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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Mete slide back ·
to beat Reds by
a pair of runs

Pick 3: ·
3-4-6

·Pick 4:
8-9-9-8
Buckeye 5:
9-16-25·31·33

Sports on Page 4

•

Clear tonight, lowe hi
, the mid and upper 501 .
Wedneedey, lnc:reeelng
c:loudlnell, chance ·of
rain. Hlghe near 80.

en

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''b. 41, NO. 38

.GOP promises rf!placement

Relief bill's delay will have no
impact on Ohio, EMA declares . ·

:.t o vetoed disaster relief bill

By The Aeeoclated Pre..
President Clinton's swift veto Monday of a bill to send $5.6 billion in
disaster reli~f to Midwest flood victims.is not a critical blow to Oh\o, a
state spokeswoman said Monday.
Individuals eligible for government assistance from the Ohio River
·flooding of early March received top Pfiority for help and will not be
affected by Clinton's veto, said Nancy Dragani, spokeswoman for the Ohio
Emergency Management Agency.
.
"People who need assistance and are eligible will still get the a.sistance," Ms. Dragani said. "Those projects that arc not critical to health
and safety might be delayed."
She said those could include projecis to rebuild eroded.stream banks
or to allow local governments to buy damaged floodplain proper!y so owners of those properties can relocate to safer, higher ground.
·
Ohio expects to receive $68 million in assistance through the Federal
Em~rgency Management Agency because of the Ohio River flooding. The
bill Clinton rejected Monday would have provided a portion of those funds.
Ms. Dragani said she did not know exactly how much the bill would have
provided to Ohio.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional Republicans pledge
'prompt action . on . ·legislation to
· replace a vetoed disaster-aid bill, but
aren 'I ready to say whether they're
.willing to meet President Clinton's
.conditions.
. . Within a few hours of Monday's
:veto, House Speaker Newt Gingrich
·Issued a statement attacking the pres. ident, bUt saying Republicans "will
. :work quickly to get relief to those in
·.need."
:. Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La.,
: chairman of the House Appropria;
, lions Committee, said he would be
· happy to "directly engage the presi;pent in conversations" on how to
; avoid another veto.
::: Beyond those broad pledges,
·lhough, Republicans have yet to say
: whether they're willing to drop items
:.the White House found objectionable.

·cH
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Suer aim chQo8e
from. 3 door 1:

stock. \Wious
equipmenl and
rolors!
•Coole in for

')'0111" !lest cJme.

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today!

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.•TOYDia
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Added House Majority Leader
reached the White House until it was
vetoed and dispatched back to the .Dick Armey, R-Texas, "I am
Capitol.
extremely disappointed that•the presThere is no controversy over the ident would veto much-needed dismoney in the measure, which aster relief simply to preserve his
includes. $5 .6 billion for victims of ability to shut down the governdisasters in the Dakotas, Minnesota ment. " ·
and more than two dozen other states.
Countered the president, ·"The
Also in the measure is $1.9 billion to issue here is not about shutting down
replenish Pentagon accounts drawn · the government." He said accepting
down by operations in Bosnia and the Republican-backed spending levelsewhere.
' els would cut $18 billion from the
But Clinton and congressional amounts contained in the new balRepublicans have squared off over . anced-budget accord, reducing colwhat the president called "extraneous lege aid. by $1.7 billion, for example,
provisions.~·
and denying 56,000 children particiRepublicans attacked sharply over pation in Head Start. .
the veto.
A second contested provision
"I'd like for the president to . would ban the use of sampling in the
explain why he would like the abili- nation's census in 2000. "Without
ty to shut down .the government," sampling, the cost of the ·decennial
said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R- census .will increase as its accuracy,
·Texas.
especially with regard to minorities ...

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decreases substantially," Clinton
wrote.

everyone.
Beyond that, Republicans fear
that if sampling is used, their majorRepublicans argue that sampling ity in the House could be in jeopardy
is of dubious constitutionalily, and when .legislative district lines arc
they ·say they arc willing to provide redrawn in scv~ral slates bel&lt;nc the
enough money to physically count 2002 elections.

.----The goal is met·-..;....., Commission
gives its nod
....··· ~ """"' '.

to ·transfers
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe. Staff
.The Meigs County Commission- ··
ers approvelt several budgetary transfers and approprialions at their reguIILJ!llletiog.on.Monday a!ternooo..'thc board approved an appropriation request from the Meigs County Juvenile Court in !he amount of
$27,191.31, representing grant funds
received for a juvenile court program.
Those funds were.appropriated as
follows:
monitor/surveillance, .
$3,250; drug testing, $1 ,500; other
expenses, $2,500; out-of-home place-·
ment, $1 0,000; program admintstra!ion, $1 ,750; community service payroll, $7,332 .06; and community ser-

.

.BY JIM FREEMAN
erty and then raise the site out of the
Sentinel Newl Steff
flood plain, he said.
· Members 'of Middleix&gt;n Village
Alxiut three-fourths of Middleport
,
Council wereremindedduringTues- r~sts in the l~ye{ll;fllle?dpll!il! . .
.. · · ~blight!! reg'AIIIl' c9un~il· M!J~g ,, Jolinson was aavrse4,n,to. bting
that they need io beg1n en(o.rdng 1ts before council at its next ·meeting a
floodplain ordinance,
recommendation pn perwil,jlrices l!ld
Arnold Johnson, who serves as the his fee.
. .
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village flQOdplain coordinator, said he
Johnson also suggested starting
has been meeting with officials from - condemnation procedures -· and
the Federal Emergency ll(lanagement subsequent demolition - of lwo
Agency, which is requiring flood dilapidated, vacanl houses; located at
plain ordinances be enforced.
305 N. Fourth Ave. and 469 Fisher St.
. Although the village has an exist- ·
He presented photographs of the
' .~ng flood plain ordinance, council two structures and said they are a
needs to es!ablish a price schedule for hazard tq neighborhood children.
·permits to build in the I 00-year
Clerk/treasurer Dennis Hockman
: ~oodplain and establish the percent- said the village has the money to
· a~c. or pay for the floodplain coor- demolish the two buildings by using
:ainator, Johnson said. ·
funds raised with landlord fees. Mon:: : If the ordinances are not enforced, ey from' the fees is supposed to be
:residents may n~t be abl~ w purchase used for purposes such as demolition,
. f~derally-suhsl\hzed flood msurancc. . he said,·
:he said.
Council instructed Johnson to
·. ·. , To build in the 100
. -year flood begin the condemnation and demoli:plain, or to conduct renovat.io~s tion process . . ·
.exccedmg 50 percent of a.bu1ldmg s
He also noted that several resi:yalue, people must have an engineer dences have yards cover~d with
·:determine the elevation of their prop(Contlnu~ on Page 3)

~Pomeroy
::ooor, w. va.
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·department look
:.a t major areas of
concern OVflr
~span project
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·C HEVIIDLEI • OLDSMOBILE •

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Among these are a provision to bar a
government shutdown ne.t fall, but
at spending levels bene~h what is
contemplated in a balanced-budget
agreement recently agreed to, and a
proposal to bar the Census Bureau
·· from using sampling techniques.
House aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it's likely to
be Wednesday at the earliest before
another measure is ready for a vote
on the floor. And in the meantime,
Senate Democtats plan .an aU-night
session- in a Capitol corridor if the
Senate formally votes to adjourn to dramatize the need for relief.
· Acting with remarkable speed,
Clinton vetoed the $8.6 billion bill
Monday and issued a wrinen statement that it was time to "stop playing politics with the lives of Americans in need." It took only 28 minutes from the time the measure

[Floodplain ·ordinance
:enforcement stressed
to Middleport Council

4 door: fnodels in

2 ~·· 12 Paa-, 35 cen,.
A o.nnen Co. Newapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; TU.sday, June 10,1997

~117. Ohio Vllller Publlllhlng Compeny

vice

Then membera of the board of the United Fund of Meigs County met briefly to dlecuss the ·
IUCCHI of the 1997 fund-ralelng c:empelgn. The 1997 goal of $",000 hn been exceeded. From
·left ere &amp;ecretery Sunn Oliver, Treeeurer Tom Dooley end board member Vickie Morrow. Board
Pr11ldent Chloril Gaul, not pictured, hae expre..ed her gratitude to everyone who contributed
to the effort. The 1998 campaign .will begin thil fell end lncludee plena for an Oclober fishing
tournament.

'-------------------------------------1

Br-idge replacement meeting slated

A public meeting about a new
Pomeroy-to-Mason, W.Va., bridge
will be held on Thursday, June 19
from 4 to ?p.m. at the Wahama High
School in Mason. ·
Representatives of ·both Ohio
Department of Transportation and
· West Virginia Department of Highways will bC'at the meeting, and con- .

cerned citizens are urged to attend.
It is hoped !hat by gathering all
affected agencies together during the
initial planning stages, major areas of
concern might be handled now, rather
than when the project is years along
in development. Federal highway
ofl1cials have also been invited.
In January, the firm of Sverdrup

maintenance

and

repairs,

$859.25.
The commissioners also approvc'd
a request to appropriate additional
funds in the budget of Meigs County Litter Control. That amount ,
received from local recycling cfli1rts.
donations and the Gallia~Jackson­
Meigs- Vinton Solid Waste District,
were approprialcd inlo the followin g
accounts: special accnunt, $75; recy cling pr~cds, $339.69; and opecial
events (River Sweep), $1.100.
·Also approved was a reduction In
an appropriation to the county's real
estate a.lliriscssmcnt line item, rcqucst-

ed·by County Auditor Nancy Parker
.
Campbell . The · adjustment of
The study area; according to $13,137.56 was made because
~nd Associates was authorized by
ODOT to begin preparing environ- ODOT, runs three miles up and lhree expenses were less !han anticipated .
mental documentation necessary to miles down the river from the existA request for approval of the
seJect a site and replace the local ing bridge. The meeting on June 19 county's grant through the Commu· bridge, one of only four Ohio River · will' include information gathered 10 nity Corrections Act was approved.
bridge~ still owned by the state of date,
·
The grant"&lt;!f1l13,li31 will b&lt;: used to
ODOT has budgeted $25 mill,inn continue the program into 1998. That
· Qhio. As the bridges arc replaced,
West.Virginia will assume ownership for replacemcnl of the bridge in program addresses alternative, comto the Ollio banks. ·.
2002 . .
munity-based sentencing through
Common Pleas Court.
David Spencer of the County
Highway Department requested an
appropriation of $154,767, representing state and fcderal .grant funds
· and administrative fees for 1996 disBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hemsley. Dana King, Katherine S. aster relief.
The funds were appropriated into
Lamb, Bonnie L. Lawson, Kimberly
Sentinel Newe Slllff
ac~ounts relating to individual proTWenty-eight men and women A. Lewis, Matthew C. Lewis, Tracy
who received their General Equiva- · Lockhart, Marjoriejo Manley, Bridget jects: Apple Grove Road, Flatwoods.
Ieney Diplomas (GED) during the MulhoHand, Christopher C. Neville, Road, Pomeroy Pike Road and
accounts for vario.us roads and
past year were honored at the Adult Timothy R. Priddy, Kcnda Reynolds.
BasicandLiteracyEducation'sannu- Adam W. Rime. Normal. Roberts, administration.
The boaJ'(j also' approved adver\I recognition dinner Monday night Rebecca L. Saxton, Brandy Stark,
al Meigs High School.
Amy L. Underwood, Shannon L. tisement for bids for AC-20 bitumi· For the past six years, the Mid- Walker and Traci Wilson Chapman. · nous liquid for use by the highway
department. The bid is specified as a
dleport-Rotary Club, as a part of i.ts
Recognized with attendance cer- Minority Business Enterprise conse..Vice program, has provided the tificlltes \VCre Freda Eakins, over 70Q
tract, meaning that the bid musl be
illnrier for the ABLE students and hours; Penny Dunkle, Sandra D&amp;111t awanlcd to a minority contractor, The
their families, as well as the plaques and Ronald Grimm; over 500 hours; bid must be a total tons bid, meaning
presented to the GED graduates. . Cy.nthia Call and Carmen Thorne, that the supplier must deliver total
That service was noted at last ove~ 400 · hours; Nellie Hatfield, tons of liquid at a fi•cd price of
pight's dinner, with the presentation Helen Hemsley, Katherine Lamb '$50,000.
of a plaque from ihe Ohio Associa- Garland Saxton, over 300 hours;
The commissioners also:
tion of Adult and Continuing Educa- Annette Cade, Lisa Collins, Marvin
• Met with Probate and Juvenile
tion to Rotary. H~l Kneen, president, · Edwards, Pam Shields, oyer 200 Court Judge Robert Buck to discuss
aceepted the plaque on behalf of the hours; ancl S.arail C111111en, Ra~~ll his budget request and a pending
Rowy.
Carpenter. Paul C~to, Linda Cns!1p, meeting regarding a juvenile facility
The) GED graduates given plaques Shirley Day, B011me Lawson, Kim- in Nelsonville;
were Aleta ·B. Billingsley, Annette bedy Lewis, Diane Milliron, Bridget
• Approved renewal of a mainteClde;Cypthia A. Call, William Cape- Mulholland, Lois Pooler, Norma nance
contracl with Mobbs Telecomhart, Sarah J. 'Carmen, Rl!ldall R. Roberts, Rebecca Saxton and V~ekie munications Service and Sales for .
Carpenter, Jr., Shirley Day, Angela Skidmore, 100 hours.
maintenance on the telephone system
Fields, )llellic E. Hatfield, Helen L.
(Continued on Page 3)
(Continued on Pllge 3)

.ABLE program grads
honored by Rotarians

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Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
'ErtabiJslid in-1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814·992·2156 • FIX 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
' Controller

_,from
l&gt;rDfd- ol ,._._
,.,..,.
ontl dayllmo , _ number. s,..,lly o ,.,. II,.,..., •"""' onco too pte-. officio
or lotlllr. lAIII to: Loltfn to 1M Editor. Tho S..tlnel, 111 Court St, PD-. Ohio
T,. Senlmet ...,..,.. ,..,.,. to lllo
·011•
INlve U.. bell oiNln.. ol being

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P"""'""'· Typed lotood '" moy be odiiMI. Eooh ohould lncludo o olg,.,.,., add,.,,

Shott letto,. (IJIJO wordo or
proto~

of57611; ()f, FAX

to fl4•11112-:i!167.

Around globe,
voters .opt for
'Clinton clones'
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Pres:s Writer
WASHING1DN - The electton returns are in and the wmner ts another Clmton clone Or at least a wm-ahke.
From England to Iran, voters arc optmg for change and favormg candidates who ex ploit the trends and employ the tacucs that put Prestdent Clinton m the Whttc House
The comparison IS most apt with Tony Blair, England's new prime minIster, and Ehud Barak, JUSt elected head of Israel's Labor Pany. The victory ot L10nel Jospin 1n France also had clements of the way Clinton won office
fiVe years ago.
It does pot stretch the imagtnauon too far to mclude Mohammad Jothataml, the Muslim clenc recently elected prestdent of Iran- not that he or
Clinton would relish any such companson
The explanation for the recent electton results may be as simple as one
of those pcrtodtc reJecuons of the status quo, be It on the left or the nght.
It was not that long ago that voters seemed to be looking tn the opposite
d1recuon. Margaret Thatcher became British prime minister m 1979 and
Ronald Reagan was elected prestdent the next year 'flJrough most of the
1980s thc1r conservatiVe vtews set the tone for Western policy.
Cli nton ran agamst that conservatiVe status quo m 1992. But first he had
to change the Democratic Pany's tmage as too beholden to spec1al interests
and as too prone to nominate old-style liberals like Walter Mondale and
M1chael ,Dukakts.
Blatr took the same course, worl:mg to convmce Brttish voters that the
Labor Party had moved to the pollltcal center. Ltkc Clinton, Blatt benefited from h1s youth and h1s ease w1th televtston It also helped both politicians that they were runmng agamst parttes that had been m power so long
that voters were look mg for change.
During the Brillsh electtOn campa1gn, Blair was often dubbed "Tony Clinton ."

Clinton JOked about the companson~ when he and Blatr met last month
m London
" A lot of the columns that were wrrtten about (the s•mllant•es) were not
altogeth er flattenng to etther one of us," the-president smd.
" I would pay tnbute to, the way that Btll Clinton blazed the trail," satd
Blatr " Th1s" a new era wh1ch calls for a new generation of pollttcs and a
new generation of leadership "
Hopmg to emulate the successes of Clinton and Blatr, Barak has assumed
the leadership of Israel's opposition Labor Pany. A former armed forces chtef
of state llarak defeated the more dovish Yosst Betlln for the pany post.
The perception that he would take a f1rmer stand than Bet lin in peace
ncgottattOns IS seen as makmg Barak a stronger candidate m a future elecuon challenge to Pnme Mtmster BcnJamm Nctanyahu.
Jospm's Soctaltst Party took control of the French parliament from conservati ves who lost favor with voters upset by record unemployment and a
government austerity program Josptn made JOb creation the centerp•ece of
hiS campa1gn
The French contest had echoes of the 1992 US campatgn in which Clinton capitalized on voter dissatlsfactton With how the Bush admmistration
was hand Img the economy
Khatam• rece1ved two-thirds of the vote tn the lraman presidcnltal electiOn, a result see n as a startling upset and a stgn of popular discontent with
the hard-hncrs m control of the Islamic state. Khatamt ts seen as a moderate by lrantan standards But he made 1t cleat he does not expect any improvement m the hosltle relations between hiS country and the Umted States.
Nonetheless, Khataml's VICtory was taken as a mandate for easmg the
soctal restncuons tmposcd by more hard-line clencs
L1kc Clmton, the wmners around the world got thctr electoral -edge from
a se nse they would bnng about change
That 1s a promise. as Clinton dtscovered, that can be hard to fulfill
EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg has covered national and
international affairs for The Associated Press in Washington since 1966.

OHIO Weother
Wedntlday, June 11
AccuWell~ forecut for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Let's make a deal, b~by boomers
I'd like 10 cut a deal with the baby
boomers. My generation will shut up
about the Internet if yours will get
over the '60s.
Because the two things are very
much related. For the past decade my
generation has been cnttcized for tts
failure to produce cataclysmtc collective expenences. Every t1me there
ts a Live Atd or a Lollapalooza the
media ts qutck to declare tt OUR
Woodstock. When the event falls to
live up to tis b•lllng, we are left wuh
the concluston that Generation X just
can't get 11 together
Let's get one thmg stra1ght. We're
not gmng to have a Woodstock It
doesn 'I work that way We're also not
gomg to have a JFK assassinatton or
a V1etnam War Can we please JUSt
move on?

or course, what we do have is the
Internet, and boy have we milked that
cow We · ve tned very hard to have
the boomers believe that there ts
somethmg wtld and daring about
g'lmg on line. One of the btggest perpetuators of thts myth is Douglas
Rushkoff, whose new novel "Ecstasy Club" ts advenised as "a cybertale about Gen Xers who encounter
computer viruses and cops in the1 r

search for a plugged-m utopta."
For those wbo have not yet begun
the quest for an electromc mrvana
' let
me 1!5SUre you that there's nothing

.

· SaraEcket
dangerous or sexy about the Internet.
It's a very useful tool; that's about it.
Yesterday, for example, I had an online conversatiOn with a friend living
m London We do not choose to commumcate thts way because we find it
exc•tmg, we do it because it is cheap
And whtle It was great to talk to my
fnend for the price of a local phone
call. I did n111 2et to sec her smtle or
hear her laugh or know from the tone
m her vmce that she was making a
Joke If talking on the phone is one
notch below talking in person, "chatting" on the Internet ts a step below
that
I thmk the reason we are trymg so
hard to awe you wtth our technologtcal prowess is that we're sltll smanmg from ojlll those smppy anicles at
the beginning of the decade that portrayed us as do-nothings whose ambitions d1d not reach htgher than v•ewmg the enttre collected works of
"Scooby Do."

Now Time mag&amp;llnc has recanted.
In a recent cover story it offers the
not-very-shocking revelatiOn that
there are many, many people under
the age of 35 who arc accomplishmg
thtngs. "The so-called Generation X
turns out to be full of go-getters who
arc just doing it," says the cover line.
The arttcle then goes on to reveal that
members of my generation are starting small businesses, making independent films and, gasp. "even taking up causes." •
Well, of course we are. Did anyone really thtnk that the people who
finished college in the late ' 80s and
early ' 90s planned to spend the rest
of their lives foaming milk for cappuccino? We're older. We're movmg
up in our companies. We't'e getllng
our acts together. Why is this so surprising?
or course, even as Time pt aised
my generalton for finally puttmg
down the clicker, tt still got m its jabs.
In a sidebar on Dineh MohaJer, who
made a fortune selling that blue toenat! poltsh everyone was wcanng last
summer, the sancltmomous boomer
reared tts heatl. "For all her success,"
the story satd, "MohaJcr's attitude tS"'
distmctly Gen X, light-years from the

'l'HaT YouttG

L"aDY iNViTeS '{ou
TOCOMeuPTo
He~~.

MICH.

,

boomers' idealized •mage of their
own youth, forged in the cructbles of
civil rights, anttwar and feminist
movements.... When 11 comes to politics, Mohajer draws a blank She
thinks she registered to vote ('Maybe
when I got my driver's license?') but
has never cast a ballot 'Politic&amp;' she

...
o'

sem was Satan .

The Ftrst Church's head priest,
Tom Ratold, told TNR that "people
are begmning to fall tn love wuh
George They nrc hcgmmng to understand his power"
ThiS ts
the son of thtng that causes me to
muuer, "Whatever," and turn the
page Btu there was even stranger
information to he found m thts aruciL. It seems there " another, more
secular group called CFFPI. The
Committee tor the Former PreSident's
lntcgrtty. "Every Bush htnhday. "the
antclc clatms. they hring a "party,
complete wuh .cake, on the steps ol

the Lmcoln Memonal, and every
But how do I kick thmgs off! I
Electton Day, a funeral ceremony don't think I can handle skydiving
outside the White House "
The very tdca of plummeting through
The group meets trregularly to space -- the only assurance that I
won't make a greasy s!lot on the
ground bemg a Oimsy bundle of
read aloud the works ot George nylon and ropes on my hack -Bush, and "the text oflegtslauon that makes my stomach flop. Even tf I had
Bush supported "They also gather to secret service agents to JUmp with
sneer at journalists who cnltctzc me, I just don'tthink I could do 11
And I won't bun gee JUmp. Forget
Bush. The group's leader, a Mary
11. I can't roller blade, and the wheels
Ung, calls The Washmgton Post "the
of my hike are tlat I could nde a
rag ot blasphemy "
roller coastcr,l suppose, if it's not one
Well, htstory IS supposed to judge of the wilder ones Maybe somchody
how good a pres1denl a pres•dcnt has
could JUSt vtdeotape me running for
been, and I'm certamly not history I a bus. That mtght do it
have no opmton one way or another
A bigger problem, however,
about President Bush. Bitt I never rcmams. President Bush combined
would have expected htm to become Amencan and allied forces to whup
a cult ftgure . Kurt Cobain, yes; Iraq tn Operation Dcsen Stonn. What
Coltrane, ccrtamly; David Duchovny, have I donc'll returned some overdue
maybe. But George Bush?
library books, and paid the fine WithIt gtves me a strange son of hope. out complatning. OK. What else'/
If a pronoun-tmpa1rcd former presi- When a cashter gave me change for
dent can msptrc such devotton, well. a twenty, and I'd only given her a ten,
maybe there's hope tor me. Heck. I pmnted out the mtstake. Not had .
ncar as I can tell, George Bush's repOh, I know! Last summer, I was
utatiOn dtdn 't even need rchabthtal- vacatiomng by a mountam creek A
mg Mmc could usc all the help it can local boy miscalculated a JUmp and
get
broke his leg on a submerged log. I
dragged hi'm out of the water, and

/an Shoales

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' I

·. r.

says, lis no fun."'

•lco1umbusla2•
•J

Berry's World

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exccuuvc muns1&lt;&gt;n
Clinton mmwns achtevcd another
first when they tnstalled secret " outstde" phone lines -- such as one that
used to ring m the office of former
Chief of Staff Mack MeLany. All
these moves made it difficult, if not
Impossible, to monitor communtca·
lions between the Executive Mansion
lind the outside world.
That wasn't the end of the innovahons. The Whtte House dawdled
for more than two years ln conducting proper security mvcstiRations for
its employees, including a couple
. dozen who fiunked drug tests. For
some reason, MeLany didn't get a
pennanent pass for more than 18
months.
lf this seems benign, consider: The
campaign-finance scandal of 1996
centers upon John Huang. who
received a top-secret clearance witbout a background check and attended more than 130 classified briefings on such areas of personal mte~est
as Chtna and Russia. Background
checks' may not be a big deal at a
burger joint. They are at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., where one rogue can
compromisc national security.
At the same time the White Rouse
.was shuttering itself to the ouuidc
•world, the president was seizing con-

trol of the federal mvesttgativc apparatus He took the unprecedented step
of linng every U.S. attorney m the
country. ThiS included prosecutors
lonkmg at everythmg !rom the
Whitewater mess in Arkansas to the
House Post Oflice scandal in Washington. He brought m lawyers of hiS
· own choosing One was Paula Casey
in J.,tttle Rock, Ark Casey, a former
law student and campa•gn staffer for
Clinton, refused tn pursue Whitewater prosccuttons until her own personal conOicts of interest became
public knowledge.
There were other moves The
administration tried to transform the
Office of Profcsstonal Responsibility at the U.S. Department of Justice
into a haven of polittcal appomtees,
rather than independent career
lawyers. That move fatled, but con1 sider the putative tmpact: Today, the
office has responsibtlity for lookina
into posstble Cllllnt acts withm the
Justice Department.
The president departed slightly
from prec:eden.t in designatina as the
White House'• offu:ial conllletat the
Jllltice Depiibilellt the No.3 offieill,
old pal Webater Hubbell. The clecision came in handy. When Vince Palter died. Hubbell helped enal_. a
clumsy lnvestiaation, whidt pul the

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V. Hendricks

Dorothy Virgmia Hendricks, 74, of Pomeroy, died Thesday, June tO, 1997
in the Rocksprings Rehabihtalton Center m Pomeroy.
She was born in Meigs County on Sept. 12, 1922, daughter-of the late Ed
and Bessie Masser Durst. She was a member of the Trinity Church in Pomuoy
and was employed as a clerk at Elberfelds Department Store for many years.
She is survtved by a son and daughter-in-law, Harley and Mary Hendricks
. of Mason, W.Va.; a brother, Roland Durst of Pomeroy; four grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Carl Hendricks, in 1992; a
son, Carl Hendricks Jr.; and a brother, Maurice Durst.
Services will be I p.m. Thur~ay tn the Pomeroy Chapel of the Ftsher
Funeral Home. Burial will be in Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends
may call at the chapel from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.
·

Edith Kile
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Farewell, dry weather:
rain returning to region

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By The Aesoclated Press
The dry weather may be coming to an end for Ohio as •a high pressure
system moves out of the area tonight, forecasters said.
A chance of showers or thunderstorms was back in Wednesday's forecast
and was likely to be repeated Thursday anil Friday, the National Weather Ser-

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But temperntures wdl continue to be warm, with highs on Wednesday rangmg from the mtd-70s to low ROS.
The record-htgh temperature for thiS date at the Columbus weather stauon was 98 degrees in 1911 while the record low was 41 in 1988. Sunset
tomght w1ll be at 8:59pm and sunnse Wednesday at6 02 a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Tomght...Ciear. Lows in the mid and upper 50s. Ltght wmd
Wednesday. .Increasing cloudmess A chance of showers and thunderstorms m the afternoon. Htghs near 80 Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday ntght. Mostly cloudy w1th a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows n·ear 60
Extended rorec:ast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy wtth a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Hi ghs in the upper 70s.
Frtday Showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows m the lower 60s and
highs in the lower 80s
Saturday .. Mostly cloudy wtth a chance of showers Lows tn the m1d and
upper 50S and htghs m the mtd 70s

Jeep plant worker claims
~: , half ~f $35 million jackpot

n .

CLEVELAND (AP)- A Toledo
man who clatmed one half of a wmmng $35 mtlllon Super Lotto Jackpot
will receive more than $5.3 million
after taxes
Donald L. Walters, 66, of Bowhng
Green, chose the lump-sum pay, , , , mcnt, whtch is the amount the lottery1 would have invested to pay the
,. advenised amount in 26 installments.
Walters, an employee of the Jeep
•
plant in Toledo, clatmcd the prize at
-:' · . the Ohm Lottery's Toledo offie~ on
... Monday. He was accompanted by his
wtfc, Florence, and one of his three
••
sons.
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1
.:' . ..Walters, .":ho ~~cllned a lottery '
, •. otter to pantctpatc m a news confer. ._,, cnce, told lottery offictals that he
\I

wattcd wtth htm unhl an ambulance
showed up. II that docsn 't make nie
the Lasste for the '90s, I don't know
what docs'
Unfonunately, I don 't have a
coterte of admtrers who'd put together an organizatton like Cll, The
Committee for Ian's Integrity.
And even if I did, what would 11
be preserving'/ Even when I saved the
boy last summer, it wasn't exactly a
shining moment of virtue. The water
was only four feet deep for one thmg.
For another, I tned to get a park
ranger to put up a plaque m my honor at my p1cntc stte, and she wouod
up gtvmg me a citatmn for llttermg
So there you go If there 's gmng
to be an Jan Shoales Rev1val, the
hall's in your court.
And "Inn Shoalcs on Icc!"
remains a great 1dca just wmt•ng to
happen
Once peuple understand my power, tt's prohahly mev1tahlc.
(To rece1vc a complimentary Jan
Shoales newsletter, call 1-K00-989DUCK or wnte Duck's Breath, 408
Bmad St , Nevada C1ty, CA 95959.)
lao Shoales Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Park Service m charge of a forenstc
analysis and forced the FBI, which
has ~xpen1se in such thmgs, to watch
from the stdcllncs. Huhbell and
Wtlllam Kennedy Ill, another old
Clinton friend, may have helped
draw the FBI into the Travclgatc
affair --persuading O-men to conduct
a ba.~elc.~s prosecution of fonncr
White House Travel Office Director
Billy Dale.
Ftnally comes a matter that has
less to do with the organizational
chart than institutional culture. Most
White Houses attempl to draw bright
lines between proper and improper
activtly. Not so here. Foster performed personal legal work for the
Clintons whtle on the Whtle House
payroll-- a clear no-no. More recently, Whtte House and private altomcys
have met to talk strategy regardmg
the vanous alleged scandals. The
Paula Jones affair, Whitewater, Travelgatc, Filegate, Ltppogatc.
In addition, the admmistration
improperly concealed deliberations
.of the first lady's health-care IISk
. foree. And White House attorneys
have made unprecedented claims of
•privilege 10 hide plpell notjUJt from
Independent Counsel Kenaeth Swr
and conpeuional inqulsiton, but
alao from courts and the Justic:e
Department.

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Edith Kile. 86, of St. Petersburg, Fla., fonnerly of Coolville, died Sunday, June 8, 1997 in the Columbia Medical Center in St. Petersburg.
Born March 29, 1911 mAmma, W.Va., daughter of the late William C.
and Aana Bell Taylor White, she was a homemaker, a member of the Pinellas Park Church of Christ in Florida, and a former member of the South Westem Cl)urch of Christ in Grove City.
She is survtved by a daughter and son-m-law, Demse and Ronald Bare
of Columbus; two daughters, Joyce Gtanvtto of St. Petersburg, and Chetyl
Bogard of Zephyt Htlls, Fla.; three sons and daughters-m-law, Forest N Pat
Kyle of Fredencktown, Buddy L. and Carol Kyle of Streetsboro, and Danny W. and Ethel Kyle of Summitt Station; 28 grandch•ldren, 25 great-grand.
chtldren and one great-great-granddaughter, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded m death by her husband, Forrest Kile, and by e1ght ·
brothers and two sisters.
Servtces wtlltie I p.m Thursday in the Red Brush Church at Bashan, w1th
the Rev. Joe l-loskins officiating. Bunal Will be tn White Cemetery in aashan .
Fnends may call at the White-Blower Funeral Home, Coolville, from 2-4
and 7-9 p m. Wednesday.

Jean. E. Seines

Word has been recet ved here of the death of former Middleport restdent
Jean Edna Scmes, 71 , ofEscondtdo, Cahf., who died Friday, May 30, 1997
tn the Palomar Medical Center.
Born May 4, 1926 in Middleport, she was a mustc teacher and homemaker
A lifetime member of the Nattonal Mustc Teachers Assoctation, she was a
member of the Church of Christ.
She ts survived by her husband of 53 years, Charles Anhur Seines Sr of
Escondido; a son, Charles Seines Jr. of Barstow, Calif.; a daughter, Bonme
Jean Wilhams of Escondido; six grandchildren and a great-granddaughter;
and a sister-in-law, June Scmes Duffield of Middlepon.
_
She was preceded in death by brothers, Dan and Judson White.
Services were held Monday, June 2, 1997 in the Alhizer-Wilson Mortuary, wtth burial in the.Oak Hill Cemetery.

Cohen must widen search
for.new joint chiefs chair

plans to use the money to buy a new
WASHINGTON (AP)- Having
home and travel.
lost the leading candidate for Joint
Walters, who works m machme Chiefs chainnan to a furor over
repa1r at the Jeep plant, purchased the · admitted adultery, Defense S,ecretary
winmng ucket m Saturday's Super William Cohen is brOII!!cntng h1s
Lotto at the Uptown Market m Tole- search for a potential nominee for the
do, wh1ch wtll recetvc a $5.000 sell- top military posiuon.
'" 's bonus.
After an agonizing week in which
The second wmmng t1cket was his tllustrious Atr Force career
sold m East Cleveland. The lottery seemed in jeopardy, Gen.Joseph RaJwas wa~ting for the second wmner to ston took himself out of the running
come forward.
to be the next Joint Chtefs chainnan
The winnmg numbers w~re 6, 14, Monday, but said he would continue
27. 32, 36 and 41
as the vice chainnan.
The Jackpot was the btggcst of the
In a statell\ent, President Clinton
year and tted for the b1ggcst m the satd he respected Ralston's dectsion
Super Lotto game.
, , and was pleased he would remain as
. The Jackpot tor . Wednesday s vice chairman. "For 32 years. in war
drawtng wtll be $4 mtlllon.
and in peace, General Ralston has
served our nation with uncommon
distinction," the president said.
A Cohen aide, speaking on condtttOnofanonymity.satdthatwithRalston out of the running Cohen would
McVeigh's less ommous past w11l have to w1dcn his search for candispare him from execution for murder dates. Gen. John Shalikashvih, the
and consptracy. He fac~s death or life current Jomt Chiefs chainnan, had
in pnson for the April 19, 1995, recommended Ralston succeed h1m,
bombing that killed 168 people, the and Cohen was believed 'to be just
deadliest act of domestic tcrronsm tn days away from picking h1m for what
U.S. history
would have been the htgh pntnt of his
Testimony tn the penalty phase c~rccr
was to resume today Jurors could
Under cxtsting congressional
hcgin dell~raltuns as early as d•rectives, Cohen must choose the
Wednesday.
next chatrman from a limited list of
Throughout the trtal that ended senior officers, pnmarily the chiefs or
last week in McVctgh 's conVICtion, staff of each service and the warfightprosecutors argued that McVetgh tng generals and admtrals posted
bombed the Alfred P. Murrah Feder- around the world
al Building exactly two years after the
These mclude Adm. Joseph
deadly siege on the Branch David tan Lopez, commander of NATO's southcompound near Waco, Texas, as em flank; Army Gen, Wesley Clark,
revenge and to spark a second Amer- commander of U.S forces in Central
Ican Revolution.
and South Amcnca; and Manne
Corps Commandant Gen. Charles
Krulak. There IS not necessarily an
urgency to the decision; Shalikashvtli
ts not scheduled to retire until Sept.
Am Ele Power ...................40 718
Akzo ..................................67 314
30.
AmrTech ...........................66 7/8
Wt\hout alluding dtrectly to hts
Alhland 011 .......................47 318
adultery, Ralston satd in a bnef wntAT&amp;T .................................36 318
ten statement that the public has
ilienk One ..........................43 314
Bob Evans ........................15 518
Borg·W•m•r .....................50 1J2
Champion .........................16 718
Toum11111eat planned
Charm Shpa ......................5 3116
Eastern Athletic Boosters wtll
CllY Holding .,....................32 112
Federal Mogul .........................30
host a I0-12 year old gtrls tournaGannett .............................94 314
ment and a 7 and 8 year old boys
QoodyMf ooooohooooooooooooooooooo59 3/4
tournament July 4 and 5. For more
Kmlrt .................................13 112
mformauon restdents may call 667Landa End ...............................30
3653.
'
Ltd.....................................19 314
OVB .........................................31
0M.VIIIey .........................40 511
To entertain
~ ............................. 32 ·3111
Junior and Rita Wliite will play
,,.,.. Flrtl .................................18
hits
of yesteryear following the S
R~II ...........................SI 112
p.m.
dinner at the Meigs Senior CenRD-SM11 ..........................1II 311
ter, Thursday. The public is invited.
ShOMY'I .............................6 118

.,.:.-M
. c vel"gh's you thf u1att rl"b utes
,;
tl" d bY
· f r1en
• , d S t 0 JUrOrS
•
'·• . OU 1ne
DENVER (AP) - Timothy
McVeigh was a lanky class clown
dubbed "chicken" by his high school
classmates He was a top-notch soldier who helped save a comrade's life
and was saddened by beggmg Iraqi
chtldren
McVetgh was all of those things
before he blew up the Oklahoma City
federal bUJidtng, accordmg to fnends
and Army colleagues He was charmtng at times, a young man who
admired fairness He loved strawberry Pop-Tatts
Attorneys for the 29-yeat-old Gulf
War veteran hope glimpses of

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Clinton's ability to escape penalties no mystery
By TONY SNOW
• Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON -- Republicans
often scratch the1r heads and whme
about the Clinton admimstrat1on 's
dexterny in evadmg legal or pollucal
puntshment for us misdeeds. But
there'~ no mystery to the president's
ability to escape.
From Day One, the Clinton team,
b_}' accident or destgn, has carried out
reforms that make it diflleult for outsiders to get tnformation about White
House acuvilies and easy for Clinton's lieutenants to conceal whatever they want.
Wtthin days of taking office, for
tnstance, the president and his aides
clicked off normal lines of communication into the White House. They
fired the ladtes who worked in the
correspondence unil, cashiered the
telephone operators and replaced
both groups with thctr own people.
Unlike prev1ous presidents, Clinton let outsiders, such as Arkansas
political entrepreneur Mark Middleton, maintain offices .(or at least
phones) at the White House. A parade
of political consultants and friends - including Paul Begala, James
Carville, Mandy Grunwald, Stanley
Greenberg and Harry Thomason ••
took up mforml!' quaners in the

IND.

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Excuse me, since when have cosmetics queens been expected to be
pohltcal activtsts? Mohajer is not representative of a generation. She ts
representative of people who sell
makeup.
And that's what really gets under
my skin about this generational stuff:
the myth that the year in which you
were born has any bearing on your
level of intelligence, depth or creativity. Sure each generation has its
own cultural references ,and maybe
even a few collective experiences, but
the fact is that boomers and Gen Xers
have a lot more in common than not.
And what we mostly have in common ts that we are groups of wtdely
dtffercnt people. Some of us arc
sman. Some of us are dumb. Some of
us are ambitious. Some of us are lazy
Some of us care deeply about pollt•cs
Some of us don't give a whit.
Of course, many members of my
generatton are happy to perpetuate
the myth that we arc substanttvcly
dtfferent from our elders, espec1ally
for a profit Novelist Rushkoff must
be laughing all the way to the bank
w1th the money he makes explainmg
h1s generatmn to cxecuttvcs from
compamcs such as Sony,' PepsiCo
and Disney. The New York Times
reports that for $7,500 an hour
Rushkoff offers his theory on why
channel surfing ts an act of rebellion
and a r~jCCl!On of the tradtttonal story arc: "Most ktds arc domg mcdm
constru.:tton whtle watching telcvtston," he informs the boomer execs.
"If you watch kids changing the
channel it's not because they are
bored or have a shon att~ntmn span,
it's because someone is innicting programming on them."
So what do you say, guys? Do we
have a deal'/
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Associalllln.
Send comments to the author In
care or this newspaper or send her
e-mail at saraeumaol.com.

Claude Cunningham, Bidwell, died Thesday, June 10, 1997 in Holzer MedICal Center.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Horne, Pomeroy.

D~rothy

"'•

Falling in love with George Bush
There was an arttcle m The New
Republic of June 9 about the George
Bush Revtval, a movement that has
gained momentum ever since our
41st prestdent jumped out of an atrplane last March. I don 't see how
skydtving bnngs you dignity, but
apparently tt worked for him
The arttcle mtormed me that there
ts a Ftrst Church of George Herbert
Walker Bush, "run by a handful of
evangelicals who hold that Bush ts
the rcmcatnatwn or Chnst " They
apparently believe that the Gulf War
was Armageddon, and Saddam Hus-

Claude Cunningham

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Stook reporte are the 10:3

~==-~byAcMet

· Bible Sclloolllaled
Vacation Bible School will be held
at White's chapel Wesleyan Church,
Coolville, next week, ~:30 to 8:30
p.m. Theme will be "Celebrate with
the Beatitudes Featuring May Jane
Newman of Zanesville'.

"blurred the facts" and created the
false tmpresston that the military
applies a double standard in matters
of sexual conduct. He was referring
to comparisons, ma~y have made tn
recent days between his case and that
of B-52 pilot Ist Lt Kelly Flinn, who
was forced out of the Air For~c on
multiple charges related to her affatr
wtth a mamed Civtlian.
Ralston. 53. a decorated combat
ptlot, made a last-dttch bid Monday
morning to rally support on Capitol
Htll he fore telling Cohen and Gen.
John Shallkashvill. the Joint Ch 1efs
chatnnan, that h~ would rather drop
out than fight oa.
"This ts solely my dcciston, and
I make it wuh a sense of regret," RaJston satd.
Reactton on Capttol Hill underscored the poliucal diflicuhy Ralston
faced
"The aucmpt to have one ~tandard
for a four-star general and another for
a first lieutenant was bound to tail."
satd Rep. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.
Cohen tssued a bnef statement
pratsmg Ralston's servtcc record.
callmg hn'n "fully qualified to serve
as chairman" and tndicating it would
be several w~cks before he was
ready to send Clinton his recommendntiOn on a successor to Shahkashvilt.
Ralston dtd not believe that hts
affair wtlh a ctv1lian woman m the
mtd-1980S while he was estranged
from th1s w1fc bad any bearmg on hiS
professional dut1cs or quallftcattons. '

PLAQUES PRESENTED - Hal kneen, president of the Middleport ~otary Club, aponsor of the GED recognition program,
preaanted a plaque to one of the greduatee, Lou Hamaley of
Pomaroy.

ABLE program graduates
(Continued from Pege 1)
The ABLE instructors. John Dailey, Meryl Houdasheh, Susan King,
Madeline N_eece.A~onell Evans, Lois
lhle and Shtrley ~nchell, asststed by
the Rotary prestdcnt, presented the
awards
John Costanzo was the speaker
and was jomed by several students
who spoke on their experiences of
learning as well as social and personal development through the
ABLE program
Mtchael Jones of the State

Department of Education was a
guest, along wtth representatives of
several local orgamzations who contnbutc to the county's ABLE program
hy etthcr provtdmg space, fundtng, or
student referrals.
Spcakmg bncfly to the OED graduates, Davtd Ma1.e of Hocking College, told of services ava1lablc there
to asSist adults m titnhcring their education. Career counseling and financtal assistance arc among the services
offered, he s81d
Numerous door prizes were
a.wa~d.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhm dtrect hog pnces at selected
buymg pnmts Tuesday as provtded by
the U S Depanment of Agnculture
Market News·
Barrows and gtfts: unevenly
steady; demand moderate on moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 56.50-57.50; plants 57 5058.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 51.0056.50; 210-230 lbs. 46 S0-51 00
Sows: steady.
us. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 42.00-43 00,

few 43 50, 450-500 lbs. 43 00-44.00;
500-600 lhs. 44.00-48.00.
Boars: 39.00-41 00
Esumatcd receipts· 2S.OOO.
Summary of Monday's auctions
at Hillsboro and Creston
Hogs: 2.00 h1gher
Butcher hogs· 53 00 to 5K K5.
Cattle 2 00 lower
Slaughter steers chmcc 60.0066 00, select 55 00-60 00
Slaughter he1lers chmcc 59.0065 00; selc'&lt;!t 54 00-60.00
Cows· steady to lower, all cows
44 50 and down

Floodplain ordinance
(Continued from Page 1)

In other husme" , counctl .
•
Approved the second rcadmg of
weeds or arc hllcrcd w1lh dchns, an
a
proposed
uttllty service termmatton
opposition to village ordmances
ordmancc:
requmng property to kept clean
• Approved the mmulcs of the
He was tnstructed to contact the
people llvmg at those reSidences and May 27 mcetmg and pa1d bills,
• Approved the mayor's report of
have them clean the property by July
$5,K92,
mcludmg $589 20 m old
4
fines.
Counctl Prcstdent Beth Sttvers.
• Agreed to purchase a full -page
prestd1ng tn the ahscncc of Mayor
advertisement
m The Daily SenDewey "Mac" Horton. passed along
tinel
's
special
June
2 tablotd coma request lrom Honon to horrow
memorating
M1ddleporLs
200th
$10,000 to make final rcpatrs to the
anm
vcrsary
,
pool wuh the goal ot havmg tl open
• Met in cx.ccullvc scss1on to d1s~
on or before July 4.
cuss
personnel matters
Counctlman
Mtck
Ch1lds
Present
were Slivers, Hockman,
approved, saymg, "We need to get II
Childs
and
counCJI members Rae
done and get on w1th 11"
Gw1azdowsky.
John Neville and
It was observed that people have
already been h1red to work at the Sandy lannarelli .
pool
Council approved the linanctal
report for May showmg the followmg balances
general fund,
$6,38965;strcct,$14,511 31, mmtature golf course, $1,422,64; law
enforcement, $777 37; fire equtpmcnt, (-$4,169.95); fire truck,
$16,326.81, COPS FAST grant,
$48.63, pool tmprovemcnts, ($1,273.83), economtc development,
$3,959.75. public transportatton, (Our statistics show thai mature
$20,270 76), law block grant,
drivers
and home owners have
$8,02K 78, Issue II, $0. revolving
fewer
and
less costly losses
loan. $0; ODNR-.Boat launch. (than
other
age
groups. So It's
$1 ,467.28), refuse, $0, CHIP, SO, tree
only
lair
to
charge
you less for
plantmg, $0, diSaster relief fund,
your
Insurance
Insure
your
$7,305 , water debt scrvtce,
with
us
and
save
home
and
car
$88,355 30, sewer debt serv1ce,
w1th our special
multi-J&gt;olio~v diSCounts
Untts of the Metgs County Emer- $55,071 49, water tank, $0; water
gency Medical Scrvtcc recorded four system, $76,620 59, sewer system,
calls for assistance Monday. Units $40,506.67, recreation , $780 42,
cemetery, (-$141.3K) meter depoSits,
responding included:
$81,062 77 . total all fun ?.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9.54 a.m .. Bashan Road, Racme, $512,740.24
Bob Jeffers, Veterans Memorial Hospttal, Racme squad asststcd,
IIMCAIII IIA.!'IIIDB BA'ftBUW-:
,.---------~
L
II 01 a.m., Chtldrens Home Road,
- - ..]..!'!!'1!!.0!!. 1- - Pomeroy, Allee Brown, VMH;
12:52 a.m. General Hartinger
Parkway, Mtddleport, Kathlene Manley, VMH;
6.28 p.m , State Route 681 West,
Darw,n, John Baxter, treated at the

We Gife Mature

Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Meigs EMS runs

scene.

Commission
(Continued from Page 1)
at the Department of Human Services, at an annual cost of $5,SOO;
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $865.428.99, with 136
entries.
Present, tn addition to auck and
Spencer, were Commissioners Janet
Howard and Fred Hoffman, Clerk
Gloria Kloes and Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes. Commisstoner Jeffrey Thornton was attending a County Commissionert Association of
Oluo meeting, and was absent.

@_,f)

OGAN

RNER _;

surance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6887

Auto-o.m..r. I,.,,..,.ee
Life Home Car Business

n. ~ fi.Jio.'

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-'Sports

The Daily Sentin~!
..

TUIINy, June 101 1887

n. Dally Sentinel• Ptlgl 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

June1 1917

·- -. . .~

,_

'

Mabry. extends hitting .streak to ·20 games
By The Alsoc:illa.d Preu

.
Lankford and Mabry each drove
in three runs and Delino DeShields
went 3-for-5 and scoml twice.
Tony Gwynn singled in the sixth
and eighth innings and now has the
second-longest hitting streak in his
caree~. 19 games. He hit in 2S straight
games il) 1983 . .

Since leaving San Diego in 1995,
Andy Benes added a.pitch to his arsonal.
Monday night. he showed it ta the
Padres.
Benes dominated his former team
for eight innings and John Mabry
extended the NL's longest hitting Dodgers 8, ~ 3
streak to 20 gaines as the St. Louis
At Los Angeles, Todd Zeile hit a
Cardinals beat the Padres 9-1.
pair of. two-run homers and Los
Benes, making his first start in San Angeles capitalized on second baseDiego since the Padres traded him to man C_raig Biggio's erro~ in the
Seattle on July 31, 1995, allowed four fourth to score the tying and go-ahead
hits, struck out seven and walked runs.
two.
.
Ramon Martinez (6-3) allowed
"I had a good changeup tonight, nine hits in seven innings to win his
and that's something they haven' t sixth straight decision against Hous- .
really seen in the past, so ·it's to my ton. The right-hander walked two and
advantage, " said Benes, who hadn't tied a season-high with nine strikequite mastered the change while he outs.
was with the Padres. ·
Zeile, whose previous seven
" He's using his changeup real homers were solo shots, connected in
well," said San Diego manager Bruce the first and seventh innings off
Bochy, whose club has only one run Chris Holt (6-5).
and I0 hits in two games: "This was Gian,ts 7, Marlins 4
another great pitching performance
At San Francisco, Barry Bonds
homered and drove in four runs to
we've faced in two days."
Houston's Darryl Kite pitched a help rookie Keith Foulke ( 1-1) get his
five-hitter against San Diego on Sun- first major league win. .
The Giants have won nine straight
day.
Elsewhere in the National League, home. games over the Marlins.
it was: Los Angeles 8, ijouston 3;
Bonds hit a three-run homer, his
San Francisco 7, Aorida 4;' Montre- third homer in two games; to help the
al 6, Chicago 5; Colorado 8, Atlanta Giants open a 6-0 lead in the fifth off
3; and the New York Mets 4, Cincin- Pat Rapp (.4-3).
·
nati 2.
Foulke allowed one run. and three
The Cardinals were the latest hits in 6 1-3 innings.
team to benefit from ineffective Expos 6, Cubs 5
Padres' starting pitching as Ray
At Montreal, Jeff Juden (6-2)
Lankford hit a two-run homer in the pitched into the seventh and Henry
first off rookie Will Cunnane (4-2), Rodriguez hit a three-run triple as
and Mike Difelice and Dmitri Young Montreal completed a four-game
connected on back-to-back shots to sweep.
open the fifth.
Juden, who gave up two runs and
·s an Diego lost for the fourth time five hits in six-plus innings, did not
in five games and for the eighth time allow a hit until Scott Servais singled
in nine home games.
·
. leading off the fifth.

-Scoreboard.---..
w
Atlanta
Florida
New York
Montreal
Philadelphia

41
35
34
33
21

w

31
31
29
24
24

Pinsburgh
Houston

St. Louis ·
Cin.;:innati

Chicago

w

.

Nailona!Leque
East Division
L '
Pel.
GB
21
.661
26
' .574
5 112
27
.557
6 1/2
28
.54).
7,112
39
.350
19
Central Division
L
Pet.
Gil
30
.508
3f
:492
I
32
.475
2
37
.393
7
38
.387
7 1/2
West Division
l'ct.
_ GB
L
.574
26
. I 1/2
.548
28
.492
5
31
34
.443
8

The four-game sweep was MonTom Glavine (~) wu reached
. treal's first over Chicago since Sept. for eight hits and five runs in eight
11-13, 1979. '
innings.
F.P. Santangelo went 3-for-4 with
Colorado's Larry WalkeF'went 3an RBI double as the Expos won their for-4 to raise hit major league-leadseventh straight at home against
Chicago.
The Cubs have lost five straigh~
their longest losing skid since opening the season with .an NL-record 14game streal!:.
F1111lk Castillo (3-8) took the loss.
Rockies 8, Braves 3
At Denver, Vinny Castilla hit a
three-run home run - the tOOth of
his career - and Ellis Burks had a
solo shot in a game delayed nearly 2
112 hours by rain.
For the fourth straight day, the
Rockies were di srupted by rain at
Coors Field. Following a rainy weekend series of postponements, delays
and tornado warnings against Aori•
da, the opener of a three-game series
with: Atlanta was delayed for 2 hours,
26 minutes in the second inning.
· Roger Bailey (6-5) allowed nine
hilS in 5 1-3 innings for the win.

Baltimore
New York
Toron10
Detroit
Boston

40

17

.,

ing average to .422.
Atlanta's Kenny Lofton reached ·
base five times with three hits and
two walks.
Mets 4, Reds,l
At Cincinnati, Bobby Jones won
his eighth consecutive start to
beCome the NL's first 11 -game winner.
Jones allowed seven hilS over
eight innings, including Jeff Bt'anson's two-run homer that tied it·in the
seventh. John Franco pitched the
ninth for his 16th save in 18 opportunities.
Stan Belinda ((}.2) let in the goahead run with a wild pitch in the
eighth, .and Manny Alexander added
a sacrifice fly in the ninth off Jeff
Shaw. ·
,..
Jones has won II games faster
than any pitcher in Mets hisiory.

•

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TRACK AND FIELD
. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mary
Slaney and Sandra Farmer-Patrick,
both suspended by track and field's
international governing body for
alleged drug use, decided to compete
in this week's USA Track and Field
Championships.
Slaney, the nation's premier distance runner, and Farmer-Patrick, a
· star hurdler, contes.ted the ruling by
the International Amateur Athletic ·
Federation.' However, there was ail
unexplained problem with FarmerPatrick's declaration.
·

taken
togetller ·

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BALTIMORE (AP) - Orioles
outfielder Eric Davis will have a
mass remo~ed from his abdomen lat·
er this week and will be sidelined for
eight weeks.
Davis, who was placed on the 15day disabled list on May 31, will
undergo a laparotomy Friday at Johns
FOOTBALL
Hopkins Hospital. The 35-year-old
KANSAS CIT\', Mo. (~P) Kansas Pty signed free agent safety . outfielder, who last played at CteveKevin Ross, 35, who spent I0 years land on May 25, was batting .302
in the Chiefs secondary from 1984- with seven homers.
93. Kansas City also signed wide TENNIS
HALI:.E; Germany (AP)- David
receiver Brett Perriman and offensive

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llurglars.

·• TUm wacaaonslnto

tax deductions

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.IFATHER'S NAME _ _ _;;___ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;..,..,...---------

1CITY, STATE

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Most valuable magazine ever published•••

r--------~--------------------~------~------------~---~
1
CIRCLE ONE:
A. 1X3 GREmNG •••$10.00 B. 1X4 GREmNG AND PICTURE...$13.00
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Fill Out The Form Below And Drop Off With PayfT1ent TC?

Baltimore (ErickiOD 8·2 and Boskie 3-2) at Boston (Wakefield 2-.4
· .
t..
Oakland (Prieto 4-3) 81 Detroit (Blair 3·2), t:05 p.m.
· Milwaukee (Eidled 6-3) at Clevel•"'! (Nagy 6-3), 7:05 p.m.
Chicago .White Sox (Navarro 4-4) at N.Y. Yankees (l'etune 7-3).
·
7:35p.m.
Seattle (Moyer 5-2) at 1\lronto (Hentgen 5-3), 7:35 p.m.
Thxas (Will 7-2) at Minnesota (Thwksbury 2-6), 8:05 p.m.
Anaheim (i:&gt;iekson 7-2) at Kansas City (Appier 4-4), 8:05p.m.
Wedlleedlir'• G Seattle (Puaero 5-2) at 1Uron10 (Clemens 11-0), 12:35 p.m.
Oakland (Oquist 1-2) at Delroit (Lira·4-J), 1:05.p.m.
.
Anaheim (Finley 3-.4) at Kansu City (Rosado 5·3), 2:05 p.m.
Baltiii!ORO (Kamieniecki 4-2) at Boston (Sele 6-5), 7:05p.m.
·
Milwaukee (McDonald 6-4) at Cleveland (HetllliHt 6.2), 7:05p.m. '
Chi&lt;:o~ White Sox {Drabelc 54) 11 N.Y. YlllkeeJ (Ragen 4-3), 7:35
p.m.
ruu (Burkett 4-5) at Minnesota ·(Aldred 2-8), 8:05 p.m.

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(YOUR FATHER'S
. NAME)

The Daily S$ntinel "Father's Day" ·
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

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HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY ·

(YOUR FATHER'S
NAME)

-'

• Outwit •ugger In
sen-service ·elewator

::::::::-=•
•••lily

and Eshelman 0.0), 2, 5;05 p.m.

~)

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

HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY

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&gt;-&lt;
\
r-:,\\ ~ .,. . ~;;3

lf:l

maslc .
car rental

• How to lilly a house
wltll no down payment

LOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
SUSAN

Tueltlay'l~

~,

lltJI&gt;·' '''

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Deadline For Thia Special Fadaer!. Day Tnbule I• Tue1day,

p:

• Use pos18 stamps to
solwe ma elmpotenca
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praiii&amp;RI .

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....

• Wlllcll
dogs·deter

I, 6-1 in the first round of the Carisbo International clay-court tennis
tournament.
In other matches Monday, thirdseeded Javier Sanchez of Spain,
Italy's Marzio Martelli and Spain's .
Alben Panas easily moved into the
second round.
LONDON (AP) - Australia's
Jason Stoltenberg, seeded 14th, was
upset by little-known German Jens
BOLOGNA, Italy (AP) - Top- Knippschild 7-5, 3-6, 6-2 in the first
seeded Albeno Berasategui of Spain · round of the l,.ondon Grass Court
defeated Austria's Gil ben Schaller 6- Champi"nships.

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Prinosil, a German ranked 48th in the .
world, broke his foot sliding on the
grass courts, sending Thomas Muster
into the second round of the GeiT)'·
Weber Open.
Germany's Michael Stich, the No.
7 seed, defeated compatriot Bernd
Karbacher 4-6, 7-5, 6-i. Other winners included, Americans Grant
Stafford and Jeff Tarango.

LOVE, JO~N, JOE AND
SUSAN

27
.557
8
' 30 '
.483
12 1/2
32
.458
14
35
.407
17
Central Division ,
L
l't:L
GB
W·
27
.526
30
Cleveland
30
.483
2 1/2
28
Milwaukee
31
.475
3
Kansas City
28
32
.467
j 112
28
Chic~go
.3.4
.443
5
27
Minnesota
West Division
W
L
l't:L
GB
Seattle
33
28 •
.541
Anaheim
32
28
.533
1/2
Texas
· 31
28
.525
I
Oakland
26
·· 37
. .413
8
Monday's multi
. .
·
Baltimore 10. Chicago While Sox 2
Anaheim 12, Kansas City 5
Only games scheduled

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WILD PITCH • New York Metl runner John Olerud scores on
1 wild pitch by Cincinnati's Stln Belinda, stlndlng, In the eighth
Inning Monday In Cincinnati. The Meta went on to win, 4-2. (AP)

Let Everyone Know Your Dad Is ·
Someone·Very Special With A .
Father's Day Thank You Tribute·To
Be Published In The Dally Sentinel
On Friday, .J~ne ·13!

34
28
27
24

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;•• to pay
late

BASEBALL

.702

•Messages
that make
hanl.;toreach people
call you
Iaack

•,• 8111s h's

lineman RalphTamm.
Perrinian, 32, was a free agent
from Detroit and the leading receiver in Lions' history with 428 catches ..
In addition, the Chiefs released
· starting safety Brian Washington.

Eao;t Oi¥ision
Pci. · GB

.•

never to
eat on an
. airplane ·
• How to
knoW when
a slot machine
Is ready to pay·on.

Monday's
sports highlights

.Americ::an Le•gue

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San Francisco 35
Colorado . 34
Los Angeles 30
San Diego
27
Monday's results
· N.Y. Mets 4, Cincinnati 2
Montreal 6, Ctiicago Cubs 5
Los Angeles 8, Houston 3
St. Louis 9, San Diego I
San Francisco 7, Florida 4
Colorado·8, Atlanta 3
Only games scheduled
1\lcsday's Games
·
Florida (Brown 5-4) at San Francisco (VanLandingham ~-3), 3:35
p.m.
Philadelphia (Stephenson 2-2 ) at Montreal !Hermanson 2-41. 7:35
p.m.
Pittsburgh (Schmidt l-4) Of Cincinnati (Burba 4-5). 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Miicki 1-5 ) at Chicago Cubs [Foster 7-3), 8:05p.m.
Atlanta {Neagle 8-1) at Colorado (Ritz 5-4), 9:05p.m.
Houston {Reynolds 4-6) at Los Angeles (Valdes 3-7). 10:05 p.m. .
St. Louis {Stottlemyre 4-4) at San Diego {Bergman 1-1 ), 10:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
.
·
N.Y. Mets (Reynoso 5-0) at Chicago Cubs {Gonzalez 2-1), 2:20p.m.
Atlanta (Wade 2-3) at Colorado (Thomson 1-.4), 3:05 p:m.
Florida (Helling 1-4) at San Francisco (Rueter 2-1), 3:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (M.Leiter 4-6) at Montreal {Bullinger 3-5), 7:35p.m.
Pittsburgh (Loaiza 5' 21 at Cincinnati (Tomko 1-1), 7:35p.m.
·
Houston (Hampton 2-4) at Los Angeles (Park 4-3), 10:35 p.m.
St. Louis (AI.Benes 5-51 at San Diego {Hamilton 4-3), 10:35 p.m.

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PomlnJY •lllddllport, Ohio

Mussina in full control for streaking Orioles
CHICAOO (AP)- Mike Muasitwo weeks aao
aaaiast Clevcllnd, showed off his
..--flawless conttol in a dominating
perfonnance against the Chicqo
Wllite Sox.
"l'm aettins the ball where I
Wlllt," said Mussina, who won his
eighth conseeutive decision Monday
night as the Baltimore Orioles routeel the White Sox 1().2 for their ninth
victory in II games.
"I chlllgecl speeds, threw strikes
and had great defense behind me. I
gave up a couple home runs, but as
long as they are solo: I can Jive with
thaL"
•
Mussina (8·1), wbo worked 8 1-3'
perfect innings in an eventual one-hitter against the Indians on May 30,
allowed five hits and struck out six in .
his second complete game of the
year. The right-hander lost his shutout
in the seventh on the solo homers·by
Alben Belle and Lyle Mouton.
"He's very consistent, using all
. his pitches," Balti111ore manager
Davey Johnson said: "'He's keeping
the ball down. He's pitching out front
in the count and has r:cally been in
total con,tmand." .

aa. -ty perfBct

· WATCHES DRIVE • Tiger Wooda Ia 1unounct.d bV the pllery
as he watchee hl1 drive on the 9th tee It the Congr111lo;•l Country Club In Bathaedli, Md., Monday. The u.S. Open ltartl Thur1- .
day It Cong1'811lo11aL (AP)
·

utive 19-victory seasons, hu 74
striboua 111d 16 walks ' in 87 2-3
innings this year.
"The bottom line for us 'hu been
our pitching," Orioles fint buem111
Rafael Palmeiro said. "It sets up
everythinJ we do offensively, IJid it
setsuphowweapproacheachpnie.
Last year; we got into a home nm-hitling mentality and felt that we bad to
slug it out in order to win."
In the only other American
4ague game Monday night, Califomia rollted Kansas City 12-5.
·
Baltimore, which stretched its AL
EaSt lead over New York to eight
games, took a .5-0 lead with a fourrun fifth, capped by Jeffrey Ham- ·
monds' two-run homer off James
Baldwin (3-8). BJ. Surhoff was 4for-.5 to raise his average to .3.50,
while Mike Bordick and Brady
Anderson each had three hits.
In the fifth, Robeno Alomar
reached on a fielder's choice, stole
second and moved to third on ·a
passed .ball. Rafael Palmeiro doubled
in a run, Surhoff added an RBI single and Hammonds followed with his .
sixth homer.
Hammonds, hitting .291 with 18 ·

DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Red Stanley Cup would be back.
The biggest cheers were forYzer- can't recall one that was more of a .
Wings captain Steve Yzerman
·. "I knew this d~y would como," man, who in completing his 14th sea- .team than this one," said Bowman, '
summed up the city's sentiments sa1d Richard Chmielewski of New . son had been with ·the Wings for a who led the Montreal Canadiens to
when he said: "I couldn ' I wait to get Balttmore, who attended the Cup- thint of their 42 year Stanley Cup five titles and the Pittsburgh Penguins ;
it over, but I wish we could start all clinching game Sllturday the sam.e drought
.
.
to one.
over again."
. day he was relea_sed from the hosp1He was iliveil a three-minute
"It was the most unselfish group ,
Fans just aien't ready for this sea- tal after undergomg a heart catheter- standing ovation before he spoke. of players," Yzerman said.
··
son, the team's first Stanley Cup sea-. IZaiion procedure.
When he was done, his teammates
The players said they had formed
"I wasn't going to miss that," he lifted him on their shoulders 111d he a special bond.
Woods has a ton of competition son in 42 years, to end. Even after
asain held up the Stanley Cup.
"We're always going to have this
lined up for the Open as he tries to · spending nearly three hours saluting said.
The pany Monday night allowed
"I will always be proud to be a moment," Brendan Shanahan said.
follow up his April victory in the the team during a party for season
Masters with the first back-to-back. ticket-holders Monday night at Joe . the team and lhefans to pay respect Detroit Red Wing, to live in Detroit," "We went through a war buys, and :
Yzerman said. "I'll never play in we won."
Masters-U.S. Open championship Louis Arena, hundreds of fans lined to one another.
"One more year," the fans chant- another uniform. I'll retire a Detroit
No one has seemed to enjoy the
double since Jack Nicklaus in 1972. a driveway and a walkway ovethead
waiting
for
another
glimpse
of
the
ed
to
Igor
Larionov
and
coach
ScotRed
Wing."
.
·
celebrations
more than Shanahan. He
But he has no competition when it
players
as
they
c)rove
away.
·
ty
Bowman.
Larionov
is
an
unre·
1;\ut
it
was
a
celebration
fQr
the
stancd
the
season
playing for Harte
comes to being the most popular
And many oflthose fans and thou- stricted free agent and l)owman is whole team, as player after player and · ford and said' all he wanted was to
golfer'around.
.
.
.
Bowman reminded the fans that the play for a contender.
,
Woods finished his abbreviated sands more planned to return to the considering retiring.
city
today
for
a
victory
parade
and
"I
love
you,"
said
Larionov,
who
·
key
was
that
the
team
played
·
s
o
well
"'When
1
think
back
to
where
I
practice round with a series of sand .
,
had to pause to fight back his emo- as a unit
.
w~s at the beginning of the year, I'm
shots from the bunker around the rally.
Fans said they never doubted the tions:
"Of all the teams I was with, 1 just grateful," he said.
ninth green. When one landed inches from the hole, the crowd went wild
with an outpouring of oohs and aahs
and shouts of "You the man, Tiger,"
and "You got a future in the game,
SALT ·LAKE CITY (AP) ·_
"This situation may be exactly s~emed to he satisfied with winning 92 team that beat Portland in Games
man."
Michael Jordan isn't worried about what we need,'" Jordan said. "The the elusive Western Conference · 5 and 6 to win the series 4-2, and the
For Woods, the toughc~t· part of himself. When it comes to his team- . auitude needs to elevate. A lot of championship and not up to the task · two star.; are unhappy with the non- •
being a golfer is that he now has to . mates, however, he has a few doubrs. these players (on the Bulls) have nev- · of dethroning tbe defending champs. contributions the Bulls are getting
"We haven't been put in this posi· erexperienced repeating or defending But two straight victories have from their comparatively inexperilive up to the expectation that he will
tion
for J1 long_time, lind that's fuJl,,to a title . .It's hard,~r to do~._anj. w~'re .. l!,rought the J~ io a state of near- .. enced . supponing cast - most.
become the greatest ever ·IO play the
Jordan said Monday, a tlay after findmg that out.
me,"
game. Anything less will be consid.
. ..
~uphorta while the Bulls have notably Dennis Rodman.
.
the Utah Jazz tied the series 2·2 to
ered a failure.
The ~ood of this series ·has slumped into a·situation they haven't
The teague's leading rebooRder
History is the toughest ·measuring become the first team since the 1991 - changed S)nce a week ago when the experienced in five years. •
has been a complete non-factor in'this
92 Poittand' TrUll ·Bftzers io ha~~ Bulls were on 'their way ·to taking a:· ·11,_:, Jordan and Pippen are the only series; and most .of Chicago's 'Other
stick to grow up against.
Woods followed his record-setting knotted a championship · round 2-0 lead agamst a Utah team that tworemainingmembersofthe 1991- role players have contributed little.
victory in the Masters with a victory against Cl)icago after four games.·
"It's a great challenge, 111d no one
ia the Byron Nelson Classic and then
said
this was going to be easy. This
a fourih-plai:e finish in the Colonial
team
is malting us work hard for it;"
before finishing neariy last at the
Jordan said.' "'I expect us to come out
Memorial. .
Clearly something, .ther it was with more focus and to be reener·
the hectic schedule or just pure giled, to play with purppse. And the
purpose is more clearly defined now
exhaustion, was getting to him.
because of the situation we're in. "
Today is the second straight off
day in the series, which resumes
Wednesday night at the Delta Center
shoulder felt weak and the pain before moving back to Chicago fo~
Game 6 on Friday and Game 7, if
returned.
·
"We're not sure .w~at's going on necessary; on Sunday.
inside the shoulder that's causing the
weakness," Dr. Timothy Kremchek
said Monday.
·
Kremchek, who will assist with
.
.
.
the exploratory surgery, said a magnetic resonance imaging test performed . over the weekend .found
some deterioration ill the shoulder's
By
condition, but gave no clue as to the
Dave
underlying problem.
Brantley has had a variety of tests
that found no significant damage to
the shoulder muscles or the joint
Doctors have been working on a
diagnosis of tendinitis. · .
Andrews examined Brantley for
the third time on Monday. ,
It's almost inevitable that a
"He didn' t find a whole lot of
narrow
mind and · a wide
change from the first two times,"
mouth go together.
Kremchek said.
'

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) - The
ninth hole at Congressional Country
Club is the kind of par-5 that no one
considers trying to reach in two
"shots - not even Tiger Woods.
It is 607 yards long with the land'ing area off the tee pinched by
..bunkers and a deep ravine guarding
. the green. The wise thing to do is lay
up off the tee and lay up with the second shot, then try to get close to the
pin.
Woods feathered a 3-wood off the
tee Monday in his first practice round
at Congressional Country Club
before Th.ursday"s stan of .the 97th
U.S. Open,then laid up again with a
2-iron to the green.
·
That was ·not good enough for a
gallery that was used to the impossible from Woods.
· "Go for it," they yelled.
"Show me the money," someone
screamed, using the catch line from
the movie "Jerry Maguire."
Woods, laughing now, reached in
his pocket·and took out another ball
and a·tee and teed the ball up. in the
fairway and went at the green with
his driver.
The shot missed to the right side,
but the effon drove the crowd w·ild.
· The ovation he received as he walked
to the green was as if it was Sunday
at the Open and he was protecting. a
lead.

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technology
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Sandra Laudennilt of Pomeroy and
Terry Phalin of Marietta, has graduated from Washington State Com'milnity College in Marietta.
. She received an associate degree
ih·office administrative technology.
Phalin is an employee in the offices
:or Drs. Brockitt, Leopold, and Tap·pel in Marietta.
. She was a 1995 honor graduate
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Rutland

Jeffers marks
·sixth brithday
Jamie Renee Jeffers' cel~brated
her sixth binhday May I with a pan
at the home of her parents, Don and
Jennifer King Laudennili of New
LlmaRoad, Harrisonville .
Attending the pany were her parents, sisters~ Jamie and Amber,
paternal grandparents, Donnie and
Donna Laudern\ih, Middleport;
maternal grandmQther, Joan King,
Julie Kind, Dave Reeves, Shawn
Reeves, Jeff King, Summer, Brittany
·and Ashley King, all of Harrisonville and Matt Older. .
Cake, ice cream and chips were
served. Jamie is the granddaughter
of the late Jack King •.Sr.

'

Ann
Landers
1995, lu1 A.nJeles
limo Syndica~ and Cre•
aklf1 Syndk:ale.

the ignorance of some people who
sho uld know better.' l was once
asked, "What time of the year do
deer tum inio elk?" However, if
someone asked me, "Who is the
prime minister of Canada?" I probably would have said, " Pierre
Trudeau." -- J.B. , Independence ,
Ore.
Dear J.: Your humility is refresh· ·
ing. Thanks for generous and lighthearted response. Weare all ignorant
·-only on different subjects.

a

Local delegates to
attend camp meeting

El~mentary

holds Family
Science Night
A Famil&gt;: Science Night was held
at Rutland Elementary recently
funded by a grant from Southeast
Ohio's Region~ Professional Development Center.
Through this grant teachers,
Carol Evans, Donna Jenkins, and
Betty Ann Wolfe, were able to pur' chase materials for use for the Fam,
ily Science Night and for 'use later In
the classroom. Materials were
selected that compliment and sup. plement the current science series
and/or curriculum~
During the Family Science Night
SCIENCE PROJECTand studenti worked together ala '
there were three concurrent sessions
family
science
night
held
racenlly
at Rutland Elementary School.
of about20-25 minutes in which stuHere
Shirley
Miller,
left,
joins
Chrissy
Miller, Miranda Stewart, A1h ·
dents were paired with family memO'Brian,
and
Tyler
Barne1
fQr
work
on
a
project.
bers to actively engage themselves
. in activities. Parents and st4dents
switched .three times to attend sessions on astronomy, simple
machines, color and light an!l magnets.
·
Carol Evans purchased special
lego kits on levers, wheels and
axles, gears, or pulleys for participants to build. · There were also
activities for students to test concepts, such as friction.
Betey Ann Wolfe had sfaiions on '
magnets and color and light. Participants observed the component colors of white light and tested the
properties of magnets, such as ·
observing the magic floating magnets.
Donna Jenkins purchased mate.
rials for ' a solar system theme and
her students
WORKING TOGETHER •• sess1ons on aa t ronomy, a1mp 1a· .
co
e 15 throdemonstrated
gh
· scientific
1 th
. nc P .
u expenmen s . ey . machines, color and light and magnets were .presented at the Rut.
had prepared on vanous th~mes; land Elementary School family science night. Here Julia Vaughan .
such as plants, heat, and energy.
and son, Corey, work on a simple machine project.
A parent, John Lentes, provided
refreshments and ·film for photographs for the evening.

Pastor Randy Barr of the Rutland Church of God has announc~d Camp
Meeting '97 for the Churches of God. in Southern Ohio. The annual spiritu·
al festival will be held June 16-20, 1997 at .Princeton Pike Church of God ,
2470 Princeton Pike, Hamilton.
. • Special guests will include Dr. 'Paul L Walker, General Overseer of the
. Church of God; Dr. Ray H. Hughes, Chainnan of the World Pentecostal
Conference, will be the night speaker; and Mark Walker, Pastor of Mt. Paran
Nonh, Atlanta, Georgia, will he the morning Bible teacher. Other guests will
include Reverend Gale Barnell, Chairman of the World Missions Board and
State Overseer of Texas; Pastor Jim McPherson of Oakcre.ek, Kellering,
Ohio; and David Ray, Youth Missions/Step Ministries Coordinator, Cleveland, Tennessee.
Each service will feature festival choirs, ensembles, and special music.
· Bennie Triplett, state overseer, will moderate the meeting. State Director
Wayne E. Wicker will supervise youth, children's and evangelism activities.
Over'l20 congregations will participate. All churches and denominations are
invited to attend .

Moody birth announced
Jim and Lisa Moody of West
Columbia, W.Va. announce the binh
of their first child, Roben Gregory,
Born at Cabell Huntington Hospital Tuesday, May 13, he weighed 8
pounds and 5 ounces. He measured
21 inches long.
His grandparents are George and
Judith Starcher of West Columbia
and George and Marjorie Moody of
Chesire. Great-grandparents are
Gaynell McAbee and the. late Ben
McAbee of West Columbia and
Mary Starcher and the late George
Starcher of Pomeroy.:

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-,---Community calendarThe Community Calendar Is ing donors. with 0 negative blood
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.
'
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EAST ~EIOS -- Eastern Athletic
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TUESDAY
POMEROY -· Meigs County high school.
Chamber of Commerce luncheon,
· · Tuesday, noon, Senior Citizens Cen- FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows Fel-.
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Ponderosa, Gallipolis, II
lowship,
Council. to speak.
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DARWIN -- Bedford Township
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Eastern OAPSE 448, piCmc,
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members and· families, Royal Oak
WEDNESDAY
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.POMEROY --Red Cross Blood- · . 6:30p.m. M~. drinks and table serrriobile at Meigs County Senior Cit- vice provided Take covered dish.
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What can we say to the couple to tion, and it is also possible that fetish" is one that is ~hared by more
convince tliem to get married? Esmerelda and her boyfriend will people than you think -- mostly
Esmerelda says she will marry only chat1ge their minds.
males. I have printed their letters in
for love and doesn't want to be marDear Ann Landers: I'm a very this space before.
ried by a justice of the· peace. Her happily married man, 46 years old.
Your desire to be punished in this
boyfriend isn:t in any hurry to for- with two chi14ren and an excellent way may be rooted in feelings of
malize their relationship "with a job as a professional engineer. There shame or worthlessness about somerin,g and a preaelier. ~· How can we is. however, a dark side to my life thing that happened long ago. It's
tum this shocking news into a joyful that no one elseis aware of.
possible that being spanked relieves
event?-- Apprehensive in Arizona
I have a compulsion that, while your anxiety and reduces your feelDe.ar Arizona: It is apparent that not morally wrong or harmful. ings of guilt. The fact that there are
Esmerelda and her boyfriend' do not makes me -feel guilty and afraid. I people who ."do this for a price"
wish to be married, in spite of the like to be spanked. There l!l'e people should let you know you aren't
circumstances. To pressure them who do this for a price, and I visit alone.
·
intp a marriage that · neither one one every other month. I greatly
Instead of paying someone to
wants would be a mistake.
enjoy this, but I am ashamed of it . spank you, I suggest that you spend
After the child is born, your and fear possible hidden conse- the money on a therapist 311d try to
daughter should bring the baby to quences .
rid yourself of this neurotic compulvisit the grandmothers, and if possiThis is not a joke, Ann. I really sion. ·
ple, the baby's .father should accom- want a better understanding of my
Dear Ann Limders : Awhile back,
pany them. When they hold the wee strange fetish and hope you can you printed a leller from "Puzzled in
one .in their arms, I doubt that there help. -- Denver Dilemma
Ontario," who cqmplained that
will be any condemnation onejecDear Denver: Your "strange Americans know . nothing about

To ensure prompt publication, of family reunions, fhe Gallipolis Daily
TribunF requests that anicles be neatly typed and double spaced for ·easy
editing. Reunion items should not exceed 300 words and must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
·
No eKceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

• Each year, breast cancer claims the lives of 46,000 women in the

u.s,

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Our 24-yearold daughter, "Esmerelda," and her
23-year-old boyfriend are expecting
a baby in the faiL The news shocked
all of us, including my daughter and
her boyfriend. After he sustained a
football injury in high school, his
doctor told him he was sterile.
Because the two of tbem are not
married, we don 't feel we can share
this news with our family and
friends. EsJ.Oerelda's grandmothers
are quite elderly and very religious.
News like this would surely cause
anger and alienation. Since we live
1.400 miles away from most of our
relatives, Esmerelda has suggested
that we just not tell them. This
would be my first grandchild and the
grandmothers' first · great-grandchild. Not telling them would be
tremendously stressful for me.

~arents

.

Know~.

'

Sh9tgun marriage would never work

Jordan: Utah making Buns work hard for repeat

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 .
.

'

Cincinnati Reds notes
CINCINNATI (AP) '-- No one is
sure what's wrong with Jeff Brantley's pitching shoulder, so doctors
will perform arthroscopic surgery on
Wednesday · to find out why the
Cincinnati Reds closer has pain when
he throws.
Brantley was examined Monday
. by Dr. James Andrews in Binningham, Ala., for pain and ,weakness in
.the back of the right shoulder. Brantley has been on the disabled list since
May 20, ,his second stint on the DL
this season for the same problem.
Brantley, who tied Los Angeles'
Todd Worrell for the major-league
lead with 44 saves last· season, has
received three conisone shots and
done .extensive therapy to s'rengthen
the shoulder. It feels fine except when
he tries to throw.
When Brantley tried to play catch
last Friday, he had to stop because the

•

•

ce;ei;·;.;tiOnS";;O'ntin'U';&amp;,~-;;;e;~;;;; Red Wings

:Fans waiting for Tiger
are not disappointed
~

•

111nounced that fellow outfielder l'zic thinl homer.
•
Davis is scheduled to undergo
"We bad our opportunities early
surpry Friday to remov~ 1111 abscess but didn't take adVIIItage," Mouton
from his abdomen.
said. "'We were able to SC111Ch out a
"With tbe loss of Eric, Jeffrey couple of home runs, but they were
really needs to play well,"1said John- solo shots, so no harm dcme." ,
son, who will be without Davis for at
Baltimore made it 9-2 in the
leasteightweeks. "It'sadevastatinl eighth on Bordick's two-i\ln double,
blow because'Eric is a big part of this Anderson's RBI single and a throwclub. But we have a group of guys .ing error by catcher Jorge Faberaas. '
who Clll pick up the slack. We're Bordick singled in the final run In the .
going to need everybody."
ninth.
Hammonds downplayecl his role · Angels ll, Royall 5
.
with Davis missing.
·
At Kansas City, Mo., Darin Erstad
· "II's not a situation where I'm try- drove in a career-high four runs and '
iog to prove anything," Hammonds · scored three: runs as Anaheim
said. "My main objective is to help roughed up Kltnsas City rookie Glenthe team win and to have (un."
don Rusch for the third time this seaBaldwin gave up five runs on son.
eight hits in seven innings. J
Ers.tad's three-run homer capped a ,
"That's going to happen from · five-run ninth inning for California, ·
time to time, "said Baldwin, who fell which had 18 hits. Jim Edmonds was
behind 1-0 in the founh when he 3-for-5 with two RBis and Jim
walked Tony.Tarasco with the bases Leyritz also drove in two runs for the
loaded. "'That one bad inning killed Angels.
·
•
me with those walks and the home
Allen Watson (5·3 ), who beat ·
run. I lost the game tonight because Rusch 7-31ast Wednesday, earned his :
I went Dill there and had one bad · fourth straight victory, allowing five
inning;"
runs and ·seven hits in five innings.
· Belle, who went 3-for-3, ' hit his Rusch (3-4) was tagged for 11 hits ,
14th home run in the seven!". O~e and seven runs inS 2-3 innings,

· U. S. Open starts Thursday

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
KM1M111 McCullough, II~ Ph. Chllrla llmt., II. Ph.
11-'11 HeMing, II. Ph.
llclru thru 1111. 1:00 e.m. lo 11:110 p.m.
....., 10:110 Llll, 1114:00
PIIIICRFI ION
IL

�Pac• 8 • The Dilly S1ntlnel

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port, Ohio

Sporn plant he,ipad
dedicated ~o pu.blic·
emergency use

LAKIN BISSELL

Bissell
observes
birthday
Lakin Bissell, daughter of Royce
and Stacy Bissell recently celebrated
her second birthday at her grandpar·
ents' home in New ·Haven, W.Va.
The theme for the party was ''Bar.
. bie."

Attending in adaition to her parents were Edward and Charlotte
· Coon, Craig, Tracy and Ashley
Coon , Doug and Carolyn Bissell ,
Matt Bissell . -Darci Bissell, Mike,
Angie and Christopher Bissell ,
Brenl, Michele and Austen Bissell,
Tim Bissell, Lea Meeks. Ron and
Nina Vance, Mary Carolyn and Jennifer Wiley, Meredith Riggs, Tracy
and Teran Barnitz, Tammy, Tyler,
and Paige Cline, Keith and Allie Jo
Reynolds.
Sending gifts were SaPa Coon
and Kristin Acree.

News policy
In an effort to provide our reader·
ship with current news, the Sunday
Times,Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
·
the event.
Weddings submiued after the 60.
day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must
be submitted within 60 days of
occurrence.

Erne111ency service for New Haven area residents got ll big boost today.
American Electric Power's Philip Sporn Plant made its new helipad part of
the emergency network.
·
"By road, it is a long way from New Haven to a hospital for the crilically ill or severely injured ..But by air, the journey (o a life-saving trama center is much quicker," said lUndy Humphreys, Sporn Plant manager.
"Our new helipad-- that we are dedicating to public use-- will make the
transition from ground emergency transportation to air ambulance much easier. We are pleased to he able to provide this facility to support the emergency needs of our neighbors."
Local and state elected officials and area residents joined a nwnber of
American Electric Power and emergency services personnel today in celebrating the availability of the helipad.
"'It's a first-rate facility, well marked and lighted for round-the-clock
access," ellplained Sean McManus, HealthNet Aeromedical Services flight
medic. "And, being so close to U.S. 33, it makes patient transfer convenient."
Humphreys cited two Sporn Plant employees for the idea and planning of
the helipad. ·
"Greg Powers, safety and health supervisor, recognized the need to be
able to get ahelicopter here in case of an accident and put.together a plan to
so. ,Dan Edwards, plant staff engineer, took the idea and turned it into thi.s
facility. And it just made .good sense to make the helipad part of the area
emergency services network."
·
A HealthNet Aeromedical Services team and an ambulance crew from
New Haven Emergency Medical Services were on hand to discuss emergency procedures.
·
·
Sporn Plant is located.on U.S. 33, just southeast of New Haven, WV.
1

Few women take fol iC acid
to prepare for pregnancy
By STEVE STERNBERG
USA TODAY
Although many women of childbearing age now know that folic acid
taken daily can avert birth defects, 78 percent still take a risk rather than a
multivitamin, a new survey ~hows .
·
The survey of 2,00 I women ages 18 to 45, being released Tuesday by the
March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, indicates that 66 percent know
the value of folic acid in fetal development, up 14 percentage points from
the March of Dimes' .first such survey two years ago. Yet just 23 percent
reponed taking a IIIUltivitarnin before their pregnancy began.
"The brain and the spinal cord develop in the first four weeks of pregnancy," said Richard Johnston, medical director of the White Plains, N.Y.,
foundation. As a result, he said, women must begin taking folic acid before
the pregnancy for it to lower the child's risk of birth defects.
Folic acid is found in green·, leafy vegetables and liver. In 1992, the U.S . .
Public Health Service advised all women who could become pregnant to
take 400 micrograms of folic acid a day to boost their odds of having a normal infant. The recommended daily allowance is 200 micrograms.
The. nutrient is so critical for fetal development that the government last
year required that 140 micrograms be added to cereals and bread.
The March of Dimes and other groups have spent the last two years trying to get the message out.
If taken within a few weeks of conception, folic acid cuts by two-thirds
the ris~ of two devastating birth defects: spina bifida, a paralyzing abnormality that leaves the nerves .of the spine exposed. and anencephaly. in
which an infant is born. without a developed brain.
'

70

•

lnduatrltll • Automotive
New Radlatcn • At-CorM
A/C Con«MnHI'I/HOM Alsembllea ·
New Locdon: 2 mHn off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124

'•

•

.

Starcher
birth'
.
;;;;..__......ta.l announced
-~

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tile .MIIgl Loci! ilol!rd ol
Edflcellon wllhll to _,.,.
bide for the following:
Brwd/81klly, Milk/Dairy
product•. Fleet Jneurer~~=~,
end Tulln/T1ree.

Public Notice .

Public Notice

AI bldllhlll be -lved All envelop.. mu•t be

MARKI!D
In, end. bid IP«&lt;IItoitlone CLEARLY
mey be obt11ned from, IOOOidlna to the type of bid.
Cindy J. Rliol-,
TREAIURI;:R'I OFFICE, 320
n.aum
1!. Meln Btrltt. Po-roy,
OH 41711, on Of NIOfl 1:00
p.m., Mondly, July 7, 1187.
Tile ..... Looil 8oml of

:: ..

can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep "eKempt• property lor their personal use.
This may Include a car. a house, clothes', and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Commlltes

(814, 10,11,8410

,, .

(614) 592-5025

·:

INCREDIBLE
PLANT SALE

FREE
'
ESTIMATEES

&lt;
.., ' ' 985-4473
..

..

7/22/tln

..

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF .
$7.00 PER DAY.. .

.

'
••'

'

B.19 Bend·Fabrication,
Machine &amp;Welding Shop

'

250 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols
Metal. INc.
.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

.

.. ,' .

....
/'

.'

...

..
.. .
~

-·
•

I

614·446-2412

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479

.

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•••

GALLIPOUS .

.

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•
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http:/twww.deere.com

•

005

Free Eetlmatea
992-9057or

wv 1023477

i92-4111

· Pomeroy, Ohio ·

&amp;COOLING '

319 S. 2nd Ave.

Middleport
Sales Service
Installation
Easy Bank Anandng
American Standard · Air Conditioners Installed 12811 a month
Freedom
· Heal Pumps Installed 131"' omonth
· HeatPump
tpaymenll based on approved credM)
(614) 992·7434
•Frea 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digllal Thermostal
II

· BOB'S ·

PDR7ULI
WILDINI

McCumber Rd.
Rutland, OH ·
•Smaii .Jobs
•Large Jobs
R•..on•ble Ralee

Experienced

(614) 742·3100

....,..., 1 mo. pd.

HllpWsnted

Overbrook Center · has Immediate
•
ojlentngs for full time or part time
fiJi's. Salf!lry to $14.()0 plus per hour
based · on experience. A variety of
benefits are available.
Submit your application at:
:
, Overbrook Center
:
333 Page Street
.•
Middleport, OH. 45780 or
Call814-8t2-84n tor Immediate
eonelderatlon.·
'•
'•
1.0.1.

·

Howard L WrlteHI

ROOFI.NG
NEW-REPAIR

8434.

. Gutters
Downspoutt
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATE$

Intelligent WF 22, SHkl WM
With Sporll Cer And Wator Toya
For
Summer
Fun1
E,.II:ARESOSHREDNET.NET
40
Giveaway
====-::::=~:-:::::
t
12'x12' Building, muat move. ·Call
304-a82-31198 or 304-773-5420.

949-,2168

2J emonlh· old tricolotad Beagles

ling. 30...a&amp;Z·3ell3.
Froo Killen~ 1 Black &amp; While, 1

IW010212

814 448 9418

V\'
)

.

\..
"
--~

WILLUft~

JUI,. CALL,
992·7074

IIIIlLI
•Sm1111 Engines
•LawnM~er•
~Chain Sa.ws

•Weed Eaters
2 mi. oft Rt. 7
Lndlng Creek Rd.

Gravel, Umeetone,
topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnu111.

a.ta).

742•2925.
"'lllllt . ..,. r ...

.......,"
111

· YOUNG'S

A lf~rllHiinl job on .
trny r o"rly rl11y,
naalcea il 1eem

brlfrloler.
Interior ·
aetore 8 p.m.
leave meauge •
After 8 p.m.
. 814-985-4180 .pel.
.

111111-

~~~~

oPilnllng

-

a.lsct appraisals,

Oab~

Antiques, lop prices paid, RiverIne ~htlqun , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner,. 11•·882·

2528.

Buying Standing Pine. 1 Acre

J &amp; D's Auto Paris. Buying sal·
vage '18hlcles. Soiling parts. 3p4-

773-5033.
Wanted: Used Har&lt;Mood Flooring
In Good Condillon. Call 614·245·

sa&amp;7.

•

like to buy mobile home

lot wl,lh water and aowage. 304·
502·5840 or 30+562·1878.
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted
HtDANCERSHt
2 ~sitiona available
Soulhlorlo Show Bar
Rt 2 Pl. Pleaaan~ WV.
(304) 575-5955.
Callaher 5pm.
Weds Ulru SaL

Avon" $8 -$181Hr, No D~or -ToDoor, Quick Caoh, Fun &amp; Relax·

1no, 1-8Q0.731Hl1681ndislllnlf&gt;.

'
Broad And Pas1r1 Baker. Pari
. Time Position. Please Respond
To: CLA 413, Clo. Ga!Hpolio Dally
Tribuna, 825 Third Avenue, Galllpoli~ OH 45831.
:._.;_
_ _ _ _ _ __
CABLE TV ORDER TAKERS

Loat : 8 1ac k An d c ream, l ong-

sions, bonuse~; benefits, leads,

secret in Amlf'ica. High commit·

IIBrl

SUite Roule 160, Pleilae Cal e 14.

training bonus, call 6i1•· 992·

446-;.c40. Reward otlerBdl

Compu l&amp;r ·Users Needed . Work

....~

DRIVERS WANTEO

Young heifer hal while flee w/V

500 Mile Radius· Home Every
Week&amp;nd. Famirv Insurance Paid
Bv Companv (Dental. Eye; Pre·
scription) 401 KRet1re;men1 Pltn,
Firsl In · First Out .Dispatch, Late
Model Conv. Tractors With
Flatbed Trailers Competitive Pay
· Percentage Of Gross.. ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VtclnHy
3 Family: 113 M•b'elene Drive

Wed. Thure. Frl 11-5, Homo lnteri·
or, MiiC., Loll Ciodllng. Adult• &amp;
Children• . . Toya, Comlortoro,
llilhol, End 1011101.

.

ALL Yard Stln Mull
Be Paid In Advance.
DEADJ.IIE: 2:00p.m.
, ... day belore the od
1o to""'· lundor
e&lt;IMion • 2:00p.m.
FrldOJ.IIondor e&lt;llllon
·tO:OO a.m. Soturday.

~

BOo.34~7 1 86xt508.

villa Alta, Reward\ Ploaso Call
614·258·1585.
in vicini!)' ol Chl~eston Rd. past
,Y.304·875-3913.
70
Yard Sale

Cent8nary Thura, Frl, Brand
Name Clothing, Jr/Misaes, Girls
0·24 Uontha &amp; U•n: Curtains,
Rod1. Dream, Espon Laser Ink
Jet Pr!nter, Adult 1Teen Paper-

ORANT' TRUCKINO, INC.
5488 SR 93
OAK HR.L. OHIO 45650
800·282·2163
Earn $t,OOO Weekly SluHing En·
velopes AI Home. Starl Now. No
E;~~periance. Free Supplies, Info.

No Obligallon. Send ~SASE To:
ACE, Dept 1351, 'Box 5137, Dia·

mand Bar,.CA 9176~

Eaoy Work! Excellent Pay! AI·
Toll Free 1·800-467·5588 EXT.
12170.
Hair Styli It Wanted Rent Your
Own Slltion, Or Make $10 To $15
semble Produc1a 11 Home. Call

An Hour, Call Carol King, 01-6·
446·8922.

b•cka, Working BUIII•In Oven,
Llgtc A•turoo.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

H204015

Four ramUy, June 10·14, Iota of
111Jft, SR 143, 114 mile oil SR 7.

-·

Serving from5:00 • 5:45
Doa..-'$4.00 lor: meal

AIIO Cone•• WOitl

(I'RII l!lmiiATIS)
V.C. YOUNG tit
IIMI11
Pamanly, 01110
.

eatates;

Found: SR 7 vicinity, email teddish brown Pomenmlan, 614-867·
DUM.
Found : Young ._.edlum Size Fe ·

prox, 35 Pounds Around Mercer-

MEIGS
CENTER
Mulberry Betahts, Pomeroy
1Qadaya 8Jid Thursdays

&lt;1n111tor a lxttrlor

· Antiques, lurr\lture, glut, china,
coins, toys, lampe, guna, tools,

Loot Siberian Hulk~ Puppj, Ap· own hours. $20k to $50k/jr 1.

$1,000 RiWARDII
For lnfonnatlon
INdlnt to the
arrnttind
eonvlctiOn of
anrone Involved In
atHllnt a P~JMrtr
line.._ 11t1 1927
Croaa It,, Raclne,O
1.1;t. Callerl '
Contact· .Ron Miller

AT
COum SENIOR

ol!ltctrlcll • Plllllblng

SterlinG. Eu:. Acqullioona J....~y
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GallipoUa, 614.US.2JII42.

448·7467, 614·446-4470. 614· _74_40_._ _ _ _ _ __

EVENING ME~L

· . (AiPENiER SElVIG
--~
oNiw
.G. . . . .

ver And Gold Coins, Prooftlll,
Diamonds. Antique JIWtilryo. Gold
Rings, Pr•U~30 U.$ . Currency,

haired Gorman Shepherd Last hoallh plua &lt;OtK. $500 last

Must be 62 years _of age or handicapped :
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements
For further details call today ~

PAINTING

773-5765 Or 304·773-5447.
90 Wanted to Buy .
Abaolute Top Dollar: All U.S. SU·

Earn StS ·$18 Per Hour t Commissions. Extremely High Cui·
tomer Demand, No Overnlghr
Travel. Immediate. OpeniJ'IQI.
Candidates t.tuat Be Available To
Start Paid Training Pf'Ogram Now.

Seen 8/7/g 1, Btown·a Market

ALL PRIMARYUTILmES PAID

I..IMIA'S

auction . service.
Llcenaed
168,0hio &amp; Waat Virginia, 304·

malo Dog. Re&lt;ldllh Biondo Wllh
CALL PAUL TOLL FREE '
Black Muzzle, Blarot Road Area,
,.,...432·7371
614·311H160.
Cemetoty sa""'? its the bell kept

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?.
·. Consider:

1112!W1-.

Rick Pearson Auction Compal)y,
lull time auctioneer, complel•

Jo Good Homo: 2 Black &amp; White mas bills at home/at -k. 1-800·
Kluena. Female. 8 WHks Old, 992·6356 or 304-882·2645,1nd .
81of.448-2398 AIIIK 5 ~M.
Rap.

'

1·614·992·7022

3118-9443.

Able Avon Representatives
needed. Earn money for Christ -

3973.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

~

Lemley's Auction Service, letHe
lemley, Auctioneer. Household,
Estate, Farm ·Salet. Phone e1•·

1•r old, 10 good home. 304· 773·
5905.
AVON I All Areas I Shlrle1
Spear~ 304-075-t42G.
Puppies 10 give away. 304·675·

0562.

....-:..

Public Sale
and AuctiOn

80

Good H!&gt;me.Only ~14-44Hil97.
Male cat, grav· wlblack itripa, 1

Two ve-r old lerriale Pomeranian,

'(5)o

5:00 . .Waalher Permitting. June
10th · 14th ..

Black, 2 Champafgn; 814· ..8·
1131, 814o446-7438.
Killona 8 Weeko Old, Free To

all aholl. ~.. lo good home. 814·
992-8873.
60 . LOSt and Found
Found: Largo Malo Biondo In
Color Dog, Rettel~r Mix, Addl·
oon Area,
Clost
To 814·367·
Ad~iaon
School.
Dayo.
Phone
7442, Evenlnga Phono 814·367·

.

&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale 110 English Rd. 8:00·

e Acral ml•ad hay, frH for cur-

in. Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall·to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.

1-800-872-5987 1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

."Htlifif·
l
,- . . ...

7513.

1 malo 1 femole, good IIDclc. has
had shall &amp; been wa.rmed, to
good- 30of.458o1515.
.

THE MAPLES

BENNETT'S MOBI..E HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving Soulheastem OH &amp; WJ

HI•.

table, doors, daillaa, young ,...,.
bill· lops and aadn ·b&lt;ttd. gil. .
ware, 81•·992-5275 or eu-tt2-

Adult VldoOL 50 Ntw Roleaoeol Trac1 Or Larger. 81 H50-eo38.
1310 Eaarern Avenue, Gallipolis,
Clean Lata . Model Cara Or
OrColl814-44e.t822.
Trucks. 1990 Models Or N,..er,
Glrla Glrla Girla, Talk To Them Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
Llvoll 1·DOD-47t·D5D5 Ext. 9970, ern Avenue, GaiMpolia.
'3.110 ll.lln, 18• Serv·U 819·645-

1-8C)0.211-51100

MobUa Boma Air Co~.UUonar
1111d B•t Plilapa

Personals

AnENliON
Haa Your Marriage Or Relationlhlp Gol Up &amp; Went. Slop In Prif1·
cou Vkloo And Rent One 01 OUr

SOLID VINYL
R~PL\q:MENT WINDOWS

110 Court Sl ,

RairVII'ol,.. Wodnoodly &amp; T.....
day, two mllaa HruiJ Run,
clothes, shoes, bag
ooftH

Mar1in, 814-092·7441. ·

"FACTORY
DIRECI'
PRICES"
Quality Window ·Systems

Houee Sites

cc~~~
•

••
' ,•.

.

w.r........fp '

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

MORRISON'S HEAnNG

p ~~

' 110

.,.,..~

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pomeroy,OH
Call 9Q2-9045
for all your
tranamluton need".
..,,_

Free

.......::;:::::::::;::;::::=:

Your "
ktl

p ...

--

Roofing, Painting
Guaranteed

311 71941TFN

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding ·
20 Yra .. E•P· · · Ina. Owner: Rick Johnaon

•

The Family Of
THOMAS EARL
TURNER
wlehee lo thenk ell lhelr
relatlv.. ·•nd frlende lor
the kind worde, con·
c11rn end preyere In hie
recent daeth.
Special thenke to
Overbrook . Center,
Ewing Funt~rel Home,
Rev. Lloyd Grimm,
D.A.V. . Chapter 53,
Feeney Bennett Poat
128, Rev. Jemea Set- ·
terfleld, Geraldine Par·
aona, Marie Snyder,
.J udy McDaniel. Berb
Petlreon end all tho..
who made conlrlbutlone, aent food, carde,
.tlowera •nd condo·

.. .

. !

123 Pteaunt Ridge

Llmastone &amp; Gravel
Saptlc Syatema
Trailer &amp;

I

304-882-3541
Free Estimates

UD. WV 011030

..........

537 BRYAN.PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

:Card of Thanks

.

668 PINECREST DRIVE

GOODNITE'S
QUALITY ROOFING

·. Now 0,.... for

IIULIII •
1 11CCIVI'riiR

- -- -··

. ..
'
'.. .
•• •

J

JC

4/4/lln

Trane., Albeny)

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

r

•

Don G11ry, Owner

(formlrly ol Dun'•

•Replacement Wladows
Reasonable Rares
•Buld Garages
.
Joe N. Sayre ·
•Storm Doors &amp;
' Sayr1 Trvddng Co•.
Windaws
•
•ROHI Additions
•
614-742·21!!117..,

Save by the yard wit):l a~·-:!:!!:!!~~~!:....:
powerful LX Lawn Tractor.
• 14·, 15:, 17 -hp engines
• Gear-drive orsutomatii.: transmission
. • 38-, 44· and 48-inch cutting widths

.

992·9200

TRANSMISSION

--:::====~

•

614-992-3120

uy•s

1112-2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

LXI?3w;th

·CARMICHAE-L'S FARM AND LAWN

CELLULAR PHONES

.

742..()3()4

•
. •'

..

Call fer Otr S•••l•l•

..

Complete' Machine Shop Service Fabrication ·
Steel Sales, Weldlna Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair '&amp; Replace111ent
' '
Monday, Friday- 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m.- 12 noon

Driveways,
. Sidewalks, Patios,
·. :·, Garagi .and ~.
BaHment Floore.
Free Estlmetll.
In lured
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES

R~•3,J4s

rI'

..

Founddori.,

.

pizza place.

Quality Work at
e Fair Price!
• St.
550 Pege
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Home Ph.

992-1056.....,

CONCRETE
SERVICES

.

Get behind big savings.
• Self-propelled and push models
• 5- and 5.5-hp engines
·
• 21-inch die-cast aluminum deck
• Standard 2.5-bushel capacity bag

(No Sunday Calls)

sna/11 1 mo.

:.ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Merchsttdtae

614-992·7643

Athens, .Ohi()

•

'•New Homes
•Garages
:~complete ' ·
·aemodellng
.: Stop &amp; Compare

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ·. ESTIMATES

Attorney At Law

1:00pm Frldar-

8cltool.

····~.Shop

CONSTRUOION

•

. Attorney William Safranek

• · For more info cell Pem
· 1185 44111 or LIH Mt-2052
Auctlon11r:
Rhllt Mllhoen

PP1.01:111--9liiV·• OH 41!t8
Ph (8f41 ... 511(0

·BISSELL
BUILDERS, INC·~
•

BANKRUPTCY

Spon1ored by
• · •Mala• Co. 4-H Horee

P.O. Boll~

• 14·, 17', 18·, zo~. 22-hp engines
• 38·, 44· and 48·, 54·,
60-inch cutting widths

Joewtlaon
(814) 9112-4277

Pomeroy, Ohio 46768 .

. Sat., ·J une 7, 1997
6 P.M.
Melge Co.
Falrgrounda

MEIGS LOCAL BOARD QF
EDUCATIDN

Great Low Financing
On A Great Machine.

M8J
1988 Martin Street

2ND ANNUAL
' : TACK AUCTION

1:1~ . .

• . , ...... t ...............
lun4aj I llo~d•r o411tea-

Sloaln'oon C.R 211 abcHe Eoa•n

D. Gear,'s

Delivery or Dine ln.
lfore than Just "

Chester, Ohio

...,..... o •

Yard sale, Fri-Sat at Jam••

, FREE ESnMATES

•

'..

the best value mowing.
• 13- or 15-hp overhtlad-valve engine
• 5-speed gear-drive or .
automatic transmission
• 38- or 4~·inch cutting width

614-742·3090
. 614-742-3324
,614-742-3076

NOW OPEN
RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

Remodeling

992·2825

~~~~~~ ·~~-~·- -----·~
··

.

Custom Homes

IOI25/96/IIn

Public Notice

Don't let the grass grow under your feet. See your John Deere deale'r, now through June 30, 1997, for groat savings on our
most popular models. And.don't make a single payment until November 1, 1997. Bul hurry, the savings end soon.

Garages, Porches.
Celli.!• FCN A Fr" lillimll"

W•anerlln•
Pomeroy

985·4422

540 Mlscellaneotia

Many Varieties
&amp; Sizes.
All healthy.
June 14-15, 9·!$
122 Butternut
Ave.

MlddlePQrt, OH

3351 Happy Hollow Rolli
Middleport, Ohio 45780
New Homel, Addition~,
Rooftng, Siding, Pole
Baine, Decklt, Painting,

614;.992·3470

ladle llaaeK Dealer

LlmeatDne • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Eduo•tlon r ..erv.. the
rlglll .t o releol eny end ell
bide, end the 1ubmlttlng of
•ny bid . ehell lmpo11 no
lleblllty or obllgeUon upon
theuldltolrd.

Lorcly.
Lorcly
Becky Is
401

ELS ELECTRONICS ·

WICKS

..,.... __ .......

Pt. Pleaeent .

-

DUMPTRUeK
SERVICE

··

•-:::eowv

Nol.wtlt Flnlnc:lel

. _ . , , , . . , . , Is

Ume•tdne,
Gravel,.Sand,
Top Soli, FIJI Dirt

RL 1, Box 44-C

u ... L a.iut., CDPJIA

. 992-5583

Mon!Sun

·R. L. HOLlON ·
TRUCKING

Edward and Michele Starcher of
West Columbia, W.Va. announce~
birth of their second son, Jacob
Edward.
Born Thursday. May 22, at
Ca~ll Huntington Hospital. ~
wetghed 8 pounds and I0 ounces,
He measured 20 inches in tength. ·
. Jacob's grandparent~ are George
and Judith Starcher of West Columbia and Michael and Jay Zirkle o(
Nitro, W.Va. Great-grandparents are
Gaynell McAbee and the late Beri
McAbee of West Columbia; Mtuj
Starcher and the late George
Starcher of Pomeroy; Lennie Hap.
·
- Medic Robin Prnley ol HealthNet AerOmedical tonstall and the late Paul Haptonstall
Servlcee demonstrates petlent tr!lnllfer •t dedication ot Philip $porn of Middleport; the late Perry Zirkle
Pl•nt'• hellped. Sporn Plllnt Admlnlltrlltlve Secretery Guyla W•l- of Clifton; and the late Ruth Zirkle
bum 11rved as •petlent. •
of Middleport.

Public Notice

304-773-5822
-

LowRatn)

HAULING

FAMILY DENTISTRY

· Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
9 am - 9

(\JmeSloii8-

..., B. • ....., D.D.S.

TONY'S POR'fABLE WELDING

........

PoiMIO'/,
lllddllp Dl1
&amp; Vlcln.IIJ

~ 11501 DElTA~ CUE

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
I

DEERE SEASON 'lJ7

The STX Series is

The Dally Sentinel• P • I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

rr.,blic is irrvited

HOME BUSINESS Choap Sllln,
Garage &amp; 1ard Ill• Monday llvu . &amp;lind SASE + 15 To C. Roololll
Friday d,.ing summer 101m-4prn. P.O. Box 742g, Canton, OH
38400 SR 124, 1'11mor0r.
44705.
. .
G~ntlo garage 1110 Juno 1~14 , IIOMITVPISTS,
lltrll !lam. Sradbu~C..hllrch 00: PC uatro neoded, $45,000 In·
llidtWMF'O.Riinor
potential.
_
_ _ _ _ _ _·....;.__ comt
4343Elll.
11-11388. c,ll 1·800•513· Moving lilt· ·Yarbrough lltm on
Loop Rd. nllr ~tland, Ohio on
MED. /OENTAI. SALES
June 13-15. Furnilure, houaohoid
' Addllionallrmmo'
l1lmt, 100it, larm nd1intry. pono Aro \'Ou C1illng On Mtdlcel •
taan boat. clothing, same •n- Dental Buainuua? Would Yoli
tlqu"' m~nr mlac. It- too nu· Like To Continue Whit 'IIIli Art
mtroua to mtnllon. Evtrf1111ng .Doing And H1¥t Addllionat IIGO
p;tce&lt;l for quick Uttt no ........ ·$2,000 P,r Morlth? Profll Ffom
tblt oller·rtluae&lt;l. celle14·742· '!bur E11p011onct.
2721.
.
114~5122

•

•

,,

·•

�. ..... 10•TheDIIIJ .......

June

•

1197

•

Ohio
881DOII:

NEA CrOIIWord Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

41 Y • a l •

a..... .. ......... c-

....

Signa lladiiFMiurbl-. Uttal
roof• palntld, lawna . mowed,

•:_oert~~n

1r-.

HanciVmM wo~ - - .1148-2229:

inlltP-~IIdl.

'""""""· $1,700. ~:Je98,
1881 Chevy C·30 350 tnglht1
auto 'trona, w18ft reading udlltY
bod. $5,200. 304-578-2BQQ .,..

.

West
• 4 2

A~~

......

lhlfi (ttpm-7:301111)

fiNArJCIAl
Two bedroom houot, nlct and
_ , no lntldo po-. dlpotlt eild

pr--

ralarancaa required, 114-802-

rnalnlenanca m.chanlc. Muat
" "'"" IKP In -.y onglnt repair,
, knowledge of Cumlna &amp; Mack

420 Mobile Hom11

Mtglnaa a plua. We olltr TOP

for Rent

PAY wllh comprtlltnolvt btnofit
..., to lnctu~• :001 (kl. Apply at
.,Aouto 1 Bo• 418 Gotllpollo Forry
WY 215515.11/FNID.

Pt.:''·

Block, brick; aower
wlildDWI, llntela, eiC. Clau a WiniBn,
Rio Orondo, Oil Call 114·245·
5121.

N-:

3 NT

Tobacco warar bed planla. 30•·

Building
Supplies

4 NT

Pass ' Pass:

886-3851.
T RANSPOflT AT ION

--

WON!!

11 o · Autos·for 8ale
z.ri,

1005 Chov,li~ Cab Z-71, 850

au~

4• -

304-t

.

'

1188 GIIC Z-71 short bod Did( UP·
~14, law mileage, IOa&amp;.d.
U1;000. ·304·882· 20SO or 304·

truck.

no-38e5.

•

730 Vane 6 4~WDe

:-FP.ANK &amp; F.ARNEST

1810 CJ7 Joop Now Tlroa, Ex·

hauat, Good Condition: 1872
Chtvy Pick-Up, Excellent Coildl·

·-·ft.

don, 114-255-8574.

Oi'AY. NOvl &amp;.fT'S E)(,tMN6f T..t C{
.
OFff!tS WE'Vf I

;

1181 Ford Econollno van F-lso
301-158-101111. •
1800 Toyoll4&lt;4 811 441 i888 '

..

BOT.. W,ITTf/11
!)OWN.

t80t s-10 ... o.a v-e. Auto. 781&lt;
Excoilont Condition, NAQA,
18.200.,
~~~ 103
15.001. Cook """
101'1, 81
.
1881 CheVy lxl llpd, tic, tilt,

crultt.118,000. 301·5711-2223.

a3

Art-c~eco

··

,_,.

MTV•pota
85 bt formally
85 s-v.
·

DOWN

5

¥=t:"'back

1 BrCNidway

e Guuealltn

2 Ffrtt man
3 Recant arrival
.4 County In

7 Roman
emperor
8 Not •• hltl

mualeal

flihla

18

~-10

:

.... ., .... ~ T,...p..ve.s

180&amp; f ·250 Turbo Dlnol, 814·
_118-0208.

g

E-miut FanciEBobTOAOL.CoM

.,.

~

TAAT ft~ YOUtt I-.IEmt-16

IS Et-iCJ-11-oNTI!-i&amp;,
.fA.Y WJc I

r

.

~

· t'M r-IOT WE.m ~ TI\E ~f'l»'o£.
· ITt&gt; ffi ~It&lt;~ IN
Tl-\15 ~IKE .

for ·J

"

23Unl.~n

.25 Fut..,. attyi-'

oum

•

30 Aqlll1k:

,.

28 MDII' group.
27· Dakota Indian
29 Anlllllll parka

6NT

Pass ~

mammal

32 Roman rq
;!5 Office rQu!ln•
(2 wda.) • ·
36-H- ~

Is this.fact
or fiction?

. I
1005 Chevy Ext Cob

28 llh8vlng taoq

. ....... .

&amp;2 Adam'a
llllndlol'l

Opening lead: • A

GUESS WHO

auto. 31J4.8_7 H801.

u...

57 lfom'a -

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Wes\
89uth
West North East

"1180 SCotadalt Half Ton Short
Bod CheVy Pickup Excoltont
Condition, et.HI8·3570 Ah• 12
P.M. $7,000.

3080..

51 lt. .
14
ano-·

31 Bump Into
33 Ne9atf.. - d
34 v.rilenl City
38 Prettx for plano
38 Folding bed
40 Hebrew letter

• 3
"8765
• 9 4 3 2
• 9 8 6 3·

1183 lntarnadanal , 1 112 ran
na-. hyd. lift gatt, 345 8 u.
lop., lOw miiH, t&lt;ctntnl coildl·
tlcin~- $5,000, 814-882... 111 .

Houl8hold
Goode

.• K 9 7 5

South

.5.!100, 014-11112-41 I I.

20 .C:urranlly
21 - ell France
T1tay gac t11a
Yollll
24 ~~~
Buntyn
28 1'-'Hmb

az

.,

•AKQJ 1'0 7 6 "• 8A 6
... 7 5
• A K Q J tO 4

II( dump !ruck, 5 &amp;

IIIICHANIC
Grt_..d llo1Dr llnH, ont or
the nation&amp; largtll famiy-owntd
'I.Tl motar freight carrltro, 11 ac·
·nptln8 applications lor a 3rd

East

" 4 3

lnl*'tiadOnaJ crew cab, d'-'
2. lir brokoa.

·1182

OliMUOnll~

ofo2

I JUST f'alSMT

.

=.ta.,.,.

:

18 Butlftgllt ttgura 111 Schoolbook
17 For~
80 Typo Oloul1~
18U.-OI
81C~

...

:;:;-·EEK &amp; MEEK

dr\nb

15 ltomachl

&lt;IKQJI082

1878 Ford 'f·1SO Y·8, aulD, 2wd.

form)

&lt;...,.&gt;

.

1hlcka 'far Sale •

1881 - - ..... 14170,
two ba•oom. GM bath. ncalant
CO.ndltiOn, Ul&lt;lng $12,000, 114·

12
13 7lluDh
14 . _

l'lo11
116-t0-11
• A Q J 10 8 6

.. • • • Pua1J •-.,_.

dlll-

•F.:v

Guard r.....,_t wlndoll't.good-._ eM, I I I I I - witt&gt;
"In 20 mllto of Htncltfoon."
83.000. :IOW75o2721.

•

... aclloft

1 .......

5:ancl

lz.es llobMo Homo · Thtfma:

Sentinel•

The

37

Winnipeg

t

Jeta''org. ,\
42 Joyful
43 Fl•hln!l

t am showing you today 's deal pri- ·.
marily for amusement. First, lhough,
w~al is the :·par result" (the bcsjlhal
cun be achi~ved by b01h sides)'!
When tbe deal was played during
a rubber-bridge session in Australia,
this is how lhe' bidding went. West's
opening · bid of three no-lrump
showed a solid seven- or eight-card
minor wilh no side ace, king orvoid
-· lhe so-called Gambling Three NoTrump. North's four no-trump
showed a big two-suiler. Ea~t bid
what he knew his partner could
make. And So~lh. looking at a )rue
Yarborough (no card higher than a
nine). decided In trust East. He sacrificed in seven dubs. expecting
partner to ~·orrcct tn seven hearts with
hnth majors. However. North pas~d.
lhinkiilg thht whch he lii&lt;l seven
hearts over lhe inevilable dnuhlc ..
Suulh would delinitely .knuw he luuJ
hulh majors rather lhun jusl a lui of
hearts. Yet East. .realizing whm was
happening. decided he would dn hcst
In pass nut seven clubs! ·
The par result is seven hc:;ns by
Nnrlh. douhlcd. which should cnsl
nnly j{)() points. ·
A trump lead lakes seven duhs 13
down Jill' min.us 650 (and pnlhahly
place in history for South"-' lhe only
per.nn lo lose every_ lric~ in an
undoublcd, freely bid grand slam!).
Al'lcr the actual diamond-ace start.
declarer lOok three -tricks: a diamond
· ruff in the dummy. lite spade xe and
a spade ruff in hand. Although thai
wus '' nnly'' 10 down lor minus 500.
Easl wa.' righl nul lo double!
·
Arc you skeptical aboutlhis deal'!
Well. il was reported in Bridge Plus
as veracious. How can we doub1 the
intcgrily o~ tho press'!

a

•

r

......

~

41Strlger

•

Frank-

411Efi1hiDH
47 BaCkl oi ··&gt;

....._+--+-1--1

nocka
'
48 s.ap.
~
. 52 -, vldl, vtiiJ
.53 Royal ,...

guardsman:
55 Written ;,

meaage. I
58 Slow-c:ootdng
dllh

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·

·

by Luis Campoa

-tu"'
"•~·
•

-1-.L.....L....J · 59 Meo-

·

1

Celebrity Cipher c:rwtograms arv c~al9d !rom quotations by famous people. past and present
Each lto!~llllheciptler Slsnds lor another. Today's due. J fKIU81S Y

-\

'Z T

RFfELR

· P F L· P F '

MEWWfECN

TH

R T ,F P

IENF

LTZ

A P

Z M F

LTLPFlPF .
PFLPF :

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LT' ZMALO "

•

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PFLPF.'
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C:ELR .
~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've soen the fulure and it's much like the present '
only longer."- (Relief pilcher) Dan Quisenberry.

·' O four
Aeorrange .letters of
Krambi&lt;ld words

.

~•

.

~

t

0

the

"

be·

~
,)

low to form four simple wqrds.

I

u R G H 0 T·

A

...

I

'.

•
.'

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REAL ESTATE

....•
"

1118 S.nttt Drive, 814-448·8238
Fot Melli Information.
1888 WaWiar. 2cer prage, Sa·

WilEN 'I'OU I-lAVE A.D06,1(0U SJ.IOULD
STA'f I-lOME, AND MAKE '{OUR D06
1-lAPPif.. TI-IAT'5 WI-IAT I{OU SHOULD
'fOU SHOULD STA'I' ~OME ..

creo, Sondhlll Road. Coil Donna
Backuo, ERA Town &amp; Country
Ronl Eotato 30U75-SS.8 offlco,
301-075-3073 homo.
Call 811·185·1222 Or Sind ila- 2 112 Ill' Old homt, 7 112 acrea
oumaTo:
In New Hovan. Kllhlyn Houon
304-1112·31127 Shown by appolnl-Holling ' Cooling. Inc.
ment.
.
P.0.1Io•8
. Cht-. 01145720.

A . PRINT NUMBERED
V lETTERS

EXCEPT FOR TI-IOSE
08VIOU5L'r' HECESSAR'(
51-!0RT TRIPS IN TO
8U'f D06 FOOD..

. , UN.scRAMBlE

··

ANSWER·

I'

FORI.

I' I' I' . I' r
I I I ·I I I I I I
1·

"•
;;•
,
~

1

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'

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'
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"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Deftly ~ Anvil- Quasi - Slalus- SIT and LISTEN

If your conversations aren't charming and witty, you ,,
should become contented to SIT and LISTEN.
·
,. ·

-

•

c;r n viC FS

Home

.

;c:~:~~~~~~~~=~~~B~n~x£~
'

...~

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
•0

.
June 11 , 1997
• In lite year ahead. take advantage
'of 11ny opportunily you getlo hroad_cn your hasc of knowledge i~ your
.uhpicc of endcav0f1i. There wtll be: a
·lood market for what you leam. ·
i~ GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Strive
· to advance your peno1111l interests
toc;lay. but don 't do so in ways that
~ prove deuimcnlal to others. In
.. Y"!!r etiJOfliiiS · to p:l lhead, you
miJhl 81eJ1 on the WI'OIIIIOCS· Gemiii ..... younell 10 binhday pft.
~ for your' Aslro-(lnph pndic:110f!1 today by mailin1 S2 and SASB
to f'wo-Onph; d~ this IICWIJIIPCr.
~·~

'iirlLt.~*--jd~il~)i~~u~l~ll&lt;l
igmircn[ forgive what ynu
say.

New Ynrt. NY 10
Be sure In
slate y&lt;1ur l.odiae sign.
CANCER (June 21 :July 22) A
fasHulking associ ale might _pul you
·in an awkward spot today where ynu
li.:d the need In make promises ynu
can't keep. Hnld ynur lnni!UC.
.
· LEO (Juiy 2J-Aug. 22) Ynu will
h.: uullar-conscious lnday. hul assn·cialcs mighl n01 h.:. lr'ynu try lo keep
up with them. yuu mighl end up
Joing . something ecomni•ically
unsound.
VIRGO (AU~!- 23-Scpt. 22) Gnld· en uppurtunilics could slip through
your lingers today it' you wail 1(10
lon11 to s1art. Play !he rule nl'thc hare.
not lite lortui~.
' .
LIBRA (Scpl. P-Oet. 23) II is n01
u JIOOd idea In re&lt;jucst fav.,rs l'rl&gt;m
friends reJardinathings you con lake
care of younclf. They will ICc: I misused and manill!llliiCd.
..
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Unintentionally, your commcMs
could be IIIOIC bilina than usual
today. A sensitive friend mi1ht find ii

\i

!r

SAGITIARIUS I Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) In order to maintain harmcmy
-wilh ·yout m~te lndaJI...dn mit make
tssues over minor points. Be very toleranl where trivials .arc involved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)11
looks like you mighl lind more rcasons why a."i!nmenls should be put
off today than why they should be
pcrfonned. Rationalizing is nonproductive.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Ignore lemptations today to take
risks on pcople or things about which
you know ·liltle. Picking the proper
odds might not be your strong suit.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Where major mailers are concerned,
you and your family will be on the
same wavelength today, but you may
1101 see eye-to-eye on less wei&amp;flty
issues.
.
ARIES !Mardi 21-April 19) If
you're hopinJIO ICt odJen to do your'
bidclin&amp; today throuah Oauery, you
could he diJ811P0inled.

. ~

•

�Ohio Lottery

·Florida's
Brown tosses

'

Pick 3:
391
Plck4:
8954
Buckeye 5:
18-28-33-35-37

no-hit, no-run

gamevsSF
Sports on P • 4

'.
'
I

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, W~neaday, June11, 1997

2

hell-.

12 . . . . · -

AGiuw..tt Co. -.paper

Ninth GOBA
will incl·u de
Rutland area
.

'

SID EDWARDS

·: cAA chief
Edwards
·retires

EARTH MOVING EQUIPMENT ARRIVES •
Thll huge back hoe WIIIHMI aa the prime dirt
loader to handle the 330,000 cubic yarda of
earth that muat be uald In the conali'uctlon of
th"ew Wai·Mart Suparcenter In Galllpolla.

Manufacturld In Germany the 0 and K bthemoth'a bucket can pick up 12 or 1&amp; cubic yarda
11 a awoop. h atanda more than 30 feet high
and welgha 383,000 pounds. .

Ohio's first Wai-Mart Supt1rcenter

•

•

By BRIAN J. REED
spend Thursday night in Rio Grande.
Sentinel News Staff
Durin~ the day Thursday, the estiPortions of Meigs County will be mated 3,000 bicyclists from40 states
inciuded in an eight-day bicycie trek and two countries will travel through ·
across Southeastern Ohio, which Pagetown. Harrisonville and Rut·
begins Sunday. .
.
land on Thursday, stopping for lunch :
The Ninth Great Ohio Bicycle at the Rutland Civic Center.
,
Adventure begins Sunday in LanFor safety reasons, GOBA routes ;
caster and takes in the communities do not include main roads. Instead.
of Circleville Logan, Athens, Rio back roads arc used whenever possiGrande, Rutland and McArthur, blc. Law ·enforcement oflicials in
among others.
communities included in the route
This year's event is the first time notified ahead of time to •assist with ·
the tour has taken in Southeastern · traffic control.
'
Ohio. The hills of this region are : The. lunch will be served hy vol- ,
expected to. be a challenge to the untccrs for the Meigs County.Cham- :
group, whiCh is made up mostly of her of Commerce. The stop issccn by
am'ateur pleasure riders, ranging in chamber oflicials as an ppportunity
age frOm 7 to 81. GOBA is designed for local businesses to showcase
to be .a family-.oricntcd activity, spun- Meigs County as a touri~t attraction.
SOfCd by Columhus Outdoor Pur,;uits,
The event. will be used to raise
a non-profit recreation organization. funds on hchalf of the chamber, and ;
GOBA brings its own team of sup-· · volunteers Were trained last night.
·port providers: emergency teams, . . Other local organit.ations are also
doctors, sanitary crews, semi trucks cxpectc&lt;l to provide concessions for
loaded with gear, lo~:ation spotters the event.
and "sag wagons." which provide
· Local entertainment during the ·
transportation for those participants lunch stop is also being planned.
who arc unable to continue to the
In addition to ·requesting panici·
next stop.
pation from local businesses and
- · OOBA rider,; camp at night during· volunteers, ..the cham her of com- ,
l)le. !lllvelitun: in what is termed mcrcc is also c~ou,r\lji~g local rcs•GOBAvillc;" tent city. and evening i!lents·to travel to the site to welcome
activities arc planned for each the riders and to make signs 10 greet
evening of the trip,, The riders will them when !hey arrive.
· ·'

are

The man who directed GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency's
advocacy efforts for the area's low· income residents over. the past 14
years has stepped down.
Sidney B. Edwards' retirement is
· effective June IS, but he has heen on
leave since May 30.
·'
The former U.S. Marine Corps By ODIE O'DONNELL
he relocated, hookups for water and
When completed the mall will fea·
officer said he felt the time was right OVP Correapondent
sewer must .be made, a bench-mark ture · the giant Wai-Man,' 22,200
to retire from the agency and do some
Preliminary work on Ohio's first must be moved, and 330,000 cubic ;;quare feet fol' other shops, and parktraveling. ,
,-p,rop~St!tWai-Mart Supen:enter is )11f~s o.f dirt must be used to raise tiJe _!ng for ahout I;0 II v~hicle_s .
.
· "'· ',•.. ::Mll~ islllillJ!r~,!t~O\XI and ·now underway ·at the ·Eastern Ave: ·~m~ll ~licwe tiliH.~~~~~r:;tJtod·platn.-- A:wiiiJIIn~-deed&lt; ilated ..May 2_1;
· ihere a_re som9 plaees I wen~ to when site as workers from the Holley The sue wtllbe ratsed about 11 feet 1997 was recorded al lhe G•lha
J. was. m .t~. M~tnes that I d hke to Brothers Construction Co. and 588 in' tlic rear, breaking to atjout eight County Courthouse. in·, "-hich ·Jay
get bat~ to, Edward~ e~plamed.
Incorporated (Jack .Swain) began feet toward Eastern Ave.
Hall, Jr. and his wife, Lillian Marlene
E_dwards had reured from thc...._movjo'g earth on the complex this
Swain, who will serve as project Hall, sold the property to JDN rievel- .
~ar~~es and had moved to the Gal- week.
·
·
,
superintendent, stated that in order to . opment Company, Inc .. a Delaware
hpohs. area sever~! years b~fore
. Based on weather conditions and · meet the proposed turn-over date to corporation, whose tax, mailing
acccptm~ the executtve du:ector s JOb oiher .factors the new shopping mall WaH\tart by Dec. 23, 1997, it is pos- address is 3340 Peachtree Road,
·.• at CAA .m. 1983. oversc~mg, a staff has a target date of Feb. 23, 1998 to sible that two shifts of opcmtors, oil- Suite 1525, Atlanta, Ga•.
_ and senes of pro~rams t~at _has open for business. In the eight month ers, and mechanics may be employed
Other firms under contract at the
'
wor~ed on tmprovmg the hvcs of period of construction utilities must to m\)Cl.\hc;deadline for earthmoving.
Continued on paae 3
low-mcome people m the Galha·
· -=.;.,.:-..:.,.
. _··-----------":'!';'~
.. Meigs area in 8fCas ranging from
: .n~trition lo housing rehabilitation.
: · : He pOinted to the expansion of the
:: ~ousing rehab program as one of the
,.
·· ;agency's noteworthy accomplish:: .ments during his tenure. Various
:: ·llomes have been upgraded in Gallia
hour long executive session follow- ·
By JIM FREEMAN ·
·: and Meigs countic~ through repairs,
ing which Buckley again rccom - •
Sentinel News Staff
· and by a weatherization program that
Chris Stout was hired by the . mended hiring Rick Edwards. The
: has brought eligible applicants' rcsi.Meigs Local Board of Education ·recommendation was voted down 3·: 4ences up to state code standard and
Tuesday night as'· head boys basket- to-2 with two hoard members, Abbott
~ better able to withstand weather
. ball coach at Meigs High School to· and Rupc, supportin,g the move,
• effects.
' .
.
replace former coach Jeff Skinner
Buckley then recommended
In Gallia County, the rehab pr~
who was no! rehired in April.
Stout, which was approved 3-tn-2
gram has conducted extensive repaii'S
..The board's action followed two with board President John HrKxl ,
executive sessions during Tuesday Scoll Walton and Randy Humphreys
to homes in Gallipolis, Bidwell and
Porter, and is now moving into the ·
night's regular board rnceting with voting "yes" .
MHS principal Fenton Taylor and
Vinton area.
.
Stout is currently a social studies
"Our jobs training program has
assistant principal Dennis Eichinger.s teacher at Meigs Middle School in
expanded considerably, and now ·
The board came out of its lirst. 45 Middleport.
.we're working on housing develop· minuic, ~xccutive session with
The board handled a few personSupcrinlcndcnt Bill Buckley recom- nel matters during the first 15-minutc
. menl (or people in both counties," ·
mending the hiring of Rick Edwards. open session portion of the meeting.·
launched this
..
,;: : ..:.
Board' member Roger Abbott made a
The board hired Carolyn Robin.... .. ,.. . .
· spring, is designed to help eligible
· · .. '' ·•· ,... ..,.,,, ~
motion . on the recommendation son and Robyn Hawk a' substitute
which d.icd due to lack of a second. teachers for the 1997-98 school
· 'low-income people become home•
Buckley then recommended the . effective immediately, and accepted
. 'owners in part by briefing them on
board rehire · Skinner. The rccom- the resignation of Marilyn Meier as
· .various ways of. buying through no
. upcoming 134th Melga County Fair and Agrl. mcndation wa' voted down 4-to-1 secretary at Pomeroy .Elementary
· dcwnpaymentloans, mortgage credCOUNTY;PROJECT • P10ple In whMichah
cuhural
Exhlbhlon.
ROida
aervlng
the
felrwith board mcmhet Lorry Rupc vot- School effective June 9.
or pushing baby llrollera should apprKiale
• il certificates and other resources.
llround
ar~
owned
by
the
county
which
Ia
•
. ing to rehire Skinner.
this county paving project underway at the
· : Like.many ofCAA's offerings, the
ThC board also h'ired Donna Wolf
reaponllble
for
their
malntananca.
Rock
Spring~
Fairgrounds...
In
time
for
the
The
board
!hen
held
another,
twoContinued on pa~e 3
:. _'. · Con!lnaed on page 3

Preliminary work begins on
proposed·Wai-Mart in .Gallia

a

Stout selected
..
new· MHS head
basketbal'l coach

•"
•

~ lld~~~a:t~~program.

~..:.. ,·~ ·~:~,.

~

:~Workers
.

•

·'

,...

...

•
•
•

..''
•

'

poised for summertime paving
.

· By JIM FREEMAN
project should be completed by July mer county paving projects includ. Sentir)el Ne- Staff
3 I. ·
Jjlg:..
·
· .
Coming soon to a neighborhood
In addi!iun, a bridge will be con·· Leading Creek Road from litus
near you... annual highway repair . structcd on state Ro11te 143 over · Road to the Rutland corporation lim·,projects. With summer finally mak- Mudfor~ Creek ncar Harrisonville. il, Titus Road from Paul ins Hill
' ing its belated appearance, motorists Bo&gt;; culverts will also be installed Road to Leading Creek Road and
.:,Gould be alert for flagmen· and · under state Route 143 in Columbia PaulinsHiiiRoadfrom1ilusRoadto
' workers performing road upgrades · ani! Scipio townships for a total ~ Gallia County line, a total stretch
.
price of $735,399.59. The estimated of about 2.59 miles .
.:and repair$.
•• Laurel Cliff Road from slate
. · Numerous projects will be taking completion date is Oct. 31.
~lace in Meigs County over the
County highway department Route 7112410 Hiland Road, a stretch
:course.of the sumn'ler on state hish· · workers Thesday began paving coun- ' of approximately 1.84 miles . .
ways as well as on county and town- ty-owned roads serving the Rock
-- 6.0S miles of Portland Road
;~hip roads.
,
Springs Fairground. The paving work from stale Route 124 in Sutton Town·: A $199,611 state project will see should provide easier access to peo- · ship to state Roule 124 in Lebanon.
' 2.06.miles of old 'state Route 7
pie in wheelchairs or pushing baby Township.
.
:ofPomaoy resurfa:ed from the june- s~ollm.
··Minersville Hill Road from fior·tionofroutes 7 and 3310 the junction
County workers used a paving es~ Run Road 10 slate Route 124, 1.16
ofthi: recenlly eompleted first phase machine that had beenr overhauled miles.
.
of the I· 77/U.S. 33 Connector Road. during the winter, accordinato Meigs ·
Total pnce of the paving projects.
: • · 'Wolbn have installed new stonn , County En1ineer Robert Eason.
, funded under the Stile Capital
·.iliains on a ponlon of die hilhway in · Meanwhile, county hi,hway ln:tpro~~ Pro.,.n, is $3'43,000
POmeroy and uphalt remo¥inl workers have completed ~torv · with •111dclitiollll $40,000 foneplac:iljuipment hu been used 10 removed work includin1 ditchin1 aiKI the !ng • bridp on C!'iklren's Hill Road
·some of the old surfiCe there. The installation of new culveru for sum- JUSI off Laurel Ctlf ROid.

north

•
'

'•·

••

.

~

Work on the paving projects
should begin in August.
· In addition, $70,000 in grant funding has been secured from the Ohio
Department of Development for
pavin1 ·ll,S 10 feet of Roy .Jones
Road from Bridgeman Streel in Syracuse to Forest Run Road . The road
serves as an emergency route for lhe
residents of the village of Syracuse
during Ohio River floods . .
Preparatory worli on Roy Jones
Road bu been completed as well,
Eason added. ·
· In iddilion, ihe county highway
department is assisting local townships with chip and 'seal paving projects including Salser, Carmel and
Mitchell road~ in Sutton Township;
.Crew Road, Baum Addition and
Lover's ~ !n Chester TOWIIShip;
NQble Sumnut Road in Salisbury
Township and DeVenny Road in
Bedford Townihip,

!

STATE PROJECT- Worktra conducting a atata paving project

on alate Route 7 from the Junction of u.s. 33to Five Pointe Mra

bUsy ramov'.., old aaphlllt from the ulatlnt ~ aurr-Monday momlng. orkwa have a1ao lnataU "''' atorm clralna and
curblln prapandlon for the PI~ - k Which alloukl b e pletad by July 1.

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