<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8849" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8849?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T11:12:47+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19273">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3d500c9f74779781bbe060e210f50387.pdf</src>
      <authentication>14efce2451c3dc6073149f7304f973aa</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28507">
                  <text>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.

�•'

I

''•

.

qommentary

•
•

Pllge2
Wlldl:•dly, .June
... . . 11,
. '1897

sch~me

.,....._-Local briefs-..-....·

recalls similar '80s scam

·'

...-..

'

Road

Letters to the editor
Seeks information

TO

..••

..

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

TO A MOVIE

:·..
••

A groundswell that
. ..never happened

..•....
...

Solid waste meetlns
The bOard of directors of the Gallia, Ja:ckson, Meigs &amp; V.inton Joint
Solid Waste Management District
will meet June' 19.6 p.m. at the .districl office at 722 E. Tent!l St., Suite
One, Wellston.
;

· · Open door ~lon

_.;._

I•

)

I

"·

Hymn sing planned
A hymn sing will be held with the
Williams Fiunily Friday nt 7 p.m. at
the Faith Full Gospel C~urch , Steve
Reed, pastor.
Singers coming
· · "Delivered" a singing group, will
be at the Harvest Outreach Church,
Saturday, 7 p.m. Rc.ibel Road,
Chesler.

(USPS 213-MG)
Published ewery afu:l'ftoon, Monday 1hrouah
r'fiday. Ill Coun ,St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio Val~ Publl•.hin&amp; Company1Gonnen Co .•
Pomen&gt;y. Ottio 4"6q, Ph. 997·2 t 56. Seco"d
cl~s postaae paid ot Pomeroy. Ohio. ·
Mtmbtr: The AslbciBted
New~papn A11M&gt;Ci1Mi0n.

Pre~,.

11.nd the Ohio

POSTMASTER: Send addr~u corr«lion• to
The Dally Senlinel. Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy.

Ohio45169.

·

y,,.. ...............................................
SINGLB COl'\' fRICK

Ooity .................................................... 35 C&lt;ttts
Sobl&lt;rillm noo dalrioato poy the&lt;'"""' moy
mnh I• ldvlftee" dh'ect 10 11rle Olily Scntieel
an a tlwrc. 111 ot 12 moftlh bMiR. Credit will be
Jiven cll'rier •h week.t

No· ru~ptiOI' by II!Niil permitted in

~reu

......, home -l!f\'l&lt;lls awtltoblo.

..._IUM&lt;ripdoo
...... tho"""
.. adjoll-·llur·
period. -l!ripdoo rato
liot'tbe

~ miy be

ltt .....wao:d to, dtatoJktlllla

-oldie•~

MAlt IIIJIIICttintONII

·-~c~ Sl7.30
13 Weob .................................................
2111Weob ...............................................l5,.12

S2 ................................................lt05.56
-.-~~~~~pc..y

S2 ................................................. lt011.72

••

Am Ele Power .......................4D'.
Alczo ......................................&amp;?\
AmrTech ................................67'4
Alhland 011 ..:. ............:...........46\

ATaT ......................·.......... ......36,__
Blink One ...............................43'At
Bob EVIInl ............................ 15,.

..................... .... 5o\

·Cftam~n ...............~............. 11'-"
Charm Shpl ............................&amp;'&amp;.
City Holdf\8 ... ~ ......................32\
I~~ Mogul ~ ...... :............... 31'.4

Dad's .·favorite ·new tool
doesn't cut or pound. ·
It doesn't paint, screw or tighten either. But it just might be the ultimate power .
tool in Dad's collection- cellular service from 360' Communications.
It's the perfect gift for Dad this Father's Day, No assembly required.

OMMtt ...................................H

.Qooctyelir ..................... ~•.••.... ~. •
Kmll"f..................................... 13 :4
L.lrldl End.......:..................... so'!.
Ltd .........................................11\

ova .......................................31\
OM Yelley..................... ~ ....... 40'At

Ptoplle ~ ......................;.......... 33'h
Prern Flrtl ............................... 11\
Rockwell ................................80'.4
RD 8talll ..·.............................111\

Plus, when you sign up forrour residential long-distance service, you get 360 long-distance minutes free for one year.

"

~~-· ... ······~-····"''"''''''''''...

'_._._

Wtrtcly .................................. 21\

WCM'I\t~ .................~."::: ...11\

360° Communitations

' Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. qUQIM provldad by Advelt

otGalllpok

Cellular. 111191~ and long distance, right down the street."'
1051 Eon Stata Straat,- ~ 16141 st.l-4•1'

i

.

:15

t3Woob .............................................~.
:IIWoob.... ~...................................... UUI

II

Stocks

~w..,.,

SUIISCIUPTION RATES
·ly Carrier o r - - ·
One \\le&lt;k;.........................................,....... S2.00
One Monlh ......................... ,...................... $8. 'Ill
One
SIIM.OO

'o

s,.... .. • .,.......

,.

.Hospital news

The Daily Sentinel

histo·~y .

'·'

·

. State Repr~scntative John Carey
will hold an·open-door session at the
. Meigs County Courthouse from I ;30
to 2:30 p.m. on Friday, June 20. Dinner planned
Asmorga•bord dinner will be he)d
, . Carey· will meet with residents on a
• one-to-one basis to discuss state gov- by the t.ong Bottom Community
Association, lune 21, with serving t!&gt;
ernment concerns.
begin at 5 p.m . Adult, $5: children •.
$2.50.

-

'

I .-UDAYI

··-: Meigs announcements

-

!t

---------·

Thieves spoil wedding ceremony

.-...

Today in

L

·Man cited following .accident

...·-•.
·..•
-...

suit---~_

-r- 'iAKA.iii
.....
llllilllll~­
;n.u.-.a"i.....-:-

:Stout selected..

What has.happened to gender relation·s?··

I can't root for a fruit

The appeal was filed May 14 by
former Gallipolis City Solil:itor R.
William Jtnkins, who allep~lhat the
commission failed to oblene established procedure in gnnlinJ the permit to Jay and Marlene Hill of
Cheshire, and JON Development
'
*
Co.• Atlanta,
Ga.
•
Jenkins also alleges that the Hall$
and JON did not conforl IQ zoninlt
ordinance rcquiremellt) 1n III!Piying
for the permit, and should have filed
for a zoning change rather than 'onditional use of the property:
The site of the retail center ir cprrently zoned traffic-oriented ' com··
mercia! and river ~ommerc;e lfl!f{it.l\
conditional use permit allows actiY'
ity to occur in the area not cove..-.
under the present. zoning designation.
The commission granted thC per..
mit on March 25.
. ;-

, ~----------------------------~
:cAA
chief...

...

.1..D

damages car

Shane.McDaniel

'I'

TAKE NIV. FAMILV

development site include Street Engineering and Surveying of St.
Clairsville,
Ohio and Wolverton and
A Pomeroy man received minor injuries after he fell asleep behind
the wheel of his pickup truck and crlshed into a guardrail early ruesAssociates, Inc. of Norcross. Ga.
Another legal documeni called a
day mornins.
Brian R. Nitz, 31, of Pomeroy was northbound on County Road
Claude L. (Ham) Cunninghain, 86, of Syracuse, died on Thesday, June slope and grading easement agree7A near state Route 7 around Pomeroy when he fell asleep while dri·
10, 1997. at Holzer Medical Ce.nter, following an extended illness.
ment was filed on April29, 1997. at.
· •H
~
1
fVa ad'
the Gallia County Counhouse in
ving a 1977 Chevrolet pi&lt;:kup truck, accordins to the Gallia-Meigs Post
.
e was a ormer emp oyee o
n lUll\ and a former riverboat employ- which the Kanawha River 'rowing,
of the State Highway Patrol. The truck went off the risht side of the
ee. He .was an active CB radio operator, and attended Syracuse Mission Inc. granted JON Development the
road and struck a guardrail, then crossed the roadway and struck anoth·
Church.
er guardrail, sustaining t.eavy·damase.
_ .· .
tfe was born on October 27' 1919 in Hartford, W.Va., son of the late rightto grade, slope, cut. and fill, and
Howard Edward and Virginia Goodriite Cunningham.
maintain slopes on the property of
Nitz was transported by the Meigs County Emergem:y Medical Ser.
.
River Towing. ·
vice to Veterans Memoriai ·Hospital in Pomeroy wllere he was treatHe 1s surviVed by .his wife, Margie Cunningham of Syracuse; a son and Kanawha
Sources say that 'actual construe-·
ed and released. Also responding to the seene were volunteers of the
daughter-in-law, Robert and Sllafon Cunningham of Syracuse; three daugh· tion on the mall fs proposed for about
Pomeroy squad and fire department.
.
!crS and sons-in-law: R,jta and Doh Chapman of Syracuse; Claudia and Chat- August 1. · A Gallipolis City Site
Nitz was cited on a charge of failure to control.
lie Divers of New Haven, W.Va. and Sue Ellen and Bob Lemley of Syra- Analysis plan shows the Wal-Mart to
cuse; 1_1 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
occupy 179.958 square feet, another
.
Bes1des
hts
parents,
he
was
preceded
m
death
by
two
brothers
and
two
22,200 square feet allocated for'othcollaps~
Sisters. . . .
.
·. ·
·
er business shops, for a total of
Gary L. Stanley, 19, Pomeroy. 'was northbound on Homer Hill Road
GraYeslde
semces
~til be he!~ at G1lmore Cemet:~ on Thursday, June · , 202,158 square feet.
just off Kingsbury Road in Scipio Township Thesday morning when
12; 1997 a( 11 a.m., w1th Re~. M1ke Thompson. officiating.
;
With earth moving now underway
. the edge or the roadway collapsed, causing his 1988 Mercury to go
Fnends
may·
call
at
tbe
Ewmg
Funeral
Home
on
Pomeroy
frol)16
to
9
p.m.
all
streets, Jots, and alleys at the forinto the ditch and sustaining moderate diunage, according to a Meigs
on Wednesday.
:
·
·
mer location of K and K Mobile
County Sheriffs Department rep&lt;irt.
Home
Park have bee.n vacated. The
In an unrelated incident, Lorraine Walker, Rutland, was northbound
contractor
is required to provide the
on State Route 7 driving a 199Z Pontiac :when the·lefi-rear wheel came
City of Gallipolis with a completed
off the car. No damage was repoJted and a wrecker was summoned
to move the car to a garage for repair.
Funeral Services for Sl)ane Marshall McDaniel, infilnt son of Jason and flood plain management elevation
Ursula McDaniel, former Meigs County residents, were held Thursday in certificate form , completed by.a registered land surveyor prior to the conGermany where Mr. and Mrs. McDaniel reside.
The services were conducted by the armed forces chaplain of the com- struction of any footings. to insure the
Joe Shuler Jr., Story's Run Road, Cheshire, reported Tuesday that
sub-grade is at the proper level.
pany in which Mrs. McDaniel serves .
Upon. completion, the mall is
within the last three days a house and building owned by him on Sto- ·/
Surviving besides his parents are his grandparents, Ralph and Judy
ry's Run Road had been entered and ransacked, ·according 10 Meigs
expected
to attract shoppers from
McDaniel !)f Rutlan\1, and Jack. and Maxine Hart of Pomeroy; and greatCounty Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
·
·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hart, Pomeroy, and Ada Hartman of many counties in Southern Ohio,
1
WestVirginia, and Kentucky.
. Nothing was reported missing.
Middlebury, Inc).
·
.
•
•
Maxine Hart and her sister, Eileen, are in Germany with the family now Appeal still pending
An administrative appeal to the
and Mr. and Mrs. McDaniel will leaveJ.unday for a week's visit there. ·
Contlnuedfrompagel
Mr. and Mrs. McDaniel's address ill3 Ord. CMR 403 , Post Office Box Gallipolis Planning Commission's
4358, APO AE 09059. While Mrs. McDaniel is in the service, her husband issuance of a conditional use permit
· program is funded through a combi· "most important job."
for the proposed shopping center on
is an area manager for a bicycle manufacturing finn in Germany.
. During !IJat time; he was in charge
nation of federal, state and local dolEastern Avenue is still pending in
of assigning Marines to work at the
lars.
Galli a County Common Pleas Court.
Edwards served 20 years in the White House and the presidentilll
Marines before retiring two decades · retreat at Camp David.
Units ·of the Meigs County Emer- Reedsville, Lucille Carr, VMH, Tupago as a captain. The recipient of a , While he enjoyed his stint with the
pers Plains squad assisted;
Veterans Memorial
.. Purple Heart· from one of his two Cheshire-based CAA, "I fell Iike it gency Medical Service answered II
3:48
p.m.,
Chester
Road
,
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
combat tours in Vietnam, the Missis- was time for me to retire," Edwards calls for assistance Tuesday. Units Pomeroy, Lorena Davidson, treated at
None.
responding included:
. sippi native became a personnel offi. said.
the
scene;
TUESDAY DISCHARGE
DISPATCH
CENTRAL
A new executive director is
. cer with Marine operations in Wash6;44
p.m.,
West
Main
Street,
Wilbur
Koenig.
12:20 a.m., Harrisonville, Paul
. • ington,,D.C .. whi.ch he considered his expected to he named by mid-'July.
Pomeroy,
Lawrence
Ke~nedy,
VMH,
Steinmetz Sr., Holzer Medical CenPomeroy squad assisted;
ter, Rutland squad assisted;
~ontlnued from page ~
7:40p.m ., Mulberry Avenue, Ger6;05 a.m., state Route 7, Pomeroy,
ald
Sellers, HMC;
motor-venicle accident, Brian Nitz, .
·: and David Ramey as tutors for four · ment. .·
9:59p.m.,
Riverside Apartments,
Memorial' Hospital,
·• health handicapped students, two
·• Authorized the treasurer to Veterans
Middlepon,
Mary
Lang, VMH;
each, at a rille of $11.72 {Klr hour not request proposals from banks for Pomeroy squad· and volunteer fire.
10;54
p.m
.,
Flatwoods
Road,
department assisted;
deposit of public fonds. ·
to exceed five hours per week.
8:43 a.m., Nye Avenue, Pomeroy, . Pomeroy, David Vanlnwagen, HMC,
-- . Accepted a proposal from ·
Boyan Gartchev of Bulgaria and
RUTLAND
. .
Ivana Najdanovic of Yugoslavia were Snouffer's Fire &amp; Safety for fire pro, Eleanora F. Landers, HMC;
8:29p.m
..
Hampton
~allow
Road,
. II :19 a.m .• Maples Apartments,
· • approved as tuition-free exchange tection services for the 1997-98 '
·
Tena
Jewell,
HMC.
·
Pomeroy, Cybil Bahr, VMH;
students for the ·upcoming school school year;
2;51 p.m., Locust Grove Road,
The next meeting will be held
year.
·
June 24, 7 p.m. at the district's cen. In other business. the board:
.. Approved the minutes of the tral office on the second floor of the
A l'omcroy man was cited for'dri' ty. Heavy damage was reported to his
May 27 meeting, the financial report Pomeroy Municipal Building .
ving under the influence and two oth- 1983 Ford, which was towed from
for May and approved bills for payer charges after an accident in the scene.
Pomeroy Tuesday evening.·
'Marshall was cited for driving
According to the Pomeroy Police· under the influence, driving under a
Dane L. Marshall, 45, DUI. s uspen~ion and failure to conDepartment,
A wedding at the Trinity Church ding expenses, and at least tWo credPomeroy,
was.
traveling on Osborne trol.
was the target of a breaking and it cards.
.
Street
at
a
high
rate of speed and
No injuries were reported.
entering on Saturday.
One ofthose credit cards was subAccording to Pomeroy Po lie~- seque~tly used, and may lead to fur- struck a building on private pro1perChief Gerald Rought, a call was ther information about the theft,
· received shortly before 6 p.m., report- Rought said.
ing that several wallets, checkbooks
"Whoever it was knew what they
and jewelry had been stolen from the were looking for and where to find
basement ofthe church, located at the it," Rought said.
Approximately $1,500 was
corner of East Second . and Lynn
Streets.
charged .to the stolen card; according
Rought said he believes the rob· to Rought, but it is not yet known
·bery took place while the wedding where the card was, used, although
ceremony was underway in the the owllCr of the card had reported the
,' chureti sanctuary. Among the items card stolen .
. stolen were checks written for wed-

Claude L. Cu·nnl".ngham

to Clinton by donating $177,000 to Clinton did, however, voice his sup- aware of it, when he met with the
the Democratic National Committee port for "multiple" pipelines to car· anns dealer.
and Jan Moller
'Esta6fisfretf in 1.948
Tsakos came to Casey during the
Lebanese-American oil financier in 1995 and 1996. His gifts got him ry Caspian Sea oil.
"
The administration's interest in the early days of the Reagan administraRoger Tamraz. who's at the center of invited to a White House coffee.
111 Court.Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
pipeline project, and Tarnraz's access tion with a multi-billion dollar
the White House fund-raising scan614·992·2156 • Fax 992·2157
to the White House, idlowed Tamraz scheme to build a trans-Africa oil
dal, is not the first unsavory character to seek the backing of Washing- By Jack Anderson to portray himself as a Clinton pal in pipeline.' Casey denied endorsing the
his dealings with officials from · project, though a CIA spokesman
ton big shots for a get-rich-quick, oiland
Thrkey and the other countries in admitted to us in 1984 that the
' pipeline scheme.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
which he planned · to build .his agency was interested in the idea. The j
; . , It might comfort President Clinton
Jan Moller
pipeline. Tamraz also had another pipeline would have carried Saudi
·and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DROBERT L. WINGETT
, Mass.-- both of whom got involved where he told the .president of his name to drop: Ted Kennedy. Tam.raz Arabian oil across Africa, bypassing
Publisher
; /with Tamraz when they probably . plans to build a "peace pipeline" to raised money for .the senator, and the Persian Gulf an&lt;\ transiting three
:,should not have .. to know that transport oil from the Caspian Sea even hired Kennedy's wife, Victorja; Central African states .. a route of
!Republican officials got themselves across Azerbaijan. Armenia and to be his lawyer.
·
questionable stability. ·
·If
,.
into
a
similar
mess
I
3
years
ago.
Turkey,
and
finally
to
the
MediterCliinon
and
Kennedy
had
done
Whether the plan was endorsed or
MARGARET
LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
a
liule
more
research
into
Tamraz's
not,
the meetings with Casey ga:ve . ·
l: The story of Basil Tsakos, a Greek ranean Sea. ·
Controller
General Manager
..
' arms merchant who, back in ihe earThe pipeline, which would have background, it's safe to say that nei• Tsakos and hisAmeriean partner .. an
:' ly 19.80s, tried to get then CIA Direc- made Tamraz rich beyond his wildest ther would have gotten involved old Casey sidekick named Joe RosenTlloSontlnel we/c....,. I - to llw odltof from - .·on • btoodi'OIIIJ'I of topic£
:; tor William Casey and Sen. Mark 0 . ·dreams, could only have been built if with the oil baron, and each would
baum--animponantnametodropas
Sht1tt,_,..(3DD_or_)hovelhebU!c-otl»&gt;ngpubltlhod. TyP«JI«·
S
· h 11 · 1
have
saved
himself
.a
great
deal
of
they sought support for the pipeline
..,. , . prwtemd and 111 moy,. .alto&lt;/. &amp;ch llhoul&lt;ltnclua. ollfllllltJ,., odl - ·
l Hatfield, R-Ore., to support his plans the United tates, wtt a tis c out,
.,., do~ phoM num,.,, Spoc/fJI• &lt;Mtolf ,.,.., ~ ,.,.,.....,. ro • pootrlow.,.,.,.
to build a trans-Africa oil pipeline, is backed the project.
embarrassment.
at the Pentagon and State Depart·
orro: lAIIIto to llw Editor, Tllo S...Unll. 111 COurt St, -..y, Oltlo
eerily reminiscent of the current conAfter spending a few minutes
"The same could be said for Casey ment. Casey also put Rosenbaum in
·.. ··-·
troversy. Neither Casey nor Hatfield chatting with. Tamraz, Clinton put and Hatfield, who sho'uldn't have · touch with some former intelligence
L~~:::-~~~.~~:!~10~.1~1:4·:•~::~~157~
. ----------------~~~~~~~
•
were ruined by their dealings· with senior Whiie House adviser Thomas been so eager to involve themselves agents who might have been inter"
Tsakos,
but both had some explain- F. "Mack" McLarty on the job. with Tsakos .back in the early 1980s. ested in the project.
,.
ing to do.
McLarty made inquires with senior Tsakos had a criminal record in
The relationship between the
£.
•
Taniraz, a Middle East wheeler- Energy Department offitials about Greece and was· suspected of being Greek arms merchant and llatfield
dealer wanted for allegedly embez- the proposed pipeline. After some involved in dubious international · was a bit more dubious .. Like Tam•
zling $200 million from a company investigation, the White House decid- arms deals. CIA Director Casey raz's dealings with Kennedy, Tsakos
1;...
L
,_ Dear Edftor
in Lebanon, was able to gain access ed not to support Tamraz's project. ignored this information. or wasn't "hired" the then-senator's wife.
lhat. The staff ofthe library, city hall,
Antoinette. She was paid $55,000 by
•.•lOn August 20, 1955, a·baby was the sheriffs department, Meigs County
Museum,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bob
Hoe.
.--..
-----"-~----=:::==:::::-:-----------:-------:-....,.----l
Tsakos
while her husband was help•• abandoned on the river bank opposite
llich,
and
the
Court
Street
Grill
all
ing
promote
the notorious pipeline
l· the comer of Lynn and Main ,Street.
r
. I am that baby.
gave assistance.
~~lER
project .
¥
If anyone has any information
or
At first, Hatfield claimed that his .
I
made
a
recent
trip
to
Pomeroy
to
:r
,. visit the river bank and to obtain any regarding my birth, please contact
LIK~
'f1ll
wife was paid the money for locating
I'
1a,. 01so•·••."""
and helping to decorate a Watergate
•• information I could on the circum- inc; Julia K. Carr 7730Janel Drive
Indianapolis,
Indiana
46237.
apartment
for. Tsakos. But this was
stance surrounding my birth. Also
again for all of the
.
disputed by the people who actually
along on my trip was a photograph- h 1Thank-you
'
located and decorated the apartment.
Randy Olson, for People Magae P·
Then the senator said his wife took
... er,
•• zme.
the
money partly to search for propSincerely,
The people in Pomeroy helped us
••
erties
in this country for Tsakos and
t
Jul.la K. Carr
so much, and we really appreciated
partly to try to. find buyers for two
properties Tsakos owned in Europe.
•.• .
Her efforts, however. did not result in
any transactions.
' ,'
.
charade
of
an
investigaAfter
a
'
tion, then Senate Ethics Commiuee.
Chairman Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska.
proclaimed that he didn't "sec anyBy WALTER R. MEARS
thing to investigate." Except for a
AP Speci'l Correspondent
few incensed objccti'ons from the
WASHINGTON- So much for ·thc myth that voter outrage over excesspress
(including one from this col.. es of the last campaign was going .to propel action to reform away fund:raisumn), the Hatficld-Tsakos affair was
ing abuses and swollen spending before the next one.
dropped.
It isn't happening, and even if televised congressional hearings this sumThe more things change in Washmci stir the political. money issue, they don't seem' likely to mobilize the
ington, the more they stay the same.
kind of pressure reformers expected early this year. ·.
·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller ' ·
The public demand that President c;::linton said should lead to enactment
are writers for Unll~d Feature
of a reform law by July 4 wasn't there,
.
Syndicate, Inc.
"I think he underst.Ood that unless we could bring that ~gislation quick·
ly to his desk, the likelihood of influencing the 198 cyct~ was very, very
·remote," said Sen. Richard J. Durbin, D:lll . .
Actually. ihe target never was realistic against Republican resistance. Now
it is no more than a Democratic talking point, and even the staged speeches concede the outcome.
·
ly made out . with him, she didn't trammg facility in Maryland. But
making the first sexual overtures.
So do Americans surveyed in a poll commissioned by reform advocates. By Joseph Perkins
intend
to go "all the way" with him. even those ~o think he should face
To
my
young
mind,
this
role
I came across one of my early
While 60 percent said it should be on the·pnority list, .only 15 percent
And
he
should have known that.
reversal
was
quite
disconcerting.
But
afiring squad for his offenses have to .
wanted it at the top. And 57 pcrecm said th"ey had little or no confidence newspaper columns the other day. It
Though
Bowman did not prevail be troubled by the military court's
the
campus
feminists
raised
my
conwas
written
during.
my
freshman
that Congress and Clinton would produce laws reducing the rolcof money
in court, she did strike a blow for the expansive new definition of rape. The
year in college. I titled it, "No more
in politics.
sisterhood. Men arc paranoid nnw court held that a rape occur.; not only
That survey for the Center for Responsive Politics reflects the mood in golden girls."
.,.,
Joseph
Perkins
,that
if a one-night stand goes awry - if a man uses physical force to comIt was an allusion to my ·favorite
other polls - interest. but not urgency about reform; concern, when asked, ·
an
unclothed woman suddenly has ·pcl a woman to hayc sex, but also in ·
if
about the influence of money and big donor.; ; and a judgment that Democ- character from American literature, sciousncss. What I was observing
misgivings
about sex or has morning- cases where .a man .exerts mental
Jay Gatsby, who devoted much of his was sexual equality in practice, they
rats and Republicans are equally l'ikely to he involved in questionable fund
•
after recriminations -- he could face pressure on a woman to have sex. S!l
adult life to making himself worthy
raising.
explained,
and
if
I had a problem with rape charges.
-~
even if a woman consents; if she's
of the woman he loved, Daisy
No groundswell, and no sign ificant pressure from beyond ~he Beltway.
-"'
that; then I must be some kind of sexAnd .even if a man has had an under any mental duress whatsoever,
Buchanan
.
Clinton had saicj he would prco:;s for action in every available forum . He
.:. ~
ongoing relationship with a woman, she has suffered rape. .
To my young -- perhaps callow·- ist.
hasn 't; it slipped down the priority list. In his Feb. 4 State of the Union mesWell,
it
took
me
some
years
10
get
he. could rind himself on the .wning
"- sage he said delay would be the death of reform legislation . Two months
Of ci,ursc, this definition applies
- mind, this was the way romance
used
to
this
brave
new
world
of
genside
of
the
law.
Like
poor
Man:
•
only to the military at !he moment.
worked. A. man would fall in love
later, Vice President AI Gore said there was unprecedented public focus on
der relations. And just when I thought Albert. He had been seeing a woman But it seems only a maucr of time
with a woman -- his Golden Girl -the
issue,
and
the
Whiie
House
set
up
an
education
and
awareness·project
-~
I was up to speed on the rules of the for 'I0 years and suddenly she iurncd before some nonmilitary court adapts
and make himself worthy of her love.
campaign finance reform . Not much has been. heard of it since.
. on The.
game, the rules suddenly changed.
on him, charging him with sexual the same standard. And when that
chairmen, former Democratic Vice President Walter Mondale and for- After a courtship, they would get
The epochal date was May 9. assa.ult, besmirching his good name happens, we will come tn the point
z,:, mer Republican Sen. Nancy Kassebaum Baker, arc to·appear before a Sen- married and~ hopefully, live happily 1991.
That's when William Kennedy · and reputation.
where prudent men will start requirever aft\:r.
.
-: ate commiuec next week to talk about the effort. ·
A)hert put the woman up in a ing women to sign sexual indemnifiSmith
was
charged
with
"date
rape."
But
once
I
.
g
ot
to
college
(sti
II
a
.
~
The Senate bill Clinton supports includes incentives to limit·spending by
Smith, a Georgetown University $400-a-night suite in a posh Wash- cation declarations heforc dating,'
virgin, as I disclo~ed in that early col'• . congressional candidates, an end to the unlimited contributions that now can
law student at the time, had been on ington, D.C., hotel. Obviously, they just as an increasing numher of men ,
:::; be delivered to political piirtics - the kind of money involved in the Dcmoc- umn), I wa• quic\dy disabused of
holiday in West Palm Beach, Fla. He had done this before, and the wo'man arc asking prospective brides to sign
:·' rats ' improper 1996 fund raising- and restrictions on donations by polit- those romantic notions. Women were
not waiting for Gatsby, Prince met a woman in a bar. They drank the willingly had sex with Albert. But on prenuptial agreements.
ical action committees.
This is the present.state of gender
Channing or yours truly to come night away. She went back to his the occasion in question, they apparIt is styled a bipartisan bill. There arc 30 sponsors; all but three of them
place after hours (instead of going ently had a diS:tgreemcnt. So now relations in America. There arc some
along
and
sweep
them
off
their
feet.
•. Democrats. The Rcpuhlica~s who control Congress won't accept that bill
Albert stands accused ofheing some feminists who view this is uS progress
They were taking matters into their home). They had sex.
'" . a~d aren 't much interested in others. A Senate GOP taskforce was going to
The
next
morning,
Patricia
Bowkind of sexual predator.
·
for women,' but this is one former
own hands.
; . consider and suggest alternatives, hut hasn' t.
.
man
decided
she
wasn't
such
a
sexAnd l'm ·not about to defend Del' romantic who linds it lumcntahlc.
They
were
just,
as
aggressive.
as
'
:j
Clinton is trying another route, seeking action by the Federal Election
men in the courtship ritual : initiating ually liberated woman after all. She mar Simpson, the Army drill instrucJoseph Pc~kins is a columnist
·•
Commission 10 forbid so-called soft money, those unrestricted donations the
was overpowered by Smith, she tor who took sexual advantage of SCV· for the ~an Diego Union-Tribune
contact
with
men
they
didn't
know,
parties can take;· $262 million worth in the last campaign cycle. The FEC
asking men out on first dates. asking charged. Though she willingly era! female recruits at the scandal- and a commentator for MSNBC.
· } 1 opened that money route, nearly 20 years ago, for funds that weren't to be
f- spent for individual candidates but for party-building efforts. The line blurred · men to he their significant others, climbed into bed with him, willing- wracked Aberdeen Proving Ground
.vanishing point as the sums involved soared.
.'::
• to the
~
Whatever happe ns on that track would take months, and probably wouldlj n't stand anyhow. given congressional claims to authority over the question.
•.;
That leaves would-be reformers to repeat their case. and insist something
!• has to he done. "We must pass meaningful campaign finance reform or be
·1
before the taxpayin~ public will lie defense, which means you can't nail
deep fat.
By Joseph Spear
:,.: em.harrassed to face the voters in the 1998 elections," said Rep. Tho111as H.
What happened is, Oprah had a coughing up big bucks for indeper- a reporter l'or writing about kohlraIt's about darn time somebody
•• . Allen. D-Mainc. co-chairman of a task force of House freshmen .working
Food Policeman on her show who ' dent counsels IO look into high·IC\Cl bies in general. It has lo be a particstood up for food.
'"' on the iss ue .
·
All we' ve been hearing for years was talking about mad cow disease disparagement of fruits, meats ~ nd ular kohlrabi.
Any embarrassment is more likely to pass than a campaign reform law.
·vegetables.
it seems is people talking about what
"There is no will, t~crc Is no commitment to .rcal campaign reform from
The lawyers will undoubtedly
Surely you recall ihc scorn t~at contend there ought to be a different
the Republi can side." Democrat Durbin said. ''Unfortunately, that means that
a terrible thing food is. Margarine's
Joseph Spear ·· George
Bush heaped on hroccoli . "I burdc~ of proof for public vegetables
. the dismal swamp of American politics will continue to exist."
got trans fa!ly acids. Mexican has fat. .
and
she
asked
the
guy
if
it
could
do
not
like broccoli," · he said ;n vs. pnvatc, and that in the interest of
Stuffing has gcnns. Etcetera etcetera
EDITOR'S NOTE.- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ~tccttra. blah blah blab, yada yada "make AIDS look like the commo.n March 1990, after banning it ft;nm Ait .robust public debate, there should be
cold." The guest said yes and Oprah · Force One. "I haven'tlikcd 11 since roo~ for error. A public ru(abaga
yada.
for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national pol·
It's gotten to the point where the turned to her a11dicncc and said: I wa~ a little kid and my mother made would have to show actual malice
.itlcs for more than 30 years.
.
·
· only thing that · doesn 't have too "Now doesn't ihat concern you an a me cat it. And I'm president of the .which means that n~wsperson~
much sodium or sugar or fat or eho- little bit here, hearing that '?It has just United States, an!l I'm not going to knowmgly published falsehoods ··
·
lesterol"'o r nitrates is the container ·stopped me cold from eating anoth· cat it any more!"
abo.ut lhe rutabaga in question or act·
And, of course. Hillary Clinton ed m reckless disregard of whether
your food came in. Eat the cardboard er burger. I'm stopped."
Cattle prices plummeted and did- would be in dccp.soup for the way their n:ports were true or not.
carton or paper bag or styrofoam tray
.
Ely The Assocllted Press ·
·
n
't
recoverfortwo
months.
That
irrishe
put
down
peas
while
taping
a
and
you
might
live·
until
tomorrow.
To prove they wer:e not reckless.
Today is Wednesday, June ll,the 162nd day of 1997. There are 203 days
Well, no more. The Food People tated Mr. Paul Engler, a rancher from' · Sesame Street segment four years reporters would have to show they
~ left in the year.
have had it with the Food Police and Amarillo, Texas: He: su!ld Oprah and ago. While urging young folks to eat attempted to set all sides. Of course
p Today's Highlights in Hi,story:
·
. .
are
striking back. In the past five her pfl)duction company for $6.7 mil· their green veggies, she bluned out • it's ~ind.of difficult to get a comment
On June II, 1776, the Continental Congress formed a committee to draft
"Hardly anybody likes peas:"
years, 14 states have passed food dis- lion.
from a cabbage, but they will have to
a Declaration of Independence from Britain.
1
am·a
pro-food
person,
but
I
see
'
Three
is,
thi.
s
food
libel
thing
will
paragement
laws.
If
you
say·
some;
demonstrate
they tried to lind a cabOn this date:
three
problems
here.
create
a
new
body
of
law,
and
that
thing
false
and
defamatory
about
bage spokesperson somewhere.
In 1509. England's King Henry VIII married Catherine of Aragon.
fruit,
vegetables
and/or
meat,
dependOne
is,
if
such
nonhuman
things
will
mean
a
bountiful
harvest
for
you
There's oio doubt the bar Will have
In 1770. Capt. James Cook, commander of the British ship Endeavour,
ing
on
which
ju~isdiction you are in; as cucumbers can be libeled, What's knQw who. Lawyers will ltave to · a field day. But hey, you know what
· discovered the Great Barrier Reef off Australia by running onto it.
you could be committing libel.
to .stop creative JawmakeJl from giv· revise such defenses as the fair com- they say. Every artichoke deserves an
In J919 •.Sir Barton .won the Belmont Stakes, becoming horse racing's
· Take Te~as. for example. Down in ins other nonhuman things. similar ment and criticism privilege, so they ·~y.
.
first Triple Crown winner.
·
.
.
cattle
country,
they'
don't
take
kindrights?
How
long
will
it
be
before,
cu
argue
that
if
a
parsnip
puts
jtseJf
.J-.ph
ld 191$2, the United States and the Soviet Union signed a lend-lease agreeto
people
badmouthing
beef.
say,
Pop
Tarts
can
sue?
Or
aun1?
Or
before
the
public
for
IJIPI'OYal,
it
hu
wallei
lor New p.,ar ~
ment to aid the Soviet war effort in World War II.
vprah
Winfrey
made
that
mistake
in
Aewlcdon.
tobacco?
Or
hair-eating
dolls?
to
take
the
good
with
the
bad.
And
In 1947, the government announced the end of household and institutional
April 1996, and now she could be in
1\vo is, it won't be 100 Ions there ;will have to be a group veggie
sugar rationing, to take effect the next day.

....

Preliminary work.::•lfa••' ,_ ,...

Man injured in one-vehicle wrec.k

'lay JICk Ancllraon

'*''

The Dally Sentinel• P8ge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

0

!Pipeline

The Daily Sentinel

•
.. : Wedne1d1y, June 11; 1997

;,

~

...

,

,.,

.'
J

..

'

'

'

..

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

ports

.

·

Justice &amp; Grissom
push Indians to &amp;-4
win over Brewers

Page4

. .June 11,1887

w~

Sports
in brief

FORCED OUT- The Pittsburgh Pirates• K~ Womack (bottom)
Is forced out at second base, but gets In the way of Cincinnati shortatop Barry Larkin just enough to prevent a dpuble play in the third
· Inning of.Tueaday night's Natlo!181 League game In Cincinnati, where
the Reels won 8-5. (AP)
· ·

Reds record 8-5
win over Pirates
By JOE KAY
Jason Schmid! struggled through
CINCINNATI (AP) - The another five•inni ng start , giving up a
Cincinnati Reds' biggest comeback . pair of runs on seven hits. The rightof the season has them thinking handcrhasn't won since April 27 and
about an even more implausible has pitched more than live innings
turnabout - salvaging their season. only onc.c in his lust seve n starts.
The Reds rallied from a five-run
. The re li ~ rs weren't much help.
deficit-Tuesday night to heat the Matt RuebeTgave up a sacrifice fly
Pittsburgh Pirates 8-5, scoring four to Cunis Goodwin in the sixth and a
runs .in the eighth inning with the run-scoring groundout lo Hal Mor·
help of :Rich Loiselle's throwing ris in the seventh.
· The Pirates were fidgeting. When
error.
At 2.5-37, the Reds are gaining Jason Kendall tripled to open the
confidence and a little bit of ground seventh but couldn 't score, the
in the NL Cenual. They. trail the Pirates had felt the mom entum
Pirates by six games with one left in change.
.
" We let one slide away when we
their series.
"We have a lot here in front of us had a man on third and nobody out,"
in the next two ·weeks, " manager manager Gene Lamont said. "That
Ray Knight said. "If we play real ·makes it different for the.other team.
well, we can erase a lot of bad mem- They only have
score one run
ories and go a long way to getting instead of two."
people truly lired'up about a positive
The Red s got four in the eighth season."
all unearned - with the help of the
The comeback Tuesday night was Pirates' first error in 47 innings.
one of the few highlights so far.
Ricardo Rincon . (2-3) ~alk~d
Pittsburgh seht 10 batters to the Mike Kelly to load the bases wJth
j,lati: in the second inning for a 5-0 --, two o~t, and Loiselle came on to face
~pad. Tony Womack and Joe Randa
Barry Larkm, who had been slde!)iad iwo-run singles off Dave Burba, hncd for the last week by muscle
iWho hasn't won since May 18.
spasms m hiS neck.
; ; " It suirted out looking like a lot
Larkin looked around when he
~f other games we've played. "
came to bat and saw what he had to
"night said.
,
do: hit .the ~a!ltowards thai big gap
•., It ended much differently because on the n ght s1de. ·
~ Pirates' pilching staff couldn't
"I actually looked at the defense
~old and their offense couldn't add.
and tried to hit it that way." Larkin
'
said

to

~cArthur ·Legi.onnaires
get .11-1 ~in over Meigs
'' '

McAnhur Post 303 broke open a

~oreless game in the late innings

:AA1f L'Oilsted to a Il-l win over Meigs

' 5~ Eighth District American Legion
1laseball action Saturday at Meigs
:High School.
l The game wa.' scoreless until the
.:Sixth inning when McArthur scnl
Mine batters 10 the pi ale and got three
~ns to take a 3-0 lead. McArthur
~d four runs in the seventh, a sin:ste run in the eighth arid three more

,,
.
Mubbard Memor1al
l l Tournament

sets
2Q-team limit
,,••

; The Bill :Huhbard Memorial Little League Tournament will he held
In July in Syracuse.
' · There will he a 2Q.tcam limit wilh
the drawing lo he held on Montlay.
lone 30. .
For more info[ma)ion ~all Ehcr
Pickens Jr. at '.192-5564.

By KEN BERGER
, · CLEVELAND (AP) - How do
a couple of All-Stars stay busy while
they're strandc:d in an airp&lt;llt all day?
Marquis Grissom and David Justice had a long chat about hitting, and
it paid off.
Grissoin and Justice were sluck in
Atlanta's airport for more than six
hours 1\aesday while lwo flights 10
Cleveland were. delayed. They
showed up at Jacobs Field less than
two hours before the game and
played key roles in the Cleveland
Indians' 5;4 viclory over the Milwaukee Brewers.
· .
"Maybe they ought to go back to
Atlanta. spend tile night, and then
come back tomoltow," Indians man·ager Mike Hargrove said.Justice drove in the go-ahead run
. with a sacrifice fly in ttie seventh and
· Grissom was . 2-for-4 and sparked '
two Cleveland rallies. AfteJ: speoding
their day off back home in Atlanta
Monday, lhe former Braves didn't
make' it to the ballpark until about
.5:30.
"Nine this morning we got to the
· airport, and we left at3:30." Grissom
,said. ''We had a preuy long day; a
·
boring day.''
They missed batting practice, but
it didn't matter. Grissom and Justice,
both traded to the Indians in the Kenny Lofton deal in March, had all day
to talk aboul hilling.
. "He just kind of talked me i.nto
relaxing a lillie bit," said Grissom,
who was dropped from first to ninth
in the Cleveland batting . order
IK!causc of a season-long slump. "I

CINCINNATI (AP) ~ The
Cincinnati Reds say their new sladium will cost $50 million more than
the latest estimate made public by
Hamilton County officials.
Reds managing executive John
Allen said he estimates the stadium.
will cost $230 million.
·
That would bring the total cost of
. the county's stadium development
project to more than $700 million,
well over the $544 million project
price touted during the campaign to
pass a half-cent sales tax 10 build stadiums for the Reds and tke Bengals.
EKpcrts said it's not unusual for
. such estimates to quickly grow outdated in the big-money world of sladium construction.
·
The estimated .cost of the Bengals' new Paul Brown Stadium has
grown from $170 million in 199.5 to
;., '
$270 million and doesn't include
land acquisition or all the design
costs.
Allen said his estimale also does
nol include !hose costs.
County Commissioner Tom Ney- · '
er Jr. said the price of such projects,
is nuid.
" It's a little premature for us 10 he
CONGRATULA110NS, KEVIN!- F1ork1a catch- · . latter's no-hitter against the liost San Franclaco
tossing numbers around," he. said. er Charles Johnson (left) and teamma.ta Pat Rapp
Giants Tuesday•.The Marlins won 9-0. (AP)
"You could spend $200 million. You
(right).congratulate pitcher Kevin Br0\¥n after the
could spend more than that."

in the ninth lo close out the scoring.
Meigs sctJrcd its only run in the siXth
mmng.
P.O. Stewart was the winning
pitcher for M&gt;Arthur with help from
'Dan Jewell. Matt Dill wa.&lt; the starter
and loser li&gt;r Meigs with help from
Jeremiah Bentley and Brad Duvcn·
poi1.
. Rohey led McArthur's 16 · hit
attack with a douhlc and three singlcs.'Nathan Stalder added two doubles and a· single. Lance Rolston
three singles and Wcs Wilson two
singles.
Josh Merkle hatl two singles for
Meigs. ·
Meigs played al Glouster Tuesday
evening. ·
lnnine tmli
McArthur 000-003-413=11 - 16-2
Mci gs
000-00 1-!lOO= 1-5-4
Stewart (WP) anti Jewell, Wilson
(4)

Dill (LP), Bentley (6 ), Davenport ·
(9) and Dugan

Brown fires no-hitter to help
Marlins shut out Giants 9-0

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
Philadelphia 76ers hired former Ohio
State coach Randy Ayers a.~ their
physical conditioning coach, Sixers'
coach Larry Brown announced Tues.
.
day.
Ayers spent eight seasons as By The Aasoelatecl Preas .
Kevin Brown· was untouchable.
coach ,at Ohio State. His record there
Only'
a pitch that bounced off Marwas 124- 108, bu.l the university
vin
Benarc;l
separated the Florida
fired him in March af'ter the Buckright-hander
from
perfection.
eyes finished the. basketball season
Brown
threw
the
first no-hitter
I 0-17 and, for the_second year in a
this season, yielding only a hit batsrow, in ninth place in the Big Ten.
Before the season started, Ayers man with two outs in the eighth
had heen 'told by Ohio State athlet- inning when a l-2 cut fastball .
ics director Andy Geiger and by glanced off Benard. The 9-0 victory
OSU president E. Gordon Gee that. over the San Francisco Giants was
he needed to finish in the top half of the second no-hitter in Marlins histhe Big Ten standings to keep his job. tory.
"It's a combination of things. II
Ayers guided the Buckeyes to a
takes
luck, and it goes !Jeyond good
pair of Big Ten championships, in·
1991 and 1992. He was The Associ- stuff. You need everything to go
ated Press national coach of the year right.': Brown said after nearly
becoming the 15th pitcher to throw
in 1991.
a
major league perfect game. " For a
A message seeking comment was
left on an answering machine at groundball pitch~r to throw a no-hitter, it's tough, because you 're lclling
Ayers' home.
put the ball in play. Overall, the
guys
Brown, former coach of the Indiless
balls
you put in play, the bellcr
ana Pacers, was hired by the 76crs on
.
May 5, replacing Johnny Davis. off you arc."
Brown,
who
led
the
major
Less than a week after he was hired.
he retained former 76ers point guard leagues with a 1.89 ERA lasl season,
Maurice Cheeks as an assistant but had not won since May 25 at San
· Diego. In his last start, he allowed 12
fired the other assistant coaches.
hits in seven innings in a 6-0 loss to
STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) - · For the New York Mets.
ihe first time in 11 years, Stcffi Oraf
But lit San · Francisco, he was
~· ill nol win a Orand Slam IOurna- superb. Brownthrew·99 pitches, 68
mentlitle in 1997.
for strikes, and fanned seven Giants.
"His stuff had no-hitter wriuen all
. Having dropped 10 her lowest
ranking since 1986 _No. 3 in the over it," Giants infielder Jeff Kent
world - Graf is expected to miss 1he .said.
next 4-6 months ~fter , undergoing
Elsewhere Tuesd~y. it was San
surgery on her ]eft knee.
·
Diego 6, St. Louis 5 in 12 innings;
She will miss the year's final two Atlanta 8, Colorado 3; New York I0,
Grand Slarn.tournaments. Wimblc- Chicago 6;.Montreal8, Philadelphia
·don and the u .S. Open. She is the S; and Houston 6, Los Angeles 3.
defending champion in hoth.
Marlins 9, Giants 0
The German right-hander had the
San Francisco's William Van·
surgery performed lit li priviue clin- Landinlham also had a no-hiucr
ic, 'according 10 Austrian TV reports. until the ~venth inning, when he
The surgeon was Dr. Reinhard Wein- . llJI.VC up a two-run home run . 10
stahl. a friend of Austrian 'tennis .Charles Johnson to spark a seven-run
rally.
.
player Barbam Paulus.
&lt;lraf, who ha.' won 21 Grand Slam
Bul Johnson was more cKcilcd,'
titles, said in a.statcmcntlhal.an MRI not surprisingly, by catching the no- .
hiuer.
last Friday revealed the. injury.
"During the two-hour surgery,
"It.'s already my second one and
repair of the cartilage a.' well as the I've only been in the league 1\Jr.threc
patellar tendon was performed,"
years," Johnson said. "A lot of guys
Orafsaid. "I hilve been a.'5ured that don't- get a chance to do that. It's
the surgery went very well and 1 feel awesome, a go()!l feeling to catch a
no· hiller."
fine riRhl now."
AI Leiter had the other one lilf

Florida on May II, 1996.
Padres 6, Cardinals S (12)
Tony Gwynn's third double of the
game -drove in the lying'runs in the .
ninth and Chris Gomez singled in the .
winning run in the bottom of the
12th.
. With one out in the 12th , Rigo
Beltran (0: I) walked Wally Joyner.
Quilvio Veras followed with a single
to center that was bobbled by Ray

Lankford, allowing hoth runners to
advance . Gomez, who was 3' 1'Qr-6,
followetl. with a single to cenlcr to ~
·.score Joyncr.
, ,( , ' , ""'""
Todd Erdos ( 1-0) pitched the lith :
inning for his lirst major league vic- .!
tory.
:
Gwynn went 3-for-5 with three •
RBis to take over the longest active :
hitting streak in ·the NL at 20 games. :
(See NL on Page S)
•

AL standings

Milwu~o~kec .......... :.. 2K

Jl

. 47~

KIIIIIILI City ........... 28 :32
Chicago ................. 28 33
MinrJes61n:........... .. 2K .l4

.467

~froit6 ,

•

''
'

•

•''

.•

.

--

CASIDMI

I

•

·

Today'spmes

•

. Atlanut (Bro~.:k 0·0) at Co\oradn
(Thomson 1-4). :l~ p.m. • ..
Florida (Kellin~ 1-41 at~ Francil~o'U

(Rutter 2·1). J:lS_p.m.

Minr.e,Oia tAl·

P~iladelphia ~ .Deeth

·

0.2) al M~tnlrt:al

. (BullillJCf i-S), 7.:\S p.m.
. PiUsburJh (Looiza ~-U a'1 CINCIN·
NATllToml&lt;o l · l ). 7 : 3~ p.m.
Houalon (Hampton 2-4) at los Ang~·

lei(Pod.4-3), 10:3lp.m.

St. Louh lAian lkncN :'i·!'il at Snn
Oii:Ja tHanlilton 4-:l). IO:~S r .m.

AuodatKm.

list . Desi,gnatfll LHP John Cumminas for
assipment.
,
OA.KLAND ATH.LETICS: Plmd
INF Soon Spielio on the l~ ·day cJisabl~o'\1
list retroocu~ to JuM It Coiled up INF·
Mark Bc:Uhorn From Edmonton of th~.
PCL.
SEATfi.E MARINERS: Traded RHP
Paul Mcnhnrt klthe San Oiego Pndre~ for
RHP: Andrea Berumen. A ui~n.:d Beru·
~ to Tacoma of the PeL.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Si~"'d
LHP Jason Jimenez.

Kevin Badenlccn.

MONTREAL EXPOS : Si~n&lt;d RHP
lbomtlf Tucker, 28 CIW'Cnc&amp;: Mytn. SS
Jl.lllhua Redlna. LHP Ryan lkcb. 18 Tul-mfl dJ,c Nunuri, 28 S~:otl Zcch. RHP
Ryan Saylor. LHP RaymomJ Plummer1
OF Mil.:httel Edge. and RHP Tuhin Liln zn&lt;a,
SAN DIEOO PADRF.S : Pln~'l:d INI:
CraiJ Shipley on the U-day dis.1hl!!d h5 t,
rctro· ncttvc to Sunduy. Activnh: d OF
Chri• Jnnes from the 1~-i.IIIY disahll"ll list.
Acquired ft,HP Puul Menhllrt l'nun Scaulc
in e•chnnae for RHP Andres Berumen
ood assifned -Menh:wt to LA~ v~,.,~ ot tlk!
Pal;ifi~: C00111

Thursday',s pmes .

·

SWJ Frtll'l(i5~:o (Gardner b-2l 311 Tc:w.as

. (Oliver ~ - 1). 8J~ p.m. .
.
· San Diego (Murmy 1-0) at Anaheim .
(Peritho 11-2). IO:OS r.m
.
Los Anaek• (Nomo 6-!i) at Oakland
(Tcl,.heder 1 - )). IO:O~p. m.
toloradn (Holmes 2· 11 111 ~ealllc
(Lowe 1·1), 10;~ p.m
·
·

Thursday'• pmes

CHICAGO WHIT~ SOX: Plucod C
Tony Pcna On the 15·dlly disabled liS!,
retroactive to lurae· l . Recalled OF Jl!ff
. Abbot! r~m NashvUie of the: America}!

National Ltaaue
·
CINCINNATI REDS : Slan&lt;d I B
Tuby SIU'IChel!!; OF O:~vi d Tidwell. U:nd SS

N.Y. Metl tRe;ynoiO S-0} ai Chi ~;~IJO
Culn (Qunzalcz 2·1). 2:20p.m.
·

.

N.Y. Yankec1 (Ro,m-4-3), 7;35 p.m.

&amp;llilf'k'ft (Knmienicd:i .t-2) Ill Sosltlll
(Selt 6-!'i). 6:05p.m.
.

•

•

not to ·giv~ this

Euttm l.elf'llt
PUR11.AND SEA OOGS: ~nt L~P
Bryan W11nJ to Chari11Ue of the IOicrnn•
lionall.e:Bi!-Lit.

Mld-L&lt;'IIU&lt;
KANE COUNTY COUGARS: Sen&lt;
RHP Dave TowllSCnllto PonJand of ~~

Easkrn taaue.

Father's Day.

San Dlc1o. (Murray 1'--0l at Anaheim
(Peri1ho 0.2). I 0:05 p.m.
,
t.o. Anaeles CNomo 6-!i) at Oakland
C"olorado tHulmu 2· 1) 01 Seanle
(l.Dwc: 1·1), IO:O:'i p.m..

NL standings ·

•••
•
.••
I

He'd really,: love a wireless phone. Goocl old

.
'

Euttrn Dlvlslon

»:

:r._

I. &amp;1.

Atlanta ...................42 21

Florida ................... JI&gt; 26

.61.17

WI

. ~Rl

Dod . The~e's. 'l'l olhing he wouldn 't do for you . Shew
'
.
.
him you're always .there for him with .a wireless

Are you 55
·or older
and ·

JUMBO 9 SIZE
CAN.TALOUPES

814.4
UCH

phone and
. service from Cellular One. . Sign ~im up
for Father's Day and he'll receive

250

· oH·peak minutes a month for

$20

plus free · activation (a
.

free local

3

.m onths

Come See
O•r
Contplete

value). Stop by

June 30, 1997.
•( thklln. M"'lcliDfllCI!Pfllr ~w 1- of ... m • . I 2&lt;'IKiflltl c-"'ilro\erll-cled·ll OPf)fOYofl-.w.d

~.~nt.o ..d lllinoAn do -

CDIIJ

o:""' No! .,.IScf - ·

-~ ~ ,..,..;Qtlon,

s..

tlof•

to. Cletollt.

.

for .Jadl

..... _ , ~04 Wesl 2nd s~ee. 614/992-7070

PICKENS

OallpaRa 1.502 E~stern Avenutt 61.4/.441.05.47

Athena 1100 East StateS~eet61.4/59.4-A800

HANGING . ·~5
BASKETS' ·~~

'

I
)

'

..

'

"

1
,

grades 9-12.
Cost of the camp is only .$10 per .~
camper with the registration deadline 0
on June 6th. Applications for the
camp arc available at Meigs High . ,
School, all area high sehools, all , .
Zide's locations, Locker 219 in Mid· ~
dleport, Vaughan's lOA Video in ;
Middleport, Rutland f:&gt;!:partment
Store in Rutland, Taz's Marathon in ,.
Pomeroy, Twin Oak's .Pennzoil in ;
Pomeroy, Baum Lumher in Chester "
and Riverside Golf Course in Mason.,
For more information, call Rick ,,
Edwards at Meigs High School al .
..
992-2158 .

Early detection is your best weapon
in Che fight against breast cancer.··
Holzer is committed to the fight ...
Early Detection
State of the art mammography
screening on site•.

The ABBI* System, Advanced
Breast Biopsy Instrumentation, a
one-step, small incision procedure
that targets and removes suspicious
ti551.~e for biopsy. Benefits of the
·ABBI* System:
·• Helps preserve-healthy breast
· tissue
• Minimal patient discomfort,
anxiety and trauma
• Quick return to normal activ.:
ties

''

3 SJ
FOR

u.s.

• 75 percent of breast cancer occurs in women 50 and over.
• 90 percent of breast cancer patients will ~arvive if the disease is
. detected and treated early.

Now has the ABBI* System, the ONLY one within a 45 mile radius.
For more information caU the Holzer Health Hotline aJ 1·800-462-5251

773-5511

'''
•

The deadline has hcen extended
for the first Mike Bartrum Football
Camp that will be held on Friday,
June 20. The new deadline will be
Friday June 13.
'
Campers can rcgist~r the day of
the camp, but they will not he guaranteed a. T-shirt on the day ol' the
camp.
The morning session will he from
9 am un1il noon with registration
from 8:30 until9 a.m.. That session
will be held, for grades 5 ~ 8 .
"I)Jc afternoon session will have.
registration [rom I :30 until 2 p.m.,
with the camp running from 2 p.m.
until 5 p.m. That session wi II he for

'I

The ,Holzer Medical Center

r.i$01( W. VA.

oComputw ll1ltCfl of your
sltll.. with lob blink of
40,000 employers from
Columbus to Charleston

Football camp registration
deadline moved to Friday ·

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

HARDWARE

Jack10n 384 Main Slreei61A/286-6Q73

,.

Did You Know?

U..eOf
.

,,..,...,.

'

'

SOUTHERN
PEACHES

.Power Tools.

I

=

The ABBI* .System

· San Francisco (GIU'dner 6-2) ol TexDI

cou....3·7J, 8:3' p.m.

(Tolahodorl·l). 10:0.1 p.m.

•

the ground, the ball almost popped ;
out, but Edmonds cndlcd il wi• his :
bau hand as lelmmalel dnw their ::
gloves into the air in celcbnlion. ~
After his ~~ double, Edmonds ~
moved to third on a wild pik:h by ;
Kevin Appier (4-5) and scored on ~
Tim Salmon's sacriftee fly: Sahpon
had a two-run homer in the ciafnh ~
and Chad Kreuter a solo shot in the .:
ninth as Appier failed forlhc seventh : i
lime at career win No. 100.
•
Rookie Jason Dickson (8-2) went '
seven innings for the win.
1
In other AL games, Baltimore
swept a doubleheader from BostOII
7-2 and 4-2. Also, it ·was : Detroit 6, '
Oakland 4; the New York Yankees 1:
12. the Chicago White Sox I ; Toron-!
to 8, Seattle 3; and Minnesota 10, ~
Texas '1. ·
. ::
Orioles 7-4, Red Sox 2·1 '
111
At Boston; Cal Ripken went 4-.7
for-4 and B.l . Surhoffhad a two-run ;
homer in the second game. and ~
Scou Erickson (9-2) provided solid ·:
pitching in the opener ·at Fcnway
Park a.' Baltimore improved to 42- 17
- matching their best start after 59
games (in 1969).
Mo Vaughn went 6-for-7 in the
two games, with a homer in each, but
the Red Sox - with the AL's worst
record at24, 37 - lost for the eighth
time in I0 games. .
I
Arthur Rhodes (3-2) won the:
nightcap, with Randy Myers picking:
up tiis 20th s~vc . Tim Wakelicld (2-'
5) was the loser. In· the opener,
Vaughn Eshelman (().1) was the los-t
cr.
'
Tigers 6, Athletics 4
AI Detroit, Willie Blair (4-2) l
allowed two runs in 5 213 innings

League:.

Milwaukee U~url 2· 7) at .CLEVE·
· LAND (l.&lt;lpCz 2-41..1j)!l p.m.

ratrllnlng

INVOUI

Atlanta S, CoiCIJado ~
.
Houlton 6, Los Ant;c5es ~
. , Son Dlcco 6. so. Louis l !lll

.406

CLEVELAND {Henhiaer 6-2). 7 :~ p.n1.
Chicago· While Sail (Ombek 5·4) at
4-~) a1

l
7

N.Y. Mcts IO.Chicn&amp;oCubs6

Toclay's 111111es

TCIIll (Butbtt

l'h

CINCINNATI 8, Pinobo&lt;gh ~

. ~17

Toronto 8, Seullle J
Minneso«a 10, Texas I
Aaabcim 6,. Kan51!.1 City 1

A•eriun Leaa•

OrlMdo Mille-r from the 60-day diubled

Tuesday'IKOres

OaklAnd 4

llted 2·KI, 8 :0~ p.m.

11.

'"'florida 9. Snn Franci~eo 0
Monnnl R, Pbiladelphin $

Seallle (fanero !'i·2) 11 1 Toro1Ho
(Clemo.,ll-01, ll:.llp.m.
0-"land (Oquist 1-2} '' Dt:!roit (Ura
4-3). I:0:1 p.m.
Anaheim (finley ).4) at Kansas City
CRotado S-3), 2:05p.m. · .
Baltimore (Johnson 0..0} nl Botloa
!Gonion :1-61.1:05 p.m.
·
Milwaukee &lt;McDonald 6-4) at

'•

Baseball
·

. 4~9

CLEVELAND ~ . Milwaukee 4
N.Y. Yllnkccs 12, qucaao White Sox

•' .

, 20

DETROIT TIGERS: Activilted SS

Wntem· Dlvlsioll
Sat\ Froncisco ........ ~~ 27 . S6~
Colorlldu ................ 34 29 .:140
LDI An,c:lcs ...... ..... 30 32 . .484
San0ie£o .... ..........2H )4. .4S2

.452

Tufsday's scores

Transactions

1~

2
6

. (Continued from Page 4)
St'. Louis' John Mabry had a 20.game hitting streak coming in, but
went ().for-4 with two walks, one
intentional.
·'
Braves II; Rockies 3
Denny Neagle raised his record 10 •
· 9-1 arid Chipper Jones drove in four
runs for Atlanta. Neagle, taming the ·
top hitting team in the majors with a
baffling nriety of offspeed pitches,
went seven innings, allowing live
hils and three runs with one walk and
four strikeouts.
Jones had 1wo hits, including his
sixth home run of the season.
Host Colorado's Larry Walker
went ().for-3, dropping his major
league-leading average lo .416.

1.

6~

...

ROSENBLATT
AP SpoN.Wrltw
When the crowd starts cheering
for the other guys, surely something
special has just occurred.
It did Tuesday night in Kansas
City, courtesy of Anaheim's Jim
Edmonds. The center fielder made a
sensational lunging, belly-flopping
catch in the fifth inning that, saved
two runs a11d helped the Angels to a
6-2 victory over the Royal s.
"It's one of the greatest catches
I've ever seen, and 9.5 pereenl of the
guys in here will tell you that," said
David Howard, who hit the ball
Edmonds tracked down on the warning track. "P.eople don'tjust dive on
their face with their back to lhe
infield lis they're heading into ttie
wall.' '
When Edmonds got to his feel,
the Kauffman Sladium crowd of
14,774 exhaled and then applauded
his brilliant elTon.
"I looked up and saw it come
over the bill of my cap and thought
I might as well lay out for this one,
the game's on the line here," said
Edmonds. "I heard Salmon screaming and I saw Luis throw his glove
.up in the air and DiSarcina had a
blank look on his face. I'm thinking,
'Man, I got the ball in my hand. Is
·.there something else I've got to do'?'
Take a bow was about all . But in
· the next inning, Edmonds broke a 1all tie with an RBI double and lhe
Angels were on their way to moving
into first place in the AL West by a
half-game over Seattle.
When Howard hit the ball,
Edmonds took on· at full speed with
his back to the infield. When he hit

NL games...

.

sltilla to help you decide what
job Is right for you
•Assessments inclu&lt;le
sugge.Uona for tnlnlng or
IIPIII'ICIInglkiHe for

QtMUTYOfA

y

DH: Baltimore 1, Boston 2; Bnllimorc
4. Boston 2

JTPA Mrvlceslncludt:
•Free 1.-...ment of your

. YOU CAN Fill THI

lil .

17 .712 · 27 . ~M , 8 ~.
30 . .492
I~
32 .467
14 ~:
J7 J9J
19

Texas .............. ,...... ~! 29
Oakland ................. 26 3R

D« Gallfa·Htfa .lfPA 1racram
· can Mia wul

-·-·CAll-

I. &amp;1.

Weltt,.Divlston
Anahe.im ... .............:n 211 - ~1
Staru~ .................... :n 29
. ~J 2

for a .job?

cio'l ..... I CAll trltllt.

»:

Bnhimore ...............42
New York .............. ~:'i
T.or0nto ..... ............. 29
Dctroil .. .......... ....... 28
Bmton ............ ....... 24

ony Cellular One location, but hurry. Offer expires

.__
......._,_.,....
....,._....
.,......

Euttr'n Otvlalon

loa

C1nll'lll DI~Wen
Houston ....... .......... 32 32 .SOO,
Pitt•burgh ......... :\1 :tt ..500
' SI. Louis ........ ........ l9 l:\ .461
CINCINNATI ....... 2.1 J7 .401
(.bicqo ................'.24 39 .3.81

Central Dl•Won
CLEVELAND ....... 31 21 . ~34

.

A-&lt;111-a-.1

New York .............. :l:'i 27 - ~
Moot,..l... ...... .......;\4 28 .348
Phllocielphia ...........21 Ml .J44

.

.

By RICHARD

Scoreboard

•

Guess what

Angels, Orioles.
&amp; Tigers tally wins .~

was kind of pressina and he wasn't."
Though Grissom is 7-for-21as a
No. 9 hitter, he- is still batting .227.
So he was a little worried he wouldn't make it to Cleveland in time to
add a few points lo that total.
"I was. Dave wasn't," Grissom .
said. "Dave's hitting .380. I'm hitting .200.'1
Justice atoned for a 6-for-28 June
swoon by putting Cleveland ahead
for good·with a sacrifice fly, handing the Brewers their fifth straight
loss.
Charles .Nagy (7-3) allowed four
runs and 10 hits in seven innings,
walking one and striking out five. He
joined Tom Olavinc and Ramon
Martinez for thc.third-most victories
BURNITZ SCORES ~ The Mllwllukee Br-a' Jeromy Bumltz
in baseball since l994. Nagy,
Olavine and Martinez are tied with · (20) alldea home to acore on Mark Loretta'a alngla u Clavallnd
catcher Sandy Alomar loaea control .of the baMball In the sixth
SO, trailing Mike Mussina (62) and
Inning of TUHday night's American League. game In Clavaland,
Greg ~addux (57).
where
the Indiana won 5-4. (AP)
·,
.
.
AI vin Morman walked Antone
Williamson to open the ninlh before
tie it at4.
Mike Jackson finished up for his sev- die of a pivotal play· in Cleveland 's
Mike Fetters came on and walked
enth save.
. two' run seventh. With Grissom on
Matt
Williams to load the bases for
Nagy also improved to 11-1 in his · first and one out, Julio Franco hit a
last 17 starts following an Indians sharp grounder to Valentin at short. . Justice, who lined a silcritice ny to
deep center making it 5-4.
loss. Cleveland led 5-0 at Bostoo He had. trouble gelling it out of his
Eldred (6-6) allowed live runs
Sunday but losl 12-6.
· ' glove, making it first and second and
and
·seven hits in 6 1/3 innings and.
The Indians again squandered an prolonging the Indians' rally.
again
failed lo heat the Indians. He
early lead, but came back this time.
"That's the ballgame right there,"
is 1-7 against Cleveland and ().5 al
" I lost my aggressiveness, " said Valentin said. "I was playing up the
Jacobs
Field with a 7.76 ERA.
Nagy. 42-14 si~ce August of 1994. middle and got bad jump on the ball .
Notes:
Brewers general manager
"I tried to trick hitters instead of I was .thinking I could make the play
Sal
BandQ,
who is from Cleveland,
staying aggressive."
at second, bul it wouldn 't come oul
atteaded the game. ... Both teams
Nagy didn'l fool Jose Valentin, of my glove."
kept reporters out of the clubhouses
who gave the Brewers a 4-3 lead
Uft-hander Ron Villone relieved
for
abcut20 minutes after tt)c game .
with a three' run homer, his fourth, in starter Cal Eldred (6·6), but lett:
No
transaclions were announced,
the siKth.
handed hilling Jim Thome drilled a
and
no explanation for the lengthy
But Valentin later was in the mid- ·single to center, scoring Grissom to
wait was ~iven.

Baseball

The Dally Sautlnel• Pege 5

&lt;I .

,.

'

•

�•

VWedneeday,June11,111?

. Pomeroy •Middleport, ·Ohio

Ohio Univenity
Collep of Osleopathic Medicine

Wedneeday, June 11, 1197

.Eastern Local honor rolls announced :

Beat
of the
Bend

~

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor ·
of Family Medicine

(

The followina students received ~elldemic distinction for the founb nine
we4J Jfldins period in the Eastern Lcc:al School District.

ORADE SIX: Carrie Crow llld Sonya frederick. all A's; Brent Buckley,
Adam Chevalier, CICy Faulk, Jennifer Thoma. Brandon Werry, and Chelser
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Wood, academic IChievement: GRADE FIVE: Brit....y Hauber, AlySII
GRADE 12: Riki Barringer, Sherry Burb, Meredith Crow, Maria Pn:ck- Holter llld Jonathan Owen, all A's: Rachel Elliott, Rebecca Taylor, SIICy
cr, Teresa McGrath, lllld Leslie l'lrlcer, all A's: Patsy Aiker, Chris Bailey, Smith, Pauicia Stuckey, Andrea Warner, Adam Will, Adam. Wolfe. and
David Baker, Calidace Bunting, Angie Chaney, Eric Dillard, BiU Francis, Willillt\ Woods, academic achievement: GRADE FOUR: Kenneth Amsbary,
'I'riCi Heines, Martie Holter, Amanda Milhoan, Peter Nowak, Kelly Osborne, Derek Baum. Cody Dill, Sara Pore. Chelsea Young, all A's: Jennifer Armes,
Mindy Sampson, Lisa Stethem, and Tracy White, overall.
Carrie Elberfeld and Abbie Chevalier, academic 'achievement.
GRADE II : Kelli Bailey, Brandon Buckley, Michelle Caldwell, and JereRIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY
miah Kehl, all A's: Jamie Drake, Heather Naylor, IW:hael Seth, Amanda
GRADE SIX: Beth Gregory, all A's; Krystal Baker, Christie Barber. Jes·
Smith, Nicole White and Corey Yonker, overall. GRADE 10: Stephanie sica Barber, Miranda Buckley, Jenifer Chadwell, Roger Chadwell. Tara FishEvans and Mike Sobieski, all A's: Lacey Bunting, Valerie Karr, Jessica Mar· cr, Cyrus Knotts, Abbi Thompson, Brittany Tolliver and Ryan Wachter; aca·
cum. Heath Proffitt, Sari Putman, Heather Rockhold, Ann Wiggins, Aaron demic achievement: GRADE FIVE: Emily Brock. Sandra Powell and HotWill, and Angie Wolfe, overall.
lie Rose, academic achievement: GRADE FOUR: Morgan Weber, all A'~;
GRADE NINE: !osh Broderick, Molly Heines, and Jessica Pore, All A's; · .Jaime Reel, C~y Smith, and Krista White, academic achievement.
Matt Caldwell, Kim Godwin. Chasatie Hollon, Rachacl Lees, Cassie Rose,
.
TUPPERS PLAINS ELEMENTARY
.
Leah Sanders, Aaron Schaekel and Josh Will, overall: GRADE EIGHT: Josh
GRADE SIX: ·Nichol Honaker and Tyler Simmons, all A's: Ashley
Clark and Josh Kehl, all A's: Juli Bailey, Amber Baker, Renee Barringer, · Boyles, Erica Lemons, Thomas Simmons, Carrie Wiggins and Joshua WilBrandpn Browning, Kristen Kristin Chevalier, Cinda Clifford, John Cooke, fong, academic achievement; GRADE FIVE: Jessica Boyles, Hailee Cline,
Wesley Crow, Tiffany Hollon and Kevin Keaton, overall; GRAD£ SEVEN: Chrissie Gregory; Kas.sandra Lodwick, Kevin Marcinko and Nicholas
Bradley Brannon and Chris Lyons, all A's; Tammy Bissell, Ale)( Carpenter, Weeks, academic al:hievement; GRADE FOUR: Brittany Barnett. Jessica
Lindsey Cross; Tina DeLaCruz, Jonathan Duffy, Ben Holter, Garrett Karr, 'Kehl, and· Darren Scarbrough, all A's; Christopher Carroll, Adam Dillard,
Whitney Karr. Tiffa,nY. Kidder, Sarah Mansfield, Kim Marcinko, Mary Jennifer Hayman. and Kntie Hol(sie, academic achievement
Marcinko, Evan Needs, Janet Ridenour, Danielle Rucker, Stacie Watson, hnd
. Students earning academic achievement recognition achieved a grade of
Jon Will, overalL
"B," "S+" or better in all subjects.
CHESTER ELEMENTARY

Question: The cam~ newspaper standpoint. but !hey surely arc cosin our college town recently pub- metically unpleasant. . ·
lished a front page story with the
The greatest health risk produced
headline, "Tanning has health bene- by sun el(posure is 8n increase in the
· fits," In the story it said that "those chance of deveioping skin cancer.
who tan arc 57 percent less'likely to ' There are about 700,000 skin cansunburn and less likely to contract cers reported each year, and 7,000
melanoma." Is it true that maintain· cases of the most deadly form,
ing a suntan decreases your chances . melanoma. Melanoma occurs I 0
of getting this type of skin cancer• times more frequently in Caucasians
That's just the opposite of what I've than it does in Afiican-Americans.
heard other places.
This difference if primarily due to
Answer: Incomplete ·knowledge · the protection fro111 sun-caused skin
often,leads to incorrect conclusions, damage provided by inherited, not
and personal bias always plays a sun-induced,. skin pigment
rol~ in the way each of us interprets
The risk of skin cancer. increases
any information; The reporter who as the amount of sun exposure - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - wrote this misleading story undoubt· increases, and tl\is is particularly
·
·
edly did not interview the most true for individuals wi!h fair skin. .
Bettie Bow and John Taylor were
Thelma Henderson and Victor Deland, Fla.
knowledgeable sources. and then the Those with skin that bums easily
Marie and Charlie Sargent were
united
in
marriage
by
Rev.
Sharon
Bahr
attended the 60th wedding
information gathered was filtered by in'l,lead of Ianning are at greater risk,
visited
by all their children on Moth·
past experience and altitude toward Those who have several sunburns Hausman at John's home on Dutch anniversary celebration of her sister,
the subject I'll try to set the record . each year are in greater risk than Ridge Road on May· 31. The faiJli- Alva and Aubra Bailey at St. Paul er's Day: Chuck Sargent, Carol
lies of Bettie and John had a part in United Methodist Church in Tuppers Erwin, Kay Bailey and Pat Spencer.
straight.
tho~e who are constantly in the sun
Weekend visitors of Mattie
As I'm sure you know, the body . but do not bum. This occurs because the wedding ceremony. Many peo- Plains and Chester Alumni on May
Pullins
were Freda Carsey, The
needs sunlight to make vitamin D. If 'repeated sunburn injury causes a ple from the church and community 31. .
one were faced with ·the limited marked increase in the risk of can- attended. Visitors were asked not to · Recent visitors of Imogene and Plains: Wilbur Pullins, Marietta;
options of either living in const.ant cer, while constant exposure: with bring gifts, but a covered dish for the !,..ester Keaton were his sister-in·law, . Judy, Bill and Betty Leech, Mineral
total darkness or using a tanning bed resultant tanning, provides some brunch following the wedding. All Kate Keaton and her children, Wells, W.Va.; and June, Jim and
Frankie Keat~n and Crecy Boggs of Janet Ridenour. Chester.
on a regular basis, then exposure to . proteciion to the deep skin layers. enjoyed this time of fellowship.
this form of artificial sunlight would This would seem to support the . I
clearly he a "health benefit" as your claim in the article you cite that
newspaper article suggested. In the maintaining a tan is beneficial. And
real world, however, the patrons of it is, in about the same sense as settanning parlors are clearly banning, ting fire to one's house with matches
not improving. their health.
is less destructive than using gaso·
Exposure to ultraviolet light. line and matches. .
whether from the sun or from lights
There is no such thing as a
in the tanning booth, damages the "healthy" tan. All tanning conskin. The immediate sign of mild tributes to skin damage, and the
damage is a suntan. The skin reacts damage is cumulative over the
· tu the injury by producing pigment years. In ·the best case, tanning just
which makes the skin darker. This makes you appear "old and leathery"
extra pigment helps block ultraviolet by the time you're in your 30s or
rays from reaching the deeper skin 40s. In the worst case, it makes you
layers where more serious dama~e is die orematurelv from skin cancer.
possible. About 20 years or more .
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
after tanning, the skin becomes column. To sub..it questions,
wrinkled, thick and leather-like. Sun write to John.C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
exposure may ·also produce rough, University College of Osteopathic
irregular skin lesions that are not Medic:lne, Grosvenor HaU, Atheils
particularly dangerous from a health OH 45701.

OPEN HOUSE
An open house in celebration. of
the 50th wedding anniversary of
James and Eleanor Thomas will he
held from 4to 7 p.m. Saturday at thePomeroy Gun Club, County Road
25. The observance is being hosted
by their children. The couple
requests no gifts.
FAREWELL TO MINISTER
Two events honoring the Rev.
Kenneth Baker and his \Wife, Janice,
will be held Saturday. IFrom·2 to 4.
p.m. an .open 'house will be held at

Donna Stoler, Centerville, Va.,
visited her parents, Delbert and Mar·
guerite Stearns.
On June I. Nina Robinson
accompanied Thelma Henderson
an,d Vi ctor Bahr to Lottridge Smorgasbord , and tu Belpre. where they
visited Thelma's daughter and her
husband. Linda and Dave Williams.
Linda is recovering from the llu.

All
.Week

24-Pack 12-oz.

-Community calendar-

OneCase Per

The Comrounity Calendar Is
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Athletic
published as a free servic:e to nonBoosters,
7 p.m. Thursday, at the
profit groups wishing to announce
high
school.
•
meeting and · special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
TUPPERS PLAINS .. VFW Post
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space .9053 meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
pennits and cannot be guaranteed Refreshll)ents at 6:30p.m.
to run a specific number of days.
'
FRIDAY
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows FelPOMEROY -, Red Cross Bloodlowship,
Ponderosa, Oallipolis. II
mobile at Meigs County Senior Cita.m.
Friday.
i1.cns o n Wednesday, 1-6 p.m. Seek·
ing donors ~ith 0 negative blood
SATURDAY
type.
Eastern OAPSE 448, pocnac,
members
and familie~. Royal Oak
THURSDAY
·
Resort,
Saturday
5 p.m. with meal at
Shade River Lodge 453. F&amp;AM,
Thursday. 8 p.m. Work in the F.C.. 6:30p.m. Meat. drinks and table service provided. Take covered dish.
Degree. Refreshments.

Customer At This

Price Please

1

Wasn't that agreat conc~rt as you
gqt ready ·for work Thesday morning? Calliope music direct from the
Della Queen moving upriver. What a
dainty dish to set before !he king. Do
keep smiling.

News·policy

§.'f )OChl .
YOU GET
All. THIS I
@8x10

'

GREEN BfANS, COim OR PEAS

.f~~
~l~::~~ .

Stokely's
Vegetables . . . . . . : 1&amp;.i31i.cans
..

You Pay Only

~ 1975~

01frft•"r

saoo

.... ,..

~95
":"" ~ Oto DIIMir

Reunion policy

• 0. SpediiPtl &amp;Aijc!' .
• 0. Sp«&lt;iii Ptl Fwnly

• Poli&gt;g Our Choice
.
:Gftql Oollgl: ,, 00 EJ, oWflrJM ti/fa ; Ad111/otra/I'Oitrllll A,.... ,

.

WeAtv
Committed
To 5etv/ng You

POII£ROY, OHIO
Frldey, June 13 • ........,, June 14

..

___

....:::..

..;......:.,;,...
I

I'

',

.

· ' To enlure prompt publication; of
· family reunions, the Gillipolis Daily
Tdbune requests that articles be
neall)' typed and dOuble spaced for
easy .editina. Reunion items should
not exceed 300 words and must be
sublnitted within 60 days
' . of occurrenee.
:No exceptions will be made.
·All material submit!~ for publication is.subject to editing.
·Articles will be published as soon
as·possible .

·studio Qu•IHy I'Drtr•lt•
•Ill*. Clt/ldlln, A/iJIIs, FamilY

.

In an effort to provide our readersl)ip whh current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddit\gs after 60.days from the date of
the.evenl.
.
·Weddings submitted after the 6Q- ,
-de¥ 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 se.ctiotl must
bl\ submitted Within 60 days of
occurrence.
All birthdays m'!st be submi~ted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

4 5x7
4 · 3x5
48 Wallets
.......'ll-1111+

FOODLAND

Mrs. Dorothy Roll~r. 93-year-old
well known Middleport resident, has
had her share of company for a
while.
On Memorial Day weekend, her
· guests included her son and daughter· in-law, Lt. Col. (Ret) and Mrs.
James M. Roller of Waldorf, Md.,
and their daughter, Mrs. Paul Jacko
of.Dclmar, Md.
On Sunday, a family dinner was
·held with Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gress and .Nancy Cale of Middleport. aitd Mr. and Mrs. Richard
·Roller of Belpre joining Mrs. Roller
arid her guests. The birthdays of
Nancy Cale and Col. Roller were
observed and dropping by on Sunday evening were. Mr. and Mrs.
Brien Conde, and children, Andrew,
Mason and Valerie ·and Mr. and Mill.
R~ymond Andrews and children,
Tyler and Dillon, all of Middleport; ·
Naitcy l{artlci,y Cooper and her
. grandda\)ghter, Jessica, of Kansas;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Gress and children,
Benjamin, Joseph, Jolin and Will of
Michigan and Jessica Cale of Point
Pleasant

Cans

,,

II
'.

'

'.

ll

K•t DE.S·IGNS· cf)&lt;t!

Moore; Rachael
Morris; Maxine
Gloria -8&gt;'8
Johnson;
Tawny Andrews;
Matthews; Tamara .Pettry; Davida
Willis; Betty VanMatre; Brenda and
ci!'
.Brandy couerin: Lcatha Cotterill: . .
Barbar:a Cremeans; Beth and Han- '0'
nab Cremeans; and Mary Birchfield. • &lt;f)

~

Professional Pet Groomfnt

.a..
v

Boarding • Training • Supplies

ceo

~

"We treat your beat friend lAke our beat friend"
~
t§o St Rt. 681
Call for Appolntmantf§&gt;
~ Tuppers Plains, Ohio
(614) 667-3526 c2f
· "Across from Tuppe111 Plalna Elementary School"

. c@j&gt;

~-

1$

~tie ttl ~ ® ~

This Week Win.·A

J

Pepsi Cola

Christian mother leaves for her
daughters and granddaughters.
Attending were Jody and Autumn
Tackett; Jennifer and ' Ashleigh
Sayre; Rosalie Sayre; Kay Sayre;
Louise (:.llis; Teresa Wood: Pam
Zirkle: . Brandy Tobin: Mildred
Workman: Linda Workman ; Lcssie
Jeffeis; Kay Osborne; Patty White;
Nancy White; Jean Kennedy; Lillie
Williams; Susie and Allison
Williams: Carolyn Trout; Louise
· Myers:· Midge Brooks;.Kathy Bar·
rett; Stacie Reed; Kim and McKay Ia
.Barrett; Florence B¥1'ett; Teresa,

1$

, 41:9&gt;

~ $1$ $~ ~ ~&lt;VS

EASTMAN'S

Hope you were able to get to the
open hooses held in Pomeroy
Sunday--one at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and .the other at' the Meigs
M\l·seum in Pomeroy.
. ·Bolh events were quite pleasant
and well attended. Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas commented that
be was well pleased with the crowd
orl- hand at the hospital endeavor
while Hal Kneen of the Meigs
County Pioneer.and Historic!~~ Society said that the turnout at the museum was excellent and far exceeded
the number of people .who annually
attend the Heritage Day event,
· Denver Rice on his guitar entertained guests a1 !he hospital open
ho.use while at the museum Jennifer
Sheets kept a lively string ofsongs
o;;oming from the piano for a couple
pf.holirs.
. . ~ Although cloning of humans is
being declared a bit of a "no, no", I
coold have stood a bit of that Sunday, Since I IIIJ\ still employed part
time at Veterans Memorial Hospital
and certainly was involved wilh the
museum ·ac'tivity which-paid. tribute
to 'lhe musicals of the Big Bend Minstrel Assn fel~·J shpuJd lie in both
locltiontlind th'atjust can't-be done:·However, I tried!

·Diet Pepsi or

the
Camiel-Sunon United M~thodist
Church located on State Ro~te 124,
Racine. at 6 p.m. a· farewell picnic
-will _he held at Star Mill Park in
Racine.
, . , ,
The pubhc as anvttect to bolh of
the events. .
,
The Rev. and Mrs. Baker, m
Meigs County since 1989, · have
accepted an appointment with a
ministry in Celina in Merce~County,
and woll move there latcrthos month.

I

~wo

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MouNTAIN DEW,

--Society scrapbook__;_

The Mt. Union Baptist Church
recently held its mother/daughter
banquet, ~osted by Marlene Carpenter.
·
A dinner was held, following
grace by Teresa Wood.
Winning door ~rlzes were Beth
·Cremeans, Florence Barrett, Lcatha
Cotterill, Kathy Barrett, Floria John·
son, and Susie Williams.
. A skit was performed by Rosalie
Sayre and Teresa Wood.·
Gloria Johnson was the guest
speaker, and gave an inspirational
message about the inheritance every

, ·If you're 15 and under you not
only have youth on your side but
you have !hat popular fishing derby
~taged by the Meigs County. Fish
a(ld GIIIJie Association coming up
this Saturday.
. ·
· · The derby runs from 8 a.m. to I
p,.m., at !he association's farm. There
will be a free lunch for all of the
lioys and girls attending and a num·
ber of prizes will be awarded as a
result of derby events. There's just
one little requirement and that is that
you must fumi.sh your own pole and
bait and minnows are not allowed.
To get to the association's farm
yo!l motor out Route 7, towards
&lt;;hester, and you'll see signs on the
Texas Road which you can follow to
reach the .farm and lake.
After the derby and the kids have
gpne home, members of the association will hold their annual chicken
barbecue in the evening. Those
attending are to take a covered dish.

AIf re d. .news------------------

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Register to Win!

Minute 39 Seeond
J'oodland Shoppine Sprf!e
1

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pr•pald Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rantala
Columbia Gaa Paymanta
Lottery Tlcketa
(except Buckeye)
•"c.l" Electric

Week:J

Ronda J'ourtras
4Wheeler
Week4

Outdoor Gas Grill
Gl)

FOODLAND COUPON

Fresh

OIL•WATER

Starkist Tuna

Head Lettuce

• Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Services
• Greeting Carda
• Roral Salas
• We accept credit cards

Pep~-· Co.b~~
24 Packs ·

,I

99
'

J1

¢i

125 I

Ea. I

()z_:

I
I

L:lmlt one~ coupon

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I

Umlt 2 wl~ coupon.

1-··--··--·-;.,-·--·-___ .. ___________... &amp;.;:.:=================-::
.

f

Diet or Reg.
Seven .Up
· R~ and Diet Wte

l:harJDin
Bath
M1t1W1 'ftssue ·

$

2Uter

Diet mte
andRC

'

12Packs

Umlt one with

s·

2.· .99

·

additional

purchaH .

. Asst. ,,'

Prlngles

99~ ·

6·7 Oz. can

Where i\vaUable

Bom.elnade Brand

lee £ream
1/2 gallon

*3"9

Y!!!::;!e~ftllm $.3 49
Velvet Sllerltet «tt-99~ ·
Velvet .,
Ice l:1eem Sandwlela $Q39
12eL---------------

~

12.5-18 oz.

Broughtou
Fat Free 1/2 Gel.

Broughton

leeCrea•
Broughton

.

$1

Cjraneby Cones 6 pk.

Skim Milk

$

.

99

.Arehway 9-12 az.

Cookies

(Reg. $2.19)

Golden Ripe

.. Boneless
Roand
.

Steak

$
Lb. .

BIG BEND

49

Tender Beef
£uhe Steak
79~
Bot Dog8 12 az.
.
·
ArlaOIII"Meat
W.AIIIMthe

SUPERMARKET
141117.

1 ---- -

nWIC

•Hal
\

'

.

orPiotorlel

�POWELL'S

Coca Cola
Products

lhl ClmifilJ Stclion!

Mondaythru
Sunday

SAM-10 PM
~ccepts

I

..'

•

·'

211ter •

R. L. HOLlON
TRUCKING

INGELS ELECTRONICS

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestqne ~ G111val
Dirt • Sand

llatlle lllaeli. Dealer
•

SPLIT CHICKEN

.

·.
.
.
129
Breasts •••••• ~ ••••••••••~~
·
$.

.

CHICKEN DRUMSTICK OR

Thigh .................... 79~
SMOKED PICNIC

·
s
·
·
·
89¢
Ham ··············~·····
lb. ·

.

.

ASSORTED OSCAR MAYER

·un. P·a k·s .............
11.2oz.
$1
·
6
9
.
.
.
.
$179
F
.
Stea k ....•................·.... . .
.
•b
$139
StyIe R1 s. ...............
.

2ND ANNUAl
TICK AUCTION
Sat, June 7, 1ft7
6P.M.
M'elgs Co.
. Falrgrounda
Sponaol'ld by
M-'ga Co. 4oft H · Commlttll

12 pk, 12 oz. cans

$ 69
12 pk. 12 oz. cans

$ 79

FRESH PORK BUTT STEAKS OR COUNTRY
LB.

79¢
Bologna ............. ~ .... .
.
•
·
·
,$1
W 1eners ....•..••........... 21· .
· ·

LB.

.

BAR S BRAND

¢

- -

•

·

Wesson
· Oil

12oz.

48oz.

$ 89
US #1 RUSS

•

.

·Potatoes ...•.•.••~0•1~·.
DEW FRESH SPREAD

·

e

·

99

gge
Mar_
gari ne ••••.•• !~b:·••

. Nunn Better
·.Mini Chunk
.Dog .Food
16.51bs.

49

'

BORDEN IWS AM~RICAN

Dz

$

169
Cheese Slices ••••• ~
12

zge
Beef Stew.......... ... v

MORTON HOUSE

·

.

20oz.

MUSSELMAN

'

.

,
.
1Soz.2J89¢
A ppIe Sauce ....... .

ORE-IDA ASST.

F-ries ••••••••••••••••••• $169
MEADOW GOLD
$189
Ice Cream •••••••••••• ·
22-32 oz.

. 1!2gal.

Rosedale Pear
·Hudson Cream
Campbell's ,
Halves or Sliced Plalli or Self Rising Chicken Noodle
Peaches
·or Tomato Soup
Flour
lllbe.

99¢
Umlt 4 Plaaa•Add. Purch. •

I

~7.5oz.

$

•

Umtt 1 P11111 -Add. Purch. $1

•
••

10.711 oz.

.Pringles
Potato Chips .·

a

¢

Win A
~®ml~IT'©UU
This Week
•

Powell's
Super
·value

sgoo

'I

I

.

Don Gury, """""'

36()0 Communications

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
POMEROY, OH.

.

-

-- ..· ·-

I

i

• Sayre TruGfnt cO..
l

..

-- ,,

IDB'S·
NI,.ULB
WBLDIII .
McCumber. Rd.
Rutland, OH
•Small Joba
•LargeJoba

'

.
..•
'

RtllonlbiiRitll

'

Exp.rlenc.cl

-·-pd. I

.

.. (614) 742·3100
..
Public Notice
.

:

RMIIO{JIIb/e RaiN
Joe N. Sayre .

PUBLIC NOTICE

814-742•2138

lllll'J1711n

Free Cash!
Stop In The
Store
For Details
Saturday,

Many Varletlea

6 Slzea...
AllhMithy• .

,WV 11023477

...

,......, ,..

..

or

.HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving SoUtheastern OH &amp; WV

14CICJ.872·58117 1391 Safford

BIEBELI

WILL BIDii ..-

.IUftCtLL,
. 992·7074

Gravel, Unlfttone,
· Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sind. No Mlnlnum.

MAXINE 'ELO,IBE"
SMITH

742·2925

· l!ftn though you .,.

"'ne from our pra-

llllnce, beautiful illem011r

~.Polehee.

Coli u. ,.,..,. ,.,., r

.,,..

614;74110110
. 1114-741-3324

814-742-3078

Ave. ·
\.

.

1·6.14·992·7022

ltllr't? t - .

LINDA'S
PAINTING
A tfOOrl tmilll job.on
11ny clour/y tl11y,
mnke• U 1eem
Lrifrltler• . ·

.

Interior
Before 8 p.m.
leave mneega.
After 8 p.m.

..,..,_

3351 Hippy~ Road
Mldclleport; Olilo 46780
New Homae, Addltloi •·
IIOOIIng, Slcling, Pole
lllmt, Olc:b, F'lltdlng, .

orle•, Hkl butllrfllu,

~

814-885-4180

KINGS'

-June 11th

.....

•Small Englnea
•Lawn Mowera
·Chlln Saws
•Weed Eatera
2 mi. off At. 7
Ludlng Creek Rd .

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

Happy Birthday

ltch•d · In

814 446 8411
Rd., Gallipolis, OH

Ruu Moore

awr;~~r.

252a.

114·H2·
•

Buying Slandlng Plna, 1 ,..,.,
Tra&lt;10rlarger,I14-25H03&amp;
Clean Lat• Model .Ca" Of.
Trucks, ,GGIO Models Or Newer,

Smilh Buick Ponliac, 11100 Eao1

ern ........,., aa•pollt.

--------------~
Wan1ed: Used Hardwood Floor!~

In Good Condition, Cal 814,245-.·
5887.
:

EMPLOYr,1EtiT

--

SERVICES

o Help wanted

.=:
~·

... DANCERS...

M.

~~~=·:::=

RL 2 Pt. PIIIIIFlC. WV.
(304) 875-!115&amp;

~

ca~a~~« epm.

:

~

Wedl ... $111.

.,

AVON I· All Artll I Shlrler;:
Spear~, 3)4-45 15-1428.
.
c_
Able

Avon

Raprasentatlvea':

loti: Black -And Cream, long·

1195.

haired Gormon Shepherd Lut
Seen 0/7117. Brown't Marke1

Stabl Roubl 160, PloaM CaU 614441·7467,114-446·4470, 814·
~ ·8440. Roward Ofloredl

Yard sale

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
112 Price Yard Sale: 81141h, 8-3,
Bolilnd Bodlmero. 588, Clolhes,
Toya, Happy Mall, Dlanay, Home
Interior, Car

Caasonao.

Seal, Popcorn Tins,

3 Family: 11.3 ./&gt;labelenit Orlve
Wed, Thurs. Fr~ 8·5. Homa lnierlor, MiK., loll Clolhing, Adulto &amp;

Avon $8 ·$ 18 /Hr. No Door •To ':,
Door, Oulck Cash, Fu~ &amp; Relax

ing.1-801).736.()1881nchlllrop.

"':

CABLETVORDERTAKERS ,.;

Star! Paid Training Prvgoarn Now. •
CALL PAUL lOLL FREE
·•

=;
Came\ory aolos? llllha btst k.,._, ·
1-888-ot32-H78

secret In America. High commit• '~~'
sions, bonuses, benerlts, lead4::
heallh plua 401K. 1500 fill tt.b .
training bonus, call Bt4·882l
7440.

·-

.

Dlshal. Enif Tobias.

Compuler Users Needed; Wor~ ·
own houra. S20k to $50k/yr 1·

5 Family: Loot Houae On Loll

800-348-7188x1508.

fo

Delivery Dr.lverl lillie eaesara
Now .Hiring Delivery Drivefl . .
Hourly Wage + Cash Commission
Paid Daily. Flexible Schedules,

Uniform Provided. Apply .\1 Galli·

141, 1 112 Milas From Willis Fu-

neral Home) 12111 ·14111, 8-4.

....-.

-

Earn $15 ·1 18 Per Hour • Com-.il
mi ulona. Ertremely High Cut-,.
tomer Demand, No o~ernlght
Travel. lmmedlale Openlnga. '
CandidaleJ a.,usr Be Adllable 1i ,

Debbie D&lt;ive Chapel, (011 Roule

in Pomeroy, Ohio
.
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
.appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements
For further details call today ~·

t:e:t
.... _

'

Antique&amp;, top prices 'paid, Rtvef- ·
ine Anti ques, Pomeroy, Ohio •

polis Location.

DRIVERS WANTED
500 Mile Radius • Home EYer)'
Weekend, Famil~ Insurance Patel

By

Compan~

(Denial. Eye, Pro-

scription) 401 KAetiremtn-1 Plan,
Firat In · First Out Dispatch. Late
Modal Conv. Tractors With
Flalbed Ttailers Competitive Pay
• Parcenlage Of Grass.

~

GRANT TRUCKING, INC.
5488SRt3

backs, Working Bulll·ln Oven,
Ughl Rxturoo.
·

THE MAPLES

'

8H.gg2·7441 . .

Auto Bodr Rlpalr Man NHCftod'~:
Must Have Experience, 1114-UI-»

Ceruenary Thura, Frl, Brand
Name Clathlng, Jr/Mitaes, Girls
0·2• Montht I Men : Curtains,
Rods, Ores~r. Espon Laser Ink
Jet Prlnt~r, AdUlt /lean Paper·

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

condition It Ia In, with no

122 Butternut

•

.......

Black Muzzle. Blaztr Road Area.

.ALI.v.d-Muot
Bo Paid In Adv-.
PE!rM M: 2:00p.m.
the doy boloNiha td
loto run. S'unday
edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldoy.llonday edHion
• 10:001.01. SaiUrdll'.

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

IJtJJ- .

June14-15, H
•
'j' ~t ~

-4118

Antiques, furniture, glen. china.~
eoina,, toys, lamps, gun1, tools,
ealBtes; alaa appralsal1, OsbJ

81«lll7-7180,

Campl"9.

Pomeroy, Ohio
1"1100o281-5100

Al'llnUO, GaRipolil, 81H...2142.

Twa r•r old fema~ Pome111nlan, 11
ol lhoia, ~.. ., good home, 81499U813.

Hilda Extension, Mise, Tires,

Quality Window Systems

.\boolult Top DoW•: All U.S. Sll·
var And Gold Colno. Ptoor::;
Diamonds, Antique .-.ry,
Rings. Pro-1830 U.S. CurrlftCY•
Slerllng. EIC. Acqullltlona f.
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 S..ond'

To Good Home: 2 81ock a While
Klnont, Female. 8 Woiiko Old,
614"'*-2398 Alter 5 P.M.

6/t21h. 6113111, 6/141h,' a To 5,

"FA£TORY
· PRICES~'

.

.

. Past Ewinglon. lues ·SoL

.DIREcr

:!fillY

INCIEDIILE
PLANT SALE

'

110 Court St.

r cui·

Chlldrensi Toyt, Comlottetl,

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

't'd

MlrehlnCIIII

""'-

'

lmpiltd
• tNt on S.IUrdtly, June 14, ; Wlrritntlet giVen.
·
.• 1117, It 10:00 I.JR., 1 public
For furtller lnfonnetfon,
·: Nit will lit httd It 11·1 Well coniHI Jerry It 8112·7430.
- e-nd tlretl, Pomeroy, Ill 11, 12, 13; 3TC
· Oblo, to. Hll lor oaah the
: falloWing coli Nl'll: ·
In
"· 1814
BUICK
: 104'J Wt'IIH171378
. • TIM 1'1nnere Btnk and
. : a1vlng1 '
Comp•nr,
.. ......... Qblo, ...._ .
· liM right to bid " IIIIa _,., .
: ~ to wlthdrlw the ebove
·•olllttrel prior to 1111.
~·111111er. The ....,..,. llnll .
a•vlnga Comp1ny
••c . .,. ... 1M ~~·at
cull bklt
•
· i l'llltiW, tht lbOYt
qal118fll wllllt 10111 In till

MllctlllniOUI

Pomeroy,OH
Call 992-9045
for all your
transmlaalon needs.

MoRRISON'S HEATING
&amp;COOliNG
· ·and • • PuiDpl
319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
.Sales Service
lnstllllatlon
Easy Bonk finondng '
American Standard · Air Coqditioners lftstaned 12r' a monlll
· Freedom
·Heat Pumps Installed 131r' o month
. Heat Pump
(PII'ft*U _,on_..,., credit)
(614) 992·7434
· •Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
·· •Free Digital Thermostat
Publls Notice

NOTICE II herej)y given exprua

i40

3f1711WTFN

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

•

5805.

123 Pl•aaant Rldga

E~tlmate•

'

ling. :~:Bay, r-.

to

.!

· needed. Earn money for Chill
mas bills 11 homel1tt M&lt;k. 1 ~
Found: Young Medium Size Fe· 892,8356 or 304-882-2845, Ind.•
'&lt;&gt;
male Dog, Reddiah Blonde With Rep.

·· ~

Llmeato~ llJi'llvel
. S!IIJtlc $yetenle .
Trailer a · ·
•
HoueeS1t11

: •::ce11ellt Windows

.

.

"

IWilll-

992-2m

:•
Garages .
:. •Stont1 Doors &amp;
' WWows
· •Raom AMtlaas

..........
·- -

'

Free

1

ROOFING
60 Lost and Found
NEW-REPAIR
Found: Hulfy while puppy, SA 32
-ol
Alhont, 814·!114-2811 .
Gutters
'
Found; nt or two ker1, SHS viDownapQuta
ciniiY, coQ "'in 814-1192-3893.
Gutter Cleaning
Found: SR 7 vicinity, small reddlah brown ·Pomeranian, 6!4·1Btl7·
Painting
Q186.
FREE ESTIMATES

..........

(614) 446-4759
20 Yra. E~q&gt;. ·Ina. Clwno&lt; RICk Jo11n1on

8:00 t.m.-3:30 p.m.

'

Howard L. Wrltesel

New 0,... for ·

'

1 ed •-

Wanted to Buy

90

Two I Week Puppl... 1 Male, 1
Female, 814-387.0011.

-...

''""'""

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

MID OLE PORT

•

Free Estimates
992-9057 or
,9 92-1056- ...

Trana.• Albany)

537 tiRYAH PLACE

'

. WorlnnaJQ•Ip

Drlvewaya,

'

e Ac

¥ale cal, gray wlblack stripe, 1
yoor oltl. 10 good home. 304-773·

(lqrmerty of Deen'a

.
J&amp;L SiDING &amp;
INSULATION

'

QuGIIt»

949-2168

614~92·5479

- -.. -773-5&lt;20.

Ucenaed

Froo Puppies, .Part Border Collie
Allatrolla Shtf)hald Mix, 4 Black . J a D's ~ulo Parll. Buying Ill·
&amp; White &amp; 1 :Brown, &amp;U-245- vaga vehicles. Salllng par11. SO. · ~
8255L- " ' - ·
773-5033.

RAY'S
TRANSMISSION

..__7.:.;; .o304

'

Lie. WVD11030

Roofing; Painting
Guaranteed

CONCRETE
SERVICES

Sldewalke, Plltloe,
•
GltreghnCI'
~ . BaMment Floors.
•'
FrH Eetlmates.
Inaureel
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES

•

12'112' Bulldl"9, m1111 move. Call

CONSTRUOION

............. '

Foundatlone, ·

..'
..
..
..
..
..

JC

'

CELLULAR PHONES
113 W. 2ND ST.

Giveaway

serVice.

188,0hlo a Wtll VIrginia. 304-.
773-5785 Or 304-773-6447.
•

Mar~n.

Girl I Qlrlo Qlrll, Talk To· Them
llvell HI00.47fl·ll585 ExL 8970,
~118 IUin, 18+ StiY-U 81~•&amp;8434.

40

'

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
A Division Qn Nichols Metal, INc.
•.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-n:l-5861

7

(No Sunday Calls)

'

Big Bend F.abricalion,
Machine &amp;Welding Shop

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

'

.......,,_

Or C811814 ••• 8922..

992·9200

l

e

Adult Vldooo. 50 Now Ralaa1111
1380 Eultrn Avo111e, GalllpoUo,

Cell fer 01t Specl•l•

INC~

auction

~als

H11 Your Uarrlage Or Raladontltlp Got Up &amp; Worf, SlOp In PrinVldto And Rent Ono Of Our

plzu place.

"

· Rick Pltar10n Aucdon COflllliaJ:Iifull time euctionttr, c....,..M

ATTENTION

Pomeroy
Delivery or Dine ln.
More than just a

' 614-992·7643

Athens, Ohio

388-11443.

ISPORTI SCOREII UPDATE
EVERY ;1 MIN Sporll Point
Spruda 5 Siar Spona Pick. uo.
A Challongo? Try Tho .Trivia
Gamt 1·t00·3SI•1100, EXT.
1071, 12.88 Por Min. Mull ~ 18
ToCIIPnlcaleG2-1154-742D.

Wagner .L ine

Serv-U (619) 64~~4

Lemley's Allctlo~ Sonllce, Lalit '
L•mley, Aucrionetf. HouMhald.
Eo1a1a, Farm Saleo. Pho. . l14•

005

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

Must be Hl yrs.

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

Complete
Shop Senlce Fabrkadoa
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Repl1cement
Monday·Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. - 12 noon

FREE

June14,1eti

Purch.

(614) 592·5025

•Garages
•Complet!t
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Carnation
Evaporated
Milk • 12oz.

·

Attorney At Law

. CONSTRUCTION · ·
&lt;· •New Homes

..

'

BISSELL BUILDERS,

....... ..,1111_

and Auction

NOW OPEN

$2.99 per min.

. 614-992...3120

Attorney William Safranek

..

BUCKET CUBED

LB

IFIIr~ctl

550PageSt.
Middleport, Oh. 457110 .
.' .Home Ph.

...
-------i
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
__
;,..,....;...;......;;....;.---.....
Machine
ROBERT BISSEll
llhetUIIIho.on

'

Quality Work at

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for their personal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, end.
household goods. .
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

For I1IIIN Info cd Pem
885 44ltl or Llu .,...2052
AuctloMtr:

.R.C. Cola
Products

Jiod»Sflep

2-4-.
80
Public 8lle

614·992-3470

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll
1-900-656-2700
Ext. 8789

D.C.a~''

992-2825

•I

1~

FREE ESlWATES

•

CELLUlA 4"""1 .,

Chester, Ohio
~

•

Middleport, OH

985-4422

7-up, Dr. Pepper,
· Crush Flavors,
Mug Root Beer ·

252110

Not ..... Flnlnclll .

9am-

Pepsi- Mt.
Dew .
Products ·

M110n, WV:

u...·L ........,CDPJIA

,.I

Eftlllll1.....
lllt:oo-'
.~~~..

.., 108 Z411 It-_ I ffJ
Junel2&amp;13111. Mloc. llnlck·
kn•cks. Ho~~~eUte cllalft ....

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

R1. 1, Box 44-C

"'

Yard Sale 14 fotler Dr. In llo- . llu .U.11. ,.. .......

WICKSHAULING

·FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822

Stick/MIG Alumjnum Welding .

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

s:oo. w..-

(lime stLow Rlltn)

....., B. ROIIItotl, D.D.S.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 14, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

SUPERIOR SLICED

~ IISOIIEITIL.CARE

New LGcatlon: 2 mila off At. 7 on At. 124

298 SECOND ST.

- - 110
10.1-14...

lnduetrlal • Automoltn
New Radllton • Re-Cores
A/C Condenlti'I/HOH Al"mbllea

I

IV1cMiy

in ·

12 pk.
12 oz. cans

STORE HOURS

PL Pllll

art Worlh A lot

. OAK HILL, OHIO 4 lf00.282·2183

...

~

·-

DRIVE'RS.~·s
O/O'SWilH EQUIP
Na!ional Carriers, Inc., A Refriger·

Friday Tho 13111, 8·5, t/2 Mile Qui aled Carrier, Ia Looking FC)f' Qual-

Gearg11 Creek Road, Kelle~ ity OIO's To Run 48 Sl8tet &amp;·
Drive, Girls Clothes, T-14, To~s• nada . Mu:. Empty Weighl 18K
Hou aehold llems, Larg&amp; Indoor Lbs., leasing Bonus. Call Today!
Dog C\llle.
1·600-654-6710.

ea.

Large llird Sal9: June 12\h -14\h, Earn $1,000 Weekly Stuffing En·
Wall Resident On Sunset Drl\18, velopes AI Home. Srar1 Now. No

Table &amp; Chairs, Other Furn,
Chlldre~a

a Adull Clolhes,

Spreads, Drapes, Toys, Kitchen
llernl, Chldl Jtap, LOIS Motel

Salurday, l/14th, 4

Famil~ :

Nice
Clothing, Womens I. Childrens.
Route 1 Addison, Beside, G&amp;G

Mallutt

Experience. Free Supplies, lnlo.

No Obligolion. Sond LSASE To:
Depl: 1351, Box 5137, Dia-

~E .

mond Bar, CA 91785.

Easy Work I Excelltnl Payl A•·

semble Products at Home. Call

Toll Free 1-800-487-5568 EXT.
12170.

._._..,

$1,000 REWARDII

For lnform~~tlon
laaclfng to the ·
arredand
conviction of
anv-. lnvolvacl In

de•llng • property
llnafenced•1827
St., llaolne,O

~ron

I.D. C.llarl
Cont•ot• lion Miller
HZ-4021 .

EVENING MEAL
AT
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy

Tuesdays a.-d Thursdays
Serving from 5:00- 5:45
. Doaatloa $4.00 lor meal

--

1'ublic is invited

Yard Hie. Fri·Sat ·at Jtimtl
tolln'o on C.R. 21 E-n

'

t,,

·"'--:---....----;_ •
Ill

�w...,...,, June 11, ,...,

10 • The o.lly 8enilnel

v~W~-~-~·:•t:~~Y·~~==~11~·~1M~7--~----------------------~p~~~m~MW~o=y=eM=~::~:p:~:~:ONO::::~:::::::::::::::nM::~::Iy:S:I:nt:I~::·:P~~~11
~-

NI!A Cro11word Pu:ble

PHILLIP

ALDER

•t..tallll*

=---

:r7 Zala lllrOIM
1 Up to- paint 31 New Yo111 IIIII

• fc:"e'c.-

40

t1LM'a,. ......

GIIIIIIIIIIICIJW
41 t:.pelr'l ldtt

telllll ·. ......,_. ..............

,. , . , .
Por1olllt Stwmll, don't
! LPN parr dme poaldon avaHatMt a-~·
.....
lhe mil a.. cd
10

' lor progrooa lvo Rohobllitlllon twul yaur loa•
!.,Center ICFISNF. · El!fHtlanced 304-675- 1857•

,.II

320 Mobile Homes
for Sail

Pomtrflt, ltovt and rtftioer81Dr,
-

25 rs experience

amstress. for men
Y • &amp; women.•
Alterations
LTL motor freight carriers, Ia ac· Coil TerHI at 30+075-a728.
CIJ!ting applications for I ~rd

11i1188 Redman Riverview 14x70 2

Bedroom lotoblla Home, 1 1/2
Batha. Coii614-&lt;44H231.
Sp
n'"
8 70 ·mobil
) proven tabve so·gna "ad·'Raturbiahed.
"otal
1993 ruco II~ge 1 dx'"
•
I hif1 (11pm· 7:-m
• •
maintenance mechanic . Mutt roofs painted. lawns mowed , home, exca enl con IliOn , nuh&amp;Ye exp in heavy q lne repair, trimmed. Handyman work, wood· merou1 upgrades Including :
the nations largest farNiy -ownad

knowledge ot Cumins a t.lack en ligna. 304-875-8925 Rick.
enginea 1 plut. We offer TOP.
PAY With comprehensiVe benefit Will .care for diaat»ed person for

r:g

10

inetude 401(k) . Apply at aveniiiQ ohlfl, have references,

814·992·2805 8 :00tm· 1O:OOam
ule 1 Box 448 Gallipolis Feuy .,.......... flru

,;;
WV~255::.,:1.:.5..:.1.tif.:..;.N_o1l;,._ _ _ _.

1

.liED. !DENTAL SALES
• Addilional h::ome.
Are You Calling On Medical &amp;
Dental Buaineaaes? Would You

Like. To Continue What You Are
Doing And Have Additional SSOO
-$2,000 Per Month? Profi• From
'ft&gt;U&lt;

E"""'614-11116·5922
""""'.

--•

Fr'-·

FINANCIAL

'

210 ·· Business
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bual·

Ever Dreamed Of Owning Your
311 Buckrldgo Rd:, BidWell, OH . Own Bllslntn? Here's Your
NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE.
Chance l Small Grocery fResruaranr located On St. AI. 7 Soulh
NEEDED : Service Man HVAC ' JuSI Below Locks And Dam. Ser·
certified, nlary to comttrate wilt! i uos lnquiritl Only. 1514·256·
· : 'experience, benefits provided, 81!JO.
company vechlle. Orman Hall
Inc: . 131.7 Ohio Sl. Pl. Pleasant Steel building dealerohlp avail·
wv.304-875-211n.
able in open market Dealers buy
factory direct. High profil potenfiart-Time Position Available Now. tial, sales ·or c;:onstructlon. (303)
Sewing Knowledge Requ ired, Ap· 759·3200 Elll. 7li5Q.
ply in Patton At: JoAnn Fabric:&amp;
and Crafts: Silver Bridge Plaza, 230
Professional

Services

venlion Agency Located In Galli'
And Jaclcsan Counties, I• Seek·
ing An Ambitious Individual To
FHI A New Prevention Position.
This Penon Will Work With All
Age Groups In l,t\&amp; CommUnities.
Qualitlc:a~ona: Bachelors Degree,
Prevenlion Certified A Plus. Good
Communications Skills (Written
And Oral}. Responsi biliti es :
Awareness Activil ies, Educalion
Programs. Tra ining Programs,
And develOpment ·And Implementation 01 New Gran! Projects. ·

HARTS MASONARY • Block,

brick &amp; arona work, 30 years experience, reasonable rates. 304·

895·3591 alter 8:00pm , no job to
small or 10 BIG. WV-021206
Livingston's basement- water·
proofing , all basemenr repairs
done free estimates. liretinle
guar~ntee. 1Oyrs on job &amp;Kper i·

enee. 304-6 75-21 45.

credit Cal 1·800-llgl-8777.

1887 14x70 2 or 3. Badroom,

Oppo1'1Unhy

To Scenic Hills Nursing Center,

Praveniion Pballlon • An Alcohol
·And Other Drli!l Counseling /Pre·

'"· ~til ss~ ·
New-1~87 14 W-1 , •~
·doWn, $139/mo, with approved

New-1897 14 Wlde-1 bioth, $811Vi
·down, $138/mo, wilh approved
crodiL Coil 1-800~91·8777.

nell with people you know. and
Needed: Part-Tima State Tested NOT 10 send mone,y through tht
Nursing AIIIOiantl (STNA's) mail until you have lnv.srigarad
N - FOf 2·10 ArwJ 10.8 ShihL tlio olfrrring.
For Application, Coma In Person

GoilipoliL

cathedral ceilings, new CIA, oar·
den rub. rwo full bl.fls, and much,
more, $18,800, Qlll14-092-3335.

sgvs down, S1~51mo. Only at
oa~wood Homea, Nluo, WV. 304·
755-5885. .

Hl97 14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom,

$&gt;,359 down, $229/mo. Froe air,

skirting, &amp; detiv~ry. Only at Oak·
wood Homes Nitro, WV. 304· 755·
6885.
1~97

doublewide $1445 down,

$229fmo. Free delivery I setup.
1-800-891-6 n1.

2 Bedrooms. Central Air, In Gali·
polia; On Rented Lot, Ready To
Uovt Into I 814 ·&lt;448-1409, Atrer

4P.M.
BY OWNER: 198G 14x70 3brma,
2 full baths, applianc::es included,
12x24 front porch, 12x14 back
porch over looking Ohio river
(doesn't flood) on At. 7 S next to

and drytr,

refBJence• and Mpoalt required,
814-11112o30110.

no- relt,.,_,.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Proflllionai/Bulineso buildiiiQ lor
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homta aubltosa. Located 11 5011 s. Thltd
tlartiiiQ II $280-$300, - , ... Straot, Mlddlopor~ OHo. Elllltl....
lor ond tnuth Included, 814-DD2· for !*¥olclan offiCI or rtol oaltle
2187. .
apace. Ample atreet p"arking.

.,.._Only,
4&lt;8· 1104.

PI Pteaunt • Domino'• Ptna

RN LPN Or RT. Responsible For
Sailing Up Infant Apnea Monitor
In Homes And Doing Uonthly ·
Home VI sirs. This Is A Pan-Time ·
Contrac::t Position. Send Resume
Or Pick-Up Application Ar: Bow-.
man's Homecare, 70 Pine Street,
Gallipolis, OH 45631, Attention :

lawie. .
SALESPERSON

WANTED:

Uiat Be EKperienced In All

Pha- Of Re~dental Remodeling
And Roofing. Flve ·Years Of Sales
Experience Required. Oualilied

Applicanll Call 814·446·4514 M·
5. Reference And Reliable Vehicle Raquwed.

Someorie needed tO repair ·barn
roof, 814-9411-27311. .

510

.•

BAI\NEV. .

Gallipolis, &amp;1•.,.•a - 3844 After 7

P.M.

440

Apanments

ror Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. lur·
nlshed and unfurnished, security
deposll required, no pets. 814·

992·22&gt;11.

gtaton, 00 Day Guaranleet
French City Mayl*g. 814·&lt;48·
7705.

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Waahera. dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skagga AppllanCtll. 70

Vine St-1, Call 014·448·7388,
1-IIOII-4Vtl-341111.
KI1Chen C&amp;ruot $UO Sole On All

Carf)e1 In Stock &amp; Room Size
Mollohan Carlll. 614-&lt;446-7444.

1 Bedroom In Gallipolis, No. Pets,
Very Nice, 614·&lt;46-7G03.

Refrig8rator $75; Washer $95;

1 Bedroom Near Holzer Exrra
Nic::e, Central Air, 1269/Mo., +
Utilities, Deposit Req. 814·4&lt;8·

ptianc;e, 76 Vine Street, Gallpolis,

$35,000, 814·256·9101 .

Three 5,000 BTU Window Air
Conditlonora; 814-&lt;446-1171 .

eludes Waler, 1100 Deposit, 614·

446-3817.
2 Bedrct'o·m Apartment, Central
Air, Gas Heat, WJO Hook~ Up

Close To Gallipolis, 614 ·&lt;46·
2072.

ttOw L.ON6 t4AVf YOU TvJO
/. lfeN viiTtt US···

Dryoo $95; Electric Range $85;
RelrigeratDr $150; Air Condidono•
5,000 BTU $125: Skagga Ap·

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart(!lent, No Pets, $200/Mo., In·

,.

Units S150 Storm Doors $50 814·
448·3301, 814-&lt;448-3583.
Uoed Furnltura 130 Bulaville Pil&lt;e,
Baby Bed, Boo~ Shalveo, "good
Hospital Be~. Couchoo/Chairo,

less than 13,000 lriiles, 1,0QOCc,

exua nice, must see 10 apperFiero, 4 Speed, 15,000

Treat •Hot Spots•. Kill fleas, ticks.
")osquttoes &amp; flies on contact.
•Without lme;rnal poi~ons. Ask A&amp;

··25-.

Two miN11ure Collie pups, male,

All real estate advertising in
tllis newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ·any preference.
limitation or discrimination
based on race. co101. religion.
se.&lt; fam~ial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,

~o

014-742·2050.

Muslc4!1
Instruments

Star Guitar, Chellhlra, Ohio- ieta·
ona and lnltrumentl· piano. gui18r and dn,~ms, 11 4-387-D302.

580

FruHs&amp;
Vegetables

Com for aalt, $3.00 per buahal,
81 ..8112·2447.

This rie~5paper will not .

knowingly accept
advenlsements for real estate
whicn is in violation of the
taw. Our ·readers
hereby
_informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on.an equal
oppor1unity basis.

Strawberrial, Pick ll&gt;ur OWn, Coli
CiludeWinllrl, 8!4·245-5121.

are

.

, , • 'f.,.,.AvfS)

1978 Harley Davidson Sportater

G FEED &amp;: SUPPLY, 614·992·
. 2"164 about HAPPY JACK KEN·
NELOIP.

limitatlen or discrimination."

.-.a ..............

I

Chairs, Much Morol (814)·448·
4782Hrs. 1.0·4.

Antiques

I•

.

TOM0ft~Ow1
.

Used Air Condlll&lt;tner 4 Heal

530

iI

NOT (,OUNTING

Queen Bed , f.tirrors.. Computer
Dtak, Chest of Drawers, Tables/

.

Slrawblrfleo, 'ftlu Plc:k, We Plok,
Opened: 8·8 Mon, Wad, F(i; Stt
-11-Noon, .Cioiod Sunday'a,
Taylor's Berry Pa1&lt;h," Kerr Road,
814·245-e047.

•
7
.8
9

v.tllcle
-willie
TV'I PP•MIJIJI..IIIII
AnnapaU•
grad

on ahon Block, Good

$1,200 814·387·0333
1985 Oldamobile Cutlass Su·
ptame, V~e, auto, AIC, cruise, 4

door, $1200,814-992-2419,

icate. $5,000. 304-8.!2·2048.
1986 Suzu~i DR 125 Dirt Bike,
Call61&lt;-256·1883.
Honda Min.l troll
245-5789.

P..W~! WIU... YOU Pl£~69

TO 5l£EP?

1984 Bandit B111 Boat 50 HP

for: Sale

~

oo, ~ IT wna 'IOU .

,

WKEN L IZUD (~ e£0, ~?

i .
V

~

·~ ~
~-II

TU~

NOT IF YOJ "l\l!i!.N OfF , ......

L.l61-\n!

Mercury -Garage t&lt;ep1, Excellent

Condition, $3,000, Batween 2 P.lot.
To 5 P.M. 30H75·5131;
1985 Fo-ur Wlnns 1t FT, Open

Bow, 4.3 Liler VB MercruiSOf, Full
Canvas, Vert Low Hour, Excel·
tent

Condition. Good

Maintenance. (614,448- 2282 Ask for
Greg.

1987 Nitlin Maximum $4,500.
1984 Chevy Cu01om Van $4,000. &gt;988 19 Ft. Open Bow. Cilalion
304·8115-3V2ll.
Boat 230 HP V-8, Excellent COn·
1887 Toyola Supra lOOK Iota· &lt;ilion, $8,000 OBO 814-148-7885.
roan, Exctt~lant Co.fldlllon, 080 19811 Range&gt;.373V 111' 12 ·24V
814·448~1 .

Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinrude

1987 Ttans Am', V~8, Au1a, Air,
PS. PI!, PW, Gr.uild Eifeols," Cowl
lndUclioq 'Hood, .LOuYen , E ~.

OulbOar~.

Cond, 814-2&lt;5-5599.

,

lA

:1 NT

Pass

Obi.
P•••

apMii!ID

FARM SUPPl iES
&amp; L IVESTOCK

$9,800, 814:1lV2·2770.

1993 21" Mirada Cuddy Cabin ·
Boat, porta pony, am· lm cassette radio, 4.3 Vorte• 8cyl. inl
ou1 board, ruu canva1 cover.

Evinrude Intruder, low Hours,
Tournament Ready, · Prlaad To

Slder'a Equipment.

7421.

27 nn
21 Arm bOnl .
29 Midday
30 Artlll
Toulou... 31 trrltMeo
32 Set of IDOII

·wake up." '·

42 Klndo
44

48

~nt(pNI.)

50 Acorn or
CMhew

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

..

c.lebrity Cipher ctYPiograrns are created IJom quotations by famous people. past end pl'eMnl

'Each lener In 1M eiphet stMda tor a~her. TocMy's clue: F

Q WI

cv

J I

HJNFAZ
WH V

RNJI

QWHA

XNAKIJ

eqcJdls u

VQFSCZCGT

WTZJNKIA
V WI X B

HAZ

C G

XC B I .

BJHl 'U

PHSSH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To ~mand 'sense' is the hallmark of nonsense.
Nature ~»es not make sense. Nothing makes sense.' - Ayn Rand .

,

The declarer had realized he
should have led his low dinmon!l al
Irick two. If Wcsl goes in with the
ace, South has nine tricks via :two
spad~s. three hearts and four dia·
monds. Yet if West ducks his dia·
mond ace, South wins with dummy's
queen and switches to clubs. getting
home with two spades, three hearts,
one diamond and three clubs.
· Bru;k to the initial question. Two
. answers came in, one from England
and the other frol)t Canada, saying
that the cxlroletcd -caffeinc is sold to
Coca-Cola. I was distinctly skeptical
the lirst time, but with the Cana~ian
confinnation I became a hclievflf.
And if you think the diamonds
wouldn "t split 4-1 on this deal. don 'l!
' A. 4-1 split will happen almost 3(
percent of the time. II isn't at al

TIIAT DAILY
PIULU

I

WOlD

•••• •

RIBOFD

I

I

L...-.,;.L·I--~...1

--=s~U~Ij-:M~U~I ..: ~,

l I I I 'I.
r-

I

0 ·E E L G
'_._I......._.I
~

.

.

.

~

Granny always told us that

·you can be as hiilPPY as you
.--"""':"~~-=-~~-.,make up your - - - - to • •.
.· ~ N 0 p E I
.

.

.

_

•

•

•

Complele the chuckle quoled
by ftlling in the missing words

L.,...
..-::
..~
. _ ....._..__...._...___, you davelcp from step No. 3 below.

PEANUTS

SOMEONE AT THE DOOR •.

Foot pwt

45 Shark
46 Legal deg.
47 Comparlll¥1
1ufflx

w

I THINK 1 I-lEARD

I .

38 Houaton
INIIIplayer
39 Genlle
40 Targel
seeker
41 Uneven

.......,,-::5-,,...-rl-.,lr-"T'I6:"""i. e
1

199&lt; Slratoa Ban Boal 150 HP

10% OFF all farm

241&gt;icka'on
25 ShOrt
a....

36Regard

875~35!1.

1994 Marada 18 FOol Open Bow,
wiSun Deck, 4.3 Liter ya. Mercru iser, Am fm Cassette. and Ski
Acces10ry. 614-256-8383

23Fim-rale
(2 llfdl,)

""""

$14,000. 304· 875-2151 or 304·

I

22 Pr018Ction

l&gt;a•s

Wednesday, June II , 1997
By Phillip Alder
· The Notes &amp; Queries column in
'!11e Guardian newspaper in England
used to be extremely amusing. Now
it is more educational. For example,
· . someone asked: "What happens to
the caffeine froni decaffeinated cof.
fee?" Well, what do you think?
In today's deal, how would you
plan the play in three no-t111mp?
West, having opened one of the suit,
leads the spade queen.
Foreseeing no problems, South
won the first trick and immediately
led the diamond jack from hand.
Accurately, West won with the ace
and continued with the spade 10.
South look this trick and cashed the
diamond king. \\lhcn East discarded
a club. South's jaw sagged notice·
ably. Knowing West had the club ace
for his opening bid, South conceded
defeat.
"Piea.•e get me so\ne coffee,' "
:South asked his partner. "I need to

I

$2195, 814-992·8824.

$2,200 . 1985 VW Jetta, 5spd,
$900. 304-875·1651 or 30 .. 875·
8197.

,

. _yBru\U~, '(OJ'~ K£€PII'(:, M£. .

ni $500, 814·

750 Boats &amp; Motors

19.87. Nlss-.n· Maxima, auto, air,

THF. BORN LOSER
.

1986 For~ Tampa, one ownet",
11,000 actual miles, loaded, excellent condition inside/ out,

1988 lroc V-8, 5 Speed, 84,000
l.tllea, T·Topa, Black, 814-24!!8185.

10 Fern ...
--lp
12W......
13T~

1181C

Back to an .
old favorite

Mobile Home: Smail 2 Bedroomo. A.PPiiancea:
Re.condltLoned
Furnlahed, $235/Mo., Walor &amp; Wallhora, Dryaro. Rangee, Rain·

Trash Paid, e20 Fourrh Avenue,

I

oil to wad
:MGallll))
35 .,_(Sp.)

K ,J 2

.Opening lead: • Q

1 JEST L0\11 TATER'S NEW
LOOPY LOOP TOY It

Household
Goods

814-«B· 73G8. 1-8118-818.0128.

home ln. disaster relief funda
awilable to help yoU purchase a
replacement home. Call 1·800·
466-7671 to aet appointment lor
delai!t.

Building
SUpplies

Pets for·Sale

For Rent: 2 Bedroom T,.Utr In

Smell Trailer Partt, Depotit &amp; Rtf.
erence1 Required, Pl:ton• 11•-

..;.land

....

20"-

b&lt;lck, - • • plpeo, wind·
oWa, lintels, tiC. Claude Wlntera.
Rio. Grande, OH Call 814· 245·
5121.

MERC HANDISE

DOWN

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
sOulh
WP.KI North Earol

Bloc~.

R.L. Kilnz, 814-593-3375-

2057.

Dlt1111or Rlllel Program
We have $1000 to $2000 per

550

Available lmmadlanaly. Contact

Robert C. Byrd Lookl &amp; Dams. 9

Milt1 below Gallipolis on 7/10
acre. Mostly level, er~ cond.

WhHI Chair, Electric Bauorlaa,
$400,814o3118-8558.

21 .PIIIIy

25 Tacit

3D
ol
UO...who...,.

6Q 109 8 ·

TRAtJSPORTATION

M W..

~~.r . •·

•AK !i2
• Q r.
t

3 Bedroom, Naor Vlrllon, 0!1180,
SmaU Gordon Spot 5I-.. By ._
814-3118-0458.

,..,

109173

' edorlbll

53 lllctlo~ u

20 llouddlr ol

H&lt;Mtih

IU~902·

e•

12

It Polntlld tool

• 5

Two bedroom house. nice and
cloln, no lnlido poll, dtpo~t lind

relerencet required,
30110.

~

•an:~

.•

~

S1 C1111 1

17 cruJM or .

.:.,.t
1.ou7

1'1.\ AFAAID :!M ~ 10
~ 1:&gt; IVJ ~ alS:£5$

qutiiiO, 1300/mo., depolit and
utllltlao, 814·9411-2587 . .

Send Resume By June 23, 1997
To : F.A.C.T.S., 1770 Jackson
Pike, Bidwell, Ohio 45614 EOE, Ml
Fil-l.
Now hiring all po~jons.

A: MEEK

Small twa bedroom hOUM,· lull

b&amp;-.

• i\ K 4":1
tQ7r.4:1
A K .1 2

no lnaldo peta,

........ with

11 ~i)IIICI

.. 4

Clean lhree bedroom hDu11 In

1887 Skyline 14x72 ttldY to

·l'lvfelllonol Tr" St,.,lce, SlUmp cond. Call JD 614·446·8340 or
Remo..l, Free Elllmallll In· l304::.:.:-li_JS.:..,_
59_43_,1•
-'•-rnouoaa--::--~-:­
lllr&amp;noe, BidwOU, Ohio. 81 ..388·
•••
Oa'""-"
170 0
•~ l4x70 2br, 2 blf&gt;,
D84l. Bt.t-317- 1 ·
h12 deck, on rented tor, exc .
$ 3 300 0B0
Roof Painting, House Trailer, cond .. uking 1 •
·
Barn, Free Elllmatoo, Coli After 304·875·8051 Leave ,m tlllgl.
;.;;,.;_;_-;IIE:::CHAH::::::;IC:;----j 5:00 P.lot. 814 448 84&lt;5.
MuBt Sell
Qr.enwo od .lot otor lines, one or Se

--

move in, lots of ••traa, axe.

• preferred, bul will consider lht
,•right candidate. Excollanl benlfit
• pocl&lt;age for port dme employ"&amp;
1
1 Call 814-SI92-8808 or aend re·
•·111'1
IUmt Ia Roclolpringl Rlo~
" ta•
I 11on
.1
Co.ntor, 3875~ RocklpriiiQI
:· Rd., Pomeroy, OH 45789.

door '

'(OUfRE ·
RI6HT..

W~RE I-IARDL'I'
IMPORTANT AT ALL., ·

Sr;i1614-24S.G3G1 .

487 N.H. hlybint, U806; J.D.
4010 rfintl traclor; S5000; kt1ir·
nlotion1t" 48 MY baltr, $300; Now
Holland 17' hay eltvat9r, $250:
two 150 gellon Rubbtrmald weler
trough's, SIOO each, 814·742·
2157.

42' Sunliner S1ea1. Hauseboal,
New lnttrior, Lota 01 Room, 2 Glot
.Engines, $8,500. II'OniOn Marina,

SCRAM LETS ANSWIRS
Trough • Meaty· Onion -Affect· FORGOTTEN
If someone calls you buddy, friend, or pal, mare than ·
likely they have FORGOTTEN your name.

814·534-2385.

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

T Nl Cyclebar mower, needs repalrld, $140; 2·rQW c:orn cullivaIOr, lntarnarional, two bar qul(k

.'

hitch, g.c., $350; 814·742·2245.

!.WEDNESDAY

Alllo Chalmbara CA 1rac1or wilh

mower, completely .rebuilt, ntw

JUNE11

I

prJii, phone 814-992·81103.

flrmaii"Cub tractor with whUI

weights, good condition, 814-247·
2724 •fl!rr 8:30pm.
JUNE SPEctALs

~

.

Brand New Joh~ l&gt;eera Round
Baiera laat Yaar'l Modell 375 &amp;
Colt; Now 17 FL ·~
R"fTotddoro Rtgutar t2,875
Now $2,3119; Several Ueed Round
Balers, Mower Conditioners,
Rakea In Stock, Now A Bulh Hog
081ltlr. Carmic::haet• ,farm I.

Lown 014· 448·2412, 1·800·5114·
1\1, .

New Holisnd &amp; !Molton Hay Tool
Saie-412 THsyblne 87,500. 488
V' Hayline S7,VOO. .4D2 II'Httrbloo
IMOO. 834 · R. · Baler 8501
$8,700. 844 R. Balor, 10001
113,300. 84G R. Balor fOOOI
Bale Command Ntl .Wrap
$1 5, 500. 864 R. Bator t 5001
SIUOO. 815 Dlac lotowera 8' a·
v Re~t

Experienced corponlry and remodetlng. Inside and ·o·urslde,

dKkt, vinyl aiding,

.

add-on addi·

uona, cal)t'net reflcing or newty

SERVICES

Home ·
lmprvvernents·

IIQW.

rebuilt. ReiMencea-Free Eatf·

Ttld-

-Jim Sloll :104-elS-1272.

BA!IENENT

WATERPROOFI!IIG
Unc::onditional lll•rim8 9uarantM.
Loc::al rel.,enc::ea lurmthed. E1·

ExperlonciO Corpent&lt;J And Ro·
modlflng Add-Ona, DKkl. Walko
From Framing To Flnloh Work,
81 ..... 1.012&lt;1.

tabfishiO 1975. Call .iSI4) 44';.
0870 Dr r,.00-287-0"571. Rogora
Woterprooli~
·

Farm Work $8.00 An Hour, 814·

211-1233.

per
I
era to Chao" Fram. Keeter'a
service Ctn'-r ·SI. Rt. 87 Pl.
PltiiBOI &amp; Ripley Rd. 304·H5·

Home lncerlor Setvlcaa: Houl8

Cloonlng, 'Call For Appolntmonl"
IMia Hafll14-448-3110, Dr Flo
TUfley 814.--3325, Gallipolio,
ONo. "

3174.
. ho......, .

Houoo ptln~ng; Exltrlor ~nd lnIOrior poln~IIQ. oq&gt;orloneiO, lreo
Mllmlltl. ,..- . rattL 304·
773-5171.

304·

A,.,lianot POrta ArwJ !lelvlco: AI

...

Namo Brando Onr 25 YNra Et·
perience All Work Ou11an1eed,

French Clly lotaylao. 014·•48·

7705.

'&lt;

•

CARS FOR $1001 Truc~a. bootl.
C General Home Mal"'
4-wllolltro, tnoll&gt;r homoa, fu(nl· C&amp;
t~nence-' Painting, vinyl tiding,
IU'!o .._onlco, COnlfiiiiO&lt;I tiC.
doorl1 windows. t.thl,
llf •B~ IRS, bEA. -ablo JIM .-penlfJ,
arM now. ¢oll ·1·800·513·4343 tnobllt- _ . lr\4 .... ~
t" estimatt call Cho~ 114oOSI2•
Ext. 1-13111
•
1323.
..
'
I
I

Ntllt• ·lillorlor /Eatorlor Wind·

.. Cllalfllt No Joll Too Smalll

-

Alllr-N Upon AtquMf, FrM
E......... Call Ann 814·379·

WMiy
Connucllon
eu U8 11822. &amp;14-+41-1187.

=

3 't'Mr Old

IIIII&lt;* &amp; Whf1o Sallon
Gando Gaotl Rldfnt Hono

, Or Trade. ei4-lif'l233.

I

::--:-:-:--:-:~~-::--:-:-:::-·1

=I=

ftt

0:.=-~

Up111n U,~ Can Rl. t2·3 Milea cenud eleclrlc)an. Rl nouf
South ol Leon, WV. Financing Eloctrlcal, WVOOOIOI, 30ol·17f.

Mlllltlt 304-4S.ICMil

'"'·

~~fd.m:Oo:;;re; .~ your
but nev·
1..:::.1.-:-..;.--•----•·you expect
. ..
disappointment a possobohty. C.on· ertheless it will
ASTRO-ORAPB
versely. if you provide help, t;ewaids resuhs.
.. . ' ..· .,
CAPRICORN ·(Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
are likely for all concerned.
In
competitive
career developments
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)_Strive _to.
he generous .in your deahngs with tooay, be alert so you'n be .able to
capill!lize on mistakes made by your
friend~ today, but also be sure lhut
competition.
Several are probable: ·
your
out-of-pocket
cost
is
not
more
l
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb . . 19)
·~itce~sjvc than theirs.
· .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You will fare better in the long run
rrangemcnts that could generate ' today if you don't take yourself too
personal gains a~ lik¢1y to _be the · seriously. Play to win, but also play
luckiest for you today. Thtnk m for the fun of it.
PISCES (Feb. 2().March 20) If
thursday. June 12. ·1997 ·
tenns of financial growth and don't
you attempt to put yourself in the olh·
think ~mall.
· GEMINI (May 21·June 20)Asit·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0&lt;:1. 23) A mat· er gliy's shoes today, mutual benefits
uation thai has been a lhoi'n in your ter tliat is (\hlpificanc:e to yoit miaht can be derived in your personal rein· ,
side lately looks like it will be elim· start off today in a sluggish way . tionstiips. Fairness ' generates fair·
inated soon, perfulps even tO!Iay. Be today. However, Lady Luck may ness.
p.tient and expect positive results. accelerate the pace in A surprising
ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) This
Know where to look for romance and . manner.
. can be productive da}' for you, pro·
you'll find it. The Astro-G,.,h
SCORPIO .(Oct 24-Nov. 22) vided that you deal with your assign·
.Matchmaker instantly reveals wh1ch. Shifts in condition&amp; over which you .ments in totality as opposed to piece·
signs arc romantically ; perfect fo( have no control are indicated today. meal analysis.
· .
Yf:!U· Mail $2.75 to Matclunlker, rio HoM.er, you'lllikc the way matters . TAURUS (April 2().May 20) Do
11 neW~p~JJCr. P.O. Box 1758, Mur· ll'lllllpire in the lona111n.
not toy with tpeCUiative financial ·
1'1)' Hill Stalion, New York; NY
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 2l· Dec. . issues today. You are apt to be the
10156.
21) Yoo may lhink that a recent luc!ciest when you ~tay within tradi·
CA"!CER (Ju~ 21-July '22) If , ..,.ment could have been worked tiona! measures.
·

a

m

1
.I

1

'

",'
•.
A

'l

••
'

,,

.,
.1

�Ohio Lottery
Bulla take

Plck3:
604
Plck4:
1269
SuperLoHo:

command~ng

3·2 aeries lead
Sports on P1ge 4

'

5-10.12·1~

Kicker:

215183

••

•

I

'
i

·Air, aluminum wl.x\s; ·.
• .· auJSe, AMIFM i
and'Moch

-

•

Boarc;t hearing testimony on mill
proposal's air pollutiop permit .
a

V6, air, tilt,~ ..

~au:!;~
. VA';; ',.\

AM/FM

I
I

•

'

.

2 St!ctlano, 12 Pogq, 35 centl '· '
A Gannett Co. N-IPII*

D
. a.tes set for second an. nua.I Exp'o

..

Event slated
Sent. 20 21 .
at fall'&lt;'grounds

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ..,.. An air poll~tion permit for proposed
$1 .1 billion pulp mill in Mason County does not protect human health,
· said anexpen·witness for an environmental group opposed to the pennit.
1
The Air Quality Board began taking ev~~ Tucsday·on whether it
I"
" should rescind the pennit.
.
.
Environmentalists oppose the project of Panons &amp; Whittemore Inc.
of Rye Brook, N.Y. They believe dangerous level• of cancer-causing dioxBY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
in will result from the plant's.operalions.
,
Sentinel Newe Staff
_ Environmentalists also contend the state is wasting taxpayers' money
The '97 Town and Country Expo,
geared to showcase 001111J1Crcial and
. by proceeding with the process since the comp..y's interest in building
. the tnill appears to·be wanins.
· .
.
collector inten:sts coupled with enter, PBBons &amp; Whittemore has said it te'mains interested in th~ process.
tainment and exotic tinimals, has been
· but the company has not renewed its option to ili!Y the land for the.plant
set for Sept. 20 and 21 at the Rock
in Apple Grove, along the Ohio River. The optj9p·expired March 1.
Sprinas Fairgrounds;
In approving the original pennit, the state Division of l;nvirolllllental
It is the second annual Expo at the
·: Protection failed to consider non cancer effects~ dioxin, such as reprofairgrounds where admission is free
· ductive disgrders, said Peter deFur, a witness fQl:. the Ohio Valley En vi·
and the committee promises "some. ronmental Coalition.
.
!i&gt;,
·
.
thing for everyone." Hours both days
' State regulators also did not account for the culjlulative effect of dioxwill be 10 a.m. to S p.m.
. in to which people are already exposed, deFur ~·
Kenny Buckley and Hal Kneen
DeFur is a scientist at Virginia Commonwealth University_and an ad viare co-chaiimcn, with Kneen also
sor on dioxin matters for the U.S. 'EnvironmenUij..Protcction Agen~y.
handling demonstrations and special
The agency permit would al)ow the plant to p!llit 8.4 million pounds · eved~her chairmen are Addollou
of pollution into the air yearly.
&lt;.
Division spokesman Brian Farkas said agency",Iawyers will continue
Lewis. inside exhibitors' spaces; Jim
to defend the air pollution permit and may iss\JC..&amp; new draft water perWatson, outside spaces including the
· mit by July.
.
·
car display and food booths; Dale
The proposed mill is backed by fonn~r Go.v. Otiston Capenon and Gov.
Kautz, antique tractors; Dallas Weber,
Cecil Underwood.
·
.
.
·
:r•. ·
. antique tractor pull and Expo promotion; Roy Holter and the Rev:
L
, _,,
William Middleswarth, things of his·'
UI.• I
f.,.I
torical interest; Becky Baer, enter• ., 1
1\
W., 4
tainment, and Eugene Underwood,
the worship· service to be held on

'

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ~ey, June 12, 1997.

••

...

,.

..

.

ti41,N0. 40
01tll7, Ohio lllllly·I'UIIItlhlng Con;&amp; IJ.

•

•

a1

..

.

Muggy tonight, chance
of ehowera, row In &amp;Oe •.
Friday, ehowera, high In
801.

••

·• .

•

••

-~·

PULUNG CONTESTS· Antique lrllctor pulls
are alway• popular with trl-county realdanta.

the imponance or public involvement.
·
"We need businesses, ~rafter.;,
flea market people, churches, food
vendors. and the general public to
'
participate," said Weber.
"We need youth to become
"
involved .. 4-H clubs, scout groups,
and church groups," he continued.
11
met
Entenaincrs are needed to perform
during the two days, and anyone .
wantins to participate is asked to con·
·
..., 1
.
cncoyragang,partaCipalton.
.
. Laft Bll!'r.at 992,6696 or 992-5860.
-~ ......~- .
... ,..;..- ? • · · · .
"' It ~ ~.~ that the Monster Arrangements have been made to
,.....IJ.olQ.f#t SQI;&amp;... -~ .- ..- . ~;em with.Jeen..age drivers; · he said. --~ ll'iU ..~~~di)'~.and·that have • · ·public ·eddress•·•yste·m· In ·
Aaaoc'"'ecl PI'HI Wrl1er
Rep. Rop. AmstutZ, R· WOoster, 'beside' doing. denidltsttations will operation to announce events as they
occur.
·
CoL"OOUS".::;'r"n·a,ers rn~~ said the bil\ was a cue of the ·state offer' rides to' kids for a small fee.
Again this year the Big Bend
be 'able to hii the road earlier than going beyo'nCI its bounds.
'
. To ~mote the event, arrange··~
......
they are ~lo)Ved now, but they would _ . "This bill sets rules and regula- ments were made to secure business Antiques Club will have an equiphave to speild more or that time dri- tions that an; damaging io youngsters sponsor.; for ,IO,OIJ!l Expo '97 place ment display and also an antique tracving with Mom or Dad.
who are lie\ng responsihle," said mats listin~ the schedule of events to tor pull. A Saturday feature will be
ANTIQUE EQUIPMENT· An extenaive display of antique tracHouse lawmakers approVed a bill AmstUtz, who ·added that he favored be used in tri-c~ty area restaurants. games on tractor driving skills.
tors and farm equipment will be on dieplay It 1M Town and Coun•u
Meigs Countians with herbs and
Wednesday that ·would let teens get peru of the wll that force young dri· . It ~~!' . also . decided .to .sec~re 500
try Expo '97, Sept 20 and 21 at the Rock Spring• .Fairgrounds.
.
dried flowers to display, those with
their .Ieamer's permits at age 15112 . vers 10 get tilore experience.
addauonal ~ters for dastnbut!on.
This photo shows a part of what was exhibited at last year's
Continued on paae 3
event.
while also requiring them to spend
Once teens get their learner's perEmphasazcd at the meeung was
more time driving with an adult. · mits, they would have to wait six
Teens now get the pennit when inonths bef'll'e taking their driving
they tum 16. . .
. test. The wwld also have to get 50
. ..,.
· The legislation was designed lO hours of driving experience require more supervised road experi- including JO'hours at night- with a BY CHARLENE ·HOEFUCH
governments.
That would provide the basis for will he gi.ving a conccn on July 10 at '·
cnce for the state's youngest drivers parent or gu)lrdian before gelling a '"--u--· "".
s
..
ff
•
·
sh'
the
....,,
•.._...
The
role
of
Project
Good
START.
development of an economic devel- 6:30 p.m. on· Coun Street. An art · •
because statasttcs ow Yarc more probationarv. license..
M han A
·
·
ed
·
·d
.,.
The
Pomeroy
ere
Is
ssocasaid
Liulc,
is
to
assist
with
fonnin
a
likely to be mvolv m acca ents.
"It!s not ,the age, it's the cxperi·
Pro
~ opment strategic plan for the village, show will he held in the park lhat
.
De
f.
Publ'
ation
will
participat~
in
~CCI
Good
a
commil!ee,
developing
and
proLittle said, adding that a plus of the night also with Becky Anderson in
The Oh10 panmcnt o ,
ac cncc," said ·,Rep. Randy Weston. D- ST.'"'.,..,. (Small "'own Assessment d ·
·
dh ·
,.,
Safety found that drivers 16 to 20 · Morral.
.
'""
,,
. ucmg commumty an usmcss sur- contacts is that it tends to bring more charge.
Susan
Clark,
president,
also
residents
into
the
process
·
and
gets
make up 7 percent of all drivers, yet
Probati.or\ary licenses would be and Readiness Techniques), a com- vcys, as well as community leader
·
d
·
l6
r
11
economic development strate- surveys, assistinooc with publicity and them to think about positive things ·reponed that Jane and Larry Banks • ••
1
they are mvo ve m percent o a
valid un.til age 18, but they could be munity
·
crashes, and make. up I S·percent of revoked after two traffic violations. gl·c p·Janna·ng ini.tiative through the promota'on • compa'la'ng and· analyza'ng that arc happening in the communi· will handle all phases of the duck derby at the Stcmwhecl Festivallhe first ••
all drivers in fatal crashes.
The bill; ,which was approved 71). Corporation For Ohio Appalachian data from the surveys. facilitating ty.
According to the development weekend in October c'xccpt sales.
Development, (COAD).
community meetings, and making
· .. Auto accidents' arc the No. 1 26, also wouJd require that: ..
killers of teen-agers," Rep. Dennis
_ Stud'rint drivers could not
Meetins Wednesday with the recommendations and referrals based specialist, 10 communities will he· Pla.n• were also discussed fi&gt;r the hem ..Pomeroy
merchants
to discuss
tbe on the infmmation in the surveys.
selected to panicipatc in the program festival and antique show to be • "':'
StapIeton told Housc members.
obtain the Ji?""'tionory license if they.
G
·
staged that same weekend.
Stapleton, R-Washington Coun have had ai[y·· -violations in the last program was ary D. Lillie, comThe . survey form s. Lillie ·at no charge.
.
·
muniiy
development
s
...
.cialist
for
cxplaa·
ned
would
go
to
every
house
After
a
vme
of
the
Pomeroy
MerThe vandalism to the brackets on · •
House. he Id up newspaper cIappangs {hrcc months,ofthcir Ieamer's pennii. ·
r··
•
· ·
'
that ·detailed the sad stories of dead_ Passcingers or drivers under 18 COAD's Ohio Rural Enterprise Pro- hold and would a.&lt;k for a variety of chants to participate in Project Gmld . ihe period lights and the lights on the
START,
Bobi)i
Karr
volunteered
to
trees wa.• discussed. The Association :;;:
ly car accidents involving teen dri- in posses~ion of alcohol Wl)uld ject.
infonnation such as general imprcs,
Little explained that Project Good sions about the community, what they serve as chairman for the. steerin@ V&lt;~ed to donate $50 to match $50 givvers.
receive a six-month suspension of ST."'RT •• offered 'ree 10 selected
ld l'k ·
· h
,.
"That's why thero. is so much con- their licenses.
n
,,
wou · 1 e to sec tn t e way o, new commiucc which wi)J he composed en by Farmers Bank for a reward to ;:':
communities through funding from stores, how they. feel ~bout village of 10-11 people tn include service . anyone providing inliJrmation lead- • •
the Appalachian Regional Commis- services. and what they feel is impor- cluhs, minislcrial associations. and ing to the arrest and conviction &lt;if the • ~
si&lt;!n .. assists communities in their tant about their community a.' .a 'village officials:
vandals.
:"':
crrort to develop, maintain. and. · place to live. He said his agency
Little said it takes ahout two ·
Musser reponed a balance of :
.expand bu.&lt;incss. All segments of the would · prepare the survey forms . months to complete the process nnd $3,874.90 in the treasury not includ- ::-;
community arc: encouraged to partie- "!hich' would then be distributed by suggested that the prnjcct,get under- ing $750 which has bOOn contribufed
ipatc in the process. he said, includ· · community . volunteers one week, way this month.
by Pomeroy village toward the land- ~­
ing businesses, community, business collected the next, and then compiled
In other action, it was announ.:cd scaping project. The bracket con- ·~~
· and development orga•izations. and analy1.cd bY COAD,
that the Oi.J CoriJmunivcrsity Band slruction and banners have not heen
youth groups, schools, and local
paid for, it was reponed.
~

--------------..;·.;. ,.I',"i"·'._______, ·
· .·a er.s ••'ant.
La m
teens·to spend .more Sun~=~~%"~r ihe commit~ce
· d·..,heel·
:~::~~pr~~~~~: !~:~: =~
tl·me,beh,·n

-.
..

..•

·-

·• .

Merchants to participate in Project Good Start

-~

\ "

I ( &gt; \\

.\ " :

..
'

., . l

.
Ground broken .for $13 million correctional. center -:..

.

•

In Lskln, W. Vs.

.

.

.

'

By M..DY KEARNS

O¥P·newa mtf

..'

'

.••
'

''
'•II

•
'•

••

CHEVROlEI • OlDSMOBilE • lEilUS • I uYD i.a

•'
••
•
''
••
•'

•I

•••
,.•

•
•

'

'A

c ''
I

'

~

'

.

.

FIRE· Fllw.1gltlssa ollw Poms:OJ lild IIJ:IJpllft Wlllln.. , fftdii'Sd.iMIIIIJ-r.nfiJJtoliliiiiOU .. 't
.~c:.~I"OiltiiiJ!I
;: ·In Pot••ov •a unci :10 liiJ morning. No
.... up an•
8nd •1111 on~,......,.. IICIIagll]ble pa
time.

. ·:.eel

of..,_

A ceremonial ground breaking
was held Wednesday for .the $13 mil·
lion women's Lakin Correctional
Center, with Otis 0 . Cox, Jr., Cabinet Sa:retary, Military Affain and
Public Safety, as guest speaker.
€onstruclion of the 240-bed
prison is expected to take approxi·
!"•tely 24 months, with Summer
1999 u the scheduled opening date.
The facility wlll be appro11imately
I00,000 square f~t over 30 tto:rOS. of
land, and will employ &amp;bout as people. All posilioni, except the warden,
will be covered u...- the Division of
Pc:nonnel.
Cox said it is hard to predict the
ruturD. but he can predict crillll! with
atay with us fen-. He atatocl then:
&amp;re no'euy 101wen or IOiutions, and
the JIUWilllllifll prililn populatioa
is Clllllitll new problema. '~We can
build new and blaer prisona. and

know they will he filled," lie said. . community, and you arc very fonuAIDS is a problem with most pris- nate lo have a senator with vision oners, also, hecause many have hecn Qshel Craigo."
IV drug users. Cox said theN is on : . Craigo, who have heen credited
idea that we have·to put people some- with bringing ihe new prison to
place, and we load correctional facil- Mason County, was not only lauded
itics with all those we consider unde- by Cox, but by Master or Ceremonies
sirable, but he added it is not work- Nicholas J. Hun, Commissioner of
in g. The ~loot camp philosophy is not the Division of Corrections, and
working either, Cox stated.
J
local authorities, as well.
What we do need, Cox advisecl. is .
Hun said Craigo is both a states·
hiJh technolol)l, workable policies, man .and leader, leadi~g our state forperhaps charaing a \ISCr fee to ward. "Spmc legislatory arc tough,
inmates and their families. "We must and some legislators are sman. Sen!
w~ to bring about a society where
ator Craigo is both tough and smart .
crimes does not ovenake us," Cox and he is not afraid to use it."
'
sald. He sald that comes through eduSenator Craigo stated there are
cation, alternative programs and stop- women in three different facilities in
ping crime before it starts.
West Virginia at the present time,
"Violence is a symptom of Olher some in coed prisons. He praised
probiCIIIJ ' said Cox, lddin11 the Commissioner Hun . •and said the
btnd lid 'piOIJIIIIS do not work and aroulld breaking would nilt be hap11111 action is nee,ded. "We must plan ~ penina if he 1w1 not ~n open to new
tottay IIIII must have a vision ol ideas and t new locatiOn: .
chaqc. ~is bopnniq in your
~on County Comm1sston Pres-

idcnt Phyllis Anhur welcomed those' '
aucndiilg to the ceremony, saying the •
corrccti&lt;mal center is a positi ve s!cp
forward, as well as a way io ' put - ·
Mason County on the map.
•
· "Mason County is on the move," ~
Anhur stated. She noted that correctional faciiity officials have said they -~
want the center to he "good neigh- ...;.
bor.;" to the county. "We in Mason
County also want to he good neigh- ::::
bors to the correctional facility."
•
Charles Lanham, president of the • ·~
Mason Couniy Economic Develop- : ..
ment Authority, and Jack Fruth, vice
president. made several presenta- ~:;;
tions of paper weights to'commcmo- t
ra~ thC occasion.
,
Among other notables attending ~ ·'
were West Virginia Lonery Director ~
John Musgrave, who was formerly . ~;.
the county economic development • , :
authOrity director; Point Pleasant •.Mayor Russell Holland; Lakin • '•
Caadl!llld CJII .... 3
• •

.

•

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="401">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9783">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28509">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28508">
              <text>June 11, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="751">
      <name>cunningham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="181">
      <name>mcdaniel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
