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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
defeats
·Indians

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Pick 3:
2·1·2
Plck4:

2-o-3-3

Shower• and thunder·

BuckeyeS:
6-15-23-29-33

Sporta on' Page
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ltOrma llally tonlgltt, loWe

In the 101. ltorm1 likely
Wldna1day, hlgh1 In the
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:e1wr, 0111o Wllel' Plllllllhlng c:omp.oy

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Counly pushed to stem drainage from landfill
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Coqtaminated water draipi~g from the old Meigs County landfill ncar
:Pomeroy is1!05ing a threat to pu~llc safety, and the Ohio Environmental Protection.Apncy is pushing the county to do' somethins about it.
Jon Jacobs, director of the Meigs County Health ·Pepartment. sanitarian
Keith Little and Joe Holland of the EPA met with the Meigs County Com·
missioners Monday lo urge the board to act on the pr~&gt;lilem .
According to Jacobs, leachate, or contaminated water draining from the
.landfill, is pouring into a stream in the Laurel Cli IT area. ·
"Somelhing has to be done," Jacobs said.
,
The problem is created by a weakened "cap" of soil on top of the 8-acre
site, causing rain water to drain through the solid waste in the landfill and
·drain ina out a1ain. Jacobs said that the problelJI is aggravated by young trees

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2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuelday, June-17, 1997

:Sy
BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Naw1 Staff .

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growing on the landfill, which break down the cap and allow funh~r corita·
minalion.
·
A study, Jacobs said, should be commenced immediaiely to address the
leachate problem:
·
Two options are likely remedies for_the problem: creation of a wetland
area at the site to encourage drainage, or draining tile leachate into a tank,
treating it and removing it to a wastewater treatmeni plant lil(e Middlepon's.
. Last year, the commissioners had received an estimate lor a feasibility
study to address the problem from the engineering firm of Qurgess &amp; Niple
J.td. The cost for a study to determine.which of the two options would be.
mOst cos...Cffective was quoted at $13,500, with an·additional cost of $2.SOO
fo~ sample testing.
Holland, who said that the EPA will force closure of the site if nction is
riot taken,. by the county to do so. estimated the cost of closure at $100,000:

:Wage.inc rea$e ordinances

He said that Athens County recently closed its 691 Land till at a cost of
$2 million. ·The Water Pollution Control Authority in Columbus has helped

Athens by offering low-interest loan funds to oH'sct the cost of closing the
landfill.
' A lot of patience'
.
The Meigs landfill, closed in 1985, w.as one of many county-operated landfills that were closed due to changes in solid waste legislation a decade ago,
Jacobs said.
· ·
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Jacobs also said that the county's earlier landfill off State Route 143
requires explosive gas monitoring. and suggested that the county include that
monit9ring in any work that is performed at the Pomeroy-area landfill.
According to Holland, the situation is further aggravated because the land·
fill was constrUcted against a mining longwall, against which solid wa.~te was
(Continued on Page 3)

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··: proceed thro\' u gh :council
By BRIAN J. REI;D

'

Sentinel Hewn·Staff
·Personnel ma(tcrs, including a
second reading on ordinances raising
employee salaries, were the topic of
discussion at Monday evening's regular meeting ·of Pomeroy Village
Council.
The second reading· on the two
wage-felated ordinances was

.

'approved unanimously. The increas- mum wage.
es, if approved at the final reading-on
In discussing the salary 'increases.
luly 7, would faise hourly wages'for council member George Wrisht sugvillage employees by $1 an hour, plus gested that the record renect that in
3 percent.
·
conjunction with the raises, i't be
A second ordinance would raise understood that depanment heads are
salaries of SUJl!lrvisory employees by . expected to attend council meetings .
an average oC:3 percent.
.
or provide reports of activities to
The hourly wages of part-lime . council members on a re~ular basis.
employees woUld remain at mini·
(Cqnttnued on Plge 3)

1
.Local;.graduate wins Byrd scholarship
.

four-year, $1, i J(}.a-ycar scholarship, confident each one of them will conthe State Board of Education tinue to live up to th!Pftigh standards
COLUMBUS- Two area grad· announced Friday. · .
they have clearly set for themselves
t
Jb•CJ~IPCJUt:UWirtJiabchool~Wut
...~, , ·
ua\ial® !liJll' ~ ~~,g.-]1 ,. Overa)l.l:Z~.l!!iuat.ioa..M~• i
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Each year, 14 seholarships are
students statewide that will share from across the stale were selected
more than $1.2 million in awards from 907 applicants.
awarded in e~h Olli!l Consression·
from . the Robert C. Byrd Honors
"It's a great honor to have the al districts. The · selection process
Scholarship Program.
_ QPportunity 19 , recogni~e these out- includes the usc of a computer proRecent Gallia Academy High standthg gradUates," State Board of gram that factors in data about stu·
School graduate Liza Holeski and Education Pre~ident Jennifer Sheets dents including srade point average.
Meigs High School graduate Liberty - a Pomeroy native - said in a class rank. and ACT or SAT scores.
The feder;~lly funded scholars!lip,
King were among the 14 Sixth Con· news release; .
.
gressional District recipients of the
"They rellfllsent the best of what began in 1986. is natned after West
'
the class of 1997 has to offer. I am Virginia Senator Roben C. Byrd.

; By AARON MARSHALL
: 9enllnll Columbul IIUI'H!J

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. BARTRUM o!ERSEYS ~ Thne Mike Bartnlm jti'My1 will be
-valllble to the public during alpOftl """""llbllla Miction II) conjunction the Mike B1rtrum
Golf Tourn11ment to be
held s.turct.y It the llelg1 County
Couree. The 1uctlon l1
tha'publlc and run• from t a.m.·1 p.m1 Bartrum, a former
HJWI iichool AJI.Itate performer, II IMii abOVe -ring hll

ee-::r

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jerlly, and holdlllf 1 h«N end IWIY jenly from hll dip
with tha Klnul City Chllfl•

=Sports -memorabill- auction
planned._as part of Bartrum
Celebrity Golf Tourn~m~nt ·
By DAVE HARRIS
:Sutlnll Corrnponcllnl
·
·
. A spons memorabilia auction will be held in conjiiilction with the Mike
Bartrum Celebrity GolfToumament io be held this S'awrday at the Meigs
.County Golf Coune.
.
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.
The auclion will be a silent auction. will run fr01119 a.m. unlii .J p.m.
;and is
to the public. The aolftoumament, which is filled. will begin
:with uhotJIIn start at 10 a.m. .
.
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Antoni the· items in ihe auction will be a Bartrum New En,tand jer·
sey, a home .nit away Kanw City Chiefs..aut0Jf'8Phed Bannan P,Jey,
.anS·by-10 autop'lphcd phoco of Mike catchinJ his fint NFL touchdown
pass, a Super Bowl hat autopaphed by Mike, an Bartrum autopaphed
team picture of the 1!195 Green Bay Pac:.ken. folD' New En1land Patriot
mini·l\clmeu with one IIIIOp'lphed by Drew_Biecboe, O'i.e by Teny Glenn.
one by Cunis Manin, and one by Tom Tupa. a Drew Bleds!ie aatopaphed
Pllriot hat, a Drew BleciJoe atJtcllnllhed 8-by-10 phOto, a hat siped by
. fonner New EnJiand pelt Steve Oropn. and three New Bn,tand auto&amp;riPIIed .._ footbllla.
- the
. iliems will be on cllaplay at the Jolf' coune
. ciUrina the auction.

open

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Reedsville
man faces ,S
new Charge

HOu·se
BY CAR - No ln)urtH ·w.,.
,..,arled lfler lhiJ Cllr eto~ck lhl lkle of 1
houR In 8ynlcul8 Monclly -lng. Robert A.
Hl)'el, 51, 8yriiCUI81 Wll backing oul of hl1
drlviWiy when hll foot eppilrently ellppld off
the brake end onto the acCillenltor, caullng hll

·1988 Ford MU.tang' to lpln out
end
ltrlke the Regl1111 Hamilton rwkllnCil on Sixth
Street, according to 1 Melg1 County Sheriff'•
Deplrtmant report. Dlftlllllll to the car wa 1111·
ltd II mcldlrlll, whlll the hOU18 IUIIalntcl
damage to 1t1 foundation end •ldlng.

'The VoJunteer' wins court fight
. to ·push along state execution

The final consultation came Fri· he wanted .. , I'll pray for him. "
CLEVELAND( APJ-:-Theattor·
Berry said hi: didn 't want to talk
day
and agiin Monday before Cuyaney who heiJied a condemned.killer
with
reponers after the hearing.
win a court fight to speed up his cxe- hoga County Common Pleas Judge
A Reedsville man accused of cution said the . man is sick and Carolyn Friedland ruled Berry com· ' Authorities made arrangements
~tent to make the death penally deci- to immediately move Berry from the
assaulting a Meigs County Sheriffs ' deserves-prayers.
county jail in Cleveland back to death
s•on.
deputy on Sept. 8, 1996, ·now faces . "~very.body a~rees ~e's very
row at the Mansfield Correctional
"I
tried
to
make
sure
both
Friday
new charges in the incident following stck. ~lhatn McGtnty sal Monday
Institution
.
. a recent session of the Meigs Coun· aft_er a Judge granted the request by . and this morning that he knew what
Berry was sentenccc,l to die for the
ty ·grand jury.
·
Wt!ford. Beny, 34, of Cleveland, to he was giving up." McGinty said. He
Dee.
I, 19K9, slaying of Charles
said
Berry's
wish
to
be
executed
John c. Sheets, 41, is accused of wa1v.e hts ap_peals. That should speed
Mitron·
Jr., a baker who had hired
·"violates
our
theory
of
self-preserassaulting' former Peputy Steve up hiS execubon by SIX to 10 yew:' .
Berry
three
days earlier. .
vation."
.
.
,
"The man has some personality
Heater dunng an.early momtng traf- d. rders .. M a·101 'd Tw0 · rt·
Berry.
didn't
testify during three
Berry's ca.'c now goes before the
fie stop on Silver Ridge Road in •so . • . ~ . ~ sw ·
cou ,
of competency hearings hefnre
Chester Township. Heater's dog, ~mtc~ psychtalnsL' agrC:OO· detatl· Ohio Supreme Coun. If the justices 'days
the
judge
last week.
uphold
the
ruling
by
Friedland,
.Calypso, was credited with coming 10 mg m thetr two days of t~lunon~ last
Gov.
George
Voinovich. who SUJl'
Berry's
execution
date
would
be
set.
his aid durint~ the alleged attack.
week:that Berry has_a spht ~rsonaipons
the
death
penalty. sent word
"There's no way of predicting
Officials maintain 'Heater had ot~ d1sorde~ _and ha.~ a history of
through
a
spokesman
last week that
stopped Sheets' truck, which he was ~~ozu~s •. sutctde attempts and hallu- when that 'will happen," said Assishe
.
won
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comment
on
cases that
tant Prosecutor George S&amp;dd. He said
driving with a Oat tire, and asked ctnauon~.
. .
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Sheets to take a field sobriety test
McGmt~ saod 11 wa.~n I hos role a.&lt; the Supreme Coun review probably might come before him for possible
when Sheets assaulted Healer and . court·apromted attorney on the death would involve a review of the case pardon nr cc•mmuUilio.n.
Ohio ha• not executed anyone
penally assue to make Berry change record, not arguments before the jus·
. fi
aItempted Io Iake hts arearm.
h'
· d 1
d M a·
'd h
since
Maich 15, 1963, even though
While Sheets allegedly tried to Is mtn . nstea • c mty sat e tices.
the
state
reinstated capital punishMcGinty said he felt "terrible for
gain Heater's firelll'lll, the deputy was t.ook c~re to ~ak~ s.ure Berry unde[·
the man personally, but he got what ment in 19KL
able to activate a special remote-con·· ' 1ood 1 c process.
trolled door. ~leasing the dog from
his cruiser, The large German shepherd then charged Sheets, knocking
him off Heater and allowing him IO
ATHENS (AP) - A trespassins ciate director of legal affairs, told him He was esconed from the building,
be arrested.
charge against a reponer arrested for- the commillce could meet in private fingerprinted and issued a citation
During the struggle, Jieater susrefusing to leave a meeting at Ohio because it only makes recommenda· before being released.
tained injuries to his head and left
Ms. Dioguardi said .she didn 'I
lions' and docs not set policy.
University has been dismissed.
Bf!ll, according to Sheriff James M.
Phillips said he thought the meet· think the public was being kepi out
Jim Phillips, 37, associate editor
Soulsby. Sheets was tn:ated for minor ofThc Athens News, a weekly news· , ing should be open to the Pl!hlic of the process because Provost
ill:iuries to the neck. . ...
because the calendar issue was of Sharon Brehm agreed to meet witJI
Sheets was originally · charged paper, had pleaded innocent to th&lt;: importance lo studenL' and resident.,. reporters
fourth-degree misdemeanor charge,
with feloniou's assault and resisting
arrest, charges later dismissCd when · which w~ drop~ Friday in Munic·
ipal Cowt
it appeared as thoush a plea agree"I believe that this is a situation
ment Wotlld be reac~. according to
that can be resolved by the parties
Meiss COunty Prosecuting Allomey
.themselves," Athens Cily Prosecutor
John R. Lentes.
McCarthy said in a statement
The currenl term of the gnnd jury George
Monday. "It is a type of sitlll!lion that
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. - A Point Pleasant man wa.~ killed in a
has now indicled Sheets on chqes · would more appropriately be
of felonjous usaull and resisti111 resolved in a civil rather than crimi· head-on collision Monday on State Route. 62 in West Columbia, accord_ing to a Mason County Sheriffs Pepattment spokesman.
· .
arrest and ~wo cclwlts of robbery, one nal court."
Guy
R.
Stewart,
44,
died
when
the
1989
Ford
he
was
driving,
regisof them atiemplld robbery.
Campus police said they arrested tered to Hilda Stewart, struck a 1995 Ford van driven by Clifford S.
- The most aerioua char&amp;e is that of Phillips May Z9 for refusing to leave
felonious uaault, a finl-delflle a meeting in Alden Library of the Thomas Jr., 44, of Pomeroy.
The sheriffs spokesman said Stewart was traveling north when he lost ·
felony, wliile lhe robbery chirps . CaleiiCW Study Task Force_.
control
or his vehicle, went left of center and.struck Tilomas, who was
stem from · Sheets' effona to tab
Tho panel had been considering a SoUthbound, around 3;25 p.m.
Heater/a aidUrm, ieconfi111 to uais- propdNI to chanae 10 a semester sys·
The Mason EMS transported Stewart and Thomas to Pleasant Valley
tant ProlecutiaJ Ali«My Chris tern. After Phillips wu removed, the
Hospital following the accident. A hospital spokesman reponed Thomu
1Uopa.
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panel voted to recommend the uni·
was tn:ated and released.
Sheela halince plelded iiiiiOeelll venity keep the quarler system.
Siewut's vehicle, as well as the van, owned by Sears Roebuck cl Co..
to the new char&amp;es and is he on
Phillips wu arrested after Nic~
were listed as total losses.
bond~
· 1et1e DiOJUII'III, the liniversity's asso-

_Charge filed against newsman dropped

Pomeroy man injured in
fatal two-vehicle crash

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�Tu11d8y, June 17, 1M7

{Co1nmentary

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Pegl2
Tuesdly,June17,1117

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Drainage from landfill

Wetfaahy,Jaae 18

(Continued from Page 1)

Aa:uWeather" forecul

,, The Daily Sentinel

When teens kill their newborns

something in !his country ts running
By Sera Eckel
"
'Btah{isfretf in 1948
It's a story that makes your blood way out of control. "What's going
run
cold. G1rl goes to prom. Girl on?" my best friend asked as we dis111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
dehvers baby m bathroom Girl cussed the case.
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157
Actually, what's gomg on ts ~oth­
throws baby m trash. Girl goes back
mg
particularly new. Neonatictde, the
to dance floor and r'I'Juests Metalhktlhng ot a baby m Its first24 hours,
ea song .
••
"Meltssa· How Could You" IS tbe has extsted for many centunes and
headline m the New York Post, as spans cultures that mclude Anc1ent
. A Gannett Co. Newspaper
l
well as preuy much the thoughts of Greece, Chma and Esktmo civthzaanyone who knows the story. How ltons. In England, the cnme has
ROBERT L. WINGETT
could she? News reports desenbe the been vtewed as manslaughter smce
Publisher
teen, Melissa Drexler, as a shy child 1922. The United States makes no
w1th dotmg parents, a sweet and pret- such dtstinctions, though JUdges and
ty girl-next-door who one day hoped juries tend to percet ve these cases as
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
to be a fashton destgner Definttely inherently different from other murController
General Manager
der cases.
not your typical killer.
Although it is impossible to calThe tragedy comes on the heels of
culate
the rate of U.S. neonatictde ·•
The S•nlind ,..lcomesletters to the editor 1rom ,.,.,.,. .... • btoed nmf18 of lop/ct.
the Amy Grossberg story, the New
Short lettor~l300 wonts or ion) hovou. "''' chonc• of bolnfl publllh«1. Typed,.,_
Jersey teen whose newborn was smce many instances are presumed to
,.,.. .,. pflferr.d •nd all m•y ,. edited. Eat:ll Mould lnclutH • 8Jglratu,., llddr.a,
~
d• d
h nl ft h
1
anddllj'llmapllononumbor.SpiOCHyodotoll,_.,.,.,...,,.,to,,._._
ooun tna umpsers
o ya crs e go undiscovered -· there IS no evior lolflr. Moll to Ult.,. to 11r0 Edllor, TM SOfltltlfi, 111 caun st, Poo•ra,, Olllo
delivered tl in a Delaware hocel dence that it has increased in recent
decades. And one researcher, Dr.
'-~4:;576:.;:::9,.,;;o;:;r..:,:FAX;;;.;,;'o;.:&amp;;;;14;;·9;:;92.;:;;;2;;1S7;:.·;.... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. roo\11 And n gtves you the sense that

.

Deep Throat, who are you?

Philltp J. Resnick of Case Western
Untversity Medical School, says lhal
the figure has ICtually gone down,
due to the availability of birth control
and abonion.
But thhl doesn't make the phenomena any le.ss disturbing. Indeed
the question·· what's gomg on? •• ts
one that has to be answered.
Dr. Margaret Spinelh, director of
maternal mental health at Columbia
Umversity College of Physicians and
Surgeons, has spent the past three
years observmg women accused of
killing their newborns and has detected some mterestmg patterns. "I was
heanng the same things from these
young women They would say, 'I
could see myself dehvenng the baby
in the bathroom .' clearly diSassociating themselves from the act, " she
says.
Spinelli says that this kmd of dis-

~~--------------------------~------~
e:IST'ei/11 •.,
~MJ;.

i'II!WS ·Nta
0

' By MIKE FEINSILBER
. Asso~·ted Press Writer
WA HINGTON - John Dean smd 11 was Alexander Ha1g. Hatg says 11
was th Bl Rabb1 Baruch Korlf smd on hiS deathbed I! was Dtane Sawyer.
Howard Ph1ll1ps and Robert Mardmn smd 11 was Leonard Garment. "Not
me," sa1d Garro en! "Honest "
Tuesday Will mark the 25th anmversary of the Watergate break-m Isn't
11 umc to come out; Deep Throat'
, Apparently not Mr Throat's ident1ty remams an endunng puzzle.
Deep Throal, an appellation that came from a pornographic movte, was
the tag !hat pacesettmg Wash•ngton Pos.t reporters Bob Woodward and Carl
, Bernste m gave thelf chwl source m reportmg Watergate
Woodward says he wtll not 1dent1fy the source as long as Deep Throat is
. .alive " or until he releases me from our agreement of confidentiality" Some
Watergate mSiders and pubhshmg figures believe Deep Throat was a literary dev1cc, created to spiCe up the Woodward-Bernstein book. "All the PresIdent's Men " Woodward demes that. He Will not say whether he ts still in
conlact With h1s source

John Dean, the pres•dcnt1allawyer who squealed on Rtchard N1xon, spent
mo nths trymg to 1dcnt1fy Deep Throat. In a 1982 book, he concluded the
leakcr was none other than Hatg. NIXon's ch1cl' of staff m the pamfullast
months of Watergate, or someone close to h1m
Ha1g also was fingered 111 the hook "Silent Coup The Removal of a Presiden t, " by Len Colodny, a Democratic political consultant and profesSion~ a l Investigator, and Robert Gcttlm, a former Newhouse News Servtce
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'Totally untrue," sa1d Ha1g
Hmg h1msclf conc luded that Deep Throat was the FBI. wh1ch "knew more

:: about the subjct:t than anyone •·

;
A month bdore he d1cd m June 1995, l&lt;orff, who was "Nixon's rabb1"
; and confidant dUI mg the darkest days, sa1d "at my deathbed I can afford to
; , peak the truth · and 1dent•hcd ncv.scaster D1ane Sawyer as Deep Throat.
' Sawyer, who had worked m N1xon's press office, called thatlaughrtble
John D Ehrltchman, N1xon's domestiC adviSer, nommated Henry
: Pe tersen, an asSistant allorney general
'
H R Haldeman, N1xon's hrst chtef of staff, wrote that he and the presl: dent both felt Deep Throat was Fred F1eldmg, Dean's deputy, but Haldeman
, later changed hiS mmd
• Wntcr Aaron Latham sa1d 11 was Wilham Casey, who was chmrman of
the Sccunt1es and Exchange Com1msston and m the State Department • , 111 d m and out of the Whne House- at the time ot Watergate He later ran
• the CIA
.
:· Others, mcludmg N1xon press secretary Ron Z1egler, ~pec ulated thai Deep
! Throat was a composttc figure , because no one person was 1n a pOs1t10n to
; ' know ~vcrytlung about the scandal as ll developed But Woodward satd
• "There was a person It's a he It would be absurd for lito be a compoSite "
• N1xon speech writer Raymond Pnce, man opm10n shared by others, called
• Deep Throat "a hctlonallnvcntlon for dramatiC purposes"
Conservati ve actiVISt Hov.ard Ph1lltps, a functionary m the Ntxon admm15tratlon, said he thought Deep Throat was Garment, N1xon's Wh1te House
:. lawyer Roher! Mardtan , a Justice Department officml at the t1me, also pomt; cd to Garment but adm1tted " I could be dead wrong"
"I'm sure there was a chorus of Throats, w1th one Pavarot11 leadmg the
re st. " wrote Garment m h1s recent mcmo1rs "Anyway, It's not me. Hon-

•

est. '

Even though The Washmgton Post had much at stake , the newspaper's
former publi sher, Kathanne Graham, and former executive ed1tor. BenJamm
: Bradlee, sa1d m their mcmmrs that the y dtd not msiSI on knowmg Throat's
• 1dcn111y Brad lee smd he was satisfied w1th Woodward 's descnptmn of h1s
' source by JOb, cx pencncc access and expertise

; After NIXon reSigned '" 1974. Bradlcc smd he felt a need to know and,
: lllt1ng on a park hench dunng a lunch break, asked Woodward to name hiS
source Woodward d•d , he s.ud, and "I have never told a soul "
! , Bradlec added thiS mtngumg thought "I have always thought II should
~ be posSible to 1dent1fy Deep Throat Simply by cntcrmg all the mformation
' about hun'" 'All the PreSidents Men' mto a computer and then entenng as
'
•inuc:h
as posSi ble ahout all the vanous suspects" - such as who was not m
: )'v'ashmgton on tiays the book reported a meetmg between the source and
' the reporter

' ' Woodward sa1d the Brad lee method mtght ehmmate some suspected
·Throats but would not po1nt to the real one

'

Floyd discovery must have been accidental
By lan Shoales
You '.~e probably heard the news
by now about the latest fire sweeping
across the Internet: If you slap on
your "Wtzard of Oz" vtdeocape,
mute the soundtrack, and play Pink
Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon,"
amazmg synchronic1ties will allegedly occur
Accordmg to the New York Datly News, wh1ch took ume out from its
busy schedule of cleanmg up Manhunan to break thts story, "Floyd
smgs. 'the lunattc IS on the grass' JUSt
as the scarecrow begms hts noppy Jill
near a green lawn The hne 'got to
keep the loomcs on the path' comes
JUst before Dorothy and the scarecrow start tra1psmg down the Yellow
Bnck Road " And so forth. Amazmg
Whatever.
Th1s revclallon has lett me more
depressed than cxhtlaratcd For one
thmg, how was 11 dt scovcred?
Through lrlal and error? D1d some
Floydhcad suck down doobtcs as he
spun the plane~ to every mov1c m hiS
v1deo collccllon? Docs tl work wuh
"EI Topo"&gt; "Yellow Submannc"?
"Allen"&gt;
D1d he try playmg 11 to h1s vtdcolape ot "Pmk Floyd-- The Wall"! Or
the mov1e ot "Tommy''" What about

By Dian Vujovich

hasn't talked to you about variable
annutltes, expect a call any day now
Variable annuittes are hot Sales of
these products -- which are mutual
funds tn an tnsurance wrapper• ..
totaled $73 b1lhon tn 1996,accordmg
to Dalbar Fmanctal Servtces, a
Boston-based research company.
That's up 42 percent from the year
before. Th1s year, more exploSive
growth is expected as sales topped
don 't have your h1gh sc hool d1ploma, $20 b1lhon at the end of the first quarABLE IS dcfmllely the place for you ter. .
What makes vanable annu1t1es so
Classes arc lree. We have open
allractiVe?
One reason IS the tax
enrollment year-round for anyone
advantage
thiS
product offers.
aged 18 and up (You're never too old
Ftnancial
author
Alan Lav1ne s01d
to learn) We also g1ve pracucc OED
tests at no cost. When you pass our that money kepi in variable annutties
practtce test, you are ehgtble for a fee can grow tax-def~rred unltl age 85,
watvcr on the oftictaltest. So you see, and in some cases age I00, before it
cverythtng 1s free. If you need our has to be annuitized. "That means
services or know anyone who does, you've got more years of tax-deferred
you may call or VtSII any of our three growlh, and you have more conirol
learmng centers for more tnfonna- over your money than you do in an
uon . Tbe locations and telephone IRA."
Louis Harvey, president of Dalbar,
numbers are: in Pomeroy, 33105
agrees.
Htland Road just off state Route 7
"Once you've maxed out on och(hospnal hill), 992-6247. In Middleer
tax-deferred
retirement plans like
port at the library, 178 S Third St.,
your
401(k),
it's
the next best tBll
992-5808. In Racine at the United
hedge
out
there,"'
says
H~n~ey...You
Methodist Church, 949-2457.
You are wanted here. Everyone is can · mvest as much as you like in
welcome. Looking forward to seeing them, and, even though you get no
tax deduction, they give you anOther
you.
leap on the taK man."
But the best reason Harvey sees
Avanelle EY-,
ABLE IQcher aide for buying a variable annuity is that
Pomei'O)' nveslors can never outlive their

EDITOR'S NOTE- Mike Feinsilber covered the Senate Watergate
committee hearings and the impeachment hearings in the House Judi·
·ci:tr) Committee.

1

Letter to the editor
Wanted
Dear Edttor.
Arc you lookmg for a way 10
1mprove your standard of ltvmg with
a bcller pay mg JOb''
Maybe you would hkc to go to
college or tcchm cal school. You may
ttlso wiSh to, improve your selfesteem, gam more confidence in
~ourself or be ab le to help your chtldren wtlh thetr homework?
: If you fit tnto any of these categones, we have help for you and it's
{iee, all it costs you 1s a little time. At
t+\is pomt you are probably askmg
Where IS thiS place that can do all of
Olis, r~ght? It's called the Me1gs
Oounty ABLE·· Adult Basic and Lneracy Education Program. You can
accompltsh aqy or all of these thmgs
at our leamin' centers, whether you .
have graduated from htgh school or
nol. If you have your h•gh school
cliploma. you may wiSh to brush up
ctn some things you have forgocten to
help you whep you enter college or
technical school 01" when you help
)'but children with h?mework.lf you

•

,

"The Last Waltz"?
After V1Stl1ng The Synchronicity
Arktve on the World W1de Web .•
check 11 out 1f you can' •• I learned
that certam Floydhcads d1d lind that
for " ... the last approx 23 mmutes of
('200 1. A Space Odyssey '), (t)hc
audto ... IS prov1ded by Pmk Floyd's
'Meddle ' album, the last track titled
'Echoes "' So Pmk Floyd fans arc
defimtely out there, trymg to find random connecttons between their COs
and laserdiscs. Good luck to you ~II'
But what1fthe reverse IS true? Dtd
some "W1zard of Oz" fanatic so
through every CD m his collectton
for the perfect match?
·
Nenher scenario seems likely. So
the discovery must have been accidental This 1s even more depressmg.
Some unknown consumer must have
been hangmg around the house one
day, watching "Wizard of Oz" with
the sound off. stmultancously hstcnmg to " Dark Stde of the Moon," paymg allcnuon just long enough to conJUre some Jungian connccllon. Does
thts not speak volumes about this
anonymous person's lifestyle? We
must find thiS person and put him
humanely to sleep
. The only other altcrnallvc IS that

A fr1end of mme (J Raoul Brody)
sent me an c-mml mfof11ltng me that
he 'd !ned an cxpenmcnl himself. He
put the soundtrack to "Wizard of Oz"
on h1s old-fashioned turntable, then
stared at the "Dark Side of the
Moon" album cover.
t1mc
There were some amazmg findKeep m mmd that, accordmg to mgs. HIS report?
what I've read, "Dark S1de" must
·· "At the exact moment when
hegm after the MOM hon's thlfd roar, Dorothy Sings 'Somewhere Over the
othcrwtsc 11 doesn 't synch w1th the Rambow,' I was starmg at the colors
mov1c properly.
coming out of the pr1sm "
Agam, thts insane prcCISton makes
·· "When the Tm Man smgs 'If I
me suspictous.
Only Had a Bram,' I was tnpping out
If th1s was a discovery by a Floyd on the fact that smokmg dope makes
or "Wizard" cult member, lhtnk of thinking a lot harder."
the many hours of tnal and error that
·• "When those Welfd monkeys
went into tl. How would you know wuh wings started chantmg, I tclt
that the mus1c shouldn't start at the really spooky and wc1rd "
first lion's roar, or the second, or watt
·• " When the needle got caught m
unul after Dorothy has sung "Some- the groove at the end of Side one, I
where Over the Rmnbow," or when dtdn 't nottcc for a really long 11mc.''
she lands tn Oz?
S&lt;nhere you go Once agatn, proof
And an even larger qucstton posit1ve Of something.
(To receive a complimentary Jan
rematns: Why would anyone want to
do this'! Personally, I've seen "Wiz- Shoales ncwslcuer, call 1-800-989ard ofOz" and hstencd to "Dark Side DUCK or wntc Duck's Breath, 408
of the Moon" enough for one life- Broad St , Nevada Cny. CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
time. What's next? "Gone Wtth the
Wind" and "Serl!cant Pepper's Lone- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
ly Hearts Club Band"?

Pmk Floyd intended "Dark Stde of
the Moon" to accompany "W11.ard of
Oz" all along. They JUst kept it a
secret until "Dark S1de'' fell off the
Billboard c;harts. It was a fiendiSh
scheme to keep the album-or~entcd­
rock format alive beyond us alloued

Variable annuities last a lifetime
If your broker or financial planner

•

•0

• 0

assoetation IS common to ch1ld-abuse
vtctims, who w1ll often mentally
remove tbemsel ves from a traumatiC
situation. lntereslmgly, Spinelli found
that seven of the nine women she
evaluateil had a history of , early
phySical or sexual abuse, and all rune
hved m homes that had a family
dynamtc that is consistent wuh most
incest cases. "All of these women
were the favored child of an over.bearing father and had a cold and
removed mother. They clearly
belonged more to Dad than Mom,"
says Dr. Spinelli
These women never bonded With,
thetr fetuses because they never
acknowledged thai they existed. Even
to the last mmute, when they went
mto labor, they reported thmkmg thai
they had some kind of 1llness ·· food
poisonmg or the nu
Compounding the problem 1s the
chemtcal change that occurs wtth
delivery. " When you're pregnant,
some hormones are gomg to be 200
ltmes what they are during a n01111al
menstrual cycle," explams Dr.
Spmelli. "And then they plummet."
For many women, this can result in
severe post-partum depression; for
those whu are already in deep denial
about the1r pregnancy, Spmelh
believes the that hof11lonal change
can put them over the edge.
Spmelh's research, as well as other stud1es m thts field, ts certainly not
concluSive Indeed, the lack of chmcal ev1dpnce m thiS area has been
used by prosecutors to diSallow the
usc of an msanny defense during
neonallcide tnals. But 1f conclusive
data on thts subject IS what's lacking,
then that is what we must pursue. We
must take the steps to find out what's
happening in these trag1c cases. We
need to know what's gmng on .
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association ..
Send comments to the author In
care or this newspaper or senil her
e-mail at saraeumaol.com.

mcomc.
"When you annu1t1ze. a certain
amount of money is guaranteed to
you for hfc." he says.
Harvey said that should you d1c
before the hfettmc tncomc feature of
your vanable- annu11y runs out, the
remaming balance doesn 'I go to your
benefictary. Instead, the montes go
back to the msurer.
Along wtth those pluses come a
vanety of mveslmenl chotccs.
The Phoentx Insurance Co. in
Hanforil, Conn., for instance, recently added four Templeton portfolios to
1ts hst of vanable annutlies. Tbe Templeton Asset Allocation Scyies (global); the Templeton Stock Series (global); Templeton International Sencs;
and the Templeton Developing Markels Series.
The addition of these funds g1vcs
investors 16 variable annuities to
select from and three money man·
agers to work with: Wanger Asset
Management, Phoenix-Aberdeen
International and now Templeton.
"Tbe new portfolios are a tll'eat
component to our existina product
line because they offer investors a
reputable val11e investment style and
additional forci11n investment opportunities," says Michael Puckly,
national sales manager Of vanable
annuities at Phoenix.
Variable annuities, however, are
r1ddled with fees and expenses. In
addttion to the annual management
fees the underlying mutual funds
charge come insurance company-

related fees, mcludmg ~n.nual mortality and admtniSlrat•ve tees Tttcn
there arc surrender charges lev~ed on
those who dectdc to cash out olthctr
pol tcy before a gtven date All of
which put a dra1n on your total return
Brian Malles, a pnnc1pal at The
Vanguard Group, a n9-load fund
tamily that offers variable annutucs
wuh some of the lowest annual fees
and expenses in the tndustry, says that
tt's' "very, very Important" to pay
close auention to annual fees
"Desp11e the tax advantages, 11
becomes almost meaningless if you
are paying close to 3 percent in fees
on your annuity each year," says
Maues.
Barbara McLaughlin, director of
corporate relations at Phoenix Duff &amp;

Phelps, sees tl differently. Stays:
"Fees are a small price to pay if
you've got good perfof11lanc ."
Because annual fees and e nscs play a big pan in this investment
product, would-be investors need to
remember that variable annutties are
long-term investments.
"Expect to stay invested for 20
years or 11 (a variable annu•ly) doesn' t pay," says Lavine.

Dian Vujovlch is the author of
"Straight Talk About Mutual
Funds" and "Straight Talk About
Investing for Your Retirement,"
bOth of which are published by
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
her In care of this newspaper, or via
e-maU at MlsMutualaol.eom.

.Today in history
Today is Tuesday, June 17,the I68th day of 1997. There are 197 d~ys
left in the year.
.
Today's Highhghl in History :
_
'
On June 17, 19'72. President Ntxon's eventual -downfall began wilh the
arrest of five burglars mside DemocratiC national headquarters in Washington's Watergate complh.
,
.
On.!his date :
In 1775; the Revolutionary War B'allle ·of Bunker Hill took place near
Boston.
•
'
In 1789, the Third Estate '" France dei:lared itself a national assembly,
and undenook to frame a conslilutjon.
·
In 1856, in Philadelphia, the Republican Party opened tiS first convention.
·
,
In 1885, the Statue ofLibeny arrived m New YOrk Ctty aboard the Frenc:h
ship!~.

··~

I

• IColumbusl7e• I

Stormy conditions continue
in area tonight, Wednesday
By The Anoclated Pre..
A nearly stationary cold front stretching across the state will produce more
showers and thunderstof11ls on Wednesday and, posstbly, Thursday, the
National Weather Servtce said.
·
Heavy rain on Monday caused some mmor Hoodmg m central and southern Ohio. Thick fog late Monday mght and early today reduced VIS1b1h1ies
to near zero in parts of the stale.
Lows tonight were expected to be m the '60s, Highs on Wednesday will
be 70-80.
The record-high temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather sta·
!ton was 97 degrees in 1994 while the record low was 44 m 1980 Sunset
tonight wtll be at 9.02 p.m. and sunnse Wednesday at 6:03 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms hkely. Fog. Lows m the mtd (iOs.
Northeast wmds 5 to 10 mph, shtfllng to the west late thts evenmg. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Wednesday ... Showers and thunderstorms likely. Fog in the morning. Highs
in the lower 80s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday night ...A chance of thunderstonns, otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Extended rorecast:
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs m the lower 80s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s and h1ghs in the mtd 80s
Saturday. Panty cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms
Lows in the mtd 60s and highs in the upper 80s

Pursuit of Simpson assets
:getting ugly in courtroom
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)- of collaborating agamsl hts chen!.
, Everyone knows the survivors of
Ira Friedman, representmg Ms .
• ,Nicole ~rown, Simpson and Ronald Simpson's father, LQuiS Brown,
Goldman want to collect the $33.5 executor of her estate, shrugged and
million Judgment from OJ. Stmpson. said: "So? You can prefer one credWho knew u would tum into a com- itor over anotl]er."
petitton?
- • And Simpson's attorney sa1d the
At a hearing where Simpson lost law a11ows Simpson !o prefer the
a bid to keep lhousands of dollars Browns.
wonh of propeny from creditors, a
"We' re concerned for tbe needs of
Goldman attorney accused lawyers the chtldren. We would hke them to
for Simpson and the Brown family of grow up with some of these items,"
conspirtng to gain an unfatr advan- lawyer Ronald Slates satd outstde
tage.
coun.
The JUdge even responded to
He sa1d the Browns "have been
lengthy bickermg at Monday's hear- much more cooperattve" and "much
mg by noung an "unseemly compc- more humane," while the Goldmans
tilton" between the part1es
have tried to take "his last morsel "
''I'm troubled by that," Supenor
The hcarmg, which was to conCoun Judge Irving Sh1mer said
tinuc today, left unknown tbe whcreStmpson was acquitted of crimmal abouts of Simpson's Heisman Trocharges in the June 1994 slayings of phy, awarded to him in 1968 as colhis e.-wife and Goldman. Shimer lege football's top player. His auorwill dec1de what property Simpson neys said last week that the trophy
can exempt from the judgment won had been assessed at $400,000.
b~ Ms. Stmpson's estate and GoldSlates said medta reports of the
man's family in their wrongful death trophy hemg located were rumors
• case.
whose ongm was he d1d not know.
'
The judge denied exemptions for Stmpson has sa1d he docsn 't know
: $170,000worthofucms, includmga where the trophy ts, last month, he
• $15.000 ltfe-stzc bronze sculpture ot satd he assumed tl was m a trust set
Stmpson and a $5,700 painting. The u!' for h1s two chtldren w1th Ms
, btggest debate centered on Simpson's Stmpson .
.
: S I golf clubs; Shimer turned down a
The JUd~c also reJected a propos' request to let Simpson ptck out a set al from S1mpson that most of hts
~ to keep.
clatmed cxcmp~io~s he drorped 1ft he
Goldman family auomey Damel Browns got prtonty over the GoldPetrocelli fumed outside court, accus- mans.
ing the Brown and Simpson lawyers
"I have not ruled that the Browns
have ach1eved any kind of pr1oruy."
Shimer told the auorncys.
Daily
Petrocelli called Simpson's otlcr a
"gimmtck . to move the ucms to
tUSPS lt:I-Ml
thetr favored creditor "

The

Sentinel

Pubt\ohed every oflemoon. Mooday lh100J)I
Friday, Ill Court St , Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Otilo Volley PubbshinJ c..,...yiGomotl Co ..
Pomeroy, Otilo ol.~769. Ph. m-2156 Second
ctau...,..... paid •• "'-"&gt;y. Ohio

'

Am Ele Power ........................41 14
Akzo .......................................68\

m.

M~mbtr~

The AJIIOc::tlJitd Preu, aM rhe Ohio
N'ew1poper Alllodlldon.

AmrTtch ...............................

Aahland 011 ...........................4774
ATAT .......................................38

POSTMASTER! Send Dddma conecc1ona to
The Dally Senllnef. Ill Court Sl , Pomeroy.
Ohlo45769.

Blink One ..............................4574
Bob Evare• ............................15\
BOili"'Wa,...... .........................52~
7

SUIISCIItPTJON RATIS

Ctwmplor. .......................~..... 16 .4.

BJ Cartltror; M.tor llotlft

One-·

Chenn Shp• ...........................5'1.
C=olding'i...........................32

.................... SlOO

OoeMomh .. ....... ·One Year,

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....... SIOIOO

F
I Mogu1 .......................31"-'
~--l'lltt ..................................95~

. . . . . . . . . . . .... .

SINGLE COPY PRICE

0~ ..............................61

~.=
13'1..
Lllnda El1d .............................30~
Ltd....,....................................11\
Oelc Hill Fll'll ............................18

llllily ... ... .. ..... ... ....... .. ., . . 35 c ....

S,....,rtbon ncx cleoirina to poy doc """" moy
rmali In OO&gt;~ance direct 10 the Olily Send•l
on
1 line,
or 12_moJCh bllh. Credit wHI be
at _
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____....,............_.
No

oubocrlplion

ova ...........,.............................ss

by mail penniiiOd to _,

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

Stocks

.- .....

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lntlhl llllail;don period. ~pdoa
~·~J be ln.plu'"'"IOd ill'....,.... dlr
6ndon oflhlsull1 tlpdora.

MAILII!IICitPTIOI!II

tl4oflo
c.-, $27-:J
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a..,- ···--·-··. .- -tt•.n

'

OM-~~~~, otooooo ooooooooooooooooouooooo41
~pill ................................... 34

Pr.n ..................................... 171,1.

flc)ulcaA ...................- .........10\

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:=.•. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

=

1411CN1···.......................11\

Stook
a.lll.

of?

-·-·ftportl

are the 10:30
pro¥1c11t1 by Advelt

..

'

deposited .. ~s weakened uea causes further contamination, he said.
Comm1sstoncr Fred Hoffmu qreed tbat tmmedWe action wq required.
. "The EPA has been very nice about this," Hoffman said. "It's been dragJtng on t~ lona. The EPA has sho)"n us a lot of patience, and we need to
get somethiaa constructtve underway to getlh11 situation under control."
Hoffman said !hat he would contact the 0-J-M-V Solid Waste District to
see ahout financial usistance, and Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton suggested
investigating the possibility of receiving mine reclamation funds for the
repairs, since an old mine is on the site.
Jacobs also said that the road into the landtill1s in need of repair, and that
hetghtened secunty ts needed because random dumping at the site IS sttlltaktng place.
Bud1et requests
'
In other busmess, Hoffman nOied that the board had received departmental
bodget requests from county offices for 1998, totaling $3,393,517, wtth estimated recetpts at $2,943, 187, leaving an estimated budget deficit of $415,000.
Last year, the county's final expenditures were approxtmately $3.2 milbon, Hoffman said. The county has cturied over approxtmately $240,000 each
year for the past three years
The budget must be finalized m July, Hoffman said, so the budget requests
must be cut aecordtngly m the next two weeks
Upon the recommendation of County Engineer Robert Eason, the board
signed agreements for pubhc safety programs admimstered by the U S.
Depanment of Transponation, whtch w1ll provide $21 ,500 for two studies
on county highways.
·
A "ball bank curve study" will use a pendulum-type device on curvy road
sections to detenninc safe speeds, while a "no passtng zone sign study" w1ll
examme safety stgnage on county roads.
The funds wtll be fronted by the county, and reimbursed in full by the
federal government. The studtes will be completed by Sept I.
Landmark work
The commissiOners authonzed the Chester/Shade Historical Association
to proceed with "po1ntmg" of bncks on the old Chester Courthouse, at a cost
of $10.473.
The work Will be performed by Custer Stucco &amp; Plaster of Mtddleport,
and the cost wtll be financed by the associatton It will involve replacing the
masonry work between the bricks on the building. The cost mcludes scaffolding costs.
David Gloecker, coordinator of Job Training Partnership Act for Gallia/Meigs Community Action Agency, met with the board to discuss the
agency's disaster relief effons, funded through the federal JTPA program.
Gloeckner said that the efforts are being concentrated on clearing debris
from creeks in the area to prevent future Hooding, and removtng debris from
nooded areas.
$983 ,000 has been received for !he program in the two counties, Gloeckner sa1d.
Thornton reponed on a County Commissioners Association of'Ohio convention that he auended last week in Akron, and shared findtngs on pendmg welfare refonn legislation.
The board also:
• Authorized, upon recommendation of Department of Human Services
Director Michael Swisher, a contract with Veterans Memorial Hospttal for
blood testin~ in child suppon paternity cases, and a contract with the Clerk
of Courts for processing of IV-D chtld suppon cases, at a cost of $198.46
per case;
• Approved an appropriation of $1,411.54 in !he bUdget of Probate and
Juvenile Coun.
Also present were Commisstoner Janet Howard; Clerk Gloria Kloes; David
Spencer of the County Highway Department; and Prosecuting Attorney John
Lentes.

James C. Chevalier
James Chnton Olevalicr, 27, Reedsville, died Monday, June 16, 19':17 at
Ohio State Universtty Hospitals in Columbus.
.
Arrangements will be announced by the White Funcralliome of Coolvtlle

Darrell D. McCoy
, Darrell D. McCoy, 59, Fremont, died Monday, June 16, 1997 at Bellevue
Hospnal in Fremont.
Born Dee. 12, 1937 in Ripley, W.Va .. son of the late Hollte and Rheatea
Reeds McCoy, he was a retired burner for Fremont Continental, and worked
for Webster Industrial in Tiffin He was a member of the Fremont Moose
Lodge and Eagles Aerie.
Survivmg are his wife, Margaret Stull McCoy; daughters, Crystal Sellers of Long Bollom, and Angel Young of Guysville; a brother, John McCoy,
of Fremont; three sisters, Rose Curry of Racine, Louise Wh1tcum of Waverly, and Stella Sarson of Apple Grove; SIX grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
,
He was preceded m death by a stepbrother, Clarence Skeels, and by brothers, Clifford and Foster McCoy.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Thursday m the Wonderly-Horvath Funeral
Home in Fremont, with burial followmg in the Oakwood Cemetery. Fnends
may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday in the funeral home .
Moose and Eagle services will be held Wednesday at 7.30 p.m. and 7.45
p.m , respeettvely. lq lieu of flowers, memorial contnbuuons may be made
to the Amer~can Heart Association.

Morgan A. Yates
. GraveSide servtces for Morgan A. Yates, 76, Mentor, who died Tuesday,
June I0, 1997 at hts residence, will be held Saturday, June 21, 1997 at I p.m.
m the Sand H11l Cemetery, Long Bollom, with the Rev. Sharon Hausman offiCiating.
He was born Sept. 19, 1920 tn East Ltverpool, son of the late Dav1d S.
and Geneva Yates, and hvcd in Mentor for 41 years He also had a llome on
Bashan Road near Racine for the past 21 years
He served m the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II, and was a member of Mentor Lodge 772 F &amp; AM, Scotttsh Rtle Valley of Cleveland, Lake
and Geauga County Si:olltsh Rtte, AI Koran Shrine in Cleveland, Eagle Shrine
Club and a 50-year member of Palmer· Robert.• Post 214 of the Amencan
LegiOn m Willoughby.
He was general agent for Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa, wtth h1s
main office,in Cleveland.
Surv1ving are his wife of 53 years, Lots M. Sm1th Yates, a son and daughter-in-law, Mark A. and Sandra Yatc!s of Chillicothe; a brother, Dav1d R. Yates
of Cambridge; and nine grandchildren and three grcat-grandchtldren.
He was preceded in death by a daughter, Susan Lynn Yates, m 1982.
Memonal contr1buttons may he made to the Amcncan Cancer Soc1cty,
Lake County Unit, 1314 Mentor Ave., Painesville Ohio 44077

Livestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) - lndianaOhto direct hog prices at selected
buymg points Tuesday as provtded by
the U.S Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts· SO cents higher; demand moderate on moderate to
light movement
Tournament planned
U S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
Juntor girls softball tournament
points
56.00-57 00, few 57 .50; plants
wtll be held June 28 and 29 Infor56
50-58.00
mation may be obtained by calling
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 50.50992-5079 or 742-2209
56 00; 210-230 lbs 46.00-50.50.
Hunter education
Sows: steady
A free h'unter educatiOn course
US 1-3 300-400 lbs. 41 50w1ll be held July 15, 16, 17, Tuesday
42.50,400-500
lbs. 42 00-44.00, few
through Thursday, from 6-9 p m., and
45.00;
500-600
lbs. 44 00-46.00, lew
Saturday, July 19,9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
the Me1gs County lkes Club on 46.50. Some over 600 lbs 47.00Scout Camp Road ncar Chester. Pre- 47.50.
Boars. 38.00-41 00.
regiStratiOn ts rcqutred and students
Esltmated
recctpls: 29,000
must allend all four sess1ons. To prePrices
from
Produ~ers Live·
regiSter, call J tm Freeman at The Datslock AIISociation:
ly Sentmcl at992-2155.
Hog market trend for Tuesday.
OAPSE to meet
1.00
higher.
OAPSE 453, Southern Local
Summary
of Monday's auctions
School OIStnct wtll met Thursday,
at Hillsboro and Creston:
7.30 p.m at Southern H1gh School.
Hogs· steady
Butcher hogs: 53.00-59.50
Caulc· steady to 1.00 htgher.
Slaughter steers· choice 62.0068.10,
select 58.00-64.00
dra Peyton, Plea•ant Valley Hospital ,
I 0:39 p m., West Mam Street,
Stephante Bonecutter, Holzer MedIcal Center
RACINE
10:26 a.m .. Th1rd Street, J\usty
Meadows, treated at the scene.
REEDSVILLE
9:16p.m., Reedsville Fire Depart·
mcnt, Roxie Stout, treated at the
scene
SYRACUSE
10·32 p m., volunteer fire department to Sixth Street, gas leak at the
Our slatistics show that mature
Hamilton reSidence
drivers and home ownera have
fewer end less costly losses
than other age groups. So It's
only lair to charge you less lor
your Insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and sava
Scoll Dtllon, B1ll Young and Larry
even more with our special
Wehrung reported that !hey have
mutti-pc~lcy discounts.
been recctvmg numerous ~omplaints
about potholes in town, especially in
the downtown area and ncar ,Beech
Grove Cemetery.
Young inquired about the possibthty of pro¥iding village water service to tesidents on Pleasant R1dgc
Musser said that Village Admmlstrator John Anderson had sa1d that such
a project would be cost-prolubi!IVC,
since the estimated cost of such service would be $90,000.
Drainage problems near Lynn
Street, on Mam Street and on Pleasant Ridge Htll, were also noted.
Wright said that tree roots and other
debris at the cemetery need to be
removed.
Dillon commended Corbet Cleek
of High Street for culling grass from
High Street to Lincoln Hill.
Present were counctl members
John Musser, Seoll Dillon, William
ER __
Young, Larry Wehrung, Georse
Wright, Clerk Kathy Hysell, Mayor
,...._Servloea
Frank Vaughan and Patrolman
214 EAST MAIN
Jonathan Sanders.

Meigs announcements
JEWEL picnic
The JEWEL (Jesus Enhanced
Wise Educallonal Leamtng) Hoi'Qeschool Suppon Group wtll hold its
summer p1cmc Friday, 5 p.m. at General Hartmger Park m Mtddlepon.
Bnng hot dogs and dish to share.
Fathers welcome For more informalton, call Bnan and Ktm Hupp at9920045.
Camp meeting
Evangehzmg for Jesus at
Guysvtlle wtll have a camp mee11ng,
June 28 through July 5, I p.m. da1ly.
There Will be preachmg and smgmg.
More mformatton may be obtamed
by contactmg the pastors, Don and
Dee Mtll, 667-6040.

Squads record eight calls
Untts of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Servtce recorded eight
calls for assistance Monday. Untts
responding included.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7:55 a.m., Main Street, Tuppers
Plains. Marvin Walker, CamdenClark Memorial Hospital, Tuppers
Plains squad assisted;
II: 13 a.m., State Route 124, Mtnersville, Harry K. Clark, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
3:32 p.m., Powell Street, Middleport, Eleanor Paeltz, VMH.
POMEROY
3:44 p m , Memorial Drive, San-

Wage

incr~ase

(Continued from P~~gt~1)
Clerk Kathy Hysell noted that the
pol~,ey should be adopted by the
council's policy and procedure commiUee, and noted m the policy and
procedure record, rather than bemg a
part of the salanes ordinance.
"I feel that we need to have some
accountability from these department heads," Wnghl satd, "espeetally m hghl ofthe fact that they're gell[!lg ~pay increase."
Mayor Frank Vaugliiin reponed
that the search was continuing for a
new police chtef, to replace Gerald
Rought, who is retinng ui August.
Adam Sm1th has been hired as a
part-time pollee dtspatcher, and
Vaughan IS also considenng applicants for the full-tunc dtspatcher
positton being vacated by Ellen
Rought, who IS also retiring in
August.
Council members John Musser,

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Dllcharaa June 16 ·- Alice
Comer, Mrs. Browning Briggs and
son, Joseph Tolliver.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Shafer, twin son and daulhter, Gallipolis.
' &lt;r..bJllhed will! .,., lnloa)

We Give•ture
,Drivers, Ho•e
Owners and
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special
Savlnas.

ordinance

N@l

Toacb

.,

Dave

Grate

of
Rutlalltl
Furnltwe
Money talks - but tt doesn't
say when 11's comtng back.

*·* *

Honesty Is the best policy
. because it has so httle
competition.

***

To be the p1cture of health,
one needs a good frame of
mind.

***

You can meet friends
anywhere, but you have to
make enemies.

***

Sterpophontc sound is when
you're trapped between lwo
people talktng about thetr
operations.

Liquidation
· Sale
Still Going
Strong! .

POMEROY

Liltlt things
11rr Worlh Alol

Auto-Ooenerait....,..Hee

IItt Cwsi/ittlStclion!

LKe Home Car Business
n. itl p,.g.,.

•
tn

The: Ligbf

9112-etS7

7 SIIIIWWOOMS

II WMiltCIIISlS

Rutland Furniture
11. 12

011.

742·

�Sports.

...

...-

The Daily Sentin~!

------------------------------TUII c'oly, June 17, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wlmb~on play begins

----~=:~----~----------~--~~~~--~----------~-~.~.~.--~~-~~~. ~.~-~·-~-~~------------------------~~----~T~u=.•=•~d~~!J~,June~~!17~,~1~11~7~ .....
;:

-

Reds 4 Indians 1

Tomko sharp in

' . ':~p .

'·•,

.

~.

_,_,'

· \ ··, 1o
-~ •.i?;
,&gt;,;\.lm·

"'
~ .,
'
.
LARKIN INJURED· Cincinnati's Barry Larkin (11) Is carried off
the field by Dave Burba, 18ft, and another teammate after auffaring
a ltralned lett call while running out a second Inning double
against Cleveland Monday night In the second Inning. (AP)

Scoreboard
Atlanta
Florida .
Montreal
New York
Philadelphia

43

Pinsburgh

33
3.i
31
28
28

National League
East Division
. Pet.
L
GB
.632
25
27
.597
2 1/2
28
.582
3 1/~
30
.552
5 1/2
44
333
20
Central Division
L
Pet.
GB
34
.493
36
.478
I
36
.463
2
39
.418
5
40
.41 2
5 1/2

w

L

w

Houston

Sr. Louis
'Cincinilati

Chicago

40

39
37
22

w

West Division

Pet.
GB
29
.567
San Francisco
38
32
.529
Colorado
36
2 112
6 '
35
.478
Los Angeles
32
38
.433
San Diego
29
9
Monday's results
Chicago Cubs 8, Chicago While So• 3
Florida 7, Detroit 3
N.Y. Mets 6, N.Y. Yankees 0
Atlanta 3. Toronto 0
Milwaukee I , St. Louis 0
Boston 5, Philadelphia 4. 10 innings
Pinsburgh 8, Minneso&lt;a 6
Kansas City 5, Houston 2
Montreal 6, Bailimore 4
Cincinnati 4,' Cleveland I
1\Jeaday's Games
. Philadelphia (Ruffcorn 0-0) at Bos10n (Scle 4-5). 7:05 p.m .
Florida (Helling 2-4) at Detroit (Lira 4-31. 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Smiley 5-7) at Cleveland (Anderson 0-1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mels (Reynoso 5-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Wells 7-31. 7:35p.m.
Montreal (Bullinger4-5) at Baltimore (Kamicniecki 4-3),,7:35 p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 7-3) at 'Toronto (Andujur 0-2). 7:35 p.m.
St. Louis (Valenzuela 2-8) at Milwaukee !Mercedes 3-2). 8:05p.m.
Pinsburgh (Loaiza 5-3) at Minncsotu iHawkins 0-01. 8:05p.m.
Houston (Garcia 2-4) at Kansas City tHuncy 0-1). 8:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Gonzalez 2-1I at Chicago White So• (Drabek 5-41. 8:05 p.m.
Te•as (Burkel! 5-5) at Colorado (Thomson 2-4). 9:05p.m.
Anaheim (Finley 3-51 at Los Angeles !Park 5-3). 10:05 p.m.
Oakland (Oquist 1-2) at San Diego 1Hamihon4-3), 10:05 p.m.
Seattle tFassero 6-21 at San Francisco (Reuter 2-21. 10:05 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
·
.
.
N.Y. Mets (Reed 4-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Cone 7-3). 1:05 p.m.
Florida (A.Leiter 5-4) at Detroit (Olivares 4-5). I :OS p.m.
Pittsburgh (Cordova 5-4) at Minnesota (Radke 6-5), I: IS p.m.
Montreal (C.Pcrcz 7-4) at Baltimore (Key 11-1). 3:05p.m.
Texas (Oliver 3-8) at Colorado (Wright 4-4), 3:05p.m:
Seattle (Lowe 1-1) at San Francisco (Gardner 7-2), 3:35p.m.
Philadelphia (Schilling 8-5) at Boston (Suppan 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Schourek 5-5) at Cleveland (Colon 1-2), 7:05p.m.
Atlanta (Smohz 6-5) at Toronto (W.Williains 1-6), 7:35p.m.
St. Louis (Morris 5-3) at Milwaukee (D'Amico 3-3), 8:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Mulholland 5-6) at Chicago White Sox (Alvarez 4-6), 8:05
p.m.
Houston (Wall 2-3) at Kansas City (Pinslcy 1-4),,8:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Pcrisho 0-2) at Los Angeles (Nomo 6-6). 10:35 p.m.
Oakland (Telgheder 2-3) at San Diego (Murray 1-1). 10:35 p.m.
American League
East Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
45
Baltimore
20
.692
30 .
.552
9
37
New York •
31
33
Toronto
.484
. 13 112
36 '
.446 ' 16
29
Detroit
. Boston
38
.433
17
29
Central Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
Cleveland
34
30
.531
Kansas City
32·
33
.492
2 1/2
Milwaukee
31
34
.477
3 112
Chicago
30
36
.455
5
Minnesota
30
37
.448
5 112
West Division
w
L
Pet;
GB
Seattle
38
29
.567
Texas
35
30
.538
2
3 112
32
.SIS
Anaheim
3t
2~
Oakland
41
.406
II
Monday's results
Chicago Cubs 8. Chicago White Sox 3
Florida 7, ,Detroit 3
N.Y. Mets 6. N.Y. Yankees 0
Atlanta 3. Toronto 0
Milwaukee I. St. Louis 0
Boston 5, Philadelphia 4, 10 innings
Pinsburgh 8, Minnesota 6
·
.Kansas City 5, Houston 2
Montreal 6, BalthnotC 4
· Cincinnati 4, Cleveland I
1\Jnday'• GtunH
Philadelphia (Ruffcorn 0-0) at Boston (Sele 4-5), 7:05 p.m. .
Aorida (Helling 2-4) at Detroit (Lira 4-3), 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Smiley 5;7) at Cleveland (Anderson 0-1 ), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Reynoso S.OJ at N.Y. Yankees (Wells 7-3), 7:35 p.m.
Montreal &lt;Bullinger 4-5) at Baltimore (Kamieniecld 4-3), 7:35 p.m. ·
Atlanta (Maddux 7·3) al Toronto (Andujar 0-2), 7:35 p'.m.
St. Louis (Valenzuela 2-8) at Milwaukee (Mercedes 3-2), 8:05p.m.
fjttsbuflh (Loaiz~ 5-3) 11 Minnesoca (Hawkins 0-0), 8:05' p.m.
Houston (Gan:ia 2-4) at Kansas City (Haney 0.1), 8:05p.m.
Chicaao Cubs (Ooll~z 2·1 J at Chicago White Sox (Drabek 5-4), 8:05p.m. .
Teul (Bullcett 5-5) at !=ofotlldo (Thomson 2-4), 9:05 p.m.

By KEN BERGER
AP Sports Wrltar
CLEVELAND - It wasn't a
Subway Series or a Nonh Side vs.
South Side battle. It wasn't even a
memorable game - unless you were
Brett Tomko.
The 24-year-old rookie returned to
his hometown and pitched the
CinCinnati Reds to a 4-1 victory over
the Cleveland Indians Monday night
in the first meeting between Ohio's
two baseball clubs.
Tomko, born in Cleveland, outdueled former Cy Young Award
winnner Orel Hershiser in the first
regular-season meeting between the
teams after 96 years and a two-hour
rai'n delay.
"It's just an incredible night," said
Tomko (3· I), who allowed five hits,
struck out four and walked three in 7
1-3 shutout innings. "To go against
him, especially when it's 1-0 deep
into the game, I was thinking, 'This
is kind of cool. We're battling.'"
The I 61 st consecutive sellout
~rowd arri ved early at Jacobs Field,
and most stayed through the rain
delay. After 96 yearS, what's a couple of hours?
Except for Tomko, it was a bigger
deal to the fans than the players.
"I don't think for us it means too
much," Indians shortstop Omar

Cincin·n~ti

Vizquel said.
American League in 1901.
"I've got a feeling it's going to be
"I don't think it's a rivalry just
a
long
hislory in this," Knight said.
because we haven 't played them,'''
Cleveland first baseman Jim Thome " We feel good about beating that
ballclub out there." · ·
agreed.
The victory, however: came at a ·
One fan perfectly captured the
price.
Cincinnati shortstop, Barry
calm nature of this "rivalry," showing up in a Reds cap and Indians T- Larkin, hampered by injuries all seashirt. It was a hybrid approach that son, left the game with a strained left
would never fly on ·the New York calf after doubling against Hershiser ·
in the second inning. He went llirectsubway.
Reds leadoff hitter Deion Sanders ly to have an MRI, but the team did
swung and missed a pitch from Her- not think it was the Achilles tendon.
Larkin led otT the second with a
shi'!'r to start the game as flash bu]bs
double
to left - .the only hit through
popped tlvoughout the park. The
flamboyant leadoff hitter, who heard , 6 1-3 innings against Hershiser.
a smattering of boos, struck out Pokey Reese, pinch-run~ing for the
swinging and jogged back to the injured shortstop, advanced to third
dugout.
on a groundout by Reds DH Eddie
·
"I felt like I knew how to pitch Taubensee.
Reese scored when Thome tried to
them, and they knew me," said Hershiser, a longtime National Leaguer · backhand a Hal Morris grounder and
who gave up two runs and five hits had it go through his legs.
in eight innings in his 29th career
Cincinnati' made it 2-0 in the sev.
enth
on Brook Fordyce's RBI single
start against the Reds. "Hell like I
was back in the National League through a drawn-in infield. Morris
again."
started the rally with a single and slid
. The Reds got a run on a Cleveland safely into third on Willie Greene's
error in the second inning, scored on single .- Aargrove argued and was
three singles against Hershiser (6-3) ejected liy third base umpire Ed
in the seventh. They added two runs HickoK.
in the ninth off reliever Paul Shuey in
"for what I said, I would have
the first regular season game between · thrown me out, too," Hargrove ·said.
the teams since Cleveland joined the
Cleveland had no luck playing AL
hardball against Tomko, a 24-year-

"
Braves beat the team they ]ost to in Red Sox S, Phillies 4
· ··
'the 1992 World Series. The Braves
Philadelphia lcfl · lieldcr Gregg
visited Toronto for a pair of spring Jefferies took extra fielding praciicc ·;
training games in 1993.
,
beforc·the ga111c arfcnway Park, try Neagle (I 0-1) pitched a five -hitter · ing to become familiar 'with the '
·and did rioi allow a runner past sec- famed Green Monster.
ond base in his second shutout of the
It helped, as 1wice he held Boston ..
season. Clemens ( 11 -2) lost his sec- · players to singles on balls off the left- '
ond straight start despite strikmg out field wall . But in the ninth inning,
12.
Jefferies misplayed a fly near the . ~ ,
A crowd of 34.409- 4,000 more crammed corner&lt;nto a douhle, selling ·,,
than Toronto has averaged-· saw the · up a pinch-hit, two-run double by .:,
B-lue Jays' first meaningful game at Troy O'Leary that tied it at 4.
home against an NL team since Joe
In the lOth, the Red Sox won""
Carter's three-run homer against when 0' Leary was hit by a pitch•·"
Philadelphia ended the 1993 World from Ricky Boualico with two outs ·'
Series.
Continued on paj!e 5
"
'

,,

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;

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FIELDER·UPSET- Yankee ace Cecil Fielder, lett, tosses hla bat
In tha ali- alter baing called out on strikes by hOme plata umpire
Tim Techlda, right, during elxth Inning play of their inter .league
game agalnat the Meta Monday night •t Yankee Stadium. Thames
blanked the Yenkaas 6-0. (AP)

·•

Attention Advertisers
Middleport Is ·Observing
'
Its Bicentennial This: Summer.
. The Dally" Sentinel .will publish a
commemorative edition for its
July 2nd issue.
•
You can be a part of this
· historic edition.
For More Information
Contact The Dally Senthlel
at 992-2155
· Dave .Harris Ext. 104
Don RifBe Ext. 105

Aaaoc!MM Preas Writer
WIMBLEDON. EnJ)and -Pete
Sampras, whose last two defeats
have been to Swedish players, will
·face another Swede in the opening
round of Wimbledon next week.
The top-seeded Sampras, winner
of three straight titles from 1993-95,
drew Mikael Tillstrom as his first..round opponent in TUesday's draw at
the All England Club.
.
Tillstrom reached the third round
at Wimbledon last year and is currently ranked No. 54. On paper at
least, he should not pose too much of
a threat 10 the world's top-ranked
player.
Sampras has been below par lately, losing in the third round at the
French Open to Magnus Nonnan and
falling to Jonas Bjorkman in the quarterfinals of last week's Queen's Club

-

Mets, _
C ubs dominate Yanks, White Sox
. and the World Series champions with
By BEN WALKER
identical 37-30 records.
AP Baseball Writer
John Oie111d drove in three runs
· In New York, the Mets are the talk
of the town . .In Chicago, same ·goes and left fielder Bernard Gilkey · got
two assists, giving him a major
for the Cubs.
league-leading II among outfielders.
At least for one day.
The Mets took a 3-0 lead in the
Baseball's biggest interleague
rivalries began Monday night, and the first inning against Andy Pcuiue.
Gilkey and Olerud hit doubles for the
visitors ruled.
The Mets made their mark in the first run and Butch Huskey ltad an
Subway Series before a sellout crowd . RBI single. Huskey got picked off,
of 56, 188 at Yankee Stadium, win- but stayed in a rundown long enough
ning 6-0 behind Dave Mlicki's for Todd Hundley to steal home.
The Mets took two team buses, led
·shutout:
by
a police escort. from Shea Stadi"He owns the city for the night,"
um
in Queens to the Bronx ballpark.
Mets reliever JOhn Franco said.
Cubs
8, White Sox 3
' The Cubs made their case at
With both teams wearing old-style
Comiskey Park, beating the White
SoK 8-3. The crowd of 36,213 was . uriifonns, the Cubs beat the White
the second-largest of the season allhe Sox in their first meeting that counted since the 1906 World Series .
ballpark.
,
Ryne Sandberg and Brian McRae
"For the first time in a long time
I was excited and nervous," Cubs each had three hits for the Cubs. Facfirst baseman Mark Grace said. "It ing former teammate Jaime Navarro.
was a fun atmosphere. It was preuy the Cubs scored six runs in the first
intense. I didn't think I'd ever sec it, three innings.
At the seventh-inning stretch, fans
not' in my career. '·.
The Cincinnati Reds made it a stood and looked toward Harry Caray
wonhwhile trip to Cleveland, defeat- as "Take Me Out To The Ball Game"
ing the Indians 4-1 in an Ohio played on the sound system. But
instead or singing, as he docs at
matchup.
"''ve got .a feeling it's going to be Wrigley Field, he motioned his hand '
.
.a long history in this," Reds manag- to the music. '
·
·The White Sox won the previous
er Ray Knight said .
The Montreal Expos, meanwhile, game between !he teams that matcontinued to.he a big winner in inter- lered, defeating the Cubs 8-3 on Oct.
league play. They .tied a team record 14, 1906, at 39th Street Grounds in
wtth their lOth straight victory, a 6- the clinching Game 6 of the 1906
4 triumph at Baltimore, and improved . Series.
Expos 6, Orioles 4
. to 4-0 against AL opponents.
"It's fun to go out there and face
Mike Lansing and Ryan McGuire
a gond team like this, especially
homered as Montreal beat Baltimore
team that's been winning so many before a sellout crowd of 47,557 at
games,'' winning pitcher Dustin Her- Camden Yards.
manson said. "We get to play teams
The Expos. 2-6 againstlhe Orioles
we'll probably never face unless we in exhibition games this spring, took
get into the World Series."
a 5-0 lead after four innings.
In other interleague games,
The Orioles, coming otT a threeAtlanta stopped Toronto 3-0; Boston game sweep in Atlanta that gave them
·beat Philadelphia 5-4 in I0 innings, the best record in the majors at45-19,
Florida defeated Detroit 7-3, Mil- got home runs from Chris Hoilcs and
waukee downed St. Louis 1-0. Pills- B.J. SurhoiT.
burgh topped Minnesota 8-6 and Braves 3, Blue Jays 0
Denny Neagle stopped Atlanta's
Kansas City defeated Houston 5-2.
longest losing streak of the season at
Mets 6, Yankees 0
Mlicki kept Yankees fans quiet, four. outpitching Roger Clemens iu
pitching the first shutout of his career SkyDoinc.
Chipper Jones homered as the
in 48 starts. The resuli left the Mets

By S~PHEN WADE

win -

-· "

tournament.

and the bases loaded ..
J he game drew a crowd of
26,926, only 800 more than the Red
SoK have averaged.
Brewers l, Cardinals 0
On a night dominated by pitching,
there were only two niisuikes on the
mound at County Stadium -by acting commissioner Bud Selig to start
the evening and by St. Louis staner
Alan Benes to end it.
Jeromy Burnitz homered off
Benes with one out in the bouom of
the ninth inning, finishing the game
bel ween 1982 World Series rival s.
Benes (6-6) struck out II. Milwaukee starter Ben McDonald
fanned 12 in eight innings.
Selig threw out the ceremonial
first ball . But the Milwaukee owner 's
loss bounccd.and was 20 feet wide of
the plate.
The crowd of 23,503. was 9,152
higher than the Brewers' average
attendance .
Marlins 7, Tigers 3
Pitching 59 years and a day 11fter
Johnny Van(ler Meer became the only
major leaguer to throw cmlsecutive
no-hillers, Kevin Brown lost his bid
in the second inning at Tiger Stadium .
Brown, who held San Francisco

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer
hitless last Wednesday, still pitched
NEW YORK - Interleague play
'well . enough as Florida dropped is doing what baseball owners wantDetroit to 0-4 in interleague play.
ed: Average attendance for the first
Marlins DH Jim Eisenreich d.rove five days is up 37 percent over the
in two runs. The game drew 23,874, first 10 112 weeks of the season.
about 10,000 more than the Tigers .
"The fan now is giving a very
have averaged.
powerful message: They love it," actRoyals 5, Astros 2
ing commissioner Bud Selig said
Jeff Kirig had three hits and drove Monday, a day that saw the New
in three runs as Kansas City won the York Mets beat the Yankees 6-0 and
first ·interleague game at Kauffman the Chicago Cubs beat the White Sox
Stadium.
8-3.
The game drew 22.528 fans, about
Teams averaged crowds of 35,341
4,000 more than Royals' average. for the first 56 interleague games.
The crowd included 6,000 walk-ups. Before interleague play began last
!Gng drove in two runs with his Thursday, teams wer~ averaging
second double of the game, giving 25,833 . .
Kansas City a•3-21ead in the seventh
".You can see what it's done for
inning. Luis Gonzalez homered for attendance, not only here. but
Houston, extending his hitting streak throughout baseball,'' Mllrincrs manto 20 games.
ager Lou Piniella said. "If it's good
for business, it's good for the sport. "
:Pirates 8, Twins 6 .
Seattle, averaging 37,461 before
Mark Smith homered in the first
at-bat by a Piusburgh DH as the the start of interleague play, drew
Pirates became the first NL team to 208,297 tti the Kingdome for two
games against Colorado and two
wio at the Metrodome.
Minnesota swept eight home against Los Angeles; a team record
games against St. Louis (1987) and for four consecutive liomc games and
Atlanta ( 1991) in the World•Series.
But the Twins lost before a.crowd of
just ·16,007. nearly 2,000 fewer than
they've been averaging . .

17"97"

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ly no chance" !he committee's rccommendations would no! be
approved by the full Board of Govcrnoi'S on June 25.
NHL spokesman Arthur Pincus
said the league would have no commcnt on the reports.
·
John McMullen, owner or the
New Jersey Devils and fonner owncr of tt)e Houston Astros baseball
team, said the league was concerned
about Houston's commitment to build
a new arena.
"Apparently they.{Houston ncgotiators) didn't live up to the commitments the other cities were willing to
make," McMullen told Houston's
KPRC-lV in a telephone interview. ·
"The requirements were fairly
clear, and there could be no question
as to what the league was asking for, ·
and (Houst9n) just didn't live up to
that expectation.
"Houston has the demographics
and the television market, all the
ingredients that are so essential, but
i think the league just did not wish to
commit themselves to play in the
Summit," he said.
Issues Sljp,h as realignment, playoff formats and an expanston draft
have yci to he worked out.

"We 're llappy 10 have Damay's
situation resolved for this season, and
· we expect to continue negoliations
for a contract that would extend
beyond 1997," said Paul H. Brown,
son or general manager Mike Brown.
Scou was a restricted free agent
this year. Under NFL rules, the Bengals' offer was sufficient that, if
anoth,er team had ·given Scou a bet.
1cr contract and the Bengals had
declined to match it, the other team
would have had to give Cincinnati a
first -round draft pick as compensation.

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·AUTO RACING
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
Indy Racing League will officiate its
own races from now on. ending
more than four decades of Indy-car
sanctioning by the U.S. Auto Club.
Embarrassed by controversial fin ishes iri each of ils pai;t two races, the

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BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP) The questions are beginning to pile
up for Richard Gnida. So far, the man
behind the wheel of the limousine
that crashed with two Detroit Red
Wings inside has. not provided many
answers.
But Birmingham police have a
theory about why Onida's limousine
crossed two lanes, jumped a curb and
hit a tree Friday night.
"His statement was, 'I think I
might have blacked out,' which indicates to me he might have dozed
off." said Richard Patterson, deputy
police chief in tbe Detroit suburb.
The wreck left dcfenseman
Vladimir Konstantinov and .masseur
·sergei Mnatsakanov comatose and
also injured defcnseman Viachcslav
Fetisov. Onida, 28, also was injured,
but was released from William Bcaumoni Hospital in Royal Oak on Sunday.
Konstantinov and Mnatsakanov
were in critical condition Monday
night. Fetisov was in good condilion.
and doctors said he ~ould go home
soon .
An invcst.igation by the Michigan
slate police has not turned up any
mechanical problems with the limousine. Authorities say there's no evidence that alCohol or drugs ·played a
role. either.
That ~~~ves investigators with
more questions for Gnid~ .
Onida was a driver Tor Gambino's
Limousine Service of Belleville. He
was taking the players and masseur
back from ·a golf ouling Friday, part
of a last day of celebrations of their
Stanley Cup victory six days earlier.
Patterson said !hat at about 9: 15
p.m., witnesses saw the limo moving .

gural season .
Kansas City drew 108,536 - the
" I think the Marlins fans and the Pirates l~rge st for a three-game
home series since September 1991
Yan~ee fans got their money 's
worth." Florida catcher Gregg Zaun against the Mcts.
!j
said after Florida rallied in the ninth
lnlerleague play had the least :.1
inning to win the second game of impact in Monlreal. The E~pos aver- i:1
.
';j
Sunday's doubleheader. "four come- aged 19,998 ror three games agamst
.1
back innings - that's pretty good for . Dctroii, slightly ·above Montreal 's •
one clay."
average Of 19,251 for its first 35 · :
Atlanta drew 143,766 for its home dates.
•'
games against Baltimore, a matchup ·
And while the Mcts and Yankees 1
of the teams with the best record in drew 56,188, the sixth-largest regu- l
each league. The Braves. who were lar-season crowd since th~ renovated I'
swept, hadn' t drawn that many for a Yankee Stadium opened in 1976, the
three -game series since 147,014 Cubs and White Sox drew 36,213,
turned out in July 1994 against 8,108 under capacity at Comiskey ;
Philadelphia - Atlanta's final home . Park.
·
!
games before the strike . .
II will take more lime to gauge . •.
The Cubs drew 112,690 for three how intcrleague play was received by l
, games against !he Brewers, geuing fans at home . Bc&lt;:ausc Fox's games ~
many fans to make the I 112-hour dri- Salurday were hroadcast in the after- l
ve from Milwaukee. ·The total was noon, national ratings won 't he avail - :
7,638 shy ofthc Wrigley Field record able until later this week , although ,i
of 120,328 for. a three-game series, ihe overnight rating from the major
set in 1994 against Cincinnati .
markets was about the same as the
And in Pittsburgh, where atten- equivalent day last year: 3.8 vs. 3.5. 1
dance ha• been down for five years
Baseball, docs not have any tclc- I
since the Pirates were last competi- vision l'igurcs on the intcrlcaguc I
tive, a three-game series against games broadcast locally by individ- '
'.•;
· ua I teams.

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with traffic, at 45 to 50 mph. It then
crossed two lanes, struck the curb,
careened otT a pole and struck the tree
head on. The witnesses said 'lhe
brakes were not used.
Gnida talked to a Binningham
officer before being taken to the hospital, Patterson said.
"He made statements ... that the
road was clear. he knew nobody had
cut him otT, he remembers traveling
southbound on Woodward," Patterson said. "Next thing he remembers
'is striking the curb, and attempting to
steer around objects in the median ..
Then his memory went blank."
.. The Detroit Free Press reported
Tuesday that people who talked with
Fctisov said hc told · them the passengers·noticed Gnida was dozing at
the wheel and they shouted at him to
try and wake him up.
Patterson said police have been
trying to reach Gnicla since Sunday to
get more information about the accidciu. Binningham police could not
say whether they had arranged an
interview Monday night.
Oakland County prosecutor David
Gorcyca said Monday that Onida was
convicted of either operating while
impaired or drunk driving a few years
ago while driving a limo for Gambino 's.
Since 1994, Onida was ticketed
for operating while imraired, operating under the innucncc and unlawful
hodily alcohol C()ntcnt. nnd twice for
speeding, according to state records.
The records also show that Onida 's license was suspended at the
lime. But Daniel Blank, the attorney
for Gambino's Limousine Service of
Belleville, said Monday that Gnida
was fully licensed when that incident
occurred.

Collins, Pistons reach deal on contract
'

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)Detroit .Pistons coach Doug Collins
announced Monday he would be
back next year after he and team
owners renegotiated his contr~~Ct.
TJ!c new contract gives Collins a
raise. In return, the P.istons have the
option to renew or fire Collins at the
end of next SCISOn. Tenns of the deal
wete not disclosed.
IRL took ove('all race responsibilities
Collins, who was in the third year
from USAC.
of a five-year contract wOflh about
MONTREAL (AP) - Fonnula $1.5 million, said the n:negotiation
One driver Olivier Panis will likely
was a reward from team owner Bill
be out of aclion until at least this fall
Davidson. He ailo said he never had
afier having su~ry on both leas he any intentiOn ofleaving Detroit and
broke in a crash at the Canadian decided to stay after talking with
Grand Prix.
Davidson and Pistons players.

----Sports briefs----_,..•

Top-seeded Manina Hingi s, who
at 16 could become the youngest
Wimbledon champion of the century,
drew a qualifier as her first-round
opponent.
,
Second-seeded Monica Seles will
face Australian doubles specialist
Rachel McQuillan. No. 3 Jana
Novotna will play Germany's
Wiltrud Probst and No. 4 Iva Majoli
will go against Argentina's Mariana
Diaz Oliva. .
The theoretical women's quarterfinal matchups are Hingis vs. No. S
Lindsay Davenpon and Majoli vs.
No. 7 Anke Huber in the top half, and
Novotna vS. No. 6 Amanda Coetzer
and Seles vs. No. 8 Arantxa Sanchez ·.
Vicario in the lower hal f.
In the semifinals, Hingis could
face Maji&gt;li, the Croatian who upset
her in the final of the French Open .
Venus Williams. the 17-ycar-old
Am eri can making her first appearance at Wimbledon, drew liulckno,wn Poli sh player Magdalena
Grzybowska bu~ could faee Coctzcr
in the third round .

I
.Police: Limo.driver may have fallen asleep

TORONTO (AP) -Atlanta and
thc Twin Cities apparently arc on the
way back in the NHL; while
Nashville and ·Colum,bus, Ohio, will
join for the first time. ·
Several newspaper and television
reports Monday said the league will
expand to 30 teams by 2000. The
NHL plan is to move into Nashville
in 1998, Atlanta the next year and
both St. Paul, Minn .. and Columbus
· 2000
That .means Houston and Okla- ·
homa City will be"bypassed .
"1 can't say anything yet," St..
Paul mayor Nonn Coleman told the
Minneapoli s-St. Paul Star Tribune.
" We're close, real close. Now we just
have to fi gure. out ir Zambonis will
work in a victory parade. "
Only Nashvill e currently has an
arena to house a team. That building
opened earlier this year.
.
· Atlanta will begin constructing a
new $213 million arena on the 'site of ·
the Omni once thai building has been
demolished. St. Paul' has arr.angcd
financin g for a $1 30 million arena,
while Columbus also has a new
huildin g ahoutlf&gt;he built.
The Tennessean , citing sources
close to the league's expansion comrnittcc, said there was now "virtual-

CINCINNATI (AP) - Wide
receiver Darnay Scott has signed a
one-year contract extension to stay
with the Cincinnati Bcngals through
· ·
the 1997 season.
Scott was the team 's second-round
draft choice in 1994, from San Diego
State. He has accepted a one-year,
$785,000 contract, the Bengals said
Monday.
Scott caught a career-high 58
passes last year for 833.yards and five
touchdowns. He is the first Bengals
receiver to top 800 receiving yards in
each of his first three seasons.

an average of 52,074.'
Auendance dropped 20 percent
following the 1994-95 strike, from an
average of ll ,6.12 in 1994 to 25,260
, in 1995. It rebounded 6:4 pcrc~ nt last
season to 26,889; and with · interleague play beginning, owners predict a &lt;j percent nse to about 29,300
this season.
"lnterleague play is a peF.ancnt
part of our landscape a'nd it will get
bigger and bigger and bigger." Selig
said.
In the stands and clubhouses, fans
and players can't slop talking about
it.
.
"You had to keep reminding yourselfthat this was a real game," Minnesota's Paul Molitor said after his
team's interleague opener at the
Astrodome. "You have to say, 'We're
playing in Houston.' But as hard as
it was to realize, you have IC! understand it's going to show up in the
standings."
With the Yankees in Miami, the
Florida Marlins topped 40,000 in
three consecutive games for the first
time since August 1993 -!heir inau-

In Red Wings accident

Columbus to get National
Hockey League team

'"·

Boris Becker. The Gennan is seeded bledon favorites. Rusedski a&lt;&gt;t to the
No. 8 this year. ·
semifinals at Queen 's .and has a
Second-seeded Goran Jvanisevic, game perfectly suited for grass.
No. 3 Yevgeny Kafelnikov and
Also meeting in the first rOund are
defending champion and No. 4 1991 champion Michael Stich and
Richard Krajicek drew little-known 1993 finalist Jim Courier. Both are
opponents for the first round.
unseeded this year.
lvanisevic will face Romania 's
(\hang could have trouble in his
Dinu Pescariu. Kafelnikov was opening match against Australia's
·
paired against Spain's Juan Antonio Tndd Woodbridge.
And 1992 champion Andre AgasMarin and Krajicek will play Gersi, who has played sparingly all year
many 's Marcel!o Craca.
The theoretical quarterfinal and has dropped 10 No. 29 'in the
matchups are: Sampras vs. Becker rankings, will open against Spain's
and Kafelnikov vs. No. 5 Michael Carlos Moya. Moya. the No. 9 seed.
Chang in the top half, with Krajicek was runner-up at the Australian Open
vs. No. 6 Thomas Muster and Ivani- ,but has played poorly in recent
sevic vs. No. 7 Mark Philippoilssis in months.
Gustavo Kuerten, the surprise
the bouom h*lf. · ·
The draw threw up several intrigu- · French Open champion. will face an
ing first-round matches. The pick of immediate test against big-serving
the bunch is the pairing of Philip- American Justin Gimelstob, with
poussis and Britain's Greg Rusedski, Slich or Courier looming in the sec~ '
two o'f the biggest servers in the ond round.
The highlight of the women's
game.
first-round
draw' is the match between
Philippoussis won the Queen's
16-year-old
Russian Anna Koumikoevent, beating Ivanisevic in the final,
va
and
American
Chanda Rubin.
and has emerged as one of the Wim-

lnterleague play proves .t o be a I:Jig a flit

Mets, Cubs... continued r..oin page 4

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If Sampras gets past Tillstrom. he
should have a relatively easy path
through the next rounds - until a
possible quarterfinal showdown
against fellow three-time champion

SURPRISE • Cleveland's Marquis Grissom, lett, aurprlaas
Cincinnati shortstop Berry Larkin prior to the start of their raindelayed game Monday In Cleveland. the Reds want on to win 41, but Larkin lett the contest In the second Inning with I! strained
lett call muscle. (AP)

Scott resigns with Cincinnati Bengals
.. '

next MWk

·Philippoussis-Rusedski top first-rounder

::

old right-hander who challenged th5
Indians with his hard fastball.
"The kid is special,'' KniJ!ht said&lt;&gt;
of Tomko, who is 3-0 with a 0.89".'
ERA in his last three starts. " We' ve •
got somebody out there who seems to !
be a stopper."
1:
The Indians avoided a shutoul ··• .
when ·Manny Ramirez hit a solo
homer in the ninth otT reliever Jeff '
Shaw - Cieveland'sNo. I draft pick
in 1986.
Taubensee batted fifth ·as the
Reds' first designated hiller since
Games 3 and 4 of the 1990 World •
Series against Oakland. Morris, the• ';,
first baseman in this game, was the :.!
DH against the A's. Taubet\see, who ·
played 26 games for Cleveland in
1991, was 0-for-3 .
Cleveland's ·DH, Kevin Seilzer,
was 2-for-4.
Notes: Reds owner Marge Schott was on hand, but did not go on the field '
before the game. A sign in the upper':
deck proclaim!1d, ' 1Schottzie II Can't ·•
DH !" - a reference to the owner's
dog . ... Cleveland left-fielder David :':.
Justice, a Cincinnati native, sat out '" •
his second st(aight game with . a ....
hyper-extended left elbow. ... Indians ·
catcher Sandy Alomar ·extended his .,,
hilling streak to 17 games, tyipg his ,.,
career
high, with a single in the third. o«·.:l
•

The Dally Sentinel• Pllll 5

"He said he look some lime "just
to.make sure I wanted to continue to
take the grinding necessary.to be successful in this business.
"I want to win a championship
and I want to win in ~uoit, " Collins
said.
He also touted the team's accomplishments in the first two years of his
reign. Two years ·ago, the Pistons
were 28-54. Last year, the Pistons
went 54-28 before losing to Atlanta
in the first round of the NBA play'
offs.
But Collins said the team still
needed improvements if it wanted to
contend for a championship.

Asked if the company later
learned about the charge, Blank said:
"The question of whether or pot an
employee runs to an employer and .
tells them something like that is a diftcrcnt matter.
"We arc curren.tly investigating
because there afC VariOUS iyvc!s in the
limousine service as to who had
knowledge as to what." he said.
" Right now we haven't completed
thcinvestigation."
Gorcyca said ·the company must
have known aboui Onida's record,
especially if he was driving one of
their vehicles·when he was stopped,
because the vehicle would have been
impounded.
' ''11lcy were on no[icc thatlhis guy
drinks and drives while driving for
them," Gorcyca said. "They were on
notice tbat he was .without a license.
because the Secretary of State would
have suspended it after a conviction."
Gorcyca and Patterson said
charges were ccnain, hut they haven't
dotermincd just what they will be.
Also Monday, doctors said they
were encouraged hy the responses of
Konstantinov and Mnatsaka~dv ~o
family members and Red Wings

playc_rs - who have hcen rlay ing
Russtan mustc and rock group
Quecn:s ."We arc the Champions ."
"It ~s Important, however, that that
cnthustasm he tempered by a rccogntlton that these responses arc somewhat inconsistent and they do not
mean We· exr~,Cl Very rartd, ~leady
Improvement , smd Dr. James Robbins, a truuma surgeon who is treating the two.
"It's becoming ·dcar that this is
going to he a long process of healing .''
Konstantinov was scheduled I'm
" rclalively minor" surgery Monda)
on his injured elbow, Robbins said.
One of the biggest concerns with
· brain inj.urics is the sv;,elling and pressure that results, said Dr. Karol Za ka·
lik,
ncumsurgcon treating Konstanlinov and {vlnatsakanov.
· "Vladimir's pressure has been
fortunately low, relatively normal,
and Sergci'·s pressure has been well
controlled as well," he said.
Robbins said Fetisov. i• bruised
and sore, hut "his sririts ·arc good and
he continues 10 he concerned primarily with the welfare of his team ·
mates."

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Driving.
.i•
Bring Your Ca.r In And :i
Have Us Check It Out ,'I
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Check Alignment
Rotate &amp; Balance Tires
Oil Change
Cooling System
Check Brakes
Check Exhaust
'Check Belts &amp; Hoses

788 N. 2nd
Middleport
.992-5515·

Western Auto
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P•S• The O.lly S•ntlnel

Tualdly,June17,1117

Pomaroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu11c"ey, June17, 1187

Community
calendar

Tobacco negotiators inching toward settlt?ment
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
"The guys on the tobacco side obviously are giving up on the money and
Ateocl.ad P,... Writer
.
they're losing out on the ability to market the product," said Roy Burry of
WASHlNGTON- Tobacco negotialors made little progress Iowan! final- Oppenheimer &amp; Co. "All thai's leFt to get is immunity (from punitive dami'zing a settlement after, their first day back. at the table, despite optimistic ages). Why would the industry give up things and not get anything?"
predictions that a deal could be signed by midweek.
Negotiators are also still talldng about how much control the Food ~
"This has been a very tough day loday," lead negotiator Mississippi Anor- Drug Administration will get over the addictive nicotine in cigarclles.
ney General Michael Moore said during a break in the talks Monday. .
The industry does not want the FDA to have the power to ban or even
"We are very hopeful we are going to bring this thing to resolution this drastically limit the amount of nicotine in cigarettes, and stalled the talks for
··· week," Moore said. "We're hardheaded, we' re determined." ·
almost a week over the iss ue.
The biggest sticldng point still appears to be the industry's demand for a
"Reports in the press of a resolution (over nicotine).are inaccurate," Washban on paying punitive damages to any sick smoker who happens to win a ington Attorney General Christine Gregoire said Monday. "These are the two
lawsuit.
toughest issues. We ' ve left them for the last. They' re big, they're deal break•
So far the states have refused, but Aorida Attorney General Bob Butter- ers for ~achside."
.
·' .. .
.
1
worth suggested Monday that "punitive damag~s in certain cases may have
Afra1d of a stalemate, Moore 1s pushmg hard lo gel White House endorseto be limited " He would not elaborate.
·
rnent of a preliminary plan, thus pressuring the ind1Jslry to sign off on the
The lobac~ industry won't comment, but Wall S~t analysts say the com- remaining sticking points. He met with White House officials again Monpanies have no reason to sign a deal if they don't win thai concession. ·
day, but won no such guarantee.

Child labor
use at egg
farm went
unreported

Critics of any ~nlement, meanwhile. are gearinJ up again. Anti-loba:co
groups in 19 countries, from Australia to Thailand, told ~ negotiators and
Congress on Monday they feared a deal would be struck at the expense of
foreign nations.
To pay for a U.S. settlement, "t~e tobacco multinationals can be expected to intensify their invasion 9f the Third World and Eastern Europe," said
a 'petition by the group, which urged any settlement to inclulje internatiQnal
curbs on U.S.-based tobacco makers,
Also Monday, British Columbia became the first Canadian province to
follow~ lead of the 37 U.S. states and demand that tobacco companies pay
for health costs associated with smoking.
The indusb'y is expected to pay over $300 billion for ,the first 2S,years of
the deal ·heing negotiatc;d ,in the U.S., but even that is comen~ou~ a.q tobacco firms push for $8 b1Ihon-a-year payments and the states mstst the fees
must rellfh SIS billion a year.
·
AliSO stales will divide that money, ':'ith a larger slice expected for the
states thai actually sued ,the industry.
._

LARUE (AP)- AgriGeneral Co.
L.P. said it was investigating whether
a contractor hired children to work a[
its 2.5 million hen-egg operation.
· Meanwhi~ . an environmental
inspector confirmed Monday that he
knew months ago that youngsters
were working there but did not alert
federal labor authorities.
The U.S. Labor Department said
last week it would investigate after
The Associated Press reported that
AgriGeneral had hired children at its
LaRue farm .
Joe Schwartz. the contractor who
hired the youngsters to stack hen ·
.,_
cages and handle chickens at the Farm
. :·:
r;... ..;
90 miles south of Toledo, said he reg• :!.
ularly hired boys - some as yo.ung
as II - from an Amish community
in Berne, Ind., to work up to.IO-hour
days.
He said he did not know children
under 14 are not all&lt;&gt;wed to work on
· corporate farms that log more than
500 worker·days per quarter. A farm
like AgriQeneral normally logs thou·
.sands of worker-days in that period.
AgriGcneral Vice.President Andy
Hansen said in a statement Monday
that the company has "not knowing·
ly employed any underage workers,
nor has the company's investigation
to date revealed the presence of any
underage workers. .
from photos taken by Ohio Environmental prg.;
PICTURE PROOF - Rosella and Bob Baer
"The complaints concerning
aat on the couch In their LaRue, Ohio, resitection Agency Inspector Mark Wilson In 1996.
dence Monday holding seven allde trays of
Wilson confirmed that he knew months ago
underage employees have been
photos
taken
at
the
AgriGaneral
egg
farm
near
tllat
youngsters were worklllg at the egg farm,
directed toward a contractor and not
but did not alert federal labor authorltln. {AP)
their home. ~· duplicate slldea - • made
AgriGeneral. The individuals alleged
to he employed in violation oF the
Fait Labor Standards Act are not Wilson was ·based at the EPA's office.
woman in Amish garb taking chick. AgriGeneral employees," Hansen Columbus offices:
EPA spokesman Jim Leach said ens out of cages in one of the hen
said in the statement.
- . He did not take the information to the slides were at a cainera store houses. Schwartz ·had said ·rast week
"Finally, AgriGeneral is making the labor department because "it nev· being copied for the media and he hired only males.
every efFort to ensure that its con- er crossed my mind that they might would be back in the building by
Spokeswoman Becky K.ibbler said
tractors also fully comply with all be underage," he said.
Wednesday.
her group couldn't determine the age
applicable state and federal regula· The Concerned Citizens of Cen' of the workers f~om the photos. But
" It is just very difficult to be on
tions," he said.
top oF other people's regulations," he tral Ohio, a group fighting AgriGen- she said Wilson should have taken the
Ohio Environmental Protection said.
eral's plans to build two more 2.5- information to the labor department.
Agency agricultural specialist Mark
The slides, which Wilson said million heri egg farms in the area, in
"It may not be his place, but bells
Wilson said Monday he saw young mcludcd shots oF the workers. were March made photos from duplicates should ruive gone ofT. Maybe he's not
people working at the farm while tak- stored at the EPA's regional office in the EPA sold it of Wilson's 300 slides required by law to contact other agening hundreds of slides of operations Bowling Green until he went back to but did not spot any workers in .the cies but ethically - if he sees kids
last November and December but did Columbus in. January. He said the shots until two weeks ago.
working there - he should say
not know or ask how old they were . slides were oo file at the Colutnbas
One shows what appears to be a something to somebody," Ms. 1\ibbier said. ,
·
·
'

1

·centr'al Stat·e leader 'lo·oks to'soften layoffs
.

.

..

.

.

.

·

a pretty good sign that people arc
most comfortable with ihe governWASHINGTON - Public trust ment they know best," Brookings
and confidence in the federal gov- Institution political scholar Stephen
ernment and the news media have Hess said.
declined dramatically . since the
Polls show that public trust in the
Watergate break-in 25 years ago fedeml government began declining
today, a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup in the late 1960s, when many Amerpoll shows.
icans began to believe their leaders
But .trust and confidence in the were not telling the truth about conSupreme Court and state and local duct of the Vietnam War,
Analysts say Watergate's abuses
governments - governments closer
to the people and dealing with every- of power and an ensuing media
day problems - have gone up.
· emphasis on uncovering government
Over the past quarter-century,, wrongdoing further caused many
Congress and the news media have Americans to become cynical about
suffered the heaviest losses of public their public institutions.
support. The presidency fared a little
Hess said the poll findings, while
bit better, but still lost ground.
hardly surprising, show that govern• Trust and con fidencc in Con- ment, particularly at the fedeml levgress declined to. 54 percent today el, "has some serious work ahead of
from 71 percent before the Watergate itself" in winning back public supbreak-in.
port ~
• Trust and confidence in the
However. as long as Americans
media fell to 53 percent from 68 per- continue to get most of their .news
cent in the same period.
from television, it will be din-i.cult to ·
·, The presidency saw its public . change public anitudcs, he said.
trust drop to 62 percent today From 73
· 'Television is essentially an enterpercent pre-Watergate.
·
tainment medium, and wc'.rc gcncr'
• The Supreme Court's esteem ally directed to the lowest common
grew to 71. percent from 66 percent. denominator" in government reportNonetheless, a majority of Amer- ing, he said.
.icans still have a great ·deal or fair
David Rubin, dean of Syracuse
amount of confidence in their gov- Univen;ity's Newhouse School of
crJlments anJI officials· overall. No Public Communications, said the
level or category has fallen below 50 sharp drop in media trust sinee Water. percent in public trust. ·
gate stems from heavier emphasis ori
The poll shows that trust and con- investigative reporting and a tenden_.
fidence in state government climbed cy to ovcrblow government scandals.
to 68 percent in 1997 from 63 percent
"Government wrongdoing is
·in 1972.And.confidcnce in local gov- news, but only one eb:mcnt oF news,"
ernment rose to 69 percent from 63 hi: said . "But if you harp on that one
percent in that period.
clement enough, the public docsn 't
"Starting with the New Deal, we like its government, and .it doesn-'t
kicked many of our prol)lems upstair.; like its messenger, either."
. \
to Washington. But these, numbers arc
'
Gannett News Service

WASHINGTON (AP) - Water
The scandal that began 25
years ago today has a lot of people
scratching their heads trying to
remember what Watergate was all
about.
·
"Some Contra stuff," offered one
guesser, mixing scandals and
decades.
"Gosh," said another. "Jt's been
so lana."
·
Assooiated Press reporters around
the country asked several hundred ·
people 10 take a sllb at explaining ·
Watergale. Some recollections were
sharp but others strayed far afield.
Here's whllt really happened:~- ·
lyon June 17, J972,111qlant tied to
Richllril Ni110II's rc-elealon CMIpaiJn broke into Democ:nttic headquanas •lhl Wllerptc office buiJcJ.
lnJ in W N-atO!!· They were tryin1
what~

'

to replace a faulty telephone bugging
• " It was the · break-in oF the
device installed during an earlier Democratic headquarters by a semibreak-in. They got caught. Nixon SWAT team hired by the Republicans
tried to cover up the growinl!'scandal. ·to find whatever 'infonnation they
On Aug. 9, 1974, under threat of could. They didn't find anything, but
impeachment, he resigned.
. they got caught.". Dion Nolcox, 34,
Here's how . some Ame'ricans Cleveland,
1
• "! .remember G. Gordon Liddy,
explain it:
• "Some people broke into a hotel the break-in, the cover-up, the 'Satand stole some documents, but for all urday Night Massacre,' the eventual
I know they coufd.lutve been Playb6y hearing, thi: call for an impeachment
magazine." Andre Williams, 20, vote and the resignation -. Aug. 9,
·Pittsburgh.
maybe.'' Kevin Winship, 36, Kan• "It was lbout some tapes." Ann tonah, N.Y.
.Smith, 40, Cleveland.
• "Hold on. Actually,l did a paper
• "Paper shredding is Ill I remeln, on this in lli&amp;h school. (Pause) Nixon.
ber, basically." Michelle Meinhardt, · Someone broke into their office dur43, Baltimore.
ing an el"ection?" Katie Dillon,'. IS,
• ":They broke into Democratic Omaha.
headquarter$ and Nixon was thrown
• "I remember Woodward and
out of office on account of that." Bernstein (of The· Washington Post)
David Barrow, 60, Glen Bumie, Md. broke it, right? I think it's the closest

a president has gotten to a potential
impeachment." Kevin Goodland, 2~ • .
Omaha.
·
. • "These two reporters from a
Boston newspaP.,r .1- somebody
snitched, Deep Throat. Isn't that
what they called .him? Nixon was
recording everything that happened
in his office." AI Gordon, SO, Helena, :Mont.
· '
• "President Nixon did sorne ille·
gal taping of the Democratic- was
. it Republican or Democratic? - .uJr,
campai1n headquarters." Greg Klein,
a9, Milwaukee. .
. ·.
• "Nixon and all his cohorts participated concerning some wire taps,
some illegal papers, some eonlrl
stuff." Bruc:e Preston, 46, Philadelphia,

et medical expenses. A single
Medicare beneficiary may qualify if
his/her income is less than $678 per
month. A couple may qualify if their
combined monthly · income is less
than $905.
'
The Specified Low-Income
Medicate Beneficiary program is for
people whose income is slight.Iy
;~bove the federal poverty level.. It
helps beneficiaries pay the Medicare

premium for Part B. which provides count, such as a home (of any value) .
help with doetor bills and many and an applicant's car; insurance
other medical expenses not provided policies, burial plans, household
by Medicare hospital insurance (Part . goods and personal effects (of a reaI
A). The income limits are about 20 sonable value).
percent higher: $809 per month for
"If you have Medicare and you
singles and $1,081 per month for need help in paying your. Medicare
couples. ·
·
bills, you can al'ply for help from
The asset limits for both pro- these programs at your County
grams are '$4,000 for individuals and Human Ser~ices Agency," Peterson
$6,000 for couples. But not all assets said.

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

,.

BOYS STATE
.Four Meigs County students
attended the recbnt 60th American
Legion Buckeye Boys State at
Bowling Green State University.
Attending were, along with the
offices the'y held; Robert S. Harris
Jr., son of Robert and Trennia Harris
of Long Bouom, State Highway
Patrol; Michael Leifheit, Roger and
Lenora Leifheit of Pomeroy, House
of Representatives; A. J. Vaughan,
son of Andrew and Julia Vaughan of
Rutland: bill clerk for Hou~e of Representabves; Trenton Dav1s, son of
·J
f
· FM'ddl rt H
. ason 0, avJS.o I epo • ouse o .
Repre~ntall_v~ floor leade~.
.
All are JUntors at Me1gs H1gh

School with ~ exception of Harris
who attends Eastern High School.
The students were sponsored by the
Pomeroy and Middleport American
Legion Posts.
,
Buckeye Boys State is the largest
of 50 programs administered by the
American Legion throughout the
United S.tates..This year, more than
1,400 high school juniors attended
the 'event.
The keynote speaker for this year
was Ohio General Assembly ~epre­
sentative Randall Giu'dner. Also
speaking were u.s.(:ongresswoman
M~y Kaptur and Robert L. Bowen,
national vice-commander of the
American Legion .

The commeitccrnent address was Erin Leslie Krawsczyn of Pomeroy,
given by U.S. Congressman Michael Provost's Freshman Scholarship;
Oxley, himself a former Boys Stater. Gregory . A. McKinney II of PortOhio Supreme Court • Justice land, Dr. James and Nellie Jewell
Thomas Moyer I administered the Scholarship, James D. Euler Memo·
oath of office to elected Boys State rial Scholarship and the ·creed
officials during the inauguration cer- James Scholastic Fund;
Jessica Erin Sayre of Racine,
emony.
· James D.' Euler Memorial ScholarOU SCHOLARSmPS
Ohio · University · recently ship; Christie Michelle Grossnickle
announced the names of its fresh- of IU:edsville, OU School of Music
man class seholarship recipients for Scholarship; Brian Marvin Allen of
the 1997-98 academic year.
Syracuse, James D. Euler Memorial
·
Local recipients are: Adam David Scholarship.
Fowler of Coolville, Dick and MarSCHOLARSHIPS
Emily · Duhl, daughter of Mike.
garet Campbell Scholarship; Chad
B. Dodson of Middleport, Don and and Diana Duhl of Portland, was
Ethel· McVay music scholarship; awQ!'ded three scholarships totaling

$3,750 from Graceland College· in
Iowa.
·
The scholarships were awarded
in three areas: academics, student
leadership and vocal music.
Graceland College is 'a four-year
liberal arts school of approximately
1,200 students based in Lall)oni,
Iowa, sponsored by the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints."
DEAN'S LIST
Jason· Taylor of Pomeroy was
named to the University of Cincinnati's dean's list for the 1997 Winter ·
quarter.

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Veteran ·screen soldier
Jaeckel dies at .age 70·

.ULOWA$

$2999
,.

· LOS ANGELES (AP)- Richard Jaeckel, a character actor.best known
for playing tough guys irtililms such as "The Dirty Dozen" and "Sands of
lwo Jima," has died. He -Was 70. ·
. ..
· · ·
·

Thestoeky,baby-Face~.actorwhoalsoplaycdcombatcowardsandcom-

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or some heavily soiled non-shrink- level for the size of the load thlt you
able cottons. Warm (llO degrees) is bave.
best for most of our colorful outer
clothes thai have permanent press or
Dry or liquid chlorine bleaches
are made of synthetic fibers . Cold may or may not be used, depending
water (80 degrees) is used for hand- on the item. Read the ~I
washables and those garments thai care label for
are liol colorfast (the . colors will clarification.
fade).
Rinse
. You need to use the right type of clothes thor. washing product. Soaps which come oughly. With .
from natural materials can he used to4ay's · washin soft water where there aren't ers, this proce-.
many minerals. Detergents that are dure is automatsynthetically made from chemicals ically
done.
work best in hard water which has a Fabric softeners
lot of minerals such as iron in it. may be used in
Using the soap or detergent Iabel .as the final rinse, or a softener sheet
your guide, determine the correct may be added to the dryer. Promptly
amount of washing product, adjust- remove Clothes from the dryer. Don't
ing the amounts as experience may · over dry. This will cause excessive
find necessary.
wrinkling. Immediately fold clothes
You should use the correct wash- and put away or store for ironing.
ing actioti. If washing delicate garIt only takes a few minutes to
ments, the gentle cycle for two to read and follo.w the instructions on
four min!ltes would be the correct . the permanent care label. If these
agitation. Most clothes require a directions are observed, your clothes
normal agitation of eight to twelve . should last you-along time.
8-12 minutes. Use the correct water

-------Society scrapbook-.-------,.---......--

ic foils, dicd ·Saturday nifit at the Motion Picture and Television Hospital .
.
. ,. . in Woodland Hills, nursir\g supervisor Ann Walsh said today. She said she
WILBERFORCE (AP) - A fac- just under 2,000 students. The most
Sen. Jeff Johnson, president of the gets the money It needs to survtve . . did not know his cause of death.
·.
ulty leader at Central State Universi- 'recent enrollment projections revised Ohio Legislative Black Caucus, said And . h~ ho~s that some of the · In 1971 , Jaeckel was nominated for a best supporting actor Oscar for his
ty is hoping to soften the blow of the anticipated fall 1997 enrollment he expects cuts in faculty.
restncuons Will be cased.
work in "Sometimes a· Great Notion. " The film, directed by Paul .Newman
teacher layoffs at the school that are From 1,600 to I ,200 students.
"But I would hope that most of
. " We 've . al~ays had a problem . and starring Newman and Henry Fonda, was based on a novel by Ken Kcscy
necessary because .of falling enrollThe school currently has about the decrease will come in retirements wuh the prov1ston tha~: would allow about a family oF loggers carving a living out of the Oregon woods.
·.
ments.
110 teachers.
and buyouts," he said.
the regents to closc _1~, he sa1d.
A~ a churlish scrgean.t in the 1967 movie "The Dirty Dozen," Jaeckel
Robert Marcus, head of the CenTrustees met over tile w~ekend to · Central State's future rests with a
Jo~nso~. said his group w':'uld played one of the few survivors along with stars Lee Maryin and Charles
tral State tcachers'•union, said Mon- approve a 1997-98 budget that legislative commiuec working on rather the regents only be ~uthonzcd Bronson. He revived the character in the Jilm's madc-fi&gt;r-telcvision sequel,
day he wants to meet with. the included layoffs, but postponed any the state's two-year budget due by to make a recnmmendauon In the "The Dirty Dozen: Nc~t Mission" in 198~.
school's emergency management decision until the state approves the June '30.
·
Legislature . .
. .
Jaeckel also appeared in "The Dcvil's Brigade," "All the Marbles;" "Starteam to discuss retirement incentives s.chool's funding and until school
The Senate has suggested giving
He"';'" smd the pr~•posal contams man" and "Airplane II: Tbc .Sequcl." Most recently, he was in "Delta Force
for faculty.
officials have .a beuer idea oF how Central State $28 million during the no money lor the lootball program 2" and "The King of the ~ickboxcn;."
·
.
" Vfc c~n ' t just willy-nilly lay off many .students they will have in the next two years.
.
for .thc neKitwo years and bars a~y
In 1943, Jaeckel was plucked from the mail room of 20t.h Century Fox ·
people,'' said Marcus.
fall .
But the university would be pnvatc lu_ndmg. He hopes the Leg1s- ·r0 portray a teen-age Marine in "Guadalcanal Diary. " After serving in the
He said teacher layoffs could
Board Chairman Fred Ransier responsible for paying its $8.6 mil- laturc Will allow the trustees to Navy from 1944 to 1948. he played a ynung 'Marinc again in "The Sands of
jeopardize academic programs 3nd said across-the-board cut~ arc certain, lion debt and would he forced to cut dectdc whether to fund the football Iwo Jima" with John Wayl\c.
:Central State's auempt to renew its but that he did not know how many its academic programs and athletics. program in 1998, when NAIA sane- • - - - - - - ·
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.._ _
accreditation next spring.
workers would be laid off.
If it did not meet any of the condi- tions arc lifted.
In February, the National AssociAc.crcditation means a college's
"The enrollment has a direct lions, the Ohio Board of Regents, the
credits will he accepted at other • impact on our revenue side. And our agel\cy in charge of higher education, ation of Intercollegiate Athletics
placed the Mar&lt;!uders' football proschools where students transFc~ and revenue has a direct impiJCt on our could close it.
.
could qualiFy the college and its stu- employment s'idc," said Ransier.
Johnson, D-Clcveland. said he is gram on suspension for 1997 aFter an
dents ·for federal financial aid .
"But we want to be adequately cov- monitoring discussions by legislative investigation determined that 15 aca'
The state's only historicaliy black, crcd for things like accreditation.''
leaders to m~kc sure .Central State demically ineligible players were on
the team last season.
·public university last fall had enrolled

25 years later, who rem.embe_rs Watergate?

Bleach is represented by a Iriangle. If there are diqonallines in the
symbol, only non-chlorine bleach
should be used. A picture of an iron
shows how the garment should be
pressed. Whenever there is an "X"
going throUgh the symbol, then that
procedure should not be used.
What is the amount and type of
dirt? Lightly ·soiled clothes should
not be .in the same load with heavily
soiled items.
How large is the article? You
could probably wash one huridred
pairs of socks at once, but only one
bedspread.
How is the garnlent constructed?
If it' is a frilly blouse, you would not
wash it with overalls.
What color are the clothes? Like
colors should be together. How
many times have you heard the complaint about men's "pink" underwear?
The next factor in proper laundering techniques is the right wat.er
temperature. Hot water (140 degrees
FahrenhCit) is good for towels, ~ot­
ton underwear and soeks, and whues

So-cial ·Security offers help for beneficiaries

By RICHARD BENEDETTO

I
1

~f''~

Time out for tips on doing-laundry

By BECKY BAEFI
remove. If you are not sure how to
Tile c.--aMy Cah fer II . Melgl COIMly Extlnllon Agent elilllinale a J*ticular stain, contact
paWl • d M a free Mnke l o - Family 8IMI Consumer Sol- the Extension Offace al992-6696 for .
prolt.....- ...... IIO•a-aee encell Cotnmunlty Develop- information.
wilDa aad lpedal eYeatl. The ment
Sort clothes properly. Clothes
calender II aat d !peel ta proDoing the f1n1ily laundry today is should be placed in separate loads
mote lales or fuad nllers ol aay much simpler than when our great- based upon the following circum.
type. · - - ate prlatecl .. space grandmothers washed clothes. We stances. What is the type of fabric?
permltl aad eaaaot be pannteecl don't have to use a scrub board or a Read the permanent care label for
110 I'WI a apecillc Dlllllber of chJya.
wringer washer that was as hard on not only the fiber content. but also
TUESDAY
grandma as it was on the clothes. .the washing instructions. Starting in
MIDDLEPORT -- The Meigs Even with today's automatic wash- July, manufacturers may use symCounty Family and Children First ers with all of their cycles, though, bois instead of written directions. A
Council, sptcial meeting, Tuesday, 9 there are still some basic considera- sketch of a filled wash tub (it looks
a.m. at the Meigs County Depart- lions · that shOuld be kept i11 ntind like a cro~n) refers to washing proment of Human Services in Middle- when doin1 the laundry.
cedures. A square indicales drying
port.
Check pockets to make sure that methods. If there is a circle inside
all items have been removed. Such the square, dry in the dryer. One line
WEDNFSDAY
things as tissues, lipstick, and nails under the symbol means permanent
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local may not only damage the clothes, ·press and two lines refer to the genBoard of Education, 6:30 p.m . but might also harm the washer. Atty tie cycle. A hand indicates that the
Wednesday, Tuppers Plains Elemen- rips or tears need to be mended .garment needs to be hand washed.
tary School.
before washing so they don't There may be dots on the label that
become ruined. Zip up zippers to . refer lo the temperature. The more
. CHESTER -- Shad.e River Lodge prevent snagging and remove any dots there are, the higher the temper.453, special meeting, 1 p.m . . trim thai is not washable.
'
ature. A curved line inside the dryer
We&lt;Jnesday. work in the MM degree.
Pretteat spots and stains. Wash- square represents line drying, verti· Refreshments.
ing and dry ina spots may "set•: them cal lines mean drip dry, and horizonso they will become very difficult to tal indicates flat drying. .
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Board of Mental Retllrdatioh, Mental Retardation/Developmental Disability, Thursday, 7:30p.m. Carleton
Medicare beneficiaries with lim- ·to make Medicare available to peoSchool. Personnel committee meetited
income but who are not poor pie who have problems paying the
ing, 6:30 p.m.
enough to qualify for Medicaid . ·Medicare premiums and out-ofPOMEROY-- Rock Springs Bet- . should be aware of the help avail- pocket medical expenses," Peterson
ter Health Club, Thursday, I p.m. able from two Medicare programs, said.
The Quali.fied Medicare Benefihome of Phyllis Skinner. · Jl!ancy according to Ed Peterson, Social
Security
manager
in
Athens.
ciary
Program is available to people
Grueser, hostess.
· "These programs--the Qualified ··who are below the federal poverty
Medicare Beneficiary Program and guideline. People who qualify may
SUNDAY
RACINE , . Eliza and Albert Hill the Specified Low-Income Medicare get help in paying the deductibles,
reunion , Sunday, · I p.m. Star Mill Beneficiary Program--are designed co-payments and other out-of-pockPark.

Congress, media
top lo,sers. in poll
of public's trust

The. Dally Sanllnel•,... 7

Pomeroy • Mldclapolt, Ohio

•

.

•

•

GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
..

�. TUII(oey, June 17, 1817

.

F'age 8 • The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy • Middleport,

Ohio

Pomeroy • lllddlepoi'"'., Ohio

TUIIday, June 17,1117

1101

:Gazpacho
cool summer
soup, a bowl of Spanish history
·

·

substantial meal."
It was peasant food, a pOtluck
mix of the most common stuff and
whatever else was in the kitchen.
Today in Spain, regional varieties
of gazpacho st.ill depend on local
custom and produce for their i,ngredients.
The famous tomato-based soup
is from the whitewashed towns of
Andalusia, but in Malag~. on the
southern Mediterranean coast,
there's ajo blanco. It has, Casas
says, " no tomato, no peppers, any
of those things we think of as gazpacho. It's basically an almond
milk, with the same kinds of seasoning.
"And then there '·s a green gazpacho from Extremadura (in west
central Spain, near Portugal). It
doesn't have tomato. "
·
In La Mancha and Aragon, in

Spain's central plateau, Casas eaten by too-worldly people."
writes in "Delicioso," there is even
Gazpacho is, Fisher wrote, "a
"a heavy and, to modem tastes, a soul-satisfying thing to . drink,
somewhat unappealing mix of . chilled, midway iii a torrid mombread and meats that Don Quixote's in g."
squire, Sancho Panza; loved to eat.
.Casas has friends who "keep a
Probably this gazpacho is closer to big container of it (in the refrigerathe original dish, but it most cer- tor) in the summer aoo drink it ·bY
tainly has fallen out of favor the glass. I've done that, too. It's
today. "
wonderful in the summer to have a
Definitely in favor- not only in container of it around. And they do
Spain but in homes and restaurants that in Spain too."
in North and South America
Her best gazpacho? Casas
throughout Europe and elsewhere remembers a ~wl of soup in the.
- is what many people think of as Bahia Bar in Cadiz on Spain's south
gazpacho. It is a refreshing tomato Atlantic coast.
.
and green-pepper-based mix with
"I guess partly it's the vinegar.
garlic, bread, vinegar and olive oil. ·that he uses," ,she says. " The place
The late writer M.F.K. Fisher, in is ih sherry country, b1,1t it's not
"The Art of Eating" (McMillan) truly a sherry-age,d vinegar ... but it
called· it the "perfect summer soup, gives a very special Oavor to the ·
tantalizing, fresh and faintly per- gazpacho."
verse, as are all primitive dishes

Gazpacho recipes
Gannett News Service
Gazpacho, with its roots in the
Spanish peasant past of Europe,
can become an appropriate soothing meal or accompaniment during hot-weather season.
·
Here arc some recipes to add
some Spanish zip to your summer
menu.

with olive oil, bread and
: ·summer drink or meal, tociav
cioso: The Regional Cooking of
By HOLLIS L. ENGLEY
Spain" (Knopl).
· Gannett News Service
' · Thank the Western Hemisphere
"The .first known dale of the use
and its native tomato for the blend- , of the word is 1611," she says.
cold Spanish vegetable· .soup "The origin is uncertain. perhaps
i hat has become a staple of Warm - North Arabic, from the pre,Roman
":;veather eating' far from the iberian 'caspa,' meaning residue or frag'ment, because of the· pieces of
Peninsul a.
• But gazpacho's history is deeper bread and vegetables that go into
the gazpacho .. ."
I •·than the to malo.
,The soup originated hundreds of , · Before Christopher Columbus
, years in the Spanish peasant past, helped open European kitchens to
' long before 16th century Spanish Western Hemisphere foods (potaexp lorers brought the American toes and chili peppers also among
tomato across th e Atlantic to them) there was no tomato in gazpacho.
, Europe, says Penelope Casas.
" Basically: it was just a very
• . Casas, of New York City. is a
,frequent visitor to Spain and author crude mash with olive oil_, bread
of Spanish guidebooks and cook- and garlic as the bas ic ingredients,"
books, including her newest, "Deli- she says. " Very bready. II was a
•

''

.l

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO THE PUBUC
; ~PECIAL MEETING OF
THE MEIGS
METROPOLITAN HOUSING
AUTHORITY
A special meeting of the
Board of Directors of the
Meigs Metropolitan Housing
A!Jthorlty will be held on
Wednesday, June 18, 1997
ar 5:00p.m. In the oHices of
the Authority al 39350
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio.
The 'purpose of tho
meeting Is to consider the
purchase of a house In
con(unction with the Meigs
~gtsl Retardation District
through g'rants funds from
that agency and any other
buelness that may arlee.
Jean Trussell
Executive Director
Meigs Housing Authority
(6) 17; 1TC
·

Township Road 190,
Soulhweal• of lnltraectlon
with Stole Route 325, Solem
Township ,
Recelylng Water: unnamed
tributary of Campaign Creek
to Ohio River.
Public notice Ia hereby
given
that
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency · (Ohio EPA) •
Division of Surface Water
(DSW) has laeued I draft
permit-to-Install (PTI) for the
construction ol the
waatewoter treatment
worka/dlapoaol ayatam for
the above referenced
project. Ohio EPA hal mecta
a determination that the
waatewater dlachllrga from
this proposed facility would
result In degradation to or
lowering of the Wiler
quality ol unnamed
tributary ol Campaign cratk
and •ub ..quently Ohio
River. Alter con•lderlng the
technical, economic, and
ooclal a1pecta of lhll
project, the -Director of the
Ohio EPA has decided to
,allow this degradation ..
However, lh'e chemical·
speclllc water quality
standarda davelopad to
protect aquatic Ill• and
human haallh, atl forth In
Ohio Administrative Coda
(OAC) 3745-1-G7, will not be
exceeded.
In accordance with OAC
3745-1·05, Ohio EPA will
provide an opportunity·tor
public comment concamtng
this project. Commanla
received
aha II
be·
conaldered by thll .Director
before the pormll II leaed
aa' llnal. Any pareon may
aubmll written commontt
·on tho, draft permit and

Pu blic Notice
·' PUBLIC NOTICE
· orsfl permit to lnetsllfor .
wastewater trsiltment
and/or dlsposalfacllllles
Ohio Environmental
· Protection Agency
Permlla Section
_. 1800 Watermark Drive
P.O. Box 1049
Cblumbus, Ohio 43266-0149
(614) 644-2001
Public Notice No. OEPA PTI
· 97-G6.050
Date ot laauo ol Public
Notice: June19,1997
Name and Addreas of
Applicant: Southern Ohio
·cp,l Company, Melga Mine
'No., .31, P.O. Box 490,
Athllnl, Ohio 45701
Name and addroaa ot
tsatllly where dlacharge
o~qura: Melgl Mine No. 31,

Get Your ....... Aero••
Wltla A hlly S..tl~ttl ·

IULUniiOAU.

•1• columil l•c• wnkd,ays
•9• coluMn lncll Sunday

............

OU~ OFFICI

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
. FOR A TOTAL OF
· $7,00 PER DAY.

GAZPACHO ANDALUZ;
ESTILO SALVADOR
From " Delicioso: The Regional
Cooking of Spain" by Penelope
Casas (Knopf)
A 4 and one-half inch length of
bread, cut. from . a long narrow
loaf, crusts removed
2 pounds ripe flavorful tomatoes, coarsely chopped
3 green frying-peppers (a~ut6
ounces), coafliely c~opped
I Kirby cucumber, about 5
inches long, peeled and coarsely
chopped ·
, . medium onion, preferably
Vidalia ·or Spanish, coarsely
chopped
7 large cloves garlic, peeled
and chopped
I cup mild extra virgin olive oil
Salt
·
I teaspoon sugar
6 tablespoons white wine vinegar
2 tablespoons sherry vinegar
2 cups cold water

Public Notice
administrative record and
may requall a public
hearing. ·A requatt lor
public hearing ahall be In
writing and 1hall 11111 thi
naiure of the l11uea to be
ral .. d. In approprlata
cases, Including c••••

Public Nolle•
mode at Ohio . EPA
Southtaat Qlltrlcl OHict,
·2195 Front 'Street, Logan,
Ohio, by flral calling (614)
385-8501, to make an
appointment
(8) 17; lTC

where there Ia aiJinlflcant
public lntereal, tho dlrKior ' - - - - - - - - may hold I public hearing
In Memory
on a draft permit or permlll
prior to flnallaauanca of thll
In Memory of
permit or parmlta. Written
G ·ld H k D
I ·
comments _and/or public
era
an oug as
hearing roqLiaat• muat be
who left us 4 yrs ago
received by the Ohio EPA,
6/16/93
Division of Surface Water
Another year just
no later than 30 daya from
passed by without you
the date of thla public
here.
notice. Commonll and/or
It's so hard not to
public hearing roquett•
ahoutd be delivered or cry•
mailed to both or the
so we wanted to let
following locallono: 1) Ohio you know,
Environmental Protection
Agency, Dlvlalon ol Surface
That we love you
Water, Permlla Proceaolng
and miss you.so.
Unit, 1800 WaterMark Drive,
Wife, Eleanor
P.O. Box 1049, Columbua,
Children- Gay Ann &amp;
Ohio. 432t6 and 2) Ohio
Envlronmantol Protection Bob, Richard &amp; Joyce,
AgencY, Southlaot Dlatrlct
·
Barb &amp; Mike.
Office, 2195 Front Streat,
Grandchildren Logan, Ohio 43138 .
Commonta received . lifter
Lori and Jeff,
thl1 dote may not ba
Kelly &amp; Chad,
conalderacl by tha Dlrectar
Jerrod, Randall,
before Iuulng tho 1111111 dr11ll
Cortni &amp; Ashll.
.oflhl• permit.
Copte• of the dr11ll permit
Great-Grandchildren,
to .1n1tall and technical
· Ryan, Alex &amp; Riley.
support Information may be
D d E
a • merson
reviewed and/or coplll
Douglas.

Finely chopped tomato, green
pepper, and-or cucumber for garnish (optional)
Soak 'bread in Water and
squeeze .dry. Put tomatoes, peppers, cucumber, onion and garlic
in large food processor with oil ,
salt, sugar, vinegars and bread.
Process until as smooth as possi·bie (t\"O steps. if necessary). Pass·
through a strainer into a bowl ,
pressing with the back of a wooden spoon to extract as much liquid
from the remaining solid pieces as
possible. Stir in the water. Add
more vinegar and salt, a little at a
time, to taste. Chill thoroughly.
Taste again for salt and vinegar
and serve in chilled bowls with an
ice cube in each, if necessary, to
keep the chill. Garnish to taste.
· Serves 8-10.
Nutritional analysis per se rving:' 232.5 calories; 22.1 grams :
total fat; (3.0 grams saturated fat);
. 1.6 grams protein; 9.5 grams carbohydrales; 0 milligrams choles,
terol; 73 milligrams sodium.
AJO BUNCO (WHITE SOUP .
WITH. GARLIC AND
GRAPES)
From " Mediterranean Cookery "
by Claudia Roden (Knopf)
7 ounces shelled fresh almonds
or ground almonds '
7 ounces day-old good white

bread, crusts removed
(Enough) Milk for soakin g
bread)
4 garlic cloves. crushed
4 lluid ounces olive oil
I pint or more iced water (sec
direct ions )
'
· Salt
4 tablespoo ns white wine vinegar or to taste
8 oun,es to I pound muscatel
or other good grapes, peeled and
seeded .
If using fresh almonds, hoi I
them for 2-J minutes. Drain and .
peel when they arc cool. then
grind them in a processor. If using
ground almonds, putlhem straight
into .the processor with the bn;ad,
soaked . in milk or water and
squeezed dry, and the garlic.
Blend to a smooth paste. While
the blender is going; add the olive
oil, drop by drop, in a slow
stream. Then add very cold water
until the soup has a thick, cream
consistency. Season with salt and
vinegar, add the grapes imd serve
chilled. Serves 6.
Nutritional ·analysis per serving: 514.7 calories; 38.4 grams
total fat; (5.0 grams saturated fat);
10.6 grams protein; 38.3 grams
carbohydrates; 3 milligrarn!· cho'
Jesterot; 1.96 milligrams sodium.

Clltle Glrll Gltlo, Talk To 1'IWIM

....

..........

.AT.

Mmcs Coul'm' SENIOR CENTER

·llpOitlcardl, aporll
memorabilia, tabacx:o
tins, cigar ~xes; ud
tabacco memorabilia.
Specializing in
match~x cars.

Doaatlon $4.00 for meal

614-742-3513

'Public is invited

9 am • 9

Young birth
announced

304-773-5822
1,... L ....,_, CDJIJfA

FREE ESTfiiATES

INGELS ELECTRO
·llatl18 lllaeli' Dealer

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel

Middleport,

OH

992·2825

Dirt • Sand
985·4422

a

2ND ANNUAL
TICK AUCTION

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

7, 1887

&amp;P.M.
MtlgaCo.
Falrgrounde
Sponaoredby
Malga Co. 4-H Horae
commmn
For more Info cal P1m
115 4411 or Uu t4a.21112
AuctlonMr:
Rhett Milhoan

·Applications
being accepted
The United States Coast . Guard
AcademY is now accepting and processing applications to the .Class of
2002. Appointments are tendered on ·
the basis of an annual nationwi&lt;jC

a

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At Law

Complete Mac:blne Shop Service Fabrlcatloll
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday· 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. • 12 noon

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gar•9es
'
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare .

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp; Welding Shop

FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473 .

o-r

992·9200
.
. ,...

JC !
CONSTRUOION
Uc. WI/ 011030

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

'

Qui~

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

w.r............

FREE ESTIMATES
'

614-992·7643

-.

Roofing, Ptlntlng
Guaranteed

FrH Eltl.m atea
992·9057 or ·

'

(No Sunday Calls)

1/11111/101

992·1 056 fN1 ...

•

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING
NE\"'·REPAIR
Gutters

360° Communications

JEFF WAaN~R INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

Gutter Cleaning
Paln~ng

FREE ESTIMATES .

949·2168

614·992·5479 .

· 3117JIWI'FN

Pomaroy,OH
Call 992-9045
tor all-your
tranamlulon needs.

Free E1tlmate•

a

. UDLIII
Wlll'rl..

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

Llmeetone I Gravel

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

;

814-742·21!!,....,

. MOlliSON'S HuniiG

110 Court St
1192...,,.

.

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

lnatallatlt;m
American Standard ·
FreedOill .
Heat Pump
(814) 192·7434

ALL PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID

tt,OOO RIWARDII

Must be 62 years of age or handicapped. .
Must ·meet HUD eligibility requirements
!or further details call today

Fot' lnforanlltlon ·

...dfn8tothe .
. . , .. . .ncl

conviction of

·...,_Involved In
at. .llllfl8 JII'OPI.IIne fencie·11t1 t ta7
Crou St., Reclne,O

. I.D. Celierl

CantHt · Ran Miller

IIIIILI
•Smell EngiMI
•Lawn Mowera
.Chain Saws

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

us.

• 75 percent of breast c.ancer occurs in women 50 .and over. . .
.• 90 percent o~ breast cancer,. patients will survive if the disease.is ·
'
detected and treated early.

742·2925

LacaiArel

Now has the ABBI* System, the ONLY one within a 45 mile radius.

For more information call the Holz~ Health Hotline at 1~800-462-1255
\

.,

i

na:

The .Holzer Medical Center

~

•WHCIEat.,..
2 mi. oft Rt. 7
Leading' Creek Ad.

•

~E·d
llltth
•

11

Afoctory dlaUibutor or llalnoolt
wlllf
1reatmtn1 "'!Uip. II 188ili!IQ:
LOll: 2 Toy Poa&lt;llel, From Bunco oppllcants
lor lollowlng positiOn: ••
Road, Poward Otraredl Ploaoo
Setviet Tachnlclana:
,.,
can 114-441-31147, Or 114-441·
ACcount Rapro_,.tlves:
•

.

.c;:r
..........
~

1·614·992·7022
.
.,,,.,

....

1:i)
....,._

Martot;ng:
·MISSING: TNT aru, Ronwollor
Managll110f1:
,,
rnllocl, - · block &amp; 1111, larni- Hlgholt pay In 1he lndultry, co,.:·
ly pel, Adly rnlaaocl. REWAPOI pany benefits. For Immediate.

•

===:::;::::::::::;::::==
Gallipolis
1 VIcinity
18111, 18th, 20th, t.f, et Gorllold,

tJtlo.

2 Famllr: I/20ih, 8-4, Rodney Vii·
l1ge II, Wamena &amp; ChUdrona
Clathea, Taya. Boya 1.2" Bike,
Lato llolol
·
If.:;'
tnS::::
l!fNJ P«: :1Dp.a

"W, treol your belt friend lilce our be•t friend"

St. Rt 881

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

(814) 817-3521

· "Acrola lrom 1i .

Ptelne Elem

School";

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
· • New Homes • Pole BuHdings
, • Room Additions

Over 20 years experience.

. Free Estimates
Cell 614-843-5428

WILLUUL.;.
JUftCI".
992·7074

Gravel, Umeatone,
· Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

baood on~ credit)
•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat
•
I

pendablo Employer, Oulltanding.

Benefits I • W"kly Salary, • In·'
contive Prao&lt;am &amp; Comprllht.n·"

2

tho....,MioNihoiill
11';',.,.......
.,.._.
:a:iti~

aive Benefit Pacltage, • Paid Va-;
colion Alto&lt; 1 Yeor 01 CondnuOUI•

Flldlf.........,oclldon

Sol'llce,1-88tl-172-245!i

• tO:OOI.m. 8ollllllly.

HOllE BUSINESS Cheap Start."
Sand SASE + $5 To C, Roneui"
P.O. Bo• 7428, Canton, OH

PonlefOY1

lllddlepon
I VIcinity

•

...705.

All Ylld Salu Mull It P&lt;old In
Advanee. Daa4,11ilo: 1:OOpon tho
dar baforo tho td h lo run,
Sunday a Monday odlllon·
t:GOpm Friday.
Sunahlno ar ~aln, garoge &amp; yord
Ala, Monday·frldiY, 10am-4prn,
38400 $1010 Rd. 124, Pomenry.

====-----

HOllE TYPISTS,
.' ;
PC uaert needed . S•S,OOO In · ~
come pa1enrlal. Call 1·S00·51;!-.
4343 Ext 8·9368.
1,;:,.:.;;,;:,:..:.;..:.:_...;_
_ __
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Nteded ... Paqulreman1o: RSES
Certllicalion In Atlrlgeration And
Haa1 Pump Syo10ma, E•perionca
1n HVAC A Mulll Knowlodgaoblt
1ft Manulacturocl Houaing Healing
And Cooling A Plus. Interviews

Public Sale ·

.

' '·

Wlnted to BI!Y

Abrralulo Tap Dollor: All U.S. S~Dlomonda. Anlique J-ry. Gold
Rl~l, Pro-1830 U.S. Cunoncy,
5'"' ing, Etc. Acqullllionl .-ky
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151.Second
,._,Gallpoi1,814-4e21142.
Anliquoa, lwnlourt, gla11, china,

-:o

Oolllpolla Fo~ WV

··• Mon thl'u ·
Waitreu needed . Apply

'M/010212

Serving Southeastem OH &amp; VN
e14 4411411
1-t00-872-6817_1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

•New Homes

• Decks

• Addi&amp;ions

• Roofing
• Siding .

SERVICES
Foundattone,
Drtvewayal
Sldewalke, Patios,
Glrege ,and
Beaement Aoors.
Free Estimates. ·
· tilsurad ·
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES ·

LINDA'S
PAINTING

"Stop putting off those-much. needed
impro&amp;Jements." Call Today!

home

992·2753 FI'H Eltlmstla . 992-553!5

A pod paint Job ort
'"'Y cloruly ·&lt;U•y,
mnlte• it ae~n•
brYfhter.
Interior

11ar11n, 814-!1112-1441.

Antlquet, top prices paid, River·
ina Anllquea, Pom,roy, Ohlo,

YOUNG'S
.(ARPEIITEISERVICE

......... Addltlol .. '
&lt;itlewGnllll
41Uil1CII 6 Pluntblllg ,

..........

1/1

-

A'H.OIHJC[ 1.11 IJh

oPelnllng
Allo Coloeo • Worll
(FREI ISTIMAT!S)
V.C. YOUNG lD
1121215

-

~.Ohio

005

week. Outitt ·_include pla·nning
breakfast, lUnch al')d afternoon

enack. de'lelop menu, maintain in-

ventoty, submllting food ordefS,

2521.

eleanlno and sanilizing kitchen,
maintaining ·monthly records.

Buying Standing Pin•. 1. Aero Mull have high schOOl diploma or

T,.Cl Or LIIJDif, 114-28..
Uodel

·

cars Or

aqUivalenl. Tw,:J ye~ra previous
experience 11 a cook praferted.

Trucka, 18110 lladela or Newer, Pool1ion ovallablt July 1. Send
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1100 East· letter of lnttrtar and raauma beL-· .,_...,
-, doldllne ol ~no 28 10 Phytli1
om -~uo. __,.,..1.
Mason, PHR, dottclor ol Human
J a D'a Auto 1'11&lt;11. Buying 1&amp;1· Rooourcoa; Unlvoralry or Rio
vage vofllcloo. Soling porta. 304· Grande, f&gt;O. Box F27, Rio
773-5033.
·
G1ondo, Ohio 45174. EEOI~A .
Wanted lo Buw : Barbie Ooll1, . -E_m~~~··~·----~----~:....
Clat!wlo, Ancl Acceaaorioo. 185g Poalll Job1 3 Po at ilona Avalf-· 18111CdDoyU14-311 1414.
able, No Expo&lt;lance NocHJIIf; .
For Information, Call 1·81 ...714-..
·34111.
Wonted· older blcyclo. 814-1182- j:.:..:;:,:;;:,:;::;.
11 Ext 2020. _ _ _---"
Prfl'tnllon Po1ltlon - An Alcohol
wan10d: Uud Hordwood Flooring
Olhw Drug CounHiing IP&lt;tl ·'
In Good Condition, Cd 61.~5· ventlon Agency Locatocl In Galllo' .
6111.
And Jackson Caunllll, Ia SMkr
lng An Ambllloua Individual To
Would llko to buy llrm tr1c1or Fill A Now Prevention Polldon.'':
with 40-!iOhp. PS. :J04olil2-5840.
Thla Paraon Will Wo&lt;k With All
Ago Graupo In Tho Conwnunldel" ·
Ouallliclliono: Bacholora Degree,!
EMPLOYr,1cNT
Pr_,lion Cor~fioct APtuo, Good

And

110

SEfl'oiCES

Communications Skills (Written· ·

HtlpWinted

Programa. Training. ~rovr~ma;" _

aaDANCERSaa

Pt.--

2 PllollioniMISaulhfoot&lt;
lor
Pt. 2
wv.
(304) 175-515&amp;.
c.t allor epm.
Wtd ltwu SaL

sr-

And Oral). RtOponolbllltloa&gt;;

Awareneaa Activities, Educadon= •

Ancl

_,_,And

~m~~~

.........

~

lilian Of Now Grant Projecll~~
9Md Roeoi.,. By Juno 28, ltKI~ :
To: F.A.C.T.S., 1170 Jacklon _
4!1&amp;14EQE, ~ ­

..... .-.Ohio

FIH.

':

Pt ~nl · Domino•• Pial : : ..

Haw hiring lor dalivO&lt;y, ""'11 be' ..
AVON I All Arou I Shl1loy - 18yro old. 304-t7S.IiiSI. -~ -.
Sptorl, 3114-tlS-1421.
Able Avon RoproHntldvea
nudoct. Earn rnonar lor Ch&lt;latna bill at homollt -11. I.ICJO.
802-8351 or 3114-112-21145, Ind .

RN, lPN Or RT, RHpon-

ft.::

Setting Up lnlont APf* Ma~:;:
In Homoa And Doing Monrhlr)
Homo Vlllrs. Thla 11 Al'llri·Timo,:
Contrlcl Poaltlon. Sand Po1uma• ·
Or PICk·Up Applicellon AI:

low-:Auto lady Pepol&lt; Man Ntedoct, :.~;:.'i\".,"'1:7ie":1~..,~~ L
Muat HM Elfll'-. 114-441- ,
•
·
Flop.

. . . . . . Ext.rlor

dMielopmeol center. 20 haulo P.,·

Rull Moore owner, 814·8U·

BefOre 6 p.m.

1e1vemesaage.
Alter&amp; p.m.
614-185-4180

preforred, bUI will consider tho
right·candidate. Excrillenl btnefll
pec:kage far part dme employees·.•.
Call 614·892·8806 or send ,.,.
aume to RockSprings Rehabilillb
lion Center, 36758 Rocklprlngo
I;Pd.=,PD;.,;. . .ma:_"'t:.·:.;OH~45:.7..;.1111:.;_
_
. _ __,:.
Need SOmeone To Hatvest HaJ,
•.
C•ll For DeiOIIo; Also AKC Gold•"
en Retriever Stud Setvlca. 61431'9-26311.

colnl, 10~1. lamps, guns, toala, l::::...:::::.~~--:--:-Parr-Time Cook netded in c:Hild

11tat11; alto appraiult, Otby

Cltln ·Lar•

BENNETI''S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

Ill.'I

Experlenee. Froo SuppUoa, Info.·
No Obligation.
Send LSASE To:·
ACE,
Dept 1351, Box 5131, Dla- ,
mond Bar, CA 811115E•porltncoct B.E:HIL Cable Tool,
Drilot/ Sol'llce Rig Opna for oil•
a oa• work, in aoutheaal Ohja,:
long torm lloady IOIQik, aond ••·
'"'"" &amp; rol•rencaa1o. P.O. Ba.,
:zea, Alhena, Oh 45701.,
. •
Fuii·Timo/Pari·Timo Wo Art Ac·"
cepling Application• By Appalnl&lt;
ment Only For Dedicated, De· .

Vlf And Gold Coins, Prootaars.

Heat W lighl 138" amonth

• Remodeling
• .Garages

••~

veloptl At Home. Start Now. No 1

Yard Sale

70

90

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

~

Professional Pet Groo~
Boarding - Training- - · -·
Supplies

employment only! Call Hrly

REWARD! II... SIIII1MIM, wear· positions will till qulclclyl 304,•
.
lng pu'ple Rea collar. Mason 788-t537"' 1-800-2113-3882.
- . Caii'-1.1CJ0.1112-nn Alk lor Eatn $1 ,000 Weekly SouHing En·:
KaltjOtrollmii112 ....... SL

Pick f"a&lt;aon Auction Compony, Frl tom 2·5f&gt;r1&gt;. 304-67S-1115.

Easy lank Anandng
Air CondlliontB hlSialed 528" amOnth

-\t $ .K•9 Designs . i Sllfti'S

Ina--·: ':

1014; or lti-448-0no.

full tii'M auctioneer, complete
auction 11rvlce.
LiGtnlld LPN pan time position available
I'Be,Ohlo 1 West VIrginia, 304- lor progressive . Rehabilitatioft ..
773-57150r304 ~7
Center ICFISNF. Experitflced-

Moldlllamellr Clm•alier
udleat.._PI

(Pa~

-

Capitol Waier Technoloaill Inc . . ·

388 ~U3 ·

Consider:

THE MAPLES

DRIVERS WANTEII

Old, l'llrl
No,....on Elkhound And Fr" 500 Milt Rodluo · Homo Evor{
Kltt- Bomo With Mitton Pawa. Weekend, Foniiy lnluranco Pold
e144'1H2ll.
By Compony tOental, Eye, Pr.. Krlptlon) 401KPolirtmenl Plan,
"'-op,jpploo,814 411 !21
F~11 In - Flr1.1Out Olapoteh, LaiO
Model Canv. Tractors With.
Fr• 10 '"" ' - · Beegle pup- Fla1bed Trailers Compolllive Ply.
pial, 114-742-211110.
• PerctniOQO 01 Grou.
To Good : 2 Iliaci&lt; &amp; While
ORANTlRucKINO, INC. ·'
Kltton1, Fornlle. I We•k• Old,
14188RI3
11• 111 81Aftlr5P.U.
, OAK HLL, OliO-Z.2113
·flO Lost llld Found
DUE TO EXPANSION

" - l'upflloo I -

E1ta1o, Fo&lt;m Salol. Phono 814·

Pomeroy, ()hlo
1-8(10.281-s4100 .

Wl/1023477

Will Your Utilities Put You ·
In Tht Poor House?

3195.2ndAve.
· Middleport
Sales Service

•

114-2151-1311,114-21H107.

ltmley, Auctlonttr. Houtthold, . .. laCintinaMtllelll RaiiiUrlnl

"FACI'ORY
·oJRE&lt;:T
PRI£ES''
Quality Window Systems .

sayre Tr-L'Co..
,......_

·'

8tta.402I

orn. - · CDL wltlnktt &amp; w
mat endorHm'ant. t -800-598-.
"- Kl-1, ·aome Pori Poralan, lt22.
i

By Appoinomitnt Only : Call: Ban·
lnd Auction
netra llobilo HOmo Haodng &amp; clg. •
AI 814·448 ·9418 g A.M. To 5
Lomloy'a Auttlon Sorvlct, Ltalio 1.P::.M::_._ _ _ _......;_ _::___

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

'\_,

FrH Klnana &amp; Uolher Cal, To DriVOf nooctod from PI P"oun1

80

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Septic Syatenla
Trailer &amp;
Houu Sltea ·
Re11110nable RaiN
. Joe N. Sayre

eltlflgcllllllt Wiltlaws

M/1-

'

Good Horne, 11~120.

123 PINHnt Ridge
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Yro. Exp. • tno. ow-: Rk:l&lt; Jon111011

polis i.ocllion.

~11..-1111.

..........

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

•I•Od G•ages
eStonn Doors &amp;
Windows .
~Roo. AMI!Ons

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

Coun!ry Homo,.To Good Home

NowO,.nfor

e:oo a.m.-3:30 p.m.

The ABBI.* System

Coon Hound Dog, P t "' Notd

Trani., Albllny)

5ervkt

&amp;CoOLING

·

304-171-14lilor 304-175-1430.

. --.

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

CELLULAR PHONES

Olvtaway .

1 Kitten To Gl-wey, 114·448- Delivery Drlvare Llnlo CooAro
Now Hiring Delivery OriVoro.
Hourly
W89" + Callh C.......lol\
Ador1 bl e KIMnl, To Olnaway Paid Dally.
Flexible Sehldulol,•
To Good Hornt, e14-:HS-tl 14
Urilorm P&lt;DVIdocl, Ai!P1r AI Galli'

(lonnerty ol Deln'l

992·2m

State of the art mammography
SCJ:"eening on site.

c.n f•r O•r Sp11l•l•

$2.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645·6434

encod baby•IUtr In rny ftome.
304 15-31103.
;::..;.,;.-t...;..:=---~~
C-UIOf UHrl Nooctod. Work
="/1~sx~~o tsoklyr I·

RAY'S
TRAIISMI$51011

John WIUiams· Owaer
Licensed Electrician
Work Gu•antaed
Free ·estlmetas Providing
Quality Rlllldentlal
SarvlceNew
construction- Total and
partial rewires on older
homes

Early Detection

More than Ju•t •
plzzapl•ce.

Ext. 8789

814-949-30110

Holzer is committed tQ the fight ...

Wagner Lana
Pomeroy
Delivery or Dine ln.

1·900-658-2700

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dalley Rd· Racine

24 Hr

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

Art'f Of Tanya M. Hodrlckl Ac-·
tiona Ancl I Arn Not Raoponallllo
For Art'f Debit Shlo llay lncurr
flam'l'hi&amp;Diy"-"'IIMIII1.

3132.

IIOW OPEII

UP-TO-DATE
. SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

Slon CAU
PlldTIIIring
P1atJ1m
- ·
PIIIIJL 'IOU
FMI

CO

614-992·3470

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

.

Fill Dirt

Downapouta ·

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

. 7/22/lfll

Top Soli,

25280

t a.n o. Shoota or 4111 Stale
Route 14 •, Galllpolla, Cilia Do-

I·.....UZ.'Im
clare Thall Am Not Uablt For Chrllllan non ~ lmokl ng, elperi-

Gravel, Sand,

-·
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

_ , .... Dol

r - -.......

no.minations or geographical quotas.
Applications must be submitted to
the Director of Admissions prior to
Dec. 15. Candidates must arrange to·
. panicipatc in either the SAT I or
ACT prior to or including the
December I997 administration.
Appointments are based on the
candidate's high school record, per. formance on either the SAT I or
ACT, and leadership potential as
demonstrated by participation in
high school activities, community
service and part-time employment
Most successful canflidates rank in
the top .quarter of their high school
class and have proficiency in mathematical and applied science.
•
Candidates must be unmanied. at
the time of the appointment, have no ·
legal obligations, arid must have
reached the age of I1 but not 23 b)(
July I, 1998. Candidates must be
assured of high school graduation by

S&amp;OPegeSt.
Middleport, Oh. Cli780
Home Ph.

Athens, Ohio

(614) 592-5025

----;r_.....__....._....;..__....;::..;;......._ _,

competition with no congressional

efltr~l

614-992-3120

1012-

Ju~a

Quality Work 1ft

Don Gnry,

Chester, Ohio

Sat.,

D. O.a17'•
.Bod~ ....

mlallona. Eau-'f Htp Cwa· Cr-ra FIN Morul Ptu• 1ft 10"*
No Ovetnlghl
HendefMft, WV. ff" apece In T&lt;avel.Ott111nd.
lmiM41alo Openlngo .
JUN. CIM lor MWIL 304-175- c..-~ea Mullhfwii..IM To
1404.

Llmistone, ·

Rt. 1, Box ....:C
Muon,WV

Nat Ill Flnlnclll

Mon-Sun

R. L. HOLlON·
TRUCKING

John and Erin Young of Middleport announce the birth of their first
child, Collen Allen.
·
He was ~rn adtthe H&lt;;llzer medical Ceriter Friday, May 23; and
weighed ·7 .punds and 9 ounces.
Collen's paternal grandparents
are John and Lynn Young of Gallipolis and maternal grandparents,
Guy and Carroll Ann Harper of Middleport. Paternal great-grandmother
is Sally Young of Gallipolis. Pater- .
nal great-great-grandmother is Edna
Fetty of Poin~ Pleasant.

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Serving from 5:00 • 5:45

.................

WICIS
HAULING

B. .......... D.D.S.

....,

Mulberry Hdptl, Pomeroy
1\leldays ud Thursdays

Lilell ,.....,.,.,_. EILNIO. Moluto Par1111 H...fll Expert·
I _. ._.,anc:t
.... - . 1.. .....u 11-'- . , . M Ml '
lllllna . ....... Ce&lt;IIIIUMr lltor·
_,.......WAolllllle,II10 Ar.nll .. DUMIIII
F D: . . . . . . _ 111: P.O. Boo
s(Oist
' CIH-t,
.,.~
Jr ............... ..
CMU1YoaR'IJII a
....... l14MIII'I
Eem Ill -111 Pti- + eom.

(LJnle StoneLowAitel)

DEITIL

EVENING MEAL

Buyera of villllp .,._

Early detection is your best ·weapon
in ·the fight against ·brea.s t cancer.

Did You Know?

......

110 ow.--~1¥ I d

. . . . Ph

IIPOIITI ICOIIIII UPDATI 1115.
IVIIIY tl MIN Sparta Point
8po eiilla I lllr IIIII&lt;• Plclt. Utoe
A CIWitlenta? Try The Trl¥11
a.mti 1·No-1Ho1lt0, lilT.
-Cll
· lUI
""' llln.
llull .. 11
11
Placllllll
111741111.

~

r .

, ..
Seloa P.raan W-h AdMet a'"
Yo1re Eaperlenco In LUIMt 1 ..-:·
Har-re Full·Tl.,. I'MII!IR '
' rii!Nr l:.i eu • • IIIII. 1'1111

~. .1 ~
~.

~

t:

;-

�. . . 10. The Dally Sentinel

T....,,...,.17111liT

June 17 1117

Ohio

Senltnel•

:·.•

MIA Cro••word Pu!zle

•

••.

.
.
Jt

SALESPERSON

W~NTED:

1 and 2 - _ _ ... M ·
h..ino dl1111•r rollel
•2000Iondo
per · nllhod and wn1..
114
~rnlll)ocl. 1_.rity
Ronch Style Homo ::i:~~~~IO~:porthiiO 1 dopollt1 r - r-. no 90 1,
·

""I!~~~~~~~~~;

In
-llwll Bo
0Eoporloncod
1- ~
And Roolng, Fiw YMra

01 Slill

E•perfenc• R~ulrtd . Qualifted

ll Barn, Main·

I

••ooo •

Appllonc11:
Roconclilionecl
W.lhlfo. Drytrl. .Ro- Rtltl·

home . Call1 ·100·
'10 aal-inlfM!illor

gratora. 80 Oar Guaranteel
French City Uawtag, lt4· UI·

WOII

Applicanll CoiiiH48·4514 M· 10nonco FtH, localtd: Addlaon
5. Roloranco And Rolla bit Vthl· TOOIIIIIip. 114-448-4782.
de RoqtJotd.
1.:::=::::..:~...;_-~~

!====7=::=:--3 Bedroom, 2 ba11'uoom, new
FAC'TOI:ff DIRfCT.

Truck Driver NMdld Cia II A &amp; family room, n• roofllidi~car·
T.- L - . 11•·2•5-g$7.
pol &amp; llnolowm, dock/In grownd
t&gt;OOI, 'car garahge,l sDtolrage,bu510111-2
WAN~DHYM:IISTAI.LEAS
••
lng, Groon So oo
line,
Eaperience art HVAC lna•Hation LeGrande Blvd. Call eu-•4tli·
A Plua. EPA Relrig~ratlon And 3302 tor appointment Pric:vd in
RSES
Ctrtillcollon A Pluo. OV•· low IIO'a
dlllt Roqukod When Nocoaury.
Vtcolion, Heollh lnawronco And 4 Bedroom house. Windaor Ct
a.-Polinlill.
Alklngfi55,000.304-175-7000.
'
1 1
Call 11•·985-4222 Or .Send Re· 8.8 Acru, 2 year Ord 1801 ana
lllmtTo:
2 bathl, cenualair, NICE I
30
w.n. H.U.V &amp; Cooling. Inc:.

~~;~ii~RI~ai~IY~
· 30~4~-6~75~·~30:
Jean CillO.

P.Q Box 8

NO Moot.E MAN.
SAVE
Oakwood Homo• Ia lho only
dealor In lho Ui·tlolt ortt lhll
builds and 11
lheir own
hornet. for tactorw direci prieta.
lhop -~•KWOOO HOMES • Nl•
TRO, WI/, 304-755- 5885. ·

sm.
u.

Fir11 limo Btlyf,ol E-Z Fl-ng.
2 or 3 bedroom, 1200/mo. Frn
doll•orr &amp; lei up. ,1·100·251·
5070
::::.::·----..,.,--:----:--=-:
For Sale: otiS Actea Utl ~lh Of
Ewrtko Wilh GrtalWithHwnllng,
An AdI 1ili~nlifijii'iil~fHo;_me H k U
I·'
'
oo C ~
:,•:.~~hop. 8 5,000

C - . OH &lt;5720.
Rd . Morgan ~rwp. 5
--~~:;;:.;;.;.;~-'7-- 10• Ko01o1
180 . Wanted lio· Do
Ac. MIL. 5 Rma., Balh. Raody To
Wove lnla. Eiu In Kltc:hen. Oak
ANY ODD JOBS: Ealtrior point· Ctblntll, Rtlrlgorolor, Elac.
ina. shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, Range. Fuel Oil Furnac:e. 8K12.
landsc:aping. 1idewalk1 edged, Storage Building. Glrdtn, Beaut!- Frazitr'l Bottom·2·3 Bedroom
lown care, tiC. Ctllllil 30ol-175- M lawn, Shtdo Trooa. $38,000. mobile home, $362. No polo, A/
7. .:..11:.::2:_
. _ _:._~-:=.,-...,-- ·l814-245-58tl.ll4·366-8783.
c·:.
· 30:..:..4-,c58,:2:.·58oi:.:.,O,o.,...,.-...,....-,-_--:Chtdk lllil owl Sa¥o $$S lnltriaf/ gRooms &amp; Balh, On Swan Crook
14l70 lhrH bedroom.
exterior pain ling, roar painting, Road, Crown Ciry, Shown By Apo monlht FREE tor rant
prenurt and hand wash houae, pointmeni,..Calle~•·258 - t59S,
81.80 ptr month wilh
mobilo homoa, naat work guar· Blol-256-1154.
down. Call l ·li00 ·637·
antlld. 15 years expefitncel
references. free Estimates. 30•· ApptOX.
OJS.Im21 or304-885-3821.
Si•tean
.::.:..::::;.;..;:.:..:.;_:.:.___--:--- 1::•4::58::·_ __;__;__ __,,....,...,.
E•nMenced carpentry and rema•
,...... Inside and outside: For nle by owner- secluded li;;~~;g:;;o,ll~~~
deling.
decki, vinyl siding, add -on addl· county home located on 15 acr·
tions cabinet relacin, or newl~ 81. 2•3 bedtaoma. one bllth,larga "' ,:.••• n •.• ::.
rtbuilt.
Ill·
, References - • rae
living room, dining room, ~~~~~~~~r~~
"l2.E · kitchen,
screened parch, central heat and
6771
mamo.JimShui:IOol• .
air, 1750 oquero lao~ pool, cov·
Goorgea Portabla Sawmill, don't ered par~ng. IWO barns. IWO oddi- Paloltlno Rd. Glenwood, 3 bod·
haul your logs to the mll just call tianal buildings, must see 10 ap- room mobile home on 1 acre
304-ll5-IQ5l.
. preciala, call 814-949 -23821or land. Cily waler. AIC. $29,500.
appoinlmOnl
304·562·5840.
loaking.For Ful-lime Job In Gal·
lia County, Body Work, Paint· For Sale br Owner-3 . 1/2 miles Palestine Rd. Glenwood, 3 bed·
work, Ulnor Repairs, H11 Own out SandhilL •br, 3 bath, large room mobile hom• 1385. No
Toolo. Some Air Toola, Willing To garage. $140,000. 304-875-5403.
pOll, oily waler,
30•·582·
5840
work For Righi Perao n '""'· For Sale Of Rent: 2 Story houll
·
4
Reply: Xt -831-S77Iil
an 1.87acres, newly remodeled, Repo's Onl~ 2 Lell, Never lived
Need 1 break from rour elderly 3 bedrooms. w/50•100 metal ln. Free Detivety &amp; Ser Up, 1·800loved on 1 ? 1 have one vacancy barn, In Gallipolis Fll"ry, 304·576· 251·5070.
. d
weekll, 3150.
·
lor an eld.rl"r lad•,
r
Repo'sl Only 2 le 1t Never 11ve
monthly, permanenlly. 304·87 · For Ule. 1 bedroom home tn Po- ln. Free delivery &amp; Ht up. 1·8008183.
·
meroy, will sell on land contract, 251 ·5070.
Prolessional Tree Service, Srump 61•·992·5858.
f
Sal
F
Removal, Free Ellimallsl In·
330 . arms Or
e
and property, approx. 4a·
.. r.nce' Bidwell, Ohio. 614·388· House
eras. ldealltafler home. Beech. Tak1ng bids· 93 acta farm localad
11&amp;&lt;8, 81ol-367· 7010.
·
SL, Pomet01'0H. 304-882·2077.
In Ponland, Ohio· one aUJrr ranch
house, two !XIildings. Sail all or
Signs Made/Refurbished. Metal Hause pluS 12lB8 trailer, house .part If tnterelled sand bids Cia
roofs painled, lawns mowed, lull pilinled. good shape, both Gar• Rupo, 196 Terrace Avenue,
.. ,·m--•. Hand•man work. wood·
1
••
u
304-&amp;75-6S2S Rick
occupied with good renters, 304· Roseville, Ohto 1.3777 ot call 61._
r
·
662-3403.
697-7802.
Bids
submlned
by July
"'
wanted painting trailers, single New Haven, WV- three bedroom. ' ~·::lh:::·:"""-=--::--....,..__~:--JIOry hOUS&amp;I, Inside &amp; out Rol· C.A., olac&gt;~ hoa~ ID&gt;rm window' .
Business and
eroncos &amp; eslimalts. 30 4·8 9 5· basemen!, $36,000, 814-992-·
I
3071.
5641 .
Build ngs
Will Babyalt In My Home, Very NIIWiy remodeled llvao bedroom. · 1700 square fool building, down.
E•perienced, Reliable, Mature one and 112 bath home in Middle- 10wn Pomeroy, 6'4·892· 7384 be61
6
Aduh
lore 9amor alter 8pm.
411i: With Rolerencaa, "".. · pan. 61•·992-34651ftar 5pm.

°

•I•·

=;,

320 Mobile Homes
Wil Do Elltnor Painong, Housea,
Trailers, Trailer &amp; Barn Roofs.
for S81e
Froo Ealimales, David 61 4·245·
0557.
1986 Oakwood 14l80 2 bedroom,
2 bath, washer 1 dryer hook-up,
WiH hlul junk, or trash away. $351 dishwashar, central air. 30•·576l!'dWP lotul. 304-675-5035.
4005.
FINANCIAL

210

Bualness
Oppo rtun""1
"

INOI'ICEI
OHtO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
ritcommonda lhol r•• do bull· ·
nell with people you know, and
NOT 10 Hfld money through the
mail until you t'tave investigated
fleollarlng.
SIMI building dealelthip avail ·
able In open market Dealers buy
tec:tory direct High protit poten-

1QB7 Skyttne 14x?2 ready to
move· in. lots of utraa, eiCc.
cond. Call JD 614·446 ·9340 or

30H7.5-51143Ieave messago.
1988 Qakwood 14l70 21&gt;&lt;, 2 balh,
8x12 deck, an rented lot, exc.
oond., asking $12,500 OBO.
304 -675·8051 leave message.
..M;:u.::st:.::Se:.::H;;;I_______
..
1989 Clayron t•x70 3 Bedrooms,
1 112 Baths, Electric, Nita Condi·
non. $9,500, 61H46.fi822.
I 99 t 14•70 Claylon Notlhridge 3
Bedrooms, 2 Balhs, H.P. D. W.,
Awing a, 2 Decks, 115,000 f irm,

saleJ or construc:lion. (303)
7511·3200 EXL 7950. .

6, .2566115,~6142~6262

230

hved m lor 3 months, must see
~r yaursell hOw beaudlul it is, to
manr 'uem$ to lisl. Asking

tial,

Professional
Sarvlces

HARTS MASONARY ; Block,
brk:k &amp; aione work, 30 yeits experience, rtaaonable rates. 30411115-3511 alltr 6:00pm, no job lo
small or UJ BIG. Wl/·021206

_
. ..

•

\.If

-

'I&lt;J"

•

1.990 14x10 Norris one owner,

S25,ooo. 304·615·3067 Lea&gt;e
message.
New·l997 14 Wiae-t bath, $6991
down, $139/mo, with approved
crediL Call 1-1100·691-6777.

Livingston·• basement water·
proofing, all basement repairs
dane. ftee estimates, lifetime
guaranlte. 1Oyra on job exper1·

DD2·22 &amp;.

1 - m I n Golilpollt, No Pita. .7795.
·
Bwlfti!Opan hoiCh &amp; Dry Sink,
1 Btdtaom Near Holzer Ex11a Kincaid, Solid Oak. II, 750 lar
Nice, Central Air, 1208/Mo., • bolh. 304-175-1570.
Ulilidoa, Depoail Roq. 114·441·
l=295=7.:...- - - - - - , . . . , - - GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahera, drrtra, ralriueraaora,
1 Bedroom unfurnlthtd Apart· rongn SkiiQI Applloncoa, 71
ment Range. AefriQetiiDI', Diapa· Vine S1rae1, Coli 114·..1· 7301,
111. Goro•t
Wtltr,1 1-1100-4119-3499.
• pro•ldtd. n.....
\lory ND, 114-4*7903. .

~r~ir~~~':rR~~~~ad.'i;~ 530

wv.

·

2 Badroom Aperlmln~. Adjtctnl
To Unlvorally 01 Rio Grondt
ca
AvaJaable 811187. ,, ••
245
.

meg:;

1997 Clayton Mobile Home-two

All real estare advenlslng 1n
thi!l newspaper is SIJbieCIIO
tne Fedetal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 whiCh makes rt illegal
to adYMise ·any preterence.
limitation or dtscriminatiOI'I
basad on race. cotor. tehgiOn,
sex famil1al statuS or national
oriQin, or anv Intention lo

make any such pretarenc8,
imitation or discriminatiOn.·
This newspaper wiH not

ltnowli&lt;gl, accept

•

advertilements for real estate
which is in violatkln Of the
law. Our . -.. ""' hor8l&gt;y
int&lt;irmed lfltl aH dwellingS
_,led In lhis news;iar&gt;er
are iiVailabte on an equal
opporlunily balil.
.

IHAI ! 'dATf

ltWII&amp;e In

310 Homll for Sale

1~

counuy. 30•· 582-

5840. ·

01 Rio Grande,

2 Bedrooms Acroaa From'Uf11·

¥WIIty

Willi Flllnl

Porch, Utllillea P•ld, 81•·388·
liKMI.

2bdrm. oplo .. 10101 olocrrlc, op.

2(),45.

· S11t1 Crattaman 18hp lawn
Garden, B.S. motor, eatra
cond. Alking '1 ;000 .OBO.
171-7045.

550

Building '
SUppllel

101. lnternalional, rwo bl.r quick

:B:-Io"":ck-,':"br-:"lo':"k.-H..;W..;e_r_p"":ipt~l-,-,..-:
.nd":'_·l 630
Llvtatoek
aws, linlela, eu: . Claude Winlers, :'":::-:"':"':'o:-.:-::':":':':":':':"':'~::::'
Rio G1ande, OH Call&amp;1•·245· 2 Now aclwll wollotn uddloo.
5121 .
30H7HO«&lt;.

560

Pets for

Sale.

Green AptL 141 or caM 114·112-

3 Piece• or llghl green carpel
St 00... 304·582·5840.

·
3711 • EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT ~· heawy corrugated pipe, 1OOtt.
rolf, 121 .99. PAINT PLUS HARD·
BUDGET PRIC6S AT JACKSON WARE.
304-675-4084.
ESTATES, 52 We1twoad Drive
from •2110 10 f334. W.lk to ohop 4,000 PSI Hoi Cold Wa10r Power
&amp; mavin Coli 1 u -us-2588. W.lhor, Lois 01 Eltrall 61088Equol Hauling Oppor"niiJ.
0413.

BHcl'l St Mlddleparl. 2br fur -

nllhod 1 ~ willlet pold, dopollll
&amp; - - 304-11112·2511.
Ca!Ttpfelelr lurniahtd efUci;:Z
...,....,.,. torrw11, d ulilili• . ·
la~iated on Park Rd. Please call

G14·VS12·2212
tor more lnforma·
lion.

·2 V11r old black Tann :walker,
very goOd dltpolltio.n, will trade
tot farm uactor or $2,000. 304·

Baby Hodge Hog1. 304·875 5111 .

10gal tarik lit up tpec;ial&amp;. Flllh
Tonk I Pol Shop, 2413 Jockaon
Ave. Point Pleasan1, 30.tt·6752013.

410

Houses for Rent

Twin Rivtta Tower, lttWI occopting

2 Bedroom house in Now Havon. appllcariono lor lbr. HUO 1ublid·
Ront $250/mo + ''0~/doposll .
apl. lor eldorly o~d handl·
Call 51 7·458 -7703 collocl oller cappod. EOH 304-675-ella.

014-992-3080',

New two bedroom home. Hlrrlaonvilo arM, aM tllclric, ltir, ~uo

approved, '325 month pi•• wiUI·
lios, no amoking; no poll, 81 4·
742-3033.

ProleiiiOnal!lktoinooa IHrildlng lor
IUbfea•. loclltd 01 509 5. Third

Ohio. e..o~on~
lor. phyllclon alb or - oa•tt

Snal.

Small clean 1 Bedroom hou11,

12•85, 2 bedroom Ira Iter, 8 mtle
143, no poll, •••·ttl2-3743

For L1118

C90 .

lrlltltlllp'"~

apoto. Am~ olroel por.kin1.
Avollablt lmmodllloly. Conlacl
RL Ku!R. 114·583-:PlS co11tc1.
'

'.lrH CHMIDiS [
510

Houlehotd
Goodl .

KiiChtn

c•pll fi!.!IO Solo On All

CorpOI In Slack I Room Size
..-Corell, 114 ..... 7444.
RolrlgoroiOr Now Modol Wltllo
Woo U50 Smoll Doni In Door
t I 75! Rolri-IOt Sllle By Sid•
Groen ••as: Rtlrigeralor'frool
Froo 1121: Whirlpool Woahor,
US; WhirlpoOl Wtalltr, Now
Model, I V..r Qaora- .295;
Ringo 30 '""" M: Eltc·
lllc llrylr M: Nrr Cor!dl- .

eroc•"'

1111 Su- Drttlo, .,.,. _ _

-

2 112 ,.., old homo, 7 112 ....
I n - H-.. Kollll- Hooaon
304-112·31127 sr-n by oppolnl-

Tlwao 1,000 BTU WindoW Air
Cca
1.......117! .

n

. IIB:IIIriiMt%1#

wl,

VIM lllrtol. Gill...... 114·
-73111, 1.-t1NIII.
!'

....

Lorgo -lion ol wood holllt. 2
or 3 -..mo. Sltrllna II P485.
Qui'* dtllv.ry. Call 1·100·837·
3231.
USED FUR1111VR£ 130 . . . . .
PIU, Baby Bad, Iooft ....,,...
Hflle.o-bod Coildlta, bods. molo
1re1101, lolllllcholra. 114· 441·
4712. HRS 10·4, WellvJ uaod

..........

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Soullt
I NT

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U10d Carl Rl. 12·3 Milti;-:J
1
304-458-1068.
I I
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l see LOWIIzY IS STILL
OFF VISITIN' HER SISTER ll

Sourh of leon, WV. Financing\

,: : :

On Rebuilt Englno, 5 Speed, Goo{~...~
Shape, Asking $1,400, 614-379· , · ~

:01

.

Air Condldontts Ra-ConditlonH
All Slzeo Gworonltod, 11•·888-

··--......

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.:.:;.:..;.:;_

~ntiquo

Full size Chevy toppe'r-Sports- .-&lt;-:.6
side bed, white. 1250., 304·675-":&gt;:: ·
1907.
., -:...J.t

&amp; 4-WDs

Vans

i

A L.ITTLf1 ·

·&gt;~

Ton •oo Erigitie, Must ~eel ::;'

"'"'"'"""~11"\"-VC-$ '7,7

. ·.·1

$5.000, OBO 614-251&gt;1722.

.
730

~AVf TO
coMe our.

(OUt.I)N'T You· JUST
I)UM8 TttE~ I&gt;O'f'/N

", N ..

SHOW TRUCK' 1g68 Oodgo'Hall ·

~ICE

fiOING. TO

:9.- ·

·; :.;;

7531 .

_;_

. TtiOSt YI1$POM TteTtl

,. · ~ ··&lt;i;~

•.•·,-.;

_ __

~

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Wtlh "'
..

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1g86 Ford F-150, • WO.
Campjlt Top, $4,500, 614·446- ..,

A·,

7597, 614-256-6577.

1991 5-10 4x.tt 4.3 V-6, Aula, .79K ' ,
ExceUem Cand•uon. NADA.

$8,200, A5king $5,g95, Cook Mo·-;:::
torS. 61.446-0103

_..j

.

1995 Toyota Taeoma 4114· 24.100

1186 Ford Tauru·l . e~~:c. running
con4. ; Sl ,200 OBO. :!oH 75·

5320....

.

245-571111.
Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1984 Bandit Bass Boat 50 HP ~•
Mercurv Garage Kept, E•cellent .
1
Condition, $3,000. Berween 2 PM
1
~:;,_.:..;.:_:__:_

_______

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I CAN'T

TAKE

.A,.NY110RE ~ IT'S

1987 20' C1tation in/outboard . •
170hp. Trailer . &amp; acceno ries m· ~ :
eluded. Runs &amp; looks great . 1
$6,500. 'l04-67S.422i.
.

I&lt;.ILLING

GOT

ne!

!'liE

TO REN&gt; THIS

~~~L:;E:..'_TIER I

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V""".......
Trolling Lt~tor, 150 XP Evinrude';~~
Outboard, $9,1100. 614·992·2770. .,.,.

FARM SUPPI IES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

--,~:--~-:--....,-I

e..

a..ro-

uo.eoo.

,:, :

1il90 Chevy Corsica, blaek on

,.2. Sunliner Steel· Houseboat , -~ :
New lnlenor, Lars 01 Room, 2 GM • '
Engmes, $8.500, Ironton Marina ... " f
614-534-2365.
' II
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gray. cold air, till, automatic,
f!O,OOO actual milu, e~tcallent

760

Condlilon, book Value $4890. will

""" S3800, 614·992,&amp;824.
610 Farm Equipment
--,. -;._,--.,--~-=--Kimble Con --~- Plano...so. 8 ,..
"'
1000 lincoln Continental, Signa·
~5-5788.
10% OFF all farm traclor parts. Me Ser~ Gray In lOut, t Own·
like Noiw Graco Toddler Bod Sider'• Equipment , 304-675· .,, 81,000 Uiiea, All Powlf /Auto
Heater, Good Condition, $6,500:
Wilh· Monroas &amp;. B~dding; B.oby 7421.
ullil2 Cadillac Sedan Oaville,
BOd Wilh Mallrell Uaed Choln 17 hp LtiiSubishi llactar, 4 wheel Whit8·
Out 1Btue ·lnt AU Power,
Link Fence Witt\ Poll I Gate, drive
wilh 4' bruth hag, call614· se,Ooo Mi'e1. E•celtenl Condition,
Cal61•·11112·5417.
1143-5350.
$12,500, Call6!4·••8· 1761, or
One G.E. AC' 3200 BTU: One 1963 Ford 2000 '1ractor, lift-· 61 H&lt;06·4470 ·
'
Soaro AC 11000 BTU: I Uprighl
er.
3
pt.
new
radiator.
rebuilt
mo·
U1.91
Dodge
Spiut
to•K
Runs
Suueipee, 61•·•~·2157.
tar, brulh hog, plow'a, ' disc, Good, Weii-Uaintainad, S2,500.
Oul Of Buslne11 : Rostiaura.nl· $4,200, 11•·gg2· 21 ~3 or 814 · 814·388-11293.
992·6373 alltr 5.
Equ.,_ Soloil61ol-245·9033.
11192 Chevy lumino, 4 dr., s•soo.
OIHHHI Size Waterbed Complete, IQ72lima Truck Ring 145,000: 61•·gg2·2!43 or 614 ·992·6373
175; Good Aulamalic Drt•ra, li88 Ha"o Plio Driving Ho'""*: oiler Spm.
1060 GMC Fuel Trwck U,750:
61.-379-27211 Afll:R 8 P.M.
48• Drum ShiiPS Foot Roller 1ga2 Lincoln Continenlal Light
Reminglon Modol 700 BOL Coli· 83,250; ltiiO IOlSO'OifiCe Trailer Blue, ltllher UphOISiety, 614·
bOf 22·250, EJcolionl Condilion, 14,200; 1838 John Dllrt A 441.04t0.
St,300; MIIC. Stall Boama 12 To
814-387-7827.
57 Fl. 814·143·2300, 8·4 P.M.; 11192 Poniioc Firollird, outi&gt;molic,
Aft• 4 P.M. 814-843·21118.
V-8, I·IOpl, toll ~alar, IH power;
REPD I!ULDINOS
grey intertor. ·excellent condition,
Duo To Rod River Fioodlng FoelOry Haa Two All Slool Duonoel 467 N. H.~ $21100: NIO 150 ,_ dologgor, 83,000 mlleo. 614 ..
Btlildlngo fO&lt; lrnmotlillt Sail, (I) gelldn, -mold wa11r uouglt'o, 2•7-3901lllor 5:30pm
'
40•80. N - Eroclod . Will Toka IIOOaoch, 114-7•2·2157.
1893 Ch .. rolol Lumino Z·34i
Balanoo Owed. Coli Bill 1-800·
whne' with red intar1or, Hllll miles•
.IUNII-CIAI.S
511-25811.
Brand Jolin Doero Rownd lour new lifH, loadtd, ••cellent
Solal _ _ _ m t _ 2
Balorl latl Yaor'a lrlodofa 375 I condilion. Call lor mort dllllll ,
Majllg wall)or I dryer, .,.,.,.. - U50 o.ir Coli:- 17 Fl4 814·11112·52113 aher 4.30pm.
blka, console 11erea, Clllll14· Real Toddora Rogulor $2,875 IQD3 'Grand-Am red _wrgray lnteri·
12,31111; Sottw1il Uaod Round
1192·7435 Iller 5:30jtril.
Baiera, Mower Conditioners, or. $1,800. 304-675-1907.
SPAINO SPE!)IAL: Can1r11 Air Roktt In S1oc:k. A Btllh Hog
Cors1c1 Auto , Aif, PW, Till,
Condilionoro; 2· Ton $1, 115; 2 112 Onler. Carmlthatf'l Farm &amp; oi1115
l C~llnder, New Brakea, 33,000
Ton •1.295: 3 Ton •1.315;·3 112 Lown 11•·•48·2412, 1·100·5g•• Millt1 Trade For Gar or Trailer
Ton $1,595; 4 Ton ,1,115; Pricol 1111.
10'1 Modal, Plid $10,000 lor Cor
Above lnclwdo Normal lnil•"•·
-nd I Million Hoy Tool One Month Ago, Selling For
lion. Fwl 5 Yoor W..ranly. "II You Saie-472
THoyblno 17,500. 488 ...000 Firm.61•·- ·7127.
Donl Call Ut Wo Bolh LOHI"
I'
Hoyblne
17,000. •112'1'Htyblno IWSiolonle Corio lS All Power.
Freo Ellimaltal Add·On Hell
Pompa Only SNGNY HIQ!Ier. Cal se,400. n• R. Boler 8501 Llllhor"irlltrior, Raor Sooi~. Low
· Ua Todoy. lg9f· li Tho 'rwon1y 11,700. 144 R. Bolar 10001 MiiHge Must s..·To Apprec iafl
SOYOnlh Year In The HoollnJ &amp; 113.300. 140 R. Boler 10001 No.11~·251·1401 .
Cooling · - 1 l14-441.e301, Bale Commond Ne1 Wrop
R.
Bolor
:11001
11,100.
814
1-800-:!111.
11115 Stllrrn SC2, Awtomt~c. Air,
: 11.100. III 'Dioc . . _ r r Cruill, AMIFM Cllltltt, Trunk
cui ..,700.•Htu10n 30' V Rlka - · , ' 112,!110 Col Aller 5 RM.
...200. Httlltln 711 DIIC lltiw- (Serlouo lnqwlrlel Only I) 81 •·
ora ...300. ~- 10' 1'1111 Ted- ...-4015.
. , . 11.-. Hetaltn T lot-·
d . . . 0_,_, He•10n 130
, . ~1110
R.
17,1100. Haoa""'
CAIIIIFOfl
1441 R • ....,•. 10001
SeiNd And Sofd
H11111n A. .... INiat WriJpar
L-,ThiaMonlh.
TrndmfH, microwave ann, 40• 17,300. Ae-Wrap R. llolo 111111
' Trudlo, 4l4'o. EIC.
oloclrlc range, lllllo I 4· ohlka, Wra-. 17,300. fJ.I .Wrop· Film
-~~ - r gu trill: 11•·11112· 211'1 . . , . nill. 30'1 :111111.
.
171 por roll. I UIOd Round Ill· C,..t Ptal1111M? Geu,.niHd Fiort 10 Chooaa From. KHfOr'l
T1110 117 Wood Fluoh Garogo lerrlco Clnlor II. Rl. 17 Pl. nanclng, 1o• Down, Poymon11
Ao Lllllil Aa 1110 Ptr llonth. No
Dooro eeo E•h: - 111 While ..,._nl • ......, IW. 104·•· t ..n llowrltl Coli Rullll1•·448·
RtiHtll'lntl Model 130.
1174.
2117.
Coll114-_l_

'tI

EM&amp;
Puat

&amp;•

Allpus

••IOitt

24 VenUI'25 Marine .
ftoh

25UQ,
Climbing

27=

·ze lnclap onHble
28 .......

31 H'o 011 your

'-1

lw-+-+-4--1-.---1·

--... .

31 Dlaancumblr

37

ay. bp

, 40 Authar

Sta.rling at $99.00 and Up. Used fl',.
Rebuilt, All Types, Over 10,000 '"

',r.

41 P.-cl
42 IIMilbMI

MAtt'9E '(OIJ6Ut(S SHOULD
60 VISIT OUR 81WTHER
SI'IKI&gt; IN THE DESERT.. HE
KNOWS MICI&lt;Et( MOOSE ..

MICKE'( MOOSE HAS.
A LOT OF FRIENDS
IN I-lOLL'fWOOtt

A
V

1

1ll 8ET l-IE COULD 6ET

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'My daughter has finally taken her finger out of her
moulh." the lady tpld her friend, "but she's put il prompUy
on the TELEPHONE."
.

TransmiSsions, Acces~ Transler
1
Cases &amp; Rear Ends. 614-2-45· '"- '
5677
·:
New gas tanks, 1 1on trucll.~
wheels &amp; rad•ators. D &amp; R Aulo, .r 11

[TUESDAY
I

A1pley, W.V. 304 · 372'·3933 or 1 :_ '7i

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·.

.,.,.
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,

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Hearse- Prune • Clink· Orient· TELEPHONE

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES .

SCilAMUTS ANSWEiS

:

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•,

••••
•a••

11 ·

• ~~~~(RMI&gt;IE FORI I

VOU J085 AT ONE OF
1liE STUDIOS:. 1-!PW
DOES TAAT SOUHO?

Budgel Price Transmission•. )' • !

800·273·9329.

-

:a.:.T

. 011
By Phillip Alder
43
Tannla-courl
One of my favorite lines·· stolen,
'
,
I believe, from Eddie Kinw •• is lhat
441WWara
prtnca11 .
if you ne«l some help frOm the
46
ActOr Ala
defenders, it is advantageous to be
playing againsl your relatives. They
..Gun grp.
will ride to your rescue. However, if
. 50 .Receae
P.G. Wodehouse is right, perhaps you
CELEBRITY CIPHER
should pick someone olher than an
,
by Lula Campos
aunt. As Plum W!'Oie, "Many a fellow
Celebrit;~atf'IYJ="""~"'•'":t;;,~rro:rt:r.
*T~=:":~IAdptWent
who looks like the dominanl male
and has himself photographed smoking a pipe, curls up like carbon paper
'WC.RZUJX
CYG
ECGN
WCRZUJX
. when confronted by an aunt."
· Freddie Nonh, an English expen,
F ·J C Y .G
llol A J
C F
J XU
I'AKLUWU
has wriueri many bridge stories featuring Aunt Agatha. Here is a deal
JNKU
lloll
CEE
JiCCJ
c X llol F J CYG
from "Bridge wilh Aunt Agatha"
(which is subtitled "Technique Wilh·
z u ..
XMFJUFF
FXIoiAEG
YMJ
out Tears"). Look jusl al lhe ·Nonh ·
hand. Your partner opens one noW C B
Z U U L·Z M ·x W .
trump, showing 16-18 wints. What is · PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I cusSed him Old in Spanish, and he lhrew. me oul in
English.~- Lou Piniella, on umpire At'l)'landi&gt; Rodriquez.
your bidding plan?
.
Nonh ··the player. not the aulhor
•• opt~ to use Stayman and raise ·
·spades immedialely to a small slam ..
111Ai DAILY
North ·-· the author, not lhe playPUULII
er .. led lhe hean ace. Then· he sal
--~----~- Nh~~~C~YI.~N--~------back and .wailed for his lrump Irick:
Roorrongo , '-""" ol tile
one down.
.
four rcramblod wordr bo·
· "Devilishly unlucky," complained
low to form fO..r simple -do.
Soulh.
'
"Dafl bidding, .I call il," interGLUEME: ,.
jected Aunt Agatha. who was E&amp;SI.
2
"When you have lhe values to bid six
f...,
no-trump direclly, why go looking for
I
a four-leaf clover?" .
i A GME N
Althouglt one example doesn't
prove much, when you have lwo bal. I
I I .
anced hands opposite each other and
full-weight high-card values for
either game or slam, it is often beuer
I'm glad to listen to other
to play in no-trump. There._you canpeoples troubles, it helps me to
·not walk into a foul trwnp break. In
keep my----off---·.
lhis deal, Soulh has 12 easy tricks in ...__
no-trump: three spades, one bean, ·
four diamonds and four clubs.

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Parts &amp;
Accessories

Auto

i·l

JUNE 171

·•·
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Two 235·75·Rt5 .W.W.A.W.R.J

f' :

Pair, 614-949·2693.

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very good condir io_n, Uk1ng $6~.~~ ~ •

--~------------~
,790
campers &amp; ·~
Motor Homes

':":
I,

-.,...,...-,------~

baltwoom,
atove &amp; relrigerator, $700, 614·
1192·36g2, '
19' camper, liMps 6,

'r(
r

1982 25' Malllltd. 814·11112-361111. !

f
I

1~~3 Ttrr~. 19', small

I

truck can ,
peN, $5500; 1973 Coachman, 28', 1
••cettent condition, $3500; &amp;14 -~
8Q8.11002.

•

SERVICES

Home

810

~

------~~~~~=-~
~
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee

loci! references

lurni'shed. Es·
labliohed lg75. Call (II•) ••8·
01170 Or 1·800·2117·0578, Rogt(l
Wolorproofi~
-

Apptilnce Plrt1 And S.rvtce: AMII
N1me &amp;ands 0vlf 25 Years E•·
petience All Work Guaran1Hd, 1 ·
.Frtnc:h City uar••o• eu-•••·

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u ....

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Main - ~
tenence- Pllntino. vinyl siding~f1~\ l'l
Cllptnft'y, dooft, ~ndowa. bllf'l~ I t1 tV

C&amp;C · General

HOtTle

moble hOme NPIIJ and more. Fot 1 ••
1- oatimtlt call Chol, 81•·992· ' ""

:I ,:J

.6323,

84O

EleCtriCIIII'Id

""

. ... ~:::

Mt•

Residendat or
1
ttnliot or ropeira.
U· :
~ertal&lt;f " oloclrlclon. Ridfno~r ·0v
Eleclricol, WVIIOOIOe, 304·875""'"

11111.

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conducled in lhC afternoon. Try lo · Friends will be 'favorably impressed
posilion yourself accordingly.
by you today. because you'll back up
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This may your wl'rds wilh action. Your reliabe a good. day to close a maucr. in bility·will be ptly apprecialed.
which
a fncnd owes you someth1n~
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb: 19)
BERNICE
thai is now pa$1 due. Expec;t a. posl· O...ee you focus your mind up1111 a
BEDE OSOL . live result~ and behave accordmgly. specific objective today, you're not
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ~not apt to be detened. II is importanl,
be reluclanttoday to assen your 1deas' however, lhal your goal is wonh·
if you think lhey ~ beltcr than your while.
comrades'. There is a very good
PISCES (Feb. 20.Man::h 20) If
Wednesday, .JU'ne 18, 1997
chance you are right.
you're conlemplating a partnership
O ~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Ways.lo arrangement today, be sure your
GEMINI (May '21-June 2 ) ou make or save mo,.,y ~ld be JIV· cobor1is asenlhusiuticas you. Simwill f.,el restless and unfulfilled today ·en lop priority loday. You have the ilar interesll doublel the probability
if you do not usc your time. effi• gift . of 1uming thinJ~ of .nomi~ of success.
,
. cienlly. DosomethingcOIISII\ICIIveso potential into somethin&amp; subslsnblll.
ARIBS (Man::h :U-Aprill9) Try
~:~s~:' ~~~r::!:~~~: SCOI!J'IO (01::1. 24-Nov. 22) Ylli;D' to utilize your time productively and
binhday gift. Selid for your ASII'!)- . . newer inteRsts are fav~ at IbiS , ,functionally today in ways that flex
Graph --'. "'.tions for the year
. ahead time. If you. have ~~~g thlt . . your menial and physk:al 111U1Ciea.
,.. ~~
recently piqued your llftii!Ubon,. Try fbiDJ IOIIIClhln&amp; complex.
by mailina ~ end SASE to Asii'O- · devote plenty of.time ID illoday.
T,.URUS (Apri12Q.MIY 20) OthJ
Graph, c/o this aewiJIIPIII'! P.O. Box ·
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc. ers will find the wumlh you radillle
17S8, Murray Hill Slltlon, New \ 21) Your objectiws will be .miev· t~ay eiltremcly ·llppealina. This is
York, NY IOIS6. Be sure to Illite able today, bul you m1y have 10 do why people will paviwe to you
Y~~~~f~ 2J.July 22) Com- IOI1IC prodding to get othen into the when you make an enll'llll:e on the
bill pm~~. Do not let them ~ tbe1r scene.
'

;.,

.Improvements

7715. . .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,1~fdd·!~:
. if 1hey are .-feet.CAPRICO)Uol (Dec. 22-Jtui. 19)
~
,
.
work out •better
: ASTRO-ORAPH ·

~::.!~
.....
C;;·~~~~;;·2~~~.x;~;;';·~:lii~;.;";~~~;;;•;tkM~n~.
coun'M1ctal wttiftO., ,..,.

•z• •·

Norllt
2•

1994 Marada 18 Foot Open Bow, · ·
wiSun Deck ~ 4.3 liter V6, Mer- "'T
cru1ser, Am Fm G:auette. and Ski · ~

Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

JET
'AERATIONMOTOAS
Ropeired,- &amp; _,lk In Slodk.
CaR Ron E""'~ 1·800-537·9528.

Welt

Pus
Pus

l
I

IT

... . .

Ac:t:esso~, 61.• ·256·6393

• pylan

~
· ====~~

1988 Invader, 1T, open bow, 130
Mercru ise. stainless steel prop, ,
amllm cassene stereo, cover, ga- ~J I
rage k&amp;pt, exceUent to new Condi! ""';~
lion. 614·992-5124.
...1 ......

For sale· Kenmare dilhwasher
with· power miur, like new, woad
Qiain top, phone014·9V2·2281.

......

11 Fill
17 Jump
11 Slllpld llq

• Grwt
10Chwch

7 Ulwyer'l

I PI I

•

~~~~~-=--~~-~

__

..... Selnt
·~­

• ttelplr·

0

Honda Mini Trail 70 $500, 61&lt;4'·

To 5 RM. 304-675·5·131
_:_

•.

S~\totllA-4£!fS•

'

n&gt;1e• s•2.soo. 304-675-3290.
740 Motor.cyi:les

750

....

· ·~--

..&gt;J

$3,000, 61H48·4782.

I

IT-.ylloo,

BC-NEABRIDOE
Tuesday, June 17, 1997

1&amp;92 N•asan Piclt· UP, 5 Speed, ,-.,_&lt;-:4
AMtFM Good Condition, Spony; ··~:::~

411 ulility trailer, alllteel, 1115

• ICind 01 cllill

No.bad
trump break

~,9"'8"'•~F~o~rd~R~an~g-e-r,-:l-:o-:w-:.M~i:-le-a-ge:--1 :
2836.

;

.· Opening lead: • A

" ,:,

Sale

Soulb
• KQg2

31YIIMOI

Vulnerable; North..SOUth
Dealer: SOuth
·

To Acoopl Or Reject Arrt And All " ,
Bidl, And Witt"ldraw Propettt-. •
From Sale Prior To Sale. TetmL ....1
01 Sale: CA·SH OR CERTIFIED

Trucks for

•t7432

• Q J 10 "
• A Q J 10

rarity And May 81 Seen By Call., i 1
ing Keith Johnson At 01•·4·U·· ";). ,
1038. OVB Reserves The Righ_l :;:

720

1 ca-n
2 Pllnldllr

•Qa

:t

~pion

..,..

• 6
•8&amp;532
•• 5

43

:
10:00 A.M. Vohiolo W.ill Ba Spld 1
To Highest Bidder •As ts• With· ~ 1
out Expre11ed Or Implied War\

atECK;

EDt

J .. 7.
A J 10

Gallipolia, OH On 0'21187 At

oao. 81•·1192·5n7 alltr lpm.

;;:::;.:=:....:..::.;;::.:.:..-;::-:-:-:::-::::-1·

In Gallipolis : Rental $350/Mo.,
With DtpOsit, 2 ·Bedrooms, 2 Two campaUea~ one whh tull
Slory, No Pall, Ouolllied Only,l;!l~~;~boa~d:nv~•:nd:_r:fi•:l&gt;
11-4-388-8828.

•K5

I

~:~!~.P!~~-~~~~~8 ~~:;!4~: I ::.pi:.ano..:.;Dr:.·...:6...:14_·_446
__-4_5_25_ _ __

010i.

• K 7 4
t A K7 2

~

1

1a9o Dodge Dalolola Automslit , .. '
AC , Extended Cab, 6U -446 · :.~~
3845.

°

•a•

• AI 5S

-~

Ch'evy With Toppi!r, l.O'!_~ r ·
Miles, $3,000, 1956 Chovy , 1. Too , 'i
Form Racko "50, 614-255-.a733. ··:-;
'IW Dodge Charger, 4 cylind~r. 5 1989 . Ford F-700, OSL Ef'.lgine ~ , ti
apoocl, runs good, body good, no Sp f2 Sp Double Frame Gt4·286t ~~ ~ (
ru11, cherry red calor, 4 goa:CI
::,:
tires lind aluminum rims. prtcud 10' fn92. '
.... $585,,114·742·2370.
1~8Q lnt Corw. tractor 365_C~m - ......,..
n:ains 15spd, Jake brake, 11r r,de., .. ~~
1882 Delta 88 diesel, needa in- 80'" sleeper, new drive iires. Call ~
jector pomp. 304&lt;1 75-4302.
weekends 3().t.-67&amp;226ot.
•!

01

Large ollico space lo1 rent. $500/ F""""whldo
., UAparu
'i"~..!:ld', ~·
129
mo.+ wUiitiu 30ol-875-7000.
- ~ - ~
ond Avenue, a.tlipeUa, 814·448Store &amp; Restaurant wiG ame 3844, Altlr 7 P.M.
·Room, now roo I, building in good I =-'---:-:==-:--""'::~::-.-:shope, bolh open doing busl- Furnlahed Ellicloncy 1115/lrlo..
ness, owner retiring, lell building, Urlllliel Pt.ld, Share Bath, 807
equipment, groceries, stock, Second Averue, Gal"palll, 8U·
170,000. more information 30•· 418 3811Aflet' 7 P.M.
882·2343.
Graclowo living. ' ond 2 bedroom
350 l tS &amp; Acreage
IPfiiUnenla II YMilge Manor and
0
Riverside Apartmenta ln Middle.,
Excellent 5 Acre lol on Addison porl From l231·f304 . Call •••·
Pike .With Septic &amp; Water lillii2·S... Equal Hauaing Oppor·
$25,500, 614-446·6822.
runlieo.
Nl
B
1 1 d
Land Fot Sale: 2 _2 A~a On urce 3 edroom Un urn she
de Bullskin Road. Appro~~:, 2 Mlln Apartment. In Point Plea11111t 8t4·
011 218, $15,000 Firm, llol-448- 418 0041, Afltor8 P.M.
391 ·
.
One Bedroom Fwrnlshod All Utili·
Sovoral 5-oCN peru1a
Ilea Plld 2515111e Slrott, $2501
S7,50CI Nell
Mo., 614-441-3187.
b
'Ill d M 1
remote, eau11 u an ;
Tara Townr\auae Apartments,
Caun~ Scipio Township. SR 002 Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Oust 0 SR 143)- Owner financing. Flaorw, CA, 1 112 Bath. Fully Car·
Call for good map, 1 " 61 ~· 583 • peted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
&amp;SotS.
Patio, Start 1340/Mo. No Peta,

Buick Rogol. V·8, aula, noodl• '' -

r: ;:.~· .. ,.. _•...275 OBO, 114·i82'

1~86

vc~.

ltnce• .,mllhed, t.undrr rDDm
1"-~•
uwl. d OH •w · - In -- · ..

AppUcatlan• evallata ar: VIUage

, , ",~

......, • c. - ..114 742 224$.
..._,
,_, .- '.,_, • •
•1001 Trucks, boata, _• j
FafmaM Cub lrac:tar with •heel
, motor homu, furnl ;. • .,.·
welghta. good condltion, .814·247· turt, •lectronlca, computerattca.:.a
272•.- 1:30pm.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Availalllo yOut-area now. Call1 -800·5t3-o1343 • :
En S·li308
•
1
.....,. Hollond grinder mlier, •••
.
• . I'
cond. ~·2.73-4215.
Ohio Valley Bonk Will Ollar For ·-'
Sill A lgflll Chevy Z24 CavaN11,
t
We moko ltydratrlic halo aaoom- YIN IIGIJFIIW5K7171003o :
blito. Sldor'a ~qulpmonl 304· Public Auction Will Be Held At
1
175-7421:
Thv OVB Annex , 143 Third Ave. t

A Gtaam Shop ·Pat Grooming .
Fealuring ftydro Both. Don 582·5840.
540 Miscellaneous
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek R~.
.3 Month Old Colt Vert Nic(t,
Merchandise
81.-446·023• .
$250; 3 Yoor Old Horse Very
-l""'f"'laod....,..,Spl,...,.in_er_;_I..,C'"o-rn....,.Sho,...,ler: -t I AKC aerman Shepherd Pupl, Gonllo, 61ol-2.5-5087.
Fill Alwminum Botlom Baal &amp; While Chimp line, 814·388· Cows, nlves, bulls, .and ltttr,
Eloclrlc Molor: 3 Fuel Tanko 275 ili-1.
·
61oi-7•2·21ZI.
Gallon &amp; Steel Frame•; 1 Harl·
AKC
male
Tri
Shellil,
1yr
old,
zontal Fuel Tank 300 Gallon•
Hay&amp; Grain
080. llol-317· 640
Willi Pump On Stael Slide; 2 ~on e•c. quality. •175
.
~. .
Ktllloo largo Phone: 814·388·
TObacco watlf bed planla. 304·
•
11140, Allor 5 P.M.
AKC Reg Wtlmtrontr pwpploo 8115-31154.
.
304.a75-n40.
10.10 8 Fl. Tall Chain Longih
TRANSPORTATION
F.,.., 11•-3116-81113.
1r ColO&lt; T.V. Wllh Bolli In
,250, 114· 441~41.

, . ......... " ( ] I .

-

lion, •3•5 OBO·, loll 1izo uwck
!Opper '45: new porlabl4 phone,
will 11111 11 112 price, $25; a14.a.a-

C• TirO, Flreolone 4 Ply
Size: 475 ·500 ·19 Spoked
Exc,ellant Condilian,
'countrylide Aparbnenta: 2 Bed- Wheels,
Used Mobile Homo 10•50 Good
&lt;110n11 I 112 Bath, CA. WID Hook· For Sorrago $500 OBO.. 614-4•8Up, 1340/Moib· 2 Badrooma, 2
' .
Baths, ·CA, W Hook-Up, 14101 7127.
Mo De lit D-·lred s13-57._ Are you buying new fu.rnitpre?
25il po ,_,.. '
Soli ro•r utlod lurnhwro 10 the Po.Downtown Gallipolis: Modern 1 meroy Thrill S!IOp. Thoro is a root
oa;; El
•· c
-~ need for couch... breakfast end
~room, ""
ectrn., arpet-.
·Camplele Kllchln, Eltclric Heat t dinirig room 1lt1. We al1a buy
baby bads, alrollora. playpeno.
AOC«dlionlng.ll4-4*0130.
toddler car 11i111 and walkers.
Far lHae: Small One Bedroom Call 814·992-3725 Tuesday lltrw
Urfurniltotcl IJ.jlerlmon~ Corner
Saturdaw. 1Gam-•pm at 220 Ea11
s-nd And Plno, AJC; $235/Mo, MalnSUoo~~.
Plua Ulllilieo: Rtloroncn And
Baby bod, high. chair, llrofier, ctr
Doppall Roqolrotl; No Poll, Call owing. 304-875-4548.
814·448-4•~
·
Beauty
salon 11yllng chaira
Fwrnlahld 3 Rooma I Balh, No
$150. Dryer ch~ira 190 and
Bu•lness space lor rent S5001 1'110, RollfOnct And Dopolil ~ ahlmpoo bowla S75oa. 304·582·
mo gas incfwded. 30•-875-7000.
qyirod, 114-4441-151 g,
5840.

no .pa11 •2001m0. + willtloa, ••oo
1087 Fleetwood 14•52, 2 Bed· clej&gt;osll. 304-675-3757.
rooms, t Bath, Washer /Dryer, Small two bedloom wllh tuM bl...
CA, .t8,900, 614·367·0518 Or mont, near Racine. UOO monlh
114-012:5428.
plus utilities, no pets, eu-e••·
lttTimo &amp;yor~. E -Z Flntinclna, 2 2587. ·
Or 3 Bedroom• ·Around S200 I ;;,Tw;.:o~b-td-r-;oo_m_h_o_•_••-.-n-ic:.a-ond­
Monll Froo Dalhllry I Sol· Up. 1' claon. no lnoldt doposi1 ond
a»-251·5070.
references required, 114·812· ·
2 Bedrooms. conoal Air, In Galli· I :31:;0::;111:;0·-:~:--:-:--:-:. ---polio, On Ronlod Lol, Roady To 420 u-..He Hamel
Wove Into! 814-448- 140g, Al11r
"""'
4P.M.
for Rent
D-tr~PNff'lllll
Frazier'• Bal1om-2bt. S225. suitable lot olnglo only. Froo walt&lt; I

h.p., T~eumaeh, ••cellent condl·

~

NOW· I997 14 Wide-I bath, $6991
down, S139Jmo, with approved 8pm.
orediL Call 1-1100·691-6777.
T1110 'bedroom aperlmenli~ Mld2 Badroom, lull ba1omon1, newly dlepar~ no pill, 114·11112·5858.
enca. 304·67'5-2145. .
· 1997 14•70 2 or 3 Bedroom, decorated, referenc;n &amp;deposit,
450
Furnllhed
$995 down, Slg5/mo. Only a1 NOpot&lt;304-CI75-5182.
·Aicll.Walker Painting; reaid&amp;li - Oakwood Homes, Nioo. WV. 304·
Rooms·
lial, commercial, auto, tree esti· 755-5885.
·
3 Bedroom Houao In Rodnay,
mtlft, 1.14-742'2707 Of 614-949·
$3751Mo., Plus Dapooll, Raler- Sl
1
1997 14100 3 or 4 Bedroom, encee, 814-843·2G11 Afttr • P.M.
eeping rooms Will'l cook ng.
2951
S1 ,351i1 down,. t2291mo. Free air,
Alto tr•il•r apace on river. All
Jkirtmg, &amp; delivery. Onl~ at Oak· Clean three bedroom hou1e In ~~~~~C~a;ll~•;";•r~2~:0~0~p~.m::.;
wood Homes Nitro, wv. 304· 755· Pomeroy, IIOYt(t ·•nd refrigetator,
Muon WV.
5885.
·
washOf and dryer. no lnlide pOlS.
Sp
fo Rent
relorencu and dtpalil required,
ace r '
bedroom, total electric ~ compierely furnished, all new turn !lure. washer &amp; dryer, under pin·
ning
a ready
to rt)Ovo
lnlo.37OnBurlol
501f100
located
in town,
dane Addition. Pl. Pleasant New
chain link fence and new out
building. Phone Da,a -ao•·675·
7870 E · 304&lt;175-2916
·
vonnos
· ·
1087 doublewide $1445 down,
S229fmo. Free deliverr &amp; setup.
1·800·891·6777.
·

Antiques

Firal A... Rolli, Golllpolis, 814·
Buy 01 1111. Rtverln• Antlqull,
441·2511
1~b;ii;;;;;~;p;;.;;;;;;:-;;;;;;w_ 1124 E. Maln su..~ on Rl 124,
I·
aparUnen~ Mot19n
Pomoro,. Howra; M.T.W. 10:00
fwlniahld Of wnlwrnilhod. Pltlocl ..... 10 8:00 p.m., S.ndily 1:00 10
tor contlrucUon worker. Call tor 8:00p.m. 114·gg2 ·2528, Roll
dotiuo. 304-773-5054.
Moore ownlf'.
•
C I I
2 Bedroom "pattmtnt, '" ra
Air, Gaa Heat, WID Hook-Up
~~;• To Gallipolia, eu-.ue ..

1.:......:...._....:.......,:.....:.._,- '::"~':':~~:;:::;;_;:::::::-:-:: T HI Cyc.-· roS..ra 31• col riding mower, 10 pelrtd, tl40; 1·- corn CIIIIIYII·
MII'Chll'ldlae

'

•P

' .•

~

'.

"

' ,t}
~oil

�Ohio Lottery
'

Reds 5-1

Pick 3:
2t4
Pick 4:
9124

&amp;porta on hge 4

Buc"eye 5:

humble

A chance ol ahciwera,
thunderstorm• tonight,
low In the lOa, Thurselay,
high In the 80s.

1-8-18-26-35

..

· 'el. 41, NO. 44
•01117, Ohio 11111'-Y Publlehlng Compeny

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wtdneaclay, June18, 1997

'

2 S,Ctlol•, 12 P8QH. ~­

A GMnett co. News~ rp .-

'

OBES, food banks receive unexpected funds
By PAUL SOUHRADA
- !hat had been schCduled to close · assistant state budget directo.r.
Aiaoclllted Press Writer
in a cost-cutting move.
Altogether, the state is expected to
COLUMBUS - Lawmakers
The committee; acting on · a save $81.9 million over lhe two
worldng on thll state budget have request from Go~. George Voinovich, years because of the decline in the
spread some of lhe wealth created by added another $780,000 to reopen the number of welfare recipients.
lower-lhan-expected welfare spend- . OBI;S office in Elyria to serve Ford
Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron,
ing and higher tax receip.ts to unem· Motor Co. employees who are said it was only right.that some of the
ployment offices and food banks.
expected to lose their jobs when lhe benefits .of lhe improving economy
The joint conference committee automaker shuts down its Avon Lake should filter down to the less fortunegotiating differences between the · plant.
nate.
House and Senate versions' of the
The committee also approved an
But Republicalis on the committee
$36.1 billion spending plan on Tues- amendment that would give $1 .5 mil- rejected an attempt by Sen. Judy
day gave tile Ohio Bureau of lion in ·each of the two years begin- Sheerer, D-Shaker Hejghts, t.o
Employment Services $5.5 million to · ning July .I to food banks around the increase lhe money going to the food
keep open 14 offices - which dis- "·,state. The money would come from banks by ano!her $4.5 million a
tribute unemployment benefits and the 11nuseil portion of the state's food year.
help out-of-work Ohioans find jobs .stamp program, said Paolo tleMatia,
Sheerer also lost a batile to strip,

lhe budget of a 'series or tax breaks for
businesses. She wanted lhe money to
· go instead to primary and secondary
education. .
"This is not a time when we
should be talking about business tax
cuts," she said. She noted !hat a task
force commissioned by Voinovich is
considering,tax increases to pay for
a new school funding system to
replace the one declared unconstitutional by lhe Ohio Supreme Court in
March.
House conservatives lost a proposal to block .state family planning
money from going to health clinics'
that provide abortion counseling.

The conference committee instead amount of spending on kinl!ergarten
opted for Senate language that through 12th-grade educaiion and at
stopped money from going to clinics public colleges and universities.
that mat;e abortion referrals.
· Sen. Roy Ray, R. Akron, said the
Committee members held off a tax cut will remain at the $285.7.mil- ·
decision on a House plan tO require lion figure proposed by.Voinovich.
the statewide computer library netHouse conservatives wanted to
work to block online pornography return about $538 million through a
from computer-savvy children. The tax-cut mechanism that is supposed
Senate, in its version of the budget, to automatically refund taxes when
wanted individual libraries to take revenues come in above projections.
steps to block obscene materials.
Committee members hoped to
Rep. Joan Lawrence,' R-Galcna. finish work on the budget plan by
said lawmakers were still tcying to Thursday, with votes ·tentatively
come to an.agreement.
scheduled in the House and Senate
Also still up for discussion: the next week. The current blidgct
size of an income tax refund and the expires June 30.
•,

Racine
·water rates
established

;spd, v6, power stfeting, 4 wheel andlock brakes, As IDw As...

1191·

4\lP, ah; AMJFM.-4 door,Asi.owAs•••

Racine Village Council took final
action Monday night on an ordinance
· establishing water rates in the village.
Council met in recessed session at
lhe municipal· building and gave a
third reading and final approval to the
ordinance. The rate for residential.
customers is now $12 for 4,000 gallons with an additional 30 cents. per
I00 gallons used over 4,000 gallons.
· The ordinance follows lhe recent·
installation of water meters in the vii-.
lage. .
In addition, council also approved
·Oie~piireliase 'of 'aPJ!i'til imlleiY:·;Qi.
·too~-efstone for ~illa~e chip al'lliqt .
proJeCfs, •' '
.
,
Letart· Township workers and
equipment will be' used with lhe vii·
!age paying for workers' wages,
materials and use of equipme~t. The
· Action VISTA Bloraglonall~m conference held
alleys, cemetery road and the walk·
J~!~u:;~~ EXERCISE • Foretter Ted King
at the Carpenter Inn.
cc
1
group
exercise
during
ihe
Rural
way at Star Mill Park will be chipped
and.scaled.
Council will also attempi to.make
.repairs at the boat launch since it was
•reportcd.lhat boaters are having prob·lcms at the upper edge of the ramp.
Council also approved the purchas~
:of paint for the fire department anneK
·so workers· can paint the building
Area:community members 'gath·
He said that stlch indicator pro·
before the July ·4 celebration,
David Spencer, SiKth Street, met · ered recently at the Carpenter Inn in jects which are occurring world wide, ·
with council requesting a copy of the rural Meigs County for a rural action · serve as alternatives to traditional
plans for the section of Broadway conference, "Bioregionalism· and economic indicators and measure
Street that was recenrly surveyed.
Appalachia Ohio."
progress toward regional sustainabil. He was told that !here are no plans
The conference was the third in a it\o.
.
· at this time.
·
. ' three part series dealing with the · "Sustilinability indicators are fun·
Jeff ThorntOn, county commis- · deveiopment of sustainable commu- damentallyditTerent from traditional
sioner and former mayor, had asked . nity indiclltors for Appalachia Ohio. economic indicators like · Gross
The first conference· which was DomeStic .Pruduct in lhat .lhey are
touncil to use ' the street to access
property he purchased from the held in November focused on basic grassroots driven.'
, IIIARK COHEN
Meigs County Public Library 8oard. . human needs while .the second. con- ·
'That is, !hey are select6d, monThe conference began with a pre·
Thc street had never been closed .ference held in February focused on itored, and reported on by the comsentation
by local resident Mark
and since it was a dead-end had not alternative economic strategies.
munity-at-large. Traditional economCohen,
renown
expert on bioregionbeen used, it was noted. The survey
Participants grappled with the ic indicators like Gross Domestic
alism.
Cohen
is
the· founder and
was done so council.would know the question: 'What can be measured to Product and unemployment rate do
exact location ·of the road. ·
gauge the health of the Appalachian not measure a community's true director of both lhe Belize AgroCouncil told Spencer !hey appre- . Ohio bioi'ejlion?" Some of the ideas health," Stlid cBstle.
· forestry Research Center in· Central
ciated ·him mowing lhe section, but raised during this small group exer"The ·indicators we've been devel- America and Tropical ConscNatiori
added that a village worker would do cise inclu~d species diversity, water oping thanks to the grassroots input Foundation in Athens. Mark's speech
the mowing if he chose not to con- quality, environmental literacy rate, from these three conferences Ifill focused on the importance of com·
tinue mowing it.
population srowth. and consumption helpAppal~hi,a Ohio become part of munity II)Cmbers developing a healthDiscussion was held on the need rates.
a· worldwide movement toward the ier relationship with their environfor a new mower. Mayor Scott Hill
Group facilitators included Ted use of altemati.ve measurements of merit.
. Following Cohen's presentation,
said he would check to see what the King, forester of the U. S. forest Ser· societal health Once these indicators
price is on the state bid purchase pro- vjce, Scott Miller of the Monday are fully developed, we will be able Ted King spoke on sustainable forest
gram . . ;
.
Creek Restoration Project. Chris to measure genuine progress wilhin management practices, one of the
A committee is to. report back in Anderson of Rural Action's Vinton the areas of human needs, economics, region's mostsalient issues. His pre1uly on the list of tr~e.s requiring County office, and Ci!lin Donahue of and the environ~J~ent," continued sentation underlined the need to bal·
. ance current demand of · forest
attention. Hill asked they be listed in Rur11l Action's Athens office.
·
Castle,
order by priority.
"The community input gathered · •According to lhe Rural Action reSources with lhe needs of future
In olher business, council;
from this series of confcreoccs serves VISTA coordinator, fully researched generations.
For more information on the
·•• Approved the purchase of a as the building blocks for Rural aDd m:voloped iDclicll,t!!fS will be
radio and dehumidifier.
&gt;
Action's projcct··"Sustainable Com- presented to the public for thc pur- researcll and development of sus•• Approved the request of Wayne munity indicators for Appalachia pose of gatJ!cring feedback from lhe tainable community indicators for
Lyons, Broadway Street, to pla,ce a · Ohio," said Rural Action VISTA \ community. This will occur ar a Appalachia Ohio, residents !lillY conculvert on Sixth Sircet so his lot will Chris Castle wbo serves as the pro- major conference to be held late lhis . tact Castle or Paul Logue of Rural
Cootinaed oa pqe 3 ·
ject coordinator.
fall.
·
Action at 614-767-4938.

House, Senate
work·on :· E-check
compromise
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - Sen, Gary
Suhadolnik and Rep. Tom Johnson ·
agree on one thing when it comes to
E-chcck. Both would like the issue to
gQ away.
.
"I can understand how all of' us
would like to get rid !)f tliis issue,"
. , JohnJI~. R-New-Concord,.silid.l\.lcsdQy .JlCfqrc • !~ttl House' v'otcd 'Uilanimou~(y· to ..rcjel:t Senate changes to
the controvcr,;ial auto cmis.•ions testing prograw.
"But more work n~cds LO be

M·e igs hosts rural
action conference

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wheeh; air, AM/FM ('398 lie, As low As...

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• WASliiNGlPN (AP)- Tobacco Drug Administnition nicotine .regu(alks have hit lhc biaest impuse yet, · lations. ' .
.
as negotiators issue whllt may 'be a ·. ·":The tQbacco indus!TY must be
· ~nal ultimatur:n ~cmanding strict , , pu~ishc,d for, ~~ !'!isconduct. must,
· l!lvernment nacotme ' control and m11ntaln the1r hab1hty for the future
''punishment" of the cigarette indus- ... and nicotine lias to be regulaled by
~~y,
thc FDA," Moore said. "They will
Mississippi Attorney Gcnel'l!l sive us what we want, or we will go
~hael Moore said Tuesday 110 hid • to trial."
.
rei\4Md industry calla for procectioil
"They
to really and tna'lll!!at payjng punitive .d amipl to ly hun,"
FIQrida AIWIMY
sk~ lmokon and called "molt con- General Boll Buttcntorth,llllfY that
""liout" lhc fighi over Food and tobacco companies were even resist·

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ing calls 19 8dmit their products are industry then would be liable only for
dangerous•.
punitive damages in the future.
"It's nota cave.in," said one J!Cr·
One source said tobacco foes
· could walk awa~ from tlJc talks a 'son close to lhe talka. "It's a .ettJc.
early as today unless the litdustry inent for put conduct." .
On the FDA issue, cigarette-mak·
offers a viable counteroffer. .· .
ers
Were pullhing to make lhc agency
But privately, one aeJoliator' said
a faction still is pu'lhing a comPJO- win coti~onal pe!111iuion before
.mile: a lulilp-sum payment that is it COilld ever bu niC()tine. The FD.\.
pert of lhc esdnwed $300 biUiolllill- abo would bave to - t c:enain
tlemet~t. to .10 either to the 11ate1 or llli1dards sbowitiJ it hid .proof that
for some "IQod deed"suc:h a health even lowering nicotine levels would
care for ·uninsured children. Tbe bolp public health, llid one soun:e.

done."
Suhadolnik, R-Strongsvillc, would
like tllat work done as quickly as possible: " I want to get this thing out of
here."

Both men likely will be part of the
joint conference committee that will
sit down to work out a compromise
on the legislation to replace the
unpopular tests with a less-intrusive
tailpipe test in northeast Ohio and the
Cincinnati-Dayton area.
The E' chcck program, created
after 14 Ohio counJies foiled to meet
standards under the 1990 federal
Clean Air Act, ha' been criticized
since it began two years ago.
Motorists have complained about
damaged cars, long Jines at testing
centers and unnecessary repairs.
House members objected to the
Senate's removal of a tax credit that
would hove reimbursed motorists for
lhc cost of lhc test. And they said lhcy
w~re concerned about the cost of the
scaled-down program.

... When we voted for this, the
majority of us felt it was marginally
acceptable," said Rep. Ron Young, RPainesville.
.Particularly bothersome was an
amendment that lifted a requirement
that the Legislature .approve any
expansion of testing beyond the orig·
ina! 14 counties. Expansion would be
.\Ill ~!lll!t;. En.vjronm_e~tal. Pr~tcction
J"gcni;y. . ' .
.
,. i hta'l was' ''lila •much fpr Young,
who only jlrudgingly voted for the
original E·chcck legislation the
House approved in April .
."We n.ccd to tell these egotistical.
tailpipe snifling federal hureaucrms
to take their probes and get nut of the
state of Ohio." he said.
· · Suhadolnik said he. too, had a
problem with the amendment. But he
added that other House nhjections
were ha,ed on misunderstanding of
thc .hill's language.
Johnson said sending the hill back
for fun her work also would give the
state time to deal with proposed' new
clean air standards 'federal officials
arc expected to'issue in mid-July . .
One other hurdle still stands in the
way.
Gov. George Voinovich· has said
he ·would veto even the version the
Senate pa.scd last week. He believes •
the E-chcck program should remain
in place imtila viable, cost-effective
alternative is found.
. In the tcsts;vehicle.s ore placed on
rollers and run at various speeds
while lh,cir emissions arc analy1.ed for
·ozone panicles and other pollutants .

GOP bill·would end race .
and ·gender preferences
WASHINGTON- Congression- that clearly. But we will continue, :
al ·Republicans, who reject President respectfully, to disagree with them," :
Clinton's "mend it, don't end · it" he said.
view of affirmative action, are renewReferring to last year '.&lt; hill,
ing efforts to climin~tc race and gen· McCurry said, ... It was subjcet to a
der classifications from federal pro- veto threat and nu doubt, as we sec
grams. The White HouSe is threaten· the final version of this legislation, if
it is the same it will be so again."
ing a veto.
.
The bill McConnell and Rep .
A similar move stalled in the last
Congress. The issue, meanwhile, Charles Canady, R-Aa., arc sponsorcould prove tricky for a political par· ing would "Jlrohibit discrimination
ty that's trying to bring more'minori· and . preferential treatment" by ·the
. federal government on the basis of
ties oo board. ·
But with Clinton's recent call for race, color, national origin or sex . .
· a nation.! discussion . about racial
"Mr. President, preferences arc
issues, Republicans felt it was the ·wrong. Talk is cheap. Let's act. End
right time to reintroduce their bill.
it, don 't mend it," said &amp;cp. David
"Every time the government · Mcintosh, R-Ind., one of 46 Repubgrants a preference to one person lican· co-sponsors of the Civil Rights
based on ra&lt;:e or gender, it discrimi· Act ofl997.
nates against another based on race or
Under 'the bill, the federal gov- ·
gender," Sen. Mitch McConnell, R· cmment would be prohibited from
Ky., said at a news conference Tues· granting preferences in contracting,
day.
employment an.d other programs or
"Discrimination by any oth~r activities to people based on race,
·name is still discrimination," he said. color, national origin or sex.
. Presi'dential spokesman Mike " It also would prohibit the federal
McCurry . reiterated thC administra- government from requiring or
tion's opposition to eliminating affir· encouraging federal contraciors, submative action.
con.tractors and recipients of govern"We have not solved problems ment assistance to srant such prcferrelated to discrimination in the work- e~.
place and sometimes 011e wonders
'I1!e government runs more !han
whclher those who advocate abol· I SO .race- and ge!"dcr-based pro-ishing affirmative action understand grams, McConnell said.
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