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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport~ Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, June e, 1995

"

Ohio Lottery

Reds win,
up lead in

COP\'IOOHI' 1. . . n. K-.. CO.II"EMMI'MJ PRICES GOOD lUNDA~
JUNE .. THIIOUGH IAT\IIIOAY, JUNE 10, liNIN POMEROY I'MJ
'

B*' I P"US.
WIIIUEIWE n. M1HT TO LliiiT QUAIIIII'E8.
IIONIIIOI.PTO DIAl EPI

Pick 3:
,332 1'ick ll:

-~

8949

I

Always Fresh.
Always Kroger.

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CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE

Diet
or
CGCII·6-Pack
COlli Classic
12-oz. cans

--Flood volunteers-------- Far-m ers await word
-

Wednesday,

· June -7 th
. SAFAM_,_

old noorlng and Install new walls, along with
removing debris. The volunteers spent two days
at the Christine Tackett home hi Rutland.
"They've done a wonderful job. I can't believe
how much work they've done," Tackett said.
Pain1ing the ceiling is Linsay Mates, a volunteer.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

The Meigs County United Methodist- Parl•h
has coordinated volunteers who have worked on
about 15 bomes across the county since last
month's nood, Rev. Keith Rader said.''The hard
work is beginning now," Rader said, adding

numerous other homes are set for work. Volunteers from a Middletown church paint, tear up

U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE BREAST TENliERS,
BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST FAMILY PACK OR

Meigs lawmen updated on
domestic violence protocol

Boneless Chicken Bre11st

./

FROZEN CAGLE

. - FreSh

Boneless/Skinless
.· Chicken Breast

Blueberries
·
Pint

(12·14 LB. AVG.) U.S.D.A

GRAIN FED BEEF

Whole
Sirloin
Tips
·
Pound

Lb.

SAVI.

Sold In

4-III.Baa

$400
,_.,..Per..._ Bag

OW. WHITE OR Bl-COLOR
YELL

\

sweet ·
corn

NABISCO STRAWBERRY, BLUEBERRY OR
APPLE-CINNAMON

whne SUpplies Last.

.

Snackwe/1 · - ·SfSS
Cereal Bars..................7.s-oz.
OLD FASHIONED
Heiner's

Let ·The Deli
Prepare
READY TO EAT

Rotisserie

~

~-

Tile IH - - - Me•. r
, . It&amp;
,.,.,. .., Adtl ~ ..r.sliM

VIS-.....

FARMLAND

__ ,.._

Chicken._...... Each

FIIEEII(tr

rdturtnr

IIEGI$f'EII 1'0 rn• ·
WOIIfH OF IRD
from Kroger and Exptess Shipping
See store for details!

·

Market Place
Chopped Ham............. s-Lb. Pkg.
HOT OR MILD

·st-sr·

.

Flinn.· ~--

............ up to

sott see store

for details!

have to respond anyhow."
By JJM FREE!\-! AN
· If actual injuries are reported, or
Sentinel news sbiiT
Represen!3tives from all Meigs if a weapon is s uspected at the
County law enforGement agenc•es scene, ille responding officer is to
and area legal and counseling tiCat the call as an emergency and
providqs attended a seminar Tues- go in with sirens and lights, he
day afternoon introducing new law added.
In addition, the officer needs 10
enforcement guidelines ror ban-identify the -offender and separate
- .,.dling domestic viplence cases. :-·
Prosecuting attorney John R. · the assailant from the yictim, get
I:.entes presented tile proposed pro- statements from both parties as
tocol at the meeting held at lbe soon as possible and obtain other
Meigs County Emergency Medical evidence.
Even if the jail is full, the preServices Office in Pomeroy.
course of action is 10 arrest
ferred
"We've never had an actual
the
person
suspected of committing
written policy for handling these
offense,
Lentes said.
the
things," he said.
Officers
have ~ valid basis for
Lenles first de fined domestic
if
they receive a written·
an
arrest
violence: "If a family member is
statement
from
the victim alleging
subjected to barm or attempted
violence,
receive an oral
domestic
harm from another family melll·
statement alleging domestic vioher. .. thai is domestic violence."
The new· protocol widely inter- lence or actually witness the
prets a family -members as jus I offense.
While Lcnles acknowledged
about ;uiyone living together ... and
some people that don't live togeth- some peop le arc accused of
tiumped up_charges (particularly in
er, such as ex-spouses.
The difference between domes- incidenls involvjng divorces or cuslie violence and other assaulls is tbdy battles), he said it is best to err
that people accused Of engaging in on tl1e side of prolecting the appardomestic violence cannot be ent victim.
released unless IIley go lrefnre a
As a mm1mum , separate the parjudge, he pointed uul.
ti~s . Lentes said. Shellers are availThe new protocol carries witll il able for tile victim, he added .
addition responsibiliti es for the
Sheriff James M . Soulsby also
asked those present to support tile
peace oflicer.
.
When a report of domestic vio- construction or a new, larger jail
lence comes in , officers are 10 facility 10 replace the aging jail
·
·respond immediately to reports or now in usc .
domestic violence, Lenles said.
Also, the protocol is designed to
Some households are notorious help the officer acquire evidence so
for repeat domestic violence calls, tlmt the bauercr citn be prosecuted
Lemes explained. "It's real fruslnll · even if the victim later declines to
ing in . some instances- but you cooperate with authorities - a

Bidwell man dies
from, cras·h injuries

-8Fead.. ~;;;-;..............2o-ez.

-

$

sausage Patties .... 3-Lb. Pkg.

.

-

.

,.

.

on requesffor relief

..

Four 6-packs .
per customer
at this price, please. ·

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Mullimediolnc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 7, 1995

Copyright 1995

.

.

•

Vol. 46, NO. 27

•
A Bidwell man aied Tuesday from injuries suffered in a car
crash at.Eno over the weekend.
L:eonaro'Dobllins, 34, 1957 Campaigrr-Road, was pronounced
dead at'4:48 p.m. in Cabell-llu ntingiOn Hospital, Humington . .
W .Va., a spokesman for the Gallia-Meigs Post of tile State Highway
Patio! said.
.
He was transported !rom tlle scene or the crash by l!caltllNet
helicopter to Cabell-l!untinglon uflcr the rescue squad of t11e Galli a
County Emergency Medical Sendee spent nearly an hour freeing
him from the wreckage of his car.
·
The patio! said Leonard Dohbins ' car and another car driven by
his brother, Danny Dobbins, 39, 3R5 Summit RoM , Vinton, were
eastbound on State Route 554 at9: 10 p.m. Saturday when Leonard
Dobbins' car went off U1e lefl side of lJ1e road.
The car struck a fence and was stopped by a cement gas island at
U1e old E no General Store, the patrol said. The cra'h sheared orr one
of tile gas pumps, which was inactive.
.
Danny Dobbins' car traveled a short distance before s~rklng n
cinder pile, the pairol said. He allegedly fled tile scene on loot. the
spokesman said.
·
. '
Danny Dobbins eventually conlacled the patio! and admtlled 10
driving U1e otller car. tile spokesman _said. No charges bad been filed
---- · •- -ro;· or today, pending consultatiOn wtlh the Galha County pro~cut· .
,ing anome§'s oftice.
·
.
.
.
. · .
The accident, the second traff1c fata.hty of the year ill Galha
County, remains under investigation.

•

common occurrence in domestic
violence cases.
Lentes encouraged off icer s . to
photograph the scene and tile victim. if possible, and 10 persuade tile
victim to seek mcdicaltrcatmem.
Ot11er charges, including menacing, stalking, disorderly conduct or
criminal trespassing, &gt;:an often be
flied in addition to domestic violence charges, he indicated.
Hilda Ttrado, director of Serenity House, a sheller for haltered and
homeless women and their children
serving Gallia and Meigs counties.
commended officials on l.heir

COLUMBUS(AP) - Beset by
heavy spring rains that have left
rain-sodden fie ld s, Midwestern
com growers are turning to the federal government for help.
The rains have delayed the
plantil'ig of com crops by at least a
mont11. So farm bureaus in seven
states, including Ohio, asked the
U.S. Deparunent of Agriculture to
consider modifying loan require·
ments and other rules for growers
who cannot yet plmll field com.
The farm bureaus hope 10
receive an answer by the end of
June from S!!Crctary of Agriculture
Dan Glickman. The request was
sent

they can't get it in thi s
week, tlley will eitllcr be looking at
anotller crop or notlling," she said.
In May, rain fall ranged from 6
inches above normai in western
Ohio; 3 to 4 inches higher in the
somh; and about 3 inches higher in
central Ohio. For illC year, average
rainfall statewide has been 2 to 3
inches higher than nonnal.
Showers are possible daily this
week, il1c National Weather Service said .
Ohio is about one monil1 behind
the best planting date for lield com,
ami tlle situation is worse in other
Midwestern states, Fish said. Field
com is used as animal feed ;md in

cent com planted in the soulhern
part pf the s tate . ... I tl1ink U1e farmers in northern Oh'io are getli11g
lheir corn in and makin~ progrc~!-,
with their soybeans," she said
The other stales requesting aid
arc Illin ois, Indiana , Iowa , Mis souri , Nebraska and .SouU1 Dakota.
ln lndimm, oflici;~s said on ly 70
perc.cnl of int Cmlell corn acreage
had heen planted as or Sunday.
Corn plan11·ng there IS 1 X tlays
behind avl! ra ge~ the lat~st since
1981 .
.
The prop,osed changes include
extending the tim«-f')f com loan
repaymem and the federal crop
in sumnce deadline for late plant-

for

more in
em
than in nortllem ru.'" ·'
she said. '.'They're only at 60 per·

tile deadline
June 5, but
lftc f'Urrn bureaus want ·an adJitwn-·

' Continued on page 3

By GEORGE ABATE
,Sentinel News Shiff
, Middleport Community Associ ation continued 10 finalize plans for
the annual Fourth of July cclebmtion at its monthly meeting Tuesday night
Tbe annual event will include a
6 p.m . parade, a flea market, a
farmer's market, entertainment and
will ·culminate in a lireworks dis. rla~ set _off"by the Middle{xm Yol.
umcer Ftre Deparunent.
Village council members will
collect donations during the lcstivities 10 pay for tile lirewurks , said
Dennis Hockman, community association president.
The last planning meeting fur

Sentinel News Staff
Cabbage. c·uuing and packing
continues through this muggy June
heat.
Jim Adam s' Letart Falls farm
shipped its first load of cabbages 10
Cleveland Friday. By removing Lhe
cabbage last week, Adams w•ts the
ftrsl in the county to ship cabbage.
In a si ngle lruckload. about 600
crates arc packed each day. Adams
said . This constitutes about 18
heads of cabbage in each c rate .
This year's cabbage are a size thai
relililers desire, .between 16 and 18
inches across, Adams said.
Cabbage production will be
about half that of nonnal years, he
added.
"Normally we raise about
·200,000 plants, that cuts between
10,000 and 12,000 crates," Adams
said.
This year, he' II be lucky to get .
5,000 crates, he ·added .
"We bad problems in the greeQhouse with our root systems,"
Adams said. "This will probably be
one of our worst production years ."
Cool nights and cool days also
s tunted the plants' g~owlh, he
· added.
Adams began working on the
family-owqed cabbage and tomato
fields at about 6 years old, be said.
His father started tile 50-acre fann
in 1937.
May's heavy rains did not seriously burt the cabbage plants, but it
saturated the roots and slowed the
growth or the tomato plants. he
said.
"(Tomato harvesting) will probably be late," Adams -said. "There
will probablY, be no tomatoes
before J u Iy Fourth."

this celebration will be at 9:30a.m . which will occur at9 p.m . Au g. 12.
June 13 -at the Rivcrbend Arts The parade route will be down SecCouncil center on Second Avenue. on d Avenue. across Walnut
HOckman said.
Avenue and hack up Fin;t Avenue.
The board· also set a meeting for
This year's festivities may also
ille beginnmg of next week for the
include a boat parade, he itddcd.
Paulene Harrison and Sharon River F.cs!Jval committee at the arL1
Hawley will perforlll' hetwecn 8:05- council building.
9:05 p.m : Their sb'ow - called
The group now ha.; -15 members,
"Countiy Tonight" - wi II he in a Hockman said.
Grm1d Ole Opry style.
Hockman said he still is seeking
The event still needs an emcee. input from downtowrt mer~hants
which Meigs County Chamber or about a downtown stmlegy.
Commerce presideJtl C huck
The association's beginning balKitchen had served as for UlC last ance on April 4 wa:; $2,440.89. 'Ole
fcwyears,Hockmansaid.
e nding balan ce June 1 was
. Ten people auend~dthis me«l· --~2,18~.40 . _
The group wlll hold its next ·
ing and learned more detail s about , 1
tile Midnight Magic Light Parade, mee ting at 5· 15 p.m .luly II at
Peoples Bank .

Mason County officials
upset by U.S. 35 report
Dy MINDY KEARNS,

•

years.

OVI' News StaiT
•
Division of Hi.ghways Comm is~
Mason County officials were sioner Fred VanKirk, speaking al a
disappointed, to say the lea". when meeting in Winlield, sponsored by
U1ey learned earlier U1is week that U1e Pumrnn County Transppr!&lt;~lioll
tile widening of U.S. 35 from Point Commince, said the stale will have
Pleasant to Km1awha County is not · to sec k special funding for tl1c 36expected to he finished for up to 20 milc project, which is estimated 10

County begins
By GEORGE ABATE

al 10 days so farmer,; who must
· plmu late do not lose covCr;1gc.

·MCA plans for July 4 festival

action.

"ll's nice to see you.'ve taken
tile initiative and created this protocol," she said.
However, she impli ed thai
Meigs (:ounly officers are not
referring enough ballering victims
to tile sheller.
"I don't thing Meigs Countians
know what Serenity Hou se bas
available," she said.

ure11n

lion, said farmers are running nul
of time to get com in the ground in
lime for harvesr.

''I[

ca~bage

Despite tile slow starL an cxccp·
tiona! production of tomatoes is
;uuicipated, he added . His tomatoes
are being irrigated by a drip sys-

tem .
"We need more warm , dr y
weather," Adams said .
The former Southern lligi1
School principal employs mostly
high school students. Adams said .
"They are exccllelll workers,"
Adams said.
Eastern lligh School graduate

.

.l'.REI?ARlNG

coM $400 million . West Vi•ginia
has asked lO have U1e road des•~ ­
natcd as pan or the . natiOJial IHgh ways system 10 he elig ible for Uw
funuing. the only likely .w ,ircc &lt;&gt;f
money for the work , he said
However. ofticials donnt expect

Continued on page 3

crop ·haryes.~ing

Jessica Radford. said this hot, hard.
work is bcuer than working in tile
public. ·
"CabNige don't talk bacR." Radford said, who is working in her
second .summer al the farm. "They
keep you busy. ll's not really had ."
Oll1er county cabbage grower;
include Max Hill. Larry Turley and
Roy Pierce.
Hill. who also operates a Letart
Falls -farm. said he may be able to
. sell hi s cabbage for more profit

witll recem heavy stonrts m Georgia and Other Southern states.
"We've got probahly th e best
crop irr years." Hill satd :
The operation is probably c ut·
lin g every si ngle plant, whi ch is
unu sual.
.
The Hills planted ahoul 300.000
plan1.1, he added .
"The groundhogs gal some. but
il will be pretty close." Hill sai d.
" W~' ve been cumng ahout 1.000
plants a day ."

FOR MUK£1; ~·Worker,~ --~~INolUh.-.. ~i!e_ ur th~'l'!!'."1.•!.y_i,e,ld,._Ma~m.' said.

pack cabbage at Jim Adams' Letart t' alls farm
Tuesday morning. This year's crop will he about
·

-,.\bout one Q-uCkfoad a day is being sh1pped to
Cleveland. l'ackin'g cabbage i~ Jessica Radfonl.
(Sentinel photo by George Ahate)

�Wednesday, June 7,1995

Commenta

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Pege2
Wednesday, June 7, 1995

Cold front will bring Ohio
more comfortable weather

OHIO Weather
Tbw llllay, June 8
Ami·~ forecut for

:~all~~.enl:~J~el~I , Until
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long All Jeuer:s are subJect to eciltmg and must be stgned wnh name.
address and telephone number No unSigned !etten; wtll be pubhshed Letters
should be m good taste addressmg tssues. not personalities

the end, Serb writer sought peace

WASHINGTON
Tbe
extraordinary bfe of M1lovan Djt·
ias, who dted recenUy at the age of
l 83, gtves paitse for some hope
amtdst the horror m the former
Yugoslavta
In a land controlled by butchers,
, Djtlas was a dreamer The Serbtan
poet and author bad every reason to
be despondent and fat'lhsuc m the
face of the bloodshed , but he
beheved a better day was commg
And though he bad more reason
than most to be bttter and brokenhearted, he chose sorrow wtthout
rancor, occas10nal tears mstead of
restgnation
Hts death bas gtven us reason to
rev1ew hiS remarkable hfe, detatled
m several convcrsattons wtth our
assoctate Dale Van Atta

Ojtlas was Yugoslavta's most
well-known author dtsstdenl and
polttical analyst, an 'author of more
than a dozen books rangmg from

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
nonticuon to poetry He knew what
tt was to be at the top of the power
structure, at the nght hand of Marshall Ttto, and. he knew what life
wts ltke at the bottom - bavmg
spent mne years 10 pnson for
speaking bts mmd He was one of
Yugoslavaa' s first Commumsts and
dted as perhaps democracy's greatest defender m hts tom-apart coun·

try

.....

Appreciates cemetery mowing
were made It was late when tt was
fuushed We understood It was
hard to get our.own yards Jnowed
due to heavy rams
Thanks agam for a very ntce
jOb
JesSte Grucser
Rutland

The cynics
By WALTER R, MEARS
AI' Spectal Correspondent
W ASHfNGTON - Call tt the cymct&lt;m

J

Amencans at large are
are

who cover them u_p close
Whtle Ute po!Jsters who made that fmdmg dldn'rexplmn 11, there may
be reasons m tssues rangmg lrom Bosma to Hollywood to poltltcal
mfighung over an antt-terronst btl!
In each of those controverstes, t11ere are explanauons that make at least
some sense mstde the Beltway, a measure ol understandmg that doesn't
mean acceptance But tits a dtlferent lens
So for example, on Pre,.dent Cltuton 's confltcted course on the U S
role m Bosma He ventured the posstbthty ol deepened Amenc,m mvolvcmcnt, then retre,ued to about where he began before the Bosman Serbs
stnTed cnsts by setzmg U N peacekeepers as hostages
'
The admmmratton posttton now IS to offer rur and lechmcal support
for UN forces deployed by NATO alhes, whtle saymg that Amencan
troops would be used there only m tfte event of rut-emer~,oency wultdrawal,
a slluauon Clmton called remote and btghly unhkely
He d satd last Wednesday that Amcncans m1ght be used were there to
he a need lor reconfiguration and strengtllemng of the 'U N peacekeepmg
Ini SS JOn

No change, the Whtte House srud, although there dearly has been
At a dtstance, ouly confusiOn and mdect ston could explam all that At
closer hand, tl seemed t11e message was mtxed because tt was gomg two
ways- to the French, Bnttsh and ot11er NA10 alhes wtth troops tn
Bosma, and also to the Alnencan public .md to Congress, where there ts
httle tl any support for mcreased mvolvement
So Chn tOJl s spokesman, Mtke McCurry summed up tht s way on
Monday
·~
"The prestdent s policy on Bosom the fundam entals ol tl have not
changed really tor over two years Not cntenng that w.n on behalf of
the Bosman government, t11e Bosman Mushms and two, no grolmd troops
as part of the contmumg UN peacekeepmg nHsSton t11ere
"llmt srud, strong support lor U1e NA10 etforLs and a conumtment
to our alltcs to do t110se Uungs that help t11em remam and parltctpate "
~McCurry descnbcd those a' " the broad panunctcrs ol ,, policy tiM! has
not changed "
That prompted skcp ucal qucsllonm g, and there wtll be more m
Congress as adm mtstrauon wttnesses seck support for Chnton policy
Skeptmsm close at hand may translate to cyntCISID on Mrun Street, where
plamer lrut guage ts the rule
1 he smne athtude may apply to Sen Bob Dole's slap at Hollywood
and the entcrtamment busmess over portrayals of viOlence and sex he satd
are debasmg Amcnca
The Senate Rc~uh11tan le.ttlet sntglcd out Tunc Wamer Inc tor cnuctsm, but he has sa1d smce that he won't be retunung tis camprugn donauons It's not a lot of money, $21,000 smce 1987 Keepmg tt, be smd m
an NBC ,tppe,rram;e on Sunday, "demonstrates that they dtdn't buy aJlY·
ilung" wtththe contnbuttons
~-~1-tt-everytlay-tefms,--retmmng tt Wflu ld ftt the mess.tgc Dole satd he
waul~ to send But campntgns arc expenstve, Dole ts runnmg for prestdent
.md tu renounce past support cou ld wntc olf future contrtbuttons
Agam, tltal JS more underst,utdable dose up than at a d1s~1nce
So 100, the hassle over antt-tcrronst lcgtsl,tlton that ""'supposed to
get top-spec&lt;.l handlmg alter tl1e Okl.thom&lt;l Cuy bombmg on Apnl 19
Clinton wanted 11 passed by Mcmonal D,ty, now the l ourth ot July ts a
goal Dole threatened to shelve n because ol Democrattc amendments
Clmton earlter had accuseil Republicans ol dclaymg tt The prestdcnt srud
Monday th.ll both parucs should 'curb pohttcs" and pass it wtthout
dcl.ty
In W,lSiungton, pohucal dtsputcs and delays arc rou tme l'o people
wll(l h.tve been told somethmg Is goutg 10 happen m a hurry, stallmg IS
~uspc(;t

Ami iltlltgs hkc that may account lor the poll th ,tt mverted convcntton,tl ,1ssumpuons and lound Ute public w he mote cymcal thml the mcd1&lt;1
about the honesty and cthtcal s~mdanls ol n.tttonallcadcrs
In limt survey hv the Tunes Mtrror Center for Pearle and the !'tess
only 18 percent of the pubhc gave htgh rattngs Tor honesty and 1ntegn1y to
oflictals m WashHJJ;IOll About three 111ncs ,t, many of the JOumalt&lt;ts who
cover t11osc oflictals ~3 percent rated t11em highly
EDITOR'S N01 E- Walter R Mear~, vtce presulent and co!umntst for The Associated Press, has reported on Washmgtnn und
national pohttcs for more Ihan 30 years

Today in history
By 'I he Assocmh·d Pt ess
l'od:ty IS Wctlnestl.ly lune 7 the 1'8th d.ty ol 199S llJCrc .uc 207
d,tys leltm Ute year
l'uday s Htghhght "' lltstu• y
June 7 1769 ts tnngmzctl by Ke111ucky s lltstonc,tl Soctcty '" the
date tll&lt;lt fronuerstp.tn l),unc! Boone hrst bcg.m to explore ctte present-day

Bluegrass State

IToledo!66" I

At 18, be set off for umvemty
m Bel~rade, where be was soon
reeogmzed for h1s fine poetry and
well-crafted short stones But b1s
role a$ a revoluuonary eventually
twerwhelmed hts art He JOmed the
illegal Commumst party m 19)2,
whtch resulted tn h1s arrest and
impnsooment by the royal government for three years Durmg World
War II, he was a parttsan fighter
Afterwards, as a promment Commumst leader m the Yugoslavtan
Pohtburo, be became one or lito's
closest advisers
Dunng litis time, DJiias recalled,
be warned Ttto early about tbe
madness of Stahn "I met Stahn
three umes," he told us , "The first
ttme he espoused Marxum and

~--------·--------~-----;

letter to the Editor
Dear Edttor,
It tS ume for someone to report
on somethmg ntce once m a whtle
I would hke to thank the trustees
for canng what M1les Cemetery
looks ltke
Whoever did the work has done
an extra good job
We arc sure some complamts

Leom1sm correctly _The second
ume, after the war-, I saw some
j)IOblems wtth his thiilking Bullhe
!hind ume, I was di~ppomted and
knew be w_as wrong
Till! warmed to th1s advice and
stood up to Stalm, carvtl)g an mde·
pendent route for Yugoslavia But
DJtlas' ferule mmd wouldo't stop
at cnuc1'Zing Stalm He came to see
MarXIsm ttself as a faJiure and
began behevmg that democracy,
wtth tiS espousal of human nghts
and freedoms, was be\ter tf c:u;eful-.
ly a~phed Hts outs~ken behefs
dtdn t s1t well w1th hb bosses, who
1mpnsoned•bun after be published
an at;uclc cnttcal of Stalln m the
New York Tunes
Like the famous Soviet dissident
Andre• Sakbarov, Djllas was
reborn wtlh the dts$01uuon of the
Commumsl emptre and lbe emergence of Mtkhatl tlorMcbev In
pre-ctvtl war mlervtews wtth us, be
was ebulltent about the future of
Yugoslavta, though he remained
vocal m hts criuctsm of Yugosla- •
vtan leaders
He was nghUy concerned when
Serbtan leader Slobodan Mtlosevtc
began heating the drum ofpan-Serbtamsm to gam populanty Tbts
meanl stokmg Serbian en mil y
toward Croauans, whQ had killed
1 hundreds of thousands of Serb1ans
m World War II when the Croattans s1ded wtth the Nazts
At first, DJtlas helteved Mtlosevtc had stmply been beset by "bad
party mfluences," But tl was not,
long befOre DJ)Ias told us that
Mtlosevtc had come to believe hts
own rile tone, winch he ')lredtcled
would open the Pandora's box ot
ethmc hatred
Duong our last eonversatton, ui
a sober uioment demrutded by lite
ongmng bloodshed, he told us that
the one thmg that must never be
s urrend~red ts hope
Jack Anderson and Michael
Btnstein are wrtlers ror United
Feature Syndtcate, Inc.

•

J

On thts date
In 1654, Louts XIV was crowned Kmg or France m Rheuns
In 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Vrrgmta proposed to the ~mal
Congress a resoltJuon callmg for a Dcclarauon ollndependcncc
fn 1848 French post-lmprcsstontst prunter Paul Gaugum was born tn
Parts
In 1864 Abral1mn Lu tcoln was nommated for another rerrn as president at h~&gt; party s convcnuon 111 Bahunore
In 1892. the Repubhcan Nauonal Convenuon began meeung tn Mm·- ·- ~·-···-~ncnJ'f'lts .•~n..t!Jc days th,u fJlllO:I&lt;I:cd,...llil:..dcU:gJ!les nom mated Prest!lent
Hamson for re-e!eeu01i' ru)p Whttelaw Rctd for vtcc preSTdem
In 1929, ilte soverctgll s~11c of Vattcan Ctty came tnlo extstcncc '"
copte.' m the Ltteran 'f;rcaty were exchanged tn Rome
In 1939, Kmg George VI ,md hts wtlc Queen El11abetlt arnved "'
Ntagara Falls, NY , from Canada on ilte lust vtstt to the Untied Stales by
a rctgnmg Bnush monarch

L~====::-

I

Flawed laws represent federal tyranny
Standmg on Ute banks ol Washmgton, DC 's Rock Cree k, !'restdent Cltnton promtsed thts week to
veto a House Republlc.'Ut rewnte of
the Clean Water Act If the mea
sure were enacted, the prestdent
warned, tt would " le t polluted
water back mto our ltvcs ••
Thts ts the usual hyperbole !rom
the Whtte House No one,ts ,tgamst
"clean water," not eve n tho se
nasty old pachyderms on Capttol
lltll !l1c problem wtth the 23-yearold law ts that tl ts bemg used by
federal regul,ltors to abrogate the
property rtghl~ of pnvate landowners lor purposes tltat have notlung
whatsoever to do wtth clean water
Ind eed. und er th e pr ~se nt
Orwelltan mterrretattOn of the
Clean Water Act, a ptece of property may be constdered a ''wetland"
11 tl ts dry 96 percent of tlte year
And even when ilmt property 15 pn
vately held, ,15 ,rre 75 percent ot the
natwn s pumuve wetlands, the guv
cnuncnt has final say over how the
property m,ty be used
rcderal enforcement ol WCIIaJld
rcstnwons oltcn borders on the
,lbsurd tl nm t11e ontrageous For
mstancc ~• grandmother 111
Wyonung was b.u-red by the government lrom planung a bed of
roses on her property A couple 111
New York were hoed $10,000 lor
bmldmg ,1 deck on thctr house that,
,unong other atrociUes, ra$1 a shadow on a wetland
A Nevada rancher was threatened wtth ,1 live-year rnson term
for hmng someone lo clear scruh

brush !rom trngatton dttches on hts
propel!y (whtch h,lll been 111 usc
SliiCC

the tum ul the Ll.!nlury) ·And

a M,lryl.uld. m,u1 aclu.Llly WdS sent
to pnson tor Lhc cnmc ol bUikhng

dnck ponds .ts
sanctuary

p&lt;~rt

ol a wt!dltle

seeking employment
Moreover, because the ADA tS
Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (CAFE) standards Thts overly broad in tts dcfimuon of diS·
20-year-old chestnut ts a rchc of abJitty - any phystcal or mental
the Arab otl embargoes of the tmpamncnt that substanually hmtts
1970s It reqUtres that new car a maJor hfe acltvtty - many non- \
fleets average a spec1f1ed gas dtsabled people have found spectal
Joseph Perkins
mtleage (27 7 mtles per gallon m protecuon under the law In fact,
remarked more than two centunes
1995)
more than a thtrd of ADA cornago, "Bad laws are the worst sort
Whtle almost everyone would plamts mvesttgated by the Equal
o!J yramty '
agree that energy conservatiOn ts a Employment Opportumty Commts·
Congress would do well to heed
worthwhtle goal, almost everyone ston mvolve workers clrummg such
Burke's admomllon
Alter would also agree tltat tt should not dub1ous dtsabth~es as back pam,
wrcstltng wtth the prestdent over come at t11e cost ol human hfe But emottonal problems or alcohol and
the Clean Water Act, lawmakers
that ts prectsely the result ol nsmg substance abuse
ought to constder rewntmg etthcr CAFE standards
Court dockets also are betng
all or part of th e followmg bad
In fact, an analysts by beset by fn volous ADA clatrns
laws
economtsts Robert Crandall, ot the Ltke the obese woman who sued a
- The Davts-Bacon Act One Brookmgs lnstttute, and John Ora
movte theater for not allowmg her
of the most blatantly ractst laws ham, of the Harvard School of Pub- to bnng a foldmg chau to watch
remauung on the federal books
he Health, found that m 1989, new "Jurasstc Park" m comfort Or Ute
Smce tL' enactment m 1931, tt has cars were 500 pounds ltghter than Flonda man who was ftred for
effectively restncted the employ- they would have been wtthout that brmgmg a gun to work He sued hts
ment\of blacks and other tmnonues year's 27 5 mt!e-per-gallon CAFE employer on grounds that he was
011 such public works rroJeCts ,IS reqUirement
mentally tmpatred and therefore
lnghway s, bndgcs dams, walcrThe economtsts cstunatcd that protected by the ADA
ways ,md .urports
the wetght reducuon resulted m
Innocent property owners arc
The law requtres that federal 2,500 addtttonal auto deaths and bcmg tcrronzed by the wetlands
contractors pay thetr workers the 25,000 addtttonal senous tnjunes proviSions of the Clean Water Act
' prcvatltn~ wa~e' for a gtve n
for that model year's fleets Thus, Federal taxpayers are bcmg shortare,t .1 figure the Labor Department tf CAFE standards were ehmmat- changed by the Davts-Bacon Act
ed, and auto makers were able to Amencan rnotonsts are losmg ltfe
usually pegs to local unton scale
And smce unton scale almost put heavter, safer cars on the road, and ltmb because of CAFE stanalw,tys ts htghcr than the local thousands of hves would he spared dards And blameless e mployers
labor market would otllerwtse bear, - and tens ol thousands of IDJ unes arc bcmg sued under the ADA .for
th e least sktlled, !east cxpenenced would be av01dcd
vtolaung the ctvtl nghts of workers
workers (who are disproporllonate- Tite Alnencans Wtth DJSabt! - who are nondisabled
ly hl.1ck and H1spamc) often fmd tttcs Act Tins 1990 Ct vtl nghts law
Congress ought not perrn1t such
tS a lex tb(J()k cx,unple ol good leg·
themselves pnccd out of govern
tyranny to conttnue under th ese
mcnt constru ctton projects
ts!attve mtcnuoris gone awry The federal laws
I he most perverse aspect ol ADA w,ts supposed to brmg
Joseph Perkms ts a columnL•I
Davts-Bacon ts that tl mcrea,es Ute severely dtsahled Amcncans mto for The San Otego Umon-Trtcost ollcdcral construcuon prOJects the JOb m.trket But stnce the bune.
by as much as 30 percent In fact, emrloymen t JlroVI SIODS Ol the Jaw
(For mformotwn on how to
the CongressiOnal Budget Offtcc went mlo effect three years ago, 85 commumcate electromcally with
csttmatcs that repeal of Davts- pe rcent ol the peor le who have tins columnist and others. con ..
Bacon wou ld save the Amcncan II led JOb bms complamts under the tact Amertca Onltne by &lt;alllng 1·
taxpayers $7 3 btlhon ove r ftve ADA were already on the JOb, not 8410-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
!f what these property owners
dtd was crumnal under the Clean
Water Act , then clearly the law
needs to be rewntten For as the
Bnttsh statesman Edmund Burke

years

Some foreigners' sup'e rior airs reek
Every cunnudgeon h,ts !he nght,
Guess what bothers the tundaby btrth aJtd by contract lo throw rn elll.tllsts the most? I'll gtvc you
poltttcal corrccllless 10 the wmds some lunts In Omrut, bow Ucs are
and wa" chauvmtsllc on occasion
a 110 110, 111 Kuwau Barbte dolls
Thts ts such an occaston
It can lounds me how people, 111
'Joseph Spear
loretgn lands can look at a tragedy
ltke t11e Oklalwma Cny bnmb111g,
or a l~ucc ltkc lh c 0 J Sunpson .trc "she Uevtls , m Saudi J\r,lbl(l
tnal dlld a.~.;sumc supcnn1 ,ur~ .w(J
and Iran, sale lille t.hs hes arc
talk .1bout wh.u barban.tns we ,uc, banned Guc.s what 1 V shows .11e
when IIley U1emselves live m soc•
all tltc rage 111 1 chenm' "Opral1 "
cues that often make ours look hke "LA Law" and "Bayw,ttch"
models of ctvt hty and tolerance
Not that these are Jewels of J\mericru1 cullure, but you get Ute pomt
! also lind tt dtlficu!t lo comprc
bend why Ule vtews ol such purT.tke France wluch has some
blmd people so often put us 10 a mce archttecture anti makes tamaWhttller Amenca funk 11 you look IIZlng pastncs but whtch also
closely, you wtll see illey arc the mventcd nouvelle cutsme- whu;h
sentnnents of msecure scolds who
ts a medallion of sumctlung smothsecrctly envy our flatr and our ered tn raspberry s,tuce served
style ,
wttll 1wo spngs of asparagus and
Indeed h dependable mmdote to three scmt-raw potatoes the St7:C ot
one of those Amcnca-ts-gomg-to- goll balls wluch aren't even comhell Ins ts to ponder the fact that plctely peeled
The French seem preoccupied
half Ute planet seems to spend half
Its wne fcndtng off Amertcan wtth rooung out anythmg made m
mflucncc
Amenca They llrntt the unportaTake the lslamtc world uon of Amencan films- no, monwbtCb"Ts dommated by holy-mcTf ----sreur ·net-because they fear US
who tssue decrees reqmrmg yonng cmema mtght he supertor, but
gtrls to be CJrcumctsed, prohtbtUng
because, m the words of Ute French
organ transplants and lorb1ddmg
.u~bassador to U1e Umted Stales
, cosmeuc surgery
'Fr,mcc IS trymg to keep open the

Amencan temns arc dommaung the
Nattonal Hatkcy League
gucrs '' T he JUform,ttlOn super
Hockey ts thetr naltonal pastughw,tylfrlghtens (Item because 11
you see They tn vented the
lime,
tS dummatcd by the Untied States
and
tdenttfy wtth tt and Utu s
sport
and Japan and could dtlute or even
the
ratent
on ll
ljave
drown thctr beloved culture fhc
Lately,
however,
thtngs have
Eng lt sb language scares them
the
worse Last
taken
a
turn
for
because "Amcncan" words keep
Decemhe1 Hentage Munster
crccpmg mto thetr vocabu lary
ror 456 years, as near as any- Mtchel Dupuy anno unced an 80
body can ltgurc, f'rance bas been percenL exctse Ia&lt; on Sports Ill us
passmg laws requmng that French trated Canada And on Jan I
bustness be conduttcd tn the. Can,tdtan regulators forced the
French language La&amp;t year, the N&lt;tshvtlle-hdsed Country Mustc
parliament passed yet another btll TeleviSion cable network oil the
outlawmg "franglats and the mrways
Mullahs and Barbte dolls are
bureaucrats published a Dtcuonary
of Ofltc ta l I erms of the French one thmg , The French and lhctr
prcctous lltcks are another But
Language
!t IS no longer acceptable to say when Canada starts to run down
"rur bag" on Ute streeL~ of Paree our country muStc, that could be
One must say "coussm gonllable " percetved as an tpsull
They do have an excuse
A Frenchman must eschew "pnme
ttme" m favor of "heurcs de gmnd though fbe NHL was on stnke at
the ttme and they were m a Whitlt
ecoute " Anti a "cordless phone'
•s now a ''poste tclcphontquc sans ~'T Canada funk so maybe we
cordon ''
ought to gtve them another chance
Joseph Spear ts a syndicated
' Take Canada, wtth whom we
writer
rnr Newspaper Enterprise
share the world's longest undefend
.
AOSO&lt;:iation
__
ed-border "Canll&lt;itans are bom.w•th
(For Information on how ~to
genes that compel them to he skep
ttcal of anylhmg Amencan, but communicate electronically with
usu&lt;\ily they confine thetr concerns thts ~o lumnist and others, con·
10 wheal and beer and whether tact America Onhne b}' callmg 1800-827-6364, ext 8317.)
pOSSibtJI(y Of ChOICC !OJ JIS JnO VIC

Stnny Pl Cloudy Cloudy

"'"---~- Weather
South·Central Oblo
Today Hazy sunslune Warm
fi1'll humtd wtth a 30 percent
. chance of showers and thunderstonns Htgh m the mtd 80s South
west w1nds mcreasmg to l 0 to 20
mph
Tomght and Thursday Vanable
cloudtness wtth a 30 percent
chance of showers and thunderstorms Low m the m1d 60s Htgh
Thursday tn the mtd 80s Wmds

By Tbt Associated Press
Weather forecasters promtsed
more comfortable condluons across
Ohio wuh the am val or a cold front
tomght
It will cooler and less humid on
Thursday. following passage of the
front. the Nauonal Weather Servtce
srud Htghs Wtll be m the 70s and
IQW 80s
A cbance of thunderstonns will
extst daJJy through the weekend
The recond-btgh temperature for
thiS date at the Columbus weather
stalton was 95 degrees m 1930
whtle the record low w,as 39 m
1977 Sunset tomgbt wtU be 'fit 8-57
p m and sunnse Thursday at 6 03
am •
Across the nahon
Tbe final remnants of Humcane
Alhson were headmg for New England thtS mornmg, whtle bot and
stonny weather was brewmg tn the
Mtdwest and a sharp cold lront
headed for North Dakota
Thtck clouds, gusty wmds ani!
ram brushed ~outhern New England as Alflson prepared to dtsperse
mto tl1e Atlanuc Ali esumated 5 to
7 mches of ram have !allen over
parts of northeast North Carolma
smce Tuesday as a resull ot Alit-

the Mtsstsstppl Rtver Valley ts
bnngmg scattered ram showers and
thunderstorms across the Great
Lakes regton and the Ohto lind
Tennessee R1ver Valleys ft should
re;~Cb. the AUanuc region by later
today
Severe thunderstorms will be
posSible from the central Htgb
Plams to lllmms, Jndtana, western
Kentucky and southern Wtsconsm
Parts of the regton also expected a
su rge of hot atr, wt th forecasted
htghs m the upper 80s to low 90s
By contrast, a chtlly ram and
temperatures 30 degrees below nor·
mal were forecast m South Dakota
Htghs were expected to drop mto
t11e 60s today and fhursday
fhe South wtll be hot and
humtd, wtth a few thunderstorms
posstble m southern Flortda Htghs
will mosUy be m lhe 90s
In the West, thunderstonns were
posstble from the mtenor secuons
of Washmgton and Oregon, northeast Calttornta and the S terra
Nevada to the Roc k,Y Moumams
Temperatures were expected to
reach the htgh 60s
The natton' s hot spot Tuesday
was Laredo, Texas, at I06 degrees,
whtle the coldest temperature was
24 degrees at Ely, Nev, and Yellowstone Park, Wyo

tomght southwest 5 to 15 mph son
"
A storm system movmg eas t ol
becommg west
Extended forec:ast
Fnday Dry nortl1 A ch,mce ot
thunderstorms south Lows f.rom
the mtddle 50s north to the mtddle
60s south Htghs from around 80
•
north to near 90 sout11
Saturday and Sunday A chance
Law otficers mvesttgaung the Sunday mgbt breaking and enterof thunderstorms Lows m the 60s
mg of the Ptck and Shovel Grocery, Salem Center, found burglars
and htghs m the upper 70s to mtd·
stole only one ttem - Ute store's burglar alarm
die 80s
Accordmg to a report from Metgs County Shenff James M
Soulsby, the burglary was reported Monday Entry was made by
prymg otT a set of bars on the store's stde wmdow, accordtng to the
report
An mvesugauon ts conunumg, Soulsby srud

Local News in Brief:
Burglars steal burglar alarm

--Area Death.s PauiBush

•

Deputies probe thefts

Paul Leonard Busb Sr, 69, of Potnt Pleasant, W Va, dted Monday,
June 5, 1995, at bis restdence He was a rellred master nvcr ptlot wtth 32
years of servtce A World War II US Mannes veteran, he was a member
of the Stewart-Johnson Veterans of Foretgn Wars Post 9926 of Mason,
W Va and Amencan Legton Post23 of Pomt Pleasant
Born May 4, 1926, m Ambrosia, W Va, he was the son of the late
Mason and Eva Stearns Bush
Survtvors tnclude five daughters, Mary Berkeley of Henderson, W Ve,
Karen Young of Ada, Okla, Nancy Gardner and Suste Halstead, both of
Pomt Pleasant, and Kathy Berkeley of Btloxt, Mtss, three sons, Roy Bush
of Ada, Paul Leonard Bush II of Pomeroy and Rtcky Bush of Letart,
W Va; three ststers, Donna Hudson and Frm1ces Lee, both of Pomt Pleasant, and Juamta Ohver or Henderson, two half brothers, Robert and
Danny Bush, both of Ohm, and 27 grandchtldren, 18 great-grandchtldren
and one great-great-grandchlid
In addtUon to hiS parents, he was preceded 111 deat11 by hts wtfe, Rcath ~
Bush, one son, Mark Bush, two brot11ers, Arnold and Cectl Bush, and one
granddaughter
Fnends may call 7 to 9 p m Wednesday at the Wtltoxen Funeral
Home m Potnt Ple3sant where the servtce wtll be held 1 30 p m Thursday
wtth Brother lsruah Crump offic1a1tng
Bnnal wtl! he m Henderson Cemetery where the VFW wtll perform
mthtary graveside rttes

County restdeniS reported two !hellS Tuesday to the Metgs County Shenfr s Department
Charles Landers Mmersvtlle, reported a Lawnboy lawnmower
was stolen from h1s restdence between 6 p m Monday and 10 30
am Tuesday
Glen Thoma Chester, reported two lake owls were stolen from
hts suawberry patch The umtauon owls were used to scare other
btnds

Hit/skip investigated
The Metgs County Shenff' s Department IS mvesttgatmg an
aprarent httlsktp acctdent on Salser Road near Racme Monday
Barry Smtih reported an umdenttfied vehtcle had damaged a
fence, .1 shenfr s report stated

Village responds to pet problems
Complrunts of damage by pets may soon rrompt a reaction from
Pomeroy vtllage offictals
The vtllage has recteved numerous comp!runts regardmg both
dogs and cats, Mayor John W Blaettnar satd In many mstances, cat
complrunts outnumber tliose agamst dogs, be added
The vtllage already has ordmances concemmg dogs, but ts now
constdenng drafung an ondnlance to allow village offictals to deal
wtth cats
Cats left free 10 roam through the vtllage are destroymg shrubbery, lawns and flowers, Blaetmar satd
Meanwhtle, Dlaettnar ts urgmg vtllage restdents to keep thetr
ammals confined
"People should not h.t ve to put up wtlh oUter people's pels" he
commented

-

Carl Stewart

Carl Edward Stewart, 65, 1387 Creekvtcw Dnvc, GalltpoltS dted
Tuesday, June 6, 1995 at the OhiO State Umverstty Hospttal m Columbus
'He was a reured heavy eqUipment operator, Gallta County deputy shenff
and former pastor at the Vmton Full Gospel Church
Born March 24, 1930 m Ironton, he was the son ol Ute late George and
Eumce Mtller Stewart He roamed Betty Ann Hampton March 8 1948 m
Russell, Ky
Survtvmg m addtlton to hts wtfe are one dau ghter, Lmda (Rol,md)
Jackson ot W~stland, Mtch , one son, Carl (Carol) Stewart of Galltpohs,
one brother, Ray Stewart of Athens, Tcnn , one stster, Cllrrtce Mtllcr ol
Jltl!sboro, and etght grandchtldren and two great grandchtldrcn
Besides hts parents, ltc was preceded m death by one son. .Kcvm Stew
art and one brother, Emerson Stewart
'Fnends may call 6 to 9 p m Thursday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel
m Galitpohs and one hour pnor to the servtcc whtch wtll be held 2 pIll
Fnday at the Crossroads Pentecostal Church nc.1r Cadmus wtth t11e Rc v
Emte Napter oftlctaung
Burial wtl! follow m the A agspnngs Cemetery m Walnut Townshtp
Pal! bearers wtll be Mtchael Jrvute, Steven Stewart Bryatl Pasquale Rtck
Mtl!er, l'ony Mtller and Woody Lmdon

Divorces filed

Stocks

The followmg ac t10ns jQ f nd
marrtage were filed recently 111 the
Am Ele Power ·--"--"-"'.34 Ill
office of Metgs County Clerk of
Akzo·-----..
--...-----.611/4
Courts L'IIT)I Spencer
Ashland
OU
-"--"--"--.l4
7/8
Fthng for divorce was Jason R
AT&amp;T
--------..
--..
Sil
Dowell, Mtddleport, from Lesa M
Bank One.--"--"--"--.l3 3/4
Dowell Marmet, W Va June 2
Bob Evans-----..--..--..20 ~~­
A dt vorce was granted June 5 to · Champion Ind. --"--"---·.21 314
Charming Sbop--"--"-"'".J 718
Eugene 0 Adkms, Portland, from
City Holding ""-"-""-"""'..--" ..... 28
Jo Ann Adkms, Terre Haute, lnd
Federal Mogul.------····"·18 1/8
Goodyear T&amp;R --------·42 7/8

The Daily Sentinel

K·mart .. ----·..------··--.. 15
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Multimedia lot. -------.l8 314

Put"lhshed every afternoon Mnnd~ y through
Fnday Ill Cqurt St Pomeroy OhJO by the
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Inc

Second cl;•~s pu~lfl8C prud 111 Pmncroy Ohto
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cnrrtcuon' to

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SUUSCR IPTION RATES
lly Carrier or Motor Rouh

One Week
Momh ...

People's --· ..--------..- -.. 23

Ohio Valley Bank.--"-----..34
One Valley ----------·~.JO 114
Rockwell ·-----------44 314
Robbins &amp; Myen..---·--·.25 Ill
Royal Dutcb-•--"-----125 718
SbOney's ln&lt;-----------·10 318
Star Bank -----"-----·44 114
Wendy lnt'l------"--·-··"--17
Worthington lnd ..---------... 21

quotes provided by Advest ol
Go.JIIpolls.

] j Cent~

came• may

rtmlt 1n rtdYance dtrct:t to Tin: Datly Sentinel
t'ln n three ~~~~or 12 month ~MIS Credll w1ll be

.,,, ,,:, w""
flowers From 1"

-

;

given curner ench week

No

•ub~cnpuon

by mml penruned

10

'"" SUBSCRIPTIONS
13 week.~
26 Weeb

ln~ldr

•

Mrlgs CountJ

S23 92
$47 06

s2 w"'''• 122~
Ratts Outside Melg.-Otat.Ty
13 Wecb
26Wccb

.S2 Week~

$2S 61
$4966
S96 20

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Ave Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454 •
&lt;soo&gt; 433-6203

Hcrttagc luncheon l'lanned
I nmty Church wtll serve tun
chcons on I hursday Fnday and
S.uurday 111 conJu nctton wt lh llcr

"

fupJJers Plams cemetery dues
The fuppers Plams Chn s uan
Cemetery are collecung the $25 per
yc.tr mmntenance fee, whtch ts now
due
Church jJosts vtdeo htstot)
I he Ractne C hur ch of the
N,lz.trcne w11l hos1 Or lam Garlow

lountlmg pastor of Mctrorlex
Chapel, who wtll rresent a vtdeo
called 'A Walk Throngh tile !&gt;ages
ol Church Htstory,' atop 111 Sun·
day at the church
Softball tourney set
1 he 84 Lum berJaCk round rohm
soflb.tll tourn amc11t wtll he held
S.uurday and Sund.ty at the St
Cloud and Barr Fte!d 111 lluntmg
ton, W Va An $80 entry fee per
team IS requtrcd Cash prtze&lt;
awarded For detatls on douh lccltmmatJon toumey, call 614-867S592 or 304-522-7629

ungc Weekend ,,cllvllJCs Servmg :

wtll be !rom II .1 m, to 5 p m
Thursday an&lt;.l Fnday and from II
am to 3 p m on Saturday The
menu wtll mclude llmners sand
wtches, beverages and desserts
mcluotng homem,tde tcc neam
Carry out Will bo dV,ulable

=

Gun shoot sched uled
A 12 gauge gun shoot wtll he
he ld Sunday, I p m at the Forked
Run Sportsmans Club wtth procceds gomg toward fireworks for
Oclllbcr's Btg Bend Sternwhcel
resuv.tl

rr---------------------~

~

'I

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

,,,

This Wee•' Special:

~

oren'

where home caiTn:r ~rvace •~ avmlnblc

Umls sought for parade
Orgamzcrs of il1e J!ent1gc Day
parade are seeking addtUonal units
lor the event Any orgamzatton or
mdtvnlual wttll ,m entry should c,lll
tony Dmges&lt; at 902-7 141 or 992SOIS Inc r.tradc wtll start Saturday at 10 a m at the Metgs I !tgh
School foothall field Lme up ts at
930.tm .

t
1

BARBEQUE

SUN.·SAT. 10'00 AM-10:00 PM •

~

l

..

~.''
'

9

SJ74
992·2556

State budget heads
for Senate vote

COLUMBUS (AP)- DiVISIOIIS
among majonly Repubhcans over
educatton funding were n01 enough
to derail the Senate's verston of the
state budget
Stx Repubhcan s on the !!member Senate Fmance Commtttee
voted Tuesday mgbt m favor of the
$33 5 blllton, two-year budget
Republtcan Sen. Gary Subadolnik,
R-Strongsvtlle, )Otned the comtmttee 's four Democrats 111 vottng
agamst the measure
Tbe full 33-membel Senate tS
set to constdcr the btl! on Thurs
day, rutd commtttee Chamnan Roy
Ray, R-Akron , pred1cted 11 could
attract the necessary 17 votes to
pass wtthout the help of
DemocraL'
But much or I uesday's debate
took place among Rerubhcans
Both Suhadolmk and Sen Grace
Drake, R-Solon , offered amendments that would have gutted the
btll' s proposed s.: hool fundtng

Meigs

mecbamsm. Both fatlect 6·5, w1th
three members from each party
opposed
Drake wanted to remove a cap
on future school dtsurct property
valuattons, wuh the extra $74 mdhon gmng 11110 a pool to be spltt up
among all school diSincts
She argued lbat lhe plan would
take money from wealthier diS·
titcts, make 11 dtfficult for them to
pass future tax levtes and stunt eco
nomtc development
" It JUSt spreads the poverty
ardund," she saJd
Suhadolnik wanted w scmp the
Senate's school fundmg mechamsm and replace 1t wtth the House
formula for dtstnbuung school atd
He labeled the Senate plan as a
"Robm Hood" ap proac h that
would take up to $ 1 mtlhon away
lrom some SChOOl dtStnCIS
Sen Robert Cupp, R-Luna, dJsagreed wtth both

I
I

\

/awmen.~:ntnued from page 1

Among ti S serv tces, Seremty
House offers temporary lodgmg
support group meeungs drug .md
alcohol educalton and help wuh
health care and ob~'Un tng servtces
In addtU on, Ttrado srud the shelter hopes to start ,1 court-mand.tted

bauerers mterventton progratn for
domesttc vtO!encc ollendcrs
'We are open 24 hours a day'
she so td "We don t turn people
away - we alw ays ftnd someUnng '

Mason County..c.ontmued from page 1
money to oe appro pnated for the
cnttrc prOJCC t In stead YanKtrk
satd he foresees butldmg the road
m stages
"My expressiOn yesterday was
utter frustrauon ,' satd Jack Fruth,
Ma&gt;on County husmessman who
has been mstrumental Ill resurrect
mg the "Keer 35 Ahve' campatgn
"We're a lorgotten group down
here There's JUSt no emphasts on
Mason County ,md Route 35 '
Fruth satd local otltc tals have
put forth a lot of effort smce the
lour-lane road was ftr~t dtscussed
111 I iJ87 but they have seen no
rrogress 'We fell we were maktng
progress, but we saw yesterday
that's probably nm true We were
JU St getting a so ng and da nce
When we would leave a meetmg
they would JUSt lay the papers astde
and forg et th em unttl the ne.l
meeung," he added
Charles Lm ham , prestdcnl ol
the Maso n Co unty Develormenl
Authonty, srud he had really never
sll Uown a nt! thou ght ,1bout how
lon g 1l would tak e, bul ~.nll
VdnK1rk' s ume cstnnnte wt~s l1g

ured on the fact that the -t.tte
rece tves $160 mtlllon a ye,rr !rom 1
I eder, ~ trust, wttlt only $40 uHihon
sta tew tdc lor new co nstruc u on
"Based on that regul,tr ,tll ocattOn
to bmld a $400 mtllton stretch ol
ht ghway 11 would t,tkc 15-20
years ' he satd
Lanham satd rrogress IS bcmg
made on the lirst two and one hall
mtles of tour-lane road, whtch wtll
go to the coast gu,trtl stalton ' That

proJect wtll go to btd June 15, be
,twarded lyl y 15 wtllt construcuon
to s t&lt;~~ t Aug 15 Lanham satd
1 hen the next process would be 10
complete t Ul cnvtronmcntal unpact
studv Md cost esumate on the four
lines bcmg cllnSJde~ed
Fruth, howe\er tsn't geumg htS
hope&gt; up He st.ttcd 11 took the state
hvc yclU's 10 do, the envtronmental
study on the 2 mtle proJect to th e
coast guard statton, when n cou ld
have taken one year We 're not a
btg concern 10 them We had the
money for the proJeCt (2-m tl e
upgrade) smcc 199 1 That's a real
mdtcatton whe re 11 ranks tn thetr
mmds he added
Fntlh s;ud there ts more mtercst
Ill Ohto for us to hutld Rt 35 th,tn
111 West Vtrgtnta '1 hey have Rt
35 very well along m Ohto clear
across the state, and by the year
2000 wtll have everythmg done
fhcy don 1 w"nt 10 htt our state and
dump 11110 a 2 lane htgbway agmn,''
he sal(!
loh11 Mli~grttve, t.hrector of the
locttl dt:velopment autJwnty satd

he was rhsappo tnt etl by the news
hul appreCiated the candor of
Vanktrk, and added he fee ls 11 ts
strtctly a fundmg problem
State Sen.tlor Oshel Cratgo (D
Putnom) summed up Jus tee hngs at
the meetmg I'm really lrustiatcd
w1th what I've hearJ ht:rc IO&lt;.Ia) I
don t tlnnk we are on the stove
IIlllCh less on the front hunter "
Fruth sa.d a meetJng w1Lh Ohm

ulltctals has been set for Fnd,ly .tt
the llmverstly of Rto Grande

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

Meigs announcements
M HS Band practice slated
The Metgs Ht gh School Band
wtll pracuce Fnday mornmg from
10 ,, m to I I am to prepare for
Saturday's Hcntagc Day parade
fhe rehearsal docs not mcludc the
new freshman class Only th e
1994-95 members are rcq utred to
attend the pracucc

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

1.... ~1' 1 111''11 1'1~•r 'l''r 'l''r.~

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Untts of the Metgs Coun ty
Eme rge ncy Medtcal Scrvtce
recorded seven calls for asststance
Tuesday tn c ludtn g one transfer
call Umts respondmg mel uded
MIDDLEI'OR I
12 48 am · Beech Street Ray
Garl e nger. Veterans Memonal
Ilospttal
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
6 42 a rn , Number Nmc Road
Loutse Smtth, Camdcm-Ciark
Memonal Hospttal
POM EROY

10 29 p m , state Route 141
llcnn.m Rcdm,m Plc"s 1111 V .tile}
llosptml
RUi'LANJ)
7 17 am Metgs Mme 2 W
Greg Peck Holzer Mcdtcal Center
10 03 &lt;1m Metg s Mtne 11
Danny Spurlock, IIMC
6 30 p m Rutland B,tll Fteld
Shelly Mtller VMH

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 6 dtsch•.rges Jan Stew
an, Margaret N1chols, Nat"ltc
Radckcr Mrs Corey Parson' anti
daughter, llomer /\dkm&lt; Chnsunc
Sneed and Oeth James
June 6 btrth Mt anti Mrs
Stephen Ntcbols a son ol Oak
Htll
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuc~day ad11usstons- none
Tuesday dtschargcs - Dtlrtha
Neutzhng, Pomeroy Velma llarnck Mtddlcpon

HILLSHIRE BAPTIST
CHURCH
located on S.R. 143 iust off Rt.
~ (";,
Pomeroy, Ohio

7J'",

\\

{ ' .)

is sponsoring a

··~ HYMN SING

GJ

Friday, June 9th .. 7:00p.m.
,.,e POMEROY PARKING LOT

c,o

~rt" DOWN BY THE RIVERSIDE

frf\1
A Sound System Is Provided
Any Gospel Group, Diets, Trio's or soloists
Who Would like to Sing Call
992-6768 OR 992-5705

•

�I

..

.,

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•

"

Sp.orts

The Daily~!~~

--------------------------------~----------------------~--------------~~------------~--~p~·
e4
'
Owens' clutch single helps Reds top Pir~tes 2-1 in 10 innings
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- In less
than 24 hours, Eric Owens went
from ,packing for a minor-league
road lrip.to winning a big-league
game in his flrst at-bal.
That's bow well things are
going these days for the Cincinnati
Reds.
Owens, called up on short notice
to help the Reds get through
injuries, singled in the lOth ilming
Tuesday night for a 2·1 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates that
underscored the teruns' directions.
For th~J?-rales, it was another
crushinll)lls~ -:-- their fifth slraight
and their eighth in nine games,
dro~ping t!)em 10 games under

.500. For the second slraight night,
they wasted good pitching with a
defensive lapse.
For the injury-depleted Reds, it
was another one of those bard-toexplain wins ·lhal keep coming.
They bad a rookie pitcher making
his first major-league start and a
newcomer at the plate in ~ lOth,
but wound up wirb their ·11th victo·
ry in 15 games.
''I never could have dreamed
that this could happen, .. said
Owens, his tone conveying disbe tieL · 'I believe I' II l~ke il and
remember this one J(Jrever.' ·
It was a game that three rookiil.~
will never forget.
Pittsburgh's Esteban Loi!iza

made hi~ best start yet in the
majors. Loaiza. 23, was promoted
from Double-A this season but bad
struggled until Tuesday, going 0-2
with five no-decisions and a 9.45
ERA in his last seven starts.
" We've had some talks over th~
last few days on what good bigleague pitchers are like and whm
!bey do on the mound the day !bey
pitch," catcher Mark Parent said.
''And he listened and came out and
did exactly what we wanted him to
do.
He _gave up jusi one hit over
seven innings·, a clean double by
Brian Hunter in the fifth . He lost
the chance for a win when third
baseman Jeff King let in an

;{~earned run with a throwing error
in the seventh - the second
straight game that the Pirates have
commiued a pivotal infield mistake .
.
I.-eft-hamler C.J. Nilkowski, the
Reus ' top draft pick last June,
threw six shutout innings in his
debut as a starter: He gave up only
three hits and three walks even
though none of his pitches was
working .
"I just got lucky," he said. "I
haven't really felt !bat good since
I've been here, to be honest."
Owens settled in right away. He
was packing for an Indianapolis
road trip late Monday night when
he got the call to !be majors.

"I told my wife to pack clothes
for a few days, we're going to
Cincinnati," Owt:IIS said.
He watched from the bench until
the eigbrb, when the Pirates tied lbe
score on Jacob BrumlieW's doubleplay grounder. Owens batted in !be
bottom of the inning and sacrificed.
Chuck McElroy (1-1) held the
PirateS in the top of the I Otb, and
Thomas Howard led off lite bottom
of the inning with a soft liner that
dropped in front of center fielder
AI Martin for a double.
Up came Owens, who took a
ball from Dan Miceli (0-2), !ben
looked like an overmatched rookie
as he swung at two high fastballs.
" He was overmatched on three,

,

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

VWednesday,June7,1995

I

actually," Martin said. "It looked
like be bit a check-swing to right."
Actually, he shortened his
stroke and slapped an inside fastball through the hole, scoring
Howard.
"I really swung at two bad
pitches," Owens said. "!think !bllt
was nerves and jitters. I told myself .
at that point, 'That ain't you.
You've got to relax and just let the
pitch come to you.' He !brew me
an inside fa~tball and I inside-outed
it and got a bao;e hit out of it."
" He hit a pretty good fastball,"
Parent said. "He was chasing high
fastballs. l-Ie just got Ute bat oh one
and it found a hole."

'I

'

Kirby's RBI groundout helps Indians get past.Tigers 4-3
CLEVELAND (AP) - It sure we got one out." Whilaker
wasn · t ris dramatic as a game-win- - s;tid. "The ball wasn't hit hard and
ning home run might have been, going home with the throw was
but pinch-hitter Wayne Kirby's way to risky. I didn't really have a
broken-bat ground out was enough chanc~- So you hope all they score
to keep the Cleveland's torrid win- is one run, and you gel ou1 of the
inning and take your chances."
ning pace going.
This baseball season, chances
Kirby's bases-loaded grounder
to second baseman Lou Whitaker are good dleveland will win. The
in lbe eighth inning drove in !be Indians are 26-10, !be best record
winning run in a 4-3 Indians win in the majors, and !bey won for the
Tuesday night over lhc Detroil ninth lime in their last 10 games.
Detroit , 16·22, endured an
Tigers.
The veteran Whitaker was look- eighUt loss in Ute last 10 games.
"They've struggled for years
ing to end Cleveland's scoring
over
here," Whitaker said. "I think
threat by turning a double play .
they've only been in contention
There was no way.
·.·About all I could do wi~1 Utal maybe once since !' ve been here
one was throw to first 'and make (19 seasons), so I'm sure !be fans

In tonight's NBA Finals opener,

"When you lose by one run ,
·and dedicated himself to learning
are enjoying this. They have a very took the lead.
Starters Bl~clc and Felipe Lira how to speak 'English. Now com- !bat's a pretty big play, now isn't
good learn, but they can be beaten.
I think we should've beat them each left after six innings wirb !be fortable with the language, be i1?" Anderson Said.
Detroit lied the score on Juan
score tied 3-3 . Black yielded three seems even more. comfortable on
today."
Samuel's
third homer in lhe second
!be
mound
.
.
hits.
walked
four
and
struck
out
Eddie Murray opened the eighUt
and
went
ahead in the third when
"It's
nice
to
get
a
victory
any·
with a single to center off losing five . Lira, making his second
Chad
Curtis
drew a two-out walk,
time,
in
relief,
starting,
whatever.
If
reliever Joe Boever (3-3). It was major-league. start for the Tigers,
·
stole
second
and scored on Fletchthey
want
me
to
start
somelime,
I'
11
the 2,978th hit of his Murray's allowed seven hits, walked three
er's
double!
·
star~ but I don't mind where I am
c"'reer. Alvaro Espinoza ran for !be and slruck out six.
Carlos
Baerga
singled in a run
Indians manager Mike Hargrove right now. Just as long as I'm in the
19-year veteran.
and
Albert
Belle
had
an RBI doumajor
leagues,
playing
for
CleveAfter Jim Thome's fly ball wa~ went to his bullpen, which has been
ble
as
Cleveland
re,ained
the lead
land,
pitching
relief
is
.
fine,'
•
caught at !he center field wall by effeclive all season. Julian Tavarez
in
tl)e
bottom
of
the
mning.
.;
Tavarez
said.
Chad Curtis, Boever walked (4-0) pitched two scoreless innings
Curtis
made
it
3-3
in
the
fifUJ.
Indians
leadoff
hitter
Kenny
Manny Ramirez and Anderson for !be victory. Jose Mesa retired
turned to left-bander Buddy Groom three slraight left-handed pinch-hit- Lofton twice beat out bunt singles Danny Bautista led off with a sinters in the ninth for his 12Ut save in and eventually scored. In the first gle and Todd Steverson walked .
to face hot-hitting Paul Sorrento.
inning, Lofton's theft of second Both advanced on a sacrifice bunt
Sorrento lined a single 10 left, 12 chances.
Tavarez, a 22-year-old rigbt- was disputed by Tigers shortstop by John Flaherty and Bautista
loading lbe bases. Rookie Brian
Maxcy came on to get Ute next two h:mdcr from !be Dominican Repub- Scou Fletcher and Tigers manager scored on Curtis' grounder to
shoriStop.
batters, but not before Cleveland lic, stayed in Cleveland last winter Sparky Anderson Anderson.

lb.

Olajuwon-O'Neal match up to be de-emphasized, Hill says
By WENDY E. LANE

ORLA.NDO , Fla . (AP) Here's what you'd like 10 see during Game I of the NBA F1inals
tonight: Shaquille. O'Neal playing
Hakeem Olajuwon straight up, one ·
on one, with no messy double

reams.

-

It' s not going to happen, say
1-lousiOiJ coach Rudy Toinjanovich
and Orlando coach Brian Hill. Neith er is willing to risk Jelling his
supcrs1ar cover the other team· s
surcrslar wi~1out some ljelp ..

''That would be interesl ing ,
wouldn't it?" Tomjanovich said.
" There'd be a lot of mad threepoint shooters, tlmugh ."
Hill said he mighl agree to a
double-team moratorium, but not
forlong.
1
" The first time Hakeem got !be
ball," he said. ''I'd have Ill raise
my hand and say, 'I lied.' " · .
· Hill look a lesson from how
Olajuwon burned San Antonio's ·
David Robinsoli when (he league ·
MVP tried 10 cover last year's

MVP one on one. Olajuwon averaged 35.3 points and l2.5 rebounds
in the Western Conference finals.
"I marveled H the way he
played,': Hill said . "In two of
U10se games, I jusl got up from my
sofa , and eve~ mentionjld to my
learn here in practice, thai I've
never seen a guy play better.''
Another reason not to let Utese
.two guard each other unaided is
they like each other so well.
O'Neal has so much admiration
for Otajuwon he once sneaked in

In the French Open,

FAMILY PACK

the back door of the HemisFair · resed with how O'Neal has bandied is crucial in this series.
"It might be the best chanCe lbe
Arena in San Antonio to get his himself during his first three highly
visiting team has til pull one off,"
aulograph. O'Neal was 16 at the publicized seasons in tlte NBA.
· ''I have a lot of respect for be said . · .
time.
Orlando is a slight fa.voritc 10
"He's a class ac~" O'Neal said. Shaq," Olajuwon said. "Just to see
"On !be court, he's a very hard- how he came into the league and win both Game I and the lille,
nosed player. He doesn 't play dirty. eslablished his position right away. sort{e!bing !be Magic players lind a
He doesn't down other players. Off People criticize him !hat he's not bit ridiculous.
"How can !be NBA champions
the cour.t. he's well-dressed. soft- developing different moves, but !be ·
spoken, nice to people. So compare guy led the league in scoring. To ·be the underdogs?" Horace Grant
me 10 him if you're going to com- see a guy !bat size moving the way said. "Of course we're !be underpare me to anybody."
, he does, you can't compare any dogs."
"We have never gotten to this
Olajuwon said l)e's been imp- • player with him." ·
· So how will the RockeiS 1ry to point, and they are the defending
keep O'Neal from living on a NBA champions,'' Brian Shaw
steady diet of dunks?
said. ' 'They have had a hard road
'' maybe lry to get Hakeem out- here with Ute sixUt-besl record in
side a little bit more .to take Shaq' the West and have not had the
away from the baskel so if guys homecourt advantage throughout
Agassi said. "It was a very sbarp, cut, there will be no siiOI-blocking !be playoffs. If that is the position
·
excru.c iating pain that whe11 I and Utat leaves the boards open for tlicy want to take, Utal' s fine."
pushed off on it, when I slretched it a couple of offensive rebounds,''
oul, I couldnlt move well to the Houston 's Mario Elie said.
The RockeiS will be after their
right and I couldn't really go for
sixth straight road victory, which
ALL FLATS ...Reg. '6.50
Ute serve, as it got worse."
Agassi went on to lose 6-4 , 6-3 , would tie an NBA playoff record,
NOW$5.00
7-5, ending his Grand Slam win- and the Magic have won flve in a
ALL 10 IN. HANGING
ning slreak at IS matches and'ifa.,h, row at Orlando Arena.
· taASKETS
Tomjanovlch said the first game
ing hi s dream of completing a
Reg . $5.95-$8.95
(See FRENCH OPEN on Page 6)

LEG·
·ouARTERS

...

lb.

Bruguera and Kafelnikoy win in quarterfinals
By NESHA STARCEVIC
injury limeout after the first game
PARIS (AP) - Sergi Bruguera of t11e second set while ATP 1rainer
advanced his bid for a third straight Bill Norris sprayed his left hamFrench Open title today when his string and put a special tight elastic
quartGrfinal opponent, Renzo slrap around it.
Furlan of I ~1l y, pulled a hamslring
The Italian resumed playing but
and went out in slraigbt se'IS.
he .was obviously hwnpered in his
Druguera won 6·2, 7'5, 6·2. a movements and Bruguera won
day after an injury led to Ute elimi- without having 10 extend himself.
nalion of top-tanked Andre Agassi. · In the last men's quarterfinal,
Furlan needed a three-minute sixth-seeded Michael Chang played

!28th-ranked qualifier Adrian
Voinea of Romania and Ute winner
will meet Bruguem.
Furlan's injury came a day after
a hip injury hampered AgassL
· Barely started in his quarterfinal
wiU1 Yevgeny Kafelllikov, Agassi
slid into the red clay and felt a sudden pain in his right hip.
"I pulled up on it and I kind of
kept waiting fOr it to ease up,"

Closeout Speelal$

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NOW$5.00

Scoreboard

Baseball

[a.dtrn Divl~ion
~ L fil.

Itllw

Ea.drrn Divllllon
~

Itllw

.Gii

Uustun .......... ... :. ..24

12

.667

.... 16

20

,444

DctrOII .......... 16

2~

.42 1

9

Tcrnnto .

15

2:!

405

~.5

Nl'W York ......... 14

21

.400

9.5

.
c.. ntral Divhoion
cu:vF.. LAND . ..26 10 .722

\

O ;;~l!JIIIQ(t'&lt; ...

NHL playoffs

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Phi lao:lelphia ..........24
A11unta ..................2 1
Mon treal ................22
New York ... ........ 15
Florida ................ .. \0

8

L l'sJ.

14

Ji32

17

.553
.:550
.39.5
.27 8

18

23
26

Jill
9
13

IIi

556

6

.444
417

....... JIJ

17

.528

4..5

St.l...mus."... .......... ,. 16

24

.400

9 ..5

M1nnc.~ota ............. I

.289

Ill
11
16

Pi1U.:bUJi!,h ...... : ...... 13

2~

,361

, ]0,5.

20
I

27

Wl!l t~~n Divi sion
..'2 ~
15 .605
Tu~ ... ,.. ............2:!
17 564
Se:ttlle ..............20 17 .541
O:tkJunU ..... , .......2!1 Ill .526

Hc•ti;tnn

We~~ll'rn

1.5
2.5
3

Mtlwmtltee 13, MlnnL'MII:.l 5

4S

s·os p.rn.

To ro nJo (Lt&gt;iter .l-2) at Chicago
{Keyser 0-0). K:0.5 p.m.
K:msali c.ty (Gordon 4- 1) Bl Texas
{Pavlik 3- 1). 8:15p.m.
.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS · SiG ned

Seattle (C'nrulflna 1-2) ut Daltimnre
1."\l

{Mu .....mu4-3), 11: 35 r .m
Du ~ton

Nl\w York (Mitcb 3·1) at San
(\\'tl~n 3-2). .l•3 S p.m
Pttlshurgh (Wngner t -7) 31

Mercado and I&gt;arniun Ro5e, outrielden::
Bryon Link and Bruforrl l)r ylln l , pitch ·

Frt~nc iN -

~u ;

1- lornl :~

UNION AVE. &amp; S.R. 7

PH. 992·6360

onions
3 Lb. Bag

~·HEARING AID CENTER

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614-446·1744
Friday, June 9, 1995- 9:00•Noon
:
• Call Toll Free 1·800·634·5265 for an lmmedlat4, appointment. •
:
The tests will &amp;t given by a Ucensed Hearing Aid Speda&amp;st •

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POWDERED OR LIQUID•18 USES
. ASSORTED VARIETIES•42·50 OUNCE PACKAGE

/ Bag

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ORANGE JUICE

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FROZEN• ASSORTED VARIETIES
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GREEN GIANT
VEGETABLES

On The
Cob.

uni l Br ia n Mill er, Anth(t ny Sh umaker,
Br ian Dunne and Jaime Mendes, pi tchers;
:1nd a.u;igned U1em to Mart in5\'i l\e of lhc
Appalacln:m League.
S AN FRANCISCO GIANTS· Plnce d
Terry MuU10lland, pitcher, on U1e IS-day
dis-abled list. PurchaRed th e con lmcl of
l:: nrique Durlj.Ofl, pi tcher, fru m Phoenh: of
the Pacifi ~ Co~t Lcawue

will be given In Gallia County area by

L

Corn.

.

••

MEIGS CO. RECYCLING &amp; LITTER PREV.

'

FREE HEARING .TESTS

Hockey

'

(

COUPON

11 :05 p.m.
CINCINNA TI (P'L18h J-0) at 1-louslon
(K1I~ 1·4), K:05 p.m

•PHONE OUR OFFICE OR PLACE APPLIANCES AT
END OF OFFICE PARKING LOT.

and Nath.1n Vop;Jta, &amp;econd baseman,

I
I
I
I

e

it . .
. .......... .

4-J~;

992'5776
Sunday 12-5

of tJ1c lnturnationall.cugue.

baseman : Richard O'Connor .li!Jn rl ~&gt; t o p :

NEW YOR K YANKEES Optioned

1·2), 7:05p.m.
. Colorado (Rtl1. ~H) at Ou~ugu (fnt:tt:r

Oakland (ll ark.ey 1- 4) at New York
(Mdlowell 1-J). 7•=\.1 p.m
DetrOit (Mul)re 4-3) at Mtnnuota
(fupan1 J-.4). 8:05p.m
CLEVELAND ( Marttn~z 5·0) at M1l ·
wauk~ (Spoub l-1 ), 8:0~ p.m
Kansa~ C11y (Han ey 2-1) at Texus
(Gru5S 1·5), • .35 p.m.

' esu~

and MarY.

JC!C Ausanio, plldlcr. tn Caturnhw; of the
lntcrnahonal League . Activated Jos ia~
Manunillo. pitcher
TEXAS RANC1F:kS · Signet1 Ju]! o

(W e alhcr~

(Smilh t - 1), 6:05 p m.

pitch~rs.

Syracuse
Open Daily 9~5

JUICY PEACHES

HOUSTON ASTROS : I'! aced And y
St.:mkieWtCZ.. mficlder. on the 15-ctay disllh le d ltsl . relroactive lo May 29. Jlurchascd to cun tract of Mikt: B,n.unley. inlieltlcr-outfieldcr, hunr TuC."'-10 or Ule P:t·
,-iii.; Coati\ Lc:ngue .
NEW YORK METS · Rdurned Kevtn
· Nnrthrup 1 uutfi eldc:r, to the Montrcill ExflU~ .
Plff(,.ADELPIUA Pllll...UES ~ Silt netl
Marlon Andcr&amp;on. secon d bwoeman; Kirk
Pierce, catcher: Mark Raynor, shortstop;
Jnna thun CurncliU5, oulfieldcr: and Brian
Ford ~ Gary Yeager , Kyle Kowabat::t. 3ntl
Wclbcrt Qaiko, pitc heu, and as~ixned Ultlll
~~~ Batavia of the New York-Penn LeagUe .
Signed Mat! B uck les and Clyd e Uvtn~~l ti H , ca tchers: Kevin Hnok.er. second

Lea~u t

JonalhM Albrecht , Steven Mu llis,

Thursdo.y's ga111cs

ThursdaY's games

IO!tll

l..eu~ue .

L11. and John Sander:&gt;.
Mellin, shortstop.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

f"LORIDA MARUNS: AcliV.Jied Pal

BOST ON REO SOX · Signed Willle
McGee. ou tfielder, to a minor-league conI ne t and .sent him to ut~nde d spnng
truintntt. Rt..:alletl Bri~n ~ney. p11chtr .
from Pawt ucket of th e lnl crnalton;ll
Le:•gue. Placed Ke llh ~hepherl.i. pllcher,
nn W;uvtrs fm lhc purpose of giYinl: h)rn
Ius unconditional relcw;~ .
CA LI FORNIA ANGELS: Placed Greg
Myers , catcher, on the 15-day disabled
luH . Recalled J o r~c Fabregas , catcher,
fro 1t1 V:~n couvc r uf th e Pll c iftc CoaNI

r·'":

SHRUBS AND TREES
20%0FF

Rupp: p1tchtr , !rom the 15- clny di,uhled
li~t. Scut Ri~hic Lewis, pitcher, to Char-

llascball
Anu·riun

NOW 50¢

coach.

IND IANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEE D·
. WAY: N~med Rt~lph Knuner director of
the ll;:tll cr Fame Museum and co rporate.
affuirs .

(ltebe r 1-5) at CINCINNATI (Jar\' iS 2-2). 12:35 p.m.
C'htC&lt;tgo (Navarro 5· 0 ) al AtlanH1,
(Srnult.z 3-3), 12:40 p.m.
Florida (Burhlt 1-5) al 1J 11usrun
(Prllbek. 2-3), 2:35
rh llDdelplua {Sc lullln~ l-IJ) 31 San
Diegu ( Alihby 2-3), 4:05 p.lll
St. Louis {Jackso n 0-6) ut C111oraclo
(Freeman 1-2), S:05 p.m.
Muotreal (F:u;sero 7-\) at Lus An~elcs
(Nomo 1- 1).. 10:35 p.m.
New Yurk ( Sabcrht~~en 1-2) at San
Francisco (Ponugat 3- 1), 1 0:3 ~ p.m.

Ca lt fnrnm (Finley J-4) a! "Bu~t on
(CictJII!n&amp; 0-0), i OS p.m.
SeBflh•. (Bosiu 3-0 ) :u Ballimore
(8r(IWII.5·2), 7:).5 p.m.
Onkland (OntiYercll:i 5-l) :u New York
(Pethlte 0-1), 7 · 3.5 p 111
Mtlwauk.et: (Do nes 3-3) at M i n neRut&lt;~

4-0) at

.5
3

Pi tt~burgh

CLEVELAND

(Nawy 1-2). 7 05 p.m

(BCI~kie

t\ uto racing

..564

17 .553
20 .487
21 .447

Today's games

Tonight's games

Cllhfor nia

17

CI.NCINNATI2. Ptustluq:h 1 [I OJ
A!lunta 17, Oucago 3
Flt1rida 7, Hnuston 6 (1 1)
Colorado 5. St. l...uUis 4
l..u10 Ani,!eles S. Monlieal l
S11n Diego I. P!uladdphta 0

Oucago 6. Toronto 4
O:ttdam1 8: New Yorl.. 6

'

Transactions

Sa n Fnmci5co 2, New Yu,k I

CLEVELAND 4, Oftroit 3
C:dtfornla 12. Bnl&gt;lcH\ J
Ualt tt ltun~ 12, Se..~ulc (,
. Tcxll.h 2. Kart~a.~ Ct ty I

(Erkk!.on 2-4),

Detroit at Chicago, 8 p.m

2

Tucsday•s scores

Tuesday's e:ocurcs

(Wdl~ 2&lt;3) nl

.595

Divi11lon

So.n Fmnci500 ........ 22
Colorado ............... 21
Los Angele&amp; ........... l9
S3n0iego ............ .. l1

Cal1fornm. .

Dctr(ut

Tonight's -gamc .
f'htlaclel phla at New kt""Y · 7·30 p.m.

ThurSday's game

Milwauku .... ,....... l6, 20
Qlicago .....
15 2 1

City

Je [!d~

3

01icago ............... 22

K :m~a.'

Dell"Oll 4, Cha:agll 3 (2 OT); Detroit
series 3-0

3

Centr».. DiYiNiun
CINCINNA11 ....... 24 13 .649

15

CHICAGO CU BS : Signt:d Donald
Gordan, catcher: Dennis Bair, Rarad Corrales. Kyle Farnsworth. Brandon Hammod;:. Mi!.tthew Hammons , Ron ald Licd~ r d i, Robert Markey. John McNeese.
Ttrn Mo; ley, Rob ~r 1 Ric ketts, Justin
Speier , and Kri,.tu(er Studi ng, pitc hers;
Brian Conley, Tom Maleski , Ashanti McI.A1 nol d, Michael Perez, Richard PreM:1ey,
and James Putko. in fiel ders; and Kevin
Bentley. Jose Co lon . Rnnn ld Gr~"~en, T~rry
Jt!S4.'ph , Don!ild Kinn ie, Ryen SelrM and
Onrian Speet!. Clulficlllers.
. CO LORAOO R.OCK.JES : Ammunctll
thll r t: lir em ~:n t \If Don Zimmer , ben ch

Tuesday's score

41N. POTS Reg. $1.00

ATLANTA fALCONS : Agrec:ll to
lcrnu. with Jumpy Geatlu~r ~&gt;. dden sive
tackle. on a two- year co utract.
HOUSTON OILERS: Re\eused Cody
Car lson, quw1erbacl.. .
MIAMI DOLPlllNS : Extended th~
co utracls of Gen e Aikins , ufery, two
years thro uj;h J \19~. and Pete Sloy ::movich. ticker, three yenrs throuGh 2000.
W~iVOO Melvin Crawfortl , s~fety; Michael
Davis, fullbaek ; anti Steve Perkins. defen·
sivc:c:nd.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Si~ned
Sc.an Millia&amp;oD , runnin back.

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE

Football
N•tiunal Foolhall Lrtt~ue

I
I
I
I

.J

�'

•
Wednelday,June7,1995
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

With Konstantinov's clutch fOal,

·

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 7, 1995

Wedding plans laid .a~ound wrong figure

k

Red Wings eage Blackhaw s ·4-3 i
in Western
·
... Conference finals
••...

'

PRIMEAU SCORES - Detroit center Keith
Primeau (Jell) gets ·his stick into the face of Chica·
go goalie Eel Belfour while getting the puck past

Belfour hi the first period or Game J orthe West·
ern Conference finals Tuesday' night in Chicago,
where; the Red Wings won 4-J In two over limes.

French Open ..._&lt;~c=on::::lin:::ue::d..=fr.::om::..:P~ag~e~~&gt;:..__ _ _ _ _..:.__.,--_ __
career sweep of tl!e four Grand people who came and watched fourth-seeded Conchita Martinez.
Agassi said he didn't know his
might feel frustrated.·· ·
Slam titles.
.
• 'For it to end like ·that is
The women •s ·semifinals are short-term plans, but worrled that
extremelY disappointing to me,' ' he · scheduled for Thursday and feature the hip problem would disrupt his
said. "Now I' m worried abou£ four seeded players who have not preparations for Wimbledon later
Wimbledon ... I'm a neurotic athlete lost a set in their f~rst five matcbes · Ibis month.
Thomas Muster, unbeaten on
whose worst nightmare is to here.
become injured, and to have probTop-seeded Arantxa Sanchez cl~y this year, survived a tough
Vicario, the defending champion, five-set .ba!!le against Alberto
lems physically."
Agassi said his disappoinunent will play ninth-seeded Kimiko Costa Tuesday and will meet
compared with the 1991 final here, Date, and No. 2 Steffi Graf, a Kafelnikov in the semifinals Fri·
when he lost in five sets to Jim three-time champion, will play day.
Cou'rier.
It's not the first time an injury - -~------ Sports briefs:-------has plagued Agassi. He played only
Baseb~U
•ing his $2.6 million salary, about
13 events in 1993 while struggling
KANSAS CITY , Mo . (AP) _ $18,000 per game.
wilh wrist problems , and dropped '
I
out of Top 10 ·for lirst time since · Kansas City Royals second base1987.
man Chico Lind returned after a
Tennis
.
. Last year be stormed back to mysterious absence blamed on
LONDON (AP) - Top-seeded
I win ·the U.S. Open. He added the family problems.
Jason Stollenilerg of Australia was
Australian. Open crown in January,
Lind, who has missed. five upset in the first round of the Deck·
and in April took over the No. 1 gaines since Friday, was at his sub· enham Open by South African Lan
ranking from Pete Sampras.
urban Kansas City home. He had Bale 6-7 (7-3), 6-3,7-6 (7·3).
Kafelnikov, who will try to stop no explanation for his absence, but
Second-seeded Patrick Rafter
Thomas Muster' s 33-match clay his agent said he was upset after beat fellow Australian James
winning streak in the semifinals. being served with divorce papers Sekulov 6·2, 6-4 , while eighth·
f A
last week: Lind said he wanted to
expressed little sympathy or g:L•- play baseball again, but hedged seeded Albert Chang of Canada
was ousted by Briton Andrew
si. " It's no excuse, in the French about wliether it would be with Richardson 6-4, 7-6 (7-4).
In women's play, top-seeded
Open quarterfinals,' ' the ninth· Kansas City.
·d
"Y
h
The
Royals
disqualified
the
1
Nicole
Bradtke defeated Australian
0
seeded Russian 531 ·
ou ave
Gold Glove infielder from the ros- · compatriot
Kristin Godridge 6-3, 3fight 100 percent, ot11erwise all lhe
ter Friday and were no !onger pay- 6, 6-3~

Dnr A. . LPden: You recently cu~ of both a firing squad and
printed a 1euer u!Jing readers to hanging, the organs could not be
become orpn donon: I'm ceriain hlrvcstcd in lime to be usable. ·
mtny convicU on death row have
The lltemalive would be 10 harvest
eyes, kidneys, lunp and a heart tltlt die organs immediately before die

trust you.' And he said, 'You iifled the rebound over Belfour
ByMIKENADEL ·
•
CHICAGO (AP) - Mter stop· scored the goaL' Then I was with 1:4S lefl in regulation.
"The idea is to get as many.
ping 47 sbots in a brilliant goal· happy."
, Belfour, meanwhile, was shots as possible," Draper said.:
tending display, Ed BelfOUI let bis
guard down for a second - and it despondent. He lay face down on "Obviously, Vladi's goal,wasn't·
co5t the Chicago Blackhawks dear· the United Center ice and dido 't the prettiest, but it counts. It s great
· move as his teammates tried to for someone else 10 step up and be
ly.
!he hero. This time. it was Vladi's
Vladimir Konstantinov's float' console him.
"We wouldn't have been in the tum.''
·
ing wrist shot offBelfour's blocker
The Red Wings, who won the
9:25 into the second overtime second overtime if il wasn't for
series open6 od&gt;Lids~m·s over·
Tuesday night gave !he Detroit Red him," Cmven said.
Of Belfour's 47 saves, 19 came time goal, lied a franchtse playoff
Wing~ a 4-3 victory and a 3-0 lead
in the two ovenimes. He left the record with !heir eighth consecu·
in the Western Conference fmals.
. "Ninety percem · of the goals locker room quickly after the game tive victory. If lhey advance to lhe
finals, lhey'll be trying to snap lhe
scored in this league aren't pretty.'' . without talking to UJe media.
"!
saw
his
reaction
and
I
know
NHL'
s longest Stan ley Cup
Detroit forward Dina Ciccarelli
•
said as lhe Red Wings moved with· it tore the guts out of him," said · drought- 40 years.
Detroit's
Stu
Grimson,
an
ex·
Detroit's
other
goals
were
by
in one win of their· fir&amp;t trip to lhe
Blackhawk. "But if Ilinow Eddie, Grimson, Keith Primeau and Paul
Stanley Cup finals since 1966.
·
.Detroit, which used its third he'salreadytumingupthejuicefor . Coffey. It was Grimson's first.
·
career playoff goal.
consecutive dramatic one-goal vic· Game 4."
The·
play
looked
innocent
Denis Savard. Bernie Nicholls
tory over Chicago to toke a 3-0
enough,
with
'k.onstanlinov
gaining
.and
Jeff Shantz scored .for Chicago. ·.
lead for its third successive series,
control
at
center
ice,
striding
into
.
Nicholls'
goal was his first in 30
can wrap up the best-qf-seven
Western Conference finals Thurs· Chicago's zone and putting a soft games dating back to March 31
wrist shot toward goal . But Belfour I after he had 22 goals in the seaday night at Chicago.
"Our team has to realize !hat barely got his blocker on the puck, son's first 32 contests. Shantz
the games have all been close," which landed in the back of the scored after stealing a pass from
·.
Coffey to tie it with 11:27 left in
Detroit coach Scotty Bowman said. goal .
.
Belfour, whose otherw1se bnl· regulation.
''If we go in with any kind or over·
Vernon made 26 saves, includ·
confidence ... !here's nothing in the liant career has been filled with
rule book that says just because playoff lapses, also made a major ing 10 in the overtimes.
The game drew the largest
you win three you have to win mistake in the Game 2 lo'Ss . He
gloved but (aiied to bold a shot by crowd in Blackhawks playoff histn·
four."
'
Only twice in NHL history has a Nicklas Lidstrom, and Kris Draper ry, 22,709.
team rail ied from a 3 -0 series
deticitto win a best-of. 7 series, but
Chicago's Gerald Diduck tried to
put a unique spin on his club's
dilenuna.
.
"We're not further back than
where we started; we still haven't
won a game," he said. "I'm not
down at all. Each game, we've
played better and better.'·
Added teammate Murray ·
Craven: "We can't do much differem . We played lhe best we can."
· Indeed, it was tl1c Blackhawks'
best game df the series. But they
were stil! outsllot 51 · 29 by a.
Detroit team lhat has followed a
league-beSt 33-11-4 regular season
by
with an li -1 playoff run.
Konstantinov didn't even know
that the 51st shot - his shot went in until Ciccarelli told him.
"I just shot the puck and turned
around to skate back to center,"
sald Konstantinov, whose tirst
career playoff goal ended the
longest game of this year's play·
offs. "Dino grabbed me from
&amp;
behind and said, 'You scored the
U~IOH AVE. &amp; RT. 7, POMEROY 992·6360
goal.' I said, 'No~ Dino, I don't

could help all~viate the critical
shonqe. 1lae convicts have takcil
fro.,; society, and it should be
mandltory thai they give something
blck.
.
.
When uansplantable o~gans are
healdly at the lime of deadl, there
should be no clwge for the Ol'gllls.
Prisoners or their families should not
reap any fiiWICial benefits from this
pt'bccdwe.
Do you agree that !his is a good
idea, Ann?·· VENICE, PLA.
DEAR VEl'IICE: About 40 states
now have the death pell8lty. There are
four methods of execution .: lethal
injection, electrocution, firing squad
and hanging. O~gans are not suitable
for transplantation after electrocution
because they are literally cooked.
They cannot be used after lethal
·injection because !hey are permeated
widl chemicals. Nor are they usable
after a fuing squad because there may
be holes in vital areas. Also, in the

REGIONAL SCHOLARS ~ Four students rrom Meigs
Eastern school districts attended the 14th a!)nual regional schol·
ars' program April 30 and May 1 at Burr Oak Lodge. The pro·
gram brought outstanding students together !o learn about leader·
ship and science. Students who attended the conference were, rront
left Alison Gerlach and Brandi Reeves and back lert, Robbie Mur·
phy and Dorothy Lelfloeit. Eastern's Reeves and Murphy and
Meigs' Gerlach and Leifheit participated in the program along
with 90.other students from Z1 school districts. This program was
runded by Martha Holden Jennings Foundation grant and local
school districts.
·
·

Long Bottom
news notes

OHIO RIVER SWEEP
SA,.., JUNE 17 .. 9 A.M.·II:IO A.M.

TO VOLUNTEER: (Individuals or Groups)
•Phone our office or stop and pick up Waiver
Forms.
•Return forms signed June 1.2th.
•Free T·Shirt to each Volunteer.

CLEANUP SITES: MIDDLEPORT • POMEROY •
.RACINE • FORKED RUN • REEDSVILLE

1'1)UI ci1cuJ now requires two guest
lists - one for those who can fit inro
the chweh (about 350 people) and
another for those who will be invited
to the reception (almost SOO people).
inmate is IIChcduled 10 die - theteby The message I get from my daughter
killinc the inmate by removing the is thai guests ,qual gifiS.
!l!P.N. which is aaainst thela"' Even
Kelly is angry with me for leaving
.if ihe laws were changed 10 penn it · her mother. The only time we talk is
this proc:edure, the process of when I call her. Frankly. I resent
harvesting the OlpiiS would force the being asked to finance these mob
doctor to become lhe exccutionc:t For scenes. I have m·any outstanding
· most doctors, this would not be an debts and very llttle savings.
My wife wants Kelly to have a
ethically acceptable llt.emalive.
Dear Ann Landen: I am getting beautiful wedding. I say she should
a divorce after 20 YCIII'S of rnarriase. get married before the baby is born
Our daughter, "Kelly," has just or have a small wedding after the
inrormcd us that~ is pregnant and 1 binb. I am embarrassed by this lack
wants to get mamed ralhct !han go· ofconsiderationforlhesacrednessof
to college.
.
the wedding tradition. I say Kelly lost
I have m.oved ~another c~ty and the privilege of~ formal wedding
have not been mvolved 10 the when she got pregnant out of
wedding plans. My wife told me the wedlock.
. ,
)Veddingwilltakeplaceafterlhebaby
I love my daughter, and I'm no1
IS born and Kelly gets her figure back. sure. if I've become unreasonable
I have also been informed that this about this. I need an unbiased
wedding won't be a ·sllll!ll, intimate opinion. --CONFIJSED iN CLEVEalfair and that they are having trollble LAND
finding a place large enough to
DEAR CLEVELAND: Maybe I'm
accommodate theirlguesllist.
square, but it seems odd to me that a

Ann
Landers
"1V9S. L.Ot Anoi'M
T..,_ SyndiCIII• and
CfNtor1S~

.p,regnant bride· tO·be would want
to postpOne her wedding until she
has the baby and gets her figure

back.

.

The central issUe here, howeve~
seems not 10 be tastelessness, but
money. Simply tell Kelly that you
will give her a set amount and she
can plan the festivities around that
figure.

Forget to save .so,,. of yowr
favorite Ann Landers colwmns?
"Nwggets and Dooziu" is t~ lii!S'oWl
Send aself-atltlressed,'long, busiMsssi:e envelope and a c~ck or mouy
onkr for $5.25 (this includes postage
and handling) to : Nwggets, cloAnn
Landers, P.O. Box JJ562 , Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562 . (In Canada, send
$6.25.)
.

I

Total

EASTMAN'S

June Griffin, Alta Ballard, Eliz.abeth Bartoe, Ellen Wells, and Lela
Delores Hawk have been ill.
Kenny and Christy Riggs and
family are in the process of moving
into the Marie Swan home.
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Wheeler,
the former Becky Driggs, announce
the birth of a daughter, Emily
Brooke. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Driggs
are the grandparents.
Lando Mount, Pole Ridge,
South Bloomingville, spent an
afternoon recently wilh his mother,
Georgia Mount. Wee\&lt;end guestS of
Dorsel Larkins were 'Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Salisbury and family , Gallipolis, and Mr. and mrs. Kenny
Larkins and family, Columbus.
Spending mother's Day with
Mildred Hauber and her family
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowles,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bow les,
Nicliolas and Jenny, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sinclair, Mr. and Mrs.
Chad Sinclair, all of Pm;neroy, Lela
Hawk, Long Bouom·and Mr. and
Mrs. Dougla ~ Hauber, Bashan.

- VOLUNTEER
7THANNUAL .

MEIGS CO. RECYCLING

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

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.WIST VIRGINIA'S lARGIST CUSTOM VAN -DIAliR! .

A New Martinsville, W.Va., girl
won one of eight stme awards pre. sen ted .by the Discover Card Tribinc Award ·~ch olarship.
Sarah Saltz, a Magnolia High
·school junior. won a $2,500 scholarship. She is daughter of 01e for. mer Nancy .lo Mayer ahd Charles
S f~tz of New Martinsville, and the
granddaught er of Charl es and
Bunny Kuhl ;md Pauline Mayer. all
of Pomeroy .
Saltz plays !lute in me marching
band, participates in junior class
fund raisers, and volunteers at U1e
Wetzel County Hospital where she
transports patients and delivers Xrays.
•
She also is a member of th e
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leaches Sund ay school 10 th e
youn ger children. She plans to continue her schoo ling and become a
radiology techn ician.

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Celebration
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A gradua tion party for Amber
Blackwell was held at the home of
her grandparents. Barb and Jerry
.Colmer.
·
· Out of lown gues ts iocluded
Ruth Blackwell , Amber's grand mother, uncles, Randy Blackwell
of Charleston, W. Va .• Neil Colmer
of Berea Kentucky. an' aunt. Nancy
Whiuekind of Huntington, W. Va.,
and Jim, Paul ette and Ri ck Farley
of Marietta.
Others attending were Shari and
Steve Blackwe ll , Arica and Aja
Blackwell, Tammy , Dave, J. D.
Scol!, Kim and Megan John son ,
Randy and Jan Snider, Katie and
Rob NorUmp, Shawn, Daniel and
Leah Whi ttekind; M'C!llf, ' T61}ir,•
Anna and Cristy McKinney, and
th e honored gue st's grandmother,
.,Mamie Stephenson. ·

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/

Page

a.•The Dally Sentinel

Wed~eeday, June

•

Literary cl~b holds
centennial celebration

-Community calenqar-

•

The Middleport Literary Club's
· centennial celebration, ·"A Cenwry
of American Literature", was climaxed with a luncheon beld recently at the Middleport Church of
Christ. .
Remarks, uibutes, poeuy and
. music by members of the club,
organized in 1894, were featured in
a memorable progmm which concluded with a toast "to the
founders" offered by Phyllis Hackett and a response from the members "to the ladies of the club",
Balloons and nora! centerpieces
arranged by Pat Holter decorated
the tables. Colorful programs were
provided by Sarah Dawn Owen,
chainnan of the event. Faye Wallace bad grace and Betsy Parsons,

RHS reunion
attracts 52
alumni
. Twenty-five of the 52 members
of the 1960 Racine High S~hool
. graduatjng class aitended a 35th
anniversary reunion held Saturday,
May. 27, at tbe Syracuse residence
of Bob Wingett.
Thl! reunion, headed by a committee composed of Patty Roush
Pape, Sue Buck Beegle and Mary
Grace Stobart Cowdrey, included a
poUuck luncheon and dessert of a
cake inscribed with the class graduation motto, "Not the End, but the
Beginning."
.
Two retired educators, Vinas
Lee and Howard Nolan, who taught
at Racine High during the time
class members were in schooL
were introduced as special guests.
Members ·of the class of '60
attending WCfe Lois Graham Allen.
Pon and Sue Buck Beegle, Mary
Euler Hill. Pany Roush Pape.
Richard Shuler, accompanied by
hi s wife Anna. Margie Stobart
Wolfe. and Don Weese , all of
Racine.
Bob Wingett and· George Connolly, accompanied by his wife
Jeanie, Syracuse; Charles Shain,
Pomeroy, Carl Leroy Wolfe, MiddlepOrt; Mary Grace Cowdrey and
Robert Smith, Long Bottom.
Jerry Lee. DubUn; Saradclle
Recs Mack. Grove City; Jerry Dailey, Reynoldsburg; Louise Fisher
Smith, Baltimore ; Donna Neville
Fiske of Columbus, accompanied
by her husband, John; Jack Wigal
. and wife of Caledonia; Altred
Toney, Jr. of Cross Lanes, W.Va .•
·accompanied by bis wife, Judy;
Tom Chapman, New Haven,
W.Va.; John Cleland, Parkersburg,
W.Va.; Robert Lewis, Highland,
Maryland and Paula Hart Laird,
Watauga, Texas.
Jack Proffitt uf East Wenatchee,
Wash., who attended some of his
high school years with the class but
moved out or county prior to graduation, ·was also present. witll his
wife, Ruby. Others attending were
.George and Ruth ' Strode, Wynn
Rees. Emmogenc Hamilton , Eliza. beth Bright and Patty Tarr.
Two members of tile 1960 grad_uating class, C hri s Pickens and
Harold McClaskey, are deceased.
CllL~s members decided to have
anoU1er reunion in the spring of the
year2000.

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chesler Garden
Club, ope11 meeting, 7 p.m .
Wednesday at lbe Chester United
Methodist Church. Hal Kneen,
exlension agent, will. be the speak- ,
er·.

program leader, welcomed the
members and their guests.
The program opened with the
collect led by Jeanette Thomas,
president. Pat Holter sang "Life
Eternal" and "The Cat Came
POMEROY - Pomeroy MerBack", and Jeanne Bowen played
chants
Association, 8:30 a.m .
"Londonderry Air" on her saxo·
Wednesday,
Bank One conference
phone. Juanita Bachtel recit,ed a
room.
poem entWed "Legacy" writtcil by
CENTENNIAL PLANNERS - The variety of •clivllies ceiehcr at the beginning of this cente·
bratlng the eer\tennlai of the Middleport Lllerary Club were
POMEROY _: Red Cross
nary year.
·
planned by from lhe left, Bernlfe Carpenter, Phyllis Hackett,
Bloodmobile
will be at the Senior
For roll Call led by secretary SisJeanette Thomas, Faye Wallace, aDd Betty Fultz;
Wednesday, I to 6
Citizens
Cenler,
ter Fidelis Bell and enjoyed as a
·
p.m
.
Gladys
Cumings,
county
stan,dard part of each meeting, were Mrs . Holter, and Pauline Horton of Jeanette Thomas; Pat Philson.
chairman,
urges
residents
to
creative verses, some humorous accompanied at the plano by friend and Becky parsons, daughter
donate.
·
and others of deep emotion, given Clarice Erwin for a medley of of Betty Ful,tz; Cathy Erwin,
by the members. Beuy Fultz pre· songs of yesteryear, opening with daughter of Clarice Erwin; Kitty
.POMEROY- Sali~bury Townsen led a summary of customary "Home, Sweet Home" and con- Dallas and Carol Tannehill, daughshtp
Trustees, Wednesday at 6
club activities contrasting the old eluding with an "Old l.rish Bless- ters of Juanita Bachtel; Emmaline
p.m.,
township ·ball.
rules witll ways they have changed ing".
Pratt, former member. Rose Marie
over the years.
. Besides the 18 members attend- Hackeu, daughler of Phyllis HackLONG BOTTOM - Mount
Bowen joi' 1ned a quartet com· lll8 the luncheon a.n~ program eu and Martha Venru:i, friend .of
Olive
Community Church will host
-'"";;;;;;..;;o;..f~;..;F;.;·u~ltz;;;:.,;..M~r;..s·.;H.;;a;;;c;;;k;;.e;;:u·~.;g;.u_cs_ts_w_erc Calhy Drulcy, daughter · Betsy Parsons, and Charlene Hoespe!l!cer
Rick Roberts from Little
r
!lich.
·

-

Hocking Wednesday, 7 p.m. PaStor

Lawrence Busb ioviles lbe public.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of Alcoholics Anonymous, :n!W'Sday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart Church,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

by.Bob Hoeflich

Shtrlff't Salt of
Aeot Eotatt
The State of Ohio,
M~lgt County
Firat Apootollc Church of
Eul Bolon Aouga, Inc.
Plaintiff ·

16'45' Eoot, 70.88 feel to the
point of · beginning
conttlnlng 2.00 ocrtt.
DEED REF~AENCE: Volumoi
237, Page 721 and Volume
232, Page 935 Deed
Recorda of Metga County,

ond from the place ol
mining or drilling oulflclent
water, gu ond ott lor
operttlng thereon. The right
to loy pipe line lor the

Don't forget We fund miser for
va.
Ohio. ,
Rita and Joseph White, Jr ., a couMI. Zion Propertlll, m; an
The obove deocrlpllon wat
ple of serious flood victims from Ohio Limited Parlnerthlp, at lurnlthed by Harold D.
al., Dtfendanto.
Whaley,
Aeg t oter e d
Mother's Day weekend, this Friday
Colt No. 94 CV-281
Surveyor No. 4986, por
evening at the American Legion
purauonce to an Order ourvey of May, 1972.
.
Annex in Middleport. Festivities olIn Sale
dated Feb. 21ot,
Being the oame premloeo
will start at S p.m . and go 'til 199S In the above enlllltd oo d11crlbtd In deed ol
whenever. Featured will be an auc- action, I wHI offer foraale at record In Volume 250, Page
tion. music. food and you.
public auction, at the door 247, and Volume 250, Pege
ol the Sherlfl't Office 530 Deed Recorda of Melgt
When the big revolution comes, Building, Pomeroy, Ohio, In County, Ohio.
PARCEL TWO: (PirC'tl
1 want to be amol1g the troops the above named County,
on Tueoday the 13th day ol Noo. 17-00973; 17-00974)
protesting against the name brand June, 11195, aiiO:OO o'clock Situate In tha Township ol
greeting card companies.
A.M. the lottowlng Scipio, County ot Meigs and
· Somehow I feel a lot of you daacrtbed real ..tata, State of Ohio, to-wit:
might want to join me. If you've altuate In tho County ol Bilng 110 rodo North from
visited a greeting card counter .Meigs, and State of Ohio, the Southeast corner of
and In the Township of Section 30, Town 7, Ra·nge
recently you might have reached Scipio,
to-wit:
14 of tho Ohio Company'il
the conclusion that tlle prices arc
PARCEL ONE: (Parcel 117- Purchooe; thence No.rth 110
atrocious. I hope you did and 00635) Situated In Section rodo; thence Wool 80 rodo,
you're right. Seems like we're pay- 30, Town 7, Range 14, OhiO or f/4 the dlotance acroaa
Purchase, the Section; thence Sooth
ing for greeting cards what we used .Company's
Scipio Township, Meigs 110 rods; thence East to the
to pay lor gifts.
County, Ohio and being ptaoe or beginning,
Re ce ntly , I was at a greeting· mare
particularly described containing 55 acree, more
card location looking for a birthday as follows: Commencing at or lees.
card to accompany a gift for a the Southeaot corner ol ALSO th, following
friend . Try as I might without Section 30; thence along described tract: Situate In
spending a couple of days at it, 1 the Eaat tine of Section 30, the Northeast quarter of
North 5'30' East, 3,630.00 Section 30, Town 7, Range
couldn't find·a card for less than a feet
to the Northeaot corner 14 ol the Ohio company'o
buck ninety-five-and a very ordi- of a 55.0 acre tract; thence Purchaee, Mitlgs County,
nary one at that. For the life of mel · along tho North llne 'ol said Ohio and beginning In the
can't comprehend how the costs! 55.0 acre tract; North 84'30' center ol the Pomeroy and
could be great enough to warrant Weot, 1,544.0 feet to •a spike Athena Road about 18
In the cor\tortlne ol the chains and 96-1/5 links
such retail prices. ·
I used to say what this country public road a·nd the South ol the Northeast
Northwest corner of an corner ot said Section;
needed was a good 50-cent greet- '18.78 acre tract described In thence North 50' West 4.75
ing card : I'm willing to concede a Volume 198, Page 662 of the . chaine, South 59° Weal 3.75
little, maybe a good dollar card . Meigs County Deed chaine; South 85° West2.99
Frankly, I think we .should all join Records; thence t~long the cha.l na, South 6.795 chalns i
together in rebellion. Why not just centerline of the public East 10.245 chains to the
road, South 16°45' West, Eut line of aatd Section;
give the gift without a card? What 196.28
teet to a point, the North 6.66 chains to • the
the hay? Those cards just make a true point ol beginning lor place of beginning,
quick trip to the trash anyways. the following described containing 7.95 acres, more
Seems to me to buy them-and I tract; thence leavl.n g the or leas.
confess I continue to do it-is like public road, South 64' 00 ' SAVING, EXCEPTING AND
Uuowing your money in the river. Eaot, 329.50 feet lo a point: RESERVING unto the said
South 26°00' West Grantors, their helio,
And it's 100 l1 ard 10 come by for thence
296.92 feet to a polnl i executora, administrators
that .
thence North 64' oo· West, and aoalgns, all the oil, gas
258.76 feet to a point In the and other minerals In and

And I thought everything was centerline of the public
just peachy keen .hetween Dan and road; thence along the
Con ni e. Wrong again·. Do · keep centerline of said road,
11 '21' East, (passing
smiling.
· aNorth
spike at 151.76 feet) for a
total dletance of 234..60 feet
to a. oplke: thence North

COS/ exhibit
set for library

under the aforesaid
premloea with the right to
drill arad operate thereon

And the right to enler upon
oald premlsas at any time
lor tho purpose ol drilling or
mining. The Right-ot-way to

Real Estate General·

Part of the Ohio's Center of Science and Industry on "Body Duild.ing: Bionics and Transplants" will
be on exhibit at the Meigs County
Public Library .Saturday. from II
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Students, teachers and volun. tcers will explore human Wlatomy
and simu l:ltC daily activities with
certain disabilities as a part of the
exhibit participation program . Dur·
ing the hands-on session. participants .will look at real human hones
. and tic shoes without the use of
their hands.

ALSO the following real
estate being In Section 30,
Town 7, Atnge 14, Scipio
Townohlp, Moigl county,
Ohio, and d01crlbod 11
follows, to-wit: Beginning
North 220 rods and Wool 80
rod e. from tho Southeast
corner ol Section 30, (The
Northwest corner of 55 acre
tract); thence North 84"Weat

157, Pogo 453 llelgo
County, Ohio.
DEE'!&gt;'&gt; REFERENCE :
Volume 232, Page 135-136
Meigs County Deed
Aecordo
Said Premlsea Appralood
at $145,000.00 end cannot

Announce Birth
Don ~nd Jennifer
King Laudermilt of
!Harri so nville announce
·the birth of their
daughter, Amber Dawn,
born Apri 1 20. 1995 .
Amber weighed 5 lhs.
and 14 ozs. and was 18
inches long.'
,
Maternal grandparents
are Joan King of New
Lima Rd. and the late
Jack King Sr. Maternal
great-grandparents are
Lenora McNutt Hudnall
of Albany, Oh. and the
late Ernest Hudnall.
· Paternal grandparents
arc Donnie and Donna
Laudcrmilt, Rutland.
Welcoming her home
were her sisters, Jamie
Renee and JoAnna
Nicole.

24, 31 : (6) 7; 3TC

C8rd of Thanks

REPLACE
YOUR OLD
WORN OUT
YARD GAMES.

Ball
•Badminton
Horseshoes
•Football
Basketball

PICKENS

'HARDWARE
-.
MASON, W. VA. ,

ll i

The Meigs County Commlssfoners have established the Meigs
County Fair Housing Office. This office is located at 39350 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio and Is available to the public Monday
through Friday from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. The Fair Housing
phone nomber Is 614-992-7908. Jean Trussell is the Meigs'Counly
Fair Housing· Coordinator and will provide Fair Housing
Information, receive and process Fair Housing complaints, and
address all Fair Housing concerns.

I

r,I

.

'•

'

Fair Housing Is a right protected by federal and stale laws .· Fair
housing means you may freely choose a place to live without
regard to your race, calor, religion, se~. national origin or because
·
you ~re disabled or have children in your family.
The Meigs County Fair Housing Program promotes equal
opportunity housing for all Meigs County residents.- The program
seeks to:
1. Assure lull housing opf)'ortunlly lor .all home-seekers In Meigs
·
County.
'
2. Alleviate dlsc~lmlnstory housing practices within the County.
3. Strengthen and maintain lair housing opportunities In all areas
of the county.
4. Encourage and assist In the vigorous enforcement of fair
housing laws, and
5. To achieve full public awareness of Individual's housing rights.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY HOUSING IS TifE-LAWc IF YOtJ FEEL YOU-·
HAVE BEEN. SUBJECTED TO UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION IN
YOUR ATTEMPTS TO SECURE OR MAINTAIN THE HOUSING OF
YOUR CHOICE, CALL 614·992-7908.

I

.home-small lot. IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII
EASONABLE OFFERS WILL BE CONSIDERED! I
. ASKING $29,900
EW LISTING- Syracuse· Ranch Style Home has 4
.
. 2 baths. utility area, ceiling radianVB .B. heat AC

of. close' sp~ce . Patio with sliding glass door and

I "''" shed 1n a nfce suQ&lt;:tivision.

ASKING $39,000

PRICE REDUCED· Gold Ridge•Road· Pcmeroy- 8+ a~res of

level/sloping ground wit,h a scenic view on Gold. Ridge Roa~ .
TPC ~aler and electric Js available . Site recently surveyed.

Jus! mrnutes from SA 33 oll681 .

ASKING $11,000

PRiCE A~DUCED· McNichols Road- 5+ acres with
Frame/Block building. Currently used as Bait Shop. Stock
and Equrpment berng sold separately. Older Mobile Home on
site rs optional. MAKE AN OFFER II
ASKING $11,000
WE NEED LISTtNG'SIII WOULD YOU LIKE TO SELL .
YOUR PROPERTY, IF SO GIVE US A CAU.II WE WORK
FOR YOU ttl WE HAVE BUYER'S COMING IN FROM OUT
OF STATE WANTING TO BUY IN THIS AREA SO WE
NEED
'
. LISTING'Sitl
.
HENRY E. CLELAND JA ...................................... 992-2259
L. aRtNAGER ............:..::.... :............: ......949-243ti
SHEAAI L. HART. .................................................742·Z357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111...................................l .. 992·1191
KATHY M. CLELAND........................................... 992-6191
OFFICE................................................................. 992·2259

Gallipolis

Jackson

446-6579

286-1553

TREE TRIMING

linesiOM &amp;Grave~

Light Hauling,

Seplk Systems, Trailer &amp;

Shrubs Shaped

House Sites.
Reasonaltle Rates

and Removed

Hangi119 Bosh1s
&amp;Flail

Misc. Jobs.

$6.00

Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Bill Slack
992·2269

AND.REMOVAL

We will be opening a new GYM in
Pomeroy, Ohio. The new address is 327
Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

POWER TUMBLING
Ages 3 &amp; UP USGF Safety
Certified Coaches
Classes at Pomerpy:
Tuesday moming 9:00 a.m.-12 noon.
Tht~rsday evening 5:00 - 8:00 p.m.
FEES for MONTHLY DUES are $30.00 for
one; $50.00 for two; and $10.00 fo r each
additional thereafter.
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC
AUCTION

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·21

$56.00
Ratliff
Pool Center

SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1995 .
10:00 A.M.

•

•

Located on Stalfhouse Rd. 4 miles north of Point
Pleasant w. v. off AI. 62. Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lanier have
moved from a large home Into a smaller home and
will be selling the following:
Fancy oak dresser, Decon bench . oak file cabinet.
school desk, old chairs. Chane! Master 'Stereo, Sinroe1r I
Tredle sewing machine, shelfs, B&amp;W TV, 10 x
Oriental rug, Depression glass, Stemware. mirro~ era"
Items, adv. tins , Tupperware. pictures. Eureka
sweeper, folding picnic table. crocks, stone jars,
Gri~dslone, shower doors, exercise bike, Kraut cutter.
corn sheller, platform scales , trailer hitch, water
softener, hyd. floor jack, nyd. pump wltank, log chain.
tap &amp; di.e set, hand tools, 7 112 H.P. Wisconsin eng jne,
5 H.P. Wisconsin engine, 3 pt. post hole digger, single
trees. compound bow, free stand buck stove,
Perfection oil healer wllan, air tank, lg. wooden tool
box, plows, 9x7 garage door. two electric lawn' mowers
&amp;more!!
·~
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY ~

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
. FEMALES
• City Limits is looking for the
hottest legs in Gallipolis.
Beginning June 8
CASH PRIZES

Open For Business

.

'

992-5251

(No Sunday .Calls)

Rill Brothers
Produee
Flowers &amp;

Vegeto~le Pt.ts

...,_.

One Step Cemplete Aute Bdf Rep1ir

H&amp;H SAWMILL

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
o Hollow Rd.
Mlddlepot:t, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy

.......

~

Brickles •

..., __

614·742·2193

Kenny's Auto Rental

AB&amp;T AUTO

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rentQI.

3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949-2882
Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

We Have Cars anfl Vansl

•ALIGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

1

Roger &amp; Tom Hill

Kenny's Auto Center

49534 State Route 338
Letart Falls, Ohio
(614) 247-2015 daytime
(614) 949-2231 evenings

264 Upper River Rd:
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Could Be Yours!
Just Call

·

1·900·945·61 00
Ext. 1327,
$2.99 per min.

Every Wed. Nite

5:30p.m.

5f1Bf1

ANNOUNCEMENT S

Looking forward to seeing old friend&amp;
005
and making new!
5/tDitln

Personals

Roduc:e: LD.. •lght ·ut &amp; •OJ,
lakt OPAL tabl•tl and E•VIp

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 , 992-6471
Mon - Fri 8 a.m.- 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Sun. by appt. only

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special · "'30'·

&amp; surrounding area.
mo.

Call for rate schedule
Min . $2.00

Announcements

Spec·al oHer includes.
1 Clean moto r

5 Clean &amp; check fi lter system

2 Grease !Oiler bear1ngs
3 CIPan &amp; check a~Hato r

6 Check belts
7. Check electntal system
B Replace ftlter bag

4 Clean al movmg parts
1

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts
One year warranty on work pe rformed.
Valid on all nalionaily advertised brands.
We servrce most makes &amp; models.

Serving ,Pomeroy, Middleport

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602-954-7420

Everyone
Welcome

1 _800 _48 6_ 1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
,_

diuretic:. Mllllblt Fruth Pharma·

A Big Hug

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues., Wed.·Fri.-Sat.

1-6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
!-oads of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Tra~ _

Looking tor relatiYtl or John
WM~ Chauc.y, ONo, oend tnlormadon ID ijam• Bigga, 74 Rt 1,
' - . , . rgdale. Otio &gt;131l1 o.

· Giveaway

3 lleoglo doQe, 2 malo, 1

-

~-

304-372·61 44

368 W Ma•n St.. Ripley. WV

I

40

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

773-544 7 MASON W. V. 773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON N66
AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS Nt191
OWNERS:
&amp;
LANIER
Not responsible lor accidents or
Llcaneed end Bonded In Ohio,
Waat VIrginia 166.

,'

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

LINDA'$
'PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;

•Sidewalks

Exterior

•Driveways

Take the pain out of
painting. Let us do It lor

•Patios

you . Very reasonable.

Free Esllmates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
AHer6p.m.
614-985-4180 ,,.,.

· •Porches
•Slabs
992-3265
512311 mo.

949·2192

RACINE, OHIO

FARMS

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2n2
Office Hours: Mon.·Frl.

AUCTIONEER
' SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer
An)iques

ALFALFA
AND MIXED

HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512
110\\'ABJ&gt;
EXCAVATJN(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Se{vices.
Home Sites, Land ·
Clearing, Scptjc
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl · ·
f\eplacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
1111ftfn

'S

2 Bnudful Gilt Pupplet, To Good
Ho~. ·e1•·388·8824, 8U ~388~
.

3 Cllllco i&lt;lllor&amp; 304 1115 3013.

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING

Radiator Repair
Service Portable
a luminum welding ·

New radiators
available,
recores also.

614·742·3212

•Factory Authorized .Par1•
&amp; Service
•All Makes -42 Yeara

•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers ~ Dryers ~ Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freeters
•Dishwashers
-H .W. Heaters

•Microwavet •Dispoaale
'•Tht.nka Mei.~t &amp;.
Surrounding Areas
(614~985-3561

992-5335 .

or
UJ1Wn

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!
1·900·884·7800
Ext. 4466
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420
~

81&gt;4-258-

4 Pupplea: Mother German
Shtpl'!trd. • Weeks Old , I 14·
&lt;-4HO!ill.

4 Small
Grey, 3

KJ-., To Good Homo, 1

Grey

&amp; llnle

br-

2~1208,

Whita,

81tJN-2806.

81._

mo-

•
5 mlxod
pul'f'lol,
II
Boogie. 304-47H783 ahar 5pm.

lilmo old calico cat. apayed,

de~

ctowod. lhoa -..15-5721 .
Chlci&lt;onl, 81 &gt;1-44&amp;-3 1113.

F.,.le mldd -

doc, appnii
·

&amp;noo old. 304-5.,..2151.

F1M Pupptol, B1&lt;-3117-Q388.

'

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Kin'"'' Very Cuta. 7 W - Old,
COitlel&gt;&lt;8 5 ~M . BI&gt;W48-7803.
Kltranl,81~1 .

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Kin'"''·

0417.

Loll

01

Mateo.

IIH41·

Klnono, ohort &amp; long haired.
.... 304-s~.

co~

Med-alzed houae broken whi1t

West Highland T•rr•r. 304..e75-

3277.

Mix0\1 9mo old dog, bolao, good

614~742-2193

-lcb dog, goad w/chifdren, to
good I'Gmo. 304-e75-&lt;IIISO.

Howard L. Writesel

My Nome II Stnoy Dog, t Noed A
Home. I'm A Golden Raulevar,
Spoyocl, I Lii&lt;o.To Run &amp; Pill)', Let
Me Love You And Bt Yo~r
Friondl11&gt;W4&amp;-1156.
.

,,...,,

SI1MI'n

KEN'S APPLIANCE
.
SERVICE '

Mobiie Welding
DiesellnjectC!r SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
9&amp;5"3879

.

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
(614) 388-9865
24 Hour PagerAnserlng
Servlc
!
1-800-215-2023

Free Ettlmates

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
Now renting on S.R. 7
in Chester across from
the Dairy Queen. Size
IOx78 ·store cars,
baafs, furniture, or
what ever you want.
Call 992-3961

.

311Wn

MANLEY'S ..
HOME
IMPROVEMEN'r ·

J&amp;L INSULATION

· WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013 OR
992·55.53 OR
TOLL FREE f·800·848·007
DARWIN , 0~~~, T.N

• Lots of Fun and
Learning
•lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. tlll6:00 P.M.
992-5388
.

lr!mllo ..

1527.

TAMMY.HYSELI!S
DAY CA(JE

..

GYMNASTICS • CHEER LEADING

ASKING $6,000. MAKE AN OFFER I

space. basement w1th washer &amp; dryer. Large liv1ng room
atrim doors th at open onto new front covered ·deck.
Hr&gt;me includes, eel ling fans and new ceiling light f1xtures .

HAULING' &amp;
EXCAVATION

You can REGISTER for summer classes
. by calling any time, The telephone number
is 614-992-6953 for the Pomeroy gym or
304-675-6762 for our Pt. Pleasant gym.
Call either gym for more information and/or
to sign up.

' t

The family of
William
Wears
would like to thank
everyone fo~ the
words of sympathy
and flowers, food
and special thanks
to Connie and family
and Steve Reha and
Carleton School and
Meigs and Gallla
Foster Care and
Meigs Industries,
an!l
Pastor J.
Hubbard during the
recent loss of pur
son and brother.
The Family of
WILLIAM WEARS

·Chlorine Users
25. Lb.
Big 3 Inch ._
Pucks

:

\

1Gnt1141tfn

WILL POWER TUMBLING
IS GROWING!!!

available. Possible fixer-upper or tear down home for

NEW LISTING- SA 124 Enterin~ Rutland· Recently
I ~~.~~1 ~1~d 1 1/.2 story frame home . Vinyl exterior, 2· 3
0 1 . applia.nces. Plaster walls, wood flooring,
II

: I

t ,:;_

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

ANNOUNCEMENTS

UNION AVE.· Older home slning on approx. 112 acre.
i lot

:

Pomeroy, Ohio

3 Long Haired Klneno,

BULLETIN BOARD
1 00
6 column inch weekdays
1800 column·inth Sunday
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR HOUSING O~FICE

: . t:

Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service
Owner/Opr.: Tom'Lane
Racine, Ohio
(614) 949-3005

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
1
Insurance Work Welcome

1112Mn

With ADaily Sentinel

992·2259

I

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

•Room Additions
•NeW Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting·
•Interior &amp; Exterior ·
Painting
· Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992,.6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Get Your Message Across

OFFICE

t I I :, •

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

be sold lor leas than two·

(5)

:

S:R. 7 Five Points

-,

recorded March 7, 1947 In
Recorda of ~aeda, .Volume

Attorney

:,t •

MY BUSINESS

Call for all of your storage needs

614-992-7643

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES .
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

PubUc Notice

thtrda of thai amount.
223.4 feet to tho center ol ALL SHERIFF'S SALES
the public road; thence OPERATED UNDER 'THE
along lho cantor of tho DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
public road North 9'45' EMPTOR. THE MEIGS
Weal 259 feet; thance South COUNTY SHERIFF. MAKES
6"30' West 315 feat;. thence NO GUARANTEE AS TO
South 51 '30' Weot 204.3 STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR
feel; thence South 26"40 ' TO SALE.
'
Eut 315 feet: thence South
Terms of sale: len Percent
31' Eoot 222.8 loot; thence (10%) cosh or certified
SQI.Ith 32'30' Eaot 341 teet; check on day of aale. Any
thence East 246 feet to the delay tn depoalt will not be
Southeaat corner; thence permiHed beyond 2:00 P.M.
North 0' 45' 1815 feet to the Tho remaining balance of
place of beginning, purchase price shall be paid
contai·nlng 18.78 acrea, within thirty (30) days from
more or len but subject to the date olaale.
James M. Souloby, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio·
Happy Ads
Frederick L Oremus,

FREE ESTIMATES
: I

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tank• cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
mOnthly rental rates.
Partl•

Custom Bulldrng &amp; Remodeling

all legal hlghwayo. Ao
ourveyed by E. W: Hyaell,
Aegl81rotton liM, January
31, 1947. Being 1 part ofthe
premtooo conveyed to A. c .
purpoae of conveying water. Oatley by W. S. Han. Auditor
Iteam, gat or oil over and of Melp County, Ohio, by
acrooo oald promltoa. Tho Auditor·• Deed dated
right to erect and maintain February 24, 1913 .end
tanka and other neceaaary recorded In Volume 10t,
equipment for .conduc-Ing Page 253 Deed Aecordo ol
uld buolneu with the right Melgi County, Ohio.
to remove at ony time ony Being the oame raat eotate
and. all machinery, oil and .convoyed to trvln Roll ond
got weft oupptteo or Luverne Aou, by deed
appurtenance• of any kind.

BISSELL BUILDEIS, INC. ·

MODERN SANITATION

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCnON

TUPPERS PLAJNS - Tuppers
Plains, -VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7 p.m at the llall. Installation of
officers. Members and guests, Dinner.

Public Notice

WICKS

(SpeciiiiH In
drl-y apl'lll!dlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
. Top Soli, FHI Dirt
614-992·3470

POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange, Thursday, 8 p.m. animal
inspection.
·

Pubnc Notice

lsMJ.fti. .J

HAULING

.
THURSDAY
· CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge F&amp;AM. 8 p.m. Thursday, at
lodge, refreshments.

· PUbUc Notice

'

llJ

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees meeti.ng, 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Chesler IOWn ball . .

Beat of the Bend ...
Probably few of you remember
Comedian Joe Penner and his
famous question:
"WanlllHIIIll._a Duck?
Perhaps, mo"\recenUy you bear
the expression that you ·had better
·
get your d.ucks in a row.
Maybe we should just duck the
subject
Naw. We can't do lhat.
This brings me to the pointyeah. finally-of mentioning to
you that the Pomeroy Merchants
Association has an "adopt" a duck
progmm underway.
The idea is that you adopt a
duck through a member of the
association. Each adopted duck has
a number. This Saturday at I p.m.,
your adopled duck and the adopted
ducks of others will be tossed into
the Ohio River near Pomeroy Village Hall. We call U1is a duck race.
"Adopters" of ducks crossing the
finish line lirst-lhis is in U1e area
of the Pomeroy levee- will be
awarded prizes.
J
·
Did l mention that you pay $5 to
adopt a duck and all proceeds go to
the merchants association. I believe
it's the only fund-raiser the ·associ-.
ation has going fof it right now .
Forgive me if I mention that Saturday should be a good day for
1
ducks.
The ducks aren't really movihg
like hotcakes but if you want to
play the game you' 11 have to move
pretty quickly since the race is
coming up this Saturday. All members or the Pomeroy Merchants
As~ociation have the ducks available for :tdoption, I'm told, Now I ·
don't know which bu sines ses
belong to the association so 1 suppose I could bC halfway safe in
telling you to try any of the
Pomeroy businesses to get th e
adoption started. I do know that the
"duck business" can be taken care
of at Bank ·! , Clark's Jewelry.
Andersons' and The Daily SentineL
Lotsa luck with your duck.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7, 1 •

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
D9wnspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
'

5/911 mo. lid .

To good home. puppioo. 304-875-

1!818.

60

Lost and Found

Gold Wtllt Weteh In &amp; Arouncl
Baptlat Church, Third Avenue ,
614-~ -289Q.

Lost ,aung rtdbone coon houncl
wMh lte specks on rront l~a. m

Apple Grove area, anawen to

"Dan". :J04..5'76·2718.

Yard Sale

10

5 16!94 TFN

Galllpons
&amp; VIcinity
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473
7/22/Q4

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge with
The Sports &amp;
Entertainment
Line
1-900-263-1800
Ext. 1986
$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs. old.
·Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

61611 mo

tto4 Llncoln Pike, 8-4, Saturday,
Dishes, Po11 &amp; Pans, Cunaln.
Baby ~lhat. And Mi110.
142 Lower Garfield June 71h •
10th, a. s, Clothing. 'Bedapruda,

Curtalna, Home Interior, lola'
Misc.
3 ·Family Garage Sale: Gltls

Clothes, 18 Mos. · 14, Toys,
Hou•eware, Otlk &amp; Headboard,
Book Sets, Men·a &amp; Womena
Clothes. Thu,.. 9•3, Fr1 ll-1 .

374

Mii&lt;:holi

Road.

Fri. Sa' June

9th , 10th, Baby Cloth.., Bt.by
lin~ Ciolhol, Hou-. Uloe.

4 Family : Frida,-, Saturdst. 0-8,
Reed Folding Plpt Viet , We•d
Eater lh12 Screen Room, Picntc
Table, Tires, Typewrirar, Bicy,lea.

M~RIT

Olshea , Crart Books, Children,
Ad~Jit Clothing, Misc. St Rt UO,

Porler. Aero II From Trinity Unit•

ed Malhodlll Ch&lt;Jrtll.

91h , 10th, 4 Famuy · Baby ltema,
Tennis. Goll Equlpmvnt, lamp,
Oilhea. 8 Men Suits. 10&lt;4 S9cond
AY8f'l.lt. ,.

All 'lll•d Solei Mull Be Paid tn

REFINANCE

Advonct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tht day batort lhe ad i1 1a fUI'I.
Sunclll)' • 2:00 p.m. Fri&lt;IIJ.
llonclll)' ediljon • 2,1)0 p.m. Sotv&lt;-

CONSOLit&gt;ATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit
Our Specialry

__._ ....t..-sOO•MERIT-98
MB#0489

dll)'.

Slop

10

&amp; S1gn-up tor

A FREE VCR

�-·

ACROSS
1 Ca••

PHILLIP

'm
.IS -Aero, 01 LM4 Willi 'llrl2
. . . . . On Clow Chopol AMd, 1·
'

~---111111U:t

1111CIIo", Dollt,
;.• :Frltla7,
r.,., Ciodloo,521Garaoo
1-S,

1·2- lot t1r llioln lltadbury
.
onCRII,OI+IIH1110.

GoO&lt;IIot:

Dlol-.
' :·;;Ju;;;no;,;;.;8;;;1h;;,,;;;I;;.D_III_,_1_11_11_o_On_ll_l_ll
'

0 ......

.._._.

a Acree- 111 ~ 1 Woo doll. 1

IIIIN Ftom Galllpollo, lloblle
Home w-me. •1.000 Down.
11..-.1211 Allot I P.M.

· .KIK Eaotetn Avonvo, Juno 8111,

: t:~:' - .. .

llltiiAI-

ao-.

I I ' - •• -~ -~~~r
'" g -..11-1111L

. PotloSolo:.U.101h, 73llncaln

Fot'""" ....... cror~~u~c~ng"'

-·

·r.,.,

11 "'"I·

r.1ERCHIINDISE

lac pov..r. noot aGIIIO 2·ototr
-·
tal,ooa. ldool Wlllot...,
lor warollouot,
hotMI1 IfNI., lhop. 1·801·741•

s .. nlc Volley, Apple Grove,

n'joc.

. 5 tamllr· lth, 8th, 10th, e to 4,
rnoall)' clolhol, Iota ol target liz·
11, no junk all nice,· Baa Wood,

GU-742-2700, from Rulland ,

com. out New lima Rd 3 mile•
"'""' tlr oignl

All Yard Salol llull Bo Paid In

Advance. Dledl~e : 1:00pm Ult
day Hlort lhe a 11 to run, SUn-

doy odldo,. I :OOpm Friday, lloo·
day t&lt;ltlon tOllllo.m. Soll.rdoy.
. Fri. -Sal. Junt 0·10, 0·4, 1371

110

Help Wanted

180 Wantld To Do

Sun Valle)' Nuraerr _ Schaal.
Chikk:are M·F earn-5:30pm Aa•
Neighborhood Rood, Golllpollo, 2-K, Young School Age During
Apply In Peraon, Tuea, Wed, Summer. 3 Ooyo pot Wook Mini·

n.n.

mum61~57.

CAREERS AVAILABLE In lho
Weal VIrginia Atmr Nallonal
Guard. Our parl·llme }Dbe come
with fill dmo bonolll Hlta mon!Ny
paycheck, educadonal lllil·
tonco, kH lob oolnlng, _ . ••
llrement plan, and much more. w.ng t) mow .,_ 1 add job'&amp;,
Call today and oak how wo can
llolp with your co- tlflnl. 304- 114-lb«tte.
. 875-5113l' or HIOIHHZ-3818.
'lard I Lnft Care, lawn Work,
AnaDnabla Aata1, FrH EadChild Care In Centenary Or IMIH. Sedolaotlon Cluarontood,
Northup ArH, Call Aher 7 P.W. 114-215e ea..

a1.an-11433.

Hill resldenct, furniture, clothes.
toyt, household gooda. baakttl,

Ell)' Wofki1,1Excellent Pay I As·

FINANCIAL

temiMe Pro uc:tl AI Home. Call

Toll Froo, I @00· 487·65aa, E11.
)
Mewing ult, June 8-tO, Crall•- · 313.
mon IDOla, ..., 30 guno, loodo ol Join rhe tong-1erm health care
toyt, electric train, Crahsman •
tip. air comprenor, bind saw, field. Sool&lt;in8 ·corlifiod Nurolng
atereo with CD. trombone, trum- Aoolotonll lor 88·bed .oklllad
Point Ptoo•
pet, Fenton giiiiWirt, 3 glan nurolng lac:l~ty. ahowcaaea 5' lang, Royal caah ant Nurllrv &amp; ROhahiUtadon Con·
w, Roul8 1, Bo• 328, FoWd ~·
reglohll', 4'18' iighlod olgn with 1&lt;11· lilt.
WV 25550. (A Gl.nmark laters, loads ol misc .• very large ..,..,.
Fodl&lt;ty). £oe.
sale, 39553 SR 1a one mile off
. RL 7, f'ome&lt;oy, Qhio,
llcentld Coamelologltt wlrh
man1ger'1 license, 814·892·
Thurldot ond Friday, ln~cie. one 4103.
'
and 112 miles Hysell. Clothn. ~~~
bag, varloualtems, cheap, 014·
NOW HIRING
992·5275.
Wo Are A Oroinno Company
Wed.-Sal on Laurel Cliff Burdana Sooklne A ll.odvltlecf l'otoon For
Road behlnd Free Methodist Advertising Sale•. You Muet
Church, children &amp; aduh clorhel. 11M Good Caomu- Skllo,
Rollabl• Tron~t~ottollon And A
10me furniture.
Wllllngn111 To. Su"Md. BaN
Pluo Commloolon. Full Or Pori
nmo. Bond Aolumo To: Tho Advertlllf', P.O. Box 254, Jackson.
OH•&amp;e40.

210

BuUiea

314·773-5071.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

W.YPHC»EROUTE
35 Primo &amp; Eotabllohod loco·
dono, Earn 11,500 Wookly, Open

24 Houro, Coi1-:IOI).Ot37.

Retail Buolnooo For Solo, Rio
Orondo, low lnvootmon~ Groot
PotonUII, Coli For Delillo, ., • •
2411-11100.

VENDING: Won't Go! Rldl Quick.
Will Got Stoady, CUlt rnoomo,
Priced To Soli, HIOCJ-820.4383,
t--.e782.

REAL ESTATE

Alck Pear10n Auttion Company,
full lime auctioneer, tompleta

auction 1ervlce. llcenud
188,0hto &amp; West VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304· 77:1-5447.

wanted to Buy

911

Clean Latt Model Cats Or

Truckl, 1887 Modell Or Nowar,
Smllh Bulclt PonUao, 11100 EOII•
Qolllpollo.

Om_,.,,

Oecorattd 1toneware, wall 11t1•

phonllt.
lompl,
old .,.,
old old
dodll.
andQut
furnhure.
Rl..-erlne Anllquts. Ru11 Moore,
owner. lt4•DII2· 2520. We buy

......

DOn't J unk Itt S.ll Ua Your Nan·
Worki ng Relrlger.tora, FrHZ.,.,
Waah er,l, Dry~ra , Ulc:rawavea,

POSTAL JOBS

SWt tt2.0Mr. For.., ond . .
pllc:olion inb col 218-lS«&lt;II
0&gt;1 WV&amp;ol8. a....gpm, Sut&gt;Frl
lllbrlillot Noodod In My GIIUpo-

io Homo, llull Be A N.,._,
And Adooot 11, lluOI HIYO Rol·
oroncoo, Altar a P.ll. 814·4•1 ·
1185.

Someone nHded tttenlnoe ·and
:u111111:idl ., Cite br tklttti wornan In her homt near Pomtroy.

Apply 1Jr wr!Ung Tho Dally Sand·
nitl, c/o Bax 721·0, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788, giving ••porlonoo,
ro-&amp;•oo-~...-

Color T.V.'I VCR'~ Air Coodldon- Someone wllh log truck to haul
trl, Comj)l.jttra. OUice WachlnM, IOQI lhOrl .hiUII, paying 140 I
0:. 8l ~258- t 2311.
1000 on ahorl hauls. cill 814·
J I O'a Auto Parta and Salvage, 88&amp;-4121.
buylnQ. wrtckt, junk autoa &amp; The Weat Virginia Army National
lrucks. Alto, pant tor ule. 304- Guard haa lmmedlalt opening•
773-5343 or 7,7.1-5033.
lor lndlvlduolo with prior military
Top Price• Paid: All Old U.S. eiCptrlenct. When you jOin, you
Colnl, Gold Rlnga, Sltver Cotna. work on a CJOOd ttdremtnt plan,
Gold Coins. M. T.S. Coin Shop, oro ollolblo 10 apply tlr - at ataTtlance, and rect{ve your
151 ..,.,... Galllpolio.
monthly poyc:hock, ill lor 1 port·
Wanted To Buy, Junk Autoa, Any time lob. GO TO· GERMANY
Condition, et•·388-8082. Or 01o4- WITH US IN AUGUST FOR AN·
NUAL TRAINING&lt; ao.·67S.5837
446-PIIRT.
ort-2-3Cit8.
Wanted 01 buy· I011iqlle lOCI
Wa are an old local company
furniture, no Item too large
seeki ng a motivated peraon 10
small. wm buy one piece or
take c:lw.rp of CUI1Dmet dellvtfy,
plata eataln Ot by Martin,
ahowroom aetupl and warehoue·
992-7441.

81. S.nd ratUIM c/o The Dally
~o. ao. 7211-llll, Pomor·

Son'
"""·
oy. 011457811.

WIUlllfE ICONSERV.moN
Uaad

JOBS
75.
Game Wardena, S.Curll)l, Main·
tenance. Etc. No Elq). N.eeewy.
Wantad: Fairly Clean 55 Gal. Now Hiring. For lnlo Ca11J 21~ )
C.Um. 8 lol-446.0547.
784.QOIO E1L 11087, 8 A.M. To 11
~II, 7 !loyL
Wanted: lltlle Tykel
Castle In Good Co ndillon, 8 1&lt;1·
WILDliFE CONSERVATION
245-5887.
. JOBS Gamewotdano, IOCurity,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o Help wanted

AU real estate advertising In
this newSpaper Is ~ubl ect to
the ,Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes 11illegal
10 advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religiOn,
sex familial status or national
origin. or any Intention to
make any such prefe(41nce,
limitation or discrimination."

This newspaper will not

moi.--ry.
rl- .- OICltiring.
No experience
For lnlo

col 218-7lloi.OOIO 01 8218.11tm11 pm 7 dllyl.

180 Wanted To Do

Ace TrM Service. Compltlt trM
'Cilre, 20yrt. e,:p. &amp; i ntur~. ff8e
AVON I All Are a l I Shlrtey eatlmatea. 1 14-441 · 1181 Gr 1·
. Spoon, 304-675- I 42i.
800-508-W?.

Adun eo,., Amb.o,latory Ptolorred.
et4·44t-eoo3
Night Or Dlrf.

G14 · ·U0·324l',

Gantfal Malnttnlnct , Painting,
Yard Work Wlndowa With~
AVON to buy or ooll, M l~lyn. ln- Gutte ra CleaMCI Light Hluling,
dep~denl ntp. 304·882·:Z04S or Comrnerlc•t. Raaldential, Stt¥1:
1·800-K2.e358.
'
at....e-16117.

I

lllklt it.W1!&lt;1••'!,.; will do ya rd
WOtk, CUI QtOU..... liij'lt Alao wooh
'f'in)'l aiding 1 do tl.nd1c:aping,
Aeatonablt Prices, Free E• tl·
mat.. l G14·37i·lt1 1. Aek for
Millo.

..

knowllngly accept

adver11semants lor real estate
which Is In vlolalion ollhe law,
Ou r readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper

are available on an equal

~~;~·~op~p~M~un~lty~b~as~ts~.~~
31 o Homes for Saki
~· 11Dr1 garage b1&gt;1ld1 New Ha·.
van Supermarket, bottom floor
completely tlmodtltd, 2 baya :

(front bay 40'•28', · roar boy
32'r23'), 100'..0' lot, 811,500.
304-882·2703.
3 Bodraomo, 2 Sethi, Hoot """""
Gu Fumaca, 1 Acre, Garage.
Addloon Arlo, 182.000, 114-387·
72137.

3btdrocm Ronch, 2bolhl, larnlly
IQOtT\. lanood In yard. Toytlr Rood,

Comp CoN.,. 182,000. 30-0 .. 7S.
53)j!Jl'".
By Owner 3 Bodroom, Full Booomaent. Madlaon Ave.Galllpotia.
W/Wllhout extra Pt, 40 lot R•·

duce To $311,000. 814-319-21168
Priced Cheap » Hlle ntata-- live
room, one 11ory houN, rwo bed·
rooma, bath, carpet, basement
CM ol Ill llood watBII, ..y good
location end neighborhood In

Mldd!epott, 125,000, 614·992·
7047, 814-742·2550 or 014·384-

- - ~~~--.
On Mulblrrr Holghto, Pomotoy,

REGISTERED ANGUS And Chi·
Anguo Bulla And Holloro 8760 •
Up. E~:cellant BloodUnet, Slate
Run Fermi, a I •·2118-538&amp; Joclt.

no pet~. 304 182 2845.

1011.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Wantod: Fader Colvoo, 300 To
'100 Pound• OH Tho' Farm, a14·

12 • ao mobil• homo, Zbodroorn,

640

$330(mo., dopooil ond ...........

t30QI~i01•L 304-758-11&amp;2.

and OopooiL No poll. Alto !railer
loll. RII2N, loculi Rd on rlgh~
Point- :104-675-1078.
3 Bedroom Both a 112, 61 .. 288·
0857.

Uud R40 DlletiWUch Trencher
wilt! BacJihDII14411M-7142. .

3 Bedroamt, Nice 14x70 Housi

Wototbod Far Solo, 2 Voon Old.
1250. 61~·.

1 Bedroom Second

klor, Unfur·

nlthtd Apartment,

.

bo-.304-875-llli:llftao 5pm.
2 Bodrocm Apattrnent, •sa 112
Second Avonuo, AIC, Appllonc·
eo, 1100/Mo. UUIIUoo Paid, •zoo
Depollt. Reterenctl Rtqulred,
11.._.21211 8:311-4:30.
2bd rm. IPII., 10101 01octr 1c, op·
pllancoo lurnlohod. laundry "'om
tacllldoo, clooo 11&gt; ocllool In IOWO.AppUcodono IYIIilbiO 11: VIllage
Groan Apta. •48 or con 114·992·
3711. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET- PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtotwood lltlvo·
•om 1221 ., 1211. Wolk ., llhop
I movleo. Coli at•·U8· 25e8.

111, oodud-

pool, c:ity ....... -

ed, Jerry'a Run. 122,000. 304 -

578-2818.
1P73 Redman so·nanza 3 Bed·
room1, 2 Bathl, NV:wly Ramoclolod, 814-B-0301 .

un.t Kirkwood U110 3 Bed·
room1, Porch, Underpll'\nlng, Extollont Condition, Will Soli. land
Alto.llo~OIIor. 614-386-8618.
1993 Sl!ylno 3 8odroomo, I Bath,

All Etoc:•i:, EIIGOIIonl Condition, 2
Ood&lt;o, On Rontod l.o~ Reduced:
• •7.000, 81 .. 2.5-0007.
MAJOR
MOBILE
HOME
LENDER. Now 14170, 2 or 3bod·
,.., 2 poyrnot111, ,.,.... In,
no paymanla ah•r 5 yur1. Joa
Swono t-IOQ.251·50l0.
Now. .1HS..14•70, lncludoo lk~l·
lng,· tttps, bfocka, ant rear
hom•owneta Insurance and alx
monlho FREE lot llnl Oriy t IQ25
- . ond 1317.17 pot monlt Coil
I .acto-837-3238.
I·

BloCk, brick._., plpoo, wind·
owo,llntollo ole. Claude Wlnltfl,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814·245·
5121.

::Cl!IYOI;;;.;;_::-,...--.-.-..-:P,--:PD,:-drlin-:-:--:-,.ponow In otock. Sldero

I

Appror. 300 boordloot ol Rod
Oak, moody clear, moolly wide;
lyt old. 180 pot bot..... it • • Ill.
Pltono 304-8115-33DO.
Bingo. Chotokoo, NC, Juno 11 l
17 . 150,000 Covoralll tue .oo

Trip and Pl.ck11011 ~I 014-,..._

·- .
Booll
Rod Wing Chi-40
To ·50ilr Dt"rooo,
H.H. Brown
•
o1~u~a~ro~n~lood~,~L=ow~oo!t~P~ric~H-,-Tho;"-Cor,.
81 I 148 1222.
C..pot. t76; Now Eloc:tri: 52 Gal.
Hot Watot Tank, tt26; 114-«41·.
a737.
.
CommOdore 128 oomputar, pint·
er, calor ma'hllar, dlac driv•,

dlooo, &amp; paper. 1250. 304-8053013.
.

Equlprnon~

301'e75-7ol21.

Slltlllulldlngo

SurmwiCicloiiiSolo

3)...0, 401180, . . . .

limited Slzoo Still Avallablel
Groot OHio On All Bullclngo a.
lng Ordoted Thru Tho llonlh 01
Juno.
CAU. 1100) Ao-7e5D.

560 Pets tor Sale
o...,., Shop -!lot Grooming. Foe·
turing Hydro/ Both. Julio Webb.
Cd eu ••• 0231.
·
8 Moo Okl Pupploo, Port Chow,
Pari Collie, 1 Black I Brown: 1
Wlill, 61-11187.
AKC Roelotorod Cocklt Sponlll
puppies. ahotl, wormeJI, 1100.
304-773-5071.

uan. played ..,., &lt;IIIIo, n1co c:ondl·
Gallla Manor Llii'tlted, Equal !!on. Hao two iolyboardl, loot podHouli"'l Opporwnlty, Eldorly Pn&gt;- ol~ boncll and· bookL Rouon lor
}acd. eu us 1638.
lolling. WI nood tho opaco t.diy,
...
$2700 - · liking $400. Coil
Qradou• IIYing. 1 and 2 bedroom 304-773-5-427.
apartmentl at Village Manor and
Riverside Aparrmanll In Mkldle-

porL From S232.. 355 . Coli 814-

992-5858. Equal Houolng Oppor·
twlitiet.

Hld•A·hd COuch Far Sale, Ex·

callant Condition, e14.,cq.Q;52G
Ahar .c P.M.

Hondo so w1th helmet. Now clotlo
net with ea..,retda. end cleaning
equipment 304-875- 5811
JET ,
AER.QlON MOTORS

liquid """""" not dolne tho lob?
Aok SO!,ITHERN STATES 3D•·
875·2780 about HAPPY JACK
TRIVERMICIDE. Recognized
1111 I eflectlve agalnat hliok,
round, I tapeworms In cktg1 and
Cltll
4

Profepia,.l Dog Grooming Vln·
ton &amp; Rl9 Grande Ar•, 20 Yaara

EKperlanct For Appointment,
01~2411-5054.

Prof111lonal Ptl Grooming. All
Broodo, Rouonoblo ~too. Guor·

antted Satltracllon, Your Pate
Sec:and Best Fr~. Llavt Me...

Unlurnl1hod oportment Pomoror,
Kill AOACHESI
oocond tloor, • 1110t111 &amp; t.th, nc
ENFORCER OvorNI!o , _ ,
para, reference• &amp;. depaalt, call 1&lt;:,,;•• or Ovarnlta Pttt Contra!
lhar 0 pm, 01 4-aQI2·2276.
Yakel 2 gallona.
i
roacnea ovatnlihl or.Jour
Upololr' 3 Roomo 6 Bath (I Bod- money bock· GUARANTEED!
rocrn), Furnlohod, Clean. Roler· Avollablo a t: RIG Feod , O'dell

ThrH AKC Roelllotod Boogloo,
150- ot 3 b ltOO, 81 ..992·
1286.

ence and Depoah Required. Na

I'III&amp;Ot..-.1518.

Supply, Vai-

Very clean one bedroom IPirl·
men111'1d twO btdroom houH ln· Uovtng-Muat Sell. tc.nmora aideMlddtepan;catl 014-QaZ-5304 Gf by-aide rahlgeralor, lyra old,
81 .......,_30111.
oloctronic oonbOII,
ell•
450
Furnished
~ doot, •• .zoo.'cal 304-

rc-...

Rooms
Room and board tlr hondlcopped ,

or elderly w1th low Income. Farnllr
llomo otmoophoro w1th RC, 81..
aG2·5042. Middleport.
Roomo tlr rant · wook or monlh.
Slatting 11 $120Jmo. Galli&amp; Hotol.
61......,_8500.
Stooping room• with cooking.
AIIo lrlller apace on river. All
• oo •~~.- up1 . C• II • Iltr 2:OO p.m.,
..
304·773-5651, ""'""' WV.

...., 4 llonlh 01c1 ~'" cholt, 11•-

•••nc

Conc:lloft. Priced
On Npootlon.l1.._,1032. ·

board. &amp;

760

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Auto Parts &amp;

I

IT'S A MOVIf AIOUT AN

.,...,=....,.A...,cces,_..,ao=r-lel=.,...,.

1878 Cadillac Sovlllo, toz,ooo
mlloo, oxoollonl conciiUon, oerlouo 2 111 hall ~ 1 XH4 p 1a•
•
l~ulrtl onl•.• Coli 014·882-3155 SR14, withn leu
'" than 13,000mliol,
~75.:::.....,_
---t85. 304 882 2:1511.
1880 Comtte Good Condition, New gat tanks. one ton truck
low MIIHQO. 114-742·22&amp;4.
- . _ - .... noot .... 1110.
1881 Fard Granada Groat lnlltl· D 1 R AutO. RI!IIOI'. WV. 304-372·
ar, And Exterior, Law Ltlltaae. :533« 1-800-273-1321.
014-258-1012.
SOUTHWEsr PICK-II' PIIRfS
BOdo, Cot., Dooro, Fondotl And
=~• Delta _88, 8500, 814· lloro. 31111&lt;11 South 01 Golllpollo
AI Jucdon AI. 7, ~ RL 211, at•·
11184 Honda S h - 500, '20,800
mll81, excellent eondldan. 81,200 Will Inatall Wlndohi&lt;lldo 100 a
or rrada an ball boat call 01•· Up, 814·388·11082, Or 11•·4411148 8042
PART. '

ENGI-15~ r-...

MON A~C.tf yi~O .feT \JP ._;

°

rmN~S

FOil ttiS

M~N

AT IEPTIM~ ....
IT'S C/11..1-fl&gt;

"KING A,TtM~
ANP HIS #lOUNPS
NIG~T
rArL.~'~ ..

Of Tttf

e

11184 Oldl CuUall Ci&lt;lro 11.200.

790

-~

BORN LOSER

.•

campers &amp;

•

"'
l--1!-\iCJ-\ OfolE. '100 WERE,
Mt&gt; :'&gt;J.CUJ) t

Motor Homes

181' Trana Am, new engine &amp;
'87 Poco Aro, 31', o4S4 Chluy on·
- - 12100. 304-1'15-5553.
gino, only 1a,ooo miol, llr, f&gt;uo.
11185lllldo GLC, 4 Door, 5 Spd., mont moc1&lt;11 oullldo 11'111. Con bo
AMIFM Ca11ette; Sun Roof
ooon II Royal 0011 - . _ tt30D 814-319-21116.
or, Ohio, ~ ·271-171 t or 30-i·
275-8153.
ID81 wtilto Flroblrd, Sopood with
......., -.75-1113 allot~
1874 Titan mctor homo, 2711, 040
Dodge, mer-. awning, QOf1o
1187 Dodge Shadow 113,000 ntot, runa &amp; 1oo1t1 good. IS.!iOO.
Ullea, loalia And Aunt Grtall 304-175-211-18.
t2,!i00, 080, 814-258-1538.
187124 FL ~. Soli·
11187 lludl RX7, - ' pockoQO, Conlllilod,
N;, Dull Aida, 2 Door,
OM owner, low mUHge. 14800. t3,000, 814-148-1137
304-1711-3004.

f&gt;{:J(

After ruffing the club·king lead in the
dummy, declarer played Ia heart to his
ace. ntffed a club in the dummy, cashed
dummy's three red·suit winners, ruffed
a diamond in hand and ruffed another
cluh in the dummy. Whe n Easl discarded, Wes t wa s mar ked wi th the spa\ie
king. CSouth had sus pected th is from
the auc tion.&gt;
South . hav ing won the firs t eigh t
tri eks. wa s le ft with the A·J · l0-9 of
spades and the club nine . Dummy had
th e ·s pade quee n and four red · sui t
ca rds . The trap to avoid was ruffing a
he art or diamond low. Here, West
would overruff with the s pade king and
return a trump, leaving South with an
uoavoidable club lose r . Instead. South
ruffed a diamo nd with the spade a oe.
which couldn 't be ove rruffed , South
ruffed his last Club with dummy's spade
quee n and graciously conceded a trick
to West's lop trump.

Tl!e5Y 7

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

_

Celetontv C11)her C'YJ)Iog'rams .are cre.ated trom quoiJIIIQrlS by tamous DWP~e . pa~l and present
Each lener rn the CIPher stands lor anotheJ Today 's clue Z equals P

' J YA B

l T

Y KB

ZVWCYK

AYJOVLWB .

BWWYW. '

. l 0

X P 0

0 W. P 0 E,

MYWSLABK . '

l T

0 E

MY W S . LA l K S

X F

V

0

GYOEBW

OBWBTV .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION MTh ~y·ve got us surrounded agatn, th~ poor bastard!
-

Gen. Craigh1on W. Ab rams , on World War II Banle ol the Bulge .

. I

...

,
'::~:t:~'
scav..onlA-~t-trs·
.
ldhtd by CLAY I . POLLAN_.;__ _ _ __
lleorronoe letters of 'h•
0 four
scrambled wards . be·
WOlD

low

to Form four words

I

HESLI R

I

LEPI R

I

_I,..,.-F,---11. :~:

A nei9of
h bowearing a dress
dreaming
5
6
I
1
two sizes smaller lhan she really
wore. Her husband says lhat
~,~------~, dieters can be ,called wishful

x
. .....,.N,...u-r

I

1-I

Q-~o-,:o;.;;

Rl A IS K
laE II 19

7

~

·,!he couckle quoted

by td l,ng 1n t ne m1ts1 ng wo rd s
L.,_l,_.,L_L....l-..L-1 you deve lop from step No 3 b elow
.

.

8

1184

e&gt;U "T WAIT' r\A'!'BIO

HE'S NOT SNEAKING

AI10UND'. HAYBE THI5
15 ALL TOTALLY
INNO&lt;.ENT 1

•

.

PRINT NUM8FREO'
lET ERS
.
UN SC RAMB LE
ANSWER

GiRL I ~
' t1A'(BE
!&gt;IST ER !

I

"-'...,..oe...

STRIKE A8JJ)W IN 11-f ~ ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CI.ASSFIEDS.

.

.

I' 1 1 1• Is 16 I' I' I' I
2

3

I I I I I I I I I
SCRAM-LET~ ANSWERS

Thrust · Abide · Notch - Menace · BUTTONED

me

. The most puzzling bit Of ad':'ice granny ever gave
was, "Once you miss lhe first buttonhole you'll never get
BUTIONED up."

For aate s · rutt bloadld Callie
pupe, 3 malea, 2 female, •100

oogo HI Can1 GOI To PhOIIo, Or
Coli Aftot 8 P.M. Coli Arlyll"" for
Appolnrmott; 81 ..258-ISSO.

eou Ron e...., t·8Q0.537·8528.

1888 Chockmato z; F~ Ski l
Pleaaure 225 HP. Johnaon Out·

0~9 Obedience Clatltl, The
Rtgnl PWN Training Contot, For inIOrmotlon Caiii14-441-IIU. ·

R&lt;poilod, New lRobuitln Sll&gt;clc.

lzod opt. lor elderly and handl·
c:appt&lt;1 EOH 300-875-18711.
.

lilt•.

CFA Slomooo KillOna, Blue Point
t100, eu ue 1213
,

For aale- lowery Genie Fun Or·

SeCond. Glillpolla. 814....,.418

I I Ft. Chock. .IO Soood Boot,
115 HP llon:ury 14,51io, a14-3811-

-lno,I)W~:mL

Alhll' 7 P.M. ·

"~--

lng,
Furnlohod Elllcloncy tt851Mo.

750 Boats &amp; MotOI'I
for Sale

American Cocker Spaniol PuppiN, AKC Roelllorod, Champion

Utllllioo Paid, Shore Balh, a07

Furnlohed 3 Roomo With Both,
Air COIIdldonod, All Udllli&lt;lo Paid
Ercopt Electricity, P~vota Pork·

Twin RIYerl Tower, now acuptlng
oppllcodono lot lbr. HUD tubold'

rage, out bulldlnga, abi:MI "und

Prt-.

Building
SUpplies

ooch, 01~ 1oi2·205D.
Concrete I ~•tic StpUc T.nka,
3DO Thru 2,000 Gallana Ron 'Four lull blooded Collie pupo,
Evans Enterprl..., Jackaon, OH SIOO ItCh, a14-37H480.
I -6374528.
labrador Pupplaa, Chocolate,
Dinette 181 •75: lon 1111 &amp; AKC 0 Woeko, Hoollh CorUfiod,
Couch $450; ·new condldon. 01•· Shott, Wormed, EKctllent Tem·
potrnort\ 8250, 114-182·74n.
8~·3221.

Equal Hou'"'a Opportunity.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
doublewlde,
5bocjroomo. 21u11 t.lho, 1a.oo oo·

288 IBM Comptllbfe Computer,
Color Monllor. Keyboard, Mouaa
&amp;
15211-.lt........aT.IO.

ijpollt,

With Stove, Rtfrlge or, 12201
Mo, Deposit, Relerencte Re·
quirod. No lloto, 611 148 41 2&amp;
tbr. unlurnllhod opL, good no~h-

550

2 'Nor Old Ouoon Silo Wtvolt11
Watotbod llattraoo and Hooter,
E"ollont Condition 1100 OBO

114 1tl 8313.

· 1 ond 2 bedroom aportmonll, flit:
nlahed and untumlah•d. HCurlty
depoalt required, no p111, 81-t·
992·2218.

250 'lllmoho Dirt Bike, Wotot

Coolod, 114-31174143.

710 A!Jtos fOr Sale

STORAGE TANKS S.OOO Gillon
Uptlgh~ Ron Evant E"*Pflooo, '81 Chluy Chovono, good condl·
.,._ 814-082 ee72.
.,
Jockoon. Ohio. 1~-­
llllhlbo 20" color 111, 8150. SH 18M llotcury Coptll, Hatcht.clt,
Stove 11 Apt 37, Village Gr-. Au•. Air, U05: 814·2•5-5877.
.. ElCP 81,:J85. Nigotloblo.
~

8364.

w/12x85

Hay &amp; Grain

South bid aggr ess ively in today 's
deal. His two· heart cue -b id showed a
good hand with, usually, at least 12
high-card points. South correctly up ·
graded hi s hand by counting some
points for his excellent di stribution.
Wh e n North cue ·bid four clubs , he
showe d a good hand for play in spades
with a
-round control in clubs.
what he hoped he c ould

GROWING ..

WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR?
••

TRANSPORTATION

Antlqutl
3bedroom, furnished, •soomo;' 530
304-5711-211110 OR 304-576-21135.
Bur or tell. Riverine Antlqueo.
Two bedroom mabHt homt, lur· 112• E. lloln SltN~ on AI. 124,
nilhocl, Ullidoo pold. IMI pooplo In Pornoror. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
hlmlly, no pata, references and a.m."' 1:1111 p.nL, Sunday 1:0010
a:OO p.m. 61 ..aG2-2528.
·
dopool~ 81 ..387.()1111.

t

lem: Don 't risk an ovelntff.

WELL, 60 A~EAD AND SHOOT..

1013.

Troller For Ron~ Vlll&amp;8e 01 Rio
Granda, Depooll, 814·378· 2720
AFTER a P.M.

monster
12 This (Sp.)

When busy cro ss ruffing between
your hand and the dummy, you take
tricks with low trumps . However, what
happens if you a re ove rruffed' Right back comes a trump. perhaps fatally re·
ducing the number of available tntmp
tricks. There is a way around thai prob·

P-EANUTS

30 Acres Mlaed Gra... On
Shartl, Ctntenar)', 114·441·

2 Bedroom Tr1ller In Country,
814-318-l!ol35

Apartmenls
for Rent

Liquor
47 Blnv-

1 44

·1 9 Oontlal'o deg.
21 The Mod'22 In poltl
23 lawyer'o

Up and over

38813"1

2·bedraom trailer. Rtftrencta

11 Loch -

By Phillip Alder

Nice S bedroom houM In Pt.

One bedroom epartmenl In Pt
Plsfiaant. furnilhlld, ciBBn 1 nice,
ropoii.Phono300-875-t388.

t.13ac rea

F/\Rr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; liV[STOCK

Reg. Santa Gorltudl'o Bull, 5
-Old t1100,11+117-5814.

440

Sa:lee Potltlon, MountaiA Stall
Homea, PDinl Pteaaant. WV, CaU
For ·An Appolntmenl, 114·,. 41 83-1().

540 MIICtlllniOUI
Merch811$11se

·

New Haven, no pets, t260 per
mo .. 30+882-2488ltftl)mo.

"'-lodOO holpflll. Good commu·

.

eu l1e eet&amp;.

m•nner

South

2 Hou- For Rant One 3 Bod- 114 Ul lUI.
rooms, Ont 2 Bedrooma, UOOI
Mo. Outdoor Pot Only, Vinton,

Two bedroom, furnished, aood 540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlll
clean condluon, ptlvote lot aboYt

Plirl·dme ~epdanlat Co,....uttr

.... wv 26lili0.

410 Houses for R•nt

40

1 Medicine bottle
ohrub 2 W. Coast coli.
Lang. aulf.
3 Deportod
Eye port
4 Neodleflah
Artery
'
Rockll
otage
Travel&amp; by ohlp
Rodecoretod
HHa hard
Coneluolon
- ·Oinomore
8 Novelist Zolo
A.S. oert
9 Fond du -, ·
Artlal'l deg.
Wlo .
Evil grin
10 By lhe timeIn 1 kingly
- to Phoenix

Mexico~

Fard Ronglll XLT. • *hHI
5 ........ ao.-675-1113 ol·

LAYNE'S FlllfiiTURE
Compltll llomo lurnlohlngo.
Houri: I4Q.o ·Sat, 8·1. lt'-«1·
0322, 3 mlltl out BullVIlle Pike

PICKENS FUII'IIfURE
Now l\llecf
No appllancta, Household fur·
nllhln8. 112 rnl. Jorrlcllo Rd. Pt.
Plouan~ wv, cog ao...711-1450,

37

DOWN

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: West

I 888 Chov, Scotlldllo ~whool

FtooOollvoty.

58,Bokn

•3
oto987 5 43 '

drtve, 350 auto. air. lllt, crulu.

.,.._.2003, 61..-.140!1.

Juno IIIII At Tho Flrot Church 01
Nozorono, (QollpoMol, FIOIII 5lb
7 P.l)!. Apply In Poroon. 11.00
Hourly 'Nog&amp;

nlcltlon tklllt a mu.at Send resume to Box 0·3, PI Pleaunt
Roelllot, 200 Main S~ PI Plea•

RENTALS

3e
41

eA

-

2 Bodroot111, Very Nloo, Galllpolio,

Only
Compu,.,
KtDWiodae
Apply.- 1-...
Taklng
Applications
Thuradar
1 1 - - - - -. . .

sale. June a, 8, 1D. Six miles
oul Jerry's Run at Apple Grove.
New &amp; used Items.

Clydo-Jt.,-.-

. otoQ6

otoAJt096

1118.4 ChoYf C·20 ••• 350 V·l,
Sid&lt;, llodr Rcugh, •••000: 127 Chevy En8ino, 1700, 114·
44._.1.1 Allot 6 P.M. Ot w..

2 Bt6drooma, $250/Mo. + 1250
Depoli~ 814-2-08, 814-2581718.

Port-limo IFuii-Timo Secretary.

~

be&amp;Yllful 2ac IDtt, public water,

2 Hard WorkiRg Wan At:
Valley Uemor)' Gardena,

Ouskey Alley. Syracuse. Rand!
. .L

•QI0874 3
•QI098

....... hou•.

-

35

•2

~SIS 'ill

.

EAST

SOUTH

rno.CoM. good map.., ... _

to ?. Denver Weber resl·
donco. RoodoviMo, tayl, clothing,

~-MAIL

102

,.,..,. -oblll, OWner .......

&amp;~am

' MY

-14000. --· SD4-4151-

umbia TR 1•1: 7...5 aoroo,
. - . 1.007- $4542: ( -

Sltunlly garago oaiO, Juno D a tO.

....

EEK&amp;MEEK

1171 CJ7, """' ""' Wlnr:lt, raltult.
' " •• appreclal8. W•ll

1554.

14~

23
26
27
31
33
34

eKJ96
•AK6 5 2

u...t

Hou11holcl
G09dl

53C~(on)

55 or-ow•
56 -rlly
(2 Wdl.)
57 Gravel •ICIO"

13 Gl8cl.a epoch

18 01 1 owelllng
2D Mao-tung
21 Took cor• ot

.,. Q 8 7 5

Oork Bluo, Good Condition,
t3,100, 114-2o~U081.

"'""

511dNI,.._

7~

18-p!Mianl
17 ll8p ebbt.

Vlni&amp;4-WDI
1871 Cbovr 4•4, uo Enorn..

_10 _ _ _

48 Boxlng-Yieloty

15 - Hllchcoclt

••

R eiiOT£, bMutHul, tldgO•IOp
land: thrH mlln aouth al Car·
- · Ohio. Ill Union Rd. (Col-

253 South 5th SOOOI, lliddlopott.
Oh., Wedolday, Thurldly, Ftit!a1.
7th, 8lh, Dth.

ALDER

•

centtr of dow: ICAh Mlddlapon.
Control lit and hall~

-...IIIah ONo- boaotn, 510
111Hto opt14n, 40•10 otool,
211noo 1t1oc11. z 1t1rn1. a ,.., 11

' Pike. Be&lt;11pread1, . Curtain•,

: Jeane, Sllooo, Glrlo Clotheo,
Iliac. homo. llortln Roll·
dOnlo, 1-4.

'N' CARLn~e by Larry Wrlpt

.

Treeing Walkart, COon Hound,
Ol4-3117-0343.

570

Musical
Jnstn,lments

1883 Dodge Shadow •4,000
Mllolo Y·l, 5 Spood, loo!ll And
Runt Groollll,700, 080, 014·
258-1538.

~3'1t:.:..:;2~7 20
::.:;AFTE
:..::::.:
R~8:,:P.II::·---- c~ Fot Sola. 11.00 A HOild,

Now Nordic Trick Wollt-FI• t300, 711 Spuco SOH~ Galllpollo, a14·
•
441 •-• Ariuo E H
.,.._2882.
- ·
. uti.
Original Nlntondo with ltand and Strowbettlao You 1&gt;tck Or Wo
Pick, Taylor Sttowbotty·Patch.
1a_t85._.75-50114,
7.;.;~~~;,-;~~;;,;;;. j Open : 8-8 llonday -Friday, 8
~oolng Go Cor1, With
Noon Saturday, Clooed Sunday,
Engine, Now Tlno, 2. Con Ttollet, 2864 Kotrllold. ~~~-~ 114-245And Accelloriea, Readr To 8047.
Rice,4161;
814-387..058ol,
114-4411· Slrawberrlea, Pick Your Own,
8060
For.lly.
Ciluclo WI-., 814-245-5121.

Home
Improvements

1883 Ford Tauruo, V6, 17885.
1993 Chov, Lundno, va, 17386. 1--11182 Cutlll!lll Supreme, VI,
S7385. 1885 Chovy Coprloo
Cialllo t1485. 1885 Oldo Toro·
nado li495. 10.. Pondoc Fleto
I13U 18M Bronco, nood woril,
I13D5. ID85 loyall 4r•. 127115.
11188 Ford pickup •22115. Soolty'o
UlodCoto.304-all2-37S2.
1~g4 Chevy Cavalier, 2dr, auta, Ace Vinyl Siding 20% Olf Sl!lle.

..

1HI~ I&gt;N'T WOfU&lt;i ~ 6 , !&lt;; IT?

l--------- -

u, exc c:ood._.

875-3181 .

110,000 OBQ 3CW..

11184 lumina Z:U.IWIII conalder

Vinyl Siding_'1teptacemant Wlndawa, Roorl.ng, 25 Years Elpertlnoa, 614-3117-Get 3.

1.:::;.:::.:..:.:...::.:..:::.:;:..__ _ _

C&amp;C Ge11arel Home Main·
tentncl· P1lntlng, vinyl sldlrig,
2 door 1088 Cu rlaaa Supreme, carpentry, docra, wlndowl, baths.
low mlle1, good condition. Call mobile home repair and mare. For
Jllftiallrada. 304.f176-6457.

;;:300-8"':';;.7~~59:.;72.:;,.._ _ _ _ _ _

.

~odmote

coli Cho!, 11HD2·

720 ll'ucks for Sale

somethi ng p !easan l for t he evoenmg
hours . Know· where to took for romance

ASTRO · GRAPH

and yo u 'll find 11. The Astro · Graph
Matchmaker •nstan11y reveals which signs

1878 Ford 4W0 4•• Runo Good, RDn'1 TV Sotvk:o, opoolllizlng In
Good Work Truck 11500 OBO Zenith alto Mrvlc:lng melt other
Cl1~31&amp;2.

187G Ford,

Shorl~,

351 W'ndaor Bored .O.tO Over, All New

New Engine, Allar 5, 11•·.t41·

37811.

.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

branda. Houst ctillt, 1·800· 787·

Parra, Over t1 ,200 In Wotor
Alane, ' C ~e TranemJ11ian, 3.70
Spl~l..conaole plano. Want re- Geared Pott Rearanc:l, New Ra·
1pon1lble party to make tow dlaror, Floor Shifter, Aotort, All
monthly paymen11 on plano. See · Now Brlkoo. Dralno Turned, Alu·
rnlnum Slota Wllh Now Tlroo Out·
-~ C o i l 1 - - 8.
kont Now Gougoo. 8odr -.go
580
Fruits &amp;
Condld011 For 78, Eroo Stoptlde
Bad, Le11 Than 150 Mlltl, On

Vegetables

1----------

.

1Q84 Mazda Runt And laokt
Qood. AuiOCIIOtlc. Bodllnor. Sliding

001 5, wv 304-576-231111.

820

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

.,

Frean.n'e Heating And Cooling.
lnat~llatlan .And Service. EPA

Cmflod. Retldondol, Commercial.
a14-258-1011.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER

LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Hut Pumpt, Air Conditioning 11

Back Window, Call . Anytime, You Oon1 Coli Uo Wo Bolli LDi.i
11,100, 114-:JBB 8813.
FrM Etllmataa, 1·800-287-G308
814-448 030CI, wv 002845.
'
1888 Chovy Picii·Up, Blacil, l.ow•od-8hott8ild, 81..,245-531, . •
Relldlndel or commercial wiring ...
naw IIWVIot or repaira. Mlltlf u :
t1187 Toyo11 Pldcup In A-1 Shope c:en1ed eltc tr lclan. Rldencaur
1 Mutfly Riding 11_, ai4·367· Eltculcol, WV000308, 304·8757441.
'
1788.

tv.

-.our
'Birthday

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No v. 22) It wtll be
es sential to ltrst ga1n the conlldence of a
person whose suppor1 you II need before
reques t1ng ass•stance . Take tim e to let

are romant1cally pe rfec l for you . Mal l

the association develop

$2 .75 10 Matchmaker, c/o thos newspa -

SAGITIARIUS (No v. 23-0ee. 21) Helplul

per . P .O . BOK 4465 . N ew Yo rk , N Y

results are •nd1cated today from a diSCuS·

10 163.

sian wtlh a fnend who knows how to an a·
lyze p ro blems m a rea1 1s t·1c, Pra cl tca!

CANCER (June 21 · Julr 22, Famdy
·members may have d1ff 1ci.Jity keeping

secrets lrom you today , es~•ally ot you

manner . Use what•s offered

CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22-Je n. 191 Acl tn

probe. The tru th probab ly won 't eiude

accordan ce w11h y ou r thoughts today ,

you . .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can have tu n

especially concern1ng your.c.areer asp•ralions . Your c9n cep1s are workab le if
given halt a chance.
AQUARIU S (J a n . 20-Fe b . 191 11 will

today mi&gt;cing wilh friends who"shsre simi·

lal interests. Arrange !hongs so that you
can get together w1th pals who operate
· on your wavelenglh

prove Important to keep the lifl9S of com·
munJcaliOn open With a helpful lr~end who

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 221 ·You m1ght

now resodes lar awa y. Th•s all oance has

rea!•ze only a mtmest mon&amp;l ary titturn
from
someth.ng today . yet your pnde of
' Information of a conf 1denhal nature could_
accompllshmen1
will e~~:ceed any 1angible
jmprove your lot in hfe in 1he year ahead
Friends w ill w ant to tell you things they proli1.

unique possib1lilles.
PISCES (Feb. 2D- March 20) Focus your
mind today on a domestic problem thai

Thursday . June e. 1995

withhold from others.

"GEMINI (Mo~2t.Juni 20P\Itl11l0g~ you
·,mighl not be n the mood early in the day,
social invo t ments Will become more
imponant as the day progresses. Arrange

you 're anx1ous to resolve , You can now
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Many woll . lind the solulions thai haole evaded you
place considerable lallll!-orryour·ooeas ·- ARIES (March-4-1 ·Aplll· 1ii' Ke"p ·yoU&lt;- r·•·
a·nd SL!ggestioMs"'today . Someone you plans fleKible today , so that you can
never thought you could fnfluence m1ght
follnw·your advtce 10 the tener .

make qwck changes In case someth ing

more fun or more profitat;.le comes up

t~i-~Y,:~~~.....:~~~.L.....::_-+J~;;glf;,n;;;li;;:;;;;iiiifci-=-f;';;~~~~-ti;.~;;l~!!...-1

�•
••

•
•
•

•
I

Weduesday, June 7, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· RC-COLA
PRODUCTS

..

•

:Rockets
slip ·past
M~ic

'

12 PK 12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS

Monday tin S1nday
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•

.••'

$ 59

8AM·IOPM

•
•

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
794
Pick 4:
.3139
Super Lotto:
4-10.15·23-35-36
Kicker:
793568

Sports, age 4

.,.'
'

'

••

e

•

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 10, 1995. -

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

•

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

2 LITER

'

.

a1

'Vol. 48, NO. 28
Copyright 1995

$1
59
·Round ••••••••••••••.•• ~:·.... · .
sJ49
UR.S~D.A."CHROICE BONELESS_BEEF

--~· -Tallest _
tree___,

KY. PRIDE

Bacon
GOLDEN DELIGHT TURKEY

·19

$.

12 PK 12.0Z. CANS

.

$299
.......................
'

79(
a••••••••!~.........•

WHITNEYS .

SUPERIOR SLICED

1 Bol
(
Brea·st •••••••••••••••••••••• 99

Breast •••••••••••••!!......

7UP
PRODUCT'S

61b.box

FRESH CHICKEN

PINK SALMON
14.75 oz.

LB.

.

.

US~A CHOI~E BONELESS BEEF\ BOTT~~$

179
Round Steak •••••••••••••

BRAWNEY
PAPER
TOWELS

79(
Bologna .....................

KY BORDER

lb.

.

ROLl

Cantaloupe •••••••••: ••••• 99c
VALLEY BELL •
$ 179
2°/o Mdk ••••••••••••••:l·••• ·
6

·
9
9
(
Orange Juice ••• ~~~~~•••• ~ ·

VALLEY BELL
•

79
(
Sauce ••••••••••••••••••••••••
99(

HUNTS SPAGH
' '

.

.·

27. 27.5 oz

WHITEHOUSE CHERRY OR APPLE · .

Pie Filling ........~2~:~·.......

·

FOLGER.SCOFFEE . GREAT LAKES
SUGAR
ADC
'

39oz.

$6!~

5#

.

$159

_... ..... ,.~?·

'

-

....

__

MEADOWGOLD

_

. ·

_·

s
Ice Cr ~am .........•........
qt. pail .

-~

.

MARZETTI
SALAD
DRESSING
soz.

79(
DORITOS
9 oz.

s

$299
. .

s
9
(
Pizza ••••••••••.•••~:~~••••••••.

c

VAN CAMPS
PORK N BEANS
160Z.

. .3- $-1
'

~ ~

~.

HUDSON CREAM
FLOUR

c

,i

•

GROUND
BEEF
10#

"

Charges dropped-in pup mill case

Meigs County bas the tallest willow tree in the state, aL-.:ording
to state Department of Natural Resources records. The Jude fami·
ly stand In front of their weeping willow tree. Property owner' are
from left: (front row) Ryan, Alisha and Eric Jude; (back row)
Doug and Pam Jude. (Sentinel _photo by George Abate)

Danville family proud
of tallest willow tree
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Mei gs CouJlty boasts the
tallest weeping willow in the
state.
~- _
The willow stretches ltL!eet
higb and is located about two
miles south of Danville off State
Roure 325 near the Gallia:Mei~s
border. Ranked third largest 10
Ohio and c,allest in the state by
the 'Ohio Deparunent of Natural
Resources, the mammoth tree bas
, a 12-foot 4-inch circumference
·and a 68 foot crown.
The largest weeping willow in
the stale - locate&lt;) in Franklin
County - ljas a 20-fooL'4-inch
circ·umference. The second.
largest tree in lhc sm1c is localCd
in Fairfield Coumy.
Noled in lhe Ohio Big Tree
program, this willow's scientific
name is Salix babylonica.
Doug and Pam Jude have lived
ncar Danville for lhe last 10
years. 'lbe lifelong Meigs Coutlly
residents estimaled the tree to be
about200 years old .
"I like il. Irputs Meigs Counly
on top," Jude said.
· · A' natural spring provides a
wnlinual supply. of wa1er 1&lt;1 iJ1c
lr~~- This sprin£ has never run
dry. llC added.
·
"ll1card lhat ibcy used lO have
lhoms in them and il was useu for
lhc cross of Jesus," Jude said.
Hh's y;eeping hcca'us.c it did 1J1at."
This tree remains an cxccllcnc
shade lrce. willl numerous birds
landing in iL Usually 1hc limbs
Jumg down to the ground, hut on
one side 'it h:mgs inlo a field and

1hc cows e:il U1e leaves, he adued.
The ftimily used to have a
swing in this tree .
"I'm tryin£ 10 gel a si£n buill

for il," Jude said.
Eric Jude, ib~ eldest child, said
ibe tree is difliculllo climb.
"It's hard to climb il because
they have lhe limbs so high," Eric
said.
The Judes own ibis 93-acre
properly, call~d The Red Oak
Ranch . Jude w.orks at Meigs
Mine 31 in lhc prep planl on midnig!ll shift He ha:; worked at lhe
. opera lion for I &amp; years.
The famil y is also known
since il staHe d making Vallee
Potai.O Chips about a year ago.
Lasl fall, the opemlioo shut down
unlil a larger facility could be
foun(l , he added.
Ann Bonn er, with 1he .Ohio
Deparunenl of NaiUral Re.,ources
in Alhens, said ibis tree, is exotic
or nol nalive 10 Ohio.
"ll' s a real britiJe tree mill fairly shon-li ved. ll can snap and
hre().k," Donner said. " ll'l' nola

solid wood li ke an oak.'-'
More !han 75 species of willows grow in NoriJ1 America, she
adued. The will ows prefer a n
exceptionall y wei sne and have
invasive rools thm clog drams.
The tree is described as very
gracefu l, with a short, SIOUl trunk,
Donner said.
Th~ 1rue S. babylonica is an
enigma and appears almosl IO be
a plant of lhe past. In Europca~1
couniJ'ics and lhe Unncd S1.a1cs 11
is almosl 'nowhere to be fou nd ,
Donner said.
In facl, trees that have been
laheled 11\is species usually ar~
somelhing else. People wish 10

Heritage .Day progf8ffl"" -;;;;;o"i.'ln""Ced
Annual Heritage Day aciivilies,
including a parade, and Meig s
County Public Library and Muse·
urn activilies will be on tap for visi·
tors lo Pomeroy this weekend.
1ctivilies include: a puppel
show by ·tbe "Master's Messengers" of Hope Baptisl Ch ur ch at
10:30 a.m.; a performance by the
Big Bend Comm unily Band a1
-10:45 a.m. ; a ceremony by lhe
I 75th Anniversary of Meigs Counly Commitree marking the burial of
a time capsule al 11:30 a.m. in lhe
courthouse lawn.
The Heritage Parade slarts at 10
a.m. at the Meigs High School
foo1ball field. Any organizalion or
individual wishing to enler the
parade should call MHS Band

COLUMBUS (AP) - Supporl·
ers of an increase in the stale gasoline 1ax 10 pay for highway and
bridge impro'vemems appear lo be
running on emply.
Pro-gas taX forces in the Sena1c
on Wednesday were able to delay
- 1empomrily - a vote on a plan
It; ask Ohio volers 10 authorize bor·
rowing $1.2 billion for 10 years'
worth of highway and brid ge
improve ments.
'The bill calls for a constilutional
a.mendmen t allowing the stale to
IJick an additional $I 20 million a
year for 10 yc31S 10 a program that
·issues tionds for sewers, waler syslems and other local projecls.
"You have 10 have 17 votes."

and its leaves arc arranged in

tics ."

New GTE (tialing format
begins Tuesday, June 13

explained Sen. llen Gaelh, R-Deli· would genera1e $120 million a issue, but th~ speaker of the House
ance.
.
year, and wouldn ' l be noticed by has inditaled there is ~o ~u pport in ·
· The bill had no supporl among ·m01oris1s.
her caucus to do lhat," Dawson
th e Senate's 13 Democrats, and
Bul Gaclh said he may change said. "Therefore, we have lo look
Gaeth and other Republicans ques- his mind on lhe issue.
a1 the other options available.··
tioned whether il was wise to bor"When I find oul lhal lhere' s
Any increase would have to win
row money long-lerm to pay for only 15 voles for a gasoline lax vo1er approval to gel Voinovicb's
rouline highway and bridge mainte- over in the House .. . we have no support. he said.
nance and improvemems.
allemative bul 10 ·go this roule."' he
Se11'. Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
A legis lalive analysis said 1be said. "We can'lleave our roads go said Democrats would rather see
bill would cosl -lhe state up to $14 to beiHor two more years."
. the highway bonds splil from lhe
million in the firsl year, and up 10
Gaelh said he had no idea when exisling infrastrucwre bond pro$140 million a year afler I 0 years lhe Senate would reconsider the gram and consider~parately.
- with the amount decreasing
. :'We've never een sure, once
issue.
later.
Mike Dawson, spokesman for . ~ass 1hcse 1yp of bills, the
GaeU1 said he would ralher sec Gov. George Voinovich, also con- ·prOJCCis Ibm should
the priorily
an increase in the stale's gasoline ceded ii' s probably lime 10 leave · gcllhc prinril y," Espy said.
tax. 10 pay for lhe improvements. the gas tax behind.
·Bul he . 100, said lhe gasoline tax
He said a lhree-ccm rise ~n the tax -. _ "Sen. Gaelh raises a legilima~e mighl be a more responsible way 10
approach iJie problem.

Clinton vetoes spending cuts; quick deal seems likely

allcmmc and simple fa,hion. · ,

associa te this tree with the han£-

In addit on, llie annual evem lhe 50th anniversary of the end of
fealures crafiS, games and quilters.
World War II, special recog nition
Althou gh not pait of the fe slival, will be given to all World War II
lbe Ohio Center of'Sci ence and veterans in aucndance al 1hc dinIndustry program on "Body Build- ner. EntertainmeOI will be by the
ing: Bionics and Transplants" will Hislorical Sociely Singers.
be_on exhibit al the Meigs ·county
The Meigs County Museu m
Public Library Samrday from II will open Saturday at I p.m.
a.m. 10 5 p.m. During the hands-on · . A mum! by Larry Blake~ depic
session, participanls will lo.ok at mg early scenes from Olive an
real human bones and tie shoes Chesler IOwnship will be on exhib·
withouithe use of lheir hands .
il. Special displays include baseball
Also, a variely of exhibils and memorabilia, a pocket watch collively entenainmenl will he fea - lection, and lhe I 75th Anniversary
tured a1 lhe 24th Annual llerilage QuilL Outside lhe 'museum, John
Weekend of lhe Meigs Co unl y Rice, relired Meigs County' AgriMuseUlll.
culture Exlension Agem, will be
The museum 's evenl wi ll kick demonslrating sheep shearing at
off with the annual flerilage dinner I:30 and '2:00 p.m.
at 7 p.m. Friday. In celebration of
Continued on page 3

1

Supporters say gas tax proposal running on fumes

WASHINGTON ·(AP) - A
quick deal between Presidenl Clinton and congressional Republicans
seems likely over a velOed spending-culs bill ibm lhe GOP says provides "real savi ngs" and lhe White
House says amounls to "old poli-

ing gardens of llubylon.
The tree ha~ a .fast growiJ1 rate

direc10r Tony Dingess a1 992-5018.
Line up is 9:30 a.m. ·
.
Scheduled . enlerlainmenl
includes a piano program by Daniel
Russell at II :45 a.m.; the Dazzling
Dolls Balon Corps at noon fol·
lowed by Clogging, Inc. at 12:30
p.m. and CJ. and the Countrv Gen·
Uemen a1 I p.m.
The annual duck derby starts at
I p.m. with winners receiving U.S .
Savings Bonds up to $1,000 and
olher prizes. Ducks are available
lhrougb parlicipaling Pomeroy
merchanls throu gh Friday and at
Bank One until noon Saturday.
Proceeds from the derby go to the
Pomeroy Merchants Associalion lo
fund several downtown beaulification projecls.
·

··

·11nhe 'flfSI veto of Ols "2/-monlh·
old administration, Clinlon rejeclcd
1he measure Wednesday. He said
ibe $16,4 billion il would cui from
already approved spending for ibis
year would slash education, envi·
ronmcmal an.d housing programs
100 deeply while 1(ming "pet congressional projecls."
"That is old politics," Clinlon
said. " h is wrong."
H.ouse Majorily .Leader Dick

Armey conceded Republicans
didn 'l have lhe lwo-thirds majorily
needed 10 override lhe_ve1o and
wouldn'l even try. He described ibe
iss ues separaling the two sides as
·'a modesI difference."
"Now tha1 \he president seems
10 be able 10 ~0111e to Jl1e.1able. and
work out lhe differences we oughl
to be able to put il back logether
and get il back through as quickly
as possible," he said Ibis mommg
on Fox TV.
Republicans accused 1hc presidenl Of abandoning deficil redUC·
tion just as lawmakers begin lhc far
more daunting 1ask of balancing the
budget
" It is one of 1hc nails lhlll fils
inlo a coffin ," said Rep . Jerry _

Lewis. R-Calif., a senior member
but a small percen1agc of ibc bill's
of !he House Appropriations Comconrents.
miuee.
The measure con1ains new funds
" II is clear lhe White House .supponcd by Republicans and
political handlers decided a veto
Democra1s alike: $6.7 billion for
was needed 10 say President ClinCalifornia and olher states rocked
lon is relevant," said Haley Bar· : by natural disasL~rs.r about $250 bouP; chainnah 'Of lhc Republican
million for anti-lerrorism activilics
National Commillee.
and $275 million to .suppon Jor:
"I'm prepared to sil down wilh
dan' s peace 'efforts in lhe Middle
the presidenl and work ou l an
Easl.
agreemenl," said House AppropriThai leaves about $9 bil11on in
alions Commiltee Chairman llob . ne1 deficil reduction, an amount
L1vings1on, R-La,
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole
Clin1on and Republicans arc
R-Kan., _called "real savings, a~
eager 10 show lhcy are adamanl
Important down paymeol on getting
aboul reducing lhe deficit There is
our counlry's financial house in
no dispule between 'lhe presidcnl
order. " TI1e deficit for lllis year is
and the GOP about U1c arnounl of
runnmg at a rale of about $175 billhe. culs; their differences are over
lion.

Beginning Tuesday lony-dis- . ming include:. privale auiOmalic
tance calls from area GTE branch exchanges PBX). cus10mcr
exchanges ibal require "0" or "I" premises equipmcn( (CI'E), loll
before lhe telephone number will restriclion t~bles,_ speed ~all lists,
require the area t'O&lt;le.
call torw~dmg hsls, sial JOn me~·
In addition lo Pomeroy, o1hcr "'sage d~1a11 record mg. call delaii
telephone exchanges which will he rcporung, com puler dial~back
nffectedintheareaareLetartFalls. . devices, modems, facsunlle
Racine, Rolland anu Portland. machines, securily systems, pnvale
·
·· •
Athens, Albany, Amesville, Shade, pagin£ syslcms and lclephonc
LOS ANGELES . (AP)- Now
.Guysville, New Marshfield, The answering cquipmcnl.
- and no slranger to high -profile The fa1al wound, lakshmanan lhc · ·professor Laurie Levenson . ''They
Plains, Breman and Logan will also
"This change is needed 1o mee1 ibal ibe initial revulsion at the sight cases, made more than 30 mislakes orizcd, was intliciCd by an assailanl
might have more confidence (in lhe
be' affected. The change will also growu1 and mcreascd ue~and for of aulopsy pholos has apparently - everything from incorreclly
using his rig hi hand. Simpson is
autopsy) because someone ha~
apply lo Jackson, Glade, McArthur. telephone services wh•ch 1s rapadly worn off, OJ. Simpson jurors are measuring wounds to mislabeling a right-handed .
checked lhe errors .'·
Hill
Wells! on
and exhausung available telephone pondering other 'starlling·evidence: botUe of !)ile as ·urine to saying a
Legal analysts said lhe prosecu - .
Jurors -were firs! exposed to lhe
Oak
Wilkesville. '
numbers ;" said Lois . SeUers, GTE lhe_ multilud e of mislakes made wound was on the wro~g finger.
tion was spending so much time on
auiopsy photos Tuesday near the
Ohio GTE customers were noti- spokesperson. "ll makes possible dunng the exmmnauon of the bodSuit Laksbmanan IDSISted thai Golden's mislakes in an altempl 10 - end of a long court day. Many
fied of Ibis change al various times new combinalions of telephone 1es.
.
.
.
when H c~!'!e I() whal Kelber.~ · siCa! tbe. lhunder of the upcoming
flinched in !heir chairs and tried lo
during 1994 and have been able 10 numbers for currenl and fuiUre
In a maJOr pre-empt1ve str1ke, ·called the big llckel questiOns
cross-examination. During the pre·
look away when cOnfronted with
dial Iong-dislance withoul the area usc."
proseculor Bnan Kelberg has . -: ume and ~use of dealh- the liminary hearing, Golden was
lhe piclures, which included lifecode since January 1, 1994. This
_GTE will conven 62 Ohio essenually assume? lhe role of mi~lflkcs were msigm!Jcant.
,
clearly uncomfortable on the sland.
size Close-ups of Ms. Simpson's
. These s~all (m•slakes) do~ I
!-low lhis strategy works, howgashed neck. One juror appeared
permissive dialing period made the ofhces for mandalOry d1almg_ on ~n defense auomey, eltCIUng from lhe
trruJsilion easier ror customers by exchang~ ~y exchange ~aSIS thts county coro?er every _error made m !ffiP3Cl ~y abll~!Y to ~lve an opm· ', ever, remains to be seen.
on the brink of tears.
giving ibem the chance to repro- summer. 1 o aYIJ.!.\L.th~.!QfQ.!lY..£.: . ~ Ihe auto~s1es o( N1col~ Brow;I__ ~on m thJS_~~ ... -~.'?~L..:_
"I don'llhink any One individu·
But by Wednesday. th~ jurors
grmn their equipm~rorlriefuory· - nien ee of mlsdTrecletl or mcom- 'STU!jlsnrr·aM Rffi'lillil G51dman.
.
~non1s opm10n was tlial Ms . .. n1 erreF-Will·be problematic: lcwill • - we.re back.IIHftcil"tlSUal-stone-· •
dialing features on their phones 10 plete calls_. area GTE cuslomcrs ·
laksbmanan Satbyav- Simpson probably faced ~er killer . be the collcclive impacl on them
faced selves, showing about as
prepare them for the effective dale.
should begm using lhe new dialing ag1swaran sa1d Wedn~sday lh~t
for several, moments, h1l her face and whelher Ihe jurors will have
much emotion while looking at the
Examples of ilems which may formal Jun.e 13.
Dcpuly Medical Exam mer Irwm · on a w~ll m a slruggle and daed sufficienl confidence in the corogruesome pictures as !hey did when
require modification or reprogramGolden, a veleran forens1c doclOr sw1fLiy afrer her throa1 was slasbed. ner,'' said Loyola University law
hearing dry DNA ~slimony .

s·Impson JUrors
.
pon der

FOX FROZEN

AMultimedia Inc. Newapaper

•

By GEORGE ABATE, .
no other ·choice bul to file a law· dogs _- her personal pets The Daily ·sentinel.
Sentinel News Staff
suit," D~rham said. "I was not returned, Lemes said.
Relurning all lhe dog s lO
Officials dropped charges guilty. I flad show dogs. I had regMeig s Co unty Co uri Judge Durham will be difficult since the
Wednesday against a woman islered dogs."
Palrick O'Brien made two separa1e animals were placed in a wide area
accused of allegedly running a
Durham said she likely will ·orders requiring that these dogs be from West Virginia 10 Columbus to
"pup mill", according to Meigs renew breeding dogs. Durham said returned.
near Cincinnati, according lO the
County Court files.
she sold the pets to indivi4uals, not
Durham's seven dogs were not prosecu10r.
Sharon Dutbam, of Vance Road, pet s1.0res.
returne&lt;! by May 11and still have
Lentes said he may pursue
· Harrisonville, had 62 dogs, five
Her dogs bad a value of aboul not been .returned , Lenle s said. charges againSI Vinton CountY's
cats and two chickens seized from $24,000. During th\: follf years she ·O'Brien dismissed lhi s case Barbara Booth. Booth bad keplthe.
her property in March. All of her raised the dogs she bad been build- because the senlemenl was no I animals before the animals were
properly must be ·retull'ed to her, ing up her slock and had not made adhered 1.0. Le mes added.
placed since the coumy' s pound
Meigs County Prosecuiing Auor- large profits.
. Since Ibis was the f~rs1 charges could nol bold the animals, he
ney John Lentes said.
The ' dog breeds. included against Durham, .Lentes said he 1 added.
Wednesday, lhe charge of cruel· Pekingese, Yorkshire terrier, Sbi- cbose to seek an out-of-court settleA tape-from Boolh was circulat·
ty to animals was dismissed.
btzu, Mallese, boxer, bassett bound mcm since there was no guarantee ed lo radio and lelevision stations
Durham said she look good care and olhers, Lenles said.
the dogs would be removed from which made derogatory commeniS
of her animals, keeping lhem in a
An agreement bad been reached · her property.
loward the judge and prosecutor,
10 by 36-foot concrete pen . The between the prosecu1.0r's office and
The animals bad been held out- Lentes said. Also, Booth had told
animals were fed and warered oul· Durham's auomey, Lenres said.
side in cat carriers in the snow, the prosecuiOr' s office that one of
side, she ac;lded.
.
Part of ibe selUement was ibat
Meigs County Humane Society the dogs had l5een run over by a car
"If they don'l return them I have Durham would gel seven of her lnvesugalor Sharon McLead had ·and another dog had its lhroat lorn

LB.

ump oast ..............

2 Sectlont, 16 Pagea 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 8, 1995

-.

GROUND

•

•

'•

Low toaJcht Ia 601. Hu•lcl.
Frlcla:r porti~CIIIdy, sb""en,
bl&amp;b Ia mid

other .s_
t artling evidence

pr.

I
J

'

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