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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

AL takes
win from
All-Star tilt

Pick 3:
3-8-5
Pick 4:
2-3-7-5
Buckeye 5:
19-22-24-25-34

Sports on Page 4

.

.

Moatly clear tonight ,
Iowa in the upper 50s .
Thuraday, moatly sunny.
Hlgha near 80.

•

en tine
\AII.411,NO. 51

County commissioners award
bid during recessed meeting
Appropriations
increase wins
nod from board
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Meigs County "commissioners awarded a bid for asphalt material when they met in recessed session
on Thesday afternoon. The meeting
was recessed Monday afternoon due
to a lack of a quorum.
The bid-for liquid asphalt materials was granted to Tom Mayle &amp;
Sons of Banleu. in the amount of
$50,000. The minority business
enterprise contract was awarded on
the basis of the amount of materials
to be provided at a set price. A bid
was also received from PDK Construction of Pomeroy.
Funding for the contract will he'
paid through State Community

f-·

...

2 Sectlono, 12 Pageo, ~cents
A Gannett Co. Newapspsr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 9, 1997

01 • • Ohio Valley Publl.tllng Compiny

Improvement Program funds.
· apologize for the inconvenience
David Spencer of the Meigs caused by the lack.of air conditionCounty Highway Depanment ing in ·the courthouse, and for the
announced that the first funds have · problems the heat caused with the
been received from the Federal Emer- computer sySiem."
gency Management Agency for the
The commissioners increased
replacement of the courthouse air appropriations for county offices ·to
conditioning system; which was cover a 3 percent pay increase for
destroyed in a Hood-related slip in" C!l\lnty employees approved earlier
this year.
March.
The offices will receive increased
The funds were paid in to the
county auditor's office on Monday. appropriations as follows: commis- .
The payment was made in the sioners, $500; auditor, $I ,400; treaamount of $29,700. representing 50 surer, $750; prosecuting auorney,
percent of the total replacement cost. $1 ,600; common pleas coun, $700;
The remainder of the cost will he juvenile court, "$660; probate coun,
received after paperwork is $300; clerk of courts, $700; county
processed, Spencer said. The cost of coun, $630; board of elections, $800;
the new system was pre-paid by the janitor. $290; sheriff, $4, 700; '
recorder, $600; soldier relief, $140;
county highway depanment.
"'(Engineer) Bob Eason has bent veterans service, $440; and plat map
over backwards to help us,"' Com- office, $680.
Additionally, the commissioners
missioner Janet Howard said. "'We
provided for an increase in PERS

By BRIAN J. REED
tion. through panting.
Sanllnel New1 Staff
A pet's temperature can be takThc safety and comfort of pets
en at home, rectally, with a regular
is always" an issue to good pet ownthermometer designe4 for human
•rs, -~ J!.uM~-o~ •.\1.01.,~ .~ "~..; ~jling;_ ·.to..J&gt;.f:-.,..~~yid
monu_,., pet C8(e ""'"omes.a m.1ulor
Krawsczyn of the Metgs Veierinlll)'
of life and death.
Clinic. The thermometer should be
_Leaving a dog or cat in a hot car
well-lubrii:ated with petroleum jelfor only a few minutes can be
iy.
deadly. On a warm day. the tern- - - Whether iraveling or at home, a
perature inside a car can reach 160
pel owner should be aware of the
degrees in a maner of minute!!,
signs of heat stress: heavy,panting,
even when the windows are open.
glazed eyes, rapid I!Uise, dizziness,
according to Alden Waitt. president
vomiting or a deep red or purple
of the Meigs County Humane
tongue .
.
Society.
Animals who become overWith only hot air to breathe, a
heated should be taken to the
pet can quickly suffer brain damshade immediately and immersed
age, or even die from heatstroke,
in or SJlQIYed with cool running
and open windows, shaded parking
water, continuing until the body
spaces and air conditioned "cars
temperature lowers. Waiu said.
with the motor off will not save a
Ice packs or cold towels can
also be applied ·to the head. neck
small animal's life, Wain said.
The primary issue with pets and
and chest. Once the dog is able to
hot weather is the internal ventiladrink, his intalte should be limited
· lion. Humans can pe_rspire while
to licking ice cubes or ice cream.
dogs cannot. ·
'
The dog should also be taken to a
"Dogs cool themselves by pantveterinarian as soon as possible.
ing, but panting cannot save a dog
The key to preventing heattrapped in what .amounts to an
related illness in pets is to provide
oven," Wain said.
shade and plenty of cool water. Hot
A dog's normal body temperawater will not help a pet, Wain
lure is 100.5 to 101.5 degrees
said. As drinking water warms, it
Fahrenheit. A dog can withstand a. should be replaced with cool water.
temperature of I07 degrees but for
or cooled with ice cubes. Ample
only a very short time before he
shade, a comfonable dog house
suffers irreparable brain damage,
and regular checks should prevent
and eventually. death. A closed car
heat stroke and death in pels.
interferes with the dog's nonnal
· According to Krawsczyn. it is
cooling process, that is evaporamore difficult to cc;mtrol body tern-

contribution, $2.168; worker's compensation, $350; and Medicare, $220.
The appropriations will come
from the commissioners' "other
expenses" line item.
The commissioners also:
• Approved a request for transfer
of funds for the highway department
in the amount of $4,990.74 for culven pipe;
• Approved a transfer of $4,63 7.62
within the commissioners' budget
for an increase in costs for the state
au4it;
• Set a public hearing on the 1998
budget proposal for July 21 from I to
2 p.m.;
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $75,741.17. with 171
entries.
Present were Commissioners
Janet Howard and Fred Hoffman.
David Spencer of the highway
depanment, and Clerk, Gloria Kloes .

Pomeroy man faces
charges .connected
to death of teacher
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A 22"-year-old Pomeroy man may be charged with murder today following the drowning of a Harrisonville Elementary School teacher in Leading Creek near Lang sville Tuesday afternoon.
Dead is Todd C. Johnson, 30, of B~iley Run Road, Pomeroy.
Meanwhtle, a Metgs County grand JUry this morning heard accusations
.of murder and robbery against Jason Hysell, who is being held in the Meigs
County Jail in connection with Johnson's.dcath.
·
· . He was exl"7ted to he arraigned on charges this afternoon if the grand
JUry returns an tndtctment.
·
. Hysell and Johnson were among several people at an area along Leadtng Creek near the JUnction of Malloons Run Road and Dexter Road,
according to Prosecuting Anorncy John R. Lentes. Hysell assaulted Johnson who fell into the creek and drowned, he said.
Around 7: 15 p.m.• the Rutland and Central Dispatch squads of the
Meigs County Emerg~ncy Medical Service, accompanied by the Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Depanment. responded to the scene. Johnson's
body had been pulled 10 shore by the time emergency medical services '
arriYcd, Lentes said .
Johnson was transponed 10 Vctera~s Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
where he was pronounced dead. An autopsy is being performed. accordIContinued on Page 3)

Home
funding
in hand

THOUGHTFUL OWNER - Daniel du Plantler, 6, son of the Rev. David and Karen du Plantier
of P-oy, melle sure his fttmily's greyhound, Blue, hed plenty of cool water in his bowl. Water
and a cool , . _ to stay are eaaantlal to a pet'1 well-being during the hot aummer months.
Blue, inciclentllly, uauany atays inside the du Plantter homa.
a dog from the heat, but! disagree.
perature in smaller dogs than in
English sheepdogs. may not be as
If long-haired dogs aren't shaved
larger dogs, and shaving an animal
preuy when they're shaved. but I
during the hot. months, they require
in hot weather can help keep them
think they're more comfortable,"'
Krawsczyn said. "Some people
air conditioning at all times. or at
comfortable or healthy.
argue
that.
long
hair
helps
insulate
(Continued on Page 3)
"Long-haired dogs. such as

Meigs Chamber looks to Tuppers Plains
as 'hot spot' for efforts in development
She said her job is to help exist·
tary School and ongoing housing $8,000 in profits, she added.
By JIM FREEMAN
ing
industries grow and bring new
"'People thought it was the nicest
developments.
Sanllnel NeWI Staff
_
industries
into the region.
"'h's like a firecracker waiting to lunch stop in the nine years of
"Thppers Plains is going to be the
"Why
do economic developGOBA," she said. .
.
hot spot of Meigs County for awhile." go off," she said.
mentT
Curl
asked.
adds cusThe Pion Hound Days event held
Maison's was one of several
That is according to Meigs Countomers
to
our
service
community."
ty Chamber of Commerce Vice Pres- announcements made by chamber at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds was
The AEP Expon Program seeks to
also successful, drawinglllmosl 7,000
ident Sue Maison, who addressed the officers.
encourage
regional interest in overCounty Economic Development people during its three-day run, she
chamber during its monthly lunseas
exporting.
Some of the benefits
cheon at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Director Ron McDade said design said.
of
exporting
are
increased profits and
An informal survey of license
work is in progress on the Tuppers
Center near Pomeroy Tuesday.
a
decrease
in
seasonal
sales Ouctua· plates at the event_indicated people
Maison said a groundbreaking for Plains Industrial Park.
·
"Things are moving along quite attending from 29 states, it was tions, she said.
.the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
"Companies
thate.port
expect
to
reponed.
The
Shade
River
Coonnicely,"
he
said.
"Things
are
starting
·District will be held Thursday, July
grow
25
percent
faster
than
those
hunters
Club,
which
hosted
the
·17, II a.m. at the Orange Township. to fall into place ... we have plans on
:Volunteer Fire Department on State building a building there so we can national event, was asked by the who do not expon," she said.
However, exporting does involve
. National Plott Hound Association to
market it"
:Route 68 I West in Thppers Plains.
commitments
in time and money on
submit
an
application
to
hold
the
Tourism Commillee Chairwoman
"We're really excited about this. "
the
part
of
the
business. Exponers
event
in
the
future.
Judy Williams said the chamber has
·said Maison.
also
have
to
learn
about a country's
'They
loved
the
fairgrounds
and
Contractors have moved into town rehired former Tourism Director
language
and
customs.
loved
the
area."
said
Maison.
"'We're
Karin Johnson, who will resume
and brought in supplies for !he sew"It's exciting.'' she said.
gl_ad the coonhunters brought them
er project, she said, adding "that there work Monday.
The
AEP program offers financial
here.
They
filled
up
every
motel
in
a
The chamber-sponsored lunc)t at
was a time I didn't think I would ever
and
logistical
support to participating
the Rutland Civic Center, held for the 50-mile radius.."
.see that tuippen ."
companies.
Those. participating
·
Manha
Curl,
ecoimmic
develop· "Thppers Plains is going to be the recent Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure
auend
international
trade shows seek·hot spot of Meigs County for awhile,"
(OOBA), raised $4,500 for the cham- ment specialist for American Electric
ing
overseas
markets.
she said, referring 10 recent devclop- ber, Williams said. The chamber and Power's Southern Ohio Region,
In 1996,31 companies participat·
:ments in or near the community such other groups that held fundralsers at addressed the chamber on the AEP
ed
with a projected sales increase of
as the sewer district development, the, Civic Center realized about Export Program.
$9,270,000,
she said.
industrial site, new Eastern €Iemen-

·:u

I

Martha Curl

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Staff
Grant funds totaling over
$500.000 will go to provide housing
rehabilitation and assistance with
loan down payments to Meigs County homeowners.
According to Jean Trussell. the
county's grants administrator and fair
housing director, $600.000 in funds
from Rural Economic Community
Development. formerly Farmers
Home Administration, will be used to
assist some 30 families in buying
an&lt;!for rehabilitating homes.
The latest Community Housing
Improvement Program (CHIP) will
be divided into two categories: down
payment assistance and housing rcha-.
bilitation.
Under the down payment assistance program, prospective.low- and
moderate-income homebuyers ·will
be proVided grant funds up to $4,500
each to assist in down payments·and
closing costs. to enable home purchases.
In-kind assistance will he provided through three local banks: Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. in Pomeroy.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co.• and
-Home National. Bank of Racine .
Those banks will cooperate by red~c­
ing interest terms and closing costs
and by coordinating subsidy interests
from FmHA.
Participants in the program will be
able to choose the home they are buy.in g. and in the event that the homes
do not meet standards set forth by the
program, can receive further financial
assistance for rehabilitation. Those
funds. up· io· $10,000 per buyer.
would be used to address building .
code violations and safety -problems
with the home being purchased,
Trussell said.
In addition, 20 homeowners will
be selected to panicipate in CHIP
housing rehabilitation. A total of
$360,000 will be provided to lowincome home owners for housing
improv.ements. Unlike the previous
CHIP program, which included rental
propenies. only homeowners will be
eligible to participate.
The funds for rehabilitation will
be awarded as a grant to the homeowners. However. a mongage will he
placed on the home. and forgiven at
10 percent per year for 10 years. In
the event that the home is sold during that period. the mortgage will be
prorated and required paid before the
· lien is removed.
The application procedure will go
through the Fair Housing Office in
ac~ordance with eligibility standards
set forth by RECD. The proce&amp;s will
begin in the fall , Trussell said.
Administrative costs are also
included in the grant am oun t.

�Commentarr

Wednesday, July 9, 1997

By J.all Ancler8on
lind ... Moller

became enthralled with the.·musical rented dinner jackeiS for the black-tie
score to "Leonardo" when he fmt occasion.
I
NAtJRU -- Ruby Dediyo doesn't heard it played on tape in London by
The Nauru officials were more
laugh when she tells the story of this Duke Minks. Minks was a financial enthusiastic than the critics proved to
island's bjg venture into the theater
be, however. The show's premise, a
business·: "Leonardo." a musical
s~ love affair between LeonarJack Anderson do
· about an imaginary affair between
da'Vinci and his famous married
Mona Lisa and Leonardo da Vinci,
subject,
Mona Lisa, was fatally
and
which, following a brief run in Lonflawed. For da Vinci was a homodon, where it was greeted by some
sexual, and was twice hauled to .
JanMoller
rather unkind reviews, proved to be
court on charges of having ~ommita S3 million flop.
ted homosexual acts with a 17-yearPhosphate-rich guano once made adviser to the Nauru government, and ol4 artist's model.
the people of this small Pacific island he had once been manager of a 1960s
'The illogical tampering with hisrepublic the richest, per capita, in the one-hit pop group, Unit 4 + 2.
tory, a score that had high points but
world. But now the phosphate supply
·A(ter hearing the score, Emiu was mostly mediocre, and the show's
is nearly gone. And the island's lead- carne back to Nauru, hummed some guan&lt;&gt;-backing proved irresistible to
ers haven't helped matters by squan- bars for friends, played the tape to the London'.• critics --.who gave it the
dering tens of millions of dollars on Cabinet, and convinced government bird. "Bird droppings are bird dropill-fated
officials to back the show with Nau- pings wherever they land,"
"Le business
ard " · ventures.f
on o 1s one o the most ru's funds . With visions of$600 mil- harumphed the Daily Mail's reviewtragically humorous examples of the lion profits made by "1be Phantom er. "Marginally more entertaining
_.profligate way the island's elected of the Opera" and "Cats"dancing In than a pile of guano," penned anoth- '
leaders have operated. A couple years their heads, two do~n officials and er critic.
back, the chainnan of the Republic of their spouses flew to London for the
Headline writers must have saliNauru's Finance Corp., Kelly Emiu, opening of " Leonardo." They even vated before tossing up: "An Offal
I

111 Court Sbeet, Pon'leloy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

•.

By

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Pubii8Mr

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW

G-llteneger

Controller

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- - - - - - -·- - - - - - -·_

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Prea
·
Recent Ohio editorials 9f statewide and national interest:
Springfield News-Sun, July 7
·
·
Even dyed-in-the-wool disbelievers in UFOs must be shaking their heads
at tbe Air Force's limp auempt IQ explain away the strange happenings outside Roswell, N.M.
·
.
After decides of intelligencc;-community stonewalling, how can the Air
Force seriously think. one speculative report can debunk what has become
a legend of extraterrestrial visits to Earth?
·
lt was downright silly for the Air Force to say the Pentagon was "con. fidem this will be the final word on the Roswell incident."
Washington officialdom has no one to blame but iiSelf for the doubts about
its version of events outside Roswell. When the alien story really begatl gathering momentum in the 1970s, the Air Force might have cleared up the matter if it had systematically dealt with the bizam: reports and admitted its failed
1947 balloon tests.
Instead, the culture of secrecy prevailed, and a flimsy rumor became a
folk myth.
·
. r

The Columbus Dispakb, July 4
Seat belt laws save lives. Ohioans ·who do not wear them should. Drivers go beltless at considerable risk.
.
But Ohio's mandatory seat-belt law should not be tightened in order to
· allow law-enforcement officers to stop motorists solely for seat-belt violations.
Government regulation is pervasive in the United States, from early childhood immunization laws to estate taxes when someone dies. State govern- 1
·. ment should be slow to find even more ways of intruding into our lives.
Under current law, officers must observe another traffic violation before
stopping a vehicle and citing the driver or any front-seat passenger for failure to wear a seat belt.
'The existing law isn't broken, let's not tty to fix it.
Ohio police officers do not need .another reason to stop otherwise lawabiding citizens.
Akron Beamn J0111'1181, July l
After three months of deliberation, the governor's task force on education formally unveiled its proposals to levarnp the state's system for funding public schools. As expected, .the recommendations. involve a. combination of tax increases and measures to improve performan£e in schools.
Critics have already attacked the plan. Many of their points have merit.
One element of the plan that deserves the closest scrutiny is a proposed
constitutional amendment that would designate state lawmakers as the final
word on what is·the "thorough and efficient" education required by t11e state
constitution. 'There are several risks in such a course, not' the least of which
is the threat to the balance of go-.;e.rnment powers.
Gov. George-Voinovich and Republican leaders have been grousing ever
since the Ohio Supreme Court declared in March the current system for funding public schools unconstitutional.
·
·
•
Now, in a bit of we'll fix tbem, they've proposed tilking a detounround
the courts.
The motives oflhe ·governor 3nd lawmakers are rather obvious. 'They
thought the courts were doing fine as Ions as they found the school-funding system passed constitutional muster.
.
Now the Supreme Court has said otherwise, and th~y want to np up the
. balance of powers.

the (Fremont) News-Messenger, July 1
The American Association of Retired Persons is urging retirees ·as well
as working-age people to contact their representatives in Congress and ask
thCm to oppose Senate Medicare proposals. . .
We agree that citizens should speak up on the 1ssue, ])ut we don't necessarily think the entire plan is off b~- __
.
.
'The plan would make wealthy sentor ctbzens pay h1gber Medocare·premiums and would raise the eligibility age from 65 to 67.
We believe it is reasonable to ask those who can afford it to pay more to
support tbe Medicare program.
Bu! we don't believe it's a sood idea to delay the benefits.
.
Raising the Medicare eligibility age to 67 will leave young retorees vulnerable. Given the push in recent years to ensure he~th protecnon for all
·citizens, it seems odd that government would be movmg to take away protection for adults for which there is no health insurance market.
·

s World
~~

Wednesday, July 9, 1~7

Show," "Gulls drop Leonardo in the
preposterous," "Critics scent failure
in guano gamble" and "Night of the ·
guano." 1be show closed after less
than a month: Aftvival of "South
Pacific" would have been a safer bet
for the Pacific island:
'Sources here, as well as in Australia, Fiji and tbe United States, have
told our associate Dale Van Atta of
some other Nauru investments that
have gone bad:
.
--The six-story CAE Link Building in Houston-- near NASA's Johnson Space Center '- suffered from
spalling, a condition where the concrete fell off in pieces from the building exterior. lt required $3.5 million
for a new black-glass exterior.
--The 15-year-old Eastern Gateway hotel projeci in the Marshall
Islands is still not finished. It has been
such an eyesore that the president of
the Marshall Islands has begged
Nauru to finish it. They have not, and
will not Why? When the ['iilipino
workers were angry about not being
paKt,fur'their .work, they poured concrete into the hotel's plumbing.
-- Even with a business they
should know, fertilizers, Nauruans
have not done well. In a joint venture
with India, they bac.ked construction
of the largest phosphate fertilizer
plant in Asia But Paradip Phosphates
Ltd. in southeast India lost so much
money that it would have gone bankrupt without huge subsidies from the
Indian government. Nauru eventually sold its 49 percent interest to an
Indian firm at a multi-million dollar
loss.
The editor of a respected regional publication (who asked not to be
named} summarized the plight of
Nauru: "Here was Nauru with a history of such affluence," he told us. in
an interview. "But having dug out all
their island for the phosphate so stupidly, they stupidly spent their money as welL 'They need to take the
blame themselves. They are in lotof
trouble because they have riot sa,ed
for a rainy day."
Jack Anderson and Jan MoHer
are writers for United Featqre
Syndicate, Inc.

All hail the public's smut sentries!
By Joseph Spear
Not enough credit is gi,en, in my
judgmen~ to the hundreds if not thousands of dutiful servaniS who work
the .!Jenches in the battle against
licentious film and literature.
We !ee the results of their labor all
the time. Disney gets boyconed.
Films get seized. So-called an gets
.· '
canned.
But w~o celebrates the upright cit·
izens who spend untold hours in tbe
search for smut and sacrifice the purity of their souls to study it and alert
us to it? No one, !hill's who.
I raise a glass (of grape juice) in
their honpr.
'
·What brings this notion to mind is
the recent business in Oklahoma
about "The Tin Drum." This is the
title of an anti-Nazi novel wriUen by
German prize-winning author Gunter
Grass in 1959, and of a movie made
from the book in 1979. The film has
heretofore been regarded as a cinematic classic, but a Pennsylvania pr&lt;&gt;- ·
fessor made ihe mistake of asking a
class to critique it, and a student
objected, and a conservative Christian talk-show host took up the battle,
and the director of an organization

Coun justices read ba&gt;lldy hooks and
view dirty movies in order to judge
their legality? Who knows the misery
tbey endured when forced' to stog
through Molly's racy soliloquy in
James Joyce's "Ulysses"? Their
Joseph Spear
heroism can only be compared to the
first hominid who ate an oyster.
a brief sex scene between a yourig
And what of the clerks who were
boy and a teen-age girl. A staie judge compelled to research steamy Interdeclared the movie obscene and net sites for tbe recent decision on
police . fanned out to seize every wbetber the Communications Decencopy in Oklahoma City -,even track- cy -Act was constitutional? The pain.
ing down two Blockbuster customers The suffering. The bours. Did you
who had dared rent the thing. 1be hear anyone complain? I did not ·
There are some famous names in
authorities in Thlsa went to the pubthe
fight against indecency -- the Rev.
lic library for a copy and found it had
Jerry
Falwell of the late Moral Majorbeen checked out only eight time~ in
ity,
the
Rev. Donald Wildmon of the ·,
12 years, but now people were signAmerican
Family Association and so
ing up to reserve it
We have a horde of heroes here: on. But the roster of stalwarts also
A student, a radio host, a watchdog, includes legions of ordinary folk .
A few years ago, the editors of
compliant Blockbuster employees,
police. But the true star is the judge " Biblical Archaeology Review" .
who took time out from a murder tri- assiduously reviewed photos of
al and screwed up his courage to ancient oil lamps to spare their more
scrutinize the film for filth. Thanks to skinish readers tbe pain of viewing
him, Okl;dlomans will not be cor- sordid images of "GrecO-Romans" in
rupted by "The Tin Drum."
. the act of copulating. 'They decided to
· Who has ever taken notice of the include the pictures'with perforations
dutiful manner in which Supreme for easy removal.
called Oklahomans for Children and
Families called the law, and soon it
was curtains for "The Tin Drum."
The objection: The film includes

In 1991, a man in Tampa, Fla.,
videotaped, through open window ·
blinds, a couple making love in tbeir
condominium and then handed tbe
tape over to tbe police. The lovers
were subsequently arrested for lewd
conduct which could have been
viewed by children. The charges
were later dropped, but you have to
appreciate the dedicated neighbor's
_willingness to expose himself to
such a nuisance for tbe benefit of the
common good.
Two years ago, policemen in
Howard County, Md.. went undercover to investigate massage parlors.
In order to obtain "&lt;:redible, reliable
information," the officers conducted
a seven-month probe during which
they tolerated the massage of their
"erogenous areas ." My guess is
these selfless defenders of morality
worked overtime in this prolonged
investigation, but it would suoprise if
they asked for extra pay.
Public service is its own reward.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

GOP tax· packages are a J~at betrayal
By Joseph

Perk~l

f~r

i~ ~eally

pages long. So what did Reps . . lion over the same s]ialo,
cans have put forward
rather
My supply-side friends may Armey •. Archer and their fellow mstance, of you sell som
kat a minuscule. It adds up to $85 billion
accuse me of heresy, but I just can't Repubhcans do? 'They cobbled profit, the Repubhcans gov ou a tax over five years. Considering that the
muster much enthusiasm for tbe · together a tax b1ll that ran 460 pages cut But1f you buy an aorhne ticket, 1990and 1993 tax hikes amounted to
Republican tax cut bills. I give tbe
the &lt;J?Psocks you with a tax hike.
a total of $538 billion, taxpaying
GOP some credit for ·proffering
Joseph Perkins
. ThtsSimplyperpetuatesoneofthe Americans will still be $453 billion
Americans the "first tax cut in 16
b1ggest flaws woth the. present tax in the hole when and if the Republiyears." But I hardly think this is the in legislative language (not including system. It prefers cenatn categones can tax package is enacted.
best that the party of Bill Archer, R- explanation). Over in the Senate, the of taxpayers over others.lnd~ed, rm
· Tlte most amusing thing is that
Texas, and Bill Roth, R-Del., (authors GOP tax bill carne in at a whopping aU for cuttmg taxes for famthes wnh both the Republican leadership in
of the House and Senate tax cut bills) 662 pages.
choldren, people sellmg houses, sur- Congress and the Clinton White
can do.
The Republican tax bills l'l'&lt;luired v1vors tnhentmg· property, parents House are suggesting that the $85 bitJust a year ago, Republicans were so many pages because lawmakers with kids in college, folks saving for lion in net .tax reduction is generous.
talking about a revolutionary change included hundreds of new tax provi- reurement
. .
~utthe fed~!ral government is taking
.in the tax system. TI!'U' recognized sions. Because it is all so complicat- . But tbere are mol11ons of taxpaytn Sl.6tnll1?n each year. 1be tax cuts
that the existing tax code had become ed, news accounts provide only an mg Amencans who are childless, amount to httle more than I percent
hopelessly complex with its five dif- overview. So most Americans think ~ho ?wn no home, .who ~x~t no of revenue.
.
ferent individual income tax rates, that the tax bills have only a few tnhentance, who have no kids tn colI, for one, expected more from a
eight different corporate rates and · components: The $500-per-child tax lege, who have no IRA. The Repub- Republican tax bill. I was hoping for
hundreds of tax deductions, credits, credit; the capital gains tax cut; the lican tax bill does nothing for these a measure that would make the tax
exemptions and exclusions for indi- e.state tax cut; the higher education categories of taxpayers. But surely code simpl~r and flatter, that would
viduals and businesses.
tax credit; the expanded Individual they deserve a tax cut too.
return more of the dollars to tax paySo Republicans promised . us a Retirement Accounts.
All taxpaying Americans took a ers that the 1990 and 1993 tax hikes
simpler tax system. Dick Anney, RBut Jim Miller, counselor. to Citi- hit in the pocketbook wben George took from them, and that would
Texas, the House Majority Leader, zens for a Sound Economy, has ·Bush raised taxes by $263 billion in reduce the tax burden on all, rather
proposed a flat tax on individual and found the devil in the details of the l 1990and Bill Clinton raised taxes by than select categories, of taxpayers.
1 business income. We'd mail in our
Republican tax biDs. He notes that the ·another $275 billion in 1993. So . Alas, the GOP tax package falls
:tax returns on a postcard, he guaran- House ·version contained 6S provi- every taxpaying American should woefully short on all these counts.
teed: Archer, the House Ways and sions that reduced taxes, 101 that are share in whatever taX relief the fedJoseph Perkins is a columnist
' Means Commiuee chairman, pr&lt;&gt;- technically neutral and 36 that raise ' eral government ultimately prqvides. for tbe San Diego Union-Tribune
posed a national consumption tax to taxes. 11Je Senate version listed 54
As it is, the net tax cut Republi- and a commentator for MSNBC.
repltice the income tax. That would provisions that reduce taxes, 98 that
spell t!le end of the IRS as we know .are oetltal and 42 that raise taxoa.
One year ago: Fonner Colorado·Gov. Richard Lamm began a drive for
· it, he asserted.
·
·. This brings me to another problem
·the presidential nomination of Ross Perot's fledgling Reform Pany. AuorYet, the Republican tax bills go in with the Republican tax bill. While it
the complete opposite direction of a does cut various and sundry taxes by ney Melvin Belli died in San Francisco at age 88. 'The National League won
simpler, flauer tax system. Indeed, $135 billion over the next five years, the All-Star game, defeating the American League 6-0 in Philadelphia.
the present tax code is already 4,000 · it also raises certain taxes by $50 bil-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Board employ$
two athletic directors

Notice

forecast for

Todd C. Johnson

MICH.

•

IToledo I 71r I

Todd C. Johnson; 30, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, July 8, 1997.
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home Pomeroy
Chapel.

.Meigs announcements ·

IND.

~

r

Fund established
.

•lcolt!mbusl·84· I

W.VA.

Chancey's Exxon in Syracuse is
accepting food l\nd money for the
Eakins family of Syracuse, which
was burned out of its borne the morning ofJuly 3.

VBS piiUinecl
"Circle of Friends" is the theme
for Vacation Bible Schoot at Pomeroy
United Methodist Church, July 14-18
from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Pre-registration
is appreciated, and may be done by
calling 992-7616.
'

Meetlq toaqbt
Rudand Village Council will meet
tonight at 7 at the Civic Center to
complete Tuesday night's meeting,
· which was recessed due to an emergency medical service run Thesday
night.
.,

Reports due
The Meigs County Farm Service
Agency (FSA) announces that final
reporting for all crops including vegetables and CRP participants is July
15, according to County Executive
Director David Fox. Producers participating in the farm program are
encouraged to visit the office and certify. Vegetable growers need to c~r­
tify to remain eligible for lhe NAP
program, should they have a loss.

Danee to be held

IIIIAI _ _

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

""

OHIO Weather
Thunday, July 10

Nauruans squander precious funds

.The Daily·.Sentinel
'LsttJDtwid in 1948

.•

Page2

;:~=~--------------

Pieasant weather on tap
for latter part of the week

By The Associated Press
High pressure will produce sunny skies and cooler temperatures across
Ohio heading into the weekend, the National Weather Service said.
Highs on Thursday will be in the upper 70s following lows tonight in the
.50s. A rerun of that weather picture is likely on Friday before warmer temperatures move in.
By Sunday, the mercury will hit 90 in parts of the state.
·
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 105 degrees in 1936 while the record low was 49 in 1963. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:02 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6: 12 am. "

A dance will be held at ~ Hartford Community Building Saturday,
8 to II p.m. Saturday. Rocky Mountain Boys will provide the music .

eigh~

calls

.Pomeroy man faces charges

Keep 'em cool in summer

Eastern accepts resignations
· The board approved change or~rs
regarding t~e replacement of the
high school roof, approving a heav-·
ocr material than was originally specified in the project. A heavier base
was approved for the new dtiveway
as instrumental music instructor and in front of the high school and the
·
band director, and Scott Wolfe as new elementary building.
The ne&gt;l regular board meeting
girls' varsity basketball coach, yearbook advisor and eighth grade class will be held on Wednesday, July 30 •
advisor, were accepted. The board at 6 p.m. at Tuppers Plains Elemenagreed to repost all remaining sup- tary School.
plemental coRtral:ts.

Meeting in special session on
Monday, the Eastern Local Board of
Education approved two resignations
and discussed change orders reliuing
to the district's building program.
The resignations of Susan Climer

'

Leadoff witness voiced concerns over Huang's role

WASHINGTON (AP) - 1be
Democratic Party's finance director
in 1995 warned against hiring John
Huang to raise money from Asian
Americans because he was concerned about Huang's fund-raising
Units of the Meigs County Emer- squad, Salem Township VFD and practices, Senate sources say.
Richard·Sullivan, the leadoff witgency Medical Service recorded eight Pomeroy Rescue with dive team
ness at the Senate's hearings on
'calls for assistance Tuesday. Units assisted (see related story);
8:45 p.m., Beech Street, Middle- campaign-fund raising abuses, preresponding included:
port,
Carl .Demoskey, VMH.
pared to testify today that he voiced
CENTRAL DISPATCH
MIDDLEPORT
warnings several months before
7:49a.m.. Childrens Home Road,
9:
II
p.m.,
Pearl
Street,
Lincoln
·
.
Huang
left his. Commerce DepartPomeroy, Alice Brown, Veterans
Smi'th,
HMC.
ment
job
to become a top DemocraMemorial Hospital;
POMEROY
tic
Party
fund-raiser,
said the Senate
9:48 a.m., Rocksprings Road,
II:~
I
p.m.,
Rocksprings
Rehabilsources, speaking on condition of
. Edna Carsey, VMH;
3:29p.m., Old Route ·7, Pomeroy, itation Center, Rheda Bing, O'Bieness anonymity.
Sen. 11wl Cochran, R-Miss., said
Marvin Yeauger, Holzer M~dical Memorial Hospital.
Sullivan
would testify how Huang,
RACINE
Center:
7:29
p.m
.•
volunteer
fire
depan.
wh,o is expected to be a central focus
7:'15 p.m., Malloons Run and
Dexter roads, Todd Johnson and ment to Ross Road, Portland, struc- of tbe hearings, came to be hired as
Melinda Stanley, VMH, Rutland ture fire at Vicky Pullins residence, a Democratic fund-raiser.
Bashan VFD assisted.
He would detail how then-depQty
White House chief of staff Harold
Ickes "presided over weekly money
meetings," with officials at the
(Continued from Page 1)
Democratic National Cornmiuee,
Cochran said.
ing to Lentes.·
.
Sullivan, who has since left the
. Also transported to VMH was ~elinda Sianley, who may face charges
DNC.
was expected to testify that his
of interfering in the murd~r mve.sto&amp;@tt~n . Lentcs satd. Hysell may also
concerns about Huang were based on
face additional charges stemming from his cunduct after emergency.and
his previous fund-raising practices
law enforcement officials, including Sheriff James M. Soulsby. arroved
and his associates on the financial
at the scene, he added.
.
side of Democratic politics, the
. "He has a long involvc'!lent in criminalmauers and has ~~n to prison
sources said.
on two separate occasions on dnig and theft-related charges, Lentes saod
Among other things, Sullivan had
of Hysell.
questions about donations to the
DNC that Huang arranged when he
was a top executive of an Indonesian
conglomerate's U.S. operations, said
(Continued from Page 1)
on their ears. Krawsczyn recomtbe sources.
mends a sun block with an SPF
the very least, a cool basement"
There apparently ~as an influx of
factor of ·at least 45. No special
Cats require summer care simforeign money into tbe 1996 presisunscreens arc required for pets.
ilar to that for dogs, although most
dential election, and "we will be
Sunscreen designed for humans is
cats are free-roaming, and are able
sufficient, as long as it provides
to seek cooler conditions on their
adequate ultraviolet protection.
own, Cool.water and acool resting
Prosecuting Attorney John
place are still vital to the health of
Lentcs said that his office has
cats during the summer.
investigated several complaints of
Another important' consideracruelty
to animals in past months,
tion for pet owners should be pro. COLUMBUS (AP) - Members
and
although
each case varies
tecting tbeir pets from too much
of
a House committee studying Gov.
according to circumstance, those
sun, Krawsczyn said. Fair-skinned
George
Voinovich 's school-funding
who mistreat their pets are subject
cats and dogs, especiall'y those with
plan
said
Tuesday that they need
to criminal investigation and the
pinkish skin and white hair, like
more
information
and the one thing
possible filing of misdemeanor
white poodles, are espec.ially susthey
won't
gelmore
time.
ceptible to·carcinoma on their ears · charges.
Hearings
opened
in
tbe
House and
A free brochure about;aring for
and other exposed parts.
Senate
finance
commiuees
as Grepets during the summer is available
Krawsczyn said that these fairgory
Browning,
the
governor's
budfrom the Humane Society of the
skinned pels should be kept out of
get
director,
and
John
Augenblick,
the
United States. A self-addressed,
the sun as much as possible. If they
plan's
principal
author,
testified
stamped envelope · should be·
are left in the sun, plenty of sunmailed to "Hot Car;- HSUS Great . before both panels.
screen should be used, especially
They told lawmakers that the plan
Lakes Regional Office; 745 Haskrepresents
the best strategy, given the
ins St., Bowling Green, Ohio
time
·
constraints
. set by the Ohio
The Daily Sentinel 43402-1692.
Supreme Court and state election
&lt;USPS 213-961)
laws.
Publimed every 11hemoon. M~nday 1hrough
The legislation must win the supFriday. Ill Coun S1 .. Pomeroy. Otlio. by the
port Of tbe 60 House members and 20
Ohio Valley Publi~ing CompanyJCilll1neu Co.,
senators needed to put a constituPomeroy. Ohio 45169, Ph. 992-21S6. Seco~d
clan postage pnid ar Pomeroy, Ohio.
tional amendment before the voters.
Am Ele Po- .~.................. A2"1.o
Akzo
......................................
&amp;&amp;\
The deadline for the Nov. 4 ballot is
Mtmber: The Asr.ociarcd Pn!u. aM the Ohio
AmrTech ...............................19'A.
Aug. 6.
.
New1paper As.!iOcialion.
Aahllnd 011 ....................~ •••••••• 49
The
Supreme
Court ruled in
AT&amp;T ............,.......................35"!.
POSTMASTER: Send addn:~' correction!'. to
March
that
the
state's
school-funding
The D•ily Scn1inel, _Ill Court St .. Pomeroy.
Bank Oree ........... ,..................48'Ohio45769.
·
&amp;¥Stem was unconstitutional and gave
Bob Evan• ..............................17
Borg-Werner ..............,..........54\
the Legislature one year to create a
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Champion ...........................·••17\
By Cariitr el' Metor Reule
Chann Shp1 ............................s\
One Week .......... ....................................,... $2.00
One Moolh ........:....................................... $8.10
City Holding ..........................32'1.
One Ycor ...................... ........................ $104.00
Fedentl Mogul .......................36\
Gannett
...............................106'SINGLE COPY PRICB

EMS units log

l'layers to meet
Eastern girls, grade 7-12, have an
interest in playing basketball should
meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Those attending are to take shoes and
shorts.

Ditmer to be held
VFW Post 9053 Ladies Auxililll)',
TuppeB Plains, dinner Sunday with
serving to begin at noon. Ham or
chicken dinners, adults, SS; children
under 12,. $2.50.

The Meigs Local School District now has two athletic directors following action by the board of education Tuesday night.
Ron Logan was hired as girls athletic director, while PJ. Woods was hired
as boys athletic director.
The tWo will split the job and the pay. according to Superintendent Bill
1
Buckley.
'
.
In other personnel matters. the board ac,cepted tbe resignation of Jennifer
L. Wolfe as a teacher at Meigs Middle Schbol, effective Aug. ·4. and the resignation of Rebecca Trent as kinderganen teacher at Pomeroy.Eiementaty
Scbo~ .
.
I
'
The board atso created a new special education teacher's position at
Pomeroy Elementary SchooL
The board renewed its contract with the Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional Resource Center at a cost of $2,373 for .the 1997-98 school
year, and membership in the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding a1 a cost of $1,186.50 for the 1997-98 school year.
The July 22 meeting will be beld at I 005 E. State St., Athens, for the purpose, of negotiations. Buckley said the mediator can only come as far south
as Athens.
.
.
·
Present were Buckley, Board President John Hood and board members
Scott Walton. Larry Rupe and Norman Humphreys.

wanting to know who knew about it,
who should have known about it and
whether there was an attempt to cover it up," said Sen. Fred Thompson,
R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee.
Senate investigators have determined that in 1992 and 1993, Huang
directed ~100,000 in illegal, foreign
money to congressional and state
candidates when he was a top executive attbe Lippo Group, an Indonesian conglomerate, a Senate aide said.
The donations made by a Lippo
real-estate subsidiary called Hip Hing
Holdings Ltd. included $65,000 the
Los Angeles' based company gave to
the DNC, federal election records
show.
DNC spokesman Steve Langdon
declined to comment on Sullivan's
testimony.
Sullivan first learned of plans to
bring Huang to the DNC as a fulltime fund-raiser at a meeting ~t a
downtowrt hotel with then-DNC
Chairman Donald L. Fowler, Marvin
Rosen, the party's finance director,
and Huang, sources said .
The hotel meeting occurred in
Septem.ber 1995 on a day that Huang
had also met with President Clinton
in the Oval Office to discuss his
desire to become a political fund-raiser for the president's re-election bid.
Huang attended the White House
meeting with James Riady, son of the
founder of Lippo.
Huang is a major focus of tbe congressional and Justice Department
investigations of illegal campaign
fund-raising practices. He raised $3.4
million for the DNC, $1.6 million of
which tbe party returned after deter-

mining it came from questionable for eleciion-law violations.
sources.
Cobb's offer, announced by Sen.
Huang has been identified by John Glenn, D-Ohio, was greeted
Senate investigators as encouraging with skepticism by Thompson.
Buddhist nuns and monks to serve as
Under Cobb's offer, Huang would
"straw donm's" of political contribu- · testify without seeking immunity
tions.
from prosecution for espionage or
Huang has refused to testify disclosing classified infonnation
before the committee, citing his Fifth
Amendment right to remain silent. ·
But his attorney, Ty Cobb, on Tuesday offered to allow Huang to testify if the Senate panel gave his client
immunity to prevent his testim(\ny
from being the basis for prosecution

Semi-gloss acrylic
latex for basement
floors, patloa,
walks, steps,
porches· Interior
.and exterior.

PICKENS
HARDWARE

__________ _,

MASON,
W.VA.

'----------.~~,
IIAttGIMMTIMUIU'IUIDlY,.,_Y

L

·-~

Lawmakers plead for more
time to· study funding plan
system. that is fair and adcq~atc to
Ohio's 1.8 million public school students.
Voinovich and Republican leaders
responded la't week with a plan,that
raises the sales tax from 5 cents to 6
cents on every dollar and

a~ion .

That may not be enough time for
lawmakers to give the plan a thorough reading. some Hou~e committee members said.

'Stocks

Dally

H

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

3!i Cents

Sublcn'btn not ~iring to pay the conier may
~~ in Wvance direct 10 The Dally Sentinel
Ofllltlllft, !ix or 12 month buht Credit will be
aivcn carrier each week.
No IIUb&amp;aipdoo by rilail permined in ueu
whert homt cilrrier service iiiii.YaiiDble.

Pubtlaher raenes the riJhlto ldju•t riles dur·
inJ lhe •ubscriptioa period. SyblcriptJon riM
~'" . ., be i m p - by choJiatna die

d11ntUon oflbe ••bsaipdon.

MAILSl!JJ5CRIP110NS
, _ MtlpCoonty
l! ................................................. $17.30
l' ................................................ $53.8'l
~' Weeb............................................... SIOB6
Melp c-,
l' ...,, .......................................119.:8

""'""OiooJdl
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l

GoodYMr ............................·.63~

Kmarf.•••;........................~ .......11\
Lllnda End ...............................n
Ltd; .....~ .................................20"J.

Oak Hill Flni ...........................20'A.

ova .......................................aa~

OM Vllley ............................-41\
.37"Prem Flnl •••,...........................
Aockweii ..............................IO'RD-Shtll ...............................55'-

PeoP••• ................................ 1n

Sh~a .........- ........................8

• . . . . .k ................................45

Wendy'
• ····-·························2'!1Worthlngton ••. - ..................... 1••

-·-·-

Stock ,.porta an the 10:3~
a.m. quotas prawklld by Advwl
of Gllllpolle.
. .

increase~

school spending by more than $1 billi.on annually. It also proposes a cut
in property. taxes and a tax break for •
parents with schoolchildren.
The Senate has scheduled a floor
vote on the plan for July 22. then it
would go to the House for consider-

·

Hospital .news

Communiversity
13dnd Concert
Under the ·Direction of John Climer,
.Director, Ohio University Band. A
Court St., Pomeroy
Thurs., July 10
·6:30p.m.

Holzer Medical Center
Dlscharties July 8 - James
McCausland, Dorothy McGuire, Earl
Darst, Della Cox, Emma Forthe, .
(Published with penoission)

ADOLPH'S
DAIRV VALLEY

Bring your lawn chair and
enjoy a ndaxing evening ofgreat music.
.
.
Come early for 'llrt in the Park," coordinated
, by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

�Wednud8y, July 9, 1897

'

Sports

The Daily

Sentin~!

'

AL beats National
League 3-1 ·in 68th
All-Star Game

Possible license
revocation may put end to Tyson's career
.
.

By TIM DAHLBERG

. "This game was dedicat~ to her.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Sandy The rest of the season will be dediAlomar, like most eve!)' baseball fan, cated to her."
Chances are, the rest of \he seahas seen the play a million times.
' Pete Rose streaks around third, bar- son will not provide anything as
rels over Ray Fosse and scores the entenaining as the Walker-Johnson
winning run for the National League. duel in the second inning.
Walker, who leads the l)l&amp;jo~ in
On Tuesday night. it was time for
batting at .398 and the NL with 25
Alomar's tum to go full tilt.
Showing a Cleveland catcher homers, hooked up with Johnson ,
could deliver an All-Star hit as well . baseball's most overpowering pitchas absorb one, Alomar sprinted the er, in their much-anticipated lefty vs.
.·
whole way after connecting for a lefty meeting.
Last month, Walker sat out an
two-run homer that gave the ALa 3·
I victory and stopped its three- imerleague game when his Colorado Rockies took on Johnson and
:game losing skid.
the ~attle Mariners, but there was
"I was flying around the bases. I
don't think I've ever run so fast no ducking him this time.
Johnson, in a scene reminis~nt of
around the bases," said Alomar,
who takes a 30-game hitting streak his 1993 All-Star duel with John
Kruk, threw the fi~t pitch way over
into the second half.
On a night full of treats for the Walker's head - it was far less than
I 00 mph and nowhere near the dansellout crowd of 44,916 at Jacobs
ger
zone- and hit the backstop on
f'ield ,- the fans got to boo Albert
the
fly.
Belle and laugh at the Larry WalkWalker, laughing, turned his heler-Randy Johnson matchup - Alomet
around, moved to the other batmar's.tiebreaking shot in the seventh
ter's box and took a pitch foi a ball
inning was the topper.
. The AL cut its deficit in 40-27-1 . right-handed .
Walker then went back to batting
Edgar Martinez and Javy Lopez
left-handed, and drew a walk.
also homered as every run scored on
"He had fun with it, and so did I,
a long ball; the same could be true
next summer when the game moves and I think the fans did, too." Johnson said.
to Coors Field in Denver.
"It was kind of humid out there .
Alomar backed out of the hOme .
THERE IT GOES I -'- The Cleveland Indiana' 9andy Alomar watchrun derby a day earlier, saying he The ball just slipped out of my
hand," he grinned. "Hopefully, es his long drive claar the fence for a two-run homer In the aevenlh
wasn't a power hitter. But his drive
Inning of the 68th All-Star Game Tue8day nlghlllt Cleveland's Jacoba
over the left-field wall off San Fran- things will be different the next time
Field. The blaet helped the American League ,..... beet the NetlonI face him."
cisco's Shawn Estes made Alomar
al League 3-1. (AP)
That could be Aug. 28 when inter·
the first · player to hit an All-Star
league play resumes. Among the
homer in his home park since Hank
Aaron at Atlanta ln 1972, and the ·games that night is Seattle at Colorado, possibly providing a rematch
filS! ever to win the MVP award in
·of the former Montreal minor league
his own stadium.
"Well, I kept his hitting streak teammates.
"It was a fun at-bat. It all worked
alive for him," Estes said. "I wouldout.
I'm just glad it's over," said
n't have picked anybody to hit a
Walker,
who last batted right-handhome run off of me, but I'm happy
ed
in
instructional
ball in 1989. "He
for him that he did it. It's a greai time
and
I
have
been
great friends for
for .llim, playing at home, the hitting
years.
l'mlooking
forward
to he and
stml)t, and the fans obviously love
The Meigs American Legion Metts pitched the final two innings
.
"
·
his
wife
coming
to
Denver
so
we can baseball team split four games in the and Glouster scored four runs off of
hJm.
take them out to dinner."
Estes walked Bernie Williams
American Legion July Fourth Base- him to make things interesting, but
Kansas City's Jose Rosado ball Toumamentlield last weekend jlt Meigs held on for tl)e win.
with one out and Alomar homered
wound up the winner despite giving Glouster Memorial Park.
one out later.
In the rematch Glouster scored in
u~~oa tying home run to Lopez in the
Before Alomar's. drive, Indians
Meigs picked up wins over Bel- every inning en route to a Il-l win
se~enth. Mariano Rivera of the New
catche~ were known fo.r only one
pre ~d· Glouster, and lost games to over Meigs.
York Yankees pitched,a perfect ninth ; Logan and had Glouster bounce
thing in All-Star play. It was 1970
Glouster pounded Meigs starter
for a save, finishing a combined back to defeat them in a rematch.
when Rose ran over Fosse to score
for 13 hits, while Sam Scchkar held
the winning run in the 12th inning at - three-hitter for eight AL pitchers.
In the Logan game MJ&gt;igs held a · the local. team to only five hits in
· Every position player selected for 9·4 lead in the fifth inning, but picking up the win.
Riverfront Stadium.
·
the game got to play except Belle, Logan came back and scored seven
"I remember seeing the play with
Glouster then won it on tourna- ·
and that seemed fine by him .
Pete Rose," Alomar .said. "That's
runs in the fifth inning to post a I I· ment with a 5-2 win over Belpre on
Belle was heCkled non-stop when 10 win.
kind of a difficult play to swallow for
a three hitter by Brady Trace. No .
his ·Chicago White Sox visited the
a catcher."
·Jeremiah Bentley was the losing other details on the games· were
Alomar and his brother, All-Star . Jake in early June, and the former pit;:her in relief of Cory Williams. available.
Indians star responded with an Jared Friesner scored the winning
·second baseman Roberto, had pinned
obscene
gesture. Belle, who skipped run in the fifth inning on a single off
•
black ribbons to each other's jersey
Monday's
workouts,
was
booed
dursleeve in memory of their grandthe bat of Josh Roggenshach.
ing pregame introductions.
mother, Tonee Valazquez, who died
Meigs scored six runs in the
By late in the game, Belle was eighth inning in the second co.ntest
last week at age 96.' She was buried
gone from the dugout, safely out of to post a I0-4 win over Belpre.
in Puerto Rico on Monday.
sight
inside the locker room.
· "I know my grandmother is in a·
Matt Dill went the distance scat"After what happened to Albert tering nine hits to pick up the win for
better place," Sandy Alomar said.
the last time he was here; and what Meigs. Belpre came back from an
happened on the third base line early 3-0 deficit to take a 4-3 lead
before the game- he didn' t choose into the eighth inning, but Meigs batnot to play. He said he'd be uncom- ted around and scored six runs in the
fortable playing," Al manager Joe eighth to post the win.
Torre said.
In the first game against Glouster,
Physicals for athletes interested in
Notes: There was . a tornado Joe Kirby slammed a three run .
playing sports at Meigs High School
watch in the Cleveland area, and home run in a five run sixth inning
for the upcoming school year can
there were sprinkles in the late to key the Meigs win.
take their physicals Thursday from I
innings. The last time an All -Star
Brad Davenport was the starter
until 4 p.m. at Veterans Memorial
game was postponed because of bad and winning pitcher for Meigs, Dan
Hospital.
•
weather was 1969.

Meigs Legionn~ites
win two of four
games in tourney

LL Tournament continues

Halley and Frazier combined in
The Gallipolis Yankees and Bidwell I posted wins · in first round the loss fanning eight and walking
· action on the second day of the Bill just one.
Gallipolis hitte~ were Hardy two
H11bbard Memorial Little League
singles,
McKinnis two doubles,
Tournament at Syracuse Municipal
Wheeler
a
double and single, and
.Park Tuesday night.
In what looked lobe a high scor- Taylor a double. The lone Rio hitter
ing game initially, the Rio Grande- was S. Pullins with a single.
Gallipolis Yankees contest turned
The second· game was close at
into a pitching shoot-out, but when first, but Bidwell! eventually boried
the guns had quit smoking, Gallipo- Green 113-3. Bidwell took a 2-0 lead
inthe first on walks to C. Hollonlis claimed a hard-fought 5-3 win.
Rio Gmtide scored two runs in the baugh and D. Joh11son, while R.
top of the fim when D. Burke, A Allen singled home two runs for a 2CorQotte, and C. Burns each walked. 0 Bidwell lead. That came ort the
An error on a passed balfand ground heels of a 1-2-3 inning by hurler C.
out led to the two runs.
Brown who pitched a great game in
· · In the bottom half of the inning the win.
Hardy walked and ' with one out
Green tied it in the second on conMcKinnis doubled for the Gallipolis secutive singles to Miller, Wiseman, .
Yankees, sparking a three run rally to Russell, and Shrader. Bodimer was
take the lead. McKinnis scored on a hit by il pitch to load the bases, but
Wheeler single, the Bias was hit with a runner was hit by the ball to end the
a pitch and an error let home anoth- possible big inning, the score 2-2.
er run to make the score 3-2 in favor
Bidwell scored two more in the
of the Yankees.
second on walks toR. Shairett.and
After a 1-2-3 inning registered by D. Berry with two erro~ ·allowing
McKinnis, Gallipolis came back to each runner to come home. Between
scon:·another run in the second when walks Ashworth retired the side on
with two out, Angelo Hardy singled three straight strikeouts.
and scored on a Taylor double.
In the fourth, Green scored on a
Rio threatened in the third, wheA Merola single and Bodimer double,
C. Burns walked and Caldwell but in the bottom ofthe some frame
reached on an error but were strand· Bidwell erupted for four runs (8-3 ),
ed.
then added five more the next round
for
a 13-3 finale.
Halley retired the side despite a
Wheeler double in the third, then
Bidwell hitters were Johnson with
was perfect in the fourth excepting two singles, Hollunbaugh a single,
another Hardy single.
and R. Allen a triple and single. For
Green.
hitters were Bodimer with a
Gallipolis added a another run in ·
double,
Wiseman a double and sinthe fifth when MCKinnis doubled for
.
gle,
and
singles by Miller, Russell,
the second time and scored when
·
and
Shrader
.
. Wheeler reached on an error. WheelBrown went the distance for the
er came on for a good inning of relief
as he and winner McKinnis com- win, fanning six and walking just
' bined for a one hitter, fanni.ng I 0 and one. Ashworth and Bodimer com'
walking nine.
bined in the loss.

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OF

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DOOR .CLOSING SALE!
Never again will you see these prices,
we w~nt everything to go! Our loss is
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r-gret... Last Cha~ce for Below
. Wholesale Ba~ains. ·
c;ash &amp; Carry- Items "As-Is"
·
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•

Graf expects to return to Grand Slam circuit in time for 1998 season

y ea h
'
f ·r ee d om

..

..

i'rvan, Yates
dissolve
partnership.

r.

________ _I~Q:..~2'!.Z~..z.!~!!l£~J'J..Q.!!!.o..; ______ .,

CHARL01TE, N.C. (AP) . Winston Cup driver Ernie Irvan and
NASCAR team owner Robert Yates .
are going their 'separate ways.
Yates owner of Robert Yates
Racing, ' said Tuesday he is not
renewing lrvan 's contract.
.
"I've worried and wrestled .Wtth
it for more than a year and it's not a
simple, one-answer deal." said Yates,
who also fields Fords for Dale Jarrett in NASCAR's Winston Cup
stock car series.
lrvan, 38, said he will announce
his plans for 1998 in the near future.

!CEIJU)S NAME(S) &amp; AGE(S): - - - - - - - - - -

~l'llooae No

1

Cincinnati Bengals search for alternatives
. for training camp fields ·

"BABY SENTINEL"

1be Above lnfonnatloa WID Be Used In Ad
Submitted By:

"·

Sacramento Kings acquire St. Jean and Funderburke

:

The Daily Sentinel

.

said. "Even if he pleads guilty we' ll
still have a few questions to ask him.
A:nd if he decides to defend himself
011 the charges, we' ll put him on the
stand and he will be subjected to
numerous questions."
It will be the second time in five
years that the 31 -year-old '!Yson
·finds his futun: in the hands of a
group of people who .will decide his
fate.
Unlike February 1992, when he
was convicted of raping Desiree
Washington, however, '!Yson will not
do time this time. He served three
years in an Indiana prison and is still
on probation.
That prison sentence, though,
seems to have affected his boxing'
abilities, and an indefinite license
revocation could erode those skills
further at an age when heavyweight
boxe~ generally bemn to decline.
e•
"I don't think you
will see the
same '!Yson again," veteran trainer
Angelo Dundee said. "His skills will
definitely erode. They already erodcd durinR his time in prison."

CLEVELAND (AP) - In base- WeSI, a situation uwne~ want to Central, the Royals would have a
Hou~to.n said in recent weeks it
has said he would veto an attempt to
" I'm totally open to and supportball's latest realignment plan, the avoid . Under some plans under dis- natural rival!)' with St. Louis. Hous.
WaS not interested in moving tO the put his team in the AL, but his veto
ive of a major realignment," ColanAmerican .and National Leagues cussion, the Diamondbacks would be ton then could move to the NL West
AL West, but the Astros might power runs out after the 1999 season. gelo said. "That would definitely be
could be obliterated with eight Pacif- in the AL West and Tampa Bay and have an interleague rivalry with change iheir minds .S part of a com- He said Tuesday he might approve a
in the best interests of baseball. That
ic and ·Mountain time zone teams would be in the AL East ·
Texas, and Detroit could fill the Roy- , plete realignment.
switch if owners attempt major
helps with rivalries and television
being grouped together.
If Kansas City shifted to the NL als' spot in the AL Central.
Arizona owner Jerry Colangelo moves.
and time zones and travel.''
As many as 14 teams could
change divisi011s and leagues next
· year under the most radical of the
plans discussed Tuesday by base.
.
ball's realignment committee. The
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) in 1994, to a two-year contract.
will not report to training camp.
establish ourselves as professional
7.6 rebound~.· for PAU-Orthez in
six-division format, instituted in Now that the Sacramento Kings
Financial terms of the agreePetrie said -Tuesday's signings basketball players."
France.
1994, also could be wiped out in a have signed their top pick in this ments were not disclosed.
were more than just insurance.
St. Jean, 22, who left San Jose
"It's been a long and tedious thn:e
switch back to four divisions.
. year's draft, they can concentrate on .
Geoff Petrie, the Kings vice pres"It's easy to say that we signed State following his junior season,
" said Funderburke, a former
"The major objective is to put sorting out the futures of their best ident of basketball operations, told a Lawrence as a precaution· for Brian averaged 23.8 points and 8.8 years,
teammate
of Predrag Stojakovic teams together geographically so two players.
· news conference Tuesday that there Grant,'' he said. "But when you've rebounds for the Spartans last season
the
Kings'
No. I pick last seasonthat it would enhance the rivalries,"
The Kings and No. I pick Olivi- is nothing new to repOrt on talks with won 34 games the last season. you're and received honorable mention all- with PAOK in Greece. "The timing
said committee chairman John Har- er St. Jean of San Jose State reached Brian Grant and Mitch Richmond.
still trying to add to your team."
is right, and I look forward to doing
America honors.
rington, the chief executive officer of agreement Tuesday on a three-year
The Kings last week offered
The 6-6 St. Jean, the lith pick
whate·ver I can to help make this
Funderburke,
25,
the
51st
draft
the Boston Red Sox.
deal, marking the firSt time a player Grant, a fourth-year free agent pow- overall in last month's draft, said he ·pick overall following his senior year ~am better."
With the addition next season of hom. and raised in France has joined er forward, a reported seven,ycar, was . happy io ·have the financial
The signings give the Kings 17
at Ohio State, has played the last
Arizona to the NL and Tampa Bay to . theNBA.
$42 million deal.
questions settled.
players
on their roster, including this
three
seasons
for
three
different
the AL, baseball's current plan calls
Richmond, meanwhile, has two
Also Tue~y. the Kings signed 6"It's time to get on to more seri- overseas teams. Lasi season, Fun- year's second-round pick, Anthony
for two IS-team leagues in 1998 foot-9 forward Lawrence Funder- years remaining on his contract, but ous things," he said. "Money is not
derburke averaged 21.7 points and Johnson of Charleston. Johnson, a 6with three divisions in each.
burke, the team's second-round p1ck has asked to ·renegotiate and said he always the issue. We're trying to fi~t
3 point guard, rcm.ains unsigned.
But Harrington said owners might
change to a I 6-team league and a 14team league, with two divisions in
.
.
each. In that scenario, Anaheim, AriCINCINNATI (AP) The schools around Lexington about of Georgetown. It will be the first
"It's mostly the fields that I'm tice field should be usable ahout
zona, Colorado, Oakland,' Seattle,
Cincinnati
Bengals
don't
like
surhalfway through camp. Problems
using
their
fields
for
practice.
He
said
time
the
Bengals
have
had
their
sumconcerned
with,'' Coslet said.
1
Los Angeles, San Diego and San
Melanie Shaw, executive director with that field occurred when spring
that is in case tile new practice fields mer camp anywhere but · in WilmFrancisco ·may be grouped in a prises.
Thus, the team is making backup at Georgetown College need a day to ington, Ohio, their camp site since of the college's Cincinnati Bengals rains caused a delay in putting d.own
"Pacific" Division.
arrangements
for training camp recover from the daily workouts dur- the team started play in 1968.
Partnership. said two of the three sod.
"It's a longshot. It's a stretch. But
fields
in
central
Kentucky
in
case
ing
the
four-week
camp.
Coslet
said
the
Bengals
have
pcactice fields- including Rawlings
"We also have a baseball field
it's possible," Harrington said on the .
they
could use," Shaw said. "We're
there
are
problems
with
their
new
The
Bengals
repon
to
Georgebeen
assured
by
Georgetown
College
S!adium
will
be
ready
when
the
field prior to the All-Star game.
camp
location
in
Georgetown,
Ky.
town
College
on
July
17
and
begin
officials
that
the
new
residence
halls,
team
begins
workouts
July
18.
confident
we' II be able to accomAmong other possibilities:
.
Coach
Bruce
Coslet
said
the
Benpractices
the
next
day.
meeting
rooms,
and
cafeteria
will
be
She
said
the
school's
third
pracmodate
them."
- Montreal, Toronto and Detroit
Lexington is about 12 miles south completed in time for camp.
.
.
could be grouped together in a -ll.als are contacting two or three high
" Northern" Division.
- Houston and Texas could be
grouped together in one division. ·.
"I'm now doing vel)' well," she
- Florida and Tampa Bay could
Dr. Reinhard Weinstabl, who per- nis and other areas figure to he part
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)- amount of ambition goes with that."
Graf, who has won Wimbledon said. "Directly after (the operation)
formed the surgery. " ... She can now of her plans when she retires from
be placed into the same division.
Steffi Graf, sidelined from Wimblenearly make it without a brace on her tennis: ,
"We have two or three alterna- don and ihe U.S. Open due to knee seven times, was unable to defend it was a bit difficult. Now I can move
knee."
"The adjustment will certainly
tives that we're push-pulling on," surgery, has a return to the top in her her title this year after undergoing without pain."
Graf
told
Sunny,
a
German
weekGraf's
new
spons
promciiion
not
be very easy and the alternatives
said Harrington, who intends to tele- · sights.
maJor
knee
surgery
June
10
in
Aus.
ly
newspaper,
that
she
hopes
to
have
to develop slowly. I won't drop
agency,
Stem
Graf
Sport
GmbH,
is
phone clubs later this week to distria.
11le
operation
will
also
cause
the
"My main goal is to be fit and to
organizing this weekend's Fed Cup into a hole,'' Graf said. "My activicuss the viability of his committee's win the Grand Slam tournaments in 28-yeilr·old German to miss the U.S. resume tennis in the late fall and
between Croatia and Germany in ties will cenainly be in my areas of
latest(deas. He hopes to hold anoth·
1998," she said. "That is my per- Open - an event she •has captured compete in an exhibition tournament
in Frankfurt in early December.
Frankfurt. Promotional work in ten- interest, for instance art and music."
er committee meeting in about I 0 sonal goal and naturally a .certain five times - later this summer.
"Every day it's going better," said
days and a special meeting of all
owners late this month or in Aug'l.st.
Baseball had two divisions in
~, .
. each league from 1969-93, then
· switched to three divisions in 1994
with a wild-card team advancing to
the playoffS in each league along
with the division winners.
.
Harrington said that if teams go
back to two divisions in each league,
the most probable scenario would he
The freedom to go where you want;
to have the division winners advance
to the postseason along with two
The freedom to do what you want.
wild .cards in each league.
Harrington, faced with an Aug. I
deadline for presenting next year's
Maybe we ' re biased, but we have a
schedule to the playen' association.
said he still hopes to convince the
·particular affection for freedom of speech.
Arizona Diamondbacks to switch
from the NL to the AL next season.
.
Owners voted in January to put
Arizona in the NL and Tampa Bay in
the AL. While the Diamondbacks are
a natural fit in the NL West, the executive council's initial plan to put the
' Devil Rays in the AL East was
qlocked by the AL. That plan called
from Detroit to move from the AL
East to the AL Central and the RoyJ{i gl ll 11 11 \ \ . ~t· l
als to move from the·AL Central to
the AL West.
oJH' 111ont h I rt ' t ' access
Next year's tentative schedules
, I lid ( h t) ll ..., t ' IH' I\\( l' ll .I l lt' t '
have Tampa Bay assigned to the AL.
.' ) t1 t l l I ot t• ph n l\t '
I I ' J, ' I \ (

Meigs physicals
set.for Thursday

-...Here .We Go ...

fight overseas while trying to get his King. But the veterinarian said
· license back, but because he's on everyone who brings an animal into
probation he may not get permission his office wants to know what he will
to leave the country.
do .
Fighting overseas might also be
"Every client that walks in wants
seen by the boxing commissioners as to talk abOut it," Nave said. "I tell
thumbing his nose at the penalty.
them we've got a job ahead, and
Commission members have been what's wrong with your dog?"
extremely tight-lipped ahout their
Holyfield, now touring South
intentions, but the decision is not Africa, said earlier that a year's ban .
without precedent. Oliver McCall from boxing wouldn't be enough for
bas agreed to a one-year suspension 1he bites '!Yson inflicted on him in
and $250,000 fine for quitting in his the richest fight in history.
Feb. 8 heavyweight title fight with
"Most boxe~ only fight one time
Lennox Lewis, and commissioners a year," Kolyfield said. " He probahave said they view '!Yson's actions bly needs, a year off to get himself
as ,.'ar more senous.
·
better an"
, way. He probabl y needs
"II's a very Important
·
dectston
··
Jhe res 1· The penaIty IS
· probabl Y
and one each comnusstoner
· ·
' has to gomg
· to have to be a 1Ill
· Ie more
look to themselves to make," com- extensive than that."
mission member Dr. James Nave
'!Yson is noi&gt;&lt; legally required. to
said. "Suspension is suspension. appear, but Rolston said he expect·
ed "·son
Revocab.on ts
permanent. "
•1
w0 uld sho w up t0 try to
Nave, one of th e most m
· fl uenb'a! co nv 1'nee comm1sst
· ·0 ners no1 1o
· ·
a1
'th Gh
revoke h•·s )'c ns
comm•ss•oners ong WI
anem,
• e e.
said there has been no pressure from
"I have every reason to llelieve he
Tyson's camp or promoter Don probably will be attending," Rolston

Baseball owne~s consider geo$1raphic realignment plan

racist, according to Vern011 Bellecourt of Minneapolis, who is
NCRSM president. He spoke at a
news conference held at the headquarters of the United Church of
Christ.
The American League team markets clothing and other merchandise
featuring the logo.
According to the team, the caricature and nickname honorS Louis
Sockalexis, the first.native American
10 play ··major league baseball.

The Daily Sllnllnel BABY Sentinel is a
.Special Edition filled with photographs of
·local kids- ages newborn to four years old.
The BABY Sentinel will appear in the July
29th issue. Be sure your child, grandchild
or relative is Included,
Complele the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each
phcliDIIra,:on. If more than
one
is In picture
Pictures must
enclose an additional
be In by
$2 per child.
Tuesday,
(ENCLOSE
July 22th,
PAYMENT
. WITH
1997
PICTURE)
Plcturea can
be picked up
after August 4

qualified June 28 during their WBA
heavyweight title fightt
The commission basically has·
two options: Suspend 1Yson for up
to five years and fine him a legal
maximum of$250,000, or revoke his
boxing license-~ move that allows
a maximum fine of $3 million. The
difference in the fines allowed by
law may prove pivotal to the commission decision.
"I don't think a suspension is a
viable option because of the difference in the amount of o\oney the
commission can fine Mr, '!Yson,"
said Donald Haight, the commission 's legal adviser. "I think most
fine
commissioners feel a $250,000
·
1
ly
a
mere
pittance
when
you're
·ls -·
,,....
looking at a $30 million purse."
Other states would be required by
8
new federal law to honor Nevada's
revocation, meaning the profession
$140 million
that has made "·son
''
during the last t.wo years could be in
jeopardy.
It is possible Tyson could still
.

Native American activists
protest Chief Wahoo logo
CLEVELAND (AP) - Chief
Wahoo, the widely grinning logo of
the Cleveland Indians, was the subjecl of a protest by an American Indian activist group prior to the 1997
All-Star game. .
Leade~ of the Nationai•Coalition
on Racism in Sports and the Media
came to Cleveland Tuesday to join
, with local activists in a protest outside Jacobs Field, the site of major
league baseball's All-Star Game.
The team's symbol is blatantly

.

and revokes Tyson's license instead
lAS VEGAS (AP)
Mike of simply suspending it, the. former
1Yson could be banned from boxing, · heavyweight champion could walk
perhaps never to return, for biting a away from the hearing with no idea
chunk out of Evander Holyfield's when he will be allowed to fight
again.
eu.
•
Tyson is expected to personally
Tyson faces the possible revocaplead
for his boxing career when the
tion of his boxing license by Nevada boxing regulat~. a move •that commission meets today in a packed
would keep him from fighting for at City Hall council cham~.
"I 011ly ask that this not be a lifeleast one year and ·possibly much
longer.
·
time ban," he said last week. .
The proceeding could take less
Tyson could reapply for the
license after one year, and each year time than the fight itself, which last•
after that, but·he will have no guar- ed three rounds, or could drag 011 for
antee that the Nevada State Athletic a few hou~. depending on how
Commission will ever let him box Tyson's attorneys handle his defense.
Commission mem~ limited teleagain.
vision coverage to a single pool feed
"The license will be gone forev'
er, never to return;" said Joe Rolston, and issued media credentials in an
the deputy attorney general prose- effort to control the meeting.
cuting Tyson. "The 011ly way Mr.
"I guarantee you it will not be a
Tyson can get it bacl\ is to reapply circus," commission chainnan Dr.
every year.and the commission will Elias Ghanem said. '.:_1 will not allow
it ...
have to decide at that point."
If the commission follows a rec'I)&gt;son has alread:t admitted biting
.ommendation from its prosecutors Holyfield's ears before being dis-

Gallipolis Yankees
&amp; Bidwelll ·claim
first-round wins

By BEN WALKER

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge 5

Nevada boxing regulators to hold hearing today

1897
tftal"ff

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

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Celebrate your freedom .

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�.,
Page i

•

By .The Bend

• The Dally Sentinel

0. J. turns
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert
Zemeokis got his family to share in
the wealth.
The Academy Award-winning
director placed his feet and hanlis into
the wet concrete outside Mann's
Chinese Theaue on Tuesday and left
footprints etched with his wife's
name on the left and his 11-year-old
son's name on the right.
" Our good friends · at Nikc
embossed both Mary Ellen's signature and Alex's signature on the bottom of each sole so we could all share
in this honor," Zemeckis said.
The front court of the Hollywood
Boulevard theater has the imprints of
185 Hollywood legends. Only a
handful of directors have received the
honor, including Cecil B. De Mille
and Steven Spielberg.
Zemeckis won an Oscar for "Forest Gump." His other films include
:'Romancing the Stone ," "Who

Wedneeday, July 9, 1987 '
i

_. -:-:-P'":'u':'b':"ll::"c"::'N"':otl"-'ce~-=-~'
NOncE TO P\IBLIC OF
NO 8IGNIFlCAHT IIIIW:T
ON ntl! ENVIROIIII!IIT
(FONSI) COIIIIINED NOTICI!
July t, 1117
11 1
t
0
Un y
11e1p County Coui1houw,
Pomoror, Ohio 457t1

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ec:...:.:...n... c

so·years
old
today
·
.

. (814)

Framed Roger Rabbit" and the Brown Simpson and her friend
"Back to the Future" series. His new Ronald Goldman. But in February a
movie, "Contact," starring Jodie • second jury found him liable for the
Foster, opens Friday.
killings under civil law ru.d awlirded
damages to the victims' families.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - OJ.
Simpson doesn't have any spedal
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Yin·
plans for his 50th birthday today.
nie Vincent wants more from Kiss.
" I'm going to do the same things
The foilner Kiss guitarist sued the
I do every day," Simpson said Tues· band for defrauding him of royalties.
day.
In court papers, Vincent claims he
If Simpson follows his usual pat- refused to sign M employment agreetern , hjs day will involve one or more ment during his tenure with the band·
rounds of golf. He remains dedicat- , from 1982-84. He claims the band
ed to the game even though he now retaliated by cutting his salary in half
. plays with borrowed clubs on public to $1 ,000 a week, and other indignigolf courses.
ties.
With the milestone; Simpson can
Vincent, 44, whose real name is
begin drawing on his National Foot· Vincent Cusano. said he wants at
ball League pension, which can' 1 he least $1.3 million and he wants
seized to satisfy a $33.5 million civ- · young musicians to be treated better
it judgment.
by ihc music business.
Simpson was acquitted of the
"They give their hearts and souls
1994 slayings,pf his ex-wife Nicole
Continued on pqe 8

National (\Jursing Home Week observed
A health fair, spring carnival, and
Tbe health fair offered free tuberentertainment highlighted the annual culosis ftests, immunizations. for
observance of National Nursing adults and children,. cholesterol
Home Week at Overbrook Center.
screening, · respiratory evaluations,
The week was kicked with the and dietary health information. Door
launching of 150 balloons with the prizes were awarded and education·
names of residents inside.
al booth~ were on display.
Performing dunng the week were , A sppng carniVal was held for the
The Classics presenting gospel music the residents, 5taffand public on the
and clogging by the Swinging front lawn with P. J. Party Rentals
Singers.
providing rides and games. Children

....a

To All 1.....-.....t P - • ·
"411 net., and Groupe·
Tho · II alga C.;unty
Commlnlonoro, propaaoo
to f0C11M1 the s- ot Ohio
to rate... Federal Iundt
under Soetlon 104 (Dl of
Tltlo I at tho Houalng end
Community Dovolopp~ont
Aet of 1874, •• aillorlded;
Section 288 of Tltlo H of the
Cranoton Goo11aloa Nallonel
Affordable Houalng Act
(NAHAl, u
emended;
end/or 1ltlo IV of the Slanut
B. McKinney · Homolna
Anletence Ac:t,
••
tiMIId«&lt;; to be u..c1 for the
following proJoct(al:
.
Meigs County
Mlc.-iloipoiH U....
Pnogram
CD8G Mlcr001U11H1•
Pnlgram .
MEIGS County, Ohio
Single ynr project
Elllliiillled coat of tho
Projoct 150.000
It h1a been dotarmlnoct
.th1t euclt Roqu..t tor
Rtloeae ot Functt Will not
conatltuto an 1ct1on
elgnlllclnlly affecting tho
qulllty of tho humon
tiwlronmont and ac:cordlng
tho
Molge
County
Commlulonera,
hu
· decided not to prepare an
Envlronmen'-1 Impact
Statement under tho
N1t1on11 Envlronmentll
Polley Act at ttal, "

Public Notlc!

-d&amp;d.
l!avlron!Mntll RoYiew
Recatd(IJ(IIIIII tor MOl! of
the fl'ra)a ct(l) lleled .....
Mw beM OIW d ded bf the
Mota•
Countr
CoiMI I l l · - 1ba I!IIR(I)
d o c u m• n t • .
tIt •
IIDVIronnoontel rowlewa ot
the praJaot(a) and -fully
ooto forth the Nit c• wiiJ
tuch atito•ant Ia not
roqu!Nd. Tho ERII(al- on
lllo and 'lvalllllte "" tho
publlc'a oumlnllllon and
copying, upon roqueet,
bwtw..., the houro ol 1:00
t.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday (except
holldoya) Ill 1M otllcll of the
II I 1D•
Co u n t y
Comml.. lonora, Court
HouH, tOO Eall 8~
street, Pomeroy, Ohio
...,...,
l,
No turthor MVIrDI~

Pfll!K' Ia
propoetd to be oonilucted,
prior to ·lilt roqueat lor
........
Th, of Pt danal lundLC
• 11 • 1D•
oun1y
Commlealonara plan to
undtrttko lllo pr=-:1
doac&amp;t- will! the
lunda oltad above. ,..,
poraon, IID•ncloo, and/or
.aroup.a , who hove anr
commanta rog1rdtng tho
onvlronmel)t. or who
with thlo ftndlng ot
No Slgnlllcant Impact
daGIIIon, are Invited to
I&amp;Ubmlt wilttln comment•
tor contldorlllon to tho
II • I D•
Co u n I J
CommtuiDI•O.
,,
· CourthouH, P - r . On
411tt, 4:30 p.m. on July :M,
1117, which lo at . _ II
tlaya altor the publlcMion of
I'IYiow 01 - h

d...,..

Wednesday, July 9,1997

-_J~~~*~·~·L-­
-~~~~~~L-~FIJNDI~
1\Coopt

ToiBinllrut&amp;d,._.to,

fundi llld 8DCI1Ptenclt of
the ca&amp;llllo•tlon only lilt ~ ·
on one of the two fcl sda4

25, 1117, 1M

llolgo
Countr
CoMMiaolonora, will
II ' I II the a- al Ohio to
IIIII Pad olllnla under
loctlotl 104 (I) al Title I of
tho
Houolng
tind
ComMUnity Development
Act of 1114, .. 81Millhd:
Iutton,.. of Tltlo Mof the
Crlnata.. Gonzaht Nlrtlonal
Attordobla Haualng Act
(NAHA), aa 1mendod;
lnd/or Title IV ot the
stewart 1 . McKinney
HomeiHI Aaoletanco Act,
.. -d&amp;dl to be ...... fDr
tho protoct(o) daacilbod

........
The llatgo

::.-.J.•&gt;In":ct.-:::.:2

"'the ..... Cotd(a chlaC
oxocuttvo ofllcer or Olholl
olllcor of lllo County ol
llolg1 IIJIPI'OVOd bJ tho·
hto a1 Ohio; or (Ill thlit the
environmental · review
record lor tile . proJoo(
lndi..IM omtnlon ol •

=

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

'

'

Written obJK!Iona
be prepllred And IUbm.
In 1ooordanco with lllo

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO 'LIMIT OOANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 12, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

rtqUJNd prGI:IdUN (24 CfJ{.

Part 51), 1nd muat bo
Conwr'ttlcn•• 18 certifying adrtn·wd.IO:
State of Ohio;
to tho • - ot Ohio, that Envlron-ntll Officer:
llolga County 1nd Janet Community
Howard, In hill/her ofllelal Dlvtalon; P.O.Development
Box IIIII ;
capacity •• Praaldent, Cotumbul,
Olllo
432H~
Mota•
Countr 0101.
.
Commtaalonara, - t o
Oblaallana to the AeltsM
tho lurllldlctlon ot ot 'unda on
othor
'•donal II ., lllllon llwlthoao_a_ wiN
Ia brought to ontorca not be conaldOrOd by tho
'"POIIIIblllttH In rolltlon fiWe
01 Ohio. No Objl CUOi..
to oavlronmoidal rovt-, ' NCOAug. IS, 1117;
daclelon-maklng, 1nd (Whlclllaattor
Ill clap alter HIt
lotion; •nd that tho.. lnUclpatod
that tho State
f11aponalbllltloa hive boon
'1!11111 receive • requHt tor
al lunda), will be
Tho IIID•I ollact of the f111Hao
conatdarod bJ the Stile of
ca&amp;UIIadon Ia that upon Ita Ohio.
...,"""" the llalga County
'"" ldllflll of U...chlef
Commtnlonora moy un OOCUIM
lo:
.the ......,., lunda, and tho
Janet
I lot nard, PrMidlnt
lt..o of Ohio will han
Coo
..... County
Ollllellad Ita raponalbl&amp;I I altrt•a
under the National
lllatga
Counly
Cou"'-"
~Polio)' Act ot
Pon.oy,
Ohio 4l1tt
~-.--lllod.
(7) t; lTC
Tile S - ot Ohio will

•-pt

21itets

BAM-10 PM

or atop lpplloabta to thlr
proJect to tho MWIRIIIIIIOIIW

County

·Pepsi &amp; Mt.
Dew Products

STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday ·

required doolalon, 11nc11ng;

~w~ew,_.

The Dally Sentlnl!l • Page 7

P 0 W'E L L'S

.......... or tho ralnn of

-..nd .Mel--..:
On or about, but not

" ' -· Jutr

en Obi Mon to Ill

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY· SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

12 pk. 12 oz. cans

"*-

...........

Showboat
Pork &amp; Beans

omc.r

competed and won prizes for their
participation. The group enjoyed batloon maker ,Phil Luckeydoo. a band
from Gallia County played classical
rock. blues and country, and refresh·
IIIIa combined nolloo.
ments were served.
:'irr~= ~.
Several merchants contributed•to
the cam&amp;val.
. --------------------------------------,--------

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF$

Bottom Round Steak ••

~~-

79

1 ·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.

Eye of Round Roasts •• $1

6

~. ..,..._A_r_m_o-ur-...

FRESH

$119
Ground Chuck·.... · .

PO

CHUCK WAGON SLICED

$

119
Bacon
.........
~~
•
:~
Engll111 Roasts ...~~ •.•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS B~E~

KROGER 2%, 1%, 1/2%, .J.25%, SKIM,

·SKIM DELUX. BUTTERMILK OR CHOCOLATE
'

Gallon Milk

CHICKEN

PERFORMING • Je1011 Stout and. Nick Rocchi crf lhe Yaung
Guns a.nd played rocklndcountryfor OVerbrook'"ldlltla lnd
guestalltlhe -~ ob11mr1ce crf Nlltlillllil Ntnlng Home Week.

.

. .

.

1 20

•••••

$1 ~

"FRFSH SILVER PLATTER"

·. BtJ~sless

!'orkLoln

TREET ·12 oz.

¢

Reg., Nat. blend,

Puritan Crisco

39

Leg Quarters •..•....•.·.
BONELESS CHICKEN BREAS'F
,~
'll
~- .
.
LB. : , $199
F1 e s .......................
KAHN'S
.
.
·
$
•
·
•
LB.
139
\nl1er1ers ........ ~~•...•.....

il-1'r-L/I. A i!:;, STR- OFF

reg. or 50% less fat

9

¢

LB.

15 oz.

Oil 32 oz.

99~
White House
Apple Juice

'

64 oz.

99¢·

FROZEN
(4·7-LB. AVO.}

Turkey ·

Breast
CLOGGERS ENTERTAIN •llle Big Bend Clogglrlllltertalned

et Overbrook's recent cemlvallleld as 1 pelt of the oblervance
of Netionel Nursing H01111t Week.

.

Community calendar
The Commuility Calendar Is
published as a free service to DOD·
profit groups wlsblog to lllliiOUIICe
meeting and spedal events. The
calendar is not designed to prop!Ote
sales or fund raisen or any type.
Items are printed !15 spate permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
spedfie number or days.

· 10 lbs·.
Po tat oes .•........•..

.'12· 14·JJEJ. A VO.J

Township Board of Trustees 1998
budget hearing Friday, 9 a.m. at the
Salem Township Fire House.

Whole·soneless
Sirloin Tips

SATURDAY
PORTLAND -· VanMeter family
reunion ~aturday, 4 p.m. at the Portland Park. Meat furnished, bring
covered dish and table service.

RACINE -- Southern Local athletic physical for high school and
junior high sports will be held Satur- .
day at Dr. Hunter's office in Racine
as follows: 8-10 a.m ., 7-9th grade
POMEROY -- Eastern High girls; 10 a.m.-noon, 7-9th grade boys;
School sports phy~icals Thursday, 1- 1-3 p.m., I ().12th grade · girls; ~-5
. 4 p.m. at Veterans Memorial Hospi- p.m., 10.12th grade boys. Students
tal in Pomeroy. All students muSI need a sports physical card, available
' have ~ physicals to participate in at Dr. Hunter's office or through ·
sports during the 1997-98 schOQI Howie Caldwell at Southern High
year.
School COfllpleted and signect by a
I
. parent or legal guardiru.. Wear shorts
CHESTER _: Shade River Lodge and T-shirts. For more information,
453 F&amp;AM meeting Thursday, 8 p.m. call Dr. Hunter's office at 949-2683.
at the lodge. All Master Masons welcome. Refreshments.
POMEROY ·- Wood family
reunion, Saturday, Virgil King Farm,
SYRACUSE .. Meigs County 38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. picnic
Republican Committee meeting at noon.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Carleton
School. All Republicans welcome.
MONDAY
WILKESVILLE -- Revival,
Wilkesville
United Methodist
FRIDAY
Church,
July
14-18,
7 p.m. each
CHESTER -- Three night Holy
night.
Rev.
Danny
Minton,
special
Ghost revival Friday through Sunday at the Harvest Outreach ·Church in singing by Harber Family, local talChester. Harold Cook will be the ent, and Headed Home.
speaker. Special singing nightly. SerREEDSVILLE-· Olive Township
vices begin 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 6 p.m. on Sunday. All welcome. Trustees, budget hearing, 7:3Q pm.
Monday, bdtliness meeting to follow.
SALEM CEN'J:ER ·- Salem

#1 IDAHO BAKING

u.s.,··..~ CHOICE

.... $129 .,.._______..
lce ·Cream ........1/2gal

BANQUET ASST. VAR.

Fried

INIJIVIDUIU.L Y OfJICK FROZEN

'

(51-«J.CT.}

GOLDEN WHEAT MAC &amp; CHEESE
72
. Soz.

Pink

. ner •••••.•.••.•••.• a;8·9"
D1n

JIF'; ~ORN MUFFI_N

~9 ·.
•TWisttr

•lo\lulon lmpoallble

·The Rode
·Tin Cup .
·The Clble

luJ·:::::::::r=ouo!g':~.~~. . . . . . . . . FRE1:I
arM
:.:d':C:n . . . .-.. .~. FREEl
Buy

Kleenex
Cottonelle Bath ·
Tissue

Get One

,,.

;;w;-~-

RlbeJes................................~... lb. ~

'

_ oz.
15 16

OO ..

'

. . . ____ ...,,_

. . . .. . . .. .......... 1hkti•Ww....

6

Mlx ............. ~ ......... 3~1

'

4 ro.ll pk.

89¢

-

·•

\

169·

DAIRY LANE

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
Plains, VFW, Post 9053, Ladies Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the post.

I

$

Luck's Mixed,
October, or
Pinto Beans

I

Rosedale Peach
Slices or Pear
Halves
29oz.

7

¢

·

Chicken::~~; 2fS

BLUE BONNET SPREA~

$.

Win A
~CIDiru ~IT'@~~

This Week

.
159
Powell's
Margar1ne ••..•.•...... · .
31b.

.

.

TROPICANA SEASON'S BEST

. ' - ..••... $169
0 range J u1ce
64 oz.

Stokely's ·
Vegetables
14.25·15.25 oz.

29¢
Limit 12 Please • ~dd.- Purch. 39¢

Thank You .
Cherry Pie Filling
21

9

oz.

¢

Limit 3 Please • Add. Purch. $1.09

Super
Value

saoo
Free Cash!
Stop In The·
Store
For Details

Saturday,
July 12, 1997

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

o.~~~.s ~~:~~1:·..,

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family

and never get anything baek but
heartache," he said at a news conference 1\Jesday.
'The lawsuit, filed Monday, in U.S.
District Court in Los Angeles, also
named the band's recond company,
Polygram Inc.
•
Vincent" co-wrote the songs "I
Love it Loud" and "Lick it Up."

MediCine
·It

I

Wednesday, July 9,1997

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

designer for the 500-bed hospital and
two. new. laboratories. Pei designed
the glass pyramid-capped entrance to
~Louvre in Paris as well as a wing
of the National Gallery of Art in
Washington.
Pei wants the design for the medical center to include a park-like setling and pleasant views for patients.
His wife recently. underwent a hip
replacement and was so charmed by
a river view that she was reluctant to
leave the .hospital.
"'The ~environment in a hospital
should be a cheerful one," Pei said.

Question: My 40-year-old sister is these concerns, the chances of a .40trying to get pregnant, and if this hap- year-old woman, like your sisJcr, havLOS ANGELES (AP)- I.M. Pei
pens, it will be her first child. I know ing a healthy child are quite good. is adding a personal view - his
that there are many older women who · Support and erlcourage her, but don't wife's - to the design of a billionhave babies, and I also know that the remind her of how much fun ·it will dollar UCLA medical center.
health risks are higher for older be parenting a teenager when she is
The university announced 1\Jesmoms and their babies. How'great are in her late 50s!
these risks?"
Answer: Pregnancy and childbinh place significant
demands upon a woman's health.
. These physiological stresses often
reveal health problems that are potentially detrimental to the mother or
baby, and these problems occur with
greater frequency in women who are
35 or older. I think it is important to
emphasize that even .though the
absolute risk of problems increases
with. these "older" mothers, the
chances of having good health and a ·
healthy baby are still very high.
During the last two decades, there
has been a persistent trend for women
to delay having children until their
: 30s or 40s. Those who delay childbearing, particularly for their firs!
child, are disproportionately well
educated. Forty-seven percent of
· those having their first child after age
40 are college educated as compared
to 7 percent of all mothers.
. Pregnancy-induced high blood
pressure and pregnancy-induced diabetes are two· examples of common
· maladies that are more frequently
seen in older mothers. High blood
' pressure during pregnancy is present
in 15 to 20 percent of women over
• 35, but only in 2 percent of the general population. Diabetes in pregnancy occurs in about 7 percent of
those in their 20s and in 14 percent .
BOneless
·: of those 30 and over. Fortunately,
proper treatment of these problems
almost always results in ,a healthy
' mother and baby.
Miscarriage, biCC!Iing, bean conditions, and many other additional '
problems of pregnancy happen more
_ often to women over 35. 'These con- ·
· ditions are, in pan, responsible for the
· higher rate of Caesarean section.·This
delivery procedure is necessary for
Lb.
: about 27 percent of women over 40.
Problems that direcdy affect the
baby's health- such as Down's Syndrome, prematurity,low birth weight
for age, congenital malformations
48 Oz. Btl.
and higher infant mortality •• are a
.Individually
Cheese Food
. concern for parents over 40. These
Natural Blend, Puritan
I ,....,&lt;.;,j-1o&lt;: occur in.about 12 out ofeyery 1,000
Canola, Canola Com
., babies wilh mothers in their 20s and
' in about20 per 1,000 for those 40 ana ·
or Pure Vegetable
older.
CriscoOO .
·• In an ideal world, the chance of
• having a healthy baby should always
be a topic for thoughtful discussion
between the parents and their physi' cian before a baby is planned -regardless of the parents' ages. This
type of planning is much more com• mon in "older" couples while, unfor' tunately, it is almost non-existent in ·
those in their teens and 20s.
I'm happy to report that despite all

EASTMAN'S

c:lose

- $ociety scrapbook-

WINS AWARD
Chance WStson, of IIC4l 1\Jppers
Plains, recondy won Reserve Champion Steer It the Oblo Valley Beef
Spectacular in Mineral Wells, W.Va.
Chance is a member of ihe Shade
Valley 4-H Club and a 10 year member of 4-H. 1be judge for the event
was Tom Turner of the Ohio State
Livestock Judging Team.

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

Professional Pet
Boarding - TrainingSupplies ·
St. Rt. 681

99

5 Lb. Bag·

Foodland Granulated

Sugar

REBECCA SNYDER
OBSERVES BIRTHDAY
Rebeccil Lynn Snyder, dlugh·
Ill' of Norm• Jilin Snyder,
IICIIitly cibBirYid her blrthdey
with • party at the homl of her
grendperentl, Norman end
Plllriclll Hyeell of Pomeroy. A
Lion King then. wea carried
out for the perty. Attending
were Norman and Patrlcle
Hyaell, Norno• Jean and
Tabitha Snyder, Steven, Lynn,
Raven end Jecidlne HyHII, ell
of Pomeroy.

101
Bleach

Applications for 1997 Carleton
·Memorial Scholarships for. higher
· education assistance are now available to residents of the Village of
Syracuse at the home of Joblo Lisle,
· Maple Street, Syracuse.
Deadline for returning the com. pleted appJjgtions to Lisle, secretary
' of the Carleton College board of
· IJUsteeS, is·July 18.
-

Washington State

Cherries

Varieties

BalfGalloo

Meadow Gold
Iee£ream
.1Jnltetl VaHey Bell

99

$

112 Gal

Orange .Juice

j$ 2
Mea•ow Gold TwiD
...... • Fudge Bars
0r81,ige Dream Ban

~reanl

112 ....

2P5

21*4

r,:.

=.::, ~'!:..:1'\::::.

for
The lllelga County
Commleslon•r• plen to
undartlke tho prolect(a)
deacrlbed with the Focllrol
t•·nda cited above. /lllrt
purean, •oanclas, encl/or
1roup1, who hiYI any
comment• · rqardi'W lh•
Ironmen I or Who
env
dlaagwith IIIIa ftndlng of
No Significant Impact
decla Ion, are Inv It• d to
aubllllt wrlnan commanto
for conildliratlon to tilt
M1111 •
c 0 un t y
commtn~onata,
Courthouao, Pom,roy, OH
~ 2•~.
45789, 4' 30 p.m. on J u.,

::·.n!':~ :.:.=:, ~
1

thlo combined-.
NOTICE 0/F INTENT TO
~· ~·aE OF
REQUEST ·R~
·
FUNDS (NOIIRAOF)
To ell lnt111111ed P......,o,
Ap1clla, end Groupe:
on or about, but not
before, July 211, 1117, ~
Me ·lg •
County
Comml .. lonen, will
Nqu•lt tiM Stale of Ohio to
~.. F......,l lunda undor
Saetlon 104 (II) ol Title I of
th•
Houalllg
and
Commuhlty Dovelopmont
Act ol 1174, •• emended;
Section Z88 of Title II of tllo
Cranaton Oonalla Nlltlonlll
Aflord1bla Houolng Act
{NAHA), n emended;
andlor Title IV of the Stewart
B. McKinney Homal•••
Aaalattnco Act, ••
lmondod; to be UNCI lor the

PI'Oiactl•l dlocrlbecl alloft,

Th• lllalgl County
Commlaalonlrt .. certifying
to tho Btato ol Ohio, thll
Malgo countr 1nd Jenll
HoWIIrcl, In hll/hor olllolel
capiCity •• Proaldent,
·Me Ill I
C0 U n l Y

Rutland Church of God

White Bread

YARD SALE &amp;
BEAN DINNER

20oz. Loaf

Friday, July 11th 9 am - ?

Seven IJp

•2::!ckl

Thru

1887•

118112~11-.

l011 : A Mlnlalure Colllt Ntlr
Oakwood Ori¥O In Galli polio.
IF1mily Pol, Rtwardl PIMH Call
114-446-2101 .

4900
900
868
l- • •
bt.1817

loll: adult female Weimaraner,
aitver gr:ay. pink oolll.r, Kinglburyl

I

, SR 33vic:inity, 814-w.!-7201.

LOST: Dog blatt!. wlgrar, muzzlt,
anawtra to "Sparkw· n Poplar

$3.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Ser-u (619) s~~~

Hei(llll

Custom Homes

&amp;J

• Decks

•New Homes
• Additions

Remodeling

• Roofing
· • Siding

• Remodeling
•Garages

"BuDd Your Dream"

"Stop putting offtho•e much needed
home improvemenu." Call Today!

992-2753 FrH Eltll:netes 992-5535

Concerned motll~ about dac:umenll. No queationa. 304·875-

5095 or :lCM-175-5135.

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
2 Families: July t•th, 15th, 8·8,
8Ba7 S&lt;11t Routt 588, Traftor I~
Rodney, Clothn, Dishes, Gla11·

· ea, ·Odda In's, A Little Bit Everylllingl

742·2925

Family Salo: Thuroday, Friday, ·
July IOih, 111h, 8·4, 150 Second

3

"W•5av• You

Mo11e31"

Avenue , Furniture, Womeoa,
Teens Clothing, Much Motel

lllOo'l7 1 mo.

'

SUPERMARKET
•Nol

"FA£TOBY
DIBECf
· PBI(;ES''
Quality Window Systems
WYI02:1477

•
B•19 Bend.f ab.ncatlon,
Machine.&amp; Welding Shop

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivision on Nichols Melal, INc.
Phone: 614:992-2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

Pomeroy, Ohio
1..aoo-211 -lle00
.

..

-

IIOW FOUIIII

SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS

Scott WeHon, Open Walor
Sc..L . 1 ~ cto

WILL UIJL •
JQI'r Cllld•,
992·7074
Gravel, umeetone,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Send. No Minimum.

uu. n.,ru
r
814-992-3314
&gt;Open Wmr
•Advance Open Wllllr
•Reacue Dive
•Diva M81ter
•Medic Fl'-tAid
•Uieguord Training

b ·
· AN MOREll

r:'t:'!.:=:::r•,:

~~i)l

949•2647

35 Gr"pe Street, Thura, Frl, Sat,
Wroug,ht Iron Table Wilh Chairs;
Jewelr_., JI.Jnior Size Clothes.

HOME CARE

BIULIRI 1
IXCII•-•
• a•

D Gea-'s
tP
1

·

•

Sh0p
_,
•-~

Quality Work at
a F• 1r Price!
550 p...;.. St.
· -.. Middleport, Oh. 45760 ·
Home Ph.

614·992-3120
.

··
1
Don GHry, OWner

L-----...;-=.,

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
lirai'··
..,. &amp; 1 .
• . Houae Sites .
..••eollllble Ratee
""""
Joe N. Sayre
..L
Co•.
Sayre TruUling
614-742·2138

BIOIMf
Road, lOft llulavillt PIIIIJ,

All Week, 8 To 8, 205

School

Cklltlel, Furniture.

For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Daily-WeeklyContract

Al.l. vn Stltolluot
BtPaldtn-.

PEAQL!tE: 3:00p.m.
lho doy bo(orl the eel
Is to run. SulldaJ
edition ·.2:00 p..m.

F~':~~~~o;:,::;e

Fridoy. llofHII!' acllllon
·10:00 &amp;m. SaturUy.

Middleport
992-5042

;====="""'=:12:-::;

··•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUC·TION
•Ne.w Homes
•Garages
Complete

•

~Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE
ESTIMATEES

· Christ Uniled Methodiat Ctlurch,
9688 State Route 7 South, Friday,

Salurday, Ju~ 11111, 12111. 11-8.
Friday 7111th, Salurday 7/121tl, t' 5:30, Behind Mc:Ciures Restau·
rant lien, Women, And Childron
Clol!lng. Ho\l101101d ltamL
Ga..ge Sale: SaiUidar. 108 lori1t
l..arle, Vin&lt;on, 8:00 -Darll. No Sele
Bell&gt;re 8:00A.M. Turn L - Thin

112MileAho&lt;554Cros-.

Moving Sale: Multl·Fam111 July

111h.

Grove

Moving Sal• : Plymal8s 5787

985-4473

State Route 588, Salurda_., July
121h.
ThUrsday, &amp; Friday, 0·5, 6 MiiM
Ro.uta 7 South From Gallipolia,
LOll Of Home Interior, Wood
Crafts. Gla...,.re, CiDiting.

$1,500 REWARD!l
For information
leading to the
arrest and

12111. 8·5, 301 Maple

Road, ApproaimateiJ' 10 Mil••
Out Route ,41) Furniture, Clothing, Baby ltema, Boolca, C(r1h1,
·Much Morel

7/22/tln

FREE ESniiATES

. 537 BRYAN PLACE
'
MIDDLEPORT
. 892-2772
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
eRIJIIac-t ......•-ws
Ill · - · ·n -

·

members
HUPP'S CUSTOM
su•RPEHIHG
n,.

M$2u.s9t9bepa1rBmyirns..
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
..- _ . . .

J&amp;L SII)IIIG &amp;
INSUL•'ION
." 1

Uflallad,
el Gwages
Tha lqal effoct of tho eStornt Doors &amp;
cartlllcltlon lallill upon Ita
, the 118,_ County . Wittlows
1......,...
,.,..-- 1
•.,.

fO 4•H &amp; lfA

1-900-656-2700
Ext. 8789

·~~~~~~~~~- ~:;;;~;;;;•;/S/;1-~~
Public Notice
Cornml..to-.,.~ io
·-·pt tho lurledlctlon ol
•=nrc:::
reoponlllbllltloa Ia l'lllllon
to onvlronmona.l ,.,.....,
declolon-maklrlg·, end
action; . and thot the..
.........
fftponalbllltlot hava .,....,

SHARPENING
JfB11f(f
11• 1
25"o Dlsconf

UP-TO-DATE

SCUU CWIIS

Yard Sale

70

•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. oH Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd.

Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacem~nt
·
Monday- Friday- 8:oo a.m.- 4:30 p.m.
Salurday- 8:00a.m. - 12 noon

304..15-&lt;4~5.

1nd ToiMlcco King. PI PIHIInl.

DREBELS

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

1998 Martin Strnt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•n.

Rawatdl return zippered porlfotio.
loti HtMen Kroger, Gallipolis

· Wadnesd&amp;J' I Thur1day, O.J.

While Road, Off 180,
EndTa~s.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

conviction of
anyone involved
Stea 11. ng a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cros.s St., .
Racine Oh
,
•
I•D • C a II er.1

Walef Bed,

Etc.

300 Broadway Slrttet. Middleport.
Thursday &amp; Friday, July 8·10,
9am·&lt;ilpm. Boy's, misses, adult
clothing, Jane Fonda treadmill ,
Powet .Wheel I Big Foo1rudL

Commlealonaro may uao eR._ Wtfoes
wm., ..
All Yard Satn Muat 8• Paid In
tho Fed.,.l lunda, and the · ~o,.;;;.;;;;;;~~~"!"'-~
Advuce. Deldllne: 1:00pm 1tt1
Ohl
111
h
·•
·
---·'day before the ad Ia to run,
Stet• o1 · O w
avo r.~~~:":'"':::':":~=:'::1 • - -......~~-.,.;,; r-........,..,._-.._....."t
Sunday I Monday •dltloft•
aatllllacl
I'HfiOIIIIbiiiiiH
YOUNG'S
under Itathe
N1t1onal CORPORAL E LECTRIC
Howard L Wrlteael
I :OOpm Fridl)'.
\':ron.aa=~:Icy Act or Dailey Rd- Racine
'.'(ARPENTER SERVIa
ROOFING
Contact: .
Friday and Sluurday, eam-.cpm,
38760 Rocksprings Ad., cloth&amp;l·
614-949-3060
..-oorn
Addition•
Ron
Miller
boy's 10. women'.s 12-14, canning
The State of OhiO w111
.....
NEW-REnAIR
aecept an obJoctlon to Ita John WUiloms- Owner
_..,..
b.....
,.-,
992
An25
jara, osuich eiggs for c:rahl.
approvol of tile raleeaa of
Licensed Electrician
&lt;Electrical 4 Plum ""'
....,
Friday, Saturday, Sunday· 183•
fundi end accapiiiiCI of the
Work Guaranteed
-Roofing .
Gutters
Lincoln Heights. Cracks, boltles,
cartl-on only 11 It Ia on
otnWrlor A Exterior
Oownspouta
. FREE
jars and c:olleclitJies, some anone of the two following Free Estimates Providing
,..lndng
Local Area
liques, 'arrowheads, Pomeroy bot·
bun: (a) the cartlllcatlon
Quality Residential
Aleo Concl'lltl WDIII
Gutter Cleaning .
ties. books I magazines. Slam·
Pick
Up
Dlecerded.
waa not, In fact, axaeuted
Service New .
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Palntin!l
9l)m.
Appllancll&amp;
b)o lhllhlge County'a chill construction- Total and
v.c. YOUNG 111
·
:rES
Many Mellie.
Garage sole, July 10·11, Bou'l'
axaeullvo officer or other partial rewires on older
_.
FREE ESnM~
8112 215
614-982-4025
·Addilion, Eblin residence. ·
olflcor of tile County of
homes
949·2168
Molgo approved by the
Pomeroy, Ohio
3/HIG&lt;IIfN
sale· Delong's on SR
L__c:::l::,:li:,:B.:em-:::;:B~m:.llilall · Garage
1...,.
sa.te 01 Ohio; or (b) thlllllle
24 Hr
Strvicl
143 In Pomeroy. Friday and Sal·
environmental revlow
urday, aam-5pm. 1998 ~appy
ANNOUN CEMENTS
record lor th• project
Holiday Barbie NRFB. Qll furnace, exterior door, atarm door,
lndlcateo omlaolon ol 1
air conditioner and clothe~.
Nqulred declalon, finding,
Hoae t•pron-ets · .005
Personals
I
or ll•P applicable to th•
For Information
Garage sale· Friday•. July 11,
3351 ·Happy Hollow Road
proJect to 1111 onviiVnmantal
ATTENTION OUVSIII
I0 :00-7:00, Salurday. July 12.
reVIew proc•••·
.
leading to lhe onest . Middleport, Ohio 45769
Fooing Alone?
10:00-4:00. Fry residence neal to
Cal Someone Who
Salisbury Elemen18'ry. Rain Of
Wrltton obJection• muot
DUMP TRUCK
and COIVktion of the
New Homes. Additions,
caret And WiN Listen
be p...,.red and aubmltled
shine.
1-1100-255-0700
Roofing, Siding, Pole
tn accordance with th•
SERVICE
-SOls who brokeH.
July 10-11, turn fiflt road left paat
e..Jnlion 8626
required pracodure (24 CFA
r••
Bams, Decks, Painting
WMPO hom Middleport hill, filth
13.99 Ptr MirvJtt
P1n 58), end 111uot b•
Limestone • Gravel
into tile A·frame o
house.
Mull
Be
18
Veaus
Call Us For A Free Estimate
-raaaed to: s- of Ohio;
6811 R d ..1
Sa&lt;v.U
Ju~ 1 1-13, T·F·S, 9am-2pm. Be·
Environmental Off lear:
Dirt • Sand
n ee SVIo e.
614-742-3090
819-645-8434.
side lire station in Chester, Oh .
community Dlvalopmont
985-4422 ·
Call
Meigs
SheriH
Bunkbed:s, Nordic: Trac. levis,
614-742-3324
ATTRACTIVE
AND
LOOKING
Dlvlolon; P.O. Box tOOt;
etc.
FOR FUNilt
Columbua, Ohio 43288·
;1 Chester, Ohl(l
992·3371
614-742-3076
1-900·2115-Cl074 EXT. 4582
MoVing sale- 2232 Six)h Street,
L--~=~.;.;:•012::;""""".::.=~ 1------="""'"'=~•-:::.t:w
01 01.
$2.aQ Uinute 118+ .
Syracuse.
. ObJectlonl to the RIIHaa .
Sa&lt;v-U (619) 1145-8434
of Funda on bun other -r··---~~-~·-Gentleman Seeking Companaion· Salurday. July 12111· 6 Oak S~H(
than lhoH atated ebo¥1 will r
(Lime Slon•
ahip From Nice Female For Talks, Monkev Run, Pomeroy. Heavy
not be con!lldared by tho ;
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Ae· ram cancals.
~ of Ohio. No objo ctlono 1
low Ratti)
plies To: CLA 3011, c:lo Gallipolis
Pl. Pleasant
DaiiV Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
·-~*a~~
Aug. 111, 11111, •
(which
II 111..d8ya
alter ft II
Ga~po~' OIU5631.
&amp;VIcinity
·ontlclpeted that the Still
30 Announcements
7 Fam1ty Yard Sale-2.C01 Jefferw111 ,...I.e • Nq..... for •
son Ave . Pt. .Pieasant (Old Val ·
relnoe ol lunda), will be ;
Crawlord's Flea Market Plus m ley Bell Building) . Thurs. 1 Friconolclered by the Still of ;
Henderson. WV. Vendor's 112 day July 11&amp;12. 8 1ill e . Furni·
pric:e in July. Call lor Qetails. ture, Home lnt Child Craft, Ctwis·
~ acldrn• ot tho chief '
Limestone, ·
30o4-675-54o.t.
lian Boolca, Paper Backs, An:
tique Books ; Pictures, Many
axecu~~n om-1a:
Gravel, Sand,
40
Giveaway
Crall IIams, SheoiS, Clolheo
Janll Howard, PIHkiMI ·
Molgaeountv
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
1 1 !Baby lo X Large,Men &amp;"Wom·
2-3yr. old eats, 1-mate, 1• ema 8• en's)Shoes, Wrestling Singlet,
Comllllaalo-. 1
.
gray/white, both fixed I de· Wedding Gown. Fur Coat, Ninten·
Mlllga County Courtllouoe
614•992.•3470
clawed. lnald• . catl. 30 4 •88 2· do, Roller Blades, Bike, Toys,
Pomeroy, Ohlo457et ,__ _
77
3&lt;1::::_:
~·~----;----;---: Dolls, "Collec:IOr" Barbie, Flowe&lt;L

o-·

KINGS'

I. L. HOLlON\ · $200 REWARD
TRUCKING

....-.-··;,;-;;;·;-

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

WICKS
HAULING .

-

Foodland King Size

DletorJiel

Llmll

: r:u.:~~ ";!s':::,~:d~
• under Sacnon 104 !Ill ot
. Tille I of lha Houalnt loci
community Development
. Act of 1174, 11 •mended:
Sactton 288 at Tlllllt of the
Cra noton Gonratoa ~
Allordoble Houelnll Alii
{NAHA), •• amended;
Tl l IV· of th •
. end/or
Stowort 1il.• MoKinnay
Hom••••• Aulatance Act,
-~·~
be u....
--~ f
•• am..
~: to
or
th1 following proJecl(a):
· · VIllage of Syraeull Sti'MI
lmprovCDBO lmmlnlnt Threat]
Program
MEijlS County, Ohio
Eotl:
=the
Profect 175.000
-~Traat
CDBO lm,.,_,
Fundo • $70,000
Mlllga County FV' ge CDBG
Formula Fundi • 55.000
n hea bon d•t1rmlned
that auoh A•qulat for
RaleiH of Fundi will not
conalllut1 en ectlon
•lilnlllcantly alfoctlng tho
quality of tha human
envlronmanl and according
the Melgl County
Commlaolonore, hao
daelded not to prepero en
Environmental Impact
Statement under tho
· Notional Environmental
Polley Act of 11119, ••
amended.
Envlronni•ntol Review
Aocord(a) (EAR) lor HCII of
the Pro)ect{o) llated . havoboen conducted by the
M• 11 •
co u n 1 Y
Commlaalonero. The EAR{•)
d 0 cum. n t I
l h.
environmental rovl•w• of
the pro)ect(e) oncl more hilly
aata ronh thl rHaona why
auch elltom•nt Ia not
requlrad. Tha ERR{I) Ire on

llnlgldaa Clllp 'N Dip 16oz. Chi. 51.19

Big Bend

Deluxe
Pizza

the

ON THE EIMIIONIIIENT
(FONSI)COMBINED
NOTICE
July 1, 1117
M• 11 •
co u n t y
Cornmlaalonen
Melgo County Courthouao,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;
(614) 112-21195
To All lntereated Parwona,
Agenolae, end Groupe:
Tho Molgl propOMa
.County
Commlaalonora,

Public Notice
file and -liable lor t111
publlc'a examination end
copying, upon requeat,
betwo., the houra of 1:00
e.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mond8f
through Frldoy (except
holldaya) at the ofllcl of the
MI I II •
c 0 unIy
Comml .. loillra, Court
Houa1, 100 Eaat Second
Stroot, Pom•roy, Ohto
45789..
· No hlrthor •nvtronmental
rovlaw
of toouch
project Ia
propoHd
be conducted,

10.11 oz. bag

EASTMAN'S

Fox

~§_99..,

Anancl,ng through 1101w11t Flnlnclal

1

Potato
£hips

'

POMEROY, OH.

.

(No

110 Caurt St.
11112-4111

MlkeSeUs

31b. bowl

:UPssll•

UnU LB......, CDPJU.

NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT

. Ass~naven

Spread

·Applications
·for Carleton
·scholarships
are available

FAMILY DENTISTRY
a04-n3-5822

Public Notice
NO~E TO PUBLIC OF
·' -

Sandwiches
lee

113 W. 2ND ST.

614-992-7643

2fS YEARS IN BUSINESS

Harr, H. Boustn, D.D.S.

Broaglaton Bomestyle

J..emon Seent

1

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Meadow Gold Ice Cream 12 Pk

Butter $14

JEFF.W"ARNER ·INSURANCE

COMMERCIAL and RESIDI:NTIAL
FREEESTIMATES

Talk Uve To A
Real Gifted
Psychic

·r-----~~~~~-----,- ~--- ~---· --------------;r-~~~-,
SOLID VINYL
Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication ·
ELIM

Moo Koolers .;:J

JifPeanut

Tuppers Plains, Ohio
887-3526

"Across from

Valley Bell 12 ~
.

ndePowder$
Detergent

~&amp;o• Communications

'Garages ·· Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

IJ K-9 Designs

"We 1rea1 your beaefriend Ulce our bell friend" .

~

. ')2 oz. pkf'42 loads

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

t!O lost llld Found
Found: llolt Huoky, 1"·388-

Sunday Calls)
~~~· 614-992-5479
,.,/TfN
~--------~--------~~ ~----~~--._~~~--~~~.-~-.~
- ~-~-~------~----~~~-----=~~

~

'~o

CELLULAR PHONES

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

Call614-843-5426

CHANCE WATSON

Kraft
American Singles

.

114--13811.

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION ·

WrapPed

With BJcado..~ oz. pkg. 33lolds
llqullr, fJft or AlouDIIiD Spriug

Sl• week old puppln, 4 malel

lnd twa - .... Colliell.eb miL
Bmlll black malo pup, all ohotl.
904.e7S-21187.

In 1977, a Senate subcommittee
revealed that Lockheed Am;raft Corp.
paid out $22 million in bribes to sell
its planes abroad.

Beef RoundS

Creamy Simply Jif- 17.3 oz. jar
Ertrt Crunchy, Regular or
Redll(ed Fat Creamy· 18 oz jar

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

HAM OR CHICKEN DINNER
Sunday. July 13 1.2 Noon
HAM OR CHICKEN
·Sweet potatoes or Scalloped
potatoes, Green Beans or
, .•.J.,,,,,1 Baked Beans, Coleslaw, Rolls,
Dessert Coffee or Tea
Sponsored by VFW POII9053
Ladies Auxiliary Tuppena Plllna
Adulls $5.00
Ql)!!o~ under

.,...,........,,_..11.

(7) 11: 1TC

Public Notice .
L£OAL NOTICE
SIMm Townahlp ,...,_
will hold tllllr 1"' lu~
Heerlng II the 1'11:11 tlloiM In

hlem Center on Friday,
July 11, 1987 at t:OO _a.m.
n. pubic II wslcome.
(7) t; 1TC

Using lht Cl11ui{itrl$
Jus

3 large

Meigs
Refrigeration
Residential Hutlng
&amp;Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
lnltlllltlon and ·
Service
Amlrlcln • SISndlrd,
Janlttol &amp; Halting I
. Cooling Equipment
B.S.E.S. Ctrtlflld •
Arl Ctrtlflld
Don Smith
37114 Pach Fort Rd.
Pom1t oy, OIL 4S7III
PltOM 614-8112-2735 .

or Plctort.l ErrorL

1/n/1-

llr
udBeaiPamps

~.~.-

lrained. 814-367-08:Jil.
FrH firewood. Must c:ut yourself .
Can pull wu~s right up to wood .

304-175-82611 or 3CM·875-2fillll.

Easy Bonk Fioondng
•

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranly
•Free Digital ThermoS1al

.}

Pulillc Sllll
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full· lime auc:lioneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed
t6e ,Ohio 1 West Vir;lnla, 304·
113-5785 Or 304· 713-5447.

Fret kintno •• give away. 30&lt;· 90

Air Condillonen lnslolecl 12r' a month
Haot Pumps lnstolleci 138" a monlh
(PaYfl*D bued an eppnMKI cred~l

bo11e1 of sctap pine &amp; New CI'Yisrnas Items.

poplar. oreal kinlin. 304·6&gt;5· 80
=~='=
- ~---:-~~~~~
::
Four 8 week old kittens , liner

Wanted to Buy

182-3557.

free puppies, Golden retueverf .AI)soluut Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
Dolder collte mill, to good hOmea. ver And Gold Cains, Proofsata,
81 ... 0411·2313.
Diamonds, Ant1que Jewttry, Gold
· Free to good home, 2 puppies,
Chow/Collie, shots &amp; wormed .

304- 77.!-5415 aliar 8pm.

::Fr::H~up~r~lg:::hl::::p~la::n::o:~y::o:;-u-;:h::au:;IJ

HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving SoutlleaS1em OH &amp;WV .
814 4418416

...,-, 81•7•2·2Hi0.

1-eoo-en.ate1 1391 Saftord School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

5 weeks old, 2 male, 2 lemale,
814·!1112·7472.

Mother cat &amp; 4·5wk aid klnens,
mull lOki all. :lCM-882·3236.

Ring1, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Suilrling, Etc. Ac:qul&amp;itiona Jew•ry
• M.T.S. Com Shop, 151 Second

A\111,..,8, GaOipoli' 014-440-2842.

Antiqull, furnilure, gl111, china,
coinl , toys, Iampi. gun1, 10011,

.ast1111: also appraisals, Oabw
Martin. 014-SIJ82.. '"'·

Antiques, top pricH f*d, River·

Ptip.-a. moiutf golden rettltver, lne AnUquea. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run J.(oore own•r. 81•·812·
2526.

-,
.,

"

�\

Wednesday, July 9, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel• Page 11

I

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 Young _ . .
·5 Type Ofaltp

... _

12
13
14
15

Buylnt Standing Pine, 1 Acre

Macll l nlt~

NHd

T111ClOrU9&lt;.- 114·25&amp;-8Il&lt;ll.

Minimum 3

Yet;rs Experience, Setup And
Operata Lalht And 1111 . .,......_

Clea n late Madel Cart Or

Truckl, 1RO Models Ot Newer,

2835.

Smith Buick PonUac,
om A,....,a, Glltllpalil.

Night Roclpcioril~ 20 H..ro Po&lt;
Week, Send To : Retume, P.O.
Bo&lt; 542, Katr, OH 45643.

t~oo

East·

J &amp; D'1 Auto Parts. Burlng sat~~ Sailing patll. 304- Now Accepting Appllcadono For
Brool\lklo Aportmontl, Wuher l
Dryer Hook-Up, One B.c:!room,
~ UIOd Hardwood Fio«lng
814-448·11811.
'
In Good Condlllon. Coli 814-245-

'

Llvingston'a bailment water ·
proorlna. all baatmtnt repairs
done, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 10yrt on job e111ptti·

1887 414 Ford Ringer, .N... Flirt.
WoK Hrbridl, Mala ~........ Shoc:tlo, E.t.u~ Etc. Loll 01 Ex·
lao, Samcwodo, Cmwo, All Aoeo, tr111l 77,000 llilao, $3,800, OBO
Puppy Pifact Kamela, lt4-:iila- Coll14-251-1t47.
042U.
t ga7 ChiYY AltrO Cargo Van
580
Fruits&amp;
STO,- PS, PB, Runt Good, No
Rua~ 11,500, 8t ...... 2688 Alter
Vegetlbltl
5.
Cabbage- JOU CUI, 30t I h•d.
814-247-3D42.
ttel Dodgo Caravan Lt. Bluo
S2,SOO, lt4-317.Q240.

...... 304-e75-214~

REAL ESTATE
'

310 Homes for Sale

HlPLOYr.1ENT
SERVICES

FARrJ SUPPLI[',
&amp; LIVeS fOCK

Help wanted

(IIIOW'YOOlHE 1M)
CABU 'GIANT Soak Order Tok·
er~, Earn 115 To $18 f+ Hour

Burtng - ' • cards!

I will buy any £lites or new Dla·
Kingt. It ~u nave c:ards ·to
sell, I me know. Call 814-DCD·

High Comrnl11lons &amp; Bonuo, Coli
Mr. Crulte, Tall Free 1·888·432·

Boaudflll,

7a78.

Apart~nl,

AVON I All Areas I Shlrler
s,-ra. 304&lt;17S-142U.

loolatod Patio,
Rent + UIIUiiea. 1
Available Within 30

AVONt Wanted person to take
over eslablished business. Marl-

,.._ -

Security
Oepoolt,
~~~~=:I
Ched!, &amp; Crodii
.C~
311M, 81""1.024&amp; For

-2845.

M per Arlicle e. Transfers and
YKaacifl, SeCiion B, &amp;lliDQ af
lhe Negotiated Agreement bet·
- n lht MLTA ancHhe Board of
Educallon, the Meigs Local
. .Sc:l"lool District it posting the following vacancies lor 111 regular
reaching

staff:

1on.

Kindergarten

All brick, 3badrocm Rancn, lull

e-,.

bnemenl. centraf air, Camp
Ccn~.

304-875-1371 .

AVON • $8 -lt8 IHr. No Doer To

Door. •aonuae~• Quk:k Cashll 1·
fl00-ll27-4&amp;10 ind'lltlrlp.

HOUIO, Machlnclr, And Cattle Illeluded, Reduced Price, Will Ac·
c:opt Oflrlrs, 8t4-3117-7031.

1100-348-7181 x1508.

•K

• J 8

• Q 9 3 2

11111 Chwr ••4 Silverado 350~ ·

&amp;opel, llr, 1u .ooo mllet, runt
good, looko gcod. $9,500. 304·
87S-t3t0.

'

BARNEY

610 Farm Equipment

LOWEEZ,Y MUST BE
STARVED FER
GOSSIP WITH
ELVINEY

Suburban t500 Sefitl 4x4,
exc1llen1 condllion,

lO% OFF aU term tractor parlt.

30U6
. Side~• ·Eq•lpmont. 304·175·
Concrete &amp; Plude Septic Tankl, 7421.
300 Thr• 2.000 Galion• Ron
Evlnt Enlef'priHa. JaGson, OH 487 N.H. """'""· t2100; 100 till
gallon
-IIOtlgil'l.
1·800-537-9528.
·
$100-. 814·247·1100.
Grubb'l PlanO· tuning &amp; ropolro. We . .ka hrdroulic hoM uaomProblems? Need TUIIOd'l Colllllo bllea. Sider's Equlpmenl S04plano Or. 814-448.. 525

-d

6!iO

JET

AERATION MC7TDRS
Repaired, Now &amp; Aobuitt In Slllck.
CSR Ron Evant. 1-8011·~7-Large lrworllorr 011101111 Suilalilo
For Flea Markel vendor, R.,...lning SmoU ltama a Har-. From
Tho Eatato Of Tho 0... 01 Tho
Ohio Valier lmplemant &amp; Som·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Tara Tow~hoUie Apartmen.tt,
Ver,- Spac1out, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floors, CA, 1 t/2 llalh. fut~ CSr·
poted, Adult Pool I Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $350/Mo. No Pets,
loasa Plul Sac:urity Deposit Re-

actual miles, 81,.·742·

quired, 814-448·3Ait, 614·«6·
2 Plus Acrea Sale: Wooded lob. 0101 .
Grean Townoh1, Galllpollo cu,
Sc:hcolt, Pave Road, $20,000. Twin Riwett Tower, now accepting
Res!rlc:tad. 814-245..11031. ·
application• lor 1br. HUD oulllid·
lzed •pt. for elde•l,- and hanclic:oppocl EOH :l04-li7!HI8111.

GONE II

MJH Serial111237710, And A
1978 Frlightllner Truck VIN

fCB113HP142102 . P•bllc Auc·

tion Will Be Held AI The OVB

Annex, 143 Third Avo.. Gallipollo,
OH On 7112187 At 10:00 A.M. Ill
H's &amp; Truck Wil Bo Sold To High-

r

est Bidder •As ta• Wilhoul' £111~
presJed ·o r Implied· Warranty
And May Be Seen By Calling
Koltfl Johnoon AI 814·441-1036.

THE
BORN LOSER
.
.
,
1-.1~'1', (o\0~ (:;I&gt;.VC:J E, 1'1\IJE. '(t).)

"fiE£, flU. ... w-1'&lt;, t-10 I ~VEI-I'T ~ ,.I Dl~'\ 11\11'\K ~!

0()-E~\1\1~
Will\~ IW~: ?

Zf.J!lo'tl ·

ova Reserves The Right To Ac·
&lt;ot&gt;t Or Reject Anr And AI Bid•.

Solid Wooc. eo Inch Office Dftk,
$100: 15 Cu. Ft. Freezer 1 112

410 ttquses lor Rent
2 Bedroom Home For Rent, No Two or three bedroom house in
Ptt1. 1240/Mo.. $t50 Oopoalt. c:ourvry,coll81•·949·11100.
References Needed I 814·4483817.
r.1ERCHAtJDISE
2bedroom en Howard Avenue,

1300/mo pluo $200 depoaiL No
pro~~. 304-875-BBn
3 Bedrooms, Near North Gallla
High SChool, No Pels, 1400/Mo..

Ptus Deposit, 81.4--44&amp;-&amp;415.

510

Household

Goods
,-.ppllanc•s:

Reconditioned

Waaharr:, Dryers, Ranges, Refrigratort, 90 Day Guaranleel
Exf(:ulive Home For Lea•. 2.000 French City Maytag, 814· 446Sq. ft. Noar Golf CourM $8501 71115.

llo., Avaltable'lmmodiare~. 014- GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES
Washera, dryers, refrigerator~,

..e-2957.
.
H0Uae In Pomeroy for sale or ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
'*"I. 614·992·3090.
Vine Streel, Call 814·446·7398,

.

.eoo..ll9-3499.
Headboard, aafllad Mat~~~;~~~~~~:I lighted
Share With

King Size Waterbed Uirrared A

tlonWcrketl,

Three bedroom houte in Middle- tresa, Bavarian Crystal Goblets,
Twin Size Bedspread· Comforler.
·por1 Wilh garage, 814·oa2-3HN.
12xeo, all electric, 2bedroom,

420 MobHe Homes
f

14.000. 304-773-QS54.
NurMI: Naodlng PlrHima RN'o
And LPN'o For All Slli~o AI Call·
Ins To Work In long-Term· Care 1piclwi&gt;lorod.
Seulng. Pleasant Environment.
Pick Up Applications IN Peraon
FltJMJCIAL
AI Scenl' Hilla Nuralng Center.

311 Burr:krldgo Rd., BicMC&gt;II. OH.

NO PHONE CALUI PLEAIE.

Pan-lime' a~~;retary, 1S-251~rt.
woolc, Poyroll. typing, billing. Flo~­
ble houri, eXperience preferred.
Senti 10: Dolly Santino!, P.O. Box

.,..., ~. Ofio45781.
Plant Manager /Satcher - Pro·

ducHon Experlonce With Concrtto lla-11, o., /Wet BotchIng. Prod.•
In Now AIK. Plea• Sand
Aelume To Aoao Torry 5711 Sta·
pill IIIII Road, Richmond, VA

len.-.. -

~

Pool Manager For Tho Galipoio
UuntclpaJ Pool. Ap_pllcatiant May
81 Plokod Up At Tho llunicipol
Building, Floc:rtatlon Department,
5tl Soccnd AYtnuo. Calllpolla,
OH The Hours 01 8 All.
to5P.M.

AI Wtll AI Train Peraonnel.
to Gather And Anelyre

'Riportlll A Requlolta.
IIIII

lk!Siness

210

opponunlty

INOIICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

2bedroom, 1bath, ci a, new carP"~

1 porch w/roof. 113,500. 304·
875-4625.
19g3 14x70 Glamour Balh, Dish·
washer, Heal Pump. Rented lot,
Must sacrillctl P(iced Upon In·
.
.g
specnan, 814·441 701.

:.lhtt::..:~=.
·:.;::_______
Reliramenl Date Is Near, Which
Makes Ue Want To Cheer. •Pet

•••60 a ranrll Wino 3 aod1 1990
rooms, 2 Full Baths, Dec:k. Gar-

Shop for Sate• If You're Serious
About Buying All Am About A.
tiring, Call Today At 814 •448 •

CA. With Heat Pump, Underpinning, Tie Downs, Many Extras·,
Immediate Possession. 814· 441·

7507.

1.:.;:;:;.;._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Steal building deatarah ip avail able In open marktt. O.ters buy

'"'·-· ,, .d•.l.rect. High pro~t potlln·
I

or conltrl.lc:tion. (303)

111!0.

den Tub, Leundr,- Room, 3 Ton

0155,,1114-448·2708

New· 1997 14 Wic»-1 bath. S899J
dawn, 139fmo, with approved

s

credi~ CSI I·IIOIHI91-6777.
10111:7 · 1·41170 2 or 3 Bedroom,

$995 down, Slt51mo. Onlr at
Oakwood Homes. Nitro, WV. 304·
755-5865.
1Q97 141180 3 or 4 Bedroom,

$1 ,~59

dawn, $220/mo. Free air,

alclrting. &amp; delivery. Only al Oak·

wood Hames Nitro, WV. 304-7555885.

All realaota18 odYer1lolng tn
thio I10Wif&gt;8l&gt;or Is iCJbject lo
lht Federal Felr Housing IV:!.
of t888 wlllch matcOI ~ lllagal
"lltl'f preforonca,
limitation ordllcrfmlnlllon

to-

-

=='"

1986 ux70 Clayton Newpon,

racommendt that you do buli·
.~. ..
nHI wilh peopi8 you know, 1 ""
NOT 10 tend money throu9h the
mall unUI you have 1nvast1gatid

bUeiloo race, oolot, religion.
Bar:heiOf'l O"roo In Computar
6ci111CI (Or Rotated Flak!) Wllh
~.,........ Prelar rod CompttltNo
Saiory Vl'rll Ex_, Fringe Bon·
ofit -aga. Submit Reoumo, A
~ 0 1 - • With Salary RaAnd TiltH Lo!llro 01
o To
Ronold A. Adlllno,
EXKVdva Oirtctllr. G&amp;llil- Jack·
ton · MliOI Boord 01 Alcohol,
Pruo Addiction And ll•ntal
lloalth Sarvl&lt;aa, P.O. Box St4,
Oallpolil. OhiO 45131 By Ju~ tl,
t1117. EOE

1982 ux70 Nice Lol, Quail
Creek, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Rt·
modled, New Dishwasher, CA, 2
Bu ildings, 113,000, Uust Seal

614-245-9153.

P08ITIDN &amp;NNDUNCEMEHT
8YITEM' COORDINATOR To
OIVOIOp, EVIIfuata And Maintain
C'omp•tor Syotam For A 11•111·
County Alcohol. D&lt;Ug Addiction
Ancl . Mental Health Sorvlc11
Board. Provide Ualoon SMYICOI
On Bolialf 01 Tho Board With
Aglnclll And Stata Oaportmonll

1974 Cameron mobile home. e•cellent condi•on. $8500, 114·192·
3931.

frunlllllslatul ornadonol

origin, or lltl'f 1ntont1oo to.

make anr such prolorouccr.
tlrnlta1lon or discrimination.'
This na

wpaptf witt not

kncrwiniW """""'
_lor...,..,..
wntc!lilln-oflhe
nllerelly
lnfonMCI thll Ill d alii .,.
~In thll UeWSpPJ*
""' . - o n an oquol

taw.

OUr.....,.

opportU1ItY bUll.

or

R 1
Ill

2 &amp; 3 bedroom· mobile homes
starting at $280·$300, aewer, wa·
ter and ttaah included, S:14-992·
2167.
2 Bedroom Trailer For RenH a

Mites Down 218, Gallipolio. S2251
Mo., ... Oapaslr,, References Re -

quired, 814·448-8172, 814·258·
8251 .

-n

&amp;14~2D8. &amp;t4-367·oao&amp;.
Klr.chan Carpet SB.SO Sela On All
Room Size Carpets, Mollohan
Furniture, 01•_...~74414.

Nice Clean 1B Ft. AI'JIInna Refrig-

erator, Avocado Green. Great
Condition! 814·256- 1291 .

'Poll(• New A UNCI Fumhure
2t0t Jelferson Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mon-SaL
:1&gt;4-675-SOFA (7832)

Trailer, Mitchell Road, S3401Ma., Sofa; Cnair, End Tables, ClleS1 Of

Deposit, Referencas •.Call Bet -' Orawe111,lamps. 614-2•5-5181.
4-9 P.M. 8t4-843·~18.

Trallror: 2 BR'o. $250. Month, D•

520

Sporting
Goods

pool1.~ol'llllt.

locatod Kemper Honow Rd. (8141
4411-7321.

Two bedroom trailer in Tuppert
Plains, $200 month plus dlposit

and uDibeo, 014-887-3487.

440

Yeara Old, Finger" Print Proof,
$200, Call Between 10·5. SU·

..0...553.
SUMMER SALE : Central Air

12,000 milu, thifl kit w/racing
transmlllion. new llrts, moan
roo~ "garaged in 111intor. 304-882· 1989 24 FL Pofttoon With 50 HP
3552 •Iter 7pm. Seriou1 (:Ill Engine Good Condilion, $4,200,

Ot4-441Hit811, 014-448-61105.

1984 Buick Electra Stadon Wag- 1~3 Polarlo Wave Runner Run&amp;,

.Jt -'

on, 118MQ Uilaa, GrHt Conc:ll- llka A Top. 13,800, para: 814· ·
tlon lnsillo &amp; Out 12.800: t983 448·8571, Or Evenings: 814-448Nit san· Ml111ima Wrecked. Me· 1324.
chanicaliy Good Shape, $500,
Two 1992 850 Yamaha Wave
814·245-1111 .
Runners, Pu"haaed New In
UD2, Deluxe Double Trailer,

11184 Camaro Z28, 350 IIIOIDr, au· $5,500. Daro: 81 ... 48·857&amp;, Or
tomodc DO. rod, t-topo, PS, PB. Evan,nga: et H411-t;t24.
PW. power-Mal, Dartona radial1.
S2fjOO 080.114-317·7v.l5.
'
760 Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories
t984 Ford LTD Station Wagcn.

Condilioners: Fllll 5 Year Warranty. ·n You Don't Cad Us We Both
lose I· Free Eslimatesl Add-On

good cond., runt well. MoYing,

Heat Pumps Onlr Slightr Higher.
Cell Us Toda,. 19&amp;7 Is The

Tllll. •

Antiques

'IN SUHtiER SCHOOL,
t.1E 'WOKK lO II.EYE~E
THAT' WE DOtli

w... NT A SINC'aLE

5TUOENT TO

SLIP

THR:JIX:rH THE CAACKS!

,,

Muat•Mtl. 1900 OBO. 304·875· Budget Price Transmission~,
2105 or 304· 875-0817- uk for Starting " $89.00 and Up, Usod I

Rebuill, AU Types, Over 10.000
Tr&amp;l)smitsfons, Acce11 Transfer
I Roar Endo, 014· 245·

Twent~

Seventh Year In The
Huting &amp; Cooing auoinot1111+

446-6308, HI00·21H.Q098.

West

4•

Pass

North
I NT
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

Ulility Trailer, Nice Sofa &amp; Love·
seat, Beds. Living Room Chairs,
Microwaves. Color T.v.• Automat-

ic Dryer, 8Ft Topper For 8Ft.

Bed, 514,379-2720, AFTER I
P.ll.

550

5121 .

peraon

--·
-·

31 -1111
(obHalion)
32 Spanlah
3ol

Blrcllballt

38 llllbel

41 The-

~

44FIIne
45 Slouaage
471sn~W811

45 Cordon~&amp; Nile ,.._,,
!Of alton

51:;:52~'a

·

It is the same at the bridge table.
For example, occasionally a deal will
come along in which nothing seems
to add up. The other three players are
bidding strongly, yet you are looking
atl5 high-card points. Who is "having a little joke" ? It will make life
. much easier if you can trust your
panner. Also, if you don't trust him ·
and you are wrong, your partnership
will suffer. Next lime, your partner
will start doubting you. It will be a
short step to divorce.
·
· In this deal, West dido 't trust his
partner and alll'wed an "impossible"
game to make.
Against four spades, West leads
the diamond ace. Which card should
East play?
It is nonnalto play high-low with
a doubleton. However, here East had
a natural trump trick. At best, taking
a ruff would break even. So, East
dropped the four.
In case his panner had slarled with
a singleton, West continued with the
diamond king. When East followed
with the nine, Wesl played a third diamond so that East could ruff away .
dummy's queen and stop declarer
from gelling a discard. However,
when East ruffed, South calmly
unlpaded his heart loser. South ruffed
the heart-ace return, drew trumps,
and claimed.
If East had wanted a ruff, he
would have echoed in diamonds:
West should have trusted his partner
and switched to a bean at trick three,
defeating the contract .. · ·

perlner
53 NDIWG'IIIIItl
se .- to Joy

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

·

CAietlnt ~ Cipher cryptograms ar.e createO lrom QUOIISIIOI"IS by tamoo$ PIIOCIIe. 'PillilltOd JKesent
Each lelle• 111 11\e cipher stanct5 IOf another Today's c/llt] U equal~ C

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.G ' H

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WTBX

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VGUBXH

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KGP

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TVTR . '

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PREVIOUS. SOLUTION: "The greatest masterpiece in literature is only a
diclionary out of order."- Jean Cadeau .
.

'==~~:~' S©\\.~lA-l&amp;~~s·
14ttarl lry CIAT I . POLLAN

....

••••

Recmono• ieners of
0 four
ocrGmbiod word•
low to form four simple

the
b.
wOrds.

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L I Q AU
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1-,__,,...P_,.E_N..,..T_,I~~...=,' ,

I I I I' -·

r---:O~M-:P-R:---

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1 learned very early in life
how lo shop. My dad always
said that I should demand qual-·
ity and be wiiHng to • • • for • -

-...,
1 1
~o.,..,_,..;;l-T::I~,.;....,.;.~.~,. .:.,..I-l O Complete
1 ~Y fillirrg
•
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lhe chuckle quolad
in lhe miuing -c1s

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REACII SOME OU'TLVIN6
1880 Buldt LaSabre cullom,
nice clean car, looks &amp;: runt
goocl, $5000.-773-5349.

AREAS ..

.- .

Cam'"'rs 11r

790

..

.

'

ScaAIMETS ANSWIU

Motor Homes
1810 Chevr Corsica, air, au·
-.lc. tl~ a - t condition In- '95 Coleman camper. tolds aut to
.and ou~ .110.000 actllal - . , 22', tleeps sia, canopy, 1tova. re~5,11~-11824 ,
1ge1 Corsica 3.1 V·B, Loaded,

Gnaat Condition. lnllda And Out
Runt Good 14.500. 014· 440·

'fbu'M be (loarilg on o cloud willt
the buys yilu'/1 find " the .

frigerator, $5300 080, 01•·992·
8064.

11 F1. Self -Contained Tru'k

Building

Camper, 114-4411·2583.

Supplies

1981 Dodge Splrit"t04K Runs

198• Prowler 22' AJC Awning· · •
1978 Swiss ColOny 20' AJC Awn~
lng; 1975 Mallard 2T With Awning; 16QQ McCormick Road, 814-

Good. Woll·llaintalntcl, $2,500,
~14-318

8293

1885 Satum SC2, Automatic, Nr,

IWEDNESDAY

«6·1511 .

CruiM. AMIFU Cattttte, Trunk

1988 Hi·lo 22 Ft. Camper EX COl·
- . . . lt2.500 Call Altar 5 P.M. Mmt
Condition. AC, Awning Etec(Ser_
l
out
Inquiries
Only
I)
6"14·
560 Pets for Sale
uic
Front
Jack And Many 'other
...Ut5. .
.
Accessories. $8.250 6 14·245·
2 remale Siberian Huskies w/
5811 .
blue eyes. $ 125ea. 304· 8515· A N'ed A Car? No Credit, Bad
Crecli~ llanluuptcy? We Con H._,
3822.
R•Etlabllsh Credit! Must Make 1H8 Pace ArrfM 34'L basernene,
VCR, Satalllte. Ca. e.5 gon,
A GrOom Shop · Pel Groomlng. $150 Wuk Toke Homo. 15% TV,
2M:.ieYelarL304-875-t73t.
Down
On
Caoh
Or
Trade
To
Featuring Hydro Bath." .Qon
Shea1s. 373 Geargll CrHk Rd. Qualify For Tlio Barik Financing. 20 Ft. Argot,, (ar Air Stream)
No Ctldll Turn Oo'wnal614·•41·
614-448-0231 .
T.T. Vorr Light, Pull With Any
0107.
Medium Size Car. Completoty Reo
Adorable loving AKC Regitllfed
S2.11X1. 8t4-4411-2957.
3 1/2 MorHh Old Pug Pup Wn CARS FOR StOOl Trucko, boall,
4-wheellfl,
motor
hornet,
turnl·
S300 Take S250. Gt4·31111-11325,
ture. tlecrronkt, computars etc:.
SERVICES
AKC Pomeranian Pups, Shols A bJ FBI, IRS, DEA. Avaliabla rour
WDfmod, 814-448-8253.
.
arH now. Call 1·800·113·4343
Eltt. &amp;83111
810
Home
AKC Reg Bo1ers, 1u shots &amp;
ImprOVements
1880
·tiiUO
C.U.For
$100111
wormed. 614·992-4199.
SaiM And Sold
BASEMENT
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Trocki, 4~4'' Etc.

t t-800-522-2730, KSUOt
SEIZED CARS From $175.
Poracnea, Cadlllaca, Chevys,

aMWo; ConvJtat, Alto JlepO, 4

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Unconditional llletlme guarant...
Local references furnfshed. Es·

''

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~~~~~~~~~~~~~pe~rfect
ASTRO· GRAPH

BF;RNICE
BEDEOSOL

tabllshod 1&amp;75. Call (Ot41 448·
0870 Or 1-1100·287·0578. Rog"''

waterproofing.

.

WO't, Your Area. Toll Free 1·

600 · 218·~000

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Ext. A·2814 For

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South of Leon, WV. Financing
-

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720 1l'uc:ks for S.le

french City May1ag, 014·448-

ms.

C&amp;C

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General

Home

Main·

1enenc•· Painting, vinyl aiding,
'14 Ford Ranger XLT, 5 opted, carpentry, cloort, wlndowt, bailie
PS. PB. 4 cyllnde&lt;, 54,058 mlteo. · mobile homo repair lnd more. Fo(
oodmate coli Cho~ Ot4-Ut2·
tinted windows. new tlret. Ton- !roo
8323.
. .
- u covar, bodma~ bug shield.
ou~ $87511, 8t4-9.1U.24110.
S8Y1 Hundreds On R ..identl•l
Rocftng, JB Roofing, DeCking /Sieling, Free Estimates, Work Guar-·

lfiiiCI!I, 8t4-:J88.88111.
640 Electrical and

Refrigeration
Residential or c:omm~tclal wiring,
new HrV~ or rtpa;ra . .....,.
(:ensed electrician. Ridlnour ·

U:

Electrical, WVOOOSOS, 304·175t781.

for you. Mail $2.75 io Matciimaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
.1758, Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156. . . '
LEO '(July 23-Aug. 22) Your
instincts in commercial affairs could
be more in focus than usual today. If
you have strong feelings about somelhing, acknowledge your urgings:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today
you will be closely observed by others and lhey, in tum, are likely to be
swayed by your example. Fortunately, it
be a good one.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If all
members are in accord regarding a
mutual family concern of a confidential nature, this is a good day to
respond collectively. .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Malle it a point to include several of
your special friends in your social
arrangements today. II will enhance
everyone's fun, including your own.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your resources could be increased
through your initiative at this lime.
Visualize specific amounts of money
and use these as your targets.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
•

will

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parience All Work Guaranteed,

Shrewd - Rainy - Quick - Brandy - BEHIND

Gr.mny's favorite saying: "It is more impOrtant to keep
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clonifred~

&lt;743.

Block. brick. uwer pipes, wind·
ow&amp;, limelt, etc. Clat,jdl Wlnlert,
Rio Grands, OH Call 814-245·

28~

P1t06WA HAS STILL 10

304-675-4548.

Used 3210 Ditch Witch Trencher,
614-694· 7842.

2t GraaiJ'IYiew
27 Kind of

'MIDNI~T eMkE11Wl•

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614-694-7642.

.

illE 601/ERNMENT'S

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Used 3210 Oitth Witch Trencher.

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23 Hard ,._.. •
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STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon

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1983 Otdl C•dall SuPflmo 2dr,
auto. Stool blue. 350 Reckat wr !T;;;;;,.:;

pric:o, $25; 614-1149·2045.

RENTALS

1I Cry ol p11ln
11 Chilean

Nanelle Newman, a British
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agree: "A good marriage is at least SO
percent good luck in finding the right
person at the right time. 'The rest is

Sale A t!IU4 Rr!llmon IMt Sarlal
f112440UI, A 1&amp;&amp;1 BrHtawood

Full size truck topper $415; new
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··~·

By Phillip Alder

TRAtJSPORTA liOtJ

RainbOW sweeper wJana(:hmenll.
3)"4-875-1725 belore 5pm.

-

mar-

10 00111

Wednesday, July 9, 1997

Livestock

o~r. l2.500.

the llnMI
58 Luau memento
I 7 Econ. lndiC8tor 5t Type ot pencil
I B Montane river 60 Vend
20 SellrM
61 CeleaUal body
22 Pen lipl
62 Like 1 cerllin
24 Mllny oz.
ranger
25 Pllld athlete
63 YIIW Of pine
28 Pour
30 Olthe•r
DOWN
33 cavalry
1 Aulhor
aoldler
Vonnegut
35 New Vorl! lake
2WOfdlol
7 n could be
37 Blrd'a home
understanding
38 Sign ollhe
. 3 Fender clamlge 8 Certain bell
4 Attack (2 wda.)
38 Inert goa
aounct
tHopplng!oy
40 Property right 5 Wooden pin .
Blllatraal
42NewZ..Iand
. ( 2 -.)

1a Sticky alufl

You must trust
your partner

MuCh Morel 014-245·5885.

Queen Size Wa1erbed, Excelt.nt
Ccndilion. e· Satellite Dish 1gsa
Volume Encyclopedia Set /Year
Books, st•..t48-970St

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54 Sort

55 Pol- R 57 Do

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washer ; Entertainment Stand;

And Wilhdraw Property From
~e Prior To Sala. TerrM 01 Solo:
CASH OR CERTIFEO CHECK.

South

trust. "

Ohio Valley Sank Will Offer for

monlhly
payment

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

lr. Income llmlll do apply. HUD
accaptod. Old Alh Vllloge Apart·
monll, Otlr &amp; Goorgcr ~ New Hl·
Westwood Home Show, Inc:. ven, WV. Office hour~ Uon-Frl
Chook thle out! Umlttcl t1m1 Oft· toarn-2pm. 304·882-3711. Eq•ll
ar. No doom PIJimoal to .,..Iliaci Hooling Oppurtunlty.
.
mera GMC, 614·4&lt;4•·4217. 814~
buyera. Double wldel !lt low aa
S24&amp; per month, lingle Wldel u Nice 2 Bedrooma, 4 112 Mllea "8-1822 After Dark, Dr Eartr
tow at $141 per manth. Call for From GoltiPQI.II. water, Stove. Ae· Mornings. ,
froo _ , _ t-«10-251-!070.
Prlgerator Furnished, No Pets,
Moving Sale: 45 Gal. Pentagon
$275/llo .• ~14 · 258·1004, 014· Fish
Tank, 19 Inch Color T.V. Air
330 Farms tor Slle
8811-11238.
Conditioner, 32,000 BTU; Dish·
110 Acre Farm e Year Old

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hours. $20k to $50kl)'r 1-

Saulh
•A87543

~75-742t.

Newlt renovared, electric heal,
air conditioned, laundry lacilities,
sewer. wa11r &amp; traah included in
rent Extermination clone ~th­

Teacher at Pomeroy Elementaf)'.
Social Studies Teacher 11 Meigs
Middle St:llccl, Spttlal Education
Teac·her at Pomeroy Elemenlary
lnd Spacial Education Toachl&lt; II
HaniiOIIVMo

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Thursday, July 10,. 1997
Powerful ambitions might be
awakened in you in the year abe~
thai will inspire you tow~ mate~al
accumulation. A substantial port1on
of your desires can be fulfilled.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) )\.n
associate you thought didn 'I like you
actually has always held you in high
esteem. Today this may become an
issue that might become apparent
even to you. Know ~bere to look for
roniance and you II fin~! 11. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker ins~tly
reveals which signs are romantically

Getting along well with others is a
reflex action for you today. You will
instinctively know how to charm an
you encounter, even the most aloof.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A
loyal friend who is aware of your pre·
sent.workload mighl do a great deal
today to help diminish ·your burdens.
Do not get in the way.
PISCES (Feb . . 20-March 20)
Things you 're unable to accomplish
on your own can be achieved today
with a productive partner whose
interests and standards parallel yours.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) The
secret to your success today is to do
things with kindred spirits. Pannership arrangements work out well
when philosophies are compatible.
. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Companions will approve or'your
demeanor today and look to emulate ·
your behavior. Your power comes .
from your will to serve.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Decisions you make today shouldn'l be
based solely upon materialistic values. n,, real worth of your endeavors could be things that are intangible.

I

JULY91

.

'

�Ohio Lottery
Suspension
·handed to
Mike Tyson

Super Lotto:

.

1·20..25-~7-32-47

Kicker:
2·2..0·5·8-7

Pick 3:
7-2-6
Pick 4:
9·2-4-1

Sports on Page 4 .

Mostly clear tonight ,
Iowa In the upper 50s .
· Friday, mostly sunny .
Hlgha In the upper 80s .

•

en tine

I· lid

'

•

Vol. 41, NO. eo
C~ll7, Olllo Yllley Publllhi11Q Company

2 Sectiono, 16

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 10, 1997

C...

35 cents

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy man gets pris.on· term
in drowning-murder of teacher

PLEA ENTERED - Jason Hysell, left, pleadad guilty to a charge
of murder In the Tuesday evening drowning of Todd C. Johnaon,
30, of Pcimeroy. He Ia shown here coneulllng with Meigs County
· Proeecutlng Attorney John lentee. Hyeell refueed representation
by an attomey.

of his injuries, according to Prose- allorney or if he wanted. an attorney.
By JIM FREEMAN
Hy sell waived his rights wanting to
cuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Sentinel News Staff
Wednesday morning. a regularly proceed with 1he plea agreement.
It was an example of quick justice:
"I want lo enter a plea. sir," Hysell
a 23-year-old Pomeroy man was scheduled grand jury indicted Hysell
sentenced 10 15 years in prison on charges including aggravaled mur- said.
Crow asked: "Do you understand
Wednesday for the Tuesday drowning der, aggravated robbery, assault on an
murder of . a Pomeroy man near emergency official and eS&lt;: ape, this coun is limited to one sentence
charges that were dismissed as part of and one sentence only? That is 15
Langsville.
years to life: I can't make it more and
Jason Hysell pleaded guihy in lhe lhe plea agreement.
Hysell, wilh close-cropped hair I can't make illess?" ·
Meigs Cou·nly Common Pleas.Court
"Yes sir," Hy sell responded.
of Judge Fred W. Ciow 10 a charge of and a golllee, wearing a green jail uni"How do you plead"" Crow asked.
murder lhal carries a mandated I5 fonn and shackles, sal alone al the
defendant's
table,
usually
responding
"Plead guilty," he answered.
years to life senlence.
''Mr. llysell. are you in fact guilty
Early ·Tuesday evening, Hysell eilher "yes sir" or "no sir" to Crow's
of
thi
s charge?" Crow asked .
beat 30-year-old Todd Johnson, a numerous questions.
During
his
lengthy
grilling,
Crow
"Yes, sir," he said.
leach.er at Harrisonville Elementary
School, who slipped or fell inlo repeaiedly asked Hysell if he knew he
Crow also questi oned Lentcs
Leading Creek and drowned as resuh was entitled 10 representation by an about the plea agreement, asking why

you had ti me to invcstiga~c

state arc being served?" he asked.
"We beli eve we kn o·w a t this tim e

fully Mr. Hysell's involve ment in this
case/ ' Lentcs said .
Crow also addressed the victim's

famil y. asking 1f they were sati sfi ed
with the plea agreement. The famil y
(Continued on Page 3)

Business tax .cut under study
in school funding proposal

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Newe Staff
Programming for the nearly completed amphilhealer and lhe need for
a summer cleanup program 10 make
lhe downtown more auractive were
discussed a1 Wednesday 's meeting of
lhe Pomeroy Merchan~s&lt;Asoociatioo. ·
Mike SlrOthreponed 1ha11he l'lme
has come to ~nsider whal will be
presented i~ lhe amphilheater once il
is ready for use . .
He , stressed the imponance of ~looking at programming now and setling guidelines so as to avoid "some
elemenls getting in there and dominating the thing."
The condition of the downtownhigh weeds along the riverbanks and
paving of the streets - was discussed .
·
It was agreed that lhc village has
a responsibility for such maintenance work and George Wrighl,
Pomeroy Council member serving as
liaison belween council and the Merchants Association, suggested · the
complaints be directed to village
officials .

h:.;.--111«~

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES - Concrete Wll baing poured
al the Pomeroy levee on Wedneedly· at the etta of the new
amphlthea~r. Llrry Benke of Banke ConelrUctlon Co., Pomeroy,
eeld the project had been a "echedullng nightmare,"' due to rJelng water Ieveii and bid weather. He projecta that moet of the
work will be done by Aug. 1, well in time for Octobar'aaternwheel
feetlval. ,

merchants get together or hire some- eveniS of that gr.oup. ShC said activ-.
one lo clean all the awnings lhi s ilies will include a variety of entersaid Annie Chapman, "and the mer- summer, and then set up a regular tainment.
Bobbi Karr reported that !here was
chants are doing about cveiything schedule where they are cleaned
little
interesl by the merchaniS in the
they can do to make things look bet- twice a year for a small fee .
Projecl
Good START (Small Town
• ter."
Maxine Griffilh announced the
Assessment
and Readiness TechWright said .lhe next meeting of Ohio University Communiversily
niques),
a
community
economic
council will be held July 21 and sug- Band is performing at6:30 1onight on
development
stralegic
planning
inigested that before lhen, a letter be Court Streel, under lhe spoilsorship of
tiative
lhrough
lhe
Cooperation
For
.
Peoples Bank. There will also be "Art
)i~Dllo the mayor detailing the merOhioAppalachian
Development.
in lhe Park" wilh paintings by local
'l!'haniS' concerns.
Gary D, Little, development speAlso discussed was the need for artisls. Lemonade will be served by
cialist,
spoke to the group last month,
having lhe awnings cleaned lo.brighl- the Merchants Association.
The Relay for Life program at the aboul the program.
en up the appearance of the village.
Promotions including summer
Many have been up a year now and · Rock Springs Fairgrounds Saturday
really need to be cleaned. said Susan night was announc&lt;;d. Dottie Mosser sidewalk-sales and fall Christmas layClark, president, who cleaned lhe one noted that proceeds will go to lhc aways were discussed. The loss of
Meigs unit of the American Cancer another relailer in lhc upper business
on her slore earlier lhis week.
It was proposed by Stroth that Sociely, replacing olher fund raising section was noted.
"There are weeds everywhere , "

liT.

"Have

and sec that the best interests of the

'

Merchants
take look
.
at events
planning

'Price lnclilldu

he .was dismissing the most serious
charge of aggravated murder.
Lcntes said the charge. and tlie
charge of robbery. would be diffic ult
to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
and that the agreement would not put
the victim's family through the rigors
of a lengthy lrial.

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Aa1oclated Preee Wrltar
COLUMBUS - While some
lawmakers were struggling to come
up with a way lo convi~ce voters 10
swallow an increase in lhe state sales
tax to improve Ohio·s schools. others
saw an opportunity to cut taxes- at
leasl for bus.inesses.
Sen . Roy Ray, R-Akron. lold
reponers Wednesday lhal Republicans are working on a plan to reduce
the state's tax o!llhvenlotiel - a
move long sought ·bY businesses.
One proposal would reduce the
percentage of invenlory subject to lhe
lax - which generated about $600
million lasl year - by I percent a
year for the next 10 years, eventually reducing lhe assessmenlto 15 percent. Ray, !hough. said he wants to
see the invenloty tax phased out
enlirely over 25 years.
Businesses pay personal property·
taxes on their inventory, machinery,
equipment, office fum ilure and fixtures. School districts receive about
70.percenl oflhis lax money, with the
resl divided among counlies, cilies,
villages and townships.
Ray's comments came as legislators.held a second day of hearings on
a Republican plan to come up with a
school-funding system to replace the
one declared unconstitutional in
March. The proposal, based on higher cigarette taxes and a penny-perdollar increase in the state sales tax.
would raise an extra $1 billion for
Ohio's schools.
Democrats were wary of the idea.
" I don 't think we oughl to buy a
pig in a poke( ' said Sen. Leigh Herington, D-Kenl.
Herington noted lhat Democrals
already feel lhal b11sinesses are nol

tern of taxation is fair game," said
Rep. E.J. Thomas of Cohlmbus.
"I'd like to take a look al whal
they 're talking aboul, but .it's a Senate 1hing at this point," added
Thomas, chairman of the House
Way s &amp; Means Commiuee, which
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
deals
wilh tax issues.
can fix its schools by using exist-·
Backers
of the reductio n in the
ing revenue and does not need the
~nvcnt ory tax say overall tax receipts
SI billion a year that a proposed
would actually increase under the
sales tax increase would raise;
plan.
treasurer Kenne1~.Biaekwell said.
That's what happene~ la&lt;l.time lhc
. Blilckwell, a Republic.an who
stale
cut its invcn10ry tax. said Donhas said he inlends lo run for govald
Bcrno,
c•cculivc dircclor of the
ernor next year, will outline an edunonpartisan
Ohio Public Expenditure
calion refonn plan later this month.
Council.
but he discussed some of it wilh
When \he Legislature voted in
reporters on Wednesday.
1983 to reduce lho amount of invcnThe plan is being developed
lory subjccllo the lax by I 0 percent
wi,lh lhe National Taxpayers Union
over
10 years, oyerall tax receipts
and the Buckeye lnslilute, two conincreased
every year, Bcrno said .
servative think tanks, and other
And
if
increased economic activ·
groups, he said.
·
ily
does
no1
offset the tax cut in any
Aboul $3.7 billion would
year
•.
the
assessment
would . not be
become available by dipping into
reduced,
Ray
added.
the slate's $800-million-plus surBusiness groups have long argued
plus, · freezing spending al most
that
1hc 1ax puts them at a disadvanstate agencies at last year 's levels.
tage when trying to compete with
and using money the state took in
companies
located in slates but had not anticipated, Blackwell
including
Illinois,
New York and
said. The spending freezes would
Pennsylvania
that
do not tax
save about $2. 1 million over two
invCntories.
·
years.
Blackwell said schoolchildren
But · Tom Han. lobbyi st for the
arc suffering because of inadequate Ohio Manufacturers' Ass ociation.
school funding .
said reducing the inventory tax
accounts for only a part of hi s group's
paying their fair shan; of higher i"nterest in 1he school-fundin g debate,
school taxes.
"Sure we want the. inventory tax
Even a key House Republican cut," Hart said. :· But wilhoul strucwho generally supports lhe idea ques- tural changes in education. you won't
tioned the liming.
improve quality.
.
"f think this is going to be chal"Our people arc doing a whole lot
lenging enough withoul people think- more remedial work in malh and ·
ing this is a free-for-all and thai reading at their plants after the shift s
cverylhing associated wilh our sys- end than anyone can imagine ."

BlackWell: tax
increase is not
a necessity

j

Strickland tabs Cremeans as potential
opponent in next congressional campaign

OPEl
MOI~·FIL

SAt9-6

If lhe nexl congressional election
were held today; incumbent U.S. Rep:
Ted Strickland expects he would be
vying wilh Gallipolis Republican
Frank Cremeans . for the voters'
approval.
But the Lucasville Democrat said
right now he isn't worried aboul
whelher he will confront Cremeans or
Li. Gov. Nancy Hollister in 1998, bul
more inlerested in serving the Sixth
Dimict. .
"It is whiu, nine months before lhe
pnmary?" Strickland,said in an interview with the Alhens Messenger. "I
have no idea who my opponent will
be.
"My responsibility is 10 represent
the district and I'll be ready when lhe
time comes to run for next November. I' II uy to do a good job," he
added.
·
, But Strickland, who unseated lhe
one-term Cremeans fro~ Congress i.n
November 1996, sa1d Cremeans
would be his choice of the moinent
as a likely opponenl because ofCremeans' conservative record an ~
proven fu,nd-raising abilities.
.

..

Hollister, who chose to abandon Lucas, Washington County Commuher long-standong intention of run- nity College teacher Tom Sharpe and
ning for Ohio secretary of stale nexl Slale Rep. George Terwilleger of
·
year. fonnally announced her candi- Maineville.
Of the group, Strickland fell Terdacy for lhe congressional seal July
L Cremeans, declaring himself the .willeger would pose '!.Problem for
"lone conservative" of the bunch, . Cremeans. Terwilleger has pushed for
said Tuesday he would challenge English to become the stale's official
language, and has called for the
Hollister for the nomination.
In his announcement, Cremeans eliminalion of numerous stale agensaid "there are few differences in lhe · cies and Qffices.
That could lead to a potential split
politics of Nancy Hollister or Ted
in
Cremeans' conservative base,
Strickland," referrilfg to Hollister's
Strickland
believes.
apparently moderate GOP stance and
"If
George
Terwilleger entets the
Strickland's record of support for lhe
race,
and
remember
that I am jusl an
Clinton administralion.
observer,
lhen
that
would make it
"I don't know where Mrs. Hollis,very
difficull
for
Frank,"
he said.
ter stands on a lot of lhe issues,"
Whatever
·
the
outcome
of the
Slrickland told lhe Messenger. "I do
Republican
primary,
Strickland
plans
know where Frank stands. He is a
10
ask
his
opponenllo
limit
campaign
. known q~ntily. I don 'I know w~re
spending - a request he made . to
she stands."
.
Cremeans and Hollister also have Cremeans last year.
"I will go as low as they 're willpotential opposition from other
Republicans who have voiced inter- ing to go," Strickland said.
Slrickland had reprcsenled the
est in lhc nomination, including ~i­
•
dislrict
for a single tenn when Crenessman }iike Aizinger, Ohio Uni·
means
defealed
him in 1994.
versity-Ironton faculty member Dave

NO•INJURIES - No lnjurlel were reported Pullins almost totally enguHed on arrival,
following 1 flrl that dlatroyed thla home on according to Racine VFD Capt. Scott Hill. A
Ron Roed near Portland Tueadly evening. cauae has not been dltennined and no ·one
Nineteen .Recine end eight Bllhln )'Oiuntaer · waa home et the time of the lira, he said. (Phoflreflghtara reapondlng to the blaze found the to courtesy Racine Volunteer F.ire Department)
on•etory, wood-frame reeldence of Vicky

..
•

•

•

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28601">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28600">
              <text>July 9, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
