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Ohio Lottery

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Pick 3:
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Buckeye 5:
3-9-18-28-31

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednnclly, June 4, 1897

Laurel Cliff seeks flood hazard mitigation funds~

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· By BRIAN J. RI!!D
lentlllll Newl 8181'1

gency Mana1ement Asency on
behalf of the Salisbury Township
lbe Laurel Cliff area near Trustees, askins that the township be
Pomeroy may become the HCond permitted to apply for hazard miticommuniiY in Meiss County to gation moni~ throulh the Federal
receive federal funds for flood hazard Emergency Management Agency.
mitigation.
The La~ Ciff and Rock Springs
The Village of Rutland is awailinB communities, have been especially
~y ~or flopd mitilalion, and the hard-hit with, hiBh water and flood
applicallOD ..process for the Laurel . dama1e in tiJC past several years.
Cliff area is now underway, ac;cord·
Rood mitisllion funds are ultiins to Bob Byer, director of Meiss mately dispe~ to residents in a tarEmergency Services, who hail filed geted area, fc¥- the purpose of making
an application with the Ohio E'!Jer- homes less s~eptible to flood-related damage. ,;.

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'Date rape'
bill moves

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have suffered significant nood damage in each of the past three years. ,. .
"This would be money Wclf'
spent," Howell said. "There's a lot of'
work to be done, and we )!!ant to ger·
it done as soon as possible:"
The commiuee's goal, Howell:
said, is to complete the application
· for fundi!lg by ·september.
·:
Last year, the village of Rutland
was one of 19 applicants approved
for FEMA hazard mitigation funding,
A total of 40 a(lplications were
received state-wide, according tfii:
Howell.

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Rain hurting
Ohio ·farmers .~
Up to25 counties may
qualify for federal help ·

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. FINDI,.AY (AP) -· ~mingly ment. ·
.
endless spring storms have turned
"I just wish it would quit rnioing."
some farmers' fields into a muddy Maurer said Tuesday. '
mess, and that could spell serious ·
Storms that .began Thursday 'ontrouble for their crops.
·
tinued in some parts of Ohio through·
Just ask farmer Neil Clark.
Tuesday. The National Weather SerMore than 7 inches of rain have vice said the skies would be clear and
fallen in eight days on Clark's 1,800- dry today and Thursdav. But foreacre farm out•idc of Findlay, about40 casters predicted more rain this week..
miles south of Toledo. The rain end- end.
'
ed late Tuesday.
. ·
The impact of the storms ca...ed ·
~-'!'ht " !!lorrils have left l,lbour ·ol&amp;=-'1\re'St!ay ns• rniiFswollcn· rivers '1lild
acres of the I,H()().acro farm where he streams in northwestern and central
grows corn :and soybCans under ·Ohio began to recede.
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water.
But some areas arc not out of the
"In three weeks will be the woods.
.
longest day of the year, and then win'The weather service' said' today·
ter will be coming. It still feels like water was still rising in the nonhwinter now." Clark said.
western Ohio cities of Dclianee,
The story was much the same on Grand Rapids, Napoleon and Water- .
many Ohio (arms, said Steve Maur- ville.
,
maintaining residential property tax- er, director of the state Farm Service . In Oak Harhor. about 30 miles cast
es as a local option and asking busi- Agency, which · administers federal ·of Toledo, the risK!g Portage River
nesses 10 chip in mon: money.
farm programs.
was threatening the wastewater treatBusinesses could he forced to pay
He said it was too early to deter- mcnt plant.
·
up to half the new taxes for Ohio's ft1inc the damage caused by the
The excess rain has probahly cost'
schools. Currently, they pay ahout27 heavy rain. But he believes up to 25 the state's fanners millions or dollars,
cents of every dollar raised in taxes counties cnuld eventually qualify f&lt;)r said Luther Tweeten, an-agricultural:
for the state's General Revenue Fund. .emergency help from the govern- . economist ul Ohio State Uni vcrsity.:
·The business increase would come
~
only if the state decides to raise tax:
es for schools, Browning said.
Donald Bema, president of the
Ohio Public Expenditure Council,
said businesses looking to move. to
WASHINGTON (AP)- Orders new orders, it's a sign that innatio..::
Ohio could be scared off if business to U.S. factories rebounded 1.2 per- ary bottlenecks could he developing
taXes are too high.
cent in April, the third rise in four in. the proiluction pipeline.
"lbey need to be real careful that months, \Jolstered by strength in
Shipments nf manufa,turcd goods
the state mnains competitive," Bema transjx&gt;nation equipment, industrial illso jumped 1.2 percent in April, the
warned.
machinery and m~tal producls.
largest surge in a year. That helpe~ ,
The increase to a seasonally produce the second consecutive
adjusted $323.9 billion was slightly decline in the hacking nf unlilleil
su:onger than economists expected. It orders - 0.3 percent in April, the
followed a 1.3 percent drop in March same .a.• in Man: h.
~
and gains or 0.4 percent in February
Within durable goods, new orders
·
. and 2.S percent in January.
for transportation cquipl!lent rose
rah Federal Building on April 19,
Advances were broad-based and 3.4 percent. It was the first increase
199S, as retaliation for the deadly included a 1.3 percent increase li1r since January and included all cnn1:.
1993 FBI raid near Waco.
durable goods and a I percent rise in poncnt industries except railroad
non-durable goods, the first increase equipment. Orders for industrial
Prosecutors were expected to con- in three months.
machinery rose 2.7 percent, the lifth
tend that the enormity of the hombFactory orders arc closely fol- consecutive increase. Primary metals
ins.on victims and families warrants .. lowed by cconomis~' as a barometer such a..stecl rnse2.'1 percent and fabthe death penalty. Defense lawyers of future production. And if produc- . ncntcd mclal ·products were up 3.g
were expected to arsue that McVeigh lion fails to keep up with the pace of percent.
was clouded by misguided patriD'
tism, and should be spared. .
·lbe penilty hearing is a relatively new phenomenon in federal courts.
The federal death penalty statute
that . applies to McVeigh has only ·
been in effect since 1994, and nobody
·has been executed under it. ·

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~=~:ei~.~~~~~:~ to pay more taxes for schools
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m Marth 1996, but tt ts still available.
·
in about 80 other countries, where it
coLm.iaus (AP)- Allowing
is used to treat sleep d!sorde~.
voters to have asay in the state's new
Rohypnolls an·an11-msomma~Ng school-fund!ns system appears to he
.10 tm1es more powe~ul ~an Vahum. likely.
,
lbe drus c~s an mtoxtcated,then
lbe idellj 1was included in a 10sleepy feehng that ~s after two . point list di~ussed '1\Jesday by law. hours and lasts about etght. It leaves makers and education leaders who
some people semiconscious and are studyina.1ways to get more mobdefenseless to sexual assault and ey for schi)Qis. The list save some
unable to remember much later.
clues as lo how officials will
Reid's ~ill would increase penal- approach sc~Jliol reform.
ties for u'ms a ~Ng for ~· sexual
Amons tl)Cm is the recommcndabattery, corruptiOn of a mtnor, gross tion to have a statewide vote on the
sexual imposition and sexual impo' funding soluaion.
sition. A rape conviction coupled ~ith
"If the s6J,ution creates a signifithe 11se of ·B dNS would result tn a earn tali inc~. then It should go to
minimum 5entence of five yean in the voters," slid OffiCe of Budget and
prison.
Managemen Director R. Gresory
· lbe bill, which passed the House Browning. · •
unanimously, now soesto the Senate
.
the Senate:' a bill ·.

Currently, the ha1r care profes~ions are ~vented by separate licensIRS asencteS that bar them from
working under the same roof. The
state Barber Board requires that barbcrs work only ·in barber shops; .the
state Board of CosmctoloiY requ1res
th• cosrnetolosists work only in
beauty shops.
lbe ' leaislation sponsored by
~sdake ~epublican Ed ~~tis
would retam the sei'B!"Ie ,ltce.nsl~ll
standards, But ~uus satd h1s b1ll
woold a~lo~ bustnesse~ to hett~r
se~e thetr cltents b&gt;: endtng t.he or11fic1al and cOSily requtremcnll for scparate facilities.
.
The Senate, meanwhtle, voted 301 for a bill that would require new

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to discuss the ten-step application
process.
According to Mick Howell, chairman ·of the committee, the entire
township might be considered for the
ft1itigation project, if funding is
approved and if a n6od hazard can be
deemed present township-wide.
The commiuee will now visit
. indi'vidual properties to assess Hood
hazard and past damage, a require· ment in order to complete the ten-step
application process.
Howell said that properties in the
Laurel Cliff and surrounding areas

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: ~-Upitgoes----~

na;!:,&gt;t~~~iaandiltherstates a·

~!'~:~~s~~.:t;,~:..cosmelologisls

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According to Byer, the mitigation has now been completed. Resident
assistance beiris sought for the Lau- surveys, project estimates and other
rei Cliff community is very similar-t(l documentation will he performed by
the mitigation program in Rutland. In a committee of residents in the comRutland, residents affected by flood munities involved: Laurel Cliff, Rock
problems will have several options: Springs, Willow Creek and Thomas
the outright sale of their property to Fork. This eommittee has been meetthe village, acquisition with reloca- ing weekly on Monday evenings at 6
lion, physical relocation of the home, p.m. Next week's meeting will be
elevation of an existing structure, and held at the Rock Springs United
retrofitting, which involves making ·Methodist Churi:h. The meetinss are
homes "flood-proor· by sealing base- open to the public.
ments and elevating hot water heaters
A representative of the Ohio
and electrical boxes.
Emer1ency Management Agency
Byer said his role in the process was on hand at this week's meeting

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
would join !be- growing number of
states seeking to stop the use of a
powerful tranquilizer in sexual ·
assaults under legislation approved ·
by the House.
The bill, approved unanimously.·
Tuesday, would bump up the penal- .
ties when victims are dNised.
Rep. Marilyn Reid, R-Beavercreek, said she introduced the bill
after ·hearins· from college students
·concerned about reports of women
who had been dNged and sexually
&amp;ssaulted.
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Tht•tarpt of. .the ·bill .ja,;;,R•i- .J
trazepam - a tasteless, odorlesS; col- . · . . , .
orless · dru&amp; sold under the trade

forxf=~~~ot~

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Cle• tonight, low In the
. Thuraday, aunny,
In the 70..

·
The Ohio School Funding Task
Force and the Legislature have about
10 months to come up with and
approve ·a new education-funding
plan in' response to the Ohio Supreme
Coun's Nlinl.that found the current
system unconstitutional.
Browning, chainllan of the task
force •. and .Goy. George Voinovich
have said in the past that they don't
want to leave out the voters.
Senate Minority Leeder Ben ESpy,
0-Columbus, questioned what Wc;&gt;Uid
happen if voters reject the plan and
the Slate has three months to find an
alternative 5Qiution.
"That is the dilemma." Browning
responded.
The list of ideas also included

Factory or,ders post third
increase in four mo~ths

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'penalty phase' of McVeigh's trial

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DENVE"- (AP) - Jurors dec:id. ins whether '{imothy McVeiah lives
or dies willMar wrenching testimony about thmQkllhoma City bombins. includi .. that of a 10-year-old
hoy who lost l!is mother and a rescuer
wl!o held a hand buried in the Nbble,
. only to feel the pulse stop.
u.S.. District .Judie Ric!iard
Matsch Nled 1\Jesday that testimony
rrom those wlio survived the bombins and lostlcried ones is relevant to
. the jury's decision on McVeip's senrenee.
.
But MiliCh did nilt allow every- .
lhinl .the JI'OICC'Ition wanted to present during the penalty phase thai

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hesins ioday, saying he hoped to
avoid ipOamingjuror sensibilities.
He also refused to let the defense
Jl!llsenl evidence on the handling or
the (alai 1ovemment raid against
Branch Davidians ncar Waco, Texas,
wltich the defense could claim drov~ .
McVeigh to commit tile worst act of
terrorism on U.S. soil. ·
·
"We have to~~ this hearing to
enSIIIe that the uluinate result and the
jury's decision arc truly a '.moral
response to app;op~atc iri(ormatio~
rather than an emouonal response, '
Marsch said.
_ .I'!osecutors have contended that
-McVeigh blew up the: Alfred P. Mur·

:ss~:::Cc::!eOO:'!x":n:n~:· Education funding tops legislative agenda

a ~lateillield.

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. Sponsorin1 Sen, lkn Espy, ~?" fundinl will top the ~nda ~
Columbus, said current law allows
. House and Senate neplltaton bepn
~ who haven't pdu~ .from
meetias aext week to smooth over
hish school to hold such polirttons.
"'Ibis bill will make sure the tllldi- thedilferencesbclweai their~
of the lllle's'iiellltwo-yell' 'buqet.
tor's 'offiCe has profenioul Iliff ror .
lesialalivo leliden uy.
~ to~." Blpy said.
The Houle set up lhe nesoUIIions
Sen. James · Carnes. R·St. Tuesday
by ~ 5cn1ee amenda.inville, ·who Clll the only nep,
mellll
to
ill propoted $36.1 billion
live yolc, said it would disqualify
spelldills
plaa The Senate Iller
lholl Who doa't hive a desr• but
ittsh'ndlll ila...;....,IMII-arouI.e I 6 . . . . . - I . , lkills liaa pn~cedulll....,.. -llld ..-t
dllouab explrilncc Hi alao Uicl the tO
-illlillle.
1111 0111
~- 1111 IIIIIJ.eiisl• l
11p. Tum J¢ •. R-New 0111an'sl Ins
l COld.
Slid dii:Ssnllt ,...._.. a bud''I belle&lt;~e dll •.d!eiw eh-eM blw \
set
thit
- 300 ...,..~o~rpr dlln
the!WIF a tfbi'ily lhlllll haw_. the- lhlllll
dtl Hou1f Ia MlrdL
.,... people," C...llld.
"Nannlaal;y, til wouldn't .... far
Thillilf- p110 1111 Ha IIi

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a blll We haven't seen," JohnJOO said. Ray of Akron and Gary Suhadolnik
Rep. Vernon Sykes; D-Akron • . of Stronssville and Democrat Judy
qreed. ·
Sheerer of Shaker Heipts.
"There is only one hook I would
Amons the issues suarantced to
accept on (aith. and this ain't it," he come up:
said
·
-· Chanses made to a· GOP
· ,;It's lOins .0 be primarily prim• iichool-fundins ror:nulalhat shielded
ry ~secondary edt~ellioo and hilh· suburban districts from the effects of
er ~ucation •." H0111e Speaker Jo·Aan rising property values .
Davidson said whe~ ukell to outline
- The Senate's watered-down
the main areas of dtaqreement.
version of a. House plan to keep
. "TIIcre aredi«-. ~ I~'t iportKJP:IIplly oft public librw'y com· dlillk tile di":~- are IIII,IOf, n...- p!ltel' netw«U.
.
dlllere-. the Reynoldsbuq
.- .A Senate -.dment limitinj
~- IIIWid.
•
CleNeland's school voucher eqleli·
ltapt 111 ntl• the Houle 1n the ment to studentl cunently enrolled.·
IIIIIs wiD be S,._, JoliDioa IIIII Joan
- A Senate decision 10 Clip the
Lawnaea, R-OIIIIL The Seal!le size of the income lilt cut 8Qin110
IM8Iben will be a.publa. Roy lndlvicltials.

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ICHOl:ARSHIP • ._,., Abbla Sbalton, prelldent ol the
WDnllll'l Auxiliary It '•'Ill,_. IIIITIOilal Holpil8l, pn11 1111 a
•1.000 ICholarlhlp to St.ale Raad, right, of RutllncL A menlbw •
of the gndudng clliu It
Sc'-1 thlallli'lna. Aeecl
Wlllllucly phylltllll......., .. ~ Colllga. Ttla .UIIIIWy hll f
pntllntld I Ioiii olta,DOO In IChDfll'ltllpe' thll eprlng.
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Commentary

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Congressional ethics

'Esta!Jfisfrd inl948

some have stuck. It's an activity that
By Jack Andel'eon
hasn't won him many friends in the
and Jan Molter
Gary Ruskin is the "other" kind cloakrooms of the Capitol.
of Washington -lobbyist. He works out
It looked like Ruskin got a break
of a tiny, third-Ooor walk·up that last winter, when lawmakers decided
could use a coat of paint and where they were goin.g to reform the notopapers are stacked in every spare cor' riously slow-moving, ineffective
ethics process. Congress' concern
ner.
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He's overworked and underpaid, was sparked bY the controversy surunlike many of his six-figured lob- rounding House Speaker Newt Gin·
bying brethren. His office sits less . grich, who fougbt off more than 70
than a mile from the mal(ogany-pan- complaints against him before suc·
eled offices of Gucci Gulch, but it . combing to a $300,000 fine. The feel·
might as well be a diffe!'l'nt.universe . ing in Congress .• as elsewhere-- was
Yet Ruskin has managed to cause I hat the current ethics process wasn't
a great deal of trouble over the last helping anyone, least of all those who
few years. He heads ·a group called wish lawmakers would be more
the Congressional Accountability accountable.
But in Orwelljan fashion, Con·
Project. To call it a group is perhaps
misleading. Though affiliated with gress has turned a golden opportuni·
Ralph Nader, CAP is a one-man shop. ty into yet another example ofwhv so
But it's a pesky one if you're an elect- many Americans have more trust in
their used-car salesmen than their
ed official on Capitol Hill.
Over the last few years, Ruskin elected officials. According to some,
has filed numerous ethics complaints ethics refonn in this Congress appar·
against the high-and-mighty on Capi- ently means; ~ather than cleaning up
tol Hill. Most have been disrl.issed ; this place, let's make ourselves even

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are up·for grabs

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less accountable than before. ·
It began in February, when House
leaderS announced a "morl!orium"
on all new ethics ch~r~es. This came
as a relief to at l~ast two top Republicans -- Reps. Bud Shuster, R-Pa.,
and Tom DeLay, R-Texas, the major·
ity whip. Both men had outstanding
complaints against them pending
from the last Congress stemming
· from their cozy relationship with lobo
byists. In Shuster's case, the lobbyist was his former chief of staff. In
DeLay's case, it .,vas his brother.
· The moratorium was supposed to
last until April .II, bilt has been
extended and is still in effect. In oth·
.er words, the House's reaction to the
grueling task of ,disciplining their
speaker has been to grant the ot~~er
434 members a six-month vacation
from all ethics charges.
So, in a city of nearly 50,000
lawyers, wllo does the House tap to
be the counsel to the· new ethics ·
reform task force? As Roll . Call
reponed, none other than Richard

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Cauacll to meet
The Regional Advisory Council of
the Area Agency on Aging will meet
June 13, II a.m. at Scenic Hills
Senior Center, 187 Southern Spring
St., Logan.

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The Pomeroy BookShelfers WritDllllCe to be beld .
A round and square dance and · ing Group will meet June 13, 7 p.m.
clogging will be held at the Tuppen at the Pomeroy Publii: Library.
Plains VFW building, Sawrday, 8 to

It»

Sumy

Offlpii/I:INot

: Ohio
: Tonialit... Mostly clear. Lows
: around 50 nortl! and 50 to ss south.
: .. Thutsday... Partly sunny. Highs
• from around 70 along the l~eshbre
'ib ilie mid 70s south. . '
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:"'Elteaded forecast ·
.
:· ; Thursday night...Chance of show::e_!'S southwest. Fair elsewi)cre. Lows

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• · Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
! processed a ·number of cases on
: Monday.
: · Forfeiting bonds were: Ronald
: Newsome, Jackson, speed, $63; Har~ ~Joe Smith, Letart, W.Va., $45, no
• seat belt; Thomas · Ingels. West
· ·' Columbia. W.Va,. $4S, no seat belt;
-Bradley Saunders, Scotttown, $69,
::speed: Lorena Oil'er, Langsville, $63,
:assured clear distance.
: • Fined were: Eric Smith, Letart,
·; W.Va., FRA suspension, SISO and
• costs, 30 day license suspension;
: Brownson Laudermih, consuming
: llcohol, $63 and caSts; Andrea Oil: lard, Middleport, speed, $S I and
: cdsts; Duane A. Johnson, consuming
' ; alcohol, $63 and costs; Blaine Qualls.
,; Pomeroy.'tpublic ·intoxication; $63
•• and costs; Robin Friend,. Long Bot.
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co~~:::;~gr~:.~~eyr~~!~ds=: ·Middleport

$63 and costs, no seat belt, $25 and
costs: Greg Stewart, Pol,"eroy, spe~.
$25 ~nd costs; Terry Mtchaels, Maddleport, defecta ve muffler, $43 and
costs; Alan Johnson, Mason, W.Va.,
speed, $50 and costs: Jeremy Coleman. Rutland, lottenng. costs ?nly;
Gary Ball, Parkersburg, receavmg
stolen property, $250 and costs;
Hel~n Propef, New York, N.Y.,
exp!red tags, $63 and costs, fictitious
tags, $63 and costs, operating under
suspension, $63 and costs: Shanon
Petrie, Pomeroy, failure to appear,
$25 and cbsts; Joy Cundift';Pomeroy,
destruction of'•property, $313 and
costs.
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relief frt?m the rain

atleasi throu1h Thursday.
: ' .J)hio is getting a welcome break - · An -approaching high pressure
: fr'jn the rain.
· system .was expected to push the
·
: · '-the National Weather Service clouds out of Ohio today.
Skies
will
be
mosdy
clear
tonight,
'-Baid
conditions should be with
. dry
'
. us.
allowing temperatures to drop to
around 50 dearets.

touch.
Malcolm. who is llll!led for his
grudfather Malcolm X. told police
he believed that if his arandn)other
died, he would be reunited with his
mother in Texas, the newspaper said,
citin1 an unidentified police source.
Police in this New York City sub.urb would not com~nt on the report
this morning. Detective Patricia
Yasinski refeiTCCI quealionato • lieutenant who was not yet in. Calls 10 the ·
county attorney's oft"ICC, which. is
prosecuting the case, were not
answered .
Malcolm's lawyer, Percy Suu~.
said 'fl!esday that the child "loves hi~
grandmother very · much and he
expressed that love for her. ... He said
how sorry he is."
Mrs. Shabazz, 61, was ip extremely critical condition early today with
third-desree bums from the fire ·

McDonald's 55-cent deal .
on dinner sandwiches tabled

.
CHICAGO (AP)- McDonald's drink.
In April. McDonald's began oll'er·
Bottom."Oliver Sayre, HMC;
much-hyped 55-cent deal on dinner
IO:IS p.m., Overbrook Nursing sandwiches has been tabled six ing Big Macs al)d later Quarter
Pounders with cheese for 55 cents
Center, Middleport, Marie Dudding, months early.
'
The fast-food restaurant chain, with the purchase of any size fries
VMH.
.
·
struggling with stagnant sales and · and a drink at re~ular !!rice.
MIDDLEPORT
7:20 p.m., South Third Avenue, franchisee discontent, said Tuesday
Timothy Shane, HMC.
the deal will continue for breakfast ,...-'"T"
sandwiches with the purchase of
PQMEROY
6:37 p.m .• Second Street, Roben regular-priced hash browns and a
Landers, treated at the scene;
8:57 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Marie Robinson, VMH.
VETEAANS MEMORIAL
REEDSVILLE
Tuesday admissions -- Marie
10:25 p.m., Osborne Road, Alta
· Robinson, Pomeroy.
Dill, HMC.
Tuesday discharges -· None.
RUTLAND
.
8:49. p.m., Long Stteet, Frances
Star, treated at the scene.

The following units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded II calls for assistance Tilesin t)1j: SOs.
day. Units responding inciuded:
Friday...Chance of showers. CENTRAL DISPATCH
Highs 65 to 75.
.
2:30 a.m., Flatwoods Road,
Saturday and sunday...Chance of Pomeroy, .Kristina Foreman, Holzer
showers. Lows 50 to 55. Highs 70 to Medical Center;
·
·
5: II a.m .. Rocksprings Rehabili· 75.
Woodwortll updated 10 include .· tation Center, Pomeroy, John Hite,
chance of showers sunday/
HMC;
.
9:05a.m., Nye Avenue, Pomeroy,
Wonora Beaver, HMC, Pomeroy
squad assisted;
6:36 p.m.. North Third Avenue,
Middleport, Eric Roush, Veterans
tom, t~ffic light violation, $63 and Memorial Hospital;
·
costs; David Eakins, Middleport,
7:13p.m., state Route 248, Long

Hospital news

jP.omeroy
Mayor's Court
.•
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YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) - Betty
Shlbau's 12-year-old pandaon cold
police he tried 10 kill her in the hope
he would be- reuniled with his molher, the Daily News repol'led today.
As his p-andmother lay in a hospital bed cover1!JI in cream IJid gauze,
Malcolm Shabazz appeared with his
mother in fal)lily court Tuesday 10
answer charges he set the fir:e in her
apartment that badly bumod her.
He chatted quietly with his moth·
er, Qubilah Shabazz, during the hear. ing in which a judge ordered a med·
li:at and psychological evaluation for
him.
His eyes were downcast and he
occasionally shook his head when his
mother appeared to question him. At
one point, she wiped a tear from his
face, and she kissed him on the cheek
later when they parted, despite a court
officer's admonition that they not

Pl.= = Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

.•:, li. ..oday's Ohio weather forecast .

zo"a.J'...

mayor's co.urt
er, Dexter, $100 plus costs, disorder·

The following cases were! settled
TUesday night in . the Middleport
Court of Mayor Dewey "Mack" Horton.
Fined were: Nancy L. Lawson,
Long Bottom, $25 plus costs, failure
to maintain assured clear distance:
Rick Hubbard, Middleport, SIOOplus
costs, trespassing; Scott A. lcenhow-

ly after warning.
Forfeiting · bonds were: John
Michael Bush Jr., Mason, W.VL, $60,
wrona way on a one:way street; Vicki S. McKinney, Middleport, $60, .
expired tags; Bariy Lynn Alford,
Estes Park, Colo., $60, wrong way on
a one-way street.

Today's .livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) .- Indiana~ . ·.
Ohio direct··hog prices at selected buying points Wednesday as provid. ed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: IJIOStly 1.00
higher; demand moderate to good on

moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2. 230-26o lbs. .country
points SS.00-56.50, few 56.75-57.00;
plants 56.00.57.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 50.00·
55.00; 210-230 lbs. 45.50-SO.ilO~
~ows: mostly steady.

••lutfonf

. ......

Window
......, .....1'0

CJiooN f'Nn•

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

!f.he .Daily Sentinel

....

(USPS 21).90itl

c

p,;blllhod cveoy altemoon, MondO)' lhrou(lh
•- y . Ill Coort St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by oho
. Olilo Valley l'llblllll... co,...,yl(lonnen.co ..
Pooneroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second
·CloM potlllp paid II Po......,, Ohio.
·Me.btr; The A11MJelllled Pm11, and the Ohio

.

NewRpll* AMOCiation.

ftlsTMASTBRt Send addm1 correction• to
111e DoiiJ Senolnel Ill Court St.. Pomeroy.

Olrio,45769.

SVISCittmON I!ATBS
·

B1CorrlorD&lt;MolorRoolt
One Wcd ............................. - ..... ............ $2.00
• One M-................................................11.10
Otii! Year ....................... :....................... Sl04.00

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SINGLH COPY PRtCI!
.
Dally .................................................... 35 c ....
Su1Mcribc11 not de11irlna 10 pny the cMf'ier may
ft!MII i'n adVIIlCC direct 10 The Daily SentlricJ

; o"P three,~~" or 12 monlh Will. ~I will be
&amp;i'tlen carrier each week.

record

No IIUbKriplion by ,m1il pcfmhted in areal
wbere home carrier ~~m~ice i1available.

.

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~- ........ ihe ri(lhl 10 odj..l ...........

IIi doe oubocription period. Sulocription ml&lt;

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JIIIPon orlhe Olblcri.. loo.
r-7- MAILSVISCRIPMONS

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t.-MtlpC-,
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26 Wcdi..................... ........................:...Sll.S2
51Wcdi.......................... :............... ....:SIOS.!I6

Mofpc-J .

tlWcdl.......................... ..................:....$2'1.~

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........................40\

Akzo ......................................65~
Ali'lr'fech ...............................66~
Alhlarld 011 ......................"'""47~

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Bob E.,_,, .............. ............. 14\
ATilT ......................................35\
Ol1e ..................................
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Borg-WarMr ••••••••••.••••••••••••.. 50~
Chalnplon ........ ,., .....................17
Chlrm Shpe ......................;..•.5'1.
~olcllng ••• .-..•.....•••.••.•••.•..••31

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Ganrwtt .................................12\
Goody............. ~·····-········....58\

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Peoplel ..........~......................33M

Prem Flnl •••• ~ •••••••••••••~••••••••:..•••. 11

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Star Benk .......- .....................41 ~
Wertd¥'1 ................................23'
.

Sloak reports •re lha 10:30
a.m. quoiN provlcllcl by AcMst
of Galllpoh.

26.1¥«b...... ...... ............................... :..... S!I6.68
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$109.72

Dad's favorite new tool
doesn't cut or pound.

... The Meigs Junior Class Prom
·.~ Banquet C~mmittee would Uke to
.~ hank the people who donated.&amp;
1;)\totked .af the May 3, 1997 Prom:

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I

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' ., "
,:&gt;

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•. •'•
..' "'''
li.'
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II p.m. Music will be provided
by"!)ut of the ·Blue" country. band.
Ronnie Wood is the caller.

BookSWen to met

·1

w.

.

•

,.,.
,,

Republiam meetlaa
.
The Meiga County Republican
Committee will meet Thursday, 7:3o
p.m. at Carleton School in Syracuse.
All ~publicans welcome.

OAPsE to meet
OAPSE. Southern Local Chapter
453, will meet at 3 p.m. at Southern
High School to discuss conttact neJOtiations.

I

Today in history

.,

Pomeroy.

Meigs ·announcements

..:.,. · ,~~

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
pressed Ronald Reagan to sign the training facility on the school's camSchizophrenic .is a better word. :
Gannett News Service
Martin Luther King holiday bill, but pus, just south ·o f• Atlanta's down·
Left to his own devices, Bush :
ATLANTA - When it comes to . as president he had to be cajoled by town .
seems to have the ·heart of his father ;
the matter Of race, George Bush is moderates of his own pany into
Morehouse, the nation's smallest when it comes to racial issues. His i
best remembered as one of only two signing a ·watered-down version of mcdic,al school, is one of leading pro- . dad was a major supporter of the }
presidents this century to veto a civ- the civil rights bill he earlier vctqcd. ' duccrs of doctors wlw work as pri- · UNCF. working tirelessly to raise ;
it rights bill, and for putting Clarence
By the time he left office,· Bush mary-care provider~.- most in poor . money to send black youngsters to ;
Thomas on 1he Supreme Court
was tightly cloaked in the rhetoric o[ urban or rural communities. That is college at a time when it was unpi&gt;p- ~
· :
Neither action will land him in a the racially insensitive right-wingcrs significant when you consider the ular in many quarters.
· But when forced to weather die ;
civil rights hall of fame . Just the · who now dominate Republican 11ar· paucity of physicians working a.~ genopposite. Both have stained B.ush's ty politics.:
cral practitioners in just those kind of political winds, Bush . routineLy .
long record of pul!lic service - a
Now he begins shedd.ing that areas that are heavily populated by allowed his · desire to hold public 1
record that over the years has l.eft soiled gannent.
·
African-Americans. Eighty-four per- office shatter. his ~Dora! compass. :
friends and foes confused about
Bush gives. the keynote address ceDI of the school's'·graduates ·prac. Now that his political career is over •
where he really stands on the politi· Wednesday at the victory celebration tice medicine in these undcrscrvcd George Bush, is behaving more like :
cally sensitive issue of llivil rights.
for Morehouse School of Medicine's communities.
the son of Prescott Bush than the l
"George Bush · is bereft of n true national fund -raising campaign, an
Sullivan, who tried to talk Bush stepchild of Jim Crow.
!
moral compass .on civil rights effon that sputtel'ed fory!l8f$ until the out of vetoing the 1990 Civil Rights'
That's 1ood news f&lt;ir both his civ· I
issues," conservative activist Clint former president helped re-launclt it 'Bill and who now believes it was a il rights legacy and for the (onuncs t
Bolick once said of the Republican last year. By doing so, h~ (llllowed mistake to nominate Thomas to the o.f·the. Morehouse School of Mcdi· ;
fonner president.
.
ofTicials at the historically black high ~ourt, thinks Bush's civil rights t:mc.
·
:
What is certain is that during his medical school to usc his name and. · ~'!~COrd is unilerrated.
,
stint in the White House, the one-time extensive contacts in the business
''.
moderate Republican succumbed to world to reach t~eir goal ,in shon
'
the views of his party's conservative order.
.
. 11
wing in wronJIY calling the 1990 civThe result, being announced
it .rights legislation ·:a quota bill" and Wednesday, is thai the money raised
- '
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.
.
•
foolishly branding Thomas the best· fAr exceeds the campaign's $30 mil- By The Auocfated Pntla
today is Wednesday, June 4, the I55th day of 1997. There are 210 days •
qualified person to fill the Supreme lion goal, says Louis Sullivan, the
left
in the year.
:
Court vacancy crealed by the retire- school's president and only black to
hightiaht
in
history:
.
Today's
ment of Thurgood Marshall.
serve in Bush's cabinet. Sullivan,
On June 4. 1942; the Battle of Midwa~ bepn durina World
11.
As a college student, Bush led a · one-time Health and Human Services
On
this
dale:
.
fund-raising drive for the United secretary, credits Bush's support for
In 1647, the English army seized Kina Charles lu • hosiate.
Negro College Fund. When he ran for opening a lot of corporate doors and.
In
1812,' the Louisiana 'Jtrritory wu reumed the MiliiOUI'i ~tory.
:
a Senate seat from Texas in 1964, · purses.
In 1878, TUrkey turned Cyprus over to the Bridab.
•
Bush spoke out against the landmark
The money will be used 10 expand
In
1892,
the
Sierra
ClubiiiCOI'JIO'II8CI
in
San
PnuK:iaco.
'
civil righ!S bill passed by Con1ress the school's faculty and underwrite a
In 1896, Henry Ford made a aqccepful pte'Cl~Wi llllt ru• of his - . . 1
later that year. As vice president, he . Jl!ational Center for 'Primary Care
lless eaqiqe, called a qlildricycle, throup the llleoll !If~
, ' .. i
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IManalleld Iw I·

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al Home,

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Supports dove hunting

.)

Thomas B. 'funa', 101, Rutland, died this mominl at OYemook Nuninl Center in Middleport. Arnnjllments will be announc:ed by Bwin1 Funer-

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·china doesn't .d eserve ·~ MFN status. · ~

reh~bilitate

Thomas E. Turner

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Bush taking first step to

Thundar, Juae 5
~A~ccu~w:~~~!!'OI~r:e~c~-!.!~~or~da~y\1~·-~-~-~~ions~!llld~h~ith!!!,!!~~~W

:

b

Dear Editor.
.
cfit wildlife? The next time·you see
1 feel compelled to writ~ this let- one of. nature's splendors, go thank
1er in response to Ms. Kipplen's let'- the pcr.on who hunts or fishes, their
1er in The Daily Sentinel dated June money probably helped it being there
2, 1997. This letter is not to try to for you to enjoy.
'change her feelings. but to clear up a
The only true statement Ms. Kipfew points that she states.
plen makes is in regard to some me.m1 would like 10 know where she bers who want ll total ban on ll.unting
came up with the crippling rate of20 and will stop at nothing to get it. The
percent? Who did this study and what same group who used glass-laced dog
scientific data did they use? Dove food in Maryland to try to stop hunthunting is permitted in 33 states and ing on state land. I don'·t want to see
I personally have hunted them in nine .one ·of illy .dogs cough up bloody
states and Mexico. I have never sce.n glass because because they think the
a loss rate anywhere close lo this.
ends justifies the means!
As to different farm groups about
The bottom line is this: are we as
trespassing, yes it is a problem. But voten; qualified to make complex
1 didn't know you had to be a hunter wild.life management laws and reguto·be a trespasser. Ohio law is very lations? If (love hunting is placed on
clear, you must have written perm is· a statewide ballot, what wildlife regsion to hunt on the land of another - ulation is next, deer hunting? E)on't be
- period. As toxic shot is a waterfowl fooled into thinking this one issue is
issue because of the way ducks feed the only one .. Once this becomes a·
in water, not birds and game animals voter issue, a'ny new game law or a
OJ1 land, I can only assume that the repeal of an existipg one is a voter
Grange, as stated by you, is against issue, the precede.nt will be set; check
the liSC of lead shot in all hunting .. .. out Ca.lifornia.
red fla• small game hunter! Ms. KipIf the future of all our l)lildlife is
P-len, we may live in Southeastern important to you let's leave these
Ohio, but we know the Grange ·and complex decisions to the people who
this is just not the case. Is this anoth· have the education and the field train• ·er miu quote or half-truth by your ing to make the intelligent decisions.
Do not sign any petition from "Save
1roup? .
Ohio aportsmen spend millions of the Doves" or if you have, ask in
dolllli1 on their respective sport: writing to have your name removed.
money thai buys the land for wildlife · Let's all make the intelligent decision
~-.. ...._
---•-~- e.,
tc
on this before it's too late.
..........
,..._. t-L....................
• 10111e o( which are closed to hunting.
S. W. MUll
'J1Ieae ._. benefit game and non·
Deep River Retrieven
JUie spec:its alike. How many
.. ' Pomei'O)' .
wildlife areas has your Jroup pur·
dJaod and maintained to really ben·.

Boy tells pollee he wanted
to be reunited with his mom

I

Leon, who also represents Ann
Eppard, former chief of staff to the
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
aforementioned Shuster, who now
lobbies on transportation-related mal- ·
614-992·2156 • Fax 992-2157
ters. By coincidence, her former boss
happens to bC the powerful chairman
of the House Transportation and
Infrastructure Committee -- a comA Gannett Co. Newspaper
mittee to which nearly every lawmaker is beholden because it doles
ROBERT L. WINGm
'out the pork-barrel highway fun~s
Publisher
that often pave the way to re-election.
· Last week we learned that .the
House task force is close to comCHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
pleting its.work. Unfortunately, tbc;ir
Generll Manager
Controller
plan has little to do with promoti!'g
an ethical Con~~ess ~ and everything
to do with protecting the hides of
11t1 Scntlaol . .,...,_ lottoro to tllo odffor lrDm - .·on • Df toplco.
lawmakers
who stray from t~e .
SIIDtt ,.,_(:Kill wordo or lou) havo ttr. boot chanco ot I»&gt;II(J publlo,..,, 1)'J&gt;Id ltl•
straight-and-narrow.
;
- - ptW(wlrod llfKI oil moy be-· E..h llhDuld lnclua. • olgnottn, - - · •
"""tlllytlme pltDno number. ~lfy • dotw II IINtl'o • -.,..,.. o ,.W.Uo atllclo ·
. Under a plan being floated •• but
tw - · llall tv: Lotiono tv IIHI Editor, Tiro Somlnol, 111 Court St., -Yo OhiD
not yet complete-· the House would
46m;or,FAX rof1~f57.
bar outside groups from filing complaints against member~ based on
newspaper acoounts. Never mind
that nearly every major ,ethics case in
By WALTER R. MEARS
recent years was sparked by me~ia
AP Special Correspondtint
reports .. including that of Gin·
WASHINGTON (AP)- When government agencies shut down for lack
grich's arch-nemesis, former House
of funds 18 months ago, President Clinton blamed the Republicans and
Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas.
.
••
·gained an issue. Now the blame game is on again, over a GOP measure to
The plan would also bar the cur·
bar shutdowns this year.
rent system of "three tellers of
. refusal" for outside groups to file
The Republicans say they want to insure against another spending dead·
lock that leaves some agencies without funds, by passing legislation to con·
charges. Under. current policy, any
outside group ·can file a complainl
tinue appropriations at 19971evcls if new ones are not enacted for 1998.
with the ethics committee, so long as
'!'he White House sees other motives, and a trap, in which planned increas· ·
they have at l~ast three letters from
es could he blocked simply'by inaction. The year-end deadline usually keeps
members of Congress declining to
the pressure on both Congress and the administration to get appropriations
file charges themselves. Guys like
bills completed before Oct. I.
Gary Ruskin would finally be shack·
That wouldn't be so this year were there to be a decision in advance on
led, and lawmakers could breathe·a
a "continuing resoiUlion," congressional parlance for measures 10 keep agensigh of relief.
cies financed until their regular appropriations bills are completed. The duraEven under the current rules, gettion·of those resolutions has varied. The automatic one at issue now would
ting
those three letters can be toug,h.,
cover the next budget year.
.
.
as most members are loath to gei
Clinton has said he'd veto a·bill that includes funds for nood and other
involved in any ethics tussle· with
disaster relie(rathcr than aeceptthe Republican measure tied 10 it by House
their colleagues. And should the rcc•
and Senate votes . The overall bill, still awaiting final action, includes $5.5
ommendations of this 'ask force ~ .
billion in disaster relief appropriations. Neither that nor the $8.4 billion total
adopted, even more members woulcl
is in dispute; the bill has been snagged by other issues for more than a month.
be spared the indignity of an ethics
So there has been ample time for blame, with mo~e to come. Democrats
probe.
say the disaster appropriation shouldn't be hostage 10 other issues. Rcpub'
licans counter thin .the threat of government shutdowns should be eliminat"Members would respond (to t~e
ed. House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Clinton was trying "to reserve to
~Q
new rules) by understanding that the~
could act with impunity," a frustrathimself the right to close the government."
cQ
Clinton accused the Republicans of leaving disaster victims in the lurch
=I
ed Ruskin told us. "It's just a tot;JI
· catastrophe."
,
by taking the week's recess, which ended today, without completing action.
o..
Sut on current terms, the next step would have been a veto anyhow.
.Ill!"
• EI:ISJ"~t&gt;i 'F7
Jack Anderson and Jan Molle~
Republican
leaders
'contend
that
prior
app!opriations
provide
the
disas·
·
"'
~=·
are
writers for United Feature
. ' ter relief n.,;,ded now and that the delay in replenishing tho~j: funds isn't hun- .. ._________________________________.,.........;;;;:;;:.:;:::;:"-..
Syndicate, Inc.
ing anyone in need. To make his point, Clinton orde.red an accelerated fiood
aid plan for the Dakotas and Minnesota, "subject to funding."
~
There's to be a conference on final tenns of the bill on Wednesday, bUl
Sen.·Tom Daschle, D-S.D., the minority leader, said he is pessimistic about
the prospects of passage this week.
He said a way out on the shutdown issue would be to have it handled as By Joseph Perkins
its free and unfettered access 10 the · \.vu, a political prisoner in China for
The missile could he deploy~il
a ·separate bill. Were it passed, it would be vetoed. And Republicans would
When Congress renewed China's American consumer market that .19 years before he won asylum in the . early an the next century. Its range
have lost the leverage they sought by tying it to the must-pass disaster relief Most Favored Nation trade status last MFN status provides. But at ihe same United States in 1995, told Congress wiU be just shy of 5,000 miles, whicb
bill in the first place.
.
.
year, the Republican leadership ratio- time, it denies American exponers the recently that Chin~ continues to incans it ,not only will pose a ·Jhrcat
Even a'GOP-Hoated House proposal to en~cl a $500 million first pay- nalized that the goodwill gesture same access to the Chinese consumer cxpon to Ameiica products made by to U.~. forces in the Pacific, but also
ment on disaster relief, avoiding Democratic taunts over the re~ess, sank toward Beijing would encourage the ·market.
slave labor, including artificial now- to San Diego and other West Coasi
because other Republicans· saw any such compromise as a weakening of their Communist government to desist
Indeed, China continues to siap a ·. crs, Christmas tree lights, hand tools cities.
efforts to force the anti-shutdown issue on Clinton.
.
And if China docs not pose · a
with its protectionist trade practices, 30 percent tariff on American and automotive parts.
The overall bill includes aid for 35 states, and funds for operations in to curb its human-rights abuses and· imports, which prices them out of the
The Clinton administration cor- future threat to the United States, theri .
Bosnia and the Middle East. Should it be vetoed,. Democrats say they have to slow its military buildup.
range of most of China's I billion roboratcs Wu's charges. "We believe maybe the threat will be pbsed by one'
the votes to sustain Clinton, in which case it would have to be revived in a
consumers
.(who earn an average of that there arc facilities that may be · of the nations to which Beijing ·has,
Well. China's MFN status expired
new version.
on June 3. And before lawmakers only $350 a year). On top of that, ' exponing materials made with p.rison sold ·advance military weaponry.
And the volume would be mrned up on the blame, Republicans acous- blithely renew it for another year, Beijing imposes various nontariff labor to the United States," said Jef.
Indeed, a top-secret CIA report•
ing the president of blocking emergency funds for disaster victims to keep they ought look back over the past 12 barriers to its markets, including frey Bader, a deputy,assistant secre- last fall . revealed that Beijing sold .
the clout involved in the possibility of federal shutdowns. Democrats argue months and consider whether U.S. licensing requirements, trade quotas tary of state, in an appearance last . missile technology, advanced radar:
that the automatic, standpat spending levels that would apply in an ·impasse generosity to China yielded the and local content restrictions.
week before the Sena1c Foreign Reta- components and chemicals for mak-:.
would undercut the budget agreement.Clinton and Republican leaders have promised results.
·
In the past year, China has not lions Commiuee.
ing nerve agents to Iran's ayatollahs. ·.
just reached.
·
· ·
So what is China doing with the. China also has sold missile technO!- ;
Over the past year. the United ·committed any ob~ious human-right&lt;
While Clinton's vetoes of Republican spending bills led to the two par- States has seen its trade deficit with outrages, like the Tiananmcn Square $40-billion-a-year trade surplus it ogy to Syria and both missile and ~
tial shutdowns in 1995 and early 1996, he argued that they had purposely China soar to $40 billion (up from massacre in 1989. But it c.ontinues to enjoys with the United States'/ Shop· nuclear technology to Pakistan.
.
forced him to it. The voters saw it his way.
. $34 billion in 1995}. That's larger, operate more than I ,100 labor camps, ping for the latest nuclear weaponry
China's actions over the past year '.
The GOP line 'his time is to identify Clinton with the shutdo~n. option, even, than our deficit to Japan. known as laogai, with nearly 1.8 mil- so that it can challenge us for military arc hardly those of a nnlion seeking !
saying he wants to keep it for his own power purposes. Nob(/dy ISm favor though our trade volume with Japan lion prisoners reduced to slave labor- supremacy early in the next century. friendlier relations with the United ·
of shutdowns, but for or against isn 'I the real question. Spending is.
Indeed, a classified Air Force States. It docs not deserve ·renewal of ·
is four times larger than our volume crs.
Five years ago, the United States report, cited last week by the Wash- Most Favored Nation status.
· ,
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist with China.
The
e•planation
for
this
is
that
and
China
signed
a
memorandum
of
ington
Times,
revealed
that
China
is
is
a
columniSt
;
Joseph
Perkins
for The Associated Press, has reported on Washintton and national polBeijing
is
deliberately
pursuing
a
understanding
·.
in
which
Beijing
developing
ri
niobile,
long-rangc
misfor
tbe
San
Diego
Union-Tribune
•
itlts for more than 30 years.
mercantilist trade policy witH the agrccd nqtto expon any prison-made site, known as Dong' Fcng-31, capa- and a commentator for MSNBC. l
Unllcd States. It takes advantage of products to this country. But Harry blc of carrying .multiple warheads.

•.!lr

The Deily SaaUnel• hgl $

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Wedulcley, June 4, 1117

~•

The Daily Sentinei ·

·Sports

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_sa

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Reds tally 3-2 wi.n over Phils
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The · which be lhoughl was intentional.
Sanders walked toward die mound
bat~le between Curk Schilling and
' De1on Sanders was far more inter- and Schilling advanced toward
Sanders before teammates separated
~estina than the alme itself.
., Kent _Mercker. was ·the pitchinc them.
"He's testing my livelihood and
. s~ tn CnK:umatl s 3-2 victory over
I
don
'I know why," Sanders · said.
flnladelph1a on Tuesday niaht, but
.Sanders and Schilling stole the spot- "I've got obligations to two differ' light with words after the same.
ent professional teams, and to have
someone
challenJe my livelihood is
•
Mercker
(3-S)
allowed
only
two
1
h1ts and one run in 6 1/3 innings in inexcusable. He's goinJ to have to
.,winning his second straight stan. He deal with .it, as God as my witness."
slf':!Ck olit five, willked four and gave
SchillinJ's respilnse: "It seems
. up Rex Hudler's second-inning like be thinks he can play a little dif'homer.
ferent than anybody else, and it's
However, the third-inning con- going to take its toll on his team·frontation between Sanders and mates ...
;·schilling overshadowed Me.;,ker's
Sch illinJ said he doubted
win.
who is also an NFL player
Sanders,
r
.
While attempting to bunt, Sanders With the Dallas Cowboys, intended
' was almost hit by an .inside pitch, to fight him after the pitch.

"The auy is not JOina. to tackle
me with pads on, much less '""
tackle m~. It's no mystery he does-

n't like to hit peopie," he said.
The Reds tcored all three of their
runs in the sixth innina on In RBI
grounder by Ed ,Tailllensee; a,n RBI
df!Uble by Willie Greene and Joe
Oliver's sacrifice fly.
The Phillies scored their final run
in the ninth on pinch-hitter Oren
Jefferies' RBI single before Jeff
Shaw picked up his eighth save. .
The loss was the Phillies' fifth
straight ·and their seventh in eight '
games. Cincinnati has now won
eight straight games at Veterans Stadium after going 6-0 in 1996. ·
Reds shonstop Barry Larkin had
two singles and extended his hitting
streak to 12 games, with an average
of .5S3.

:Mets beat Expos 2-1 to sl~sh
~arlins' Eastern Division ·tead

RESTRAINED ...;. The Cincinnati Reds' Dalon
S.ndera (third from left In foreground) Ia
n~Jtn~lned by hie IHmmatee afller he Willi after
Philadelphia pHcher Curt Schilling In the third
Inning of Tuesday night's National League game

in·all of those statistics. I'm pleased earned the win in relief.
Cardlaals·IS, Rockies 4
with the way that I'm throwing and
I have total confidence in both our
At St. Louis, John Mabry drove in
offense and defense."
a career-high six runs, Ron Gant had
The. Expos took the lead in the three hits and four RBis ~nd Royce
eighth on Rondell White's RBI dou- · Clayton went 5-for-6 for St. Louis.
Matt Morris (3-3) gave up four
· ble. But in the bottom of the inning, ·
Mall Franco, pinch-hilling for Jones, · runs and four hits in six innings. .
led off with his first career pinch-hit · Rockies rookie starter Bobby
homer.
·
·
Jones (1-1) gave up six runs and
By TOM WITHERS
Edgardo Alfonzo singled with eight hits in I 1/3 innings.
AP Sports Writer
one
out and Todd Hundley drew a
Pirates J, Cubs I
As their win total grows, so does
two-out walk. Baerga. 7-for-10 in his
At Chicago, St.eve Cooke (5-6)
the New York Mets'legion of belicvcareer vs. MartineZ; lined a double allowed five hits in 7 1/3 innings and
crs.
They have theNL's first 10-game into the right-field comer to score struck out live to help Pittsburgh stop
winner, the league's founh-highesl Alfonzo. Rookie right fielder Chicago's first three-game winning
winning percentage and more wins. Vladimir Guerrero's .strong throw streak this seasmi.
than the wqrld champion Yankees.
· from the warning trsck nailed HundJose Guillen broke a 1-1 tie with
And Wednesday nigh!, the Mets . ley at the phlle.
an RBI double in the ·fourth as Pittsopen their most significant series in
...The last two games ·1:1e has hit · burgh won for the founh time in six
years, a two-game set against Flori- me well, but there'll be a lime that · games. ·
..
da. New York trails the second-place I'll come back and get him," MarSteve Trachsel (3-S) was the los;
Marlins by one-half game in the NL tinez said of Baerga. "Yo4 can be ~r.
sure of that."
Astros 4, Dodgen J .(lO)
East.
. Unbelievable.
Elsewhere in the National
At Houston, Jeff Bagwell hit his
New York continued ·its resurLeague, it was San Diego S, Atlanta • league-leading 18th home run in the
gcnce Tuesday night with a 2-1 win 2; St. Louis 15, Colorado 4; Pills- lOth to give Houston a two-game ·
over the Montreal E,xpos. Bobby
burgh 3, Chicago I; Houston 4, Los sweep.
Jones got his league-leading lOth . Angeles 3 in 10 innings; and San
Bagwell was 0-for-3 with three
· 'OHIO DIVISION CHAMPS - The Meigs
win when pinch-hitter Milll Franco Francisco 9, Florida I in a rain-shan. strikeouts and a walk before con·Marauders
won the Trl-Valley Conference'• Ohio
homered and Carlos Bacrga hit an ened game.
.
necting
on
a
3·2
pitch
from
Scou
Dlvlalon softball championship In May. In front
RBI double in the.eighth.
Padftl 5, Braves l
...
(L-R) Melt... Ramaburg, Patricia Smith, EmiRadin
sky
(2-1
).
The Mets had been blanked .over
At Atlanta, after umpires reversed
ly
Fackler,
Julie King, Jeallc8 McElroy 111d Tangy
the first seven innings by Pedro Mara call and took away a two-run
Mike Magnante ( 1-0) pitche!l on.e _· Llludermllt Stanclng teammatea ara Sarah Lee,
tinez (8-2) before .rallying.
homer from Atlanta's Keith Lock- inning for the victorv.
"Good teams are going to do · hart, ~an Diego scored three runs in
Urbana fires men's
Glaats 9, Marlins 1
that," said John Franco, who struck
the .nmth.
·
:
(6
inn.-raln)
out two in the ninth for his 15th save. - - The Braves thought they had tak:
cage coach AD
At Miami, Bill Mueller and pitch"We feel we're a good~. and that en the lead 'n the.eighth wh_en LockURBANA, Ohio (AP)- Urbana
we can come back from one run two · hart h11 a ball mlo the ·nght-field er Shawn Estes hit their fil'lll majorhos decided not to renew the contract
runs down. We beat a heclc 'or. a stands that rookie umpire C. B. Sue- league homers in a game culled
of Bob Ronai, the men's basketball
because
of
rain
with
one
out
in
the
pitcher toniJhl and a heck of a .knor ruled a two-run homer.
,coach and the school's aihlctics
team."
But after the Padres surrounded top o{ the seventh.
director.
. Jones struck out five and walked Bucknor lo .protest, crew chief Ed
J.T. Snow hit his second home
Ronai 's contract expires June 30.
three as the Mets handed Martinez Montague changed the call, and run ror the Giants, who tied a season. Ronui had coached the Blue
his seco~d straight loss against them television ·replays showed the ball high with 14 hits, ' includina 10
Knights since the 1986-87 Season,
after he won his first 10 decisions was clearly foul.
aaainst Alex Fernandez (5-6).
compiling a 210-139 record. Urbana .
against New York.
In the ninth against Mark Wohlel'll
has made three trips to ihe NAIA
. E.~tes (8-2) led off the Giants' six"I. beat one ·o f' the best, bu\ the . (2-1 ), John Flaheny bmught home
national tournament, advancing to
more imponant thing is that it was a .the go-ahead run with a base,s-lnadcd run firth inning with u homer. He had
the
qulirterfinals in 1992-93.
victory for the team," Jones said.
groundout, then Quilvio Vera.• added been O-ror-18 previously this year
Urbana
president Francis Hazard
and 3-for-42 in his career. ·
"That's all it means os far "'' I'm
a two-out, two-run single.
said Ronai w.as dismissed as pan or
concerned. Itry notto get caught up
Former Brave Pete Smith (1-0)
a restruCturing that included the
elimination of 22 jobs.

Be

In Phllldelphla, where the Recla won 3-2. Both
bench• cleared after Senders chergad the
mound following a pitch thllt elmolt hit Sanders.
(AP)

·

Amer ican
League
roundup

'. '!' .
CI!HY Sanford, Kelly Gilkey, Tonya Miller, Ginger
Dlirat and Brooke Williams. Behind them are·
e11letant coach Phil Miller and heed coach Dille "
Harrlaon. The Marauders flnlahad the -•on
with one of the beat recorda In the achool'a hlltory with a 20·3 mark.

MUIII~~ .............. :.l'J
Phii1Kklrhio1 .... ~ .... ;.19

AL standings
Bamr.-Dl"li'-

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J. r.J.

Hullim.n ........... .....'7 15 .712
~w. York .............. 31 26 . ~44

Torutd0 .................. 26 2K
o.:troil ................... 26 2'1

a,,..on .................. 22 n

PinAburp ..... ."........ 2M .
Hooatnn ................. 2M
Sa, l.o\d• ................ l"'
ChiCflJO :.. .............. 2:\
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(Jot,:Oould 6-3), a5 p.m.
Stlnll! (Failml "'2) at Detnllit (Uta .a..

21, 7ft! p.m.
·
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CLEVELAND(- .'1-2~ 7 :~ p.m.
01111.,.. (Priolo 4-.1) .. T-o("""·
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A.eAIIe&amp;.o (Dkboll ~2) • MinlltiOUI
(T~ 2·'1· am p.m.
T- (Win 7-2)• tc-.Cioy(Appl" ...~l:~p.,..
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or: Kc"i• M"l:hcll.

DlmtUtT Tl(iERS : AL'Ii\latN RHI'
rmm lht l~day dilllhk.'d li~ .
Qc.IIJ.Itlllct.l RHP Tim ·Putth rot a••it~a·
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All•••• (Ntltle 7~ Il 11 Mo11r1!1l
tllen••-1-ll f:.1.~ p.m.
II. I.Awit (SII...,N- .... 3~ M'Pill'"'
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ins-'· .....~lltol• .,.....,.........
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CIIICAOO CUI$: TrMeol lNF lob- .
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LOS ANGELES DODOUS: A&lt;li·
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di11bled lia1. OptleaM OF Eddie
Wi-IOAI 1 :paftMPCL.

•••••

NBAFinals
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HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY

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DAIRY VALLEY.

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HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY

TrilllS;JCttons

CMik.-lr.i 1-4). 7:40p.m.

• '""'A. ..... (V- ~~ 1®.1p,"'

SAN L&gt;mQo CHANGERS: SiJ:Ik'd
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Assessments include sugesdons for
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job bank of 40,oo0 employers from
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Tuesday'sKoru

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Let .Everyone Know Your Dad Is
Someone Very Special With A
Father's Day Thank You Trlhute To
Be PuhUshed In The Dally_Sentinel
On Friday, .June· 13~ )

a

Free nssessmeat of your skills to
1:1nrid:1 .......... ;~,.......12 l~
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Southern
girls' cage
camp slated

White Sox to 9-5
·win .over Indians ·

The Gallia-Meigs .TTPA
program can help you!

Baseball

with Jackson today or Thursday to
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
By FRI!D GOODALL
CHICAGO (AP)- The future of make .theirs. Other teams, including
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Chuck
the Chicigo Bulls remains as unset- Milwaukee and possibly Detroit,
· Daly's coaehins resume speaks fDI'
itself. ·
·
tled as ever. even though the team have made informal queries. Jackson
would like people to believe other- also is pondering whether to retire
Two NBA champio~ships, II
for a year.
wise.
.
.
playoff appearances in 12 seasons
"I prefer to hold my person~! ·
Stories appeared in the Chicaao
and the lOth-best winning percent·
feelings
about coming back to this
. newspapers Tuesday saying Michael
age (.S98) in league hi'story, not to
job
and
the future and how I feel
Jordan wants a $36 million, one-year
mention an Olympic aold medal and
contract extension and coach Phil about It until the final game," J~~:k­
a spot in the basketball Hall of Fame. ·
Jackson held a mectin&amp; with team ·son said. "Then, there will be the
It was easy to understand why the
opportunity to talk a!lout it."
CHUCK DALY
owner Jerry Reinsdoif.
Orlando Magic were determined to
Jordan, meanwhile, says he won:t
But Jordan shot down the salary
hire him out of retirement with a
play
nexl season ifJackson doesn't
three-year, $1 S million offer that Nick Anderson contributed to a slow number and Jackson sa.id the report
Daly formally accepted Tuesday.
start last fall, ind a players' revolt in of a meetinJ was untrue. And a . return to coach the Bulls. Jordan has
"It is truly his success,. and his February fon:ed the firing of coach source close to the team, speaking on been sayinJ the same thing for
the condition he not be identified, weeks, although some suspect he'd
ability to bring out the best in his · Brian Hill.
players and his team, that is the reaDespite the turmoil, the Magic said Jackson and Jordan met before have a hard time lumina down $36
son that he sits before us today," gen· finished strong under interim coach practice and decided to put an opti- million · - or whatever the Bulls
,
Richie Adubato. They won 45 mistic spin on their comii)CIIts to the offer.
eral m~er Joh.n Gabriel said.
do
you
think,
I'm lying'/
"What
.
\
TWo · ks ago, it didn'tlook like g~s, earned a playoff berth for the media.
AND AWAY IT GOES!- The Cleveland Indiana' Jim Thome watCh
I'm
not
lying,"
Jordan
said art'Cir
"We don't think it's a distraCtion
it we. happen: Daly turned down fourth straiaht year .
·
hla drive clear the fence for a 1101o hornet' In the flratlnnlng of~
at all to the ballplayers, although a practice Tuesday. "I wholeheanedthe position, qnly to reconsider.
day nklht'a American League game igalnet the vlaltlna Chlcttgo
lot of them have a lot pf things lied . ly believe that and it's truo. l do bave
, "As soon as I hung up," Daly
White Sox. Though Thome hit a thr-run shot four lnnlnga IIIIer,
to
what's happening here with us, options and I have a choice, and l'ljl
sa1d, recall.ing the conversation with
the White Sox won 8-5. (AP)
·
i
particularly
· Michael, Scottie (Pip- not afraid to take the choice."
Gabriel that ended the first round of
Jordan
said
the
$36
million
figure
pen) and myself," Jackson said.
discussions, "I was a little depressed.
Whether it's a distraction or not; that appeared in the Tribune did n~
And I don' I get depressed."
it
Was
the main focus of discu.,sion come from him or his agent, Davi .
The more the 67-year-old coach
Tuesday
on the second straight off Falk. He questioned its origin, a
thought about the opportunity, the
day in the series.
more he wanted it.
that led to speculation that the nuj
The
th~rd.annual
Southern
High
The
Bulls
lead
the
IJtah
Juzz
J.()
her had been leaked hy somcon
"I
was
intrigued
by
this
job,"
he
,
.
S~hool
g1rls
bask~tball
camp
for
goina
into
Game
2
tonight.
close
to Reinsdorf.
·
said, addinathat another appeal was
g1rls
grades
3-9
will
be
held
from
"You
guys
are
doing
all
the
talk,
It
would
represent
a
$6
millio
Orlando is only a two-hour drive
Monday,
June
16
to
Friday,
June
20
ingsaying
there
is
talking
in
the
increa...e
over
Jordan's
current
sala~
from Jupiter, where Daly has made
from 9 a.m. to noon at Southern back room, talking in the front· · - the highest one-year pay in the.,
his home for the past two years.
•
room," Jordan said. "If it is, great.! history or team spurts. .
"I still love the game, and I made High School.
The
camp
will.
be
highlighted
by
haven't
had
any
convcr.;ations
"Do
I
deserve
~
raise
'I
I
don'·
'
the decision that I wanted to come
two hitless innings for the win.
numerous
individual
competitions
because
my
job
is
to
play
the
game
know.
You've
got
Ill
look
at
thil.
back. It's as simple as that."
Marlaers 6, Blue Jays 3
Daly, who led the Detroit Pistons and general instruction. Southern of basketball. I haven "I talked to Jcr- year," Jordao said. "There arc n lot
At Seattle, Jay Buhner homered to NBA championships in 1989 and varsity coach Jenni Roush and ass1s- ry Rcinsdorl', lliaven'ttalkcd to my · or things attuned 10 the cnd-uf-thc&lt;J
twice and rookie Jose Cruz Jr. hit his
1990, leaves his job as a television tants Alan Crisp and John Manuel agent. The little convcr.;ation I had season evaluation from Jerry Krause&gt;
first major-league homer as the commentator with Turner Sports for will conduct the camp with most of with Phil is a coach-player relation- to determine whul your mise is or .
Mariners won their third straight. a team that finds itself searching for the girls coaching staff and featured ship and it:s always going to be that · whether you should he around next
Paul Sorrento also homered for Seat- a new identity only two years after guest speakers.
·
year. So I'm waitinJ:l for my cvalua•
way. "
tle, which beat Toronto for the fourth reaching the NBA Finals.
.
Individual competitions include ·
Jordan, Jackson and Dennis Rod- · lion rromJcrry."
J,
time in five games this season. The
free
throw
shooting
contests,
P-1-G
.
nian
will
he
free
agents
at
the
end
of
Utah
coach
Jerry
Sloan
.
s
aid
his
The loss of Shaquille O'Neal to
By The Aaaocl• Prell
Mariners trailed 2·0 in the founh the Lakers in free agency last sum- Tournament, 3-on-3 and Knock-Out. the season and Pippen has one year team, which is making its l'irsl!
They ~oocd and rang cowbells. ·inning before Buhner tied it with a mer began a tum.ultuous year for the For .further information, call Roush remaining on his contract. General appearance in the NBA Finals, did~
They chanted his former nickname. two-run.sbotoffWoodyWilliams (1- Magic, who had one of the league's at 304-273-2161 or Manuel at 949- manager Jerry Krause has refused to n'l feel slighted by the lack of allen';
rule out a trade of Pippen.
lion paid to them because or the (ufOII
They threw fake money, cups, ice, a . 6).
best young teams and fiJured to be 21S9.
baseball and even a pair of ~inocuBrewen 6, Red Sox 4
surrounding the Bulls.
. :•
Cost
of
the
camp
is
$3S,
which
Coaching
jobs
remain
open
in
title contenders for many seasons
Iars at their former hero.
At Milwaukee.• Jeff Cirillo .hit a before the All-Star center's depar- can be sent.payable to Jenni Roush, Golden. Stale and Vancouver. The
"I Wllflllhem to get whatever they
Still, Cleveland Indians fans two-run homer with two outs in the ture.
P.O. Box 902, Racine, Ohio 45771. Warriors have already made an offer, deserve- Michael and Phil deserve
·
couldn't rattle Alben Belle.
hottom of \he ninth to lift the Brew;J
All out-of-district students· are and the Grizzlies were set to meet it," he said.
Injuries to Penny Hardaway and
welcome.·
Playing at Jacobs Field for the ers over' Boston. Cirillo's shot com"
fill&gt;! time since leaving Cleveland for pleted a comeback from a4-l defiCit
. 't
,,
. a megabucks deal with Chicago, and gave Milwaukee its fifth win in
Belle hit a.three-run homer and two six games. Jesse Levis led off the
ri
d01.1ble~ to lead,the W)lite Sox over
ninth with ·8··single off Heathcliff
.
.
"'"
the Indians 975 Tuesday night.
Slocumb (0-)), who retired the n~xt
,,
"Out of anything you can say two batter:s !Jefore Cirillo hit an 0-2
about the guy,- he's a great player," pitch over the fence in left for his .
i!
said Jim Thome, who homered twice fourth ·homer.
.. 14
for Cleveland. "And I think he realOrioles 7, Yankees 5
~y loves the pressure. I really do." _ At Baltimore, Rafael Palmciro hit
.
.
.
·"
: The sellout crowd of 42,994 start- .
two-tun homer in the bottom of the .
:1:&lt;1 booing Belle before his first at·bal lOth as the Orioles finally heat the
)nd chanted "Joey! Joey!"- a nick- Yankees at Camden Yards. Jeff
II
)lame he despises- when he came Reboulet hit a one-out single oO' Jim
•"•
•)
'o the plate.
.
·
Mecir (0-3) before Palmeiro hit his
• · But after flying out to center in
lith homer of the season. Randy
~is lifst two at-bats, Belle hit a three- ." Myers ( 1-2) pitched the lOth for the
•!
:h.n homer in the fifth for a 7-1 lead. Orioles, who have won six straight
n
:He .doubled in his last two at-hats, and 12 of 14. The Orioles beat New
"
· ~nd made an obscene gesture to the York twice on the road last week, but
.. ' b
);:rowd after the final out of the game. went 0-9 against the Yan.kees at
: Chicago shortstop Ozzie Guillen home last year.
.
' lx4 GreetJng &amp; ·
I
'l:riticized the fans' behavior.
Twins 5, Raniers 4
,, .
lx3
GreelintJ
•
•10.00
: "Look at how much good this
. AI Arlingtpn, Matt Lawton and
Pietui-e· $13.00
,.,
i!uy brought to this 'own, and the Paul Molitor each went 3-for-5 and
:rcople forget that because he wants Rick Aguilera pitched out of trouble
)o make his living," Guillen said. in .the linaltwo innings. Rich Robcn;:;
~ 'That's ignorant."
·
son (6-3) won ror the third time in
· • As usual, Belle did not talk to the his last four stans. and Aguilera got
.
his 13th save hy striking oullhe final
media after the game.
: "I hope they keep booing him,"
bauer in the eighth and ninth with
Guillen said. "He gets pretty cKcit- runners at the comers. Will Clark
i:d."
went 4-for•4 and Ivan Rodriguez
: .Dave Martinez hit' two homers homered and doubled for the
~nd Frank Thomas added a solo shot
Rangcl'll.
IJs the White Sox handed the AL
Royals 5, Angels 2
'
~ntral-lcading Indians their founh
At Anaheim, Tom Goodwin went ·
(YOUR FATHER'S
joss in five games.
4-for-4 with' a homer und three RBis ·
t
••
• Thome had a ihree-run shot in the and Tim Belcher pitched eig~t strung·
NAME) ·
·Jinh ror Cleveland.
innings as Kansas City. heal ' Ana·
(YOUR FATHER'S
: Elsewhere in the American heim. Belcher (6-6) held the Angels
ft
I
NAME)
LOVE,
JOHN,
JOE
AND
League, it was Oakland 9, Detroit K; to six hits. Hipolito Pichardo pitched ·
Seattle 6, Toronto 3; Milwaukcc '6, the ninth for his ninth save.
SUSAN
Boston 4; Baltimore 7, New York 5
·I
LOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
jn I0 innings; Minnesota 5. Texas 4; -Sports briefs-••
Bueball
SUSAN
and Kansas City S, Anaheim 2.
t
· MIAMI (AP) - Colorado's
:
Athletics 9, Tlpn 8
; At Oakland, Mark McGwire hit Andres Galarra&amp;a and Florida's Denhis 22nd homer as the i\thletics ral- nis Cook received three-game suslied for five runs in the· seventh . pensions for .a hench-clearing inciInning. McGwirc has 10 hpmen; in dent Saturday. .
•
. Both players appealed and will
~is last 19 games and 35 I for his
Deodliru~
ForTh~
SpeciGl
FGiher's
DOy
Tribute
la
TuesdGy~
}uru~lO,
12
110011.
fareer, tyinJ him with Dick Allen fot remain eliaible to play until their
All Out The Form Below And Drop Off With Payment To
t6th on the all-time list. Brosius hit cases are heard by NL president
•
two homers and a double for Oak· Leonard Coleman. Cook wJis fined
The Dally Sentinei"Father's Day"
I
iond. and Aaron Small (5-1) pitched $1 ,000 and Oalarraga an undisclosed amount.
Box
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I
'.'
(

Bel·le's bat leads

Are you·ssor
older and
Looking for a
job?

Scoreboard

Bulls deny stories
of $36M contracts
&amp; coming breakup

Magic
hire Daly
as coach

.
...... 4
Wedn11rley, .June 4, 1117
. ..
.. .
. ... '

The o.Hy S•nllnel • ,.._ 5

llldcl1port, Ohio

I

814 _...,.
'l

J

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(PL!ASE PRINT OR TYPE)

.

IFATHER'S
NAME
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1YOUR NAME(S)·
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· ZIP

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__________.______________________________________J

!ciTY,
STATE
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Pomeroy•

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.

W.dc II Ny, June 4, 1117

After tragedy, other water parks say 'not here ·
SAN DIMAS, c.lif. (AP) Wilh y01111pters on sUIIIIIIer break
and lookina to Slay cool, water slide
openlors souaht 10 assure the public
dill a deadly collllpiC like the.one at
Coacord couldn't happen 111 their
parks.
After all, willa' slides lhlll'survive
earthquakes Cllll handle rowdy kids,
an ' operator said Tuesday, the day
after a slide collapsed at W111erworld
USA, leaving a 17-year-old girl dead
and 14 ocher youngsters hospitalized.'
Jeff Lyon, a chun;h group chaperone who brought 30 kidS from Long

Beach 10 ~ina Walen in San
Dimu, 30 miles east of Los Angeles,
wanted to assure · himself lhal the
rides ~ safe.
"Initially I wu concerned, bui
after going on several rides, it seems
very safe," Lyon said.
"I think they~ all basically safe
rides, but it depends on people following -the rules," added Julie Jordan
of Victorville.
· Witnesses ...td park olfJC:ials in
Concord, about 2S miles cut of San
Francisco, said seniors from Napa
High School rushed a lifeguard Mon·

day and crowded on10 the spiraling
"A lifepard can'i hold back 30
Banzai Pipeline tosether. The slide people, but here you couldn't build
brQke and twisted upside down, send· up 30 people," he uid.
ina 33 SIUdents plummeting 40 feet ,
At Oasis, riller lines Sll8ke through
hiuin11 buttresses, oihcr slides and a ziazaa of barriers, and lhe rule is
trees on ihc way down.
one rider at a time, to help keep peoSeventeen-year-old
Quimby ple from pilina onto each other.
Ghilotti was killed_and 14 students
"It's a very big deal," said Mesa.
remained hospitalized. A 17-year-old "We won't even let a pment and a
airl was listed in tritical condition. child go together."
At Palm Springs Ol!SiS Waterpark
Unlike the Concord slide, · the
- which hu a slide of the same type Oasis chute . is on a hillside and
u the one in Concord- summer nowhere is it more than 8 feet offihe
means more crowd control, said ground, he said.
Tony Mesa, a park.representative.
Such slides arc desiKQed to hold

lbout 20 people 'saancii~s sido-byside, said Fred I.Miiford of Wlllerwcrtd Products. No rellltion 10 Wiler- .
world USA, the company has
desiped 300 slickis worldwide.
"And these students were not
standina - the stud!:nts were possi·
bly either lyina !IIi their back or sitting," which would. help distribute the
weight. Langford said . .
· He said he. had loot heard of such
an accident, odding ·slides should
buckle but not break.
"(was quite stlqCked. I've. never
heafd of thlll hipJ)ening," said nm

Property
transfers

,,

You remember a.couple of mentions of Julia Carr in previous
columns.
Julia wu abandoned u a baby a
number of years ago on the banks of
tl)e Ohio River in Pomeroy, She was ·
8dopted by a Jackson County family
'Sod tb!=se days . is living in Indianapolis, Ind. Only in recent months
did she le&amp;!'ll of her abandonment
and has been searching since then to
try to ·find· out more about the circumstances.
Julia was in town recently and
commented that people here have
· been fantastic ill !rying to help her
with her search. Polisbed ilnd intelligent, Julia was . accompanied to
Pomeroy by a People's Ma11azine
photographer, who -is working on a
story dealing with abandoned peogle. Her story is upecled to appear
in the July or August issue of the
magazine.

·\

I
I

Chcller;
Deed, Thomas M. and Sheila

Theiu 10 · Mllllie Teaford, Suuc:m,
1.4749 acres;
.
. Deed. Marpret A. and David
B.rba 10 Barbara E. Bowen,

,.

,~--'!""'-___,.THIS

WEEK REGISTER TO WIN!'

(Le~~~~unta 19 FREE
BAGS OF GROCERIES

:~. Regieter

at 111. FM41•••
'JYsonl WEEK 2
Farms 1 MINUTE J9 SECOND
~hieken Leg quarters SHOPPING SPREE
If •••• F...,•••

No purchaSe necessary. You must be at least
18 years old to enter.
~

_.___________________________

The Rev. and Mrs. Clar~ Baker
eniertai~ed

City, Staa, Zip ---------------.,....-:

Phone I-----.------------!

~-·-·---~·-·--·-··-·-~·-··-·--·-··---·-·--~~

WEEK 4
OUTDOOR GAS GRILL
H

.

-.
•

.•..•., ...,.

Hon•• Fo•t Ttax JOO

.Lb.

.

Addn.a~--~---------------------i l

WEEK J ·

'

to win

~oke

\W
$

Prod.uets

.

~r

99

.

, . ,, .• u

'

Sold In 31139

Lb.

Soft'a
Gentle Bath .
Dssue

Street in Maitlfie!d, Ohio 44905
from the ntll'ling home. His sillier,
Faye Watso' of Meip County,
re~&gt;rts thai ~ill wu more lhll!l.
pleased with your cards of encouragement and YIIW' prayen.
-----,
·
- General and Mn. Jim Hartinger
of Colorado Sprinp, Colorado, ~ · program.
planning a lrip' to Middleport for a
Marilyn Hannum and Delores
few days in AUJUII and Ill that time Frank were co-hostesses for the
General Haninp plans to do an meeting which opened with devo.autograph ses5ion wilh his book, lions, "Today l Will Make a Differ"From One Slripe IQ Four Stars".
encc" given b y Hoskins. She also
The session will not be to sell had prayer before a cookout pre~
books.. In other words you are to ~ by the hostesses. J-lomemade
have your boQlc in hand by that time i« cream made by Mr. and Mrs.
and take it tqlthe session, the place Hoskins was se.rved.
·
to be annouQt;ed. Eiglity percent of
Thank you notes were acknowlthe quantity have already been sol,d edged from Richaro and MacelBarand lhe Hart(naen expect them all to ton '!Jid Tom Boggs. ·It was noted
be gone by .!llc·end of July. They do that 'JYron Brinegar donated flowers
not plan to have a second printing. , for the school planter.
.If you're interested in I~ . book
Games were played with Betty
you can pun:hase it from The Chi- Boggs and Frances Reed in charge.
nook Book Shop which has a toll -Prizes were awarded to the winners
free number J-800-999-1195.
and Nola Young won the door prize. ·
Others attending were Maxine
-------· .
Harry K. .and Eileen Clark of Whitehead, lllla Osborne, Mary
Minersville send a big thanks 10 all · Alice Bise, Margaret Grossnickle,
of you for the lovely cards sent to Ora.;;e Weber, Janet Connolly, Jan ice
congratulate them on their 45th Young, Pauline Myers, and Ruth ·
wedding anni ersary recently;
Anne Balderson.
Harry has· been bedridden for
some )9 months and·ii is impossible
for Eileen to get out much even to go
to the grocery. But she and Harry did·
want me to thank you for your sup· port.
-------,
Caller J.D. seems to be growing
in popularity. It should give you
some control over the tele·communicaiOrs not 10 mention that it should
bring porno calls to a screaming
halt. ~ow, if ·there were just some
way 10 stop the trait to vandalize and
Food&amp;Drug
destroy just for the heck of it, we'd
have it mnde.

Aut 33-39 oz. can

ANCCII!TONE aR•

99

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WITHTHIS.•S'rlljiCir'ICER

FREE II
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MaxweU Bouse fAt8ee

......

Farm
.,
.. /:

Llmh1 with

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49 .

$

SYRAC{!SE ·- Meias County
Republican Committee meetinl!
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. All Republicans welcome.

purct1111

· ~ornla

Ripe
Strawberries

.. . . . ~

Fill . . d

~

IJ...._. I'lL .... lee«:.

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'Mike Sells PotaCO l!hlflll

•.

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w~

DOU8LI mfrs' coui'ONS

Plus ... Unlimited .

10( =60( \10( =90(

\ 40(: $\.10

65

55¢=51,

Limit fOUr per customer
st tillS prtce (11esse.

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE ( 12-14-LB. Avti.)

Whole
.f'lps

SALEM CENTER-- Srar Grange
778, and Srar Junior Grange 878,
Saturday, pollock at6:30, meeting at
8 p.m .. Final plans for hosting District 2 talent contest on June 14.

•

reqlllrecL]'ColltKt

...;...:._,

JIU........,....,Jm,

Your 280 dog ·
yean or •o
That malce• you
the
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BiG 4-0!

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

·Whole,,.,.,. .

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llod:J6,

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ASSOffTED VARif!JS

Overbrook C.nter hu . lmmtdlltt
opening• fo' full ·tlmt or p11rt time
· RN'a. Sal1ry to $14.00 plua per hour

.

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BIG ·BEND · .•

•

1

333PIIglltlaat

:
llldclllport, OH. 45710 0t ·
Clllt14 112-1472 for lmlnl4late

tiD."
••

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~)
....~
DORITOS

•

' CIJips
1.5-9-o~.

sur~one

baaed on experience. A variety of
blrienta .,. nallabll.
Submit yoUr appliCation at: ,
OVerbroOk Center

'

'lh

b.
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II

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jonas

LPN'•Ibr.......-te
Cll't l'ldlltJ.Welt
Vl....... llceue

Srinlc

Bowen lo Raymond H. and
1. Laui•. Salilbilry, 10.9S3acm.

814-742-3090
814-742-3324 .
814-742-3078

suk!Jia·~'•ud

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.......

Garegn, PorcheS.
C1J11 VI For A FtH E -

BN'• •M •IN'•

IJIIitM Valleyllell a.u ual. .
p

Birthday Open House
and Card Shower in
honor of Ruth Taylor's
BOth birthday.
Saturday, June 7th,
6:30p.m., at Gary
Smith residence, ·
Sumner Road. Friends
and family welcome.

3351 Happy HolloW Ro.t
Mlddtep011, Ohio 45780
• New Homee. AddiiiOne,
Roofing, Siding, Pole
Barna, Oecka. Painting,

Excellent oppol'tllalty
to joiD tiM .... term
helllll Cll't fteld.

7-1201.

10

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Services,
DANVILLE
Danville Church of christ, Saturdaf.
7 p.m.; Sunday, 10:30 a.m. 6 p.m.,
Denver Hill, Fosler, W. Va., speaker.

Country Bacan 1 lb. pkg. $3;11 ·· ·

. ~antaloupes

~·

HAULING

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PQund

1..-•ge
£allforala

Kee.ler .Fudge
Shoppe £ooldes

WICKJ

lclclltlonll

··tt.m StMu 2 lb. pkg. • · •

180z. '

(Lime Stone. Low Rates)

. ;'\ •

..-nee

POMEROY -- PERSIPERI meetins, Thursday, noon luncheon. Bob
Byer to speak on EMS and
Medicare. Reservations to Senior
Center, 992-2161 by 9 a.m.

Save up to $1.00

@.'!..!&gt;

Business Services ·

.

The Commtmlty Caleoclar II
REEDSvW :. Olive Townpublllbed u a free Hrvlce to - · ship Trustees to meet Thursday, 7:30
profit 1f0UP1 wilblaa 10
at township garage. ·
mud• and special eveab. The ·
__ . •...II.
: ~•"Wa-~-....... 'fo prolUJI.LANV--~ Rutland Tjlwnship
' mote 181a ot luDd niHn at any Trustees, Thursday, 6 p.m. fire statype. Items an priDted u space tion.
pumitsllllllaiiiiOt be panateell
FRIDAY · .
to run a s"lftc number at da:flo
POMEROY-- The Meigs &lt;;ounty
Heritage
Dinner at the Meigs CounWEDNESDAY
ty
Museum
will be held Friday, 7
RACINE -- Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, work in the p.m. For additional information or to
E.A. degree, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday make reservations, call Museum
992-3810 by, Wednesday. Cost is
• at
hall.
$10 a person.
CHESTER -- Chester Garden
11\
Club, · family picnic, Wedn~sday, SATURDAY ·
HARRISONVILLE -- Har6:30 p.m. home of Judy Bunger.
risonville
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM.II!CCIBevCQges.- meat and table services
ing
7:30
p.m. Saturday, Refreshprovi!fed. .
ments.

· THURSDAY

·'a~"
Sl%11:

Jl'llll on planlin11 and caring · for
annuals .at a recent meetina of the
Riverview Garden Oub held Ill the
home of Theda Hoskins.
Amon11 the topics he covered
were choosing the right plants and
the riaht size containers, choosing ·
the correct soil, water fmJuency, and
ty~ -and amount of fenilizers to be ·
·used: Nancy Wachter presented him
with a book in appreciation for the

me

24roll pkg.

IIUYa

•14•

Hal KMen, Meigs County Exten-

-Community calendar-

1

Ph fl14) I II
011411711 11)4, 10, 11,22 4..

P.O.IICIII2n,
Potne~oy;

.,

sion Scrvi« aaent. presented • pro-

· And Willard,(Bill) Dill has been
returned t(l his home a1 405 Parry

'la·voJrl1e Frozen
Boneless Chleken BI e•sts

8-12 oz cans, Alaarted Varieties

Memorial Day weekend
with their annual neighborhood picnic despite skies which threatened to
pour down rain. The couple went
through a lot of effort to stage the
event. Both Rev. and Mrs. Baker arc
blessed with a sense of humor which
doesn't quit. That's quite an asset
these days.

Public Notice

agent talks
about annuals

Beat of the Bend ...
Pomeroy Barber Mick Williams
was elected commander of the
Eighth District, American Legion, a1
SDIIIDrset Sunday and will he sworn
iniO his office in July a1 Cincinnati.
The dislrict offtce is demandina
and Mk:k will have his work cut out
for him ln the year ahead. However,
a faithful member of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, in
Pomeroy, Mick will handle the job
well.

The following land transfers were ·

recorded rece'ntly in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed. Mont and Joyce Anri Vance
to Ronald A. and Nancy J. Vance,
Scipio, US acres;
Deed, Jeff Coley to Wanda R.
Wyeth and Roben Wellman, Scipio,
17.338 acres;
Easement, Larry Michael Bissell,
Patricia A. Bissell, Thomas P. Groeneveld, A. Marilyn Miller, Mark D.
Miller, Orva Jean Bond, John C.
· Bond and Janet K. Groeneveld to
Ohio Department of Trsnsponation,
Olive;
Deed, Home National Bank to
Paul H. and Carol A. Schuler, Salem;
Deed, Klithryn Wildermuth to
Timothy P. and Teresa R. Gillilan,
Chester;
Deed, Ralph F. k and Edna L.
Neigler to Donald Bruce Neigler,
Middleport parcel;
Deed, Warren H. Calaway to
.Richard and Ruby Vaughan, Midilleport parcel;
.
Deed, Thorne M. and Ann Foster
Cottrill to JUdith Ann Cottrill, Mary
Jayne Orth and Jennifer Thorne Cottrill Sapp, Sutton parcel;
Deed. Ann FosterCotlrill, Thome
M. Cottrill to Judith A. Cottrill, Salisbury parcel;
Deed, Beverly M. Ramey to Donald L. Freed, Bedford pari:el;
Deed; Susie Kerwin to Melvin C.
and JoAnn Reed, Olive, 2 acres;
Deed, Freda Marie and Roben A.
Wolfe to Bobby 0. and Ramona L.
Parker, Sutton parcel;
Deed. Rhojean V. and Hershel
McClure to Harley E. McDonald,
Middlepon lot;
Deed, Jack L. and Jean M. Mason
io Evelyn 0. Tephabock, Olive;
Deed, Anthony Land Company
Ltd. to Galloway Land Company,
Salem tracts;
Deed, Galloway ·Land Company
to Anthony Land Company Ltd ..
Salem tl'acts;
Deed, John Jr. and Sarah Sue
Fisher to \Randy E. and Teresa L.
Houdashcll. Chester;
- ·
.
Deed, Terri M. Bishop io Tim A.
Bishop. Scipio; .
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian M.. Hall
to Blue Tartan Inc., Salisbury loiS; ·
Deed, Aerie 2171 . to Fraternal
Order of ~gles, Pomeroy lots;
Deed. Michael and Clarinda Hendrickson to lamesA. and Tammy A.
· Randolph, Olive, 2.5 16 acres;
..
Deed. Jack D. and Joan F. Sorden ·
to Robin A. Spurlock, Pomeroy lot;
DcCd. James William and Phyllis
Jean RD!Ie to Charles H. Butterworth, Columbia parcel;
Deed, Edith R. Hubbard to Larry
W. and Dottie L. Jones, Bedford,
11.295 acres;
Deed. John aild Karen Ridenour to
Shade River Lodge. Chester;
Deed. Mark J. Dailey to Nellie
Zerkle, Middleport parcel:
Deed. Theodore P. and Melinda
Hayes to John W. and Ruth Swinehart. Rutland, 40 acres;
Deed. Jame.• E. and Mary Oliver
to Leroy and Judy E. Hcndri~.
Orange, I 1/2 acres;
Deed, Howard L. Jr. and
Pauline Pond to Carl E. and Lue E.!
Shenefield, and Roy R. and Linda A.
Vau11han. Salem;
Deed', Virginia Pond Foss to Carl
E. and Luc E. Shenefield, and Roy R.
and Linda A. Vaughan, Salem;
Deed. Carl E. and Luc E. Shenefield, Roy R. and Linda A. Vaughan
to same. Salem;
Deed. Billy R. and Karen S. Allen
toMqaretE.andBctsyHaw1hoone,,l

puhllc Notte!

by Bob Hoeflich

'·

The Daily Sentinel• P•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

FREE!
WeAre
Committed
·To Serving
11 .

•

I~

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

WedniiMy, June-, 1111.

·p 0 WELL'S

Royal Crown
Cola Producta

:::::::.::~ ::u.......
::;::

....ion

2-12 pk.
12 oz. cans

STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday

Re-Core~

1:=81CJII&lt;!lrlbilla, llbac:co

BAM-10 PM

l:::!lbac:co mentcirabilia.
· Specializing in

THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 7, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

.1-. 1. HOllON

Products

;, "
)la '

Ml~dleport,

..

.
.
$219
Chops .........•- ~........
r:~

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

·P
. ork C
.. ·ho· s
p·

Lit.

•r•••~•••
.

'

.

$1.
•

•

, .:.·; , ; ; . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _

, .-

.

59

$

..

.. . .

39"'

.

. . LB. .
Q ua rters ...................

· II&amp;

CELLULA A• ._.....,

. 12 oz.
H()t D()QS..................

;IOBERt BISSELL

limit 12 cans
14.75oz.

Homes
•Garages
•Complete

FREE
, ESnMATEES
985-4473

Gll'llgaand
Floora.

Van Camps

.

18

Sauce ....••.........•....

79

¢

(t

\1,

~

•

Whitney Pink
Salmon

34·5-39 oz. ·

14.5 oz.

$

99

·.

·c
.
$
I__ce ream ••••••••••••

99

sqt.pall

BLUE BONNET

.

. ..

!

HAGAN

),_

Margarine......... :.~2!'1 •

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

. Maxwell
House Coffee

Free

·Umlt4Pieaea
l

Firat T1mo FW. FalftNr 'IWd Salo:

aarattt: alto app~aala, OtbJ
llarlln, 11~7401 .

Saturdar•. Juno 7111, 1-5, 1012 1..,.;;,;...;..;.....;;::..;.;~--­
Walaon Road, Rod ..J, Lola 01 Antiquoa, lop prlcoa paid, RIYorU' ' -..r
int An1iqu11, Pom•ror. Ohla,
Ru11 Moore owner, lt•·DD2·
Frl • Sa ~ t-5, 5 famlly·'OIIrd Solo: 25211.
AnUqutl: Antiquo Wood Cook
·
Stove, Antique Bicycle, Tciyo, Suring Sllnding Pint, 1 Aero
Comlortaro, Olaltworo, '~.dull Tract0r~,814-2588"31'
Cloht, Clildr- Clollllna, C....
Dawn St. RL 211 Turn loh On Ctoan Lilt Modol Cart Ot
T-• Run Rood 0o 1 MHt Turn Trucka, 18110 Mocltla Or Nw.,
Right On Davia Road Follow Smith lkllcll Pontloc, IDOO Eaallllitnl. RoiiiShlnal
'
am AYanua. 01111 ala

949-2188

Garage Salt: 112 Milo Out 21 I J &amp; D'i Auto Porta. Burlng ...
Wtdn-,, Thllltday. Dolt, Dol ~SO~

_Salllritl Pllrll. -

Furniture,, Home lntarlor, Both· 1;.;,;~;;...._ _ _ __
,100m Fl.,..... 2 Alr ~- Wonlod 10 bur uatd Mobile
":"-~-.,;;,;;;Cio;;.111;;.:"10-::._,___ Homo, caH It ........or 71 ., ..... 5111 Thru 1t11, .:Dark, 221M 1~1,;.;;75-~!1811;;,5;..__ _ _ __
J8ckaon PIU, Rldng ,Lown Mow· Wanlod To Buy: Standing nrn~~or;
ar, Truck Accot~orlao, Loll : 0r vacant Pr-IJ Willi Tlmbtr,

Frlldom
Hilt Pump

•

,114) 992•7434

wanttc~-

Ha-

l'f IIHd, Rio GI'Mdt Areo, 11._.21113.
M.,., WOmtna, Chllddno Cloth· 1~..:.::..=:.:::..__ _ __
lng, Toolt. Ma11rt11 /Bouprlnga, Wanllld: Uttd
Fillollna
Signa Rail ISI'mt.
ln Good Condition, can 114-:Ms;

Yard I Boko Salo Trlnltr O. M.
Church. Fortor. Thlr.·Frl. Juno f.
I .lltQinnlng hm. H Flair~ 'FtHowalip Hall

.

.

5887

•

EMPLOYt.'EtiT
SERVICES

Pomeroy,
. Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ArHK&gt;Urlu r.n r11s

Calls)

CELLULAR PHONES .
3600 Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST. ·

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Llrneatone i OI'IIVBI
Saptlc Syltauia ·.
Tnlllar.

StJsatlorlal Rtnlts
•

• LIVEIU

4-4.25 oz.

$

4 roll

JoeN. s.yr.

Sayre,...... Co.,

145 1434

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to,your
income. Lovely apartments featuring ·
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all .
appliances.
· ALL PRIMARY UTILmES PAID
'· Must be 62 years of age or handiC8J?ped.
meetHUD eligibility reQ1Uire1men1ts

otlf!I'!.~' Forfurther

~@[li)~[f@~~
•

•.•..
•S._.,_,,

Air Candllla.llfS htslulled 1281' amanth
Heat Pumps hlstalled ~3r amonlh

Wbtlit~s

(f'almatlll-on~ cnodl1)

'

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Tharmoatat
1

BENNETI''S MOBILE HOME

School

Rd., Gellipolle,'OH

BIDILI
•LawnMowere
oChllln~·

•Weed e.teia

. Servlna
s:oo • si45 ,
' Do11dee $QO for.meal

LHdlng ,C,...tc Rd.

2 mi. off Rt. 7

rro..

7C2·2925

tJ'ublic inVited

...... •.•.

HAIIWEU .
IOUII.

·Ct11fn4tle•

.... Cona1ruCIIon.
Rtmodllllg

Kllct. Celllpele '
8ldlng. Roofa
~

......

,... ,....
'•

.

...
,.,
·-

,.,. ' .&amp;11119 •

Y.C. YOUNG•

11A-741-1411

ra o;o0111a

1lwoo tamiiy ron! -

•Small Engines

. Mulberry JINhtl, J»o~I'O!
· 1QIIdl:r~ ad Thuridaya ·

·GIIIIU

I.D. C.IIMI

Con11oot· lion

·~===Wit,
·~
a.....

Easy Bank finandng

I' .'AT I
.
MEIGS COVNTY SENiqR CENTER .

.

.......... t!tl7

c..... tt.. RocatMI,OI

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
. 1112-2772
l:lltll.m.·3:30 p.m.

EVENING MEAL

Value

contloU-of
onr- lmrolved In

'-ror, Ohio
1-IQ0.211-MOO

wv 1023477

t!~==··=·=l~~·~·~==~~=~~:!.t:1:-ICIN:::7:2:1:81:7:1:39:·1:Sillord:
·:

Super
•

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

Model Cqnv. Tractora With
Flatbtd Tralltrt CompaUtlvo Par
• Porcontage or Groaa.

Setvtnir ~~H~ ~OOL~~41 8411

call tO&lt;Iay

Powell's

. June7,1817

110 Court St.
812-4.111

acrlprlon) 4011CRtliremenr Plan.
Firat !n · Firat Out Dlapoleh, L.10

lt,OOO MWUDII
·•• lellorlutlon

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

THE MAPLES

·_wi·n A

.Free Caahl
Stop.In The
Store
·For Details

DJBE(;T
PRil':ES''
Quality Window Systems

Consider:

59

This Week

~FAl':TORY

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?

12 oz.

$800

Heinz·strained
·Baby Food

Serv·U

Rodl~a • Homt1 Evary
Weekend, Ftmlly inaura- Paid
y Company (Oon!al, Ert. Prt· ·

500 Milo

25 RARS IN BUSINESS .

HouHSitw
,_.,..,.R,_

Muetbe11rn.

Kratt
Velveeta. &amp;
Shells

Owner: Alcit Jotviaon

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

·saturc:tav,

1 ,.....

caina. toys, lampa, guna, toala,

• Stump Grinding

110 Yra. Ellp. •

GIFTED. ,
PSYCHICS!!

'

.

UICe ··•··· .Iii·••••••• .• •••

oz.

EVII'Yfingt

FitOr e- .._._ lole: TIIUrt. Frl, - . . . Gailpolo, ~~-.. .. 101 Fourlh Av.-, loll or Antiquo&amp;, lurnlwra, glau, chino,

GutWCr.Ming
Pllntlng
FREE ES'nMATES

• Top • Trim • Removal ·

lnaurad
UA~RE CONCRETE
SERVICES

· Pork &amp; Beans

...

.

· II.T.

(6 14) 446-4759

FrH

.Grapes .••••••••••• !~ .. ~9
VALLEY BELL 2%
.$
a_9
·alk
·
.
·
gal.
.
M
............... . ,
ORANGt;
'
•
.
gal.
·.
$.
1
·
99
J
KRAFT _,BQ

~ Coin Shop, 1 1 1 -

. . Z\1, .Nne 2nd ........

f.,...Li.J..... '

SEEDLESS

Towels ...•.............. ,_ ·

DowMpouts

Pra-ta30
Eto.q,r-.a~

Beans ·15 oz.

69¢
.

~9¢

U.S. Curr-r, ·

.. a... IIIIo: u - ......

Pllito, Navy, Mixed

.

single roll

Joe Wllaon
(114) 882-4277

614-992·7643

250 Condor Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
A Division on ·Nichola Metal, INc.
.Phone: 614: 992·2406 .
Fax: 304-n:J.5861

. Hcio-(484)-1 020
. ' Exl. 1412
:• . ta.• par min. ·

·

Gutlen

319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
Sales Service

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Addltlona • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.Big ~end Fabrication~
Machine &amp;Welding Shop

, ·.~Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

$

.

lilac . Ola........ AnlkM , . . , 110111

BISSELL BUILDERS,

Complete Madllae Sbop Senok:e Fabrieatlc!l
Steel Sales, WekliDa Sappllel, lndUitrlal Gu
Radiator Repair &amp;: Replacement
Mondlly·Friday • 8:!JO a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m.· 12 noon

~~~lew

16 oz. cans

BRAWNY

1988 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457et ,

-·-

Stokely
Vegetables

·.
. LB.
$169
..
·Sausage·.·...........•...... · ·
--

NEW-REPAIR

L---------------------~--~~an~·~ ~----------------~----~--~~U ,..~=='============~~~~~
..... 1111, 1111, a-s. Plalaant Yal· ~~~~14~-~a~aa~~~~---==
uaacl lap top _ . . , ,

HILLSHIRE SMOKED

ARMOUR STAR

· .._. Oottar: All U.l. . . '
TOGII, ver And Gold Cain!~; Proo.fooll,

lnatallltlon

.
Attorney·At Law ·
(614) 592·5025 .
Athans. Ohio

Lucks

.
.
LB.
$179
Breast s .·........ ~ ..........·

10 WlnteCI to ....,

&amp;COOliNG

992-2825

OH

Attorney William·Safranek

·

BONELESS CHICKEN

II

BANKRUPTCY

69

·
n
.
g~
g
¢
Baco • ~................. .
lb.

tlow•d L. Wt 11 Ill
ROO FIN~

Remodeling ·

Custom HomH ·

can · ralleve a debtor o1
financial obligations and arrange a · · fair
distribution of assats. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep 'exempt' property for their personal usa.
This may .include a car, a house, clolt1as, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding ·Bankruptcy contact:

·CHUCK WAGON SLICED
. CHICKEN
.. LEG ..

10/2518111l1n

12 pk, 12 oz. cans

179
· .

BONELESS PORK SIRLOIN

Dirt • Sand
985-4422

l ..
~ .. . Cheater, Ohio

7-up, Dr.
Pepper

.
. .
Botto·m
Round Roast •• ~~·

ll11on, WY
21210

ladle lllaeli Dealer

: DUMP TRUCK
:... . SERVICE
:.umeatone • Gravel

.

Ute•• L Btl...... CDiJU

LS ELECTRONICS ·

~:~TRUCKING
a.,,

. 211ter

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEE~$

. .Rt. 1' ltox 41-C

,.

w•• ~ ...

7JN1110r-11MM7.

't~ l

Dew

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

304-n3-5822 ..

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

' 614-741-3513
9am • .9 Moo-Sun

_Pepsi- Mto

F~ILYDENIISIRY

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

matchbox.~

'

..., .........,'D.D.I.

A/C Condtniii'8/HOII Alltmbll•
New LAoetloro: z mill I Orr Rt. 7 Qn RL 124

L~""' clpr boxes, llld

298 SECOND ST. ·
Accepts Credit Cards

~ IISOI,IEITil CIIE

~~~== •Automa~Uw.
New Rldlltora •

~:::::

-·

...Oitlo.

t•l..lllln. ......

GOODtlfE'S
QUALITY ROORNG
304 882~1 .
FrH EltlmatH

· ao•·•
McCumber Rd••
Ruttllnd, OH

•SmiiiJoba
•l.argeJoba
Rnnna•ll ......

_,_

1411 lannd

. t61.4J 741-1111

82 Ntlaon

Rd., Ru~and, Saturd'J, Ju .. 7, Tho Village of Pomeroy It ••·
gom·4pm. Ouna, Llloar,ler 2000 · copdng apt&gt;llcadont lor lilt poai·
akl machine, nico clothoa, car lion al Chielol Folica. Allinttme·
toot, baaai ..t, dlahtl, loll ol td Opt)ilconto llhould . - t t11t1r
70
Ywcl Sill
nitc.
roaumt and a!atomant ol quollfl·
cationa lo the VMtaga Olficoa 11r
Ju .. 30, !UD7. Salarr oholl bt
PI.PIH•nt
Glllllpolls
commenaur11t
wlrh expirl•nce
&amp; VIcinity
• VIcinity
and kno..todQa ol the poaWon:
Communlr, Sal..Gunvlllo Ridge 120,000 minlm~m. Appllcanll ·
..,,. 5th a llh. a-a, 1 ni~ 1ang, lhol bt • rtaldont of the Viltoge
11 houooa, 30 l'llmllr's. From: Corporation llmlta ..tlhln al1
Point Pttlaant·Rt 2 N. to Rl 81 montlli ol Ilia or hor iPf)ol-t
1:,~~~ go
1 ll'ial. F - Slgrial .
•• Chlol. Tho opt&gt;Mcan1 llilall bt
1
ma1
rtqulrH to pau 1 phrslct~l ••·
Equl-" Colltt
Garage s.ta.Ju .. I, 1. 1 7. I·? amlnation, given bJ a lictnatd
Muarlum. I Wlclttf Fumlluro:
111. Varnon Ava. Toolt, boat, flhrtldan, .-ng hi ht or alit
mowor, waatorn boeka, . llon'a moo11 h ployalcol -~-~~
• ~'1M! Salo: 112 IIIIo Out large ..... nioc.
h dudH
t:M, , _ ,
Sal June 7:~ ~ ...
~- 'lf\~1:1111.
? Mana, womano, "' ·ain cloth· I WANTED: E - lng.
-.glln,
SalMI r a - to Baa CW.21111r
. . . . 71\H.I-Otal11.
QalliiiOIIt. Ohio On Ltlt Yellow '11lid s.re:lmlloa out,..,., Run Point Ploaaant Roalaltf 100
8t PL Plea..,. WV HIIIO.
CloiiH, ~...... Rei, APIIIt Grove. Ntw &amp; uoad. WhaoiJ; Tlraa. Etc. EW!rrllllno loll of Bargalno. June 4 mru
I ai1111.
Qooal~ Cotl,=.Mia:;;;;,;.l'fl.=lll;;;:m-~?----- HILJIWAIITID • •••klla" or •
114111 ~,_lltth I!l¥ra, 11Nt7 10
Sill
ICuniUUI Of Jolt Ceah · ...,
Fr1. 1H. -We Flied, - .
All· Alld 0ut11t A o,to.ICitlt ClaNa. ~.....
~=:-:an~ld~Au-::.,.tt-..IOI_n-,.
·
~"'e
•
..."''"',..,
':"':
Attlrenc.. A Mult. .
.....
Ill ..rtlt7, 1-1. a HoUitl Rl7 l....,..,Airctlon
..01i!'~lltinloo.,.
. , Loollo A...,ltd M • F AI Cllrt-'t
HarWI G - t llaltlttt. lelora
?""
llou-. Cot.., ••• • 1&gt;1111 ~-..
atalllll Alloy, jle!oHiooltl,
....... 114- G1111!1111: 0111 A.M• • I'-"
Clllal,llao.
.
~·~~...-...-~~'="':_

1

.;.;"--------!
•••lloutl
"'*""'

:=.7..::""""

--1

'-wA;mo;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

:12"..., - ·

llual--••

PUbic

"'=

~

___:

.'

�NIA Crouword Pufale
PHILLIP
ALDER

~

m

·= . .1:.
.......
..., :w:.
1

I

•

.,~.

ff.O.

Box

~ 441011.

hoult In Clifton, clean,
no peto, 1275/mo. UDD
304-m-1102.

MN i l - ""•IIM1D In
. . . . J : . rloUJjtcllo
. . , _ , . Houolng Act

l ..

_5tmllt_Ot_
or...,

IED._,.ALUI.II

origin,
illenloro10
,..., C.1f ltd .........
hii5Utr. or dllci • ••lllltkJn:

·...-.~o~-..·

Aro You CoiMno on Modlcol &amp;

Dtnlll 8uolnouoo? Would You
llko To Continuo Whot You Are
Doing And Have Addltiontl •500
·12,000 Par lion.,? Prollt From
'lbur E I lw11,.._51122

. . _,_y
. ... ........... tor .........
1Nat4WIJIN• wtlnot
IIOOOp1

."'*"Our-.. fLrllll'

II I n - ol tho llw.

lnlonnod lhtlll d • •

flg7 doubltwltll 11445 - n .
1220/lno. Ftoo delivery I utup.
1-100-1111..m.

e4

2 llo!iroom Trailer For Rant, Lo·
Ollld on Jill, No "-11, - · I
P.U. I14-24S.5582, Allor 5, 11+
245-58110.
2 Btdnoomo, 2 Sotho, Vorr Nice

2 Bttllo, Control Air, 1300/Mo.,
PW_Dopool, IU- 1371.
3 Bedroom· Houae TraUtr for
Ront. In
RioYard,
-·
Oopool~ . No
Poto,
Nlco
814·9711-2720

AFTIIU P.ll.

3 .Bedroom

Tralltr. Thurman

Arw,814-211«107.

Nice 14x70 2 Btdraomoi, Manier·
¥111 Locotlon. 814-250-1050.
One beciloo:u:. lbour MD miM out
Noir Umo Rd., 814-742-2803 or
114-742·2421.

We~ From Home Earn lar~ In·

comeCIIIIkog BuL 81-1.0187.

14 Rlltiii•ID ·

11

ANT ODD oiOBS: Exterior point·
anrubs &amp; we1d1 trimmed,

- ~ Ina.

londscilping, aldowalks odgod,
tare, oto . Call 811! 304-67S.
7112.
lobyoilling At My Homo Quilty
A-ablt Afttr &amp;:l)ool ~labto
Floxablo Hours, Coli 114·317·
0157 Ask For Corol Or leave
liaug&lt;o, Will Core For Chifdtan
Or Mlill With Dioallljoo.
Child care 111 my heme, referenc~
, H IMiilabio, 814-082-e&amp;42.

Ctild Care In My Home, Slate Ro-

. . 1 Soulh. Crown City, 614-256-

142!1.
ExpMiencad c:arpentrr and r•filOo
d•ling. Inside and oulslde,

H&lt;kt, vinyl siding, add-on addl·
Iiana, cab1ne1 refac:ing or newly
rebuilt. Referenc... fr•• Eati·
mo• Jim Sl'&lt;li304-87S.t272.

Exporlentad Carpentry And Re·
modeling Add-Ona, Docks, Walkx

From Framing To Flniah Work,

.

Gtorgea Portable Sawmill, don't

Now Bank Ropo"tl Onlr S itft,
Hou •• F. •• Solo·. In Uorcorvlllo ownor
financing '"''ltoblt. S04·
,\roo; WIU Mow On Your lo~ Coil 75s-7181 .
114·251-1217.
S.e Manufactured Homea~ at
In Muon, 1 112 otory homo for Mountain Stoll Homo&amp;. Rt 12 N •
•kL 304-773.-5121.

Middleport
N. TNrd- 3 BR, 2 BA, 5 yaora old,
lriX •Tt mon~ 147,000.

aerOII trom Vocation at. achool.
Mo1o11t ·&amp; MCtionoi' , _ • Pllll

&amp;-.304-87S.1400.

·F:mns for Slle

Rutland Suell· 3 BR, 2 BA. river
view, naw siding, carpet &amp; kltch- I Yoor Old, Four Bodroom.~, 2.5
Both, Sunken LMng Room uvoren,$46,000.
laaklng Raccoon Cr•ak (High
Cole· 3 uAU~,: live in one, rent - . Flood Plain) • 2046 Squore
F01t, Alsa Ntwlr Roofed Older
2 OUt or ..1111 rant $010. Five Room Form Houu, Parloct

"""-• &amp; ctrpet, 113.500.

Fot Rantol or Uotfter.Jn-low, All

Thlo On Approx. 1D Aoreo and
Pomeroy:
Fisher· 3 BH. 1 BA, new carpel, '1000 Foot CrMk Frontago, with
aomt remodeling, $11,500 II· fl¥t Outbultdlnoe. And Ont
llrtt Born. CfiiW Township. I 112
ranCed ar $1•.500 cash firm.
Will po11ibfy land conlract or

•••..-so.

Mllto Up - n Road, Off Jlo.
u117 Soulh. 81.._....72112

ht" finanoo on al,
Newly remodoltd duoo bldruorn,
one ond 112 blllo homo In M-.
pori, 814-082-3485oftor 5pm,

houl your logo to tf1e mill just call Socdonll 3BR, 2 1\11! bltf1a, larg&lt;o
904-1175-li57.
kitchen, large front porch, heal
Hause Cleaning Reasonable
Rates, Work Gaurtnteed, 614·

250-1233.
HOUH ptlntlng: E1tarior and In·

pump, an 4

a~re1

of ground In

FiaiiO&lt;I&lt;. 304-67S.511110. ·

'

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

teriar painting, experienced, " "
Hllmatet. reasonable ratn. 304· 14x60 Clayton Cherokee, in-

clude• big kllchen. 2bedroomt,

773-5878.

lnaidor hoot pump, 117.~85: can
Painting ' lntoriof /Exterior Wind· Mountain Stato Home&amp; ;l04·8751400.
ow Glazing No
Too
RalefoncH
E•llmltll, Uponi
Call J~~·;~:~-~~~ 14x70 Two Bedroom, Two Balh
21&lt;1!1.
Trailer Only $7500 Or Solo With
:::.;:::..-----"----1 Land And Will Salt Land Sepa·
S..mstrnll. 25 yrs. ••parianca. l'lte.(614)3B7-7555
:;;:~..:.;:.:;;.;;_,.:.....-:-:..;..

Homo

·

LlwnC1t1

. Ctl:

tim 12d511abiie . - . $2.400,
__ 1 814~48-811!51.

Uic, tllrtt bodrooni, 1 &amp; 112 "-lh.
wry good condition, ...ty point·
ed, inc:ludtt stove, ,.ffigtraiOr,
htat pump. garag&lt;o dlapoul. two
in my home In ceiling ,.n• Wlli'ghts, blinds,
out At 218. valances, block Uflderpinnl"iJ,

10.112 parch with roof, must be

movtd, UDOO OBO. 814·g82·
eoes. - mo.,.ge.

Will haul junk or uallh oway.
plclwp load. 304-87S.5035.

=~====;;;_--11888~ 14X70 21Jt, 2 "-th,
Will •kl cara of tldtrty and do lx12 deck, on reoted' lat, exc.
hou11k apog, 814-048-1:102.
cond., uklng l13,goo 080.
304·875·1051 L•••• meaoooe. I loii·IIOx3ZI and
F ltJMJCIAL
llllll Still
H,500. Pltono 304 ..75-5101 If·
1ga2 14x78 Cioyton Uabilo 1&amp;&lt;5pmb-lnfornaion.
21 0'
BUIIIIIIS
Homo, Throo Bedroom, 2 Btth,
II 7,000 . Hat Boon Uovod.

_,...,.,_

Opportunny

IIIOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommenda lhll you, do ~Uii·

nou wl.. pooplo you k-. lnd
. HOT 10
mont)' through tho
-mill
hl¥o l'l'fOs•a•tod

:.:...
~~fftiiOn.il-1 -:::3:135=--1118714
.----230 PloltiiiOnll
-1
both, . . .

Slrvleel

down. t13tnno, wltll appr ..od

crtdlt Coii1-IDO.at.em.
3n

-eAI.I

,_,.ond 2-11181..,_

-14X10 cornjlltitll
'" Oliectric furnimolllto -....
·
................. ilw, . . . . .

Llvlngtton't baaemenl
,_ling, all buomont
40M, frft ettimattl,
. - -. IOyr&amp; on job

1!1-.--.z...,.__
&amp; .,.,. -

&amp; 4 ....... .,., 11·

., ....,.., hu ........ 2 nighloll""o, vonltJ. I .,._L- b • - r.olllo lltd 1l1d I - dltll. TNrt1
llodrNm r.o bHn uood lor
crofto. Lorge l'x22' - r H

---7Wt4!1.

~

~~~~~~~~~~~
porcfl, oorplllll, lu-m....
110
HIMI II for 8111
turMwe4 oltoin

In•"••
ond cnhiono, otoao top lllllo ·

. 2 1111 , . , . . . . . 2 - · llvlna
....,. - . 111-. lui
Mit nonr . . . eplu.,l/1 _ ,
..... 112 HU~ M . . . .
. - ' p II • iiiiUiiiiiRt I ..,
U ,.. ..,.... 11oo! ....., M1.1 _..,
I1U . . . . . .. . ,.

-

Appliances : · Reconditioned
Washtrl. Oryera, Rangel, Ralrlgratora, 90 Day Guaranteet IPRINO SPECIAL: Control Air

Fronch City Maytag, 014·441·
7785.

GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
Wash•r•, drrara. relrigeratars,

rangeo. Skaggo Applianceo, 78
Vine StrMt Call 814·448·7398,
1·800-4118-349U.
Klldoon Carpet $8.50 Sale On All
Carpet In Stock· &amp; Room Size
-Carel&amp;.l14~1·7444.

Refrigerator $75; Waahar •us:
Orrer SUS: Electric Range •95;
Refrigerator 1.150; Air Condidontr
5,000 BTU ,125; Skaggs Ap·
plionco, 11 Vlno StrM~ GallpoUo,
114-446-73118, 1·888-818-0128.

Conjll-.: 2 Ton 11, 1D5: 2 112
ron l1,2e5: 3 Ton 11,305; 3·112
ron 11,585: 4 Ton 11-.885: Prlcol
Above Include Normal lnatalla-

tion. Full 5 Yaor warranty. "II You

Don't Call Us We Bath La111•

Free Elllmatesl Ad&lt;f·On Htat
Pump&amp; Only Sllghty Hlghar. Call
Us Today. 1gu7 fo The Twenty
SeYenrh Year In The Healing &amp;

Cooling Buolnessl 114-441·8301,
.I-800-20HlOg&amp;
·

Livestock

1g01 Ch .. y Ell Cab Z·71, 350
..... 304-417,._;
.
2 5 llonth Old .Goo to Both Do· I.;;;;,;;.=..:.;.;;..:.:.:;.;;._ _ ___
horntd, 1 Co-tod Buck: 1 NonValley Bonk Will OHor For
ny, Both Good Hftltf1, H0 Bolh
I A1g85 Ford 'Rongor, VIN
114 141 11868
IIFTCR1058FUC82087. Public
Auction Woll Bo HOld At Tht OVB
Annol. 143 Third /We., Gollfpolo,
OH On 117/87 At 10:00 A.li. V.
Wll Bo SOld To HithtOI Bid·
der ·•As IS" Without Expraooad
Or Implied Warnruy And May Bo
Soan By Conllcdng Koith John·
&amp;on At814·44HD38. OVB Ra·
Small ~roe, threo Y'* old oorrtl aervtl Tte• Rlghr To Accept Or
mart. new bridle .and 11ddlt, ReJect Any And All Bida, And
Wiohdrn( Pr-ty From Salt Pri$500, 814·1182-4221 .
or To Salt. Termo Of Silo: CASH
Two lamam:ha W&amp;ther Goafa OR CERTII' ED CHECK.
125 Each ; Ono Lamachi Nanny
135 All 8 Wetka Old, 814 ·258· 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
138e.
1ga5 Plrmouth Mini Van, power

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Tobacco water bed planta. 304·

885-31154.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
UptiQI'It, Ron Evana EnterpriMt,

Jro:kson, Ohio, 1·800·537-9528.

17.--

llr

-on.
lit-.,...,--

... . - ....
ltll1 but
1101 .... ti 1 tO'xt .. mo111 - ·
ond

uC'.,... .;:-,. ••
27....,....,

30 MtdlaiiMII 111a1
II t'aalurnel

DOWN

r«wra,. ·

1

38Prl-·a

.1

.

Not""

2NIIIt .
34 ,.... Wlllbi II 3 Conelhbi ..it
. 4Radlla
31 Atn:l1tlon
l!OUftiiY

eom,....

TRMJSPORTATION

8oulb
••

Weal Nortb
Pw 2• ·

4•

Paso

Poas

Eul
Pus

Paso

Opening lead: • Q

JUGHAID!!

$1100, 614-247-2811.

•

SPOilT 5wf All

tgse ChoN~ - Full Silo Convora!&lt;ln
Van, Whitt and Navy Excellent

Condlon, Low Mlltaoa, Pda At
~ 814-448·7t28.
•

sl-lo~ I

SA/,f;
. .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Cllmpol
Celebrilr Opher Cl::;;::••• .. ct'Ntid ff'OWI II'.
W
br '-not.~~ peopie, PMt tnd Pteltnt
bdt
lnthtci;:lhilr . . . . fotanolher.
.....,.,.

~-

UDPDO
I

I

: THE BORN LOSER
:i&gt;..Y, I f\~l.el'r f\1\D ""
~ (:.00;&gt; c.oo€..Y ~

f-'-.,.,.alo-,;lq. IN y~i ·

~

.

ER

V X

YKJHE8.'

-

"

MDPPDZ.

0 J NDp

IPJOT

.-

Tcdly~cW: H

.'PEKDZSKYZD
E

A

I.
'

VEZ ZJ A

s· B Z

z,E 0 L ~

V 8 E. 0' ·. Z J 8 L • '

•. .

-"•

RKDOL .U8P.
~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; 'Life Ja teldom ioa unendurable aa, 10 judge by llle~
. ftCII, " logicllly ought to be." - Brool&lt;a Alldneon.
,

~

HI! fO.J t-eOOT F'IXI~ 1'£ CNE
o.JITH. Tf\E WClfl:ll.!&gt; ?'

·'

·'

.

.1

,'

882·--

l

'l'
..

::

•

'•I
I FINALLY'
AADTOTAI:K
TO HIM
M'f'SELF...

8ETTER 6ET UP

RI61-1T NOW, KID. BEFORE
TI-lE ZAM80N I

~UNS

j

HE 60T

UP!

OVER YOU!

S!=RAM LITS ANSWERS
Thrift - Milth • Hobby • Weight • BRIGHT
.
'It is a fact.· the)olly woman told her kids, 'you can't
d~mag! your eyeSight by looking at the BRIGHT side ot

tlllnQS . .

I WEDNESDAY

-- .

-~ .

1400:

'141 0380.

Houe• for flint

Ono Mdroom opartmontln Pt
Furnlohld. Vory clean
21ed 0111111. h --. .. 0 "r:llt •Plooun~
_ ... PilL :ICJ4.f75-- .•
City llmlll,. l3ti/IIO., Ptuo Do·
pool~ AafiNnce. No Pall, 114' One badroom p .,.....In Mid:
......... ptliL iiZJa mo.,
2·1 IR, 1·112 lllrtho, 10011 ap· liDO dopooh, "4·M2·7101,
plloricll, Air,- Lg. 'tlord. i7 Parta· 111m lpfn.
...... Rd. . 011~ Dll. 1400. tiDnf:. Twin Ahwt Tawlr, now tc c JJtlno
: o i l, RalotO!OCO, lt14J·441·
1br. HUll .. ~
Ia";
for
Mill hindi·
EOHID4-8JUm,
llulroom, I bOth. !lou.. ClAir,
- l u r n l - . njce lot,·.ltt· lWo badtoom ••• &amp;me:• tn Mktlotoo IW. a-111• IMtf, renv
dloport, - - - - 1 1 7.
- . , . . JIJ,oll . . . - ·
.
S2DD mo.,.._ llOO . . . . . 114082·1101, kr&gt;Spm.
Fot Rent
2 .Jiado.........
+ UHMt.
'Oipoelll
•-11..-,-«110.
Two -om -tmtntln Uf4.
poll, l14-lt8UISI.
,._ IWD ....,_ r.me, Hom.
oorwlllt orH, 1~1 month pfuo 450
. - . no wrillllr ... no poll, 114-

....o-. .......,. •·

Mill llooiiH up to oflc.
lrlc. HelM II on rlftW tot tn -~742!:l1131~~-----F - • Wible Home court 111 'two bedroom houoe, nice and
co_..,.., WV. SofNi.'&amp;ffM *-\ 110 ._,_......,..,.
...,.. "'UD. .,.. rolortnoao required, ••4·ft2-Cifi:Dh17HI14.
.,.

-

14 ~ a1 IIIII

a

•u

410

Gille

tteerlng and power brakes, 5
apaed, foakl and runa goo4,

Und Waahtr &amp; Dryer General 710 A 1 fo Sal
1988 Ford Aer0118r van, 14500.
Eltctrlc, 1300, Both 614·4411- ,
U OS r
I
1·304-773-5305 oner epm.
•
Saara Ftaot-FrH Uprlgh~ FINZ· 4113.
1879
Cadilloo
Coup
Dtoville,
1\io Btdroom, llouto 7 Soutf1 Al&gt;- er, 1100, 614·448-4141 After 6
War,ren 10x12 dual jet knock· goqrd condition. S8U5. 304·6.75· 1988 Ford Econolino van F-1!1o
proodmotot~ MIIH F"'m Galli· . P.M. &amp; WHktnd&amp;
.
WIWhoelchaidifL 304-458-1081. •
.down cooler wtunlt $500. ax 12 3100.
polo. 1814
1581
lnwnallonal
cold
ttorage
freezer
Used Air Conditioner &amp; Heat
1978 Camoro. 180 Honda mooorFord f·tSO 4wd, 82,0~0
440 Apartments
Units $150 S10rm Doors S!io 814- w/unlt 1850. Bel:ore !ipm 304-173- crcla, need a work, ball a tier. I~~~~~~;_--~
448-3301, 114-418 35B3
5341 5pm 304-113-5142.
torRent .
Cllll Ooug ol.304-882·3638.
F250 lariat, cold ole, no
Wedding Gown: Siltln Brocade,
1 l 2 BR ljllruntnto, 2 I 3 BR Uatd furniture 130 8ulavl!a Pilca, Chapel length Train, Size 8, Cri· t9ito Buick LeSabra Runo Good, ruot, groat ohapo,. 814·892-33~4
hou1lng, aomt currently being Baby Bed, Book Shelves, good nollne &amp; Veil lnoludod: $150 . Neods Banory $500, ooo Mal!e dorsorB14·742·302011¥t1'inge. ,
remodOiod, loW rtn~ Wloomt utJf. Hoapi1al Bed, Couche&amp;/Chalil, (114) 446 411113 .
t99t Ranger XLT 4x4, 4.0 liter,
A Deal, 814-256-!233.
Bed, Ml,ora. Computer
ltlea paid. Small p•.t111 welcome. Queen
Desk,
Chest
of
Drawers,
Tables/
1Q82
Chev)'
Station
Wagon.
MaN·.
Tool
Tonneau Cover,
Wldopolit. 304-4175-2053.
·
Wood ·Bunk Bed With Maure11 bu Clonic, Runs Good, Body 105,000Box,
Chalro, lluch Morel 1814)·440· Twin
Milos, $7,000 814· 245Tap
Full
Bottom
$200
Felx·
41i2 Hro. 1CH.
Gopdt!IOOOB0.(614J4-7759
9544leaveaM-.
till Couch 130, 014-4441-2124.
1 11M! 2 btdroom - - 1\ir·
and unfurnl-. aocurlty Wuher, Orrtr, Relrlgeratar;
8g
S-10 Blazer 5 SP, 2 door,
dopool1 required, no polo, 814·
Building
550
17.800 or lake cw8r
Stove,
Fre8zet',
Microwave.
Cotar
1182'2218.
..
tv.8t4-258-t236.
~pplles
1 Bedroom Noar Holzer Extra
'Antiques
Block. brick, oowor pl:r.ea, windNice, Contra! Air, 121g1Mo., + 530 .
awl, lintel' etc. Clau a Wlnt&amp;rl,
440
114
~~~loo, Dopoalt Req. " • Bur· or ull. Riverine Antiquea, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614·245·
'
1124 E. 'llaln SVOII, on RL 124, 5121.
1884 Ford Tompo 4 Doors, Auto,
BooutHul Apt. Acrou From· Pomoroy.tloura:.U.T.W. tD:OD
Good CondiUon, $700, 814·317·
DowntoW!' Park. Bo4, 1 Both, i.ll\.',10 e:oo p.m.. Sunder 1;0Q., StoOl 8u!ldl~~ga "!~'•, Engineered 0521',
11-1·1111
,
1:00' p.m. et4·gg2· 2520, Ruao 40x80112 wo'o 15,500 now
se,g4CJ, 50ll00118 .... 128,200 18i5 Oldo good running condl· 1882 Yamaha Vorgo $500; Dlyo:
3278; Evtnlnga 814·
2 Bolfroom _Aptrtmentl Acroao •,.=-·~-~=_.r.- : : - - - - -'' f!ow .11,831, 10x200lll WI&amp; Uon &amp; good body. $800 . 304· 014·448·
441'30K.
.
Unloorloltv Rio Orondo, Alto, Ell· ,.
Mllcelll
182,500 now $38,g72 1-BDD-406·
clonor Aportmont, All Utllltloo
neoul
;:51::21::-~..--......- - - - 1911 Ford Taurua, exc. running 1991 HOnda 300 ••• $2,300, 114Pold, 11 ..-.11148'
'
..-chllldiH
580 Pels for Sale
cond., St,5DO 000. 304·875· _441
_·88_58
_ · --~---2 lltdroom Apottment,
5320·
1884
Suzuki
GS 500, 4DQ milo&amp;.
1)00 Dopooll, AJ UjiiH
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Dan 1D87. Carnora, v.a 305, outomat· t2150 080, 814-892·5571 - Polo, IU 41,8 3137.
Shaoto. 313 Georgo~ Crook Rd. ic, olr, supor ahorp. 12800, 814· lno•
2bdrm. apta.; Ioiii t!octrlc, •P.·
114-441-G231.
.
1182·5034. •
750 Boata ·&amp; Motors
plltnota furnlllhtd, laundry noom
facilidOO, Ciooo 10 ll!'hoolin toWn.
11187 Rtllwot Plymo•llh K Cor Air,
for Sale
AppiJca~ano ovoiloblo ot: Vllago
~~:~'::; ~=:U~ Condition, . ::,8:-:_s~too::-:::t-::S:::uo::10::1~1k~lboo::.::~:-::150
;::-:hp~.
Oratn Apto. 14 or oall 114·1182·
3711 . EOH.
3pc, Uving room oulto. 2 end II·
Suzuki, 8&amp;. mpll. kept, ••.
biH a coffoo toblt. 1400 for oil. AKC malo Trl Sholde, 1yr old, 1087 Trono Am, V·\ Auto, Air, collont condition, $5500, B14-g48oxc. quality. t175 080. 614-367· PSi PB. PW, Grcund ~""""· CIMI 3403.
311&lt; oportmont In Oalllpolia Felry. 304-875-I 803
Induction Hood, lauvtra, Exc.
0021.
Refertl!nc•• &amp; depoait r~ulred.
Cond.et4-24S.55118.
til88 Ranger 373V II' 12 ·24V
~ place bedroom aulte, tKctllenl
304-4175-5421 .
Trolling Motor, 1SO XP Evinrude
condition, Jublito ook, 1350 ceo, AKC Rog Boxaro 1250 malts,
$300 fo-loo. Raody to 00 Fa· 11180 Buick LaSilbre, ono ownor, Ou-.t. $0,800, 814·002-2770.
114-742·2011.
thor'o Dorl I Malee a-t gill&amp;.)
ctll 114-992·4103, Can be''""'
4" hoavy co"ugotod pipe, lOOft AKC Roo Uaftooo, 8wks old. at 38 Hudoon S~atl Mlddltport 1118i 21' pontoon boatlliilh cover,
Otio.
Boss TriCker Party Borgt, 80 hp.
·roll, $21 .118. Por.INT PLUS HARD· 114·1182·1• or 304·1182-411111.
Ewinrude, good condition, 814WARE. 304-417!1-«114;
AKC Roglotortd Mlnloturo 1080 Grand Pill 2dr, rod, oun 0&amp;5-4203.
·
5 118" Jointer, 111" Floor Uodol Schnauzer Females I Months
13 500
':i:a~~· cold air. ' ' 1904 ~- 18 Foot ()pon Bow,
Saw, Riding lown Mo-. lown Ofcf, 114-4441-3523.
S - r . Shop Voc .. Mlacallont·
w1Sun Deck, 4.3 litet \Is, Mer·
ou 1 Toole Ect. •3 Ctlrllty Drive. AKC Whlto Gormon Shephard 11180 Oldomol&gt;ilo Calais, two door, crulllt(, Am Fm CooM111, tnd SJoi
614-448·24711
. pupploo •20oee. P1lont 304-675- air, automellc, looka and rune Acceuary.. B14-25;8-~3
7771.
good, 121100 090, 114-742.0002
5'x8' Utility trallor wltb. loodlno
116 SEA 000 XP jet ski, .... CusBoston Ttrrltr &amp; Chlnooa Pug 1981 Oodg&lt;o Spirlt .4 Doora, Now 10m Haul ~ailer, $5,100, 814·118~·
, . ,• . $500. 304-417S.2181.
,
Puppleo, Both AKC Rogl&amp;torod, Tlrto All Around; Well-Main· 1102.
1 Cedar Hercult11 Jacuzzi Teal s- 0Uall1y. Vol Chtckod. Sltote tainod, Good Condition, $2,400,
Green, Ozeniltor Skirt. Cov•r. I Wormed Now Taking Dopoalt 814·-.a2113. .
760 Auto Parts &amp;
13,800,114-317-1735.
114-388-8325.
Accessories
lhp Homelito riding lawn mowor,
N..,
tanka, 1 ton t'r'uck
e~~r ...~, highchair, stroller, lnfanl
wheal&amp; &amp; radlatora. D &amp; R AulD,
carrier and an.Wering mlchine.
Ripley, W'l. 304·3n-3g33 or 1·
304-l17S.21180 lltor 8pm.
800-273-832e.
AnUquo Cor Tiro, Flro•tono 4 Ply
Sizo: 475 ·500 · ID Spoked
Whtela, Exco11ont Condition, 114- T-t "1191 Spoto". Kill 11ou. lcko,
moaqultOII I tuea a~ contacL
448·7127.
Wltlloutlntomol poiooni. All&lt; R&amp;
35', lully con·
Automtlc Dryora $75 Eoch: Safll 0 FEED &amp; SUPPLY, 114·g02·
condition, 19500,
$50: Rofrig&lt;orator $75: Sola Bod 2114 obout HAPPY JACK 'KE"'
~ D85 Ho,x~a Accord LXA, Aula,
$10: FuN Slzo Bodlinar Fits 8 Ft. NEL DIP.
. · AJC,
loaded, Bol. Fct. War. 18871l112 Fl. Sunllnt. Trailer,
Bad, Uko Nowl S11. 814-37g23,000
Ulloa. Excollont $13,4!10, AC, Awning, SIMp&amp; 0, E xcallont
Two
_,,
miniature
Colla
pupo,
212D AfTIR I P.l!.
.
&amp;125 -h; ono fernola Joel! Ruo·· e,;4 418'011at ,
Conditio"&lt; 814-~7. Ahor 5.
Boola By Rodwlng, Chlppowo, aoll torrlor pup. 1250: 814·742·
85
Cougar,
v:a,
1800,
114·742·
Rocky, Tony lama. Guaranteed 2050.
No mol"!tf downl E••Y toan
l-111 P;icH AI Shoe Colt, Gil·
trlnsf•r, 1988 Dutchman 18ft.,
lpofiL
.
loaded. 304·875-5522. . .
570
. Muel~l .
lnati'UI'I)tnla
Cemetery lots~ Granlre Bronn
,500.
MerncrioiL Appto Grovo Mernori·
Crato.
GX21
t
Amp.,
llkt
Now
,r Gardono. 304;1i71-271U.
.
814-317·0851.
Sf.llVICf~;
Commerlcol Rldgid Sowior ~nd

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romoto1 baeudlul lond: M•,:S• 1
Groclouolvlng. 1 iond 2 bodooom
11183 Spruoo Rldg&lt;o 11x10 mobile Cou~
. ,.Y, SRSolplt
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2
-""'"'" ot Vinoga Monor and
1_,.
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homo, ncollon1 condition, nu·
ftH
oood
rnop,
1
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m•raua upsad•• including:
~4. Equol Houolng Oppor· .
cothodral &lt;Oil 1, now CIA, gor· llllo&amp;S.
don .,., twO kl bl.,., and rrarch
11 r r l r r. )
moro, ttg,500 ceo c:lll 114-902·
Modorn I BodrCIOm Aportmont,

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Ollltlft

2 Ploco living Room Suloo. Good
Sark&gt;us lnqur_ita onty,
114-448-IDOO,L-Mos-.

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Dealer: South

630

Household
Goods

Condl~an,

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1182·2187.
Trailor lolL Counuy lano Mobile
H · ~ k All 1
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omo r•r .
1 zoo acoep - ·
304-4175-5421.

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ClliTer- al304-1175-8n8.

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114~1.0124.

114-448-81122, 014-441·5117.

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Conttruction Worbra Welcome

D415,(C-~

SaDYe, Aef,...ator, Cen•al Air,
Wttor &amp; Treoh Paid, t35Q..IIIo.,
Plua Dapolf~ Alto. 3 &amp;tdroomo,

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2 I 3 bedroom mobile hOmtl llobilo homo apacoo for renl, up
tWtlng II t21CJ.S30Q, - , WI· II 18x80'1, 180 per month, wator,

w 11M! nah lndudod, 114-1182·
2117.
2 - - Control Nt. In &lt;IIIli- :,-8-odt--oo-m-ln_M_o_sa_m_N_O_""'_O.
IlOilo, On Rantod Lo~ Raodr To
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lolcwe Inial 114-44&amp;-1400., AIflor 304-773-5751.
4P.U.
2 Bodroom Mobllo Honie, 12151
Mo., 1215 Dtpool~ low Ullldoo,
Nice Neighborhood, 814·317·

n•coppc&gt;rtunlly
•-on"-111.

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WHkJy Rotn. Or Monthly RIIO&amp;,

day ..., fridor,

edtlntlldfr1thllr:etl P PI
enoqulf

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(814) 448.0130 I Lm.·Sp.m. mon-

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Downtown flflt noor o1tct opoco.

cf ~- w1tlcn- • . . ,
10 ...... .., ...... let.
It; n I •or dl&amp;r••••llon
1111111
rw1g1trn.

requited. Send ttaumt to: Bo1
• 'CW-3 Clo Point Plooaon1 R...
lotllr 200 Main St. Pt. Pleoaont
t

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Town, Newly Remodaled, HBO,

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~ UNrO nlldod. 141,- In·
, ~ potondtl. Call HIOO.Sis' -f34S Ell..
~~-~Secr,;.;.;;..llll;,;.;.r;,.y,~.co_mp_u_ter_ok_I_Mo

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Kingo Motol Lowest Rlloo in

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uoo, 814·448·4782 Oalllpollo,
Ohio.
Concrete &amp; Pl..tlc s•pdc Tanka.
:100 Thfu · 2.000 Goliono Ron
Evons Entorprltoo. Jockoo~. OH
1-100-537-0526.
Electric Scoot•r · and Wh••l·
cholra. _, Uud, Scooter Lilli,
Portolllo R - . Stalrwor El..a·
tore, 8ownan'1 Homecare ~t4 -

--n83

Family room lumitUro, old · -·

. HOme

580

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Logon Glont polo Mptl oood.
:104-175-8881.
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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

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Applionco Plrta And Sortico: All
Nornt Brandl 0.. 2i VIera Ex·
ptriiii1CO All Work OulorantHd
Ftonch Cllf a,laytoo. 114· ••&amp;:
J~

'-totd 1\io Btdroom

ment Upotolrs,. 322 Third
Col
_,lwnDtpm.

Gollpolio.ll4-286-1~

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ASTRO.ORAPH
. .· .

BASEMENT
WATERPAC)OFHO
Uneondltianal·lifedn. ...,antee.
LOCII IOlO&lt;tncoo furnloj1od. £J.
tablillhod 1175. Coli (114) 440·
0170 0.. 1 -~217-!)57f. Rogoro

Ludwig 4rum ML Zod. oymbolo.
PV Boo. .np. 904-475-1304. '

tlhp. mower, 8hp. onow blower
(now), 12go. 870 Remington
- Pick
'lbur OWn, Coli
c- w;-.,
114-24s-&amp;12t.
Wlngmaal•r, a barrtla, mile ., ·
81447-3417.
. .
SltiWIIIrrlts, You Pick, Wo ,Piclt,
Full Silo 3 Ploco Ant!&lt;luo Bod· Oponod: 8·1 Mon, Wtd, Frl: lot
room Bur., E - Condition. I·Noon, Cloood Sunday'a,
Twin ilia B o d - - And Tart«• lorry Patcfl. ~ Road,
11..,..8047.
lox Sprlrogo, Clfllt......W141.

Glmt 11or 10 111n111 eo.. 1100:
SMES 13 Qtrnol 11110, 114·•7·

lrnJil'ovpments

Otio-1
ani
piano,
Ill and dru... 114-387.Q302.

Upton Ulod Cora R~
Iouth of Loon, wv.

.,_...... 304-4Wioee.

I

,

. GEMINI (May 21-Jtine 20) In a
delieaki situation today you 'II be in
apositionto take unfair advantage or .
another. However, to your credit you
won':, ·and :his will prove to be a
lucky decision. Know where to look
for romam:e and you'll find it. The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker .ins~an:ly
noveals which siana ore romanbcally
perfect for yoo. Mall $2.,75 to Match·
mlker, c/o :hi• newspaper. P.O. 8oJt.
l7S8, Murray Hill Station, . New
Yort, NY 10156.

: CANCiiR (June
II

~1-July 22) A ·

you a
progress
your·
amount of
looks like .it will self and you will reach your goal.
work to your 11enefilloday. Regard·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If
less of appearances, don't ·give up · you are working for sOineonc else
hope.
.
today, do more .than wt,at you arc
· LEO !July 23-Aug: 22) For today asked, Your effons wollt gn unob·
il's bestto do all you can to transfonn served and you may be rewarded
new contacts into friends. Keep accordingly.
everything on a sociable level and
·AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19)
l!on'ttalk shop or politics.
Some happy and lucky e~periencc
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. ~2) Lady · might be in the offing for you today.
Luck ·is in your comer today ·and It .won't be or a tangible nature, but
she'll do all she can to help you'real· or the real substance that life offers.
i~ your aspirations. Be cenain that
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc:h 20) Ben·
you're doing your part.
eficial closures could result today if
. I.JBRA (Sept. 23-Qct. 23) Your ·yoli let eventuvn their natu111l Cotlllsolind judg1001t and sense of humor es. Conveb1Ciy, forcina issues could
are your most valuable uscts todlty. 1enet'IIC complk:ationi.
.
They will etlllble you to teach your ' ARIES(MIIdi21-Apriii9)Yoor
pis wi:hoot beina forcefUl or arro-- initial assessment• coold be on the.
aant.
.
.
· neptive side today., Study matters
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In a closer. and yoo should see much
commen:ial lrrlllpment todlty it ·promise for whic:h IIi be p~~eful .
miaht look lib you're ,e11in1 the
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) .
short end of :he llick. btt1 eventually S:.nina t~y your financial trends
evciy1hin1 should even out
could be showiiiJ 'sipla of improve·
SAOmAJUUS (Nov. 23:Dec. . ment. You must remember not to
21) Y~eldin11 10 self-doubts is the , ·wute what could be eft'ectively uti·
N,jor illpedilnl dtat c:ould retlld liad later.
.
t,.
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Ohio Lottery

Bulls up ·

Pick 3:

.. series lead
..

123
Pick 4:
3210
Super Lotto:

to2-o

5-27-33-38 4045
Kicker:

Sparta on Page 4

120724

Partly cloudy tonltlhl,
low In mid soe. Frier~.
cloudy, h~h In the 7011,

chance of.ovtera.

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New·VMH unit scheduled to open June 9

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Pomeroy-.-~leport, Ohio, Thuraday, Jones, 1997

:otll7, Olllo \IIIIey Publlal•lll Cu:L 1

A U.olililt Co. rturp I.P IF

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.TO OPEN JUNE 9 • Final
are
. · completed on 1 Behlvlonl
which
. will open at Veteran• Memorial Ho.pltll ·on
· · Mondly,. Juna 9,· and will·be dleplayad to the
· public on Su.y, Juna 8, when the holpltlll
· atagaun 01*1 houll fl'om2 to 4 p.m. Plclur.t

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checking out uPecta Ot thl neW fllcHity are
from tha left, Hoapltal Admlnlltrltor Scott
Lueu; Su11n Elliott, RN, !ISN,Idmlnllb•tor of
the new unit, and LIM Hogan, RN, coordinator
of the ho.pltlll'l Day Clrel'nlltmtnt Canter,

l

COLUMBUS (AP) - Taking had to 'do to comply with federal
':, ,. · · ' ~le ,off welfan: • ...t nulling ihem · law,·: Sllid the bill's. ~P&lt;!_~~-o:r•.J~_ep~
. ii!W:,;olis~~n't~ l'futn bOth Joan laWJ'CIICt, R-Galena. ·- ·-~ - - ... '
·Democrats had oppoSed the origDemocrats and Republicans .
The House Finance &lt;!:ommittee on inal bill because it would have put a
, Wednesday unanimously approve!~ three-year limit on benefits. B.ut an
the welfare reform plan that would amendment approved Wedncsaay
, . put a five-year limit on state assis- added two additional years.
Under lhe new plan, welfare recip. tance and-increase job training for
ien!s would be able to get state aid for
welfJLfC recipients .
The bill likely will face a vote in three years before being forced out of
the full House today. The changes in the system for two yearS. 11ley then
the state's welfan: rules, which would could get an additional two years of.
take effect in October, were proposed welfare benefits.
Currently, there is no limit to how
to match chanses made by Congress.
"WhaJ we're. doing is what we long the benefits can be collecied.

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In its continuing efforts to be
responsible to the community's
health care needs, Veterans Memor·
ial Hospital in P~meroy wjll be .
opening a new 10-bed Behavioral
Health Unit 011 Monday, June 9.
The new ·facility, located ' in the
south wing of lhe hospital, will help
expand the scope of geriatric health
care in Meigs County and ·will be
operating in conjunction with the
hospital's Day Care Center which
opened to patients last .November.
The new Behavioral Unit will be
geared primarily towards providing
psychiatric care for the elderly population and will provide a fun spectrum of intensive treatment for adults
~ge 55 and over who exhibit a wide .
range of emotional, behavioral.and/or
psychiatric problems.
Thc south wing of the hospital has
been completely remodeled and
' redecorated .to ptovide adequate and

• RHODES ·. ENDORSES TAFT • FOI'IMI' Otllo Gov. Jlmea .
:Fihodle, right, glv11 current S.Creblry of .,... Bob Tift the
tliumbl-up 11 he offered Tift hla andorla~ lor governor
w.dn.II~Y In Plliln City.. (AP)
.
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Rhodes endorses
·Taft for go~ernor
.

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PLAIIII CITY (AP) - Former Gov. James Rh!ldes has endorsed
Secretary of Stale Bob Taft in lhe 1998 gubernatorial race.
· Rhodes gave the endorsement Wednesday al the·annual meeting of
his former Cabinet and staff.
,
·
Rhodes, a Republican who also was Colum~ mayor and state
auditor, served a record 16 years as governor from 1963·71 and 1975~.

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Treasurer J. Kenneth Blackwell has beeli hinting that he will chal- '
lenge Taft for the·Republican nomination. Gov. George Voinovich can, not run for a third tenn .
A Democratic candidate has not yet entered the race.

t:::OLUMBUS (AP) .:..... Government would · have to· consider the
rights of property owners in certain
proceedings under a bill the House
has overwhelmingly passed.
The House on Wednesday voted
!i8-7 for the bill sponsored by Rep.
William Batchelder.
A government agency would be
required to detennine whether a new
la•v or other action would result in
' caking property, then provide the
landowner with a written assessment ·
of how the action would aJfecl the
propeny value and estimate the pos. s'ible cost.
·
Batchelder, R-Mcdina, . said the
bill is designed to protect property
owners.

. ; Raci~ Village Council in its paving has rc.•ul~d in more specdi,ng.
Mayor ~cOt\ Hill said he would
Monday night meeting approved
advertising again for bids on con- have police mohi\91' lhe area. ,
"o~rd of Public Affairs II)Cmbcrs
·struction of a new fire station on.the
Doug
Rc~s · and Lee Layne, along
property behind the municipal buildwith a represcnULtive of R.J. Indusins.
.
·The plans have
I'CYised so tries of Parkers~, W.Va., answered
dlat firemen can do more of the work, q\K'stion regarding using an epoxy ·
paint inside the !Niter tank instead of
. it was noted.
.
,
Contracto,rs may pick up a bid the wax material prc~ntly used.
Hill said he would contact the
packet at the Racine Municipal
Building. and bid on any portion of Letart Township Board of Trustees to
~he pro~t or the entire project with see if the township could chip and
bids being due back by July 7 by 4 seal the alleys as 'well as the walking
track 111 Star Mill Park. The village
p.m.
. 'Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clark met with would pav for 0\itlt'ials, labor and
council and requested a drop box be · use of the' toWIIIIIIP equipment.
.·
Hill also said hil'llflll set up a town
installed for water and refuse bills so
rel'idents could pay *hen the offices mec:tipg for I'Ciidents of ·Racine,
ftelo~.
· ,
·
Syracuse.uid Rutl'll'i to. ~ with
:COIIIK:ii said plans wete bein&amp; J'CRieiCiilllives of Nlilonll OIS &amp; Oil
J11!L11C lo ini~l a drop box, bUt wm Corponlion repndin&amp; the fuel recovnot yet completed. Councilman John ery chirFa thll In beiRI IIICIIod . .
Dtidclin&amp; wi.ll handle tlie illltallatiOI! He said then: is IJIIPPilled to be • fliof.the •liNd drop boxes. A box will er ·with the billnxpllinina tbe l'uel
lwlllllllled ror the sewer district also. ·recoWirY• .
,
it iw.IIOied.
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Clerk !CareD Lyons reminded res:Yc:llo.wb!llh ROIId rUidc:nt On:g . . . IIIII W11u11111J . . -.lllk i,...
'nl)olor ....... police . . . aftc&amp; ilmillble for' 112 a r-"· , _
~ on the road, ·saying that recent

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Rep. Vernon Sykes, D·Akron, of getting people off the welfn rolls.
said members fro'm both parties . "One of the key issues is access
~foi.tghl for thtle'otra·time so that wei:···iuHJ'beilia able to got tho peqplc to the
fare recipients )lloUid ' be able to jobs," Sykes said.'
develop job skills.
Other provisio.ns of the bill
"It takes ti.me to develop those include:
skills," Sykes said.
- A~tho.rizhig "Ohio Works
The time · limit ·had been the . First" program that l,llould reqliire
biggest stumbling block for the bill, · participants to work at least 1S hours
which also would require thai people lL week, with another 1S hours spent
work at least 15 hours a week to con- working or taking classes or iraining.
tinue receiving benefits.
__: Guaranteeing child caR: to
The bill ·includes SIO million for program part,icipants until they get
getting workers to the jobs. Counties jotis and their incomes reach ISO perwould have to divide the money. cent of the federal.......
poveny level,
which would come from the savings which is about S17,V&lt;IU for a family
of four.

Personal property bill approved :by House

Racine Village.Council approves. .
$dvertising for ~ire .:department b1ds

been

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attractive quarters for the new inpa- ment will serve refreshments to the ""
tient unit.
public in the hospital cafeteria where ~
On Sunday, June 8, from 2 to 4 visitors will be entertained by Den· 1::
p.m., Veterans Memorial will be ver Rice of Middleport. Favors will ;;
staging a public open houSe: at which also be presented guests. The ~
. time residents will be given a tour of Women's Auxiliary under ·!he directhe new unit. Included also in the tion of Mrs.Abbie Strallon, p~~:sidcnt, ~
open house activities will be tours of will register guests.·and those wishing :•
·~
the hospital's Home Health &lt;:;are, to undergo cholesterol testing.
11le new Behavioral Health Unit •
Hospice, offices of two new physicians and the Day Care Center, all -is the result of a cooperative dfort ..:
located in the Meigs Medical Com- between Veterans Memorial Hospital ;;;
plex adjacent to lhe hospital structure. and Sunrise HealthCare, Inc., 11 ~.
Those auending will be given free Louisiana owned heahhcare corpo- ~
blood pressure checks and cholesterol ration headquarters in Baton Route, · '
tests if they wish. Tours of the hos- ~
.
'
~·
Each patient admiued to the new ••.
pital proper will include not only the'
new Behavioral Unit but also visits to facility for treatment will be cared for
the various departments and .visitors by a team of medical and cliniCal pro- will be shown access routes to the fessionals·..These professionals will :
emergency room servlces as well as work together to pinpoint the nahu'C : .
' the new location of the hospital's lab- of the prol&gt;lem and help the patient •
·and the family· begin the recovery •~
.oratory.
.
.
The hospital's Nutriiion Dcpan- ·
Condnued on pqe 3
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Ohio House to vote on·welfare changes

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pie wanting the i.nsurance can apply
at .the water office. II will pay for
water leaks up to $200 and does not
pay for water line repairs.
In other business, council:·
. . ! Gave second readin. to a watei
rate ordinance.
- . : Authorized Hill to ptlrchase two
ceiling fans .for the offices.
\
-- Approved the use of the dump
uuck for trash collection for the Ohio
River Sweep on June 21.
-· ser June 18 as an additional
Clean up day. Residents are to set the
•items outat'the curb by noon for vilr
lqe workers.to pick up. · .
.
-~~the mayilr's repOrt for
·May shOWina the vlll9's illwe of
$49!1. '
· •• Repot1ed the street committee
wiU check on uees that need attention
and report back to .council. ·
Also present were councilmen·
R~ Beegle, Dale Hart, Henry
Lyons and Larry Wolfe, and street
commirsioner Olnn Rizer. Absent
- Councihtllll Heary BelllL
Council will meet qlin on June
16 it 7 p.111. 11 the ~ ~uaic:ipal
Buildina.
·.

"Private. property has been the
reason some of QUr best citizens have
come here from all ov~r the world, .. .
Batchelder said.
·
In other action, the H(!use:·
- Passed 93-1 a hill that would
award reasonable, expenses to taxpayers when they prevail in a coun·
proceeding against the government.
- Voted 94-2 for a bill that
would pennit government to issue
"anticipation" notes that allow it to
receive part of tax receipts :it the .
begj!lning of a levy tcnn. The notes
woUld tie repaid. from the ta~ collected later.
,
- .Passed a bill that says if a mayoral vacancy occurs more than 40
days before the next scheduled elec-

tion, a successor must be chosen at
that election for the unexpired tcnn.
The vote was 94-2.
-Adopted a resolution 95-0 that
would urge the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission to rej!X!t the recommendation of'the Chicago Board
of Trade that the Port of Toledo be
eliminated or reduced as a point of
delivery for ~rain.
· Those bills and the resolution
now go to the Senate.
The House also accepted Senate
changes in a bill that would let
Ohio's' policyholder-owned insurance companies sell stock to raise
money. That bill goes to Gov. George
Voinovich for his signature.
·
The Senate, meanwhile, approved

three bills that now go to tlie House.
They would:
- Create a program for extra
training for 911 operators. 11le bill
was approved 32-0. Sen. Janet
Howard, R-Cincinnati, said the training programs wpuld help prevent
mistakes by emergency operators.
: -Allow clerks bf courts to accept
alternate forms of payment for motor
vehicle title taxes. including credit
and debit cards. The bill passed ~20.
- Transfer land to allow the
building of a juvenile jail in Cincin·
nati. Howard, who voted against the
bill, said the community needs JK&gt;Sitivc develppment instead of another
jail. The vote was 23·9.

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