon to third. Then Lyons' sacri·
fi ce fly to right ce nter sc ored
Brannon with their club's final run .
Coolville pressed Lillie Hocking
in the final frame . Shayne Barnhart.
who came 1h as a pmch runner for
Willis in th e fourth , walked and
scored on Bond 's two-o ut single
down the left field line. But with
Bond and Putnam on bas e,
McCumber grounded out to first to
end the game.
The decision delayed Coolville 's
bid to become only the fourth team

- Pomt Pleasant Cit~ Ice &amp; F
( 1970 and 1974), Pomt Pleasa
Fnll!h Pharmacy ( 1969 .and I
and the M1ddleport Cardmals (1 988
and 1992) have accomphshed th15
feat _- and the f1rst outs1de the
Galha-Me1gs-Mason Count~ area to
repeat as tournament champiOn. .
Followmg the game ~ Quality
Furniture_Plus r~presentauves dedi cated the1r team s Vlctory _to the late
Roger Frec ker, an Oh1.o Vall ey
Electnc Company ret1ree who
worked for many years at Its Kyger
Creek plant.
1
The numbers: Delancey and
Lyons combmed to stnke out e1ght
and walk three. Wtres, Coolv111 e·s
starter, JOmed W1lhs and Bond '"
stnking out four and walkmg e1gh1.
Little Hoc king's offense was
powered by Brannon, Delan cey
(both went 2-3), Hendncks ( 1·2).
Sayre (1· 3) and Lyons 0·4).
Coolville 's hillers were Putn am
(2-3), McCumber, W1res (both went
2-4), Brunty, Sears (both went 1-3)
and Bond ( 1-4).

·
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!.~
~
~

·

~:

::
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Point Pleasant got the first of its
two second-inning runs when
Hatfield's single to center brought
home B.J. Smith. Then two errors
on . Davis' over-the-mound hopper
- one by Cornell and one by shOrt·
stop Justin Allen - helped Hatfield
score. ·
·
The ~ally was wha1roint Pleasant
needed to avoid suffenng high anxiety that Syracuse's two-ruri rally in
its hidf of the second might have
caused. Why?
With one out and two runner;; Dally Hill and Justin Connolly having reached on singles, Jimmy
Eakins grounded Hatfield's 0· 2
pitch into center to score those runners. That cut Point Pleasant's lead
to 5-2 and gave the future TornadOes
the it first dents of the ·plate. since
Hill scored on a wild pitch ·in the
fou.t:th inning of Friday night's 7-5
quarterfinal win over Rio Grande.
Hatfield allowed only two run·
ners- Nate·MIIl'lin
in the

- to reach base. Neither got to second, which was tra&lt;:eO to the following:
• In the third, Hill hit a fielder's.
choice grounder to third base that
third sacker Nicky Stephens pegged
to Pyles at second to get Martin and
end the inning.
• Pyles, the shortstop, was the
architect of a fourth-inning double
play in which he stepped on second
base to retire Allen before throwing
to first to nail Connolly.
Meanwhile, Point Pleasant,
which watched Syracuse move
Harmon to the mound in the fourth,
tapped the middle reliever for four
runs to put the game out of reach.
After going down 1-2-3 in the fifth
against Connolly, Point Pleasant
balled around for the second time in
the game during a sixth-inning riot
that generated five runs. , ,
The numbers: Hatf1eld s complete·game effort was the product of
13 strikeouts and no walks..

Coolville .......... .302 101 = 7-9-2
Lillie Hocking .... 500 22x = 9-6-0
WP - Lyons
LP - D. Bond

/nd/BnS

with a pinch double, sending Fran-

AJomar fouled out

RUNNER-UP CREW ::ft'embera of the Kyger
:::Creek Little League Toa-r•::)lament
runner-up
·., Coolville team are (front
. ~ ~ow, L-R) Brent Bond,
· ·b ch Wlrea, Clint Sears,
: Joah Bigley, J.J. Guea
and Shayne Barnhart.
Standing teammate&amp; are
Darren Bond, Jaaon
McCumber, Brad Wlllla,
; : Eric Little, Jaaon Putnam
i:; and Matt Brunty. a-hind
i ~ lhem are coac:haa Rocky
i Brunty, VIctor Bond n
i Keith Seara. Bat boy
i~;Juatln McCumber Ia In
: tfront of the playera.

4) .

The Greenhouse's ' hitters were
Allen, Connolly, Eakins (all went 12), Cornell, Hill and Martin (all
went 1-3).

11111111&amp; llltala

P.P. Hardware .... 320 405 = 14-11-0
Hubbard's .... ...... 020 000 = 2-6-3
WP - Hatfield
LP - Comell
----------OUT BY INCHES - Syrecuee'e Dlllly HHI (8) turned on the
gee butflnclahlmeelfoutbyhalf
' 8 alep by Point Pleaaant Hardware thlr'd baseman Nicky
Stephana' throw to first aac:ker
Stephen Blazer (11) for the final
out of the c:cinaolatlon game.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer
Oeborne)
,, ,

I

'

~ Rejuvenated · Lo:fton helps _Tribe .d own Orioles 6-3 in 13 innings
-easy
"

· By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP)- Even Cal
Ripken might consider taking a day
t off if he could be assured of playing
~ as well as Kenny Lofton did upon
; returning from a rare day of inactiv( ity.
1
Lofton made a·game·saving catch
\ in the 12th inning and added anoth: er defensive gem"on the next play
) Sunday in the Cleveland Indians' 6I 3 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
:
Lofton's heroics occurred one
: day after he was rested for the sec: ond time this season. Ripken, in con·
: trast, hasn 'I had a day off since May
' 29, 1982. .

r

"{t's not
to ~e a guy like
Kcnny .ciut of the lineup; but everybody!s huinan andyou need days off
as IJlUCh mental.ly ~.! physically,"
Cleveland IJl&amp;nager Mike Hargrove
said. "I think it paid off today;.You
saw a re-energized l:.otloii. ·anil ·he
played very hard and vefy well."
Indeed. Lofton reached above
the center field wall to rob Roberto
Alomar of a two-run homer in the
12th inning.
•
"The ball kind of hung up there
and gave me a chance to, gel it It
wasn'tlhe best catch I've made, but
maybe the best because of the situ·
ation," 'Lofton said.
· ·

" Not many outfielder;; are even
soing to get there to make a catch
l jke that," said Baltimore manager
Davey Johnson, who was positive
Aloinar had won the game.
Lofton wasn't dime. On the next
play; he made a·perfect throw·after
pick;ing up a single, gunning down
Luis Polonia at third base.
" Lofton kind of single-handily
kept us from winning that one,"
Johnson said.
·
1bc Orioles' only win in the fourgame series came Saturday, when
Loftpn was replaced in c.enter by
Mark Carrc~m.
" He's llt;ll chicken salad out

there," Hargrove said of Carreon.
"Of course, he's not the defensive
player that Kenny Lofton is, but I
don't know that anyone else in this
game is, either."
Jim Thome won the game with a
!hrce-run homer in the top of the
13th after Lofton kept the uprising
alive with a bunt single.
"Kenny made n great play, our
bullpen did a great job," Thome said.
"lbcy kept us in the game to win ,"
1
Cleveland relievers gave up only
three hits and three: walks in seven
innings.
Casey Candaele also homered for
the lnd1ans, who arc 12·6 smce the

All-Star brenk. Brian Giles had a
double and two singles, his fourth
consecutive multi -hit game.
Baltimore got a home run from
B.J. Surhoff but lost for the sixth
time in seven games. The Orioles, 5.
1'4 since July 6, now embark on a 13·
game road trip beginning Tuesday.
Sandy Alomar opened the 13th
with a walk otT Garren Stephenson
(0-1 ). After a sacrifice, Lofton heat
out a bunt that sent Alomar to third .
Lofton stole second . as Candacle
struck out, and Thome hit a 2·2 pitch
into the left-field scats, hi s 21Sl
homer of the season.
"Stephenson hung a curve ball ,"

Hargrove said. "It wa.' the right pit~lr
to throw; he just hung it."
~
Jose Mesa (2-J) pit&lt;hcd two
scoreless innings for the Indians. i
Cleveland loaded the bases with
no outs in the ninth heforc Ran'\}'
Myers struck out Alvaro Espinoia,
Lofton and Candaclc. In the lOt ,·
Alhen Belle walked and was fore
at second base when Bohby Bonilla
f1clded Julio Franco's shot on tJ!c
right field scoreboard and fired ,a.
strikc ,to Cal Ripkcn at second base.
Belle had been standing between
the bases, waiting to sec if the bal (
would he caught. Carreon followC!]
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

.

- Bobby
; Jones answered Dallas Green's SOS.
1 All weekend, the New York Mets
l manager had been moaning about his
: sllrting pitching. Jones threw a
• three-hitter Sunday as the Mets beat
: the Cincinnati Reds 7- llo snap a six:game losing streak.
: "I'm glad Bobby found him• self," Green said. "He's a touch-and·
; feel guy -he's got to feel every
; pitch - and he had it today."
Cincinnati lost its first game after
six straight wins as owner Marge
Sl:hoU returned to Riverfront Stadium for the first time since being
banned from her office, luxury box
and field-level seat by major league
baseball.

Schott was on the field with her
St. Bernard dog before the game,
talking with Reds players and their
families. John Allen, the Reds interim chief executive officer. said baseball had allowed a partial lifting of
the ban, although Schott still has to •
stay away from her office and day.
to-day operations.
"I was glad to see that," Reds
manager Ray Knight said of Schott's
return. " I don 't think it's fair that
she's not allowed to come to the ballpark. I like to see her around. She
loves this baseball team, and she
loves being here."
Hundley 's solo homer started a
five-run sixth inning. The Mets tied
a team record by homering in their
12th straight game.

Sundoy'o scora
Toromo I, OaklllldO
New York 3, Kwu Ciry 2

AL standings

MinotiOI:. 9, Boslon 8

at.kn!Di•Wen

X..

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12
· 16
17

New VorL .... ... .6J 40
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61 2

T...-o ..... ~............48 51
.................. 46 ~7

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447

llrocroit .................... 3~ 72 .314

Cbicqo ' · Tew I

CLEVELAND~ llalllnael Ull

Oeuoi1 14, S...Oit~
Milwllllkee 4, Calit.mla l (I))

No pma toallbt

31

Tllelday'opme&amp;.

c-ola.EVD.AN0 .......64 41 .610
Ooicop................57 ... ,54)

Scll!lo

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1'&gt;if
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Colifonlo...............$1 54 .416

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a.IVILAIID
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New Yorlr {Peuine 15-5 ) ac Teau
(Wi111-l~ B S p.A
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-(Rodripeai0 ·7). 8:0Sp.m. ,
lotion (Noyct 7· 1) at K11au Cily

O tcaao (laWwia I -I) •• Oaki1H

Yort , , ICioooo C!Q' 4

T-6,-~

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(Manj~ \J.5), 7;~ p.m.
; ·: · _.,
.B•himo~ (CopPinacr !.~2) •• Min:

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!0:05p.m.

,.,pdin..

Jones (9-6) walkad one and struck
out five in his second complete
game. The Mets went 1·5 on their
road trip that began with three games
in Colorado.
"To salvage something out of a
very difficull trip is something we
can go home to," Green said .
"There's still a lot of season left, but
we've got to piay better than we did
on this road trip."
Kevin Jarvis (4-3) was charged
with all seven Mets runs.
·
"I kept it close for a while, but
that sixth inning was big for them,"
Jarvis said. "I gave up the homerun,
and they found a couple of holes.
The walks didn't help, either."
1bc Mets scored twice in the first,
helped by two errors. Jose Vizcaino

Iii

,

......

~~

.......49
Now YOfk .............41
Philadelphia ...........42

15
16
l2 'l,

C-01-

SI . Lo.li1 ................S6 49

Houooon ................. l6

CINCINNATI. ...... ~

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.500
lO ,. .411
PiltJburah ..............41 55 .466

au....,..................

: W-Dt•M ' ..121

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tripled and shortstop Barry Larkin's
relay bounced, hit Vizcaino in the
bock and rolled down the foul line,
allowing a run to score.
Bernard Gilkey singled, went to
third on a single by Hundley and
scored on third baseman Jeff Bran·
son's error.
Hundley stancd the sixth·inning
bun;! a'ld Bdtch Huskey followed
with a walk. Jeff Kent singled to center and Alex Ochoa beat out an
infield hit to load the bases.
Jarvis then walked Edgardo
Alfonzo to ,force home a run and
Jones squeezed home a run off
reliever Sco11 Service. After Lance
Johnson walked to load the bases
again, Viuaino hit a two-run single
to center.

Houttoo ), Loo A...la 2

a...o 7, COlorado S
Florida a.s.. llieJO 2

San -..to. A11an&lt;a l
Pioo-p 12. Philadelphia R.

Cincinnati 's lone run came in the
third when Joe Oliver singled, went

' CIHCINNI\117,'fh Yitk'' ·
"" Ftooa1Ciooo 7, Alla!!lo.'

s.
01qo lll. lz
Loo Alplot 6 , - ' (II)
SudaJ,'U"',. ·

NewYort7,CftnNNA111

sc. ..-6.~4
...

.
'

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to second on a sacrifice bunt anil
(See REDS on Paxe 5)

..

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•

~'It~~... ~ ~-- .~ ~ ~" •

•• .

CAPTURES THIRD - Membera of Point Piela. ant True Value Harclw.re'a
;team, which captured
third In the Kyger Creek
· Little League Tournament, are·(front row, L-R)
·~ahley Pylea, B.J. Smith,
i Nicky Stephena, Ryan
Petera, Seth Hatfield and
bat boy Brandon Hodge.
· ~tanding teammates are
Josh Davia, Seth Matheny, Steven Blazer, Ryan
Hodge and Jamea Matheny. Behind them are
coachea Fred Pylae, Curtis Matheny and Sam
Stephena. Player Joah
~mlth didn't make the
photo aealon.

FOR YOU

• TO
JUGGLE
You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world 1md your insurance needs are
real. Bot you don't need to add this worry
to your list.

fOIII' liiii.JNfldelll ...,.,.,
S....... ll.;p C011111y Sillee 1868

QTI olin

Of

WHEII~ EXTRA EFFORT

IS OUR

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to TIA lor- r-.

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~eeks and only one off day until
BecluM of rMI!Outs, Cincannau ~ • Sept. 5.... Hundley has 5ix homers
·tine dou~n in d)e next six and 14 RBis in his put II g~s.

...-letcutcJu!ltol'iar 190~·

His 29 homers and 81 RBis -

careerbiJbs.

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Reds Jose••&lt;~ontinued trom Pip 4) •
•

Cleveland had I 5 hits and strand·
ed 13 111nners.

To!IGI(ftMIIIIil-.01110 lllllllould_... . . . . . . . . . IPPMII.aR
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traek and· fteld athleta .to witt the
same .event in four ti!Jipl
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···"In IIIOihor IUJhiY anlic~.flllll
today, Johnson willtry ·to ~
half of a hilloric 201).400 Cloilble
· when ho cornpetea in the .COO.meters.
Other track and field &amp;Qkls were at
stake in the men's
hurdlet and
I0.000 meters, plus liM: women '1 clia.
cus, 400, 800 aild I0-kilomoter walk.

Consumer Information from GTE on
Telephone Service Assistance

"Ill.

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experienpe. community presence, and
someone who is with you both bef'&gt;re -a nd
after things happen. Just do this one thing.
and lave tft•jugglinti Kt to us.
·

l

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. TAKES FOURTH t..embera of SyracuH
ljfubbard'a GrMnhouH ·
team, which took fourth
flace In the Kyger Creek ·
LIHie League Touma. .n~a~(frontrow,L-R)
Juatln Allen, Jimmy
••kina, Aaron Ohlinger,
Nate Martin and Wallace
Standing teemfiiiiWI
~re Cory Van Raelh, Dally Hill, J.P. Hannon, Joe
vomell and Justin Connolly. Behind them are
SkMter
qoachea
Ohlinger, Bill Hannon and
.., Martin. Bat boy Etlwl
Martin Is In front of the
players.

THING

L

,

•

ONE
LESS

Calalodo 10, Cloi&lt;op 6 ' •
Pili........ 2, l'lno!toooJio I

St. .._,_,

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Sa!uni!JJ'• -a '

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"

!Mets'
7-1 win over Reds ends six-garne skid and Cincy's win streak
.
! By TERRY KINNEY
! CINCINNATI (AP)

.

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·,

second. That left him in 15th place
JOin&amp; into his final jump, and only
12 advance to the final.
.
But that all chanJed in a few :
breathtakiq II!COIICIJ, FQ,IIowj 11,1 his ,
clutch ~. Lewis ~·,out of
the pit and celebnled by Pflllllilll
his righ111111 in the air.
· , '
"It brouJht out !Jit.best ib. me,"
ho llid of the~· '
Lewis wu soina 'for ..,.IPid
today alonJ with telnl(lllla Mike
Powell and "Joe 0~. ·Wi•nina
would 1io him with swim&amp;
Spitz for I)K)It l9lda by 111. · ••

Your child can get both High
Academics and Traditional Values.
·All the ~ngs you want in a school
for your .son or daughter.
Only enrollment available at this
time is K-(Learning to read). This.
is a phonetic based reading
program,
individualize·d
curriculum, and values that'
'
character.
For more infonnation please call:
The Fellowship Christian
Academy · Reedsville, Dhio 378,.·
6175 or 378-6422. ,.-_

,....

..............~......~.....-...............................l

.

l

W/n.~C:on
·.;:':;::in::;ued;;,;;.fro;;;;m;.::'P..;;:as~e...;,4):.,__ _ _ _ __

co to third with two outs, but Sandy

strike out four and walk four.
Point Pleasant's hitters were
Davis (3·4), Blazer, Seth Matheny
(both went 2-4 ), Hatfield, Peters ,'
Smith (all went 1·2) and Hodge (I·

~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~-0~::::~~~~~~
.

'

Carl Lewis
jumped for survival and Clwloa
Austin jumped for joy. Michlel
Johnlon cntised and Bull:h Reynolds
hobbJad. The Dream ThaJn JIVC
Croatia the basketball blues, and the
Cubllls save the United Swcs ita
lint baseball beatins.
Greece won its lint IIYmnutics
medal since the modem aames
began 100 yean qo and Amy Chow
aave the United Stateo its lint individual IIYmnutics medal of these:
games, a silver on the uneven bars.
In a jampacked day of Olympic
competition Sunday, ·nothina wu
more ckamalic than Lewis' lut leap.
Needing a big effon to make the
finals aild keep 'alive his bid for a
fourth atraishl gold modal in the long
jump, Lewis soared '1:1 feet, 2 Ifl
inches - the longest leap of the
qualifying rounds.
"I had to tell myself, this is the
last meet of your life. Do you want
it to end like this?" Lewis said.
Lewis jumped only 26-0 1/4 on
his first attempt and fouled on his

llmiD&amp; l!!llb

··Point Pleasant ha·n ds Syracuse 14-2 loss
By 0. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tribune Staff Writer
Point Pleasant Hardware, a 5-0
loser to Lillie Hocking in Saturday
night 's Kyger Creek Lillie League
Tournament semifinal action,
returned to the win column with a
14-2 victory over Syracuse
Hubbard's Greenhouse in the consolation game Sunday at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club field.
In the first inning, Point Pleasant
needed just two baners to score.
Leadoff hitter Seth Hatfield, who
walked, stole second base and
moved to third on a wild pitch by
Greenhouse starter Joe Cornell,
scored when he beat first baseman
J.P. Harmon's throw to itie plate
after Harmon retired Josh Davis on a
hopper to first.
A ~ries of events similar to this
re·sulted in Davis getting home on
Steven Blazer's groundout. With
two out, Ryan Hodge 'scored
Hardware's third run on a wild pitch

A~A (AP) -

TOURNAMENT CHAM.PION - Members of the
.. Kyger Creek Little l.ellgue
Tournament champion
, ·Little Hocking team are .
· (front row, L-R) Patrick
Johnson, Bradley Br111n- .
.non, Chrla Hendricks, !
Curt
Morrie,
Gabe
'Humphrey and Brandon
Hall. Standing ~mmatea
are Steve Sayre, Ron
Delancey, Travia Ollom,
Chrla Lyons and Ben
Gum. Behind them are
:Coafihe' Rick Gum, Joe
·Delancey · and Bill Hendrlcka.

,'
,J
•

as

medal
candidates
,_

By RICK WARNER

In the consolstlon gsme,
,
•
:
:
:

gol~

•~nd

~

·

Oli

tllll't111urbt:

mr:;.t..... ISDI D1
4

IIIPIIIIIIIIntlrllltOeMinllle,....._Qn
1u • • 1
•
1~ ouUidl Coloo-A .m·TDD ~1:.1:&amp;::: D uit '111 a

..,,....m••••••••·•
... ,....w &gt;«•lar..·•A~
•••m.

'·

�Page 6 • The DaJI~ Sentinel

Pomerqy · ·Middleport, Ohio

;•Mondi!Y· July 29, 1996

Monday, July 21, 1191

The Dally sentinel• Page-7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FutUre pr0jeCti06S steady
By. ED PETEftSOH
Soclal Security , manager,

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SOUTHERN SCHOLARS - The following Southam High School students participated In the OU
Govemor',s Scholars Program. Shown are, from left: frot'!t, Josle Jarrell, Jenny Friend, Erica Amott,
Man Dill and Jeremiah Johnaon; middle, Amber Hayet, Trlah Warner, Tara Michael, Aahll Davia and
Chad Clar.k; rear, Evan Struble, Corey Wllllama, Jennifer Yeauger and Jolh Ervin.

Students
·participate
in scholars
program

due''priinarily o a technical eorreclion, 111\d ~ 2029 date is lhp same
Athenl
· "trus( !iJ!!,d exhaustiol)" date that was
· The 1996 Social Security truslecs · reported by the iru~tccS in 1994. t is
report tells us that the Social Securi- important to note !hat in 2029, conty long-range financial projections uary to what many · people think,
are holding steady. ·
Social SC&lt;:urity will riot be "broke."
As past and current program ben- Annual tax revenues will be enough
eficiaries can attest, Social Security to cover 77 percent of annual' expcnhas always met its beneficiary oblig- ditures.
·
: ations. And it always will. Even with
!be fact that the fin\IIICirtg situano changes in current law, Social tion is now stable docs not, of course,
Security will be able to continue pay- alter the fact that some corrective
ing benefits for more than three action will have to lie '*en, in tbe
decades into the future.
future. lbere is do crisis situation .
Specifically, the 1996 annual The Social S~urity trust funds,have
report states that the combined Old- enough revenue to meet all benefiAge and Survivon Insurance and ciary obligations for the next 33
Disability Insurance Trust Funds are years. There is time to discuss alter,rapidly accruing reserves and will be .... native solutions and to devise an
able to meet all benefit obligations approach that has the full support of
through 2029.
the American public.
The 2029 date is a year earlier
Social Security is the most sucthall&lt;"Was reported in last yca(s cessful domestic program in the
Trustees Report. But that change is natiqn's history. It provides protection
against the loss of earnings due to

"

·r ----Best-baton

'. contiquing story line lasting the
..
.. w,hott season.
.
PASADENA; C3iif. ,.- H~re's
Officially acknowledging that
what you'll sec. 9n ABC's courthe blew it when he created the
room· drama "Murder One" this
show as o~ hum9ngous multi• fall:
: · we~k saga, producer Steven
New star Anthony.. 4Paglia ' ;. B~hc.o tOld TV critics \Wre ,Thurs{"Betsy's Wedding," ' 'So 1 Mar- . -d~Y.: mgllt that the ~vtsed set-up .
ried An Ax Murderer") ani! 1\1~ . ..th~s · f,~!,l . ~9 p.m., Thursdays) w1ll
. differen! co!ISCCutive story lint's;'.' .• s~ll ·:: gt~e us. an opportun!tY to
s.,Ung with eigh~ episodes oit tJle . . ~nun~ to, tell , these stones m
tnal. of a pmo~, ~of killing , · -~~!"·
a governor of California: Then
· , · ·, We .can ~ly get mstde a c ~
there will &amp; a shorter inurdcr caiC; • more -~ most . shows ev~r d!il
followcil by a longer third sio,Y: · . . betore: wu'!~ut kind ~f sag~mg m
Here's what you won' t sec: ·,
.the mt~dle and l~mg ~·ewers
Old Star Daniel Benzali and one.
who ,MISSed a ~ouple of ep,lsode.s.

·

·, ~

' )·.·'.

. '

·..

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All Fomele Pari Getman
Sht phord Pupplea, Good Wtlh
Chllclror\ 114-.41-GO&gt;IO After 3:30

retirement, death, or disability. It covers about 142 million American
workers and pays benefits to more
than 43 million benefaciarics. And it
represents a financial foundation
upon which both ·older Americans
and young families can plan tbeir
lives. It has served this counuy well
for 60 years. The trustees urge careful examination and discussion of the
Social Security program to ensul'\0
that tlie program will continue to
setve all Americans for the next 60
years.
· Social Security ••• Not Just For
Old People
Did you know that more than a
third of the people who receive
Social Security benefits qualify for
reasons other than retirement? That's
because disabled people receive
Social Seturity too. And so do survivors of deceased workers. In all,
about 14 million people receive reg·
·ular mo~thly Social Security for
non-retirement reasons.

J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Authorized AQA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/S1ainless • Tool Dressing •.Qmamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fum~ure;'tireptace
~ems, Ptan1er hange'11. Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
814-992·2n2

8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

tfl.,lac-t Wm4ows
oltild Garages
•Stn Doors &amp; wildows
tfi0011M.s

Corp wu Hlectsd best blton group In the Gallipolis Fourth of July Parade. Members are first
row left, Jodi Unroe · Instructor, holding Malls88 Shafer, Klono Norvell, Whitley Mayo, ·Daniell
Mayo, Jodi Woodyard, Becky Mayse, Laura
Mayle, Stacy Fooce, Macle Moss and Misty
. Stanley • Instructor, lloldlng Taylor WoHord;
aecond row, Nicole Mount, Pam Johnson, Sara

I'

:·

' \:

nu ....., ..,.... To place Gil ad, call
992 215
Classifieds
" •

.,~

ofhiJIJI"B'-

Keller birth
announced

\.

Mon., Tues., and Wed.
Thursday
Ftiday

.

··-

.
~'

.

Roush Bros. Farm
614-247-2851 or

'

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.

)

.

(614)99~1
l ,

I

~

Pomeroy
(614) 992·2133 ·

.

'•

.

9:00 &amp;.pl•• 5:00 p.m.
' 11:00 a.m.· 7:00p.m.
9:00 a.m • 3:00 p.m.

Middl

Rutla'ld
(614) 142·2~
.' ,.
,.

i

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61

1

2MEDIUM '
PEPPERONI PIZZAS
1 ORDER BREAD STICKS
&amp; 2 PEPSI'S $10.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Oh.
992-2124

t

•'

i
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t

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YARD/BAKE SALE
Aug. 2·3, 8:00am - 4:00 pm
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church
Sponser; Lend-A-Hand

~

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'•

j

For an appointment phone 949-2683

~

~....

•

-

I

ANNOUNCING.NE'\V OFFICE
- HOURS.
'

16 yrs. or older

I

1

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Keller,
Chester, announce the birth of their
first child, a daughter, Katie Rose
Keller, born July S. She weighed seven pounds, I I ounces and was 21
inches long.
'
· Grandparenll IR Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Keller, Pomeroy, Daa ~~
ows of Bidwell, and Ina Meidol'J !Jf
St. Petersburg, Fla.

F),ICKERS NEEDED

Gallipolis
(614) 446-0902

.'

--~-~~~~--~~
..... i

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
·Room Acklltlon•
•NtwOaragea .
·Etectrlell I Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior I Exttrlor
Pllnttng
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
9112-8215
Pomttoy, Ohio
1/l/lln

Public Notice
NON-OPERAnNG
RECEIPTS
{DISBURSEMENTS)
Contribution• &amp;
Do Nitlone ............. 2,026.69
Operating Treneltra ·
ln ...............................$25.55
Refund of Prior Year•
Expend ......................236.91
Operating Trenelere .
Oul .......................... (525.55)
Total Other Fin. Sourcn
(Uae1) ..................... 2,299.60
Dlaburaernenta &amp; Other
Uaea/Net .................(356.99)
Beginning Fund C..h
Balance ................ 15,559.49
Ending Fund C11h
Balance ................ 15,202.50
Reeerved lor
Encumbrencea......... 399.39
Unre11rvld Fund
Balllnce ................ 14,803.11
TOTALS
Toxea .................. 739,544.29
Earnlnpon
lnveltmenu ........ 64,240.78
FoodServt...
S.lell ....................91,688.61
Extracunlculllr
Actlvttl ............... 95,697.47
Cl111 Materlall I
Fnt...................... 24,405.52
MIIC. Aeeelpta ... 476,888.3e
State Sourcea.2,718,882.94
Federal Sour-179,601.57
TotaiRecetpta(Operatlng) .... 4,39(),948.68
DISBURSEMENTS
tnetructton ...... 1,992,124.07
Supponlng
Servlcee .......... 1,327,198.54

=::.~

f j ll,r
•''

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tnalde 10 Mtii ............ A.1000
Outalde 10 Mill.. ..... 20.1500
ADM ...........................854.80
Number of Non-&lt;:ert.
Employee1 .................. 35.00
Number of Cer1.
Employ-.................. 51.00
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
BONDS
BallnOt Blgtnntng ol
Ptrlod........................30,000
11et1ttrne0- During Ftacel
Ptrlod............ - ........ 10,000
Ballllce 1130198 ........ 20,000
SUMMARY INOI!BTEDNESS
NOTES LOND &amp; SHORT
TEAll

....

::r:s~.~-~~~~~

60

· RedttnJtd. During F'-1
Ptrlod.................- 11,331.83

Baltnee 113Q198.174,382.f7
1 certify the following
report. to bt contct 1nd
true, to tht beet of my

lcnwltdge.
,.,.._of tilt a-d of

(7) 2111TC

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
Heat Pump
Furnaces
Rerrlgerators
We have the new FR12
Low Cost Replacement .
for Automotive R12.

992·2735
7/1196 1 mo.

HARTWELL
HOUSE

Edu!:ltion

WICKS
HAULING

Moll)lle and 'Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps,
Furnaces. All equipment In stock
for Immediate Installation.
Free Eatlmates
tWV010212

BIB ROOFING and
CONS,RUC,ION

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
future, love,
success and your
health !II
1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

of
Work
-All Kinds
992-3838

1·900-945-4400
Ext. 3124
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs .
Procall Co.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

(602) 954-7 420
7/ftft mo.

FActORY
I ALE
· 30o/o·40o/o OFF
Mini Blinds,
Verticals,
Pleated Shades
and much morel

JIIJ 16, 1996 to

??????

Drapes By Design
46 State Street
GalllpoHa, Ohio 45631
614 Us-411111
800-441-:031111

Earth

lttYERtOR·ElYEIIOI

..,...

FREE ESTIMATES

.,.... t•• pel• Ht ••
pelatllf. let •• lie It
~IY

RWOIIAILE
ttAVE RlfiiiiCIS
614·915·4110
4131 rna pd.

2/1vt2/Ttn

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Cuatom Bulldl119 I Romodolln9
•New Homes
•Addltlone
•New Gurage1
•Remodeling
·Siding
•Rooltng
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 8112-5535
814 992·2753

Remodeling
&amp; Roofing
Siding &amp; Some
Block Work
Free Estimates

992-2768
992·3274

Datwtn· 4 lamily, Wad 31, Auo. 1.

Find out about lheir
gifted Power!1
Call
1·900-484-1515
Ext. 1965
$3.99 per minute

Fnday and Sarurda.y, Augus1 -2·3,

Comlruction Inc.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

1-80G-47G-2S59

681 wes t 1 mil o pu t Wha ley's
Grocery on the lef t, gi rls. hoys
siz es 0-6•. Hom&amp; lnter io ,, 'ti ttle

like Jr sizes 3-13.
1402 Du sk y Stree t, S yrac 'i se ,

9:00-?

Pt. Pleasani ,
&amp; VIcinity
Movi ng Sale : Augu st 111, 2nd,
Acro ss From Crawford t Stclro,
208 Smith Str ee t AI Henderso n. r ~
Home Interior, Dishes. l tnen' ftc

Extra Nice Clothes, Avor1 Fut neture, 9-5.

Gutter a
Downs pouts
Gutter eleenlng
Painting
FREE ESnMATES
Mt-2168
5/l~TFfrt

lull tim e aucl ton ee r, c om p lete

aucl ton

serv tce

lt ce nSod

166,0 hto &amp; West Vtrg tniS, J(M -

•Garages

773·5785 01 304-773-5447.

•

90 . Wanted to Buy

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

985-4473
L-~--------~,~~~-~

LIVE PSYHICS
Want to Help
You Ill
Let them tell you
about the futurelll
1-900-868-4100

Ext. 2469

~

Absolu te fo p Dollar · All lJ s Stl
ve r And Gold C otn s, Proo bo tc; ,
Dtamonds, AntiQ Ue Jewelry Gold
Rtng a, Old Glasswa re, St ~M,f\g ,
Etc.- AcQU ISi ttons Jewelry . u r~s

FREE ESTIMATES
'

Cotn Shop. 15 1 Second Avcn~~e
Gallipolis, 6 1 ~ · •46- 2842.
'

~~~2_~~--~ ­
l arg e AmOunu 50't. eo ·~ ) "•
RPM Records. Aller 8P M s 1.3

675-2930. 43l9 JupEH n oae .
Jamestown. O H 45335
·
Cl ean

6;

Lal e Model Cars

Truck s, 1990 Models Or Newtr
Smith Bu ick Po nhac. 1900 r a. :

ern Avenue, Galhpoh9.

J &amp; O's Auto Parts Ruyrng

.,;

..

o; ,n

vage vehtclos Sellt!'lg parts 10,
773-5033
,.

large Trampolme m good Condl
l10n 614 -256-6800
..

'

$3.99 per min.

Must be 18 yra.
Serv-U(61 9)-645-8434
llttnmo

Let a Psychic
Answer your
.Questions!
1-900-868·4900
Ext. 7625
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-u (619)-645-8434
11tiiMO

F REE
Pic k-up discarded,
appllances, baHerlea,A
many metals .
614-992·4025
8 am -8 pm ,

GRUESER'S
GARAGE
Body work, car truck 6
truck painting, minor
mechanical repair.
Tune-ups,
0 11 Change, Wax,
Buffing ·
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Ask for Kip
~ 11111111

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

PubliC Sale :
and Auction :

Rick Pea rson Auc 11on ComW.ny.

·New Homes

711:111 mo. pd.

Howard L. Wrlte" l

Painting, Siding

Advance. Deadline: 1.oopm the
day t&gt;e lore the ad is 10 run, · ~un ·
day &amp; Monday editt on 1 OOpm

EVEN POIJCE
USE
PSYCHICS!!

. H&amp;H

Tammera
Remodeling
Room additions
Roofing
Garage's, Deck's,

.A ll Yard Sa le a Mu s! Bo Pd1d In

Must be 1B yrs.
SE RV-U (61g) 645-8434

1·800-889-3943

}4ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roo'fing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

IS RIADY
NO Will

EASY

Pomeroy, .1
Middleport . j
&amp; VIcinity

Fnday.

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

MATCH MAKING

Serv-U (619) 645·8434

nary 2nd Road Lelt ; Slgn&amp; Good
Clothing ·School, l oll 01Mtsr •

ffN

35 Ye11rs Exparlence

Trucking Limestone
Bulldor.ing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

---

July 26 th · Au g ust tO ttl, 11· fa
mll1esl I · 7. Northu p. U 1 Ctnte ·

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlddlepor!, Oh10 45760
Da nny &amp; Peggy Brickles
614·742·2193

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles Mlnor·Repairs - Gutter and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling - Oecks
Bathrooms - Kitchen s - Siding

Howard h(avatin

Monday edition · 1():00 a .m· Sat
urday.
•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSJRUCfiON

Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; West VIrginia
Toll Free 1-1100-872·5967
446-9416

88 Pa•d In

DEADUNE: 2:00' p m

t he day befo re the l d ,JI to run
Sunday edltlon · 2:00 p.m r uday

80

with the part11 &amp; /lerv/ce lo back It up

714196 1 mo. pd

81.15 1 -3rd. 1 112 M iles Out 2 18
R1gh 1. Wu her /Dryer, Electric
Range, Cheat Freezer, Jeans

7129 1 mo

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

1

per min.

B11ndsow Mill

BENNETTS

$3.g9 per min.
Must be 18 yrs
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

H&amp;H
SAWMill
Portoble

Umeatone • Gravel

(614) 992·2364

70

Ad va nce .

SERVICE

Ext. 5489

Logs Voty Friendly CroppOtrl Tatl
Rod Colla!, 81 4-448-44151 .

All Yard Sales Mu st

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culven· Dual wall and Regula• 8" 1hru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf.. solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie&gt; pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 314" (' PVC. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s. i. waler pipe (1 00' roll's 1hru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduil
K" Gravetess Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" 1hru 2'' ·Fittings· Regulators· Risers
Full assortmenl or P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water littmgs
Full line or CiSicm. Septic &amp; Water &gt;~o ragc tanks.

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1
1-900-868-41 00

Found: You ng Malt: Dog Mi sses
His Family B lack &amp; Ta n !Lo n~

Serv-U (619 645-8434

St. Rt. 7

Cheater, Ohio

Radne, 614-9411·22118.

Mus1 be 18 Yrs.

I &amp; WPWnCS liD SUPPLY

985-4422

f ound- am111 houatdog . nea r

1·900·255·0500
Ext. 5266
$3.99

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

7:00p.m.

Dirt• Sand

Two 7 WH k Old I OII d biiCk kii 1011S, 514-9112-21112.

UNEXPLAINED
POWER!!

Fres Estimates

PUMP TRUCK

To good nome· Auttrahan
Sl\epherd, doe l. -~~~ malte good
p&amp;l 6 14·1182·4111.

60 Lost and FounJl

JONES' TREE SERVICE

nights until

R.L'IOLLON
TRUCKING

I&lt;IRtn s, tree, IO QOod home. 304 -

937-2733.

614-992-3470

367-0266 - 1-BQ0-950·3359

Gifts • Folkart
• Antiques
992-7696

•war,

Kin~na to give
1-8 weeks
old. Some C11ico, tittf stripped ,
Siamese. mlrod. 304-812-3557

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Open Monday

Free Klttent, long H1lrtd CaliCO
Excellenl Uouurtl To Good
Home! 514-317.0283.

Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to
know??

Air Conditioning

. . ....

3,882.73
Extracurrtculllr
AC11Yitlea .............. 68, 186.13
Facllltlea ·
Acqultltlon ........... 2,177.32
DebtServtcea ...... 40,123.80
EmplQy- S.l1rlell &amp;
W~~gea .................. 113,351.76
Employee• Retirement
Beneflta ................ 55,607.77
Purcholld
Servlcel .............463,853.21
Suppllta &amp;
Materllla ............ 106,761.52
Ceplllll Outllly........ 2,358.67
Clpltal Outley •
Repllcernent ......... 2,370.00
Other Objec18 ........ 2,172.26
Total Dlaburltftltnll
(Oper) .............4,130,183.88
Exc. Rcpta. Overi(Under)
Dtab .................... 260,784.68
NON-OPERAnNG
RECEIPTS
(DISBURSEMENTS)
Contribution•
Donlllon• .......... . 5, 188.62.
Proc. Fm. Sale I · • of
Aauu .................... 149.34
State Sourcea ...... 1 236.03
Feder• I
Sour................ '!! 1,001.29
Operating Trenelera tn ........................... 19,565.87
Relund of Prior Ye.,.
Expend ................... 4,807.97
Operttlng Tr1naltr1 Out .................... (1 9,565.87)
Refund of Prior y..,.
Recelpll .............. (4,803.93)
Total Other Fin. Source.
(U-) .................139,579.32
Dlaburumenta I Other
U1ta/Net ............ 400,364.00
Begtnnii'IQ Fund C•h
Btlllnce ..............ttV,837.56
Ending Fund C11h
Balance .......... 1,320,201 .56
RtaerYidlor
Encumbrtncee .. 290,893.71
UnreHrvtd Fund
Balllnce ........... 1,029,307.85
Caah In lllnka
(Ntot) .................... 418,565.21
lnvtl1m8nta .......801,636.35
Total Fund
llllanee.......... 1,320,201.56
MEMORANDA DATA
Alanlld
Ya1Uitlon ............32,863,380

*'Fbi! ptogram ~ loatis for jnuclxM

~

Specializing In
Family Praetlce

KAnE KELLER

Public Notice

doWntown can help to create jobs and reraln therii, not to mention provide a pleasant
place for folks to get togelber and enjoy themselves. That's why we've allocated
$3 mlllion in available loans for downtown revitalization proj~. The loan may be
used for leasehold impl'IM!Dients, fixtures, equip~~ landscaping or other structural
and beauttfication projects.• In addition to our own revitalization program, we also
suppOrt a n~r of f~ral and state
programs-such as SBA, LOWDOC,
Unked Deposit, the 166 Program and ·
others. If you've got ideas for dOWntown
improvements, we may be able to help
you along the way. Stop In and see us.
All loans are subject to standard credit
.. .
crlffr!a.
., r

Racine, Ohio 45771

AlCina, Olllo 45771
(&amp;14) 94..3013 Phont
(814) 94..2018 FAX

61271'111 mo

Actlvltlll ................5,277.52
Ctaaa Matarlalt &amp;
F-..................... 11,865.04
Milo Recelpb .... 476,874.02
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ......... 585,703.19
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS
Employ- S.larlee I
Wagea .................. 63,067.95
Employeea Retirement
Benaflu................55,557.74
Purchued
Servlce~ ............. 445,107.35
Suppllel I
Materlalt ............. 89.342.33
Cepltal Outlay........ 1,224.17
Cepltal OutlllyReplacement ......... 2,370.00
Other Objec18........... 109.03
Total Diaburaemenu
(Oper) .......... - ..... 657,378.57
Exc. Rcpta. Overi(Under)
~~~PERAnfig 1 '675·38&gt;
RECEIPTS
{DISBURSEMENts)
State Sourcee., ... 10,236.03
Fed. Sourcae ..... 121,001.29
Operating
Tran1flra - In ............ 10,000
Debt
Refund of Prior Yeert
Servtca..............40,123.80
Expend ...................2,659.45
TOTAL DISBURSEMENTS
(Oper).............. 3,433,674.69 Operating Tran11er1 Out ....................... (5,479.89)
Exeeul Recpte.
Total Other Ftn. Source•
over/(Under)
Dlebmu..............335,116.65 (U-) ................. 138,416.86
Dl1burnmenta I Other
OTHER FINANCING
UIII/Net .............. 66,741.50
SOURCES (USES)
Beginning Fund C..h
Contribution• I
Bal ......................347,748.19
Don~~ttone .............. 3,125.93
Ending Fund Cah
Proc Fm. S.te I LoN of
.- . .................... 3,149.34 . Balance.............. 4t ~487.69
Reaerved lor . ·
Operating
Encumb,.neea:::: 19,783.05
1'r11ne~n ........... 9,040.32
Unr"erved Fund
Refund of Prior Y•••
Expend ................... 1,911.61 Balance.............. 394,704.64
AGENC'fFUND
Operating TranlferiExtraeunlcular ·
·Out ..................... (13,560.43)
Actlvltlea .............. 36,454.03
Refund of Prior y_.
·Recalpta .............. (4,803.93) TotatRecelpta (Operatlng) .........36,454.03
TOTAL OTHER FINANCING
OPERATING
·SOURCES
(USES) ................. (1,137.16) DISBURSEMENTS
Dlabur-nta I Other
· Employ- Slllerlet I
u...INet ............ 333,979.49 Wagea ....................... 290.81
EmploY"" Retirement
:Blgtnntng Fund Cnh
Balllnce .............. 556,531.88 Btnellta.......................50.03
Pure hued
Ending Fund Cuh
Balllnce .............. 890,511 .37 s.rvt.................. l8,745.86
Suppllel &amp;
R-·vectror
Encumbrlnces .. 270,711.27 M1terlala .............. 17,426.19
C1pltal Outlay ........ 1,134.50
'unreurved Fund
·a.t ...................... 619,aoo.to Other Oblec18 ........ 1,463.23
Tobl Dlabu,..,.nta
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
(Oper) ..................39, 110.62
Food Service
S.ln .................... 91,686:&amp;1 Exc. Rcpta. Over/(Under)
Dlab ......................(2,656.59)
Extracuntcutar

We've Come
up
,,
•
Wi1h3' on
•
to aRevi~ ed
Downtown.

P.O. Box458
/

614·985-3982

STATEMENT$
Combined Flnancllll Report
of the BOIII'd of Education
For the Flecat Y- Ended
June 30, 1996
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS
Te..................... 739,544.29
Earnings on
tnvntrnenta ........64,240.78
Ellraco.nlcutar
Actlvltlee .............. 53,965.92
ClaM M-Illie I
F"e..................... 12,540.48
MIIC. A-'ptl ............ 15.36
GnlntalnAid
Slate Sour-.2,718,882.94
Federal Sourcea179,601.57
TOTAL RECEIPTS
(0pel'lltlng).......3,768, 791.34
DISBURSEMENTS
lnetructlon ...... 1,992,124.07
Supporting
Strvl-............1,327,198.54
Community
s.rvl....................3,882.73
extr.currlcular
Actlvltlee ...............68,168.13
Fecllltlee
Acquleltlon .......:...2,177.32

ABC Entertainment boss Ted
Harbert made it clear that without
such shifts "Murder One" would
have been history: r.Thc fact that
{Bochco)·was willing to say - on
his own, without having to be told
by thC network - 'I'll do three stories instcad,ofonc, and we' ll make
th'is cast cliangc'- I felt an obligation to give him another shot."
The disappearance of Bcnzali 's
chara&lt;;ter, Jllllff attorney Ted Hoffman, .w,ill bC explained simply,
Bochi:d Sl!YS ..:..'meaning he won't
be killed oflby abomb like a soap.opera 'cluintl:ler. .

I

DOUGLAS D. QUNTER,
M.D., -INC~
J.

Roofing, Vinyl
Siding, Garages,
Porches, Sidewalks
and Add-ons .
Free Estimates
Phone

Public Notice

"

Lively, Sonya Welle, Tetal Wright and Mall11a
Johnson; third row left, Lyndsay Kingery,
Christina Denny, Heather Lovejoy, Becky Gibson, Celli Sigman and Tina Caldwill; and
fourth row left, Jill Bickle, Misty Mount, Jennifer
Cremeens and Katie Allen. Not .pictured are
Krlatle Davison, Elizabeth Keeton, CheiHB
Stowera, Hannah Overstreet and · Alllstsnt
Mlsay Keeton.

Fifth &amp; Peart Street&amp;

QUICK
'
CONSTRUCTION

o1J

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

P. M.

(Lime StoneLowRIIel)

Repla"ment
Windows

28563 BASHAM RD.

.
We will worl&lt; wi1hin your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pome10 Street
Mason: wv

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Mt-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

"No Job Too urge or Too Smsll"

Peoples Bank believes.that vital downtowns make
for healthy communities, because an attractiVe and prosperous

The French City Twirlers Baton and Flag

Glvfaway

5 Kittena G.,._, I Wttlts Old
114-44&amp;3738. .

-Bochco hopes three!s the charm for
.ABC's new,drama 'Murder One' . By TIM KISKA'
The Detroit Newa

Twenty local high school stu·
dents participated in the Ohio Uni&gt;'ersity Governor's Scholars Program which concluded Friday at OU
in Athens.
· . The pro~ram is an enrichment
program for talented and gifted high
school students. Students focus one
of the following academic areas:
architecture, business entrepreneur- .
ship, computers, creative writing,
MEIGS SCHOLARS - Melga High School students attending
education , photography, psychology
the OU Governor's Scholars Program were, from left: Beth Farley,
and sculpture.
Students attending were: Eastern T.J. King and B.J. Fowler.
Local -- Jamie Drake, Robert Harris
and Jeremy Kehl; Southern Local -- served as student directors. Tim· July 8.
Erica Arnott, Chad Clark, Ashli Peavley and Josh Roberts from
The Governor's Scholars ProDavis, Mau Dill, Josh Ervin, Jenny Meigs, and Meredith Crow from gram, funded by the Ohio Division
Friend. Amber Hayes, Josie Jarrell, Eastern served as student leaders. ·
of Special Education, the OU
Jeremiah Johnson, Tara Michael,
Studem leaders are selected from Provost's Office and the OU School
. Evan Struble, Trish Warner, Corey last year's outstanding scholars and of Curriculum and Instruction, was
· Williams and Jennifer Yeauger; coach students in academic contests. conducted under the direction of
Meigs Local -- Beth Farley. B.J. Student directors help in the coordi- Ray Skinner, emeritus professor of
· Fowler and T.I. King.
nation of the program.
.
curriculum and instruction, and
In addition , Bea Lisle from
Nearly 150 high school students Sarah Jane Skinner, a graduate stuSouthern, Angela Hale from Meigs and 16 student leaders and directors dent in the school of curriculum and
and Robbie Murphy from Eastern attended the program which began instruction.

40

Personals

Gentleman Seflkrng Companio nship From Nr ce lremale For Talk I,
Walks &amp; Foendsntp Send Re pl ies To · ClA 309 c/o Gallipolis

Oa11y Tr!bune, 825 Thild Avenue,

Ga~pobs, ·OIH563 t

40

Giveaway

1D Inch

Desktop Color T.V.

Neoda Repaired. 614· 24~ 56&amp;4 .

Non-Wor ktng Washers, Ory e rt .
S toves. Re tngerators, r ree/tHI ,
Atr Condtt toners, Color T v ·•·
VCR's, Also Junk Cars , 814 ? ~
1238.
~

=---------------L

To p d ollar· an ttques, tvrrutur,,
glass, chma , ctor.ks, gold , SIIVflJ,
corns , wa tches , estA tes O s oy
Marttn, 614·992·7441
4

Wanted To Svy Junk Au tos W• t6
O r W• thou t Mo t or s Call I Rrrr
Lrvely. 61 4·308·9303
•

Wtll Buy Childrens Cloth1ng 0·6l
One Pnce For AU, 614 ·,...6 ·0364 r

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 o

Help wanted

$$$1Danctus,ns N efld .,,a
money, we need you . Sou1ht o r~:

Inn Sh&lt;Mbat. 304 6/S-5955

•.

Armed Guald S ror GDvfl r nnlen1'
ContraCI S1 t 18 Par lh Ptv4:
Benefm. ?IF. 'i.n !Srt . 6t'\ -Mi 9,.
51.'15
As per Artrc le 9. l ran•len And

vacaocre3, Sechon B, flullng . ol
the Negotiated Agree"'e nt bet
ween the t-4 LTA and the Boord o{
Educalton , the Me1gs lo cal
School OtStllc l rs posting rhe lor
lo wing vacancy lor rn regu lar
teach1ng stall Juntor H1g11 SC't ·
ence Teacher (~ten ce cef!tl,l:l •

uon or elemen tary certdJt.a i!0/1
wnn pnor e,penence tn prade 5 7
&amp; 8 anrt knowl edg e o mtdrHc

__ ____
sctool concept
)
...::...:._

,_

AnENTION
ACT NOW
Ou1 Company Is Soelung r :&gt; lr'l(h
Vlduals To Ft ll Porman en t. f vll

~

11me Po st!tons Ctea ted Ry Pro
mot•')n Theut Posrlrons Arc En .
try LGV91 Wtlh Po s5•bthty 01 flapt~

Advancement. We Provide lns1d
Tratnmg 01 All Necessary Sior;tll
Needed To Perform Ou!IB!I No
Prlor E•perie~ Is Reqt..nrod S~
Jection WtU Be Made Bued O"l
l ntervrtw And Screenmg Pro

cess . Applican ts Must Be AVI ll -

abra To Start Work lmmedtlttll
As Selectron Proctss Wrll Begtf)- •

ThJ5 Week. Stan•no Pay At 1300 ~.
I Wk As Per Wt~Uen Agreement ' '

Ac.:·:

Pl'!one l ntervtews w.u Not Be
cepted Call6 t4 -441 1969 MonT
da~. July 29th And Tuesday, Jvl-(

:JOih Only Foo

"-"''""'"!.

~:

Babysitter NeediKt In My Home
Non-Smoker Would Be Ava,lable' Sf.

To Work Any HoutS For Wore rn .., , ,
2 Uale Beagle Pups To Giveaway formabon CaH 61 ... 41 ·0802 Aller :
To Good llome, 61 ....S.070~
6 P.M.
•&lt;.

..
----------------~-----------------------------------~~~----

�..

-

..

Monday, July 29, 1996

..

t

..• Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • MfddlePQrt, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS
1 c.n. prov.

42 Mythlcel
... : ( l i g h t )
48 Lortgtlmea
48 Ear(comb•

4 WMQnd.

Mlcomlng

FINANCIAL

'• ~· ATTN

Po tnl Pleasant" Po stal
Jp:cltrkJsoners
Pos111001 Perman•nt full time tor
Full Bentflls For

210

Apartments
lor Rent

Business

Opportunity

monlh. Free dtltvery &amp; '
Onl-,. 11 Oakwood Homes

f:eaam. applw:.atron and salary 1"1fo

teal!

(70SJ906 2350Ell 36 70

wv.304-755-5885.

:~

A

All Areas 1 Sntrley
Spear I, 304-6 75-1429

·~--~-------------

1 -.6.ble Avon Represenlllives I~~~:!______:.__
: ·needed Eam money for Chr~st- I·
1 .mas biNs at hOma;'ll work. 1·800· Bus•neuperson Of Builder ; Na·
I QQ2 -6356 ot 304-882 -2645 , Ind. tional ManulaCiurlf aee•mg 10
Rep
Quality DEALERS in some oeloct
open areas. Steel buildings u
Ambros1a Uach•ne Inc . Look 1ng low os $3.00 sq. foal Call (303)
tor machtnt ll. Syrs eapenenc:e. 75&amp;-&lt;1 35, EXT. 1!m
Ca ll 304 -675 -1722 Uonday - Fr~ ­
6usane$SC)tf10n. smUI Silt Conoay 1·:r&gt;-3 00
1rlc1or, NatiOnal Wanutecturer
Compwter Ustts Needed Work
Own Hours. 20t&lt; To $SOt&lt; IYr. 1·

11)().34&amp; 711111 X1173.

DeiNert on-. PotrJ. r.,.. -

Gas Loadot

In Tho "'-"" Gas
Industry Ia Stek.inSI OthYtrJ
Orrven To wont Part· T"" Flutble Schedut. 1'1&gt;11110n1 In GaJii.
poks &amp; ~"*Of AtM. E acehnl

Clppo&lt; .. ni!J Fo&lt; S o -

L-·

ln'iJ For Addlllonal lnt;Ome Or

Seasonal Work. To ~i ly Must
H- COL, Wid\ - · • lie·

..,.... "11 -~ DEAlERSHIP lo•
............. Bog """' Fb ... tiol

on sa)t.s and COMinlcnon (303)

?'il-3:100. ""' :r.m.

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE ls Tt.. Wost Effic;1ent
i\nct lowest Em.ss1ons Ou1door
Wood Furnace On The Market
Ctntr11t Boliw lt Currentty Look·
•ng For A Oualtty Deller In Thr s
lmfne&lt;t~att Area. For lnformalton
01'1 Btcommo A Oea~ Or For A.
Free Brochure Call 1-800 -248-

4681 0.

H111-78:! · 257~

992-2218.
.

11255
OH 056:11

E1pononcod Mecll111lco

__..:...;.;,.::.;:..________ 1

~~~~~~~~~~-~1

New Bank Repoa. Onl-,. 3 left Still
l"'watranly: 30.c-75S.7191 .
O:lder Schultz home, owner occu ·
pted, 2 bedroom, excellent for
young or retll'ed cou~e. poced
'"IP8Ch0n. :rl4-67S.S39 4

Paleltll'l9 Rd . 10mtn fro, Rt2, Mason Co 314 acre wnh 3 bedroom
Brandy wtne mobile home, sell fo;
$26 .000. owner financing Accept
farm ttactor or land as trade -tn .

304·562·5840.

Work around 8:00am-5:00pm
5 112 days per week. Paid vacation, medieallniVI'ance. Call for
Interview.

TAI.eOUNTY FORO
461 South Thlrd,lliddl•po•.
OH, 614-992·2196.

Puce Buater. 1&amp;97 3bedroom
$825 down , S159/mo Free delivery &amp; setup. Onl-,. at Oakwood

sex lamiHalslatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
moll8 any sucll prsferanat,

Full T1me Servtce Technu::.an
Prerer E1peuenced Wtll Tratn
Rtghl Person Outboard &amp; Inboard
Boats. 614 367 7902.
HOME TYPIST, PC users need·
ed S4S ,OOO tncome potential.

Call t·800·5t3-4343 Ext B-!1368.
lmmedtate Opentng local buSt·
ness, Fuii-T1me Salary Plua Ben·
el1ts, 10me College Sack Ground
and selling Exp&amp;r•ence Requtred
Send Resumlt' to PO Box 5oil2
Kerr, Ohio 456-43
lmmedtate Open+ngs AvallaDie
For CenUted Nurse Atdes. Com·
petlti~a Wages. Ditferenral With
Exper•ence Stgn On Bonus
Available, Equal Opportuntty Emplayer Contact The Asststant Dt·
rec tor 01 Nursrng, Ptnecrest Care
Center, t70 Ptnecrest On'lle, Galltpohs, Ohio -45631 614 --446-7112.
lmmed•ate Open1ngs Avar lable
For Certt hed Nurse Atdes. Compe11t1ve Wage~. Dtllerental Wtfh
E xper rence , Sivn On Bonu 1
Avarlable, Equal Oppor tunity Emplayer Contact The Asststam Director Of Nurstng. Ptnecrest Care
Cen ter, 170 Prnecreat Onve, Gal hpohs, Ohio .&lt;~5631 . 614-~6 - 7112.
Lady to ltYe·ln and care lor elderl~
gentlemen. lioht housework. and
coo~ one meat a day, tn ex change lor room and bo ard , no
expenses to pay Cal l 304 ·67S-

3350.
Need someone to ltve-tn &amp; care
lor elderly lady, preter mature person Of couple, pay &amp; trme-oll neg ,
6t4-698-2765
Needed Ortver · In state or out of
sta te, your car or m1ne. call tor
more ll"'formallon. 3::&gt;-4-675-7818
Now accepttng appltcallon s lor
the posllton of Dental Hygtentst
Please send resume to :
Dental Hygtenrst, P.O Box 360,
Mason, WV 25260
Now Taktng Applrcatton,s For
H a ~rdresser. Apply Ar Hatr Highlights 453 S.R 7 North, Gat•pohs
Overbrook Cen1er has par 1 t•m e
ST NA poswons lor au sh•hs . anyone tnterested please contact
Jac kt&amp; Cremeans at 614 Q92 ·

6&lt;72

Wanted Mature Women To ltve
In Wrth Elderl y Lady Ambulatory
Wtth ASIISt Sa lary Plus Room
And Board Wi!h Pnvate Ouaner s
N•ce Home In Gallipoli s Wlfh
Pleasant Surround1ngs Hous ekeeptng And Cooktng Reqwed
Rehtrences AM Backgro und
Check Required Call 6 14 446

9627 Between S.OOAnd SOO PM

120

Tills newspaper wll nol
knowllngly aceept
advertisements for real estate
..nk:hls In violation ollhalaw.
Our readers are hereby

lnlomted tnal sll dWellings

Situations
Wanted

Wanled: Dump lruck 10 rent fof 1·
2 months. Call Johnny 1·800·319-

opponunlty basis.

REAL ESTATE

1bedroom, $2,000 down, S2601mo.
304-675-7-482
287Z Thtrd Street, Sy racuse , 2
lot s 112 acre total, 4 BR. LR , FA,
OR, k• tchen, ut•l•ty, new bath, new
plumbmg, overlookrng OhiO AtVer,
available September 1sl, $45,000,

614-992·5006 or614-992-74116

Askino 1375; Singer S...gor OBO
Call 814·245 -5008 or 814-370 -

Z8113

180

Wanted To

Do

4 Bedroom Ranch . Red Brick.
New ly Remodeled . State Route
218, Mercerville, Ohio 014 •440·

.

FANTASTIC . OPPORTUNITY
FOR INVESTORS: 1D apartment
unas. Vtand St , fully rented, good
mcome Only $97.500 . Watson
Aealty 304 -675-3433
3bedroom bath , hv •ng room wl
hardwood flo ors, krtchen &amp; dintng
area Tog ether. new root, garage,
on Rt 2 304 -675 -4139 or 304 -

675-7326 ah"' 6:30
Reduced Pnce, country home tn
town. beauuful 1 314 acres wnh
woods, moSIIy kNel, located tn vtl·
lag e of Utddleport with a lovely
t988 Schutrs Special Ed1110n mobile home, bath &amp; a half. With carpettng throughout , some new,
plus many extra's added 10 home
1nclude s deck &amp; central atr,

phone St4·992·7350 (No Suncay
calls !
Six room&amp;, new kttchen/ tat h,
Pearl Street, Middleport, S29,000,
6t-4 ·992 ·37•9, lloyd Gnmm, no

·

Tt1ree bedroom home 1n country,

Whites Hill Rd., RUtland, one balh,
1n-grourxt pool, 614-992·5067.

for S81e

127.000,- 6t4-367·0126
14x70 Uob•le Home t 112 Acre
lot, RIVer Valley School Otstrict, t
M1le From Cheshire On 5S4
Stove, Rel t~ gerator, Washer .
Beths. 2 Bedrooms, Heat Pump,
16xt6 1=\:)(ch, Bt4-3e7 7043

2

1964 Act1ve , 12~60 . 2 bedroom,
remodeled ba th; electrtc stove.
natural gas ho t water &amp; heat
good coM1110n, SS,OOO , 614·992,

1981 totx70 3 bedroom 2 baths
$7.500 , •nctudes sktrun'o. porch:
awmng. 2 ac, new water heater
new carpet new lurnaco Must ~
moved out ot K &amp; K lrar ler pa rk

Any Odd Jobl, pt~inting, carpen.

1988 Oakwood 14 • 72 3 Bed ·
. t t/2 Ba ths, large Front
care Far The Elderly tn Their IKo tc h·en 8x20 Deck . 6t4 ·446 ·

Homo, Wookdayo Only, 6 14 .. 46· 1125.

Pr1Cft.l 14.251-e342.

1 112 Acres, State Rou te 180,
13,500 And 2 Lou 100x300
$6,000 Each, 61.C·446·0130, 614-

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dr~ve
!rom S2H to 1315. Walk 10 shop
&amp; movles Cal l 614 -446 · 2568
EQUal Housmg ()pportumry

368-9t26.

5 Acres For Sale $10,000, local·
ed On Sailer Road Between Vtn·
ton And R1o Grande, 614 · 388·

S521.
80 acres ttmbefl woods wtth mmeral rights, lndl8n Run Road, Otive
townshtp, Meigs County, $60,000,

614·985·3933.
614-775-9t73
M81gs Cou nty Hey Hunters
here's a Lot for ~ou 8 Acres
$8,000 , 11 + Acres $8 , 500 -both
Very Remote Also, 2 lots each 5
Acres Ready lor Your Home, or
10+ ACres $8.500 great tor
Horses.
Gall ra County . Gallipolis, 2 Mtles

Oul Neighborhood Rd. 9 Acres
$14,500, 0• 10 Acres 117,000.
Just N. ,of Huntrngton, 3 Miles Out
Teens Au n &amp; Chambers Rds.
Your Horses Wtll Love this 8 acres Wtlh Stream $1t ,900 , 5 Acres $12,000 , Several 10 Ac res
lots Avatlable
All above owner F1nanced wrth
tO% Down tO% Oft Cash Pur
chases Call k;Jr Maps.
Parcels on Rayburn Rd Wa ter ,
paved road reasonable restrtc ttons. 304 ·67S-5253 (no Singlewide tnqutres please)
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
Deauttful 2ac Iota. public water.

Clyde Bo- Jr , 304·576·2336
Trar ler lol lor Rent on Jer'tcho

Road. 304·895-3534.

1gg4 14X 76 flee twood 2 Ded room, 2 bath, ElK, LA, all eleetuc,
Cia, lppliances, skylights, garden
lllOilOy - ..

payoff or rake over loan o f

Furmshed Apartment S2851Mo. 1
Bedroom, Utlhttes Patd, 920
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 61 &lt;I ·
446·3644 Alttr 7 P.M.
Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
$205/Mo., Utilities Paid , AC, 607
Sec ond Avenue, Galli pol ill, 61 4·

446·3644 After 7P.M.
Furnished Efttctency Share Bath,
St851Mo., Ut•lilles Pa•d, 607 Second, Galhpohs, 614·4-'16·3844 AI·
ter 1 P.M
Gractous hv•no 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vrllage Manor and
R1vera1de Apartments 1n Middle port. From $232 ·$355 Call 61-4-

992·5064. Equal Housono Opporti.Kltties
MiddleporT N. 3rd Ave, 1bedroo m,
furntslled apt. depostt &amp; reference

required 304·882·2566
New Haven· 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom lur rusl'1ed apts. Deposit &amp; referenc01. 304-882·2566

Newly Remodted furmshed 3
Room Apanment At 651 Second
Avenue Next To Bossard Library,
$350/Mo., Plus $350 Oepoart Re-quired No Pet11 Allowed, Reference Requirecl. Call Judy Or Debbie 81 •·440-- 7323
Ntce 2 Bedroom Furnished
Apartment, Gallipolis. laundry

Room, Air, No Poll, S3651Mo.,
Plus Oeposit.SI4-&lt;146-2800
N ice 2 bedroom, WID hook-up,
ground floor . References &amp; de·
posn, no pets. 304-67S.51G2.
Ntce Clean 2 Bedroom All Electric. Furnished Kttchen, Cloae To
Spnng Va~ey. No Pe11, $3501Mo .,
+D.O. References, 814-448-8157.
Ntce two bedroom apartment 1n

FbiT'&lt;!fOY. no-· 614-992·5858.
One bedroom apartment, fur nished, in Pt. Pleasant, no pels.

3()4-875-13811
One bedroom apartment In Pt.

RENTALS
Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom House located Wtthtn

City Loi1)11S 01 Galhpolos $200 De·
posrt, SjQO Uomh, No Pets, Mu st
Have References Call 614·446 ·
4069 Until 9 00 P.M II N()o Answer
leave Message

One bedroom apartment In Middleport, all uhlrties paid, $270/mo.

plus $100 deposot Call 614·992·
71106, Bam·5pm
Twm R•vliHI Tower, now accepting
applicaTions lor !Dr HUD subsld·
•zed apt tor ttder ly and nand• ·

capped EOH 304-875-ll679

450

FurnIshed
Rooms

2 Bedroom. depoSit, you pay uttll·

ties. 304-875-2535.
2 BR wnh Baaemem Garage on

t41, $350 plus Depoal1614·446 ·
65116
2-3 BR Carpet9d Crty School Dis
tnc1, LG Famrly RM Avatlable Au ·
gus I 151 $350 Month S1 SO De·
postt 304 -757 · 1013
3 Bedroom Wrth Gat age 1053
Rou te 588 S285 per monlh $ 150
DepoSit 614·446-1340

C1rcle Motel. Gallipolit, OH 8t4 4-46· 2501 or 1514·387-0612 . Effe ·
c1ency Rooms. Cable. Air, Phone.
M1crowave &amp; Rafrioerator, Taa1
Serv1ce t/2 Pr ic e For Motel
Rooms lor rent · week or moncn
Starnng at t1201mo Galha Ho1el.
6 "·416-9580
Sleeprng rooms wi th cookr ng
i\lso tratl&amp;r space on nver. All
hook-ups Call afler 2 ·00 p.m ..
304-773-!ieS t. MasonV{V

30H75-Ste2.

460 Space for Rent

Three bedroom house tn Chester,
many updateSf remodeliog De ·
posit and references requ~red ,
814-445-9821 aher 8:00pm.

Commerci1l Space Approx . 800
Square Feet located Corner Of
State Street &amp; Third Avenue, Gal lipoltl. The Former lic:ense Bu ·
reau LocatOn. Call514-4~ .

Two or three bedroom house on
beautiful kit tn Pomeroy. HUD ac cepted, 1400/mo. or sell or lease
with option to buy on r.ontrac:1 wtth
good references, no ~ets , 61 4·

698-7244.

Tra1l8f 101 lor ren~ 112 acre, beaU ·
~ ful sacluded area, Sr 7, Chtsllf,
depo111 &amp; referencu, S125J
month, 614 ·992·2001

470 Wanted to Rent

420 Mobile

Homes
lor Rent

2 Bedroom Treiler, 8 Mllea Roule

218, 12201110 + O.pooil, Reier·
encu. 614·446·8172, 614·256·
6251 .
2 Bed room Hailer, referenc:e I
depoail, no pels, Rt1 Norrh Lucaa

Rd. on righL304-t7S.1076.

3·• Bedroom house tn Pt Pleasant or GaUipofis area,
out of
town . Contac:t Tem at 304·875 ·

pr...,

t612.

490

homoo. 11arlin9 ot 1240·1300.
MWtr, Wllttr and traah included.

114-0112-2167.
Two C'o Pltli 304-t7S.3507, 014·
446-8221.

•

HID0-499-3499

Reh•gerator , freezer, Washer,
Dryer, Stcwe, Atr ConchttOnet', S50
EechBU-256-t 238
U&amp;ed F~rntture t30 Bulavlfte Ptke,
Ltvmgroom Sune, Beds, Chests,
Bunk Beoa, Refngerators, Desks,
614-446-4782

.

-

AKC Whnelsil'ller/sable, German

I Sheptlard pupptes, excellent tern·
~pe:;.ra:.rre=:n:.t.=Xl:.:4..:-l;:.:.7:.5-:.:.74::9::5:_
. _ __

CFA Reg•ste r ed female Htma ·
layan ktttens, one blue, twO seet. 7
weells old, 614·992-386 7
Groom Shop -Pet Groomrng Fea tur•ng Hydro Bath Don Sheets
Call6t4-4-46·0231
H•ppy Tncks-Oroom &amp; Hydro
Balh Great for Flea Problems. Pt.
Pleasan1, Central locauon 304·

675·2696 Va&lt;&gt;ne Tayto•

____G_o_Od
__s____
Bailey's Bow Shack

1

Arc,_, and Black Pl&gt;wder su~
,,...., ,
'"
pliel. 9:00 · 8:00 Oeiley. Morgan
0454

Rabbtts For Sale B•g And Little
lop Eared Netherland Dwarf s.
Mm Rex , Dutch, Everyth•ng Mus t
Go l 614·368-9844 .

Antiques

-,. or sell A1venne Anttques.
112C E Ua•n Street. on R1 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W tO ·oo
a.m to 6.00 p.m., Sunday 1.00 to
e:oo p.m. eu.g92·2526, Russ
Moore owner.

-----------1
Yellow, S125: Hotpoint Double
Oven Electric Range, Yellow,
SSOO, Napla Dining Room Table
With Leal, .c Chalfs, &amp; Deacons
$200 . 8' Fiberglass Truck
Stiver $300 , 61-4 -2-45 1lt88 Ntssan Pulsar ; 4 Cycllnder ,

SSP $759.00. 2·12" 1nch Speak·
er 300 Wall Amp Wtth Blau -

bunch CD Playor. $500.00 . Call
Alter 4:30-304·675-2352
C&lt;&gt;ndilion, $250, S14..48·S251 .

r
usse 11 puppieS, two
lemales and one male, t 0 lbs lull
grown, S250tea, 6 t4· 742-2050

Musical
Instruments

2836
1983 Jaguar, -4 dr , 6 el y, $6,500.
614·992·4t11
1983 T 81rd, 50 , auto, Hemage ,
loaded. new t~res . real good body.
runs good, $1 ,295, 6 t 4-2.t:t7-4292

S14·379·2720.

. 8778.

486 OX CompuiO', 420 HO, 8 MB
RAM, Super VGA Monitor,
mouse anCI speaker, call ti14·

1192-6293.
49 Ft. X18 ft. steel' bndgelguard
rait , 14-4ft. x 18ft. crane mats,
welderi, compressor, office
equtpment. 35 ton Fruehauf trail ·
er, 12 ton trail·ez traifar, otfrce and
construction trailers, Ford u-heul
tool van, small tools, fuel tanks.
wood lorms, 665ft •10 f300 volt
alxlpe eleclflcal w1re 304 -675 5096 II no answer leave mestage
on rec:Ofder
Boot1 By Redwtng, Chtppewa .
Tonv Lama. Guaranteed Lowest
Prices AI Shoe Cale. Gall1pohs.

6t4·J88.S521!.

1988 Ponua.:: Grande Am Grey, 4
Door. Power lo cks, Windowt
And Seats looks Good, Runs
Good S2,500 , After 4 P.M . 614 ·

245·9657
1968 T-Btrd , 1989 T-Bifd Fu lly
EqLJpped. 6t4-446-3739
1989 Blue Olds Cutlass Cala11
106,000 Miles /Quad 4 IAuiOmll·
tc, AC, Cru1se Control , Front
Wheel Dr1ve. Intermittent Wipers,

$4,000, OBO 6t4-3S7·7137.
1989 Bulc:k leSabre , excellent
running condttton, V-6, PB, PS,
AC, POW8f Wtndows, $3800, 61-4 ·
940-2045 or6 14-949-2302.
1989 Olds Cutlau Ciera Body
Damage , Good Mocor, 4 Door,

AC, PB. PS, PW, $750, 614·448·

evenings .
Home Grown Tom atoes &amp; P&amp;Q ·
pen. Jacob S1utzne n. 55 Allr so n
Road, Patr101. OH 45658
Red Raspberues Taylor's Berry
Patch. 614-245-9047
Starttng to ptCk toma toes, wholesale &amp; re1111. 304.a82·3626

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1993 Geo Metro, 26 000 Mrles.
A- t Shape, 54,500, t988 Chevy
Astro Work Van . $2 .500 . 614 ·

Ant•que Car Spoke Wheels And
F1re Stone Ttre Srze t175500 19
Inch Mak.e Otter, 6t4 - 4&lt;~6-71 27 .

:-:-:-=---=--:-----1 Auto loans. Dealer w1ll arrange ft·
610

Farm Equipment

nancong even 11 you have been

1994 New Holland square baler,
model 565, excell ent condrllon,
less lhen t SOQ bales baled tiYu 11

$8500, 6t4·742·2086

.

fur ne d down elsewhere . Upton
EqUipment Used Cars 304-4 58·
1069.
S1ivar 1987 Ford Escort, 4 door,
casse11e deck. good condition ,

446·n83.
Garden Tiller {S tateman) SHP
S450: New Western Saddle , Brt dle, Blanke t $270, 1960 Honda

(Hawk 400)1600 Phone 614·368·
9t94
Gravely walk behtnd , 30N dock,
electrtc start, SSOO , call 614-992
3-45-4 after Opm.

$2.900. 614-368-897S

Hydraulic Hoses. Made To Order
Sider's Equ1pmen1 Co 304 -6 75
7421

1983 Ford p1c~ -u p, short-bed,
step ·s•de, 302 3spd w/overdrive,
ps. pD, wtme, ewa alumtnum

Joh n Dee re lndusmal Mow er
F725 54 Inch Cut , less Than 60
Hours. $7.300.614 388 -9349
Wh1t e 2 t Hor se D•esel -4 WO
T1ac1or 5 Ft Belly Motor, low
Hour s , John De ere 301 Wt th
Frontend loader &amp; Srckl e Bar,
Low Hours, 61-4--4 46-3436
Yardman Tractor Mower 20 HP
so- Cut Hydrostatic Kohler En·
g1ne, Used One Summer $1 .900 ,
614-446-0560

630

Livestock

t M•nrature Shetland Ram. 2 Che
VIOl yews 304 675 - 1234 aher

7pm

JE T
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RGbulll In S1ock.
Call Ron Evans. 1-800·537-9526

Olac:k a While Pony W11h Cafl
Harness &amp; Sartdles . 1 Ouarter
Hor se Al l For 5850 6t4 245 ·

·5087
Ktng Wood &amp; Coal Heater With
Blowet Used I Year Eacellent

Condition, $450, 81H46.0516.
longaberger bas/lets wtth every·
thlnQ. magaztne $100, serving
tray S100 , excel lent condrt1on

Three cows wtherler calves. one
2 year old bred heder , 6 14- 742 -

Ca~er

2074

614·3889708

30

1992 Ford Ranger KlT, ext cab,
sport wheels, !iihdmg rear Window,
new ltros. pb, ps. air, am-tm cassette, V-6, w1ll sell lor loan value,
very QOOd co ndr l ron 304 ·675 ·
1992 lsuzu prckup, 5 speed, ntce,
SSOOO, 614 992-259-4 after Epm.

1993 Chovy 1500 W.T.. 5 Speed,
Atr, AMIFM . Tool Bo•el Wtll sell
br pay ott 6t4-4-46-6889

730

manress, changtng table, dresser, excellent condition. S300 30-4·

Cleon. I tBOO OBO St4-245·0020

675-1077

Exc: alfalfa hay from S60J1on &amp; up
Morgan Fa rms, 111 35 304 937

Oiieen' ela w•terHd
wilh 1 second m~tress, $1 75;

201 6

boiJy crib, S30, 614·94~3403
Relrtgeratora, Stoves. Washers.
And Oryera , All Recondttioned
And Gauranttedl $100 And Up .
Wtll Deliver. 614-66g.644 1
'
Start ltlestyler I 5 HP Treadmtll
Wrth ElectrOniC Fi!neu Uon 11or'

I200. St4·256-6321 .

.

Sears room au condrnon&amp;r 8 000

2204.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

550

Goods

Building
Supplies

Block. brick. sewer p1pes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude Win ters ·
Rio Grande, OH C111 814 -245:

5121 .

TRANSPORTATION

71 o

Autos for Sale

'78 Ford Mavenck, l1ght blue,
good condition, must see
nres, new complete exhaust new
brakes, drum rotors comPlete,
new seat covers and more Ask•ng only $850, Pomeroy/ Chester
area. caP 614 -992-4156 . you may

5t90

1987 LE Toyota Van, ps, pb, auto,
over·dnve, dual atr, dual sunroof.

304-t7S.7V65.
1Q88 Mtnwan Plymouth Voyager
SE Cruise lAC, 5 Speed , Manual
Transmi ssion Pass Good Condt ·
bon, Call81-.t-44G-11~ .

..

2679

fO.HJ~

.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

t967 Mu11an9 351 Auto. Now

'(QUit,
~€£!(£t.lt&gt;,

.0\IU?'

Wanted To Buy 10 Inch Sta-ll
Converter Por General Motorl,
350 Or 400 T H M Automatic
Transm1ss•on ,
61-4 -H6 - 7581
leave Message

.......
, 22 Hullh reaort

S5 Ending lor
ldtchon

66 Comparauve

' 24 - lncl the

oulllx

Bofmonta

28 ln!Mnal organs
DOWN
30 Bomblllk:
1
.leal
33 RCIIIO-2 Arm bone
JOM
3 Not hard
34 lnf01'1118110n
4 Snared
38~
5 lbrtlnl
37 Brown•
Ingredient
31 SICIWCIIIOIIII
41 Oun grp.
I - - 11181 you

Pua

Eul

Pau

re

i
I
~

If you wish to own a taxi In New
York City, how mucb do you think the
medallion license would cost?
The declarer in today'8 deal made a
amall slip, but it proved IAl be costly
How would you have pla,yed in ftve clubs
alter West has led the heart queen?
It isn't clear what to open with that
· South hand. Five clubs has the disad·
vantage of taking the bidding past
three no-trump, which might be the
only making game. But with so few
m!ljor·suit cards, pre-empting to the
limit cannot be considered wrong.
"Missed it, partner," said South with
a rueful shake of the head after seeing
the dummy. "King, please."
South's jaw dropped several notch·
es when East ruffed the trick and re·
turned a trump. Suddenly 12 or 13
tricks had shrunk to 10. East hail to
get two diamond tricks to go with the
Initial ruff'.
"I 18Bume you meant that we had
missed three no-trump." said North
with a noticeably sarcastic lAine.
It was unlucky to find the hearts 8-0,
but suppose South givea away the first
trick, playing low from the dummy.
Even if Eut follows suit, it probably
doesn't lose the contract. When West
continues with the heart jack. declarer
playa low from the dummy again .
South wins the next trick (ruffing the
third heart if necenaryl, draws
trumps and claims his II top tricks .
This line backfires only if Eut started
wilh one heart and six diamonds. Then
he can ruff the second heart and return a diamond for a fatal ruJr by Weal
Last May, 53 people bought New
York City taxi medallions. At least
three of them paid more than $175,000.
Wow! That puts South's lost game
bonus into proper perspective.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo•
Celebrity Ciphet' cryptog-~~ms are meted from

e.ch

XUD

EPJD

XUD

HPMWR

M

REDDXDM

WNNI

SDXXDM

(AUPAVHN

VJK
EUDJ

A F S)

T V II I

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ; "Life ta like !hal ola Spanish saying : 'He who plants
the lenuce dOesn't always eat the salad.'"- Anthony Quinn.

'::~;~:~' S© )\Q{l}A
-l£ £irS·
---------loy CLAY R. POUAN

WOlD
lAM I

14~eol

·Rearrange letteu of thl
• four scrambled word1 below to form four word&amp;

I
I

OGYMOL

I I I

II

2

1

I

I
~I..~...-~1 ~

NEARA

3
L........L(___._1

---,1 ~

,.....,..D-:-A-:-N:-:M~O
....

•

r

~
~

RHETTE

]

I I I
5 I

1

I

rI

I believe if you overlook your
m1stakes you will likely repeat
them ,youwill ftnd success if you
-- ·---them

0

Complete tho chuckle quotod

~y ftfhng tn the musrng words

vou develop from step No 3 below

PRINt NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

1992 35' 5th Wheel, excelle~ t
condition, beauulul. loaded . w111
·constder trade, 6t4-949-3150.

UNSCRAMBLE A80VE LETTERS
TO GEl ANSWER

1~93 Pop -Up Coleman Climpfr
Excell ent Condl\1on, 6 t4 · 38$ ·

SCJtAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

'

Behave- Doubt- Yours " Levity- EVERYBODY
As a kid granny always told me that if there is time

SERVICES

810

XVRXDR

x· D

HMVAD .

I

1962 MoTor Home Good Conmfton. lo w M1leage, $8.900 , 614 441 -12t2

S D X

RNFJKR

Ep J

ED

qiK)Ial~

~~~

TFRPA

XUD

•

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

8293.

by !amoua people, p..t and pruent
.._,In lht Clpherllandllor another T«My'•
dw T
M

,.-_,...,.,......,.....,....-=-.,....-.,

enough, everything will happen to EVERYBODY'
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

IMONDAY

,

JULY 291

ROBOTMAN

Waterproohng
Appliance Parts And Serv1ce: 1
Name Brands Over 2S Years E\pertence All Work Guarante&amp;rt
French City Maytag , 614 · 4-'lff:
7795
~
C&amp;C General Homt Ma1
tenence - Patnttng, vinyl Sl{:iin
carpentry, doors, windowa, balh
mobrle home repa~r and more. F
free esltmale call Chet . 614· 09

6323

I

CR House Con struction. Home
Remodeling V•nyl Stdmg, Win
ows Dan Or Cr11g 614·256·68A
614 ·~·6019,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~can

wv 0256e0.

ASTRf»·ORAPH

DRYWALL
Hang, f1ntsh, repair
Cetlings textu red, plaster repatr.

Call Tom 304·675·411111. 20 yeai$
e•per~&amp;n:e

Ron's TV Servtee, specializing m '
ZeOilh also servrong molt other
brands . House calls, 1· 800 · 797 ·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

0015. wv 304-576·2396
Roohng &amp; gu11er5 COmplett home
remodel•n g deck s &amp; stding, 3S
~ears tMpenence, B &amp; B Rooting

1

6t4

-~2 · 2364

help you understand what to do to
make the relationship wort&lt;. Mat! $2.75 to
Matchmaker. c/o thlt newspaper, P .O.
Box 1758. Murray HIH Station . New Vorl&lt;.
NV 10t56.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today, guard
against lh8 ;nclinatlon lo dO things In a
manner which could make 11 more dilficul!
lor yoo to accomplish yoor objectives.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Unneceasaty
complications might occur today il you
get involved too closely with an abra·
siva friend who wants to dominate the
SIIUBtton.

une, 825 Ttird Avenue, Gall1pol1s

Tuesday. July 30, 1996

An edng year ahead could be In store
1i&gt;r you and chance could play a role In
railorlng.your ~· You wtH like the

1

Resldenual or commercial wiring
StfY1C8 or repatrs Nasttr u~·

,_patterns.

LEO (July 2$-Aug. 22) Tty not to make
decisionS on yolK own toc1ey withOUt getl
ling inputlrom tht other people ~ .
An error 111 1001 likely to occur If you ad

betann, bug shteld, ••· ~ ~~;~~~.:~ etectr~c•mn
ten&lt;lodW/gokt
Clb, 31-1050
~•d . load·

81 · WV000306, Ridenou;:
304·075&lt;',

07S-«117.
: :17::-1111:-.: :-:--:-::--:-----J.'
t9tl Joop Ctlefokoo Sport. lood· Ruodtn11al Or Comme.ciol Wi•,;..
•no. New Servtce Or Repa irs. Lt1•
3.0 Auto, loaded, New Tires,
klyleu tntty, AllOY wheels, censed EltctfiC:iln. Welsh Elec:\,
Brokn, Etc. 12,000, 614·245· . ed,
ou..,.tlc,
12.000
rriloo, $19,500,
• • • ""SO G
,
Olio. u 14 • • 4• ••• • 11111)0111;
614-002.JOIS .,... 4pm.
IXI19.
Patnt GT Rims, U1ny New Partl

14.500; 19118 Grand-Am 4 Door,

-

.

~OU~l&gt;

~

II'

Olio.

. od. ..,111011. 118,900 llrm. 30•·

"

••

THE BORN LOSER

675-3284

1990 Dodge Ram "•n 8 · 250 ,
72.000 Mllo1, 14,000, OBO Can and
S. Seen At · Gallipolis Oa1ly Trib·

11185 t/2 Toyota Tacoma 4X4 ,

OF Tt4E 36

•

le~message

'89 Thunderbird SC, two door, 3.8
1t1re V-6. erne model turbo, PS ,
PB, AC. 5 speed . power 1aat1
and locks , · areat Car," $5200
neg., 614· 992·7478 or 614-948·

~.

You "''~f TO
T~f EASY ONt1

PAYMfNT
PL.. AN

Prtce reduc ed 20ft. Ga laxy,
170hp, open bow, new cover~t
seats, alumtnum ss prop! 3011-

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

1984 Plymouth Voyager . Very

Tttt,., ·· wttiG~

PAYMtHT$

614 · 448 · 20~5

tabloshed 1975 Call (614) 44$·
0870 Or 1·800·287-0578. ROOOIS

t989 GMC P•ck -Up Long Bed,
V8, Auto , 79K, Excellen t Condt ·
t•on $5895 1980 $4'95 Ftre btrd
Cook. Uotors6 r4--'146·0103

~- NOvl,

Gttel&gt;IT t&gt;tPT
ASIC ABOUT
OUtt EASY

20' 1991 Monarch pontoon txiat
wtth 50 horse motor, 6t4 · 843 ·

1986 S- 10 . 4cyl . 4Spd $1,500
Call alter 4pm 304-895-3441

-----------------1~33~~---------Hay &amp; Grain ·
Mmtch1ng Jenny Lrnd babr bed, 640
1500 lb hay bales , $20 per bale,
6t4 -742 3069 or 6t4 -742-3064

sporty boat. $4.700 304·8&amp;2·
2241

Uncondtttonal hlehme guaranlee
Local references lurn1 shed Es-

l~rm

I 14EARD THERE
ARE TWELVE
8EA6LE5 ON THE
JUR'I' .. !-lOW DID
ilolEI( LIKE
6EIN6
SEQUESTERED?

for sale

1985 Fo rd Ranger, 4 ely. fuel tn·
Jtcled, S sp 112.000 actual miles,
cassc ue, chrome wheels , grtll
guard, roll bar wtth ltghts, some
rust, S1,500, 614 -24 7-4292

2264

Reg rstered -'ngus Breadrng Bull ,
Son Of G•nger H1 11 Ouster 89, 3
Years Old. 1.300 Pounds , Easy

304·675·1077.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

wheels $2.000 304-458-t9 tO
1984 Ford Ranger. 4cyl , Hpd,
good cond. $1,500 304 ·675 ·

PEANUTS

•no•

790

Cupid

62 Exertion
63 Mao - ·tung
64 Genua of lrOga

By Phillip Alder

Honda Trarl 50 Neods Mtntmi¥TI
Repans, S300 , 61 4· 448 · 17•3
Days . Larry 614· 446·6861 Even·

760

(comb. form)

61

The cost was high

'

Aller 7 00 P~ Leave Mes5age

57 "Rulo-"
80 a.m.

NAKED II

Honda 300. 4xot, 4·wheeler 30'4 -

675·1589.

.

Opening lead: • Q

82 Honda CX 500 · With A !1Motor. LowMt\el 614·256-1631 •

720 Trucks for Sale

6t4·379-2720 AFTER 6 P.M.

600DV It THEN
I CAN GO DOWN

.1991 KX 125. Don Boke S2.0$
304·895-3493
'

Much Less Call

1995 Z-28 Camaro, loaded wit tops, all lea ther mt eflor, black .
$17,500 304· 773-6t66

NOPE II IT'S ONLY
THAT FELLER FROM
TH' %00

'

675-7702

0868"' 304-675·4257

1982 t Ton Chevy Shon Wheel
Base Standard , 366 Motor

Scooters
And
Wheelcha~r s . New tUsed . Van 1
Car l 1ft Installed, Sta~rghdes , l 1ft
Cha~rs, Call For Brochure , E14 ·

W16?

1994 Pontrac Ftrebrrd, exc cond ,
t-top, loa ded, 19,SOO mtles,
$13,800 Ca ll alter 5:00pm 304-

1993 Olds Cutlass Supreme, red.
4dr, auto, '11·6, abs, all power, ac,
radroJcasseue. $8.900 30•·67 5-

HAVE I GOT
TO WEAR THAT
DAOBURN

t 995 Kawasaki KX 125, $2,5QO
good c:ondtuon. Call after s·OOpPn

BaJa Power Boat 1994, 180 11~ ­
der Wtth Only 20 Hrs On Engll'le
(Same As New) Thts New Ba';u
Has A New $650 Camper TQp
And Excellent Tra 1ler Thts Bea~
Has Clocked 58.- Miles Per Ho1u
You And Fam•ly Could Be Havu\g
Coun lle ss Fun Hour s Load4d
Wrth Accessortes Current Bnek
'v'alue IsS 12,600 , Wtl l Sell For

367-7755

Pau

1993 Kawasaki KX 125, $1 ,6$ .

20~ Chec~mate Convincer, open
bow, stereo, Mercruiser mot(lr,
e~tc. condttion·mstde &amp; out, very

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Weal . Nortll

1990 Kawasak• 600R 4, 700 M1les,
Black In Color. S2,SOO , 814 ·446·
2924.
I

11Hl2 Dodge Oynesty, loaded

1993 Fofd Probe, 37,000 mtles,
auto . loaded 304- 773-597.4 alter
6 OOpm. or 304 -773-62&lt;44

BARNEY

6t-4-992-6048

304·458-1604

form)

48 Soormo plant
51 Alae&gt;
53 Tore down

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1981 CX ·SOO Deluxe. 12,500mr. ,

good cond $900 304·882·2299

$5,800 OBO 614·256· 1252 o•

Drag Drsc &amp; Couple Single Plows,

E!oc trtc

• 7 6 3 2

• A K Q J 10 V 8

Fender Bassman 50 Comb•nanon
Bass &amp; lead Amp, 614 -441 ·0727
AlterS PM

580

•• 3 2

t1tle, 614·949 -2311 days or f314 ·
949·2644 e'/801f'I9S

6253 Alter 7 P.M.

-

• '7 5 4

Iron! damage. 13055. OH ulvage

miles. l5,000. 304-882·2030.

614·256·1618

• Q J 10 6

South

'96 Sllzuki 600 Katana, 607 mrles,

52 ,000 Senous lnqu rues Only
614--446 6747

$600. 304 ·675·

tor, Oos 5.0 Intel, Tl LP 9PPM
11.500, OBO. 514·367·0283

Dress1ng tabl e. baby bed . car
seat, stroller, sw10g , wa!ker, h•9h·
chaw. 304·615·4548.

'92 Suzu~• 600 Katana, g,ooo
mtles. leh &amp;ide shde, $2,555, OH
sal'llage title , 814 -9•9-23 t 1 days
or 614·949-2644 evenings.

...

East
•K96542

• A 10 8 7
•QJI0987
• 95
• 6

459·524S.

1~93 Pola11s WaveruDner W(th
Trailer &amp; Cover, $3,SOO , 6U·4.tUi·

Old Cost $4,000 New Ask1ng

West

'91 Honda CR 1 2S, excellenT condl!ton. new plastic , runs oreat,
many extras, $1600 090, 614 -

19QO Thunderbird, V-6, auto,
loaded, garage ke-pt, 105,000

Conn Ptano l en Than 3 Years

Grand·~m

Ram, SVGA 14 Inch Color Mom·

Sell $100 614·823·0490

• 3 2

$3600 Call Between 1 pm and 5
pm (304)675·5131

'9t Ford Ranger XLT, S speed,
excellen t c ond1hon. 54000 , su.
742 1603 or leave message

01sney Area 5 Days , " Hot el
N1ghts, Use Anyt1me Vahle $320

$3:&gt;00000, 614·247·3901 .

1989 Toyola MR2 Black wtth Red
lnteoor , S Speed, AC, loaded,
Good Condtl ton 67, 000 Mtles

1990

o·~-:~t-te

•AK65t
+ AK4

EEK&amp;MEEK

prpes, twtll throule, bored, new
ures, runs good , extra pa rt$,

5091

S14·992·3242

Norib
• QJ 3

'89 Banshee 350, Nerl bars, FMF

1984 Bandit Bass Boat 50 JtlP
Mercury Mo1or, Good Co ndttibn

Dozer TO 15 Intern ational 1 SO
Sertes , needs a head, sell or
trade lor larm tractor or anylhtng
of equal value. 304-562 5840.

1-80().537·9528

Motorcycles

1615. After Stx 61• ·446· 1244.

$1,900 304-67S.651S.

Dell 433, SL 120MB HD, 4MB

740

196 7 Honda XR80 . $700 obo.

1986 Thunderbtrd , V-6 , AIC ,
80,000 miles. left rear damaoe
very clean, $950 , 614-g49-231 1
days, 614-949·264-c evenings.

300 g111on plastic farm ehsmiesltank, on sled w11h ho se, S7S ,
614-949-3403.

Concrete &amp; Plasttc Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnaes, Jackson. OH

88 Bronco XlT .CWO. 814 ·446 -

3583

1967 BaJa 180 Islander, 130~p,
trailer, all access, $6 ,SOO . Alief
500pm 304 -675 -H99 or 304 675--14 15.

3995 days o• 614 ·992 ·5S66

4- 12 Inch Ktcker Competn•on
Subwooters 4 Months Old , Under
Warran1y S8S Each, 6 14 -446 -

1986 Chevene 4 Door AC, Runs
Good Body Farr Shape, 1750 ,

$6500 614·446-2510 aher 5 pm

Alto saxophone tor sale, lik.e new,

3 Piece Bedroom Suite, Refrigerator Frost Free, Small Tableaaw, For sale- homegrown lncred rble
Propane Heating Stove, Small corn and tomatoes, Wtl l1ams
Aparlment Dryer, AFTER 6 P.M. Farm , Syracuse. Ohro. 614-992·

61-44&amp;-12:10

C&lt;&gt;untry Fumiturt. 304-875-882o.
Rt 2 N, emlloo, Pt Pl.. 10 n~ wv
T.,..Sot;.e, Sun 11·5.
.

304-675· 7740
Th ee Jack R

Merchandise
570
-11--c-u.-F-t_H_o_tpo_in_tR:.:.e_l:.rio:.•e-ra-to-r·. 1

Wuher and Dryer Set S300.oo .
2-Fish Tanks + Stand . $30 .00 .

Household

Regrstered Wermaraner pupp1 es

540 Miscellaneous

MERCHANDISE

51 o

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boardtng,
Srud Serv1ce Pupptes , Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; T•ade. All Breeds.
Payments Wel co me, 61.C -388 ·

0429

Center Rd. Vinton, Oh. 614-388-

BTU, $80. New Haven. 304·irB2·
ForLease

1983 Dodge 400, e-.cellen1 cond•tton , 51 SOO negOtiable , 614·992·

CFA Himalayan 7 Week Old K 11tens. 614-•46·3188

Sporting

530

304-675-4841 AFTER 6 PM

$250. 614·388-9220

VrRA FURNITURE
614·446·31 58
Oualtry Household FurntlJre And
Appliances. Great Deals On
Cuh AndCifryl RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Also Avaltatwt
Free Deli'lery W1!11ln 25 Miles.

520

t960 Pontrac Tr an s - Am Au·
tomauc , 2 Doors, Sun roof 455 .
Good Shape, &amp; Pans Car. 51 ,500

AKC R&amp;gls lered Ronwe1lers -4
Females Le h H Weeks 6 1d
Sho1s And Wo, med Are Up To
Dale Have Paren t On Premrses.

Relrtgator and match1ng 30 tnch
gas sto'lle Both excellent condi tion call 614-446-0350

Uprlghl, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jacklon, Olio, 1-801).537-8528.

S1ze, 1 Full Sed , 2 Batht, C lay
Two and lhrH bedroom mobile

APPLIANCES

Trailer alte, ,lver accns, dry wa·
11r &amp; tewage. ContiCI Dean
~!It 304-882-2077.

2 Bedrooms. Furnished, 1 Queen

Chapel Rood, 614·256-8408

USED

Washen. dryers . refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vtne Street, Call 814· 448·7398,

Guesl

Ava1latMe soon. ntce 3 bedroom.
references, depostt &amp; no pets . 1.:.:.__.!.:..:.;.;~.:.;,;.:..;_;;,.:._ __

121,800. 304-773-5302.

GOOD

BEAUTIFUL AKC REGISTERED
BOSTON TERRIER PUPPIES
AND ALSO BEAUTIFUL AKC
REGISTERED PUG WILL AC·
CEPT PAYMENT OR DEPOSIT
TO HOLD. 614-446·8270.

2 112 Ton CI A Unit, Excel lent

Pleasant.614·992·5858

41 0

I 2•65 Mobile Hom e On t A.cre
l811el l o1, Small Out Butldtng. A
2&lt;4 Ft Above Ground Pool With
Fenced In Deck, Very Ntca,

Day, 7 Dayo A WOOl!. Corrc&gt;Oililvo tub, .-.ny •-• No

0080

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

320 Mobile Homes

try, town ...., etc. 304-675-1112.

2427.
Chtld Cate Pr ovider Opening
SOon In LOCII•Area. 24 Houri A

3 Room Apanmem StO'II'e, Refng·
erator. And Utilittes Furnished

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

BRUNER LAND

170

Dre11 Size t 2 And Head Piece

3711 . EOH.

4 Rooms, 2 Baths, $300/Mo. ,
$300 Depostt, Electnc 20 Mtnutes
From Galltpoils On 160 614-388·

6pm

31 0 Homes for sate

t972 Horne11e 12160 3 Bedrooms.
Like New Through Out Gas Heat,
614 -4-46 -0t75 S8,4SO Atr, Under·
ptnnng

Solid Oak Table And chairl P8td

2bdrm apt s , total elec1nc. ap
pllanc:es lurntshed, laundry room
laC11111es, close to scnool tn town
Apphcattons avatlable at Vtllage
Green Apls. •40 or call 6t4·992

Professional SultEIS A'llarlable For
lease. Excellent For Doctor's Offi ces Or Servtce Prolesstcns.
Ampl e Park tng Modern. Handi·
capped .Acceutble 614-446 ·

14 parcels, from 1.2 to 11 6 acres,
somB overlookmg Ractne, parnal
tmanctng , 614 -992 -7104 after

613-4

11800 Aoklng $1500; Wedding

2 Rooms &amp; Ba th $185/Mo, In ·
eludes All Uttl•tl9s, 614-446-2477

614 ..46-2583.

1.38 Acres Suitable For Building
Or Mobile Home Water And
Electuc Avatlable S• .SOO. 61-4 ·
4-41-0928

371S.
Miscellaneous

6196.

154.900, 614-2511·1426

1 Acre looters, water, septic, oa·
rage, blacktop road , in Addison
area. 614-388-8978.

advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

04t8

2 Bedroom apt, $375/mo, ublittes
pa id, $100 depo sit. 304 · 675 ·

8795

7795.

2 Bedroom Apartment, All Uoltnes
Paid, $42&amp;Mo ; 2 Room &amp; Bath All
Ulllnies Paid 1225/J.to. 513-574·

S289

Hm11allon or dl!crlmlnallon •

Sundar cal~

The Fellowshtp Church of The Nazarene. Reeds~ille, Ohto IS cur·
rently takino bids for posumn ol
cleanmg school area, one da~ 11
week For more 1nformatron and
10b descnplion call 614-378 -627S
or614-37S.6247

Business and
Buildings

Crown City Vtllage : Triple, Commercial Or Residenual. Corner LDt
On Roule 7 Wtth Income,

llmttation or ' lscrimlnaUon
based on race, co&lt;&gt;r, religion,

----------10 1/2 Ptne Street. Garage Apartment 2 Bedrooms, SIOYe &amp; Refngera tor, Washer &amp; Dryer Hook-Up,
Wrndow AC, No Pets , Re ferenc es, 614·446-2143.

1974 Corvette New Trres, Ex ·
haust And Tune Up, Red Wt th
Grey ln ter~ or, S6,500, Or Tr ade,
For FuJI Stze Blazer 01 Equal Val·
ue 61A -441 -t975 Or 614-446 ·

Appliances ·
Recondrtioned
Washers , Dtyer&amp;, Ranges, Retnorators . 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Uaytag , &amp;U-4-48-

2539.

Balha Wilh Heal Pump, 614·256·
1270.

An r..l -•• advertising In
to
the Federal Fair using Act
of 1968 which
os II ilegal
to aovelllse
prsterence,

Bedroom apartment , across
from post oll•ca m P1. PleasanC
304 · 675 · 217-4 aller Spm 614 -

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Commerctal Butld1ng On Route 7
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!his newopa~rlsubject

rn Middle-

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I Doga'leel
12 Guma
13 Prwalent
14 Merprlnt
15-andout.
18 H1111111n bodloa
18 Dlacharge a
dabt(2wda.)
, :10 Comedian
Conway
, 21 1111111 center

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aa a unH . Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The AatrO-GrtiPh Matchmaker

e

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Major
changas• that affect your !He should not
be initiated today without your maft'a
consent. He or she must bllrl complete

ag.-.t.
· SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) Today,
H yoy critiCize others. dOn't bl shoCked
when yoy realize that yoy will not be
lnstJialed from ll1llir- 81 well.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.J.n. 11) Try to
remain alfrt and cautlooa In your com·
merclal allalra today. You mfltrl think that
you are atropger, but tht other guy wiH
IICIUIIIY 11aV8 tht etlga.
.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 11) II you

negotiatt a deal today, prepare to make
some concession&amp; on vital issues. II a
compromise isn't achieved, prolonged
bargaining is probable. . .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h :10) Continued
negtect o1 e significant maner wll be an
YnwiSe policy to puratlll today. The longer
yoo delay, the mora dilliCIIH rt will be to
handle ialer
ARIES (March ,21-Aprll 11) lndepen·
dance is an enviable aaaet. but don't
abuae nor carry Hto,.....,.. today. The
majoritY wiN not let yoo get-y with thla •
kind ol bellaviDr.
TAURUS (April 20"11ay 20) II you
behave poorly today, others wiH mimiC
you and lhll COIIId l8int yolK lrnlgl. You
myst use caution when yoo ere out In
public.
GEMINI (lily 21.June 20) You might
Yntcnowingly do or IIY eomethlng IOtlly
to • oonaitl'le PlfWI whoM luppor1 you
need now. Try to be extra careful.
CAHC!ft (~u,. :11.Jtllr U) ff you get
drawn Into I lrlend'l oompllattld alllkl
today, you ~ llaV8 to ~ ol
your money. Do not butt lftiQ IIUI!onlln
whiCh you do not belong.

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Page 10 • The ally Sentinel

Pomerqy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 29,1996

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Hidden addiction may be sour.C~ of son's disobedience
schools (including the best military
academy in the South). We tried
Ann
Toughlove and finally psychiatric
Landers
hospitalization. Nothing worked.
The day before John's 18th birthday,
JV95. Lns o\lltcla
limn SyalicfiC and Crt my husband had a heart attack. I was
lion S)'ftdielw:.
unable to contact John because he
was out West somewhere trying to
"find himself."
:By ANN LANDERS
Fast-forward to our son and
Dear Ann Landers: When I read
where
he is now: Would you believe
"the letter from "Parents of an Outhe
is
happily
married and the father
. of-Control Son," I knew I had to
of
two
fine
boys?
His problem was
write. That letter could have been
closet
alcoholism.
Drinking made
written by ·my husband and me. The
him
not
only
drunk
but
crazy. It was
· behavior described was identical to
Alcoholics
Anonymous
thai turned
what we had experienced. We were
him
around.
-Palm
Beach,
Aa .
' _. ilunned by the similarities.
Dear
Palm
Beach:
Thanks
for
: We took our son, "John." to a
sharing
your
experience.
Here's
· psychologist and sent him to special
another one:

Dear Ann: M}:&lt;&gt;heart went out to
People who are on this drug lose
those parents with the out-of-control wei_ght, go without .sleep for long
son because I have walked in their penods of tim~. become violent and
shoes. I would be willing to bet that then' crash for days, just as your
their boy is on crystal methampheta- reader described. That boy needs to
mines. Crystal meth is the most gel into a rehab center. The sooner
wicked drug of all. Experts call the the better. -- No N11111e. No City
users "the living dead."
Dear Ann: That out-of-control
Our 15-year-old daughter was on kid is on speed or meth. Both are
it and had to be hospitalized to get cheap, easy to buy on the street 81)d
off. The process cost us more than highly addictive, and they make
$20,000, but it was worth it. She is people violent and destructive.
now happily married and a strong Speed and meth addicts don 't get off
supporter of Narcotics Anonymous. the stuff by themselves. They need
We are grateful to that organization hospitalization. Believe me, I've
for saving her life. --Los Angeles
been there. -- Oakland, Calif.
Dear Ann: The boy who punches
Dear Oakland: Thanks for the
holes in the walls is on crystal meth. ·input. Keep reading for a different
I recognize the symptoms because explanation:
our son was on it at age 14.
Dear Ann: Our 12-year-old son
. I

Chester
Shade
Days
observed

fit the behavioral paucrn of the lad
in your column. We, too, had holes
in the walls. broken windows,
smashed furniture and multiple suspensions from school. "Don" had a
near-genius IQ but did poorly in
School, which posed a mystery. One
of his teachers ~aid, "This is not a
behavioral problem. Your son is
mentally ill." We took him for a psychiatric evaluation, and Of course,
she was right. That was the day the
healing began. We will be forever
grateful to the teacher who opened
our eyes. -- Somewhere in the Middle West
Dear Readers: Bizarre behavior
by teens could be drug-related or a
symptom of mental illness. Please, if
you are struggling with an out-of-

Creators Synditate, 5777 ·w. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 9004

Richard "Rick" Keith Johnson,
son of Ric~ Johnson of Racine
and Diana J nson of Letart was
recently na ed to Who's Who
Among Am rican Hit1b School Students.
Who's Who recognizes the
achievements of the nation's out- .
standing students wbo have contributed to their schools. and communities. Only five percent of
national high school students are
named each year.
Rick is the grandson of Delores
Rick, a Junior at Wahama High Lynch SurfiiCC of Middlepol1 and the
School, enjOys fishing, row--wheel- late Robert Lynch, Harry Surface,
ing, and playing football.
and Harold and Stella Johnson.

Walton inducted into h9nor society

for a proposed building proioct in the
district. Participants will meet at 7
p.m. at the junior high school.

POMEROY-- Meigs County Veterans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
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Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
!:;•Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
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SCOIT INSURANCE

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Buckeye 5:
15·17·21·36-37

•

VoL 47, NO. 81
: ' 1 8ectton, 10 1'-e-

614-698-4{111 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.

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SoulbeiD Local Building Committee

. Kim Plulllps, ~

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AGannett Co. IMWIPIIIIII

Commissioners
approve sale of
property for
medical facility
infiThrmearyt
' r -~oncern stemmed from a
hospital architect's drawing showing
the infirmary as a site for possible
future expansion.
·
However, Lentes explained that
the architect's drawing ·does not
d
reflect what the commisstoners o
and referred to the sketch as the
"architect's wish list."
Lentes also said the property can
only be used for a medical facility
"for the community's benefit", ruling_
out the possibility of a medical waste
incinerator or abortion clinic at the
site, which were other concerns
voiced.
Those opposed to the sale were
outnumbered by about a dozen supporting the sale -- including VMH
employees, concerned citizens and
area clergy.
' When questions circled around
once more to the county infirmary.
Howard said the issue has been
closed.
"This ltas to do with keeping the
hospital alive, saving jobs and saving
lives," sljc; commented.
·- ~c~)· Fiut~\ltf,belte~ accused
~ -.o lie' aeeejlrecl ~ the board of settmg'llp tiJ.t! sale $0 no
•. ,--Comtili:IOII VI~- President Janet · one other than CH~ codld purchase
Howard immediately moved that it.
.
commissionen accept the bid. Com"You might as well sell it outnght
missioner Robert Harten bach sec- - instead of bidding it," she stated.
onded the motion which was unani· Hoffman asked, "What's the probmously approved by roll'call vote of lem with selling P~perty if it's going
all three COIJimissioners.
to help the county.
"The bid has been accepted,"
Lente_s said the ~al ~s helping to
Hoffman concluded.
accomphsh two goals: savmg the
Afterwards the board fielded com- hospital and saving the infirmary.
mcnts from people opposed to the
"This is a ~ood way ~o s~lve _bot?,
sale, who either said it was wrong to problems ... 11 s a.wm/wm sttuauon.
sell county propeJ:Iy without pulling
~ntes also dtsagreed with accu~
it before voters or who feel the move sattons that the commtsstoncrs have
threatens the Meigs County Home, or
Continued on page 3

By JIM FREEMAN
Consolidated Health Syste111s Inc.
of Gallipolis now has a Mei~s ~oun:ty site for ·a medical arts butldtng to
:complement Veterans Memorial Hos:pi,talin Pomeroy.
. The Meigs County Board of Com: missioners Monday afternoon
· approved the sale of county-owned
: property near VMH. Plans c~ll for a
: $1.5 million, 10,000-to-12,000: square-foot building there which will
· house thiCC to seven doctors and ere: ate 18 to 22 new jobs.
: Doctors will use the hospital facil: ity for testing and other services
• including in-patient and acute care,
: hospital officials said earlier.
• Commission President Fred Hoff: man opened the sole bid by CHS, a
: partnership of Holzer Medical Cen: ter, Holzer Clinic and Vetera~s
- Memorial Hospital. CHS btd
: SISO,OOO and included a $15.000
: deposit.
: Hoffman promptly gave the bid to
: Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
· who quickly ex!llllined it and S8ld:
,~11Jif·~·Jn,.prpper f9rrn ... and

Sentinel News Staff

-

SALE APPROVED- Tha Melge County Board of Commieeloners Monday afternoon approved the sele of county-owned
property for construction of a medical building near Veterans
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy. The purchaser, Consolldeted
Haalth Systems Inc. of Gallipolis plana to build a $1.5 million,

seven. :::

10,00G-to-12,00G-aquare-foot building housl= three to
doctora and creating 18 to 22 new jobs. From I to right ara com- .
mlasloners Janet Howard, Robert Hartenbach and Fred Hoffman ·
examine the 111• agreement. They also anawered qu11tlons. ·. ·.· :
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Recommend insurance premium ··
hike for Meigs County employee~
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners may have to consider an
!nc~115e in countr employees' he.~~~ .
ms.urance :-prennpms" rotiQwlng a
meeiing With an insurance actuary
Monday afternoon.
The board met with actuary David
Rubadue who recommended a 23percent increase in insurance premi·
ums for those participating in the
county-owned insurance program.
Currently; premiums for single
employees in the Meigs County
Counhouse cost $197 a month while
family premiums total $500 a month.
Of those amounts, employees pay
$30 and $200, respectively.
Commission President Fred Hoffman said the board would have to

take Rubadue's recommendation
under consideration.
Attending the meeting were Jon
Jacobs, director of the Meigs CountY. ~ealth Department: Connie Karshni!C';'RN. Metgs County: Tuberculosis
Nurse: Recorder Emmogene Hamil·
ton: Auditor Nancy Campbell: Rich
Jones and Mary Hobstetter of lhe
Meigs County Department of Human
Services. and Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer.
The board also opened bids on
work fo~ th~ Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water Dtstnct East Letart Water Lme
project. Submitting bids were: Weber
Construction
of
Reedsville,
$135,525; Everett L. Harper and
Sons of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
$123535: Home Creek Enterprises
of Pomeroy, $96,812, and Lawson

Excavating of Albany, $109,475.
·Mid-Atlantic Storage Systems of
Washington Courthouse submiued
the sole bid for a water storage tank
for $92,900. The bids were tabled
pending:ftirt.bt;r n;view.
Commissioners approved the sole
bid by Asphalt Materials Inc. of Marietta for paving material for August.
• At the request of Gayle Price of
Portland, the board passed a resolution urging the state to repair state
Route 124 between Portland and
Long Bonom.
.
The resolution states m pan that
"the condition of State Route 124
between L.ong Bottom and Portland,
Ohio, constitutes a hazard to the safety and welfare. both physically and
economically to the residents of
Meigs County."

In other business, the hoard: ·-·•·
-- Met with Racine Mayor ··and
commission candidate Jell Thornton
concerning complaints by Racine
resjdents concerning the ~illllgc's
Cbrnmunity Hl)using ll)lptl:ivcmel)t
Project. Thcinubrr asked commissioners to visit the village to talk with
those with complaints.
-- Met with Susie Heines, director
of the Meigs County Speech and .
Hearing Clinic. who a.~ked for $4,000
to assist the clinic. Commissioners
approved the request.
•
-- Approved weekly hills of
$166,023.49 consisting of 155
entries.
Also present were commissioners
Janet Howard and Robert Hartcnhach, and Clerk of Commission Glo·
ria Klocs.

Divers seek wreckage pointing to sabotage
By PAT MILTON Asaoclated Press Writer
EAST MORICHES, N.Y.- Passengers silting toward the front of
TWA Flight 800 were apparently the
hardest hit when the plane exploded.
an FBI agent said.
Although the injuries suffered by
the people aboard fit no pattern.
"those in front experienced the bulk
' of the event," said Joe Cantanessa. an
FBI supervisor.
That fact would support- but not
et
Y prove - the theory that the jetliner's nose was blown off by a
bomb, sending the aircraft plunging
into the ocean.
Publicly, officials say they don't
know what caused the plane to crash
10 miles off Long Island on 1uly 17
_a bomb, a missile or catastrophic
mechanical failure.
But a source has told The Associ·
ated Press that investigators think a

5,000

3,000

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ll.ol"n'o•'J"ch seeks probe at
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on plane wreckage, and that any pit- price to pay."
ting found on metal did not indicate
Earlier Monday. some victims '
a bomb.
relatives mmplaincd searchers were
Searchers armed with sophistical- more interested in finding evidence .
ed tools converged on an underwater
"We believe that the investig~li(.JO
"debris field" Monday where first- may be taking priority over• the
•,-lass scats and the front landing gear recovery of the bodies," said Joe
were found over the weekend.
Lychner of Houston, who lost ' his
While divers have scoured the sea wife and two daughters. "We have to
lloor 'or
'' days • Cantanes•a
• ·sat'd · the ritake absolutely certain that ev•ry
f"
first pans of the plane to hitthe ocean single loved one comes out o ,the
have not been broug ht up ·
water."
Another relative, John Felice,
That was partly a result of the ini·
,.1a1 .ocus
'
on recovert·ng vt'ctt'ms' added, "We feel that we're hclng
bodies over collecting evidence, ~~Oy(~?- fcd hodics. three or folir"a
investigators said.
· c chat·rman of
· Francis later showed the relatiVe"•
Robe rt Franc1·s. vtc
the National Transportation Safety a videotape of the crash site to ill us;
Board. said the emphasis on rccov- tratc how difficult and dangerous
cring victims "is probably marginal· recovering bodies was, and he
ly delaying our finding out what assured them that "recovery of (bod:
caused this catastrophe."
ics) rcmuins the highest priority of the
But, he added, "That's not a high recovery team." NTSB spokesman
Peter Gocl1 said.
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Police say 911 call was handled properly::;
By DICK PETTVS
what would be 'normal, especially
Associated Presa Writer .
" knowing that Ceriten,nial Par_k ts
ATLANTA _ Ten minutes occupied and that there sa 30.:mmute
elapsed between the time authorities deadlio~ ... said Gary Allen, of Berkewere notified about a bomb in Ceo- ley. Cahf.
.
. . .
tennial Olympic Park and the next
Atlanta pohce recetved thts t~rSC:
indication that action was taken. threat by 911 early Sat~rday mornmg.
documents show.
.
"There is a, bomb . 10 a;ntenntal
Poli.ce Chief Beverly Harvard said Park. You have 30 mmutes. .
Th
g ever made u to
today she is satisfied that the call was
at warnm n
handled properly.
.
police in the park before the bomb
"The computer log does ·not tell exploded, kill in~ one J)CfSOn and
you e118Ctly what was going on in injuring 11 L
..
those time periods,'' she said on
~ document, obtaifie4 by. the
NBC's "Today" show...1 am satis· AP,
a sequence of
tnncs
tied that from the time the call came logged tnto the Atlanta poltce ~II
in, it was actively being· worked."
computer early Saturcla
. y morntng
A dispatcb supervisor who pub- · before the fatal bombtng:
lishes a newsletter for 911 dispatch- 12:58:34 a.m.•. apparently ~
ers and reviewed the document at the time the call was recctvcd. Attcon~tng
request of The Associated Press said to the displlll:her's notes, tl!e caller
1 .and eve11" and
the apparen_t delay was troubling.
was "very
. cam
"
L
I
I'd say it appears longer than . !II'I•Rilrll h~C( • white man.

COLUMBUS - Gov. Geor&amp;e Voioovlcla bl!t liked tile state
Inspector Gtttcnl'• olllce to IDvestlpte tdleptionl atflsc:lil mlsllliiiiiPIIIelll and ,_n,1e criminal miKonduct.by olrldalut Celltral State 'University. ·
MeaDWhle. Baraes I! Noble Colleae Boobtores •Y• the school
0$490,000 for ftnuclal aid voucben the company
accepted from students last year. Unl• the bill II paid, the com,.,y wlllllOt .........., voucben this fall, It laid in a letter Jut week
..--r
.,,_, __ Halnt00
to Ohio Board at Jleaeat8 Clwtcellor _ , .
•
The scltool'• llundal uilil - It II S8 mWioa ID 'debt- and
reports at•prnd.l q ~~
!lavnlolated.,.. ~I'IIIDJ •tate
1peacllelled tO tile IDYeedpt'M.
.
·. ' · ·
State II Oltlo'• only bidorieally black,
eel ltool
"'
'dlere WJII aetM&amp;y a erlmlaal uta., our
__
,.. .... toa•OI'Ward'--'-ormatioatotheapproprillelaw•
1"11- .
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enliiR:elllalt apacy," NlciiDipector Gaeral ~ Warcl.
State llajJ. Otto a.tay, l)o{'olullilul, last week liked
C••nl.leUy Moa.......,. to laveotlpte a .,_Ill"' tt1 for
for tlle.lllliwnlt).,wtliilllltallle at for-.lilterbl
· -a.PI'atl'tlnlltlln
~ •••.~ ~ .,_...,
.
--·
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bomb exploded in the 747's front car. go hold, and they arc close to proving it
The AP source, who is close to the
probe and spoke on condition of
anonymity, said investigators needed
· of CYI·dcnce- sue h a·s
one key p1cce
the plane's aluminum skin, pien:ed by
the blast - to prove I hc1r· bomb the ory.
.
The Navy said the sal vag~ shtp
· · 1hc rccovUSS Grapple wou ld JOin
cry effon today. Its tools include a
. 1c
remotc-contro\led underwatcr ve htc
capable of raising loads up to 13.000
pounds. Another vessel op the sc_enc,
the Diane G.. has an acute Iy senslltve
laser scanner.
Investigators had no prog~ss to
repon Monday.
··
''We're all a little frustrated,"
Cantanessa told reporters. He said
tests had not confirmed several preliminary indications o fbo mb rest'duc

Ten minutes elapsed before action was taken

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·Paid for by die

35oenil

PomerQy·Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 30, 1996

::a~=c ~ ...:. ::X~W:

Please Get Out Your Tax Duplicate and Call
The Meigs County Auditor at 992-2698
or ,

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en tine

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Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuities are inued by
COmpanies and have • IIJ
penalties for eirly wlchdrawats.
peradt ~sday. 7 p.m. to campalgn ....,_ _ _ _ _..__ _.

-- -··

9406

Sports on Page 4

'-..../'

Do You Have a Question About
What Change Your Property T~xes Would Take
With the ~rqposed
5.42 MillBond Is~ue?
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Pick 3:
166 .
Pick 4:

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-Community calendar-

lvuoAY
RACINE __ The Southern Local
·u h0 ld. a
Buildi,ng Committee WI

LA's Lasorda
steps d~wn
as manager

Johnson
named to
Who's Who

'Family' the topic at :
Alfred UMW meeting

- RUTLAND -- Rutland Garden
Club, ii p.m. picnic at the home of
Mn. Donna Jenkins. Members will
ulur the Jet~kins gardens preceding
the picnic.
PORTLAND __ Lebanon Township Trustees, 7 p.m. Monday at the
town~p building.
REEDSVILLE - Free skin testing
clinic by Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
Meigs County ru~rculosis Clinic
Dune, Reedsville Ftre Department.
Monday, 5 to 7 p.m.

~;

Send questions to Ann Landers,

Shade Oays opened last Friday
with a pie baking contest with 15
entries. Judges were Betty Dean,
Opal Dyer and Diane Rice. Winners
. in the contest were Kathryn ·Mora,
first place: Enna Cleland, second
place: Kathryn Windon , third place.
The pies were then auctioned by
Rhett Milhoan, master of ceremonies
for the weekend events. Performances by The Gentlemen Four Barbershop Quartet of the French City
Barbershop singers and the Happy
Hollow Boys with J. B. Wilson,
caller, played for the square dance.
Saturday with the Chester Scout
CHESTER PIONEERS - These Individuals got Into the pioneer mood 'during the first annual
Troop raising the American and Ohio
Chester Shade Days celabratlon, held recently In Chester. Dressed In period dresa from the 1800'1
llags on the new nag pole beside the are, from left, Pat Holter, Lloyd Blackwood, and Jackie Spaun. (Photo by Paul Gerard)
Chester Counhouse, while Karen
Griffith• played the Star Spangled
Banner on the trumpet.
canoe . Chester Shade (Russell
Osie Mae Follrod 1e9 . the pro- opened in prayer by Elliott and the
The Feeney Bennett American Starcher) told of his experiences of
gram, "Families, Bible St6ries, Our reading of the UMW Purpose.
Legion Post 128 .saluted the Ameri- e~ploring the area, about his hunting
Stories", when the ·Alfred United Friendship calls reponed were 26.
can Rag which was presented by camp and other exploits. He intraMethodist Women met at 'the church President Parker announced the
Congressman Frank Cremeans. The duced his companions, Alan Holter
for the July 16 meeting:
UMW annual meeting will be Sept.
Ohio Flag was presented by Ohio and George Mora, who were also
The program was opened with 21 at Logan Trinity United
Representative John Carey.
dressed as frontiersmen, carrying
unison prayer and introduction by Methodist Church: Festival of SharThe new nag pole was made by their muzzle loader, powder horns
Follrod. The society studi~ the firsi ing Ingathering will be Sept. 19 111
Duane Longe neue , donat~d and and knives.
half of the program, "Bible Explo- The Plains UMC: Festival of Shar,
installed by members of the Amcri The first Meigs County commisration," using Bible and Concor- ing Sept. 28 at Springfield.
can Legion Posts 128 and 39, and the sioncrs were introduced; Levi Sted- tit
dance.
The group voted to buy school
V.F.W. 9053 ufTuppers Plains.
man (Lloyd Blackwood) told of •
Manha Poole '111ld Nellie Parker supplies for the Festival of Sharing
Invocation was given by Darlene donating thirty acres of land for the
explore.d family references; Thelma instead of blankets. Mrs. Caldwell
Newell, followed by a short com- courthouse, clerks offi.ce, a jail and a
Henderson and Manha Elliou, will check on ordering. school supmentary by Congressman Cremeans jailor's house and laying out the town
brother and sister: Sarah Caldwell plies. The reading prog!llm will bC
on the restoration efforts on the old- and naming it Chester. He also intraand Nina Robinson, husbands and continued.
est standing courthouse m Ohio. duced William Alexander (Carson
wives: Charloue VanMeter and AoVanMeter had the prayer calenrence Ann Spencer. daughters and dar and chose Nancy Collins who is
Patriotic bunting provided by Tom Crow) of Letan, who proceeded to
sons. Follrod showed a picture of the in education at Beverly, Ky. 'ThC
Dooley, decorated the windows of the - give ij campaign speech.
Mercer family from a recent edition society signed a birthday card for
courthouse while a 28 by 18 foot
Beside the covered wagon
of The Athens Messenger and pic- her. During the social hour. RobinAmerican Flag owned by Chuck (belonging to the Blackwood family)
tures of her parents' families.
son was hostess and served lemon
Kitchen draped the front of the old and express wagon (Lesier Parker's),
The society concluded that the cake, ice cream and nuts.
academy. A yellow banner draped the Duane Longenette and Gardener
MORGAN'S RAIDERS -A group of lcical residents helped to reenNext meeting will be Aug. 20 111
400 year old oak tree.
Wehrung displayed muzzle loader act the Infamous Civil War raid of General Morgan's Confederate families are the most impbnant part
Spectators lined the hillside and guns and powder horns which they troopa ICI'OII Melga County during the recent Chester Shade Days of the society and need 1o be nur- .the church. Poole will lead the program on the second part of "Famicommons below to watch this dedi - had crafted.
celebration. The Raiders, led by General Morgan (Eddie Wolfe) ere tured with God's help.
lies," and Parker will be the hostess.
The
business
meering
was
cation.
One hundred and twenty six peo- shown marc~lng acrosa the village commons. (Photo by Paul Ger'- - The time line reenactment then pie registered and toured the court- ard)
,
,
bCgan. While the drums beat. Chief house. The tours were conducted by
Greg Wolfe, in full regalia and with Delmar Baum and Howard Parker, . the other r~iders were Danny. Linda
'09nna Davidson had a rug weavGeri L. Walton, Pomeroy, was quarters.
his squaw, rode down the hill to meet who had an extensive display offam- and Daniel Young, Larry and Judy ing demonstration on an early Amer- recently inducted into Phi Theta
She was ·an accounting major,
with his tribe in front of the grand- ily artifacts.
Bunger, Art and Rebecca Wolfe, ican antique loom. The antique trac- Kappa Honor Society, Hocking Col- earning three separate one-year cerstand. They paraded the commons
George Genheimer and Thelmas John Clonch, Brandon Black and tors were displayed by Edison Hol- lege. Nelsonville
~
tificates in the accounting field. She
while Emmett Conroy of McArthur Case were selected as Meigs Coun- John Lentes.
lon;.Victor Wolfe and Paul Marr. SpePhi Theta Kappa honors full time is enrolled in the nursing program
told of the ancient Indian trails which ty's Finest citizens. Children enjoyed
Lester Parker and his son Lester Jr. cial music was by C.J. and the Coun- and pantime students who maintain which began June 26.
crossed Meigs County.
games an~. a parade of decorated hitched a team of Belgian horses to try Gentlemen, and a real crowd at least a 3.5 academic average.
She is married to Scott Walton,
Dan Roush of Portland demon- btkes and pets. Participating with the expfeSs wagon, loaded militia pleaser was the dancing by the Big
Walton maintained a 4.0 acade- Pomeroy, and their son, Scan, a
strated the an of flint napping using btkes were Shane Milhoan, first place aboard and gave chase,
Bend Cloggers led by Vivian Maye. mic average during the 1995-1996 senior at · Ohio University, is a
the primitive methods of the Indian award: Morgan Werry, Brittany
The Federal Calvary with GenerFood was served by the Chester school year and was named to the French language major and is also a
nappers in a canopy enclosure on the Myers. Kelly Myers, Becky Taylor al Shackelford in command (Eddie Fire Department Au~iliary. Ed Wer- Scholar and Dean's List for all three · Phi Theta Kappa member.
commons.
and Moonshine, Michael Taylor and Wolfe) arrived. The cavalry, .who ry cooked beans and vegetable soup
Rebecca Edwards, who taught Charhe, Kyle Edwards, Damel Buck- were the same horsemen with differ- in big iron kettles over an open fire.
Indian lore to her fifth grade class thts ley. Andrea Buckley, Jeremy Lee, ent uniforms and flags, were very
An illumination of the Courtpast year, provided the poles that Abb1c Chevalier, Stacy Smith: skate impressive . as they charged up house and flag on the Academy was
Lloyd Blackwood, Jan Davis and Pat board, Adam Wolfe. Trisha Congo through the Chester Commons.
enjoyed both evenings.
Holter used to make an Indian wig- and West Shade Dog. Walking were
warn. The lndjans on horseback were Alyssa, Kelsey and Brenna Holter. In r------------------:::::----------:~111111;;:-:::~~~;;;:----------------,
Chief Greg Wolfe, An Wolfe; Rcbec- period dress were Jacklyn Spaun,
ca Wolfe. John Clonch. Brandon Lloyd Blackwood and Pat Holter.
Black. Eddie Wolfe. John Lcntes,
After the cannon fire warning by
Larry and Judy Banger.
James McDaniel, the confederates
Then the frontiersmen arrived led by General John Morgan (Eddie
from Shade River carrymg their Wolfe) rode into Chester. Portraying

MONDAY
POMEROY -- Bible school, Calvary Pilgrim Chapel. Route 143,
Pomeroy, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Monday
through Aug. 2.

Ohio Lottery

:-_-_,.1'1')1 -;

control teen, have him or her
checked out by a psychiatrist. And
for those whose children may be on
drugs, I recommend Narcotics
Anonymous, World Service Office.
P.O. Box 9999, Van Nuys, Calif.
91409, or Families Anonymous ,
P.O. Box 3475, Cplver City, Calif.
90231-3475 (send a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope).
Gem of the Day: The best cure
for love at first sight is to take a second look.

..

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- I :08:35 a.m., followed by the
abbreviation "DIS," apparently nefcrring to- the dispatch of one or more
officers.
- I: 12:52 a.m ., followed by
" ARV," apparently referring to an
officer arriving at an unspecified
location.
Harvard has said an officer went
to the pay phone where the call.was
placed.
.

whether thal'.s possible or nut, that'S
a dThifferent maucr."
:,
e time bcltwcen the first tw.,
entries i: 10 minutes and one second!
Law en orcerncnt sources have JQI4
AP that they have been told there:'")~
o gap of cxPctly that length of tQn4
before the 911 center propC!-11,
processed the call.
A partial evacuation in the par~
did occur. but only because police

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,

The l~t entry apparently does not . there '"'f'pened by chance upon.(hc(
refer to Jl9Iice amving at the park, u~attendedb knapsack thai held :!bit
because officials have sllid officers ptpe m .
,
there did not learn of
9ti "call
At daily briefings, authorities have
before the I:18a.m. cxplosio!l.
said liule about the way the call was
The Atlanta police deputment handled except that procedure Yf&amp;s
declined requests from the AP to followed.
explain the document
On Saturday, Woody Johnson, in
In her 'IV inte~ew, HIIVard said, charge of the Atlanta FBI office, said
"Ideally, any call that would come in, . "there was delay in ilassinl! that
we would hope that someone would information on," but he did not elab;be the
'thin two seconds but
re wt
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