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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Pomeroy
Yanks.win
in KC meet

Pick 3:
427
Pick 4:
2518
Super Lotto:
12·19-30·36-43-45
Kicker:
420038

Sports on Page 4

Chance of showers
tonight, low in the 60s.
Tuesday, showers, high in
the mid-80s.

,

en tine
....I

I

~.48,N0.87

I

2 Sections, 12 Pegoo, 35 conts
AGannett Co. Nowapapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 21, 1997

c1rm; Ohio Yalley Publllhln; company

Feds propose relief for black lung claimants
say he doesn't.
'" I've had this and that test I don 't
Associated Press Writer
know
how many times;"' sa1d Cline,
WASHINGTON - Retired mine
72.
who
toiled in West Virginia coal
worker Calvin Cline has bounced
mines
for
30 years and must now
from one doctor to another for the
inhale
medication
to help him ,
past seven years. He's almost ready
breathe.
'"
It'&gt;
such
a
hassle.
I didn't
to give up fighting for disability benwan\
to
fool
with
it
myself,
but my
efits.
·
wife
wanted
me
to
keep
fighting."
He has been subjected'to a slew or
Now, the Labor Depanment is
X-rays, blood tests and medical
~onsidering
relief for Cline and othreviews. Sometimes the doctors said
er
ailing
mine
workers, proposing
he has black lung diS.ase. Somechanges
to
14-year-old
rules governtimes, l09king at other results, they

By ANICK JESDANUN

·.~. "'

... ,.

mg black lung compensation. The
new rules would spare miners from
having to undergo countless medical
exams.
Advocates for the workers back ·
that idea but fear that other aspects of
the new rules could make it harder for
miners to assemble a convincing

case. And the mining indusll)' opposes the proposal, considering the
restrictions an infringement on their
right to submit evidence.
Hearings in Washington begin

Tuesday.
Mike South, president of the
National Black Lung Association,
said cases sucli a• Cline's are not
unusual. He said .coal companies
reluctant to pay benefits often drag
cases on for years - until the miner
gives up or dies.
At least 7,000 Ohioans currently
collect black lung benefits.
Federal black lung benefits exceed
SI billion a year and are funded by
coal companies and.a federal tax on

coal. The illness'. also known as
Pt:teumoconiosis, is "caused by long·
lcnn inhal ation or coal mine dust.
· Miners complain that the rules are
stacked in favor of coal companies
willing to spend thousands of dollars
to fight awards that could reach
$200,000 per beneficiary. According
to the Labor Department, only about
7.5 percent or claims are approved.
"The intent or the proposal is to
streamline our process as much as we
can, to make it faster so that miners

and survivors can gel a decision.
promptly," said Shelby Hallmark, ·
acting director for the Office of
Workers' Compensation Programs.
" Cases can drag on i.n .the appeals

procesS for years and yeaTs and take

a lot of lime and mllncy ...
The department expects the rules
to sli ght ly boost the approval rate, to
about 8.5 percent, partly because
each sioe would be limited to two sets
of mcdi~.:al examinations. Currently,
Continued on page 3
.

Kauff's case
bound over
to grand jury
A preliminary hearing in the
case of Willie Kauff, charged
with felonious assault in conneCtion with the July 8 death of
Todd Johnson was concluding at
press lime.
Kauff appeared before County Court .Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien, for the purpose of ,
determining probable cause in
the case.
' Among the·evidence present·

OFFICIAL VISIT • Ohio Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, foreground,
toured the state's oldest standing courthouse, in Chester, on Sat·
urdiy aftemoon. She Is pictured wHh Dale Colburn,-left, and Delmar Baum, both.members of the restoration team, and Elizabeth
Schaad of the Governor's Regional Representative for EconomIc Development.

ed in today's hearing was a taperecorded interview with Kaufl'
which provided details about the
altertation betweerr Johnson and
Jason Hysell which preceded
Johnson's death.

PIONEER CRAFT • Donna Davidson of Rutland demonstrated the pioneer craft of rug
weaving on her antique loom at Saturday's
Cheater/Shade Days. A chenille ljllg like the one ·

Davidson Is weaving here takes about an hour
to complete. (See additional photos on page
8).

Four school districts Woman ·becomes crusader
share $350 m·i llion to
against nation's tired truckers
replace old buildings
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state is
pumping about $350 million into 19
Ohio school districts to help them
repair or replace rundown or outdated buildings.
The grants, which the State Board
of Education approved last week,
were the latest round of awards
under a school building assistance
program. The program was created to
help Ohio's poorest districts upgrade
structures, many of which do not
meet health and safety codes.
Most of the money was included
iQ legislation that Gov. George
Vpinovich signed in May.
Under a new school-funding plan
proposed by Voinovich and being
d~bated in the Legislature, as much
~ $6 billion in state aid for buildings
could flow into districts over the next
10 .years. The Ohio Supreme CoUlt
r1!led in March that . the state must
d~vise a new funding plan because
11-, current meth&lt;X! is unfair to poor
di,stricts and unconstitutional.

''

The proposed program would be
financed by part or the proceeds of a
penny-per-dollar increase in the state

TOLEDO (AP) ...:.. A .woman
whose son died in a 1995 trucking
accident is lobbying legislators to
change federal rules regijlating the

sales tax, which would generate an

amount of time · truck drivers can

extra $1 billion annually for schools.
The latest awards more than dou, ble the amount of state aid for school
buildings since the first awards went
out in .1991.
Tops on the new list:
- · East Cleveland City School
DiSirict, which got nearly $80 million .
- Western Brown Local School
District in Brown County in southwestern Ohio, $40.5 million,
- ~ Minford Lecal School District
in. Scioto County' in southeastern
Ohio, $28.7 million.
- Claymont City School District
in Tuscarawas County in ea~tern
Ohio, $24.3 million.
Depending on the particular district's wealth and debt burden, some
of the grants requir-e a partial match
with local tax dollars . .,

spend on the road.
Althea Banner has become par1 of
an organization known as Parents
Agaihst Tired Truckers. She has traveled several times since last summer
to Washington and Columbus to
speak to lawmakers about its agenda.
Ms. Banner said by jdining the
anti-fatigue campaign. she is '"putting
a face to a number," referring to her
son Michael 's ·death on Dec. 29.
1995
Michael Banner, 18, died when his

'

'

COLUMBUS, (AP) - A judge
who can 't understand how youths
S'ifm to have easy access to guns has
fQpned a task force in hopes or trac~­
inlf down the sources of the weapons.
Judge Susan Brown or Franklin
Cvunly Juvenile Court said the most
s&lt;fious criminal offenses committed
by&lt; youths who come through her
court usually involve usc; or a fire&lt;UTll.
" It is just so commonplace to have
a gun involved in the offense,"' she
said. "For some kids, I think a gun
has become par1 . or their getting
dressed in the morning. And it is hard
to get kids to give you any information on where theY got the guns."
The task force includes Sheriff
Jim Kames, Prosecutor Ron O' Brien,
other representatives from local and
federal law enforcement agencies,.

Nevertheless. Ms. Banner believes
her son's death was caused by driver
fatigue .
.
.
Daphne lzer of Lisbom Falls.
Maine. formed Parent&lt; Against Tired
Truckers
after her son and three friends
were killed by a truck whose driver
had fallen asleep and drifted into their
disabled car.
·
The group proposes that truck
owners pay their drivers by the hour.
instead .of by the mile, as is the common practice in the industry. It also
has urged trucks to be equipped with

computers to replace manual driver
log books.

Amid fears of revenge and a hit list,
FBI continues Cunanan manhunt

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)- As
authorities probed hundreds of tips on
the whereabouts of suspected killer
Andrew Cupanan, the FBI has reportcdly begun warning his acquainlances they may be his next targets.
Cunanan, a suspect in the slayings
of fashion designer Gianni Versace
and four. other men across the country, may be seeking revenge against
those he believes have crossed him,
FBl sp.o_keswoman Colecn Rowley
said in today's editions- of USA
.,
Today.
The FBI was reviewing interlawyers and coun officials.
views
with people who knew
Its top priority IS to trace the guns,
Cunanan
to detennine who should be
Ms. Brown said. Police will question
warned.
The
agency was reportedly
a juvenile arrested with a gun to find
concerned he was working his way
out where it was obtained.
The judge also is putting together down a hit list or wealthy gays and
a form for arresting officers or pros- an patrons.
"We want to see if he talked about
ecutors to fill out on the type, manuother
people,"" Rowley said. "If we
facturer and serial n~mber or the gun.
do
come
across those names, we
Besides identifying the sources of
would
be
remiss
if we did not convey
the firearms, the task force hopes to
that
information
to them."'
push for stiffer penalties for people
Authorities
have
said they believe
who supply guns to youths.
Cunanan,
who
could
be posing as a
Authorities have several theories
woman,
is
still
in
south
Florida. The
on how guns •get into youths' hands.
manhunt,
however,
is
national.
Some are acquired through thefts and
More details have emerged about
burglaries. Some juveniles purchase
Cuminan
"s actions in the days before
a gun from a,n adult who can legally
Versace's
slaying last Tuesday on the
buy the weapon. Some guns are
steps
of
his
South Beach villa found in the home.
including an infonnal get-together at

Task force tries
t,o determine how
1(0Uths aet guns

eastbound car collided head-on with
a tractor-trailer driven by Earl
Phillips. 6S. of Blisslield;Mich., on
State Route 2 in Ottawa County.
Three other vehicles collided with the
rig, inclu&lt;Jing a pickup truck driven
by Stewart Jimison. 29; of Toledo.
who was killed. Nine others were
hun.
Phillips told authorities after the
crash that there was a period before
tlie accident when he could not
remember what happened, but he
denied that he felt tired that evening.
In October, an Ouawa County
Municipal Court jury. acquitted
Phillips of two counts or vehicular
homicide.

the mansion two days before the murdcr that was apparently attended by·
Cunanan .
A Brazilian woman told authorilies she has photos and video showing Cunanan and Versace together at
the July 13 gathering. USA Today
qltoted a Brazilian police official who
con finned the woman's claim and
said the photos have been given to the
FBI.
A frie.nd ofCunanan's told the FBI
thatCunanan had a crush on a momber of Versace's entourage, Time
magazine reported. Authorities have
tried to determine whether Cunanan
and Versace knew each other.
A week ago, a day before the July
15 slaying, security cameras al the
News Cafe recorded Cunanan about
30 minutes before Versace made his
usual appearance to buy magazines,
Newsweek reported. The cafe is
within walking distance of Versace's
home .
Before all of this, Cunanan had
left a brazen trail across Miami
Beach .
Two weeks ago, he walked into a
. pawnshop, used hi.s real name and
"left a thumbprint as he pawned a gold
coin from one of the men he is
. accused or killing. He also left a
record of the hotel and room number
where he stayed until the day before

Versace's slaying.

At the pawn shop. Cash On The
Beach, clerk Vivian Ol iva said she
followed Florida law requiring her ti&gt;
mail a copy of the receipt , thumhprint
and all , to Miami Beach Police within 24 hours .
It was nol clear whether police
received the receipt. Calls 10 Miami
Beach police and the FBI were not
returned Sunday.
Oliva didn 'ttalk to police unti I the
day after Versace's killing, when she
called to tell them about the receip t
she still had . They confiscated lhe fin gerprint card and the coin. which
investigators said was stolen from
Lee Miglin, a Chicago developer
Cunanan is accused with killing in
May.
'
Th·c pawn shop is Within sight of
the Normandy Plaza Hotel, where
employees said Cunanan stayed for
lhe lwo months before Versace 's
murder. Manager Roger Falin said
Cunanan used an alias, nashed a
French passport and went from paying daily to week ly to monthly.
Even before Versace's slaying, the
FBI Was receiving reports of
.Cunanan sighlings from all comers of
the country - boarding airplanes. at
a laundry in Oklahoma City, in the
audience at the Geraldo Rivera show.

Hysell pled guilty shortly after
Johnson's death to a ·charge of
murder, ~nd was sentenced torl5
years to hfe. /
.
After the presentation of evidence, Kauf'f's case was bound

over to the Meigs County Grand
Jury by Judge O'Brien for further action .

. Prosecuting . Attorney John
Lentes said at the beginning Of
today's hearing that the case "is
nearing completion. ~ ·

Details of the hearing and the
taped .interview will appear in
Thesday's .edition of The· Daily
Sentinel.

Meigs fair
tickets arenow on•sale
Membership and season tickets
for the Meigs County Fair, Aug. ll16. are now on sale.
Membership tickets which gj vcs
voting privilege on members of the
Meigs County Fair Board arc $15,
while season tickets which provide
gate admissi on "and free park ing du ring I he entire fair arc $12 . Membership tickets arc on sale at the Sugar
Run Flour Mill, Pomeroy, and may he
purchased from any fair Board member.
Season tickets may he purchased
at Joe's Country Market. Rutland ;
Waid Ci"oss Sons, Racine; Baum

Lumber Co .. CheSler. Sugar Run
Flour Mill. Pomeroy : Swi&gt;hcr-Loh&gt;c
Pharmacy. Pomeroy: Litt le John \,

Food Man, Tupper&lt; Plains and MidJicpon ; Gloeckner's Rcstauranl ,
Pomeroy; Whalcy ;s Grocery, Dar-

win: Helen Baer. Syracu&gt;e: Dorscl
Larkins, Long Bottom: Dan's Middleport;

Five

Point ~

Ex prc:-.~.

Pomeroy; Reed's Country Store.
Reedsville: and McDonald 's of
Pomeroy.
r:or those C)(hibit ing in the !'l~ nJOr
fair departments, purchase of a membership or season ticket i; required .
The entry deadline is Aug . l at 4
p.ni. at the ·secretary's offi ce on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. No entries
will be taken by telephone but they
can be made by mail. The offi ce will
be open on Aug. 't and 2 rrom 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Again this year the Fa1r Board is
offering reserved parking in specified
areas for $20 for the week. Payment
is lobe made and 1hc site picked on
Aug. 2 with those interested to go 10
the secretary's office.
Cost of parking a camper or trailier for the week is $60, or for putting
.
Continued on page 3

�Com1nentary
The Daily .Sentinel
'EstJJ{,fislid in 1.948

614-992·2156 • FIX 992·2157

.!1
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllhw

CHARLEHE HOEFUCH
o..ra1
Ulger
on

MARGARET LEHEW
Conbol._

Special interests pitch their
school plans for lawmakers
By PAUL SOUHRADA
AaiOCillted Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Ideas about how to fix Ohoo's schools are not on short
supply around the Statehouse Fogunng out wtuch will actually do the job,
placate the Ohio Supreme Court - and are pohtocally feasible os a whole
· nolher matter.
A steady stream of lobbyosts, economists, parents, tea~hers, school officials and pubhc pohcy wonks paraded through legislative committees over
the past two weeks. lbey came to pnch their plans to lcgoslators scrambhng
to come up woth some way to retool Ohoo 's schools - academocally and
financially- under a self-ompo$&lt;d Aug 6 deadline.
Some argued for higher 1axes Others maontaoned taxes should be lowered. Most agreed there should be tougher academic standards, but doffercd
on how to achoeve them.
Many thmk pubhc schools need more money; others say they should
spend what they already get more eflicoently A few want to free parents to
send their choldren IO pnvate schools Most opposed the odea.
Gov. George Voonovich and Republican legislauve leaders have proposed
a penny-per-dollar mcrease on the slate sales tax to raose more than S1.1 bdhon annually for Oh1o schools and hmned residenual property tax rehef.
House and Senate leaders plan to release their version of the plan this week,
which likely will include more tax breaks for homeowners but dump a 12cent-a-pack mcrcase m the state cogarette tax proposed by Vomovoch
"This may JUS! be a rare opportuntty to do somethmg for Ohto's schoolchildren," observed Rep. Tom Robert&lt;, D-Dayton
Some speakers - hke the leader of a coaliuon of I00 busoncss, education and civic groups - received a whrm welcome and thoughtful consideration of their ideas Others, a pohtc "Thank you. Next wotness."
Conservative Ohio Unovcrsity economist R1chard Vedder testoficd for
over an hour. but doubts his views woll he renectcd in the final package
''I pessimistic," saod Vedder, who proposed selling the Ohio Turnpike
and turn1ng the state's prtsons over to prtvatc contractors to raose money for
education.
!'We were going through some very elahoratc exerctses to give the public a c~ancc to aor thcor vtews. but the deals arc beong cooked behind closed
doors.
Democrats. in fact. abl'\lptly cut off a lgcal school superintendent testifying in the House Fmancc Committee last week to anend a closed door meeting - with Voinovich and hi~ staff.
··The committee hearings were JUst no longer productive ... explained
Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron. "We think we should resolve these ossues. and
we &gt;hould resolve them now."
- •
The high court gave the Legislature until March to deve lop~ response to
iL~ order declartng the current system unconstitutional . but Voinovoch and
other top Rcpublo~ans want the voters· stamp of approval on whatever they
dcsogn . Aug. 6 os the last day to put ossucs on the November ballot

Letters to the editor
·Supports Hysell sentence

.2

Meigs EMS units
respond to 13 calls

OHIO Weather

Lobby working to kill Medicare reform
By Jack Anderson
For.the past~. Congress has
repeatedly had the opportunity to
enact baste, common-sense n:form
that would have saved the endan·
gered Med1care pro11ram many mol loons-- 1f not bolhons-- of dollars.
But lawmakers. at the urgmg of
hogh powered lobbyists. have conltnually passed up this opportunity.
Now, as broad changes to the
Medocare program are contemplated
on Capitol Hill. those close to the
ossue wonder of lawmakers woll
finally legislate this much-needed
reform . If they do. bravo.
But of our elected officoals tale
another pass. we'll know that
they're far more interested on
appeasmg the lobbyosts representing
a wealthy mdustry than m preserving Medicare for future generauons.
Here's the problem: Medicare
buys all 1ts med1cal supplies and
equipment at government-set pnccs
Unfortunately. these pnces-- or "fee
schedules"-- arc usually much higher
than the market price For example.
Medocare pays $2 32 for a pad of
gau:z.c that wholesales for 19 cents.
Veterans Affaors, meanwhile. pays a
mere 4 cents for the same pad of

HCFA doesn't have the authority to
change payment rates in response to
the market.
Since 1987, the Depanment of
Healt~ and Human Services has submitted several legislative proposals
to Congress that would gove HCFA
the authority to promptly adJUSt fccschedules.
But the makers of mcdocal supplies -- which view Medicare as a
cash cow-- don't want the htgh payment levels changed. So they've
sent lobbyists to Capitol Hill to
encourage lawmakers to leave the
current system m place. Members of
Congress. who hate tummg down
the people who fund theor campaogns, have turned a blind eye to
the HHS proposals
"There's &lt;arne strong olidustry

and lobbying groups who lobby the
Congress because they obvtously
don't wantlhetr payment rates cut,"
a source familiar with the tssue told
our associate Aaron Karp. "It's common knowledge that they (lawmak·
ers) get lobbied hard by the indus·
try.''

1be president's 1998 budget proposal includes a provision to "cslablrsh compe11t1ve biddong" for
Medicare purchasong
Citong a laundry list of mequities,
oncluding the fact that "Medicare
pays 176 percent more than physicians for certam panels of laboratory
tests." the proposal claoms 11 woll
save "about Sl bilbon over live
year.; ...
That Sl bollion os pure waste. If
lawmakers don't su on thctr hands

again, they could save taxpayers a
bundle wuhout cutting any servoces.
But the medical supply industry
is pushing for Congress to take
another pass. And no one is bettmg
that lawmakers won't let a powerful
lobby get in the way of common
sense once again. "At this point. rt's
a wait and see game," our source
sa1d "It's hard to speculate."
UNDER THE DOME -- House
Budget Commlllee Chairman John
Kasich, R-Ohio, has won rave
rc-.cws on the mcdoa for hos vehement
campaogn to balance the fedeml budget. It's an issue that's made the boylsh-lookong lawmaker a nsong polill·
cal star.
-Jack Andenon and Jan Moller
are writen for United Featuft Syndicate, Inc.

expanded the Molwaukcc Parental
Choocc Program to mcludc the usc
of state vouchers on relogoous
schools But any pupil can be
exempt from a school's rehgoous
activity if the parent requests 11.
Law suns were brought challcngmg the constitutlonaltty or using
puhhc tunds tnr scctaroan schools
Among the plamtofls were the AmerICan Clv1l Lobertic s Unum. Amencans Unotcd lor Separallon of
Church and State the Milwaukee
Teachers· Educauon Assocoation and
the NAACP.
The consolidat ed ca!lc has hccn
up and down the Wi scons in courts
(the slate Supreme Court ucd JJ). and so far the most onnucntoal
dccosoon has'hecn made by Judge
Paul Higgonhotham of the Dane
County Cncull Court m Madison
H 1ggonbotham had based hos de cos1on on the state Constitution. hu1
hos fonding,s have co nsiderable
rclcvam;c for the Estahllshmcnl
Clause 10 the kdcral Const1tutmn
(No state or tcderal government
can aod one or all religoons. or
prefer one rchgoon over another)
In his dccosion. the Judge noted
that the part1C1pat1ng rehg1ous
schools m the Mtlwaukee voucher
plan "announced l(&gt;rthroghtly that
theor mossoon os rcligoous and that
rclogoous doctnnc woll he onstilled on
thcor students" (except for those npl-

ing out of rcligoous instruction -- but
rchgoon sllll permeates all the dass·

own. We do not object to the existence of parochial schools or their
rooms in those schools)
aucmpls to spread lhcor behefs
The JUdge prc&lt;cnted a long hst of through the or schools They Just canthese particopatong schools -· wuh not do it with state tax dollar.; "
direct quotes from them. For examVoucher supporters often make
ple. "The contmumg purpose nf St. the poont. however. that It " the parManhcw Evangehcal Lutheran ents who receive the puhlu.: voucher
Church and School os to gn and tell money and then decide to govc 11 to
the pure gospel nf Jesus Christ fnr the schmi/Thcrcforc, they say. there
lhc conversion or unbelievers .. "
is no direct puhhc md to a rchgwus
1nstitut11&gt;n.
Saod Chrost Lutheran Church: ··A
But on 1973. the Supreme Court.
prospective student whose parents
arc not memhcrs or a chun:h woll he m Sloan vs. lemon. sau.l that no
consadercd a m1ss10n prujcct." And matter how 1hc""c st.ttc arr.mgcmcnts
so II wcn1 down the hnc nr schools - to rchg~nus schools arc designed.
eager w share their savmg grace "the State h.os stnglcd nut a class of
Its Citizen" lor a spc~,;1al C4..:onomu.:
with voucher studcnrs.
hcnclil. . At hottom 11s mtcndcd
Judge Hoggonhotham declared consequence 1s to serve und suppur1
th'll lhos voucher pro~ram 'lolatcs rchg1ous mstltutums:· Th11 .. '1101hc scctaon of the state Conslltutlon lalcs the L'onstiiUlmnal mandat~
that prohohtts "co m~ lied support agamst the ·sponsorship· nr ' Imanof rehgwn."
Cia I support' nl rcligum or rchgwus
Furthcnnorc. he saod. the Wos- mslttulmns .··
cons1n Constatut10n makes clear that
Unless the Supreme Cnun has
no tunds can " he drawn trnm the
decided to entirely doscard the
treasury for the benefit of rcligonus
Estahhshmcnt Clause, the tome h;i;.
sococucs .. "
not yet come for the state to support
Hoggonbotham went on tn cmpha- rchguJUs schools. Nor should 1t.
sozc that "perhaps the most oiTcnNat Hentoff is a nationall,
s1vc part ol th1s vou&lt;.:hcr pkm 1s that
renowned authority on the First
ll compels Wasconsm cJtJzcn~ of
Amendment and the I'C!It of the
vnryong lallhs In support schmls
Bill of Rights.
woth their tax dollars that prnsclymc
students and allempt to inculcate
them woth hchcls contrary to thetr

Reynolds, Kennedy: 'Disparate treatment by justice system

-

Today in his.t ory

Harold E. Burt

MICH.

Units of the Meogs Emer- Road, Pomeroy. Alice Bro111n. vMH.
10:26 am .. Laurel Cliff,
Harold Edwon Burt, 59, of Slate Route 124, Pomeroy, doed Monday, July gency Services answered 13 calls for
Toledo 7'J'
Pomeroy,
Sharon Smith, VMH
21, 1997 in the Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Chollicothe, following an assostance over the weekend.
10·57
a.m., 333 Page Street,
extended tllness.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Moddlepon,
Dayton
McElroy.
Born on April 18, 1938 on Pomeroy, he was the son of Lollian L Buck
Saturday
'''
\
6.36
p
m.
Thord
Street, ModBurt of Pomeroy, and the late Charles H. Burt.
7 59 am. South Thtrd,
Mansfield !83'
dleport,
Peggy
Lewis,
VMH
He was a driver/salesman for Heoner's Bakery, a U.S. Army "veteran of Robert Dempsey. Veterans Memori· REEDSVILLE
the Vietnam War,served in the National Guard, a member of the Masonic
al Hospital
IND
Sunday
Lodge 363, F &amp; AM, Middleport; Amencan Legoon, Post ?3. Pomt Pleas8:50 a.m Lydea Road ,
2 52 p m , State Route 124,
Reedsvolle, Shannon Bumgardner.
ant, W Va . and the Stewart-Johnson Post 9926, Veterans of Fon:ogn Wars
Chns
Cleland,
VMH.
He attended the Bradford Church of Chnst.
' Selby Memonal Hospital. Maroetta;
RACINE
Besides his mother, he os survoved by a soster, Marjorie M. Chapman of asststed at the scene by Reedsvolle.
Columbusl85'
Saturday
Moddleport; and by one noece and one nephew
5:22 p m., assisted Gallia
3 23 p m , East Letart Road.
In addouon to his father, he was preceded in death by a brother, Fredersquad, State Route 7, enroute to
Erwin
Glo.:ckner.
Holzer Medical
ick R. Bun.
VMH. woth Clarence Searles.
Center.
Servoces woll be II a.m. Wednesday on the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rut6·14 p m , State Route 143,
7 36 p m , State Route 124,
land, woth Douglas Shamblin oftictating. Burial woll be in the Beech Grove
motor vehicle acctdent, Mayford
Wesley
Clark.
treated not transportCemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2- 4 and· 6Whaley and Me lame Whaley, refused
ed.
8 p m Tuesday.
treatment
W.VA....
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday
Saturday
3.48 a.m., Hudson Street,
7·48 p m., State Route 7,
Sharon While, treated not transportMarvin
Yeauger, Holzer Medical
ed
Richard Caner Caruthers Sr.. 67, Pomeroy. died on Sunday, July 20, 1997
·
Center.
9:06 a.m .. Choldren's Home
' in Pleasant Valley Hospolal.
He was born in Putnam County, W.Va., on March 17, 1930, son of the
late .Levi and Maggie Lee Buchannan Caruthers. He was a veteran of the
Korean Conn oct, a member of Feeney Benneu Post 128 American Legion,
Member of the Meogs County Chapter 53. DAV, and a lifeume member of
the VFW
.
He is survived by three daughters and sons-tn·law, Barbara and J.R. Wamsley of Pomeroy, Jennoe and Terry Adam of Canal Winchester. and Debbie
Extended forecast. .•
Ohio forecast
and Davod Shuler ofSalem Center; a son and daughter-in-law, Rochard Jr. and
NEW YORK (AP)- All manner extortoon . The alleged nngleader was
Wednesday ... Scauered showers Mary Caruthers of Pomeroy; four sosters and two brothers-on-law, Alberta
Today .. Increastng cloudoness
of beggar.; and panhandlers scrounge stoll at large
Showers and thunderstorms hkely and thunderstorms. Lows on the 60s, Hoffman of Bellville, Oh1o, Daisy Taylor of Moddleport, Hester and HenTh~ ommigrants, who appeared to
a
hvmg on New York City subways,
northwest and a chance elsewhere. Highs from the mid 70s to the lower ry Ebhn of Rutland, and Reba and Bob Elkons of Bidwell, three brothers and
be
in good health, worked 18-hour
two sostcrs-on-law, lorn and Gladys Caruthers of Canton, 'Ed and Shirley from musocians on station platfonns days bcggmg and peddhng cheap
Hoghs in the 80s to around 9Q tn the 80s
Thursday ... Achance of showers or Caruthers of Cheshire, and Russell Caruthers of Federal Way, Wash. ; a sis- to the downtrodden who recount
south
tales of woe as they ask riders for tronkets, authorities saod.
· Tonoght.. Mostly cloudy Showers thunderstonns ... Maonly east. Lows 60 ter-in-law, Opel Caruthers of Beech City; and eight grandcholdren.
"Essentially ,they were being used
Besodes hos parents, he was preceded in death by hos wofe. Roberta money
and thunderstorms again likely in the to 65. Hoghs from the upper 70s north
as slaves," saod Mayor Rudolph Gm·
But
it
was
the
most
silent
of
the
to the lower 80s south.
Caruthers, in 1993: three brothers, Ralph, Robert and Hoadly Caruthers; and
northwest with a chance elsewhere
city's underground entrepreneurs hani ''Thos os a situation in whtch a
Friday ... A·chance of showers cast. three sosters, Pauhne, Lolhan and Mandina Caruthers.
Lows from the mod 60s to lower 70s
cenam group of people in this day
Servoces w1ll be II a.m: Thursday in the Rutlartll Freewoll Baptost Church. who may have been in the most desTuesday. Showers and thunder- Dry elsewhere Lows in the 60s and
and
age held them on bondage."
perate
of
straits.
woth burial to follow on Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy, w1th the Rev. Paul
storms hkely. Hoghs mid 70s to mid hoghs on the 80s
Such peddlers are .famohar to anyAuthorities are unravehng an
Taylor ofticoatmg. M&gt;hlary servoces w1ll be held Froends may call at the Mid80s.
operation on whtch dozens of deaf one who ndcs the subway. They
dleport Chapel of Fosher Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Wednescjay
and
sometimes mute Mexicans were move through trams, placmg keyMemorial contributions may be made to the Me1gs County Chapter 53,
illegally smuggled onto the country chams with tags rcadmg "$1, I am
DAV. s,ate Route 7, Cheshtre, Ohoo 45620
and sent to work on the subways. lov- deaf" on the seats, then rush back to
ing in "vortual slavery" for bosses retroeve those not purchased.
who confiscated theor earnings as · The trinket sales apparently were
Up to 7 onches of ratn was possoBy The Aeeocillted Press
payment bnngmg them here .
lucratove for someone - $30,()()(} 1n
'
Carl Arthur •Ritchie, 93, Long Bottom, doed Saturday, July 19, 1997 on
Showers and thunderstorms woll ble by tonoght across Louosoana. MosActing on a tip from four Mexican cash was se1zed at one house, the
move into Ohio tonight and hang sossippi. Georgia and Alabama, where Darst's Private Care Home, Pomeroy
deaf-mutes who walked into a mayor said.
Born on Su!:cess, Ohoo, on Feb. 13, 1904. he was the son of the late Herve Queens precmct house early Saturaround through most of the work the former humcane forced hundreds
"The conspiracy has to be big·
week, the National Weather Service of evacuations, destroyed homes and and Mary Elizabeth Baker Rue hie. He was employed as a heavy equipment day, police found 57 people, most of ger," saod Gouhano, who called the
left thousands wnhout power.
operator and was a farmer.
them also deaf-mutes, living in two arrangement "virtual slavery."
said.
,
Danny was downgraded to a tropHe held 1- teaching certificate from Rio Grande College, and for over 50 crowded homes.
The culprit is a slow-moving
In Mexico City, the Rev. Martin
years was a member of the Operating Engineers Local 132 of Charleston,
Seven other Mex1can immiJ!rants, Montoya Garc1a, dorector of the
frontal system that will pull warm. ical depressoon over the weekend
Strong thunderstonns were also W.Va , and the Shade River Lodge 453, F &amp; AM.
some of them also deaf, were arrest- Rosendo Ollcla Institute for the deaf.
moost air from the south.
expected
by tonight in a wode band
He is survived by his wofe, Zetta Pottman Ritchie; three daughters and sons- ed Sunday on charges that mclude said the news conlinned his fears .
It also woll become more humod as
on-law, Helen and Raymond Barber of Pataskala, Nola and Darrell Cheva· alien-smuggling, grand larceny and
temperatures mcrease, forecasters from Minnesota onto the Carolinas
Storms packtng 60-mph wind and her of Pataskala, and Rose and Mike Bums of Letart, W.Va ; two sons and
saod
Hoghs on .Tuesday will be mostly hail were forecast to push east from daughters-on-law, Robert and JoAnn Rotchte of Racone, and Roger and Carthe Rockies onto the Plaons, from the olyn Ritchie of Reedsvdle; a SISter. Josephine Rotchte of Long Bottom; II
on the 80s.
•
grandchtldren. 17 great-grandcholdren and seveml great-great grandcholdrcn , By The Associated Praas
· The record-hogh temperature for Dakolas to Texas.
25, of Cortland, drover in a one-vehiDry and fair weather was expect- and noeces and nephews.
th1s date at the Columbus weather
cle
accident on state Route 45 in
At least seven people died in trafBesides hos parents, he was preceded on death by a &lt;an, Larry Ritchoe, fic accidents on Ohoo roads over the Trumbull County
station was 106 degrees in 1934 ed in the West. though strong evenong
whole the record low was 48 in 1970. stonns were forecast over Anzona two brothers, Alv1n and Wayne Ruchie; three sisters, Zana Hall, Len me Crary weekend. the State Highway Patrol
BELLBROOK- Davtd I. Dorc,
Sunset tomght will be at 8:56 p m. a~d New Mextco. Flash floods ~ere and Nonna Ritchie, and one great-granddaughter
52.
of Bcavcrcr))ck. driver on a oncsaod Sunday.
possible in An zona.
Services will be II a m Wednesday on the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher
and sunrise Tuesday at6:21 a.m
vchoclc
accidci'it on a Bellebrook
The patrol coqnts fatalities from 6
- On Sunday. strong thunderstorms Funeral Home, Inc, 590 E. Maon St., Pomeroy. The Rev. Glenn D. Easter- p m Fnday unul midnight Sunday.
road
Strong storms brought heavy ram pushes across the M1dwes~. Great long woll ofticoate and burial woll be on Chester Cemetery. Fnends may call
ZANESVILLE - Corby S.
The dead:
to the Gulf Coast today as the rem- Lakes and Southeast.
at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Tue~day
Watring
Jr.. 20, of Newark. driver.
SUNDAY
Winds gusting to 70 mph on TulMasonoc servoces w1ll be held at 8:30 p.m Tuesday by the Shade Rover
and
Jason
Moiler, 18, of Newark, pas' nants of Humcane Danny moved
VAN WERT - Kenneth E.
senger,
m
a onc-cnr accldcnl on a
slowly to the northeast toward Geor- sa. Okla , uprooted trees and blew Lodge.
Nochols, 19, of Rockford. driver in a
down power hnes.
goa. It was generally fair elsewhere
Miiskingum
County road.
onc-vchoclc accident on a Van Wert
County road
continued rrom page 1
SATURDAY
CAMBRIDGE - Mark Beach,
Jr.,
38. of Northfield, and Clara M.
Board
changes
meeting
t1mc
So&lt;ial
planned
Bobby Jackson, voce prestdcnt of
there os no limot, and cnucs say coal
Beach,
63. of Cleveland. passengers
The
Meogs
Local
School
Board
of
An
ice
cream
socoal
woll
be
held
compames often counler mtners' human resources for the industry's
on
a
onc-vchocle
accident on Interstate
Education
woll
hold
Its
regular
mectclaoms by deluging the record woth trade group, said the effort to push the Saturday from 4 to 9 p.m at the North
77
m
Guernsey
County
ong
at
7
p.m.
Thursday
in
the
board
IJIU!tiple medical optni&lt;]ns favorable heanng process to the Labor Depart- Bethel Umtcd Methodist Church
WARREN
-Allison
M. Phollips.
ment's admonistrative offices was located near Coolvolle on old Route room.
tp them .
The rules also are expected to cut unwarrante&lt;). By restrictmg evidence, 7. In conjunctoon woth the socoal a
mdividuals' and companoes' nghts arc gospel sing will be hrld woth Russ Clink set
&lt;~own the number of appeals by
A free skin tcstmg chnoc woll be
Spencer and the Gospel Tones, ,Jim
rfStricung the submission of new evo- curtailed, he said.
"The Department of Labor uses Blatr and the Gospel Aires, and oth- conducted by Connoc Karschnik. R.
&lt;lence after the first stage That could
Continued from page 1
N , T. B Nurse at the Chester Fore
shorten the revoe.w process to months the term 'streamlinong' as a rationale er local talent.
Department tonight from 4.30 to up a ten. $25. Sites and payment on
for proposong these rules," Jackson
opstead of years.
6·30 p m. All indtvodual who arc those will also be handled on Aug. 2.
But the United Mine Workers of saod. "Everybody would agree they Class picnic planned
General admossoon onto tbe fair is
The Chester High School Class of involved on food scrvocc arc rcqutrcd
America and the Natoonal Mming arc cumbersome, but that docsn 't
$5,
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday,
1931 woll have ots annual pocnoc Sun- to obtam an annual skin test. Thts woll
Assocoauon are unoted on opposong mean they are broken."
and
$6, Wednesday. Fnday and SatJackson refuted claoms that coal day at 12·30 p m Teachers and class- be one of the last cvenmg chnocs
t,f!at provasion.
urday.
Children under two are admitbl:-rorc the faor.
"Coal operators are well-equoppcd operators skew outcomes by out- mates are welcome.
free
Gate admissoon all of the
ted
with legal representatiOn at every spendong plaontoffs and saod the new
mechanocal
ndes free as well free
Revival slated
Reunion planned
~tage of the application process. rules would govc moners an advantage
The
Rutland
Church
of
God
woll
admossion
to
the grandstand.
The descendants of Tommy
Jrlost miners are nor," said uno on by relaxing the medocal definitions
hold
a
weekend
revival
Friday
and
Holders
of
membership, season or
Gilkey and Molda Jane Hudnall woll
11resodent Cecil Roberts "In the for black lung disease.
4-H
uckets
ride
by paymg $3 at the
The House twoce passed lcgisla- hold thetr annual reunoon, Sunday. at · Saturday, 7 p.m. each evcnong, and
~arne of streamlimng, the rule shuts
rode
office
on
Monday,
Tuesday and
Sunday, 10 a It) to 6 p.m The church
qut posstbly critical evidence and wit- toon containing some of the provi- the roadsodc Park on Route 33.
sions, but the Senate failed to act. In Potluck donner at noon. Those attend· os located on State Route 124 near Thursday, and $4 on Wednesday. FrifltSSeS ."
day and Saturday.
the late 1970s. before the Reagan ing to take table servocc and folding Rutland.
admonistrauon lightened eligobility chaors
rcquorements. nearly half of black
Daily
lung claims were approved.
Club to meet
(USPS Zll-MG)
The Rutland Garden Club woll
hold ots annual pocnic at the home of
Pt.Jbll•hed every llflemoon. Moll®~ thro\lp
&amp;idly. Ill Coort SL, Pomeroy, Ohio, by 1be
Pauline Atkins, Wednesday, at 6 p m

•

I

I I

I

l•

''"'' •'I

. I

Seven are charged with
holding Mexican deafmutes in 'virtual slavery'

Showers, thunderstorms are
forecast for Ohio most of week

The deep trouble with school vouchers
Advocates of publicly financed
vouchers for religious schools took
heart when the Supreme Court on
June 23 reversed one of lis own
precedents.
The Coun ruled that 11 docs not
voolatc the Constnutoon to send pubhe schoolteachers -- paod by taxpayers' money --.into parochoal schools
to teach rcmcdtal classes to dosadvantogcd choldrcn.
In dasscnt. Jusltcc Dav1d Souter
warned that the dccosoon would lead
to "d1rcct !-.late md to rclig1ous mslilutlons on an unparalleled scale."'
But Mark Chopko. general counsel
lor the Unotcd States Cntholoc Conterence. JUholantly saod that the
Court maJonty had now prnv1dcd
states wnh a · hlucpront" for •ouchcrs lO scctanan sc hoob.
H1s cc lchrallo n. however. 1s
dcc1dedly premature. as " partoculnrly otlustratcJ hy the mdunus JOU[·
ncy ot school vouchers on Wo&lt;eon-

AccuW.athe,e fOR!:ISI for

Today's weather forecast

And a number of reports on recent
years have ondicatcd that pnvate companies paod 17 1~ 48 percent less than
Medocarc for cenam nutriuonal supplements.
"These above-market fees and
payment rates lead to Medicare and
taxpayers losong hundreds of mollions of dollars," report congressoonal rnvesugators from the General
Accountmg Office.
The blame loes not with the
Medicare program but w1th do-nothIng lawmakers and the cumbersome
rcgulauons
In one case. ot took more than
three years for the Health Care
Fonancing Adminostration (the
agency that runs Medicare) to adJust
a payment rate . In other cases.

By Nat Hentoff

Thesday, Jaly 22

Richard C. Caruthers Sr.

gauze.

Dear Ednor·
My heart truly goes out to the Johnso ~ famoly conccrnmg the senseless
murder of their beloved famoly memhcr I am still on shock and dosbchel that
somcthong so smistcr could actually happen to a fellow educator here on
Mcogs County. Such shock was also felt last sp•ong when a fellow Enghsh sm.
teacher was poosoncd by one of her students whole at school. Actmns of
Wath greater cducallon and
meanncs. and hatefulness always force canng mdmduals to search tor
povcrt y problems than any other
answers liS to wlty• Why dod thos have tn happen '' Why was thos gmd perschool d1stnct an W1scons1n. Malson taken? Why? Why?
Justice was swift in the John•on ca&gt;c. Perhaps not (()the Irking of some waukee. starung on 1990. ~rmlltcd
indivodual&gt; who possess a Iole for a hie" ph1losophy or those who wosh to sec any puhhc school student to attend
any non-scctanan school in the clly
convicted cnmmals rchahlhtatcd 1n psych1atnc centers. but neverthe less
at puhloc expense
efficient. Not everyone can he happy with rhc results ot murder ancmptcd
. Then on 1995 the state lcgoslaturc
,
murder cases.
One such unhappy mdovodual seems to he Davod Bodikcr. the head ol the and g&lt;wcrnor Tommy Thompson
·Ohio Puboc Defenders Office in Columbus Mr Bodokcr omphcd cnucbm ol
our Meigs County JUStice system on a Daily Sentinel aruclc on July II. 1997
Apparently Mr Bodikcr wou\d pret'cr that Meigs County conduct a very
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM'
lengthy trial for Jason Hysell. Why waste tax dollars for a troal when Mr.
Gannett
News Service
Hysell has confessed to the cromc'' Enough ta&lt; dollars arc consumed by sup·
They
fonally
hrokc
Mel
plyong facoliucs to hou&lt;c convoctcd crominals Why question th" 'Conic" to . Reynolds .
the crime, then do the time.
For two years. the former conI question what pohucal asp~rauons Bodokcr has that would prompt hos
gressman has argued that hos state
altention to thos particular case over the hundreds that arc processed every
court conviction on charges of hav·
single day throughout Ohoo What docs he personally have to gaon by qucs·
ing sex wuh a mmor and obstruction
toomng Meogs County just1cc ' Docs he have an ax to gnnd'' Who knows' '
of jusucc was a· set-up - part of a
I support and applaud indovoduals of our legal system for the way they
long-alleged consporacy to chase
have conducted themselves. properly mvcst ogated the cnmc and sentenced
hlack nlficoals from1 oflicc.
Mr. Hysell m the Johnson murder case Each agency worked swoltly and
And when carhcr thts year a lcdconsctcntoously stnved not to voolatc Mr. Hy sell's nghts' Judge Crow pointcral JUry convicted hom of hank and
ed out in the article that Mr. Hysell was a.ked ten umcs whether he woshcd
wore fraud and Iy mg to the Fcdc&amp;al
legal representation. Each time Mr. Hysell rclu&lt;cd. Mr. Bodikcr should realElcctoon Commossoon. Reynolds
ize that we do have ontclhgcnt and competent legal professoonals on Meogs
- continued to protest Jus mnoccnt:c
County.
and mistreatment hy prosecutors.
I am confident that most indivoduals woll agree that no cnme was comBut JUSt before he was to be senmilled against Mr. Hysell. The nome was agaonst Todd Johnson and his fam· tenced on Tuesday Reynolds dod a
ily.
nip-nop.
" I have not followed the law
M. Suzanne Bentz
when ot comes to my campaign,
Meigs Local Teacher
when 11 comes to the way I dealt
Racine
wnh banks. and I have made mostakcs as it relates to putting myself
on posotoon to hurt my famoly," he
sa od
"' Have you broken the law?"
U.S.
District Judge Charles Norgle
By The Auoclated Prase
asked
Today is Monday, July 21. the 202nd day of 1997 There are 163 days left
' .. Yes,
have,'' Reynolds
rn the year.
·
answered.
Today's Htghlighl m Hostory:
Then the Judge sentenced
On July 21, 1925, thc sorcalled "Monkey Trial" ended in Dayton, Tenn.,
with John T. Scopes convocted of vrolaung state law for teaching Darwin 's Reynolds to 6 112 years in prison,
SIX months of w"ich woll overlap
theory of evolution. The convrction was later overturned.
what remarns of the ume he now is
On this dale:
In 1831, Belgium became independent as Leopold I was proclaomed Kong servong in a state jail And woth that
Reynolds ' charge of disparate treatof the Belgians.

mcnt lizzlcd.
Or did it'!
Though he never offered proof he
was hc'ong smgled nut because ot hts

race. or that wh1tes accused of similar cnmcs have gotten otf far caster.
that doesn't mean there isn't more

" Without the wilhng involvement of the vtcllm there is no hasos
to proceed further," the Massachusetts prosecutor cxplamcd
The woman who brought
Reynolds down also was 19 at the
tome charges were brought agaonst

"I have . not followed the ,law
when it comes to my campaign,
when it comes to the way I dealt
with banks, and I have made mistakes as it relates to putting myself
in position to hurt my family," he
said.
than a germ of truth to hos claoms
What he dtdn 't mention, but
could have.
Last week, a prosecutor tn suburban Boston abandoned his effort to
bring charges against Michael
Kennedy - son of Robert F
Ken ned)' - for a sexual relationship
he is satd to have had with his chtldren 's young baby sitter. The gorl,
now 19 but a monor when tho affaor
was suspected to have begun, refuses to talk 10 law enforcement offiCials about what happened.

hom - and reluctant to talk ahout
her sexual encounters with the thencongressman

But onstcad of shutting down hts
onvcstlgation, Chicago's prosecutor
urged the Judge to hold the woman
on contempt of court, whoch os exactly what he did.
She was sent to Jail and told she
would have to slay until she talked
about her sexual relationship woth
Reynolds.
After spending over a week in a
lockup, the young woman caved in

•
•

THe Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 21, 1997

Uor.dllf, July 21, 1997

and J1111 llaler

111 Court StrMt. Pomeroy, Ohio

•

p•

•

and gave prosecutor&gt; the cvodcncc
they needed to convtct Reynolds of
having sex wuh a monor
Of course, some woll argue these
dcc1soons were made in different
states, by do ffcrcnt prosecutors.
They ' ll say that companng them is
the legal cquo valent of judgong
apples woth oranges And, in a technical sense, they arc right.
But JUStice shouldn't hang on
such a thon thread .
Unless the Massachusclts prosecutor had hos head on the sand back
in 1995, he was well aware of the
pressure hos ' Chicago counterpart
put on the young woman who
eventually tcstofocd agaonst the
hlack congressman.
She was treated hke an accessory
to the cnmc, whole the young
woman in the Kennedy case was
treated as a vicum.
·
As a result, Reynolds went to jail
- and Kennedy was allowed to gel
on with hos life.
If that's not dosparatc treatment, I
don 't know what IS . The fact that the
one WhO is behind bars IS black and
the man who got off ~cot-free is
while may only be coincidelital, but
it fitS'a dosturbing pattern
The disparate treatment o(' Mel
Reynolds and Michael Kennedy
throws the scales of JUstice out of
balance and offers more proof that
race still matters in America •

Carl

A~

Ritchie

Seven people die on Ohio roads

Meigs announcements

Feds propose...

Meigs fair. ..

The

Sentinel

Oh1o Valley PubUtbi"l ~yJOanoeu Co.
Pomeroy. Oh10 _.S'769, Ph: 992-2156 Second
elasa posiOJC paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: Tho AISOCIIIItd Preas, and lhe Ohio

.

Ncwtpopet AUOCiadon .

POSTMASTER; Send addreu eontcdon• 10
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-·-·-

The Meigs County Library is
Bringing the Library to Youl

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quote• provided by Adveal
of Galllpolla.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 18 - Mrs.
WiH1nm Sharp and son . .Mrs. Roger
Spaun and son, Mrs. Anthony
Burgess and son.
Birth -- Mr. and Mrs. James
Bush, son, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Mollohan, son, Bidwell.
Discharges July 19 - Mrs.
James Bush and son, James Yates,
Sheila Hall , Carol Justts, Mrs
Thomas Mollohan and son, liftinta
Moore.
Discharges July 20 - Amber
Wnght, Dcmse Goheen, Mrs, Jason
Wells and daughler.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jason
Wells, daughter, Racme.
(Published with pennission)
' iti
A blackout in New York Cny

1977 left 9 molhon people without
electricoty for up to 25 hours, and
lootmg resulted in 3,700 arrests

We now offer Homebound Delivery
If you are homebound, handicapped, or elderly and cannot ·
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Name---------------------- Phone Number-----Address---------------------we will be happy to provide our free service upon request.

�.•

..

-

~

The Daily Sent~~!

Sports

Monday, July 21, 1997

Pirates, Yankees, Raide.r s anCI Home Care Medical win
three-RBI effort from Fruth pttcher
Mtke Benson set the stage for lastmnmg berates by Btdwell.
Wtth leadoff httter Jason McCoy
aboard vta a walk, Benson, the No.
3 hllter, drove a two-run homer to
nght center off starter Chns Brown.
But Brown struck out two of the next
three httters to contam the damage.
Btdwell started chappmg away at
the lead m the bottom of the first
when Charhe Hollanbaugh beat Benson's throw to the plate after Benson
dropped Raysean Allen's popup
The Pirates ued the game when Donme Johnson, who was htt by a pllch,
scored on Brown's groundout to second The hosts cracked the tte when
Allen scored by beatmg catcher
Stephen Parsons' throw to Benson at
the plate followmg a wdd pllch
After a scoreless second mnmg,
Fruth erased the 3-2 defictt m the
third when McCoy scored the tying
run on a wtld pllch. Benson's one-

CELEBRATION TIME comes lor the Pomeroy Yankees, who cel·
etnte tile grand slam hh by Jeremy Roush (35) In the third Inning
ol Sunday's Kyger Creek Little Leegue Tournament geme against
Rio Grande II, which lqst1H. The Yank-, one ol the lour Meigs
County enlrln left In the dlamondlest, scored In every Inning but
the tilth to earn a second-round berth oppoalte Racine Wednesday
night. (OVP pholo by G, Spencer Osborne)

out, smgle to center sent Branson
Barkey home wtth the go-ahead
run That marked the last ttme Fruth
held a lead
The Ptrates tted the game when
Allen, who smgled to lead off the
hosts' thlfd, scored on a botched rundown durtng Brandon Coe's at-bat.
Allen, trapped by Benson between
second base and third, took advantage of shortstop McCoy's errant
throw to thtrd baseman Shawn Henry and later beat Henry's throw to tile
plate to score
Btdwell took the lead when
Brown, who reached on McCoy's
error on a groundei, scored on a
throwtng error to third by center
fielder Wes Taylor.
After a scoreless fourth . Btdwell
sent Johnson to the htll tn rehef of
Brown to stan the fifth Fruth lied the
game when Joe Hart's groundout to
second allowed Benson to tte the
game at 5-5 But Johnson needed
only three pitches to get Parsons to
ground out to second to hold Fruth
at bay.
Bidwell took a 6-S lead in the bottom of the fifth when Allen, who
doubled to left center and advanced
to thtrd on Coe 's groundout to first,
scored when Barkey commuted an
error at second on Brown's grounder.
Frulh's sixlh: Fruth tied the
game at 6-6 when Ben Redman, who
walked, Sl:ored on McCoy's basesloaded groundout to second Fruth
got into a potential lead-changing situation when Johnson walked Barkey
on five pllches. But Johnson got
Benson to strike out swmging on
four pitches to leave the bases
loaded.
,
, Bidwell's sixlh: Erwm walked
and moved to third when Benson
fired an errant throw to McCoy at
second base on Pete Saunders' bunt.
Hollanbaugh reached on a fielder's-chotce grounder to first that saw
first sacker Redman throw out Erwm
at the plate. Thts was the first part of
a four-player relay that resulted in a
ft rst-to-catcher-to- pitoher-to-tht rd
baseman double play that nailed
Saunders at thtrd.
Then Johnson hned Benson's
ftrst pttch mto center field to allow

Hollanbaugh, who moved to second
during the double play, to score the
gamc-w1nnina run.

The n11111ben: Brown struck out
seven and walked three m hts four·
mmng stmt. Jollnson struck out three
and walked as many to get the wm.
Benson's complete-game effort
resulted m two strtkeouts, four walks
and a four-hitter (Allen and Johnson
turned m 2-for-3 efforts at the plate).
Fruth's httters were Benson (3-4),
Joe Messer (he doubled m a 1-for-3
effort), McCoy and Parsons (both
also went 1-3)

1llni.u mllb

Fruth
202-011 =6-6-6
Btdwelll
302-011 =7·4-0
WP - Johnson (m relief of
Brown)
LP- Benson

Yankees 18, Rio Grande 11-4
The conclusion of tirst-round
play was a two-hour-plus exhtbttton
that saw the Yankees weather Rto
Grande's opening-frame rehellton
and put on an offcnstve thunderstorm
that let up only tn the fifth.
In the firs~ Pomeroy got its first
two runs on a throwtng error and a
wtld pitch But Rio Grande got satisfaction when two eiTOrs- one on
a grounder and one on a fly ball resulted m two runs.
Rto pucher Brian Caldwell, his
club's No.5 hiller, used some hustle
to follow up the outfield error by
beaung second baseman Davtd
McClure's throw to the plate Rto
added to its 3-2 lead when Kris Ferrell doubled to left center to score
Tommy Bose.
The Yankees battled back when
No 3 httter Jeremy Roush started his
Slx-RBI exhibnton wllh a groundrule double that scored Paul Wtll
Pomeroy turned thtngs m Us favor
when Mcqure and Roush scored on
wtld pttches durmg Kyle Hannan's
at-bat.
In the thlfd, Roush hll a grand
slam to cap a five-run not and help
put the Yankees out of Rto's reach
Rto got runners to thtrd base tn
the fourth and the stxth. However,
Pomeroy's defense rose to the occaSion and nailed Dertck Layton at the
plate in the fourth. That wa.' the only

occasiOn after the opentng frame that
Rto got a runner past third
Pomeroy got five tnnings out of
staner Ty Ault before sending him to
shortstop tn favor of closer Carl
Musser, the starting catcher who also
duty at first before puchtng. The two
combined to strike out seven and
walk four.
'
Caldwell, Stephen Kenney and
Mtke Davis, Rto's pnchmg relay
team, combined to strike out six and
walk 12
Pomeroy's hmers were Ault,
Roush (both 3-5), Wtll (1-1),
McClure and Brandon Ramshurg
(hoth 1-5).
Rto's hitters were Ferrell (2-3),
Coldwell ( 1·2) and Landon Grate (1 -

3)

lllnin&amp; tlllali

Pomeroy
235-305=18-9-3
400-000=4-4-5
R10 Grande II
WP - Ault
LP - Caldwell

Raiders 18, Mason VFW 11·0
The Ratdcrs' I 0-run not m the
lust, thetr three-homer assault, T J.
Thompson's ltvc-RBI ell on and
Cohn Woodall's nu·hll pnchmg
made them the lirst to reach the quarterlinal round.
In the first, four htts, mcludmg
Thompson's two-run homer to lett,
ac~:ountcd lor seven of the Ra1dcrs'
early runs. When No 7 htttcr Ntcky
Craycraft struck out for the second
It me to end the mnmg, Kyger Creek
had sent 16 batters to the plate. The
lirst three httters m the hneup Adam Darst (he also had two RBls),
Bryan Workman and Ryan Spauldmg - scored tw1ce.
In the second, Thompson htt his
sccon~ two-run shot ol the game11 was his thtrd of the tournamentm the same area as the first In the
third, Craycralt made up for hts two
prcvtous at-bats hy dnvmg Jeremy
SmJth 's first ollcnng beyond the lett
licld lcnce By then, K C wa.' ahead
15-0
Meanwhile, Woodall struck out
the stdc tw~&lt;c en mute to whtlling II
ol the 14 htttcrs he laced. He walked
two and hll another No VFW runner
got past lirxt.
K C 's hitters were Thompson

(4-4), Woodall (2-2), Spaulding (2~
3), Caleb Davidson (1-1), Josh
Wamsley ( 1-2), Craycraft and
Workman (both 1-3).

lllllin&amp; l!l1ll5

Ma.•on VFW II
000-0=0-0-5
K.C Ratders
(10)44-x=IS-12-Q
WP- Woodall
LP- While
Home Care Medical 6
Mead's Body Shop 3
In the nightcap, homers by Kevm
Thompson and Jeremy Turner started and finished Home Care Modteal 's dnvc to the quarterfinals.
Thompson drove tn HCM's first
runs wtth Mwo-run blast m the linn
off N•ck Dalton. Four frames later,
Turner's solo shot oft rehcver Brandon Bonecutter gave HCM an msurance run m ns final at-bat.
On the mound, Turner had a complete game for Home Care, lannm~
14 and walking four. Dalton (6Ks &amp;
2 BBs) lasted four mnmgs before
giVIng way to Bonecutter (2Ks &amp; I
BB)
Home Care's billers were Jam~s
Schultz (2-2), Hunter Roush,
Thompson (both 1-2), Duncan add
Turner (both 1-3)
MBS, whtch got the first or i!S
three runs when Chad Sayre's smgle
scored Ken Durst m the fourth, got
its offense from Durst ( 1-2), Say're
( I-3) and Dustin Momson ( 1-4 ). ·
!gnjng llllab
Mead's Body Shop 000-111=3-3-0
Home Care
203-0 lx=6-~ I
WP-Turncr
LP - Dalton

-·-

Here is the agenda lor the next
four days.
Tonight - Rto Grande Rcdmen
vs, Harnsonvlllc at 6 p m , Nallonwtdc Insurance vs Lillie Hockmg at
7.30 p.m.
Thesday - Chester vs. Point
Pleasant Hardware at 6 p.m., Galhpolts Reds vs. Btdwcll II at 7:~0
p.m
Wednesday- New Haven Reds
vs. Bidwell I at 6 p.m.; Pomeroy
Yankees vs Racmc at 7 30 p.m.
Thursday Kyger Creek
Raiders vs Home Care Medtcal at 6
p.m., tontght's v~~:tors at 7 30 p.m

Jarrett slips past
Gordon
·to
win
Pennsylvania
500
flag
•

_ wins by Chevrolets, took the lead m
By DICK BRINSTER
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) - Dale the 'Winston Cup pomt standmgs.
The 40-year-old JaJTett, considJarrett, who resurrected hiS career
with a surprising vtctory two years ered lmlc more than a journeyman
earlier at Pocono International Race- helore w10n10g thiS race tn 1995,led
way, won hiS latest duel wtth Jeff ftvc times for 108 laps
Gordon on Sunday in the Pennsyl·
He assumed the lead for the final
vania 500.
ttmc on lap 180, 151aps aftertaktng
' They exchanged the lead four four tlfes dunng the last round ofptt
umes, but Jarrett was able to pull stops Jeff Burton, whose thtrd·place
away late in the race and beat Gor· ftntsh was hts eighth in the last 10
don by 2.99 seconds to w10 for the ruce&lt;, left the pHs first because he put
thtrd time thts season and gtvc Ford only two ttres on his Ford.
its lith vtctory m 18 races.
"That was the key," Jarrett satd ol
"This motor was IOCf\'dtble," Jar- the deciSiOn not to take JUst two ttres.
rett said. "It's almost unfatr that the
"We didn't know what ll would do,
thing was that good."
and we had too good a race car to
In agreement was Gordon, pre- mess 1! up"
.
cluded by Jarrett from sweepmg the
The vtctory was the lith of Jar1997 races at Pocono.
rett's career, but the ctghth since
"There was only one good car," JOmmg Robert Yates Racmg m 1995
he said "We couldn't compete We Alter takmg the Daytona 500 for Joe
were in a dtfferent ~lass."
Gtbbs 10 1993, Jarrett wOn Just once
But Gordon, who has all seven m the hts next 78 starts before hts

first Pocono vtctory
"Thts was a great pl3ce for me m
'95," he satd "When I really needed somethmg good to happen, I won
here."

Irontcally, Jarrett beat Gordon
that day. Although he duphcatcd that
effort Sunday, Jarrett struggled wtth
a car that dtdn't want to turn cn~ply
"Butllound a Ime that worked a
httle b1t better wtth the light race
car," he satd. "I was runnmg ~wful
hard trymg to get past JeiT llurton
and get away from Jeff Gordon.
"I was probably makmg 11 push a
httlc more than it needed to. Then I
•aimed dpwn a btl and cverythmg
was OK"
Jarrett got the Yates nde m 1995
only because current teammate Ernie
lrvan was still recovcnng from a
near-fatal head mjury the prcvtous
year. The plan was for Jarrett to start
hiS own team in. 1996, but ll never

came to fruttton, and he stayed a.'
Yates' so-called second dnver.
The 1996 season began wtth Jarrett wmnmg hts second Daytona 500.
He won three more races and had a
shot at a $1 milhon honus before a
lew ~ents worth of oil sent htm mto
the wall in the Southern 500.
The winner that day was Gordon,
who has a chance for that same
bonus at Darlington on Labor Day
weekend. Among those he must
heat Js Jarrett, who spoiled hts
chan~:e to become the only driver to
win four stratght races at troublesome Darlmgton wtth u vtctory four
months ago m the TranSouth 400.
Last month, when Jarrell slowed
approachmg an acctdent at Dover, a
closely pursumg Gordon rammed
htm. The mtshap took both cars lmm
contention.
Jarrett, who ~:ollectcd $104,570
from u purse ol $1.4 mtlhon, gave

a ~:hampton at last
"I've patd my dues," the 32-ycarold from Port St. Lucte, Fla., satd
after capturmg her first tour vtctory,
a three-stroke, record-settmg endeavor (wcr two ~hargmg superstars m
the JAL Btg Apple ClasSic.
Redman's thrce-bndtc, twobogey 70 capped a first-day-to-last
sweep of the field m one ol the
LPGA's most presttg10us events It
gave her a four-round 272, a stroke
better than the tournament's old
record and three lower than her clos-

the eye, and terror bhnkcd
Anntka Sorenstam, the LPGA's
hestand arguably the most dom10ant
player m all golf, was 10 the final
threesome wtth Redman and Barb
Mucha, four strokes off the lead
When Redman bogeyed two of
the first three holes, and then Sorcnstam rolled 10 a 12-footer lor btrdic
at No. 5 to cut the defictt to one
stroke, you could almost sec the
leader lookmg for a seat m coach and
her Swedtsh pursuer wondering how
she'd spend her fifth wmncr's check
est pursuer
of the season.
On the way, she looked terror m
Except that's when Redman
decided 11 was ume to hold onto this
lead, and Sorenstam, who makes
_ most opponents qu~~:k.£, never found
the answer.
IS

MU's Darling expects to
recover from gunshot wound
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)Marshall full~ack Javonnc Darhng
was shot in th.f: calf thts weekend hut
was not IRJ\Ired senously, coa~;h
Bob Pruett s~id Sunday mght.
"As far a, I know, he was an
innocent by~tander passing by a
fight and fro~t what I understand of course, I' IIi' not sure - the people fighting gpt in an argument, one
shot at the o~, a number of shots
were fired, itnd one of them htt
Javonne m tltli 1calf as he was runmng
away," Pruetl said.
Darling, 2~. a senior from Staten
Island, N.Y., was treated at Cabell
Huntington l!ospital and released
' after ttio sho~~mg Saturday, a nursing supervisor satd
Pruett saitl the wound dtd not
, require stJtc~'s and Darhng should

rC&lt;..:UVCr Within tWO Or three weeks.
Pruett satd he would conunue to
seck mformatton about the shooung,
whtch occurred m a parkmg lot near
a bar.
"And if disciplinary action needs
to be taken, we' ll certamly take 11,"
Pruett said.
Police satd no one had been
charged. They released no other
detatls.
Darhng has · been a reserve at
Marshall. He is not listed on the
Herd's first- or second-team offenSive depth chart going into thiS sea·
son
He rushed for 1,335 yards and 21
touchdowns as a sen10r at Susan B.·
Wagner Htgh School tn New York.

vcrs

Burton's teammates, Ted Mu:-;~
grave and Mark Martm, guvc Ju~k
Roush Ractng a 3-4-5 limsh. Fords
have fmtshed among the top live 15
limes m the Ia" four races at the 2
1/2-mllc track. Chcvys have threeall by Gordon - and Ponttacs two
Gordon's teammate, Terry
Labonte, fell from the scncs lead by
finiShing 35th. Man10 moved to
second 10 the staodmgs, 64 pmnts
bchmd Gordon.
Rusty Wallace, the dcfcndmg race
champton who made the licld a.' ,,
prov1s10nal starter alter twtcc fat ling
to quahfy, timshcd 37th wtth a
blown cngme. Polestttcr Joe
Nemcchek, who quahlicd at 16K.K81
mph, was 21st m hts Chevy.
'

stem Cup ,..fo.~cc at Pncnnu lntern.ltional Rat:cway, w1th startmg posllmn m parentheses, dnvcr, home-

town, type uf car, laps completed,
reason out 11 any and money W1m. I
I (4) f),,k! J.tm:n
SIIN,'\70

2 (61 JcCI Gm'Uun
200

Hl..:~t l(y

1'111 ~ t•urn

N (.'

lvrtl 2(10

lnd. (

l~.,.r,,lct

$~6.74~

l (20) Jeff Bu11:u~1 Slluth Bustuu V.t I unl
2111 S44 ltJ'i
~ 1221 h.'tl Mu sl!r:l\1..:, 1rankhn w, ~ I tll\l 'li~l

$\IJ,07(1
'li (YI M.wk M 1r1m ll.u ~sv •lk J\rk 11N"i..l :mo.
$1h 0411
h (Ill M1kl:: ~kmltL'f SuN&lt;IIIV!IIc (',,hi (1., vm
1.::1 20J $21 fli.Xl
7 (14ll•nunySrcn~\.-r
S'O.!IIJO

lki'W1~k

1•,, l11nl 21J:I

Sorenstam's drives were long, but
not back-breaking Her approach
shots were close, but not close
enough Her putts had the line, b~t
not tho length Sorenstam dtd what
she rarely docs - she let an opponent off the hook
"Two-under IS a good number,"
she satd after a closmg 69. "But on
Sunday, you hke to put a httle more
pressure on the leader "
All three of the last group blfdted
the par-3 seventh, and from there on
the round belonged to Redman.
Sorenstam three-pulled from 15
feet for a bogcy-5 at No. 10, and
Redman then hit an 8-tron to 12 feet
and ran m the putt for a btrdte at No.
II Suddenly the lead was three, and
Sorenstam was running out of holes.

FHEE li\SPEC'rH)r\

Here's the order of limsh m the
Pcnnsylvama 500 NASCAR Wm-

By RONSIRAK
TROON, Scotland (AP) -Jesper
Pamevik knew the score this lime.
And it told htm that Justin Leonatd
was the British Open champion
Leonatd, the only conte~r to
mount a charge on Sunday at Royal
• Troon, closed wllh a 65 to win the
126th Open champtonship at 12·
under-par 272.
Pamevik, who had as much as a
four-stroke advantage on the final
day, lost the lead for good when
Leonard, playmg in the group ahead
· of him, made a bmlie on No. 17.
" I came up to 17 and watched hts
birdie and the air kmd of went out of

JUSTIN LEONARD

:tJy KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Fmally,
"the Cleveland lndtans got some
good pttchmg news Charles Nagy's
slurnp appears to be over.
, The lndtans and thelf ace both
,stopped two-game losmg streaks
and gave manager M1ke Hargrove
hiS 500th career vtctory as the Indians beat the Boston Red Sox 7-2
Sunday.
Nagy ( 10-6) had allowed 13 runs
,in etght mmngs m losmg hiS prevt&lt;,&gt;us two starts - perhaps trytng to
carry the AL Central-leadmg lndtans
"whtle Jack McDowell and Chad
Ogea are on the dtsabled hst
','' "I was trymg to do too mucli out
, lhere, I know that, " Nagy said "It
had nothmg to do wtth the InJUries
I JUSt wanted to do well for the
"

team."

Daw~unv1lk

(M

200, $2K.240

NEW YORK (AP)- After playmg six one-run games m thelf last
seven, the New York Mets changed
thetr style Sunday and won an oldfashioned blowout.
Todd Hundley homered from both
sides of the plate - gomg 4-for-4
wuh five RBls - as the Mets domInated the Cmcinnau Reds 10-1,
New York's fourth stratght wm
Hundley also doubled and smglcd, and matched his season htgh
for RBis He has hit borne runs from
both stdes twtce thiS year and a teamrecord five umes 10 h1s career
"These days don't come along
often." Hundley satd " I htt the ball
hard when guys were on base. I was
-.ry comfortable "

The Red Sox, m last place 1n the
AL East. had their season-htgh fourgame wmnmg streak snapped despite
John Valenttn's thtrd homer m two
days, a solo shot off Nagy m the first.
Everyone seemed to agree that the
problem wllh Nagy wasn't health or
mechan.-s He was JUStthmkmg too
much
"(Pncl\ing coach) Mark Wtley
looked at a lot of film and watched
me throw on the stdc and he satd
there was nothmg wrong," Nagy
satd. "It was JUSt my mental
approach. I was ktlhng myself out
there, bastcally IS what 1t was "
Hargrove, 500-418 (.545) smce
becommg Cleveland 's manager '"
1991, became the fourth acttve manager wnh 500 wms wtth hiS t,urrent
club. The others arc Bobby .,;ox of
Atlanta. Cllo Gaston of Toronto and

Tom Kelly of Mmnesota
"I lot of people have contrtbuted
to tt," Hargrove said "It proves
we ' re domg somethtng nght around
here "
It was fittmg that Hargrove's
mtlestone vtctory came from Nagy,
who has 43 of his manager's 250
wms the past three seasons.
"It makes you feel a lot better
wllh htm seemmgly back on track,"
Hargrove satd
The Indians, who dropped the
first two games of thts four-game
sertes while gomg 2-for-16 wuh
runners m scortng posuion. also got
thetr offense back on track They battered Tom Gordon for ftvc runs m
four mnmgs and were 4-for-13 with
runners m sconng posmon on Sunday.
Gordon (5-8), who has not won m

Hundley bomered baumg right- cr. and I am," Gtlkcy satd, "and no
handed leading off the thtrd against one can take that away from me My
Kent Mercker (7-7) and then hit a team earned me when I was playmg
three-run shot. his 22nd. m the sixth poorly. and now I'm part of the team
agatn ..
offFchx Rodnguez
Mets manager Bobby V~lcnunc
Dave Mhckt (5-7) had the ltrst
rested Hundley in Saturday's S-3 wm two-hu game of hiS' career and
as the Mcts catcher ha.' been nursmg scored twtcc for the Mcts He
a sore nght elbow.
allowed li vc hils m seven mnlngs,
My elbow problem " sttll while stnkmg out four and walktng
there ... he satd "It tells men's there, none
and I know 11 's not gomg to go away,
"It looks hkc we got Mltckt more
but 11\ nu worse Our team 1s not runs tn one game today than we got
,gomg to go away either"
for lum all thiS season," Hundley
Bernard Gtlkey went 3-lor-4 wllh
satd "Mitckl had soft stuff. he got
a two-run homer. He has htt three
II over the plate He also used hts
home runs m rour games. and has I 8
lastball when he had to. He gave us
RBis m the last 23 games
a great effort "
'(kept bchcvmg I'm a good play(

:

200. 5ZII.:WO

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(4(1) Juhnny

B.::n~••n

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five starts Sm&lt;;c June 22, contmued

to struggle agamst the Indtans. He
has never beaten Cleveland as a
starter and IS now 0-4 wtth a 17 44
ERA tn four star,ts at Jacobs F1eldthe htghc$t by a vtsllmg pitcher
"I haven 't put my linger on n, "
Gordon sa1d of hts apparent nvcrston
to puchmg agamst Cleveland
After hts last SIOrt agamst the
Indmns m Boston , Gordon accused

Cleveland of stcahng hts stgns He
dtdn't do so on Sunday
''I'm glad he thmks that," Hargrove satd. "I w1sh we were "
Valenun homered m the first
mnmg for the second stratght day
Nagy seuled down and allowed only
one more run - an RBI single by
Mtke BenJamm m the seventh.
Nagy gave up seven hn~ m seven mnmgs He walked two. hlltwo

Mcrckcr, who had won SIX of hts
prcv10us seven dccJstons, gave up six
runs and eight htts m four mmngs
"ThiS particular game, I don't
even feel bad about losmg 11, " Reds
manager Ray Kmght satd. "Those
other two crushed me.
. "In rcahty, we should be 2-1 here
mstcad of 0-3. You expect to have a
game ltkc thts on the road once m a
whtlc You do, you do But the other two games we dtdn 't catch catchable ny balls Today was JUSt an
aberration "
The Mcts scored three t1mes m the
first mnmg Gtlkey smgled wtth one
out m the first, John Olcrud walked
and Hundley htt an RBI double

NY Y.tnli.c~·s tP~mu~ II 'iJ .11 Mil
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l..os 1\n)!..:k-s ut Churlntlc 7 10 I' m
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PIM"-'IIIK .11 Sa~rallll.'nln

NY

Parnevtk made a bogey on No 6
when hts second shot landed tn a pot
bunker 40 yards short ol the green
and all he could do was pop 11 biiCk
to the fatrway
He made a great par save on No
8 when he hit mto the nghl bunker
and blasted a very lncky shot l\l five
teet and m.tdc the pull
He stood 10 hts lull hetght a.' the
hall Jell 10, turned toward hts wtle,
Mta. and two young daughters and
saluted them w1th a ra1scd 11~1 over
h1s head
Mc;:mwhtle, Leonard was lnl:htng
forward
He pulled wllhm one s1rokc wuh
ol

twdle on No 9 .md then hrlth he

.1nd Parncvtk rnadc .1 h( l£:CY on the
dttlicuh I Oth hole
Parnev1k got thnt stroke h.tL.:k wnh
.1 2.5 loll! hmltc pull on No II, hut
then thmgs tell apart. hcgmnmg
wuh a hngcy tm Nn I~ when he htt
the rough lwu.:c and then mtssed a
ti'Ye-lunt pull
- Leonard reeled oil a relentless
scncs ol live pars - 1hc hcst hcmg
the scramhhng one Irom the rough
on the 15th - tbcn closed out the
tournament hke a champ1on w1th
h1rd1c"m Nos 16 .md 17
Lcon.ud's vu.:tory mcanl thal
~tl4mg w1th Woods m the M01stcn~ :.md
Ermc Els 10 the U.S Open, all three
muJm ~;h.nnp10n~h1p wmncrs th1s

year were m thC1r 20s.

and struck out three

The Indtans took a 3-1 lead tn the
flfst on a two-run smglc by Davtd
Jusuce wtth the bases loaded and an
RBI smglc by Sandy Alomar
In the fourth, Bnan Giles walked
and scored when Omar Vtzqucl smglcd to nght and Darren Bragg
threw the ball 1~to tbc photographer s bay bchmd thlfd VtZquel
ad&gt;anced to thtrd and S~:ored on a
smgle by Marquts Gnssom lor a 5I lead.
Matt Wllhams added an RBI sm glc m the fifth off Joe Hudson O•lcs
led off the stxth wtth a smglc and
' scored on a double-play grounder by
Tony Fernandez to make 11 7-1 .
· Notes: Hargrove is fourth on Cleveland's career vtctory hst among
managers, led by Lou Boudreau

Wtth 728. Justtce was 0-for-6 wtth
the bases loaded pnor to his two-run
smgle m the first
Boston rookie
sbonstop Nomar Garetaparra left the
game an mmng after bctng htt on the
left elbow by a pnch from Nagy. He
dtd not have X-rays and IS day-today
Gnssom was hll on the helmet hy a puch from Hudson tn the
Sixth. He was OK and stayed in the
game
Boston outfielder Troy
O'Leary was a late scratch. He
injured his hand swmgtng at a pn~:h
Saturday and was rcpla~:cd m the
hncup by Shane Mack .... For the
second stratght day, Vtzqucl recorded an out hy barchandmg a grounder
up the mtddlc that went off the ptt~:h­
er 's g. love Th1s tnne. H was a hncr
by Mtke Stanley deflected by Paul
As~cnma~,;hcr

Edgardo Allonzo followed wllh a
lwo-ru n douhlc
Hundley made 11 4-0 wtth hts
homer 10 the third Mhckt smglcd m
the fourth and scored on Gilkey's
II th h(lmc run . a two-run shot
Mltck1 doubled tn the mth.
moved up on Lmcc Jnhnsnn s smgle
and scored on Olcrud's smglc Hundley homered '" make 11 10-1
The Reds scored tn the fifth when
Enc Owens s1nglcd with two out ,
advanced on a wtld pttch and scored
on Pokey Reese's srngle
Notes: The Mcts arc IJ games
over .500 for the first tunc smcc July
24, 1991 , when they were 53-40
They arc now 55-42.
They arc

now 28-11 at home after startmg the
season 3-6
Mhckt leads Mcts
starter.; m battmg average wtth a 250
mark (M-Ior·32)'and has three RBis
Mcts shortstop Rcy Ordonez
made another specta~:ular play tn the
seventh mnmg One out alter Hal
Moms led oil wtth a double, Owens
hll a hard grounder that deflected oiT
the ~love oil thtrd baseman Luts
Lopez. Ordonct., runnmg to h" nght,
Jumped up and threw back to Lopez
to get the sltdmg Moms ... New
York hroke a streak ol 18 games m
whtch 11 tr.uled However, the Mcts
won I0 ol those gmnes .... Joe Ohvcr caught Ordone1. trymg to steal. h
was the 15th runner Oliver has
gunned down m 32 allcmpts

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Saturday's scores
Boslon 6. CLEVELAND J
BalllrnoR' 8 OiiLllJO Whttc So~ l

Muuaoco7. Oakland 6
NY Yankees 8, Mltwllllkee 0
Detron 6. Texas ~
Anahdm 'li, Toron!o 4
Kan1u Ctty 9, Scatllc 6

Sundoy'o ICOftS
CLEVELAND 7. Botiton 2
CbiCJIIO Wh11e So1 10, Baltimore 2
AAihc:im 9. Toronto !I .
MmleiOhll , Oakland 0
ScauiD 'l, KIIMU C11y 4,..

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. Sunday's scores

Mmnt. ~ll

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Today's acames

AL standings

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S.tn I lolll~I\UI (lmrlk~ 1 - ~).tl St lo~•UI\

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Baseball

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Parnevak, meanwhile, m1sscd a

five-toot btrdtc pull at No 16 to fall
behmd Leonard, then made two
sloppy bogeys on the hnal two

holes
It was the first maJor ~:hampt­
onshtp for the 25-year-old Texan
who has now won three tournaments
m less than a year
What started as a pusstblc
Pamevak runaway lumed intu a lcn!)C
tussle when Leonard ~pphed the
pressure over the closmg holes.
Leonard got to 12 under and took
the lead for the ltrst lime all week
wtth the btrdtc on No 17.
He then wa~ted on the IHlh tee
rtght near the 16th green as Parncvtk
attempted hts b~rdte and drove on the
final hole after he heard the groan
Parne'lk , who handled the dillicult back at a cumulahve 6-under-par
m the firxt three rounds, played those
holes 3-ovcr-par under Sunday's
pressure.
Wtth the bill of hts cap turned up
and blonde hatr sttcking wtldly uul
beneath the brtm, a goll tee stuck
behmd h• ~ nghl car and wc.mng
hnght purple pants, Parncv1k looked
hke he should be playmg a duh
match rather than lor the Bnu sh
Open tule.
But the free sptru was all busmess
on the course.
He started the day two strokes
ahead of Clarke, but after a btrdtc on
No 3 was four shots ahead. But
Leonard moved wuhm three strokes
with a r'lll nl three consccut1 vc
bndies startmg at No 2..

Scoreboard

ltiJIII

II (10)8uhhyL•hlllll.: Curpus0ms111.::Jtl•
Ptlllll~~~.:.

Padraig Harrtngton of Ireland finished at 280.
·
Ttger Woods stumbled once
agam, makmg a tnple bogey on the
par-3 eighth hole tn shooting a 74 to·
finish I 2 strokes back
Wo9&lt;fs, who started the day ctghl
stroke behmd, made a bn of a run
wnh two early htrdtes, but lost any
hope when he made a tnple bogey 6
on the 126-yard Postage Stamp hole
when It took htm two shots to get out
of the bunker.
Btg numbers dtd Woods m at
Royal Troon He had two triple
bogeys and a quadruple bogey m the
lournament
Leonard won with a hot putter
that helped htm get six btrdtes on the
front mne to get back m the hunt He
then closed wllh a senes of great
putts to blow past Parnevtk
"Makmg those putts on 15, 16
and 17," Leonard satd, scarchmg for
words to descnbe the feehng. "The
hole JUst opened up lor me today "
Leonard made a 12-footer to save
par on the 15th
"That was the tournament nght
there," Leonard satd.
He foll owed II wllh a 15-fuoter
for b1rdte on the next hole and then
the 35-foot b1rd1e pull on No. 17

-: Hundley's homers propel Mets to 10-1 victory over Reds

Anahe1m

II. 21D-

that's the kmd of confidence I'll be
able to take away from heTC,"
Leonard sa1d
Only Jtm ]3ames tn 1925 was able
to come from five strokes back on
the final day to wtn the British Open.
Later, as Leonard brushed back
tears when he was awarded the stlver claret JUg that goes to the winner,
the scoreboard carried the message:
· " Well done, Justm See you at Royal B~rkdale tn 1998 "
Leonard, the fifth consecuttve
Amcncan to wm at Troon, starttng
wtlh Arnold Palmer m 1962, was a
p1cture of calm on the course
"Because all day I was behmd,
and most of the day behmd by two
or three strokes," Leonard satd. " I
just wanted to go out aggressively
and avoid making a couple of mistakes on the back nine "
He followed that plan perfectly
Needing only to two-pull on the
final hole, Leonard stroked hiS 30footer gently toward the hole and
gave out n btg Sigh and rolled hiS
eyes as ll nestled wllhm tap-m diStance
" That last pull I was JUst praymg
that I could two-pun," Leonard satd
" It was surpnsmg how calm I
stayed"
A final bogey on No 18 put
Parnevtk at 275, ned Wllh Darren
Clarke of Northern Ireland. Jtm
Furyk was fourth wllh a 279· and

K (14) Kyle P\!ny. R.Uldlcn~;~n N (' l'unu~:
$11HI91l
~
9 07) k~my Mayfidi..l ()w,.·u~hnm Ky I 111).1
2011, $1H.4 1JU
•

10 (1!1 ) RJIIIIlmn.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

:·I ndians defeat Red Sox 7-2 to kill Boston~s winning streak

ScaiUC

FRUTH PHARMACY

my swls for good." Parnevtk said.
Parnevik followed with a bogey
on No. 17 to fall two behtnd and the
tournament was over
It was his second crushing disappmntment m the Bntish Open. He
lost the 1994 championship just 10
mtles down the coast at Turnberry
when he failed to look at the scoreboard on the final hole and gambled
when he dtdn 't need to.
"Thts one hurts a lot more than
Turnberry;" Parnevtk said "I thmk
the pressure was too much. It was a
struggle all day."
As Parnevtk walked up the 18th
fatrway to a thunderous ovatton
trom the packed bleachers, the
mescapablc truth was wntten m the
black letters on the gtant yellow
scoreboard· He was second once
agatn
Leonard's closmg round was one
of the best tn major championship
hiStory, rankmg with the 67 by Ntck
Faldo in the 1996 Masters, the 64 by
Greg Norman m the 1993 Brtllsh
Open and the 63 by Johnny Mtller m
the 1973 US Open.
All of them shot scores no one
else could come near on the finol
day So dtd Leonard. Of the 16 players who started the day under par,
Leonard was the only one to shoot a
round m the 60s.
"Just to be able to come through
wtth the tournament on the hne,

2011

2011 $2l (19()

Redman outpaces super~tars to win JAL Big Apple Classic
By LARRY SIDDONS
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP)ThiS is for the masses of the LPGA,
the rank-and-file, the shock troops,
the golfers who were champtons
from country clubs through colleges
and now go out early on Sundays
before the leaders take over
To you, Michele Redman says:
"Keep plugging "
Because, you see, until thiS Sunday, Redman was just hkc you. Stx
years on the tour, notlu ng better than
a thtrd-place finish, not even a finalround lead to protect
That's all changed now. Redman

Yates hts 31st vtctory by avcr,lgtng
142.1J68 mph 10 a race slowed lour
Urnes hy 1g laps ol cautiOn. There
were 23 lead changes among 14 dn-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Leonard's last-round rally earns him British Open title.

Kyger Creek LL Tournament starts second-round play

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP St.tf W[her
In the Kyger Creek Ltttle League
Tournament Sunday, Btdwell I got
past Pomt Pleasant Fruth Pharmacy
7-6 before the Pomeroy Yankees to
complete first-round play
Second-round play began wtth
the Kyger Creek Raiders defeaung
Mason VFW II 18-0 m 3 1/2 mntngs
and Pomt Pleasant Home Care Medical tallymg a 6-3 wtn over Pomt
Pleasant Mead's Body Shop.
In Saturday's first-round actton, 11
was the Rio Grande Redmen 6,
Coolville 4, Harrtsonvtlle 14, Pomt
Pleasant Deal &amp; Brown Funeral
Home 5, Pomt Pleasant Nationwtde
Insurance 18, Kyger Creek II 5;
Chester 7, Vmton 2, the Galhpohs
Reds 4, Mason VFW 1 I; and the
New Haven Reds 18, Green I 3.
Bidwell 1-7, Fruth 6
A contest with three lead
exchanges, two deadlocks and a

Monday, July 21, 1997

Ohio River Campground
Come and See Our New Look
Great Fishing!
Super Group Rates!
Directory • Fax :-.s1rvtr:e
We offer 10% Discount to Senior Citizens
Racine, OH
St. Rt. 124
Historical Look
Call Ken Rausch Mgr.
949-2526

..

The Daily Sentinel
has a supply of the
commemorative edition
for Middleport's
Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50 and can
be picked up at
The Daily Sentinel
from
Sam· 5 pm
Monday • Friday.
o

�By·The Bend

The··Daily

Ann
Landers
19'17.

""'-~limo.:~

S,..aicue IIMI CreiLIIn;
S}'ftCticaiC.

Dear Ann .Landers: I need your
help. My husband and I came to
America from China in 1990. Two
years later, we bought a condominium. After we· moved in, our nightmare began.
'There is a middle-aged woman
who lives in the apartment above us.
Every day before 6 a.m. she walks
around with heavy, noisy footsteps
from bedroom to kitc!len to bathroom to living room. II sounds like

Boo.mers grapple with teaching kids to drive

Pq.8

that the parent is constantly gripping
It seemed to work.
Commercial driving schools cost
By GREGG ZOROYA
Instructor Voigt says the teaching
the dashboard and putting their foot $150 to $500. Some parents can't
Special for USA TODAY
Donna McBride finally realized on the imaginary brake. And con- afford it and so, A_AA estimates, 40 ritual can do mcire than JUSt make
that the loud noise inside the 1982 stantly: 'Watch out for this!' 'Watch percent of the nation 's secondary teens betler drivers.
These days, "parents and children
Honda Civic, with her 16-year-old out for that!' 'You're goirig too fast!' school students don't have access tO'
son Jereme at the wheel, was .the 'You've got to stop'' " Voigt, 55, driver education. With or without it, don' t do a whole lot together. ... This
sound of her own voice screeching. says. "Most of them would rather dri- driving instruction professionals say is on~ of the few instances where a
parents should provide each child parent and child spend some time
She remembers that afternoon on ve with us."
together, and in many cases, it ends
But teens need the practice. The with at least 50 hours of practice.
12th Street in Phoenix ..c.. her baptism
In Kenosha, Wis., Santo "Mike" up ·to be a pretty positive (experiin the American parent-child ritual of National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration reports that motor Misurelli takes his daughter, Nicole. ence). The parent gets to know the
driver training.
"I said, 'JEREME, YOU NEED vehicle crashes are the leading cause 15, for practice runs in the family's child again," he says. And vice verTO BRAKE!' and I repeated it about of death for 15- to 20-year-olds, and 1997 Buick Park Avenue at least sa.
Jereme McBride, a 6-foot shootthe American Automobile Associa- twice a week. "She can't wait until
·four times."
ing
guard for the Phoenix Christian
September to get her license," says
"He said,''Mom, it's OK . .You're tion predicts the' number will rise.
High
School Cougars, thought he'd
Driving authorities like the Amer- Misure\li , 41 , general manager of an
yelling!' 'No, I'm not.' "
seen
the
limits of his mother's anXiAll this just because another car ican Automobile Association are urg- auto dealership.
ety.
Already a veteran of instructing
pulled in front of the Honda. On the ing parents to give teens more driving
· Then he got his license.
list of close calls, this was barely an practice. Nationally, public-school son Joseph, 18. how to drive·, MisNow, he has to tell his parents
entry. 8ut -it was. a neon sign for driver education is declining - and urelli thought "Nic" might be
where
he is going, why, what route
provides only about six hours behind tougher because she did not. at first,
McBride, 39.
he'll
take
and when he expects to be
display the same·passion for it.
"I just knew at that point that tak- the wheel anyway.
on
the
road
. For-his 16th birthday,
In fact, he says, the expenence has
ing him on the main road and the
The AAA's Charles Butler says
they
gave
him
a pager. Whenever he
freeways was just something I was- that because of budgetary cutbacks been a breeze. There 's been some
leaves
a
location.
he must call in No.
EASTERN SCHOLARS - Students from Eastern High School
n't going to be able to do," she con- . and reduced federal aid, only half the nagging trial-and-error on parking
II
to
his
mother
's beeper - their
participating in the 1997 GoVernor's Scholarship Program at Ohio
high schools in the nation offer dri- ·drills, and when they first ventured
cedes.
code
indicating
he
is heading out on
University are lett to right, front, Lori Harris, Jessica Burchard,
Her fear might be e&lt;cused, given ver education; down from about 75 .onto the interstate to experiment
the
road.
·
and JaBS Marcum, and back, Robart Harris and Jeremy Kehl. The
that she's a state coordinator for Stu- · percent in the mid-1970s. And where with acceleration and lane.changes,
program Is' a three-week enrichment workshop located on OU's
"It's
hot
too
fun
all
the
time ,"
dents Against Dn.tnk Driving and a it is provided, classes are no longer Nic's palms were sweaty and she
main campus which provides the opportunity for the scholars
storehouse of horror stories about pan of the regular curriculum, but admitted being a little scared. But Jercme says. " I understand that she
to take part In an axtenslve study of a desired area of research ..
kids and cars. But Iter rite of passage in&lt;tead are held before or after Misurelli calmed her with a rnantra: worries about me. She's my mom.
is shared by an ever-increasing num- school, or during the. summer, he " You're doing very well. You're But sometimes. I don't agree."
doing very well."
ber of baby boomer parents. 1be says.
number of teens is expected to peak
in 2010 at ·30 million, up from 24.6
million in 1990.
These parents face their child's
inal 148 by wagon or on foot. Some passage from passenger to fullBy PATRICK O'DRISCOLL
6,000 died on the way, most of them nedged operator of the family's costUSA TODAY
EMIGRATION CANYON, Utah children.
ly. deadly ton-and-a-half block of
- For 91 (lays and more than 1,000 • A century and a half later, the re- steel.
miles, Roger and Lisa Hoi green have enacted trek to religions freedom has
And the angst comes with a price By DEBORAH SEWARD
pulled a two-wheeled handcan in the become a powerful missionary mes- t~g : that pound-of-nesh premium Associated Pre88 Writer
sage for the 9.7-million-member added to your car insurance. DependPARIS -:- . France paid tribute
footsteps of their ancestors.
church.
.
Dressed in 19th-century pioneer
ing on your child's grades (good-stu- Sunday to the memory of 13,152
The participants, including 222 dent discounts) and gender (boys are Jews who were rounded up in 1942
garb, the brother and sister will
trudge 24 more grueling miles tQ\Iay who have gone every mile, have sur- deemed riskier than girls) and where and sent to Nazi death camps in one .
before pitching their final camp, vived cold, heat, wagon rollovers, you live (you pay in Los Angeles), of the worst incidents of French
with about 700 others, in this moun- blisters upon blisters and an even your premium can climb by up to · wartime collaboration.
worse fate: Interviews by more than $2,000 a year. At a ceremony marking the 55th
tain gap outside Salt Lake City.
After that, it's all downhill for the 120 news organizations from around "I was a nervous wreck," says San- anniversary of the Vel d'Hiv roundup,
Mormon Pioneer Trail wagon train, a the globe.
di Vanderpool, 46, of Plain View, Prime Minister Lionel Jospin remind" We had no idea (the wagon
!50th-anniversary re-enactment of
N.Y. Her son, Peter, 16, acted like Mr. ed his countrymen . that the French
the cross-country exodus to an earth- train) would catch the world like it Know-It-All after a little cl~sroom bore responsibility for the mass
ly Zion in the not-so-Godforsaken has," said M. Russell Ballard, one of education at his high scliool: Sud- arrest.
the 12 "aj:&gt;ostlcs" atop the church's denly he was the better driver with
"This roundup was decided,
Utah desert.
At midday Tuesday, they' II reach lay hierarchy. "They realize now that better judgment who could react planned and carried out by the
the historic site, now a state park, we're not a sect. not a Mickey·Mouse with better (youthful) renexes. Bet- French. Politicians, administrators,
where church leader Brigham Young operation.''
ter, Sandi and David Vanderpool _police and gendarmes took part: Not
But evangelical and fundamental- decided, to send Peter to private dri- one German soldier was needed to
spied the Great Salt Lake Valley and
accomplish this hideous crime,"
told his persecuted followers, "This ist Christians still consider Mor- ving lessons. ·
monism a dangerouS sect, even carhJospin
said.
is the right place."
"It was called keeping sanity in
Jospin was the latest French leader
Tens of thousands of Mormons, or . paigning on the Internet against LDS your home," Sandi says.
members of the Church of Jesus "cult" beliefs. " l would simply call
But Malcolm Bernstein, 51, of to pay, homage to the victims of the
Christ of Latter-day Saints, will line it counterfeit Christianity," said Phil Granada Hills, Calif., has taken hap- roundup at the Velodrome d' Hivcr. a
the route to cheer the arrival of Roberts of the Southern Baptist Con- pily to teaching son Gregory, 16, in cycling stadium in western Paris
trekkers on horseback and on foot, in vention, which plans to evangelize in the family's second car, a 1985 where the Jews were detained on July
nearly 70 covered wagons and Salt Lake City next June when it Chevrolet Cavalier. The elder Bern- 16-17, 1942, before being deponed to
holds its 1998 convention there.
\
pulling 15 handcarts.
stein is a driver for a health mainte- . Nazi death camps.
The Latter-day Saints is the nance organization, so he has a few ,
Former President Francois Mit:Tm getting buuerHies. lt's finally hit me," said Roger Holgreen, 30, fastest-growing denomination in L.A.-driving tips, such as: "Don't terrand dedicated a memorial three
HOLOCAUST REMEMBERED - Paris Archbishop Jean-Marie
who has sh~d 51 of his 352 pi&gt;unds America, swelling by 50 percent give people the finger. They might years ago at the Vel d'Hiv site,
Lustiger, left, chats with Grand Rabbi of France ~oseph Sitruk,
oach decade. Its conservative, mid- have a gun.''
which was razed in 1959, and ,made
along the trail from Omaha.
right, during the commemoration of the 55th anntversary of the
"I'm still the heaviest pioneer. dle-class following has spread far
What's Bernstein's secret for less- the anniversary a day of national
Vel d'Hiv round-up, Sunday, in Paris. France paid tribute to the
People did not think I could finish beyond Utah, where three-fourths of . cning the stress of teaching his ~on to :omrnemoration.
memory of 13,152 Jews rounded up in 1942 by French police and
In all, about 75,000 Jews were
this trip," adds Holgreen, a soft-spo- the population still claims Mormon drive '? For now, at least, they stay off
.
s
ent to Nazi death camps in one of the worst Incidents of French
ken, 6-foot-3 youth prison counselor ties. With 50,000 lay missionaries the streets. The sprawling parking Jeported from France to Nazi conwartime
collaboration.'
from Bountiful, Utah. "My body has toiling in 160 countries, church mem- fields of California State University, :cntratioo camps during World War
II. Only 2,500 survived.
I
shrunk. But I've had spiritual expe- bership abroad has exploded, now Northridge, are challenge enough.
riences inside that have made my soul outnumbering those inside the Unit"I don't take him in the traffic,"
··-ed States.
grow."
Bernstein says. "He just stays in that
Among the handCart walkers, big old giant parking lot."
The original pioneers had
ned there the previous year after Englishman Gordon Beharrell 's
At John Hersey High School in
mobs murdered church founder and miraculous recovery from a hospital . Arlington Heights, Ill., driving
i'nstructor Roger Voigt, after 33 years
prophet Joseph Smith and torched the bed en route is the talk of the trek.
Stricken
on
the
trail
with
excruciMormons' thriving settlement at Nauof teaching, children to drive, has
voo. Ill. Until the transcontinental ating pain from a botched colostomy heard just about every parent horror
railroad was completed in 1869, after cancer surgery 18 months ago, . story.
"Some students will cOme and say
70,000 Mormons followed the orig- Beharrell went under the knife in
Nebraska for repairs.

Monday,·July 21, 1811

'

Neighbor'~

Sen~inel

•

n·oisy habits are d-riving couple to despair

she is ¥ng army boots. She t'V"S
on her :Washing machine, radio or
TV. drags her furniture around and is
always hanging pictures or fixing
appliances. The pqunding never
stops. She exercises on her treadmill
or bike, and I not only hear the
machine squeak, but the ceiling
shakes.
I have spoken to this woman and
written her a letter, hoping she .
would start her day a little later, but
she ignored me. We rang her bell
when shc .decided to start exercising
at II 'p.m., but she yelled at the top
of her lungs, saying it is her house
and she will do whatever she wants.
We have written letters of complaint to the condominium hoard of

our building. We were told to call
the police or get a lawyer. We did
phone the police once when she
started her noise at 6:30, but by the
time they arrived. it was after 7:00, ·
and they said there was nothing they
could do.
How can we stop this woman
from ruining our peaceful life? We
must wake up whenever she wakes
up, and we can't go to bed until she
does. We have already put the condo
up for sale, but nobody seems interested in buying it. Any ideas? -Beside Ourselves in Brooklyn
Dear Brooklyn: Ask the condo
board for permission to make structural changes in your unit. You may
need to put in a false ceiling and

offer to buy your neighbor some carpeting, but I urge you to do whatever is suggested by a professional. It
wiII be cheaper' than a nervous .
breakdown.
If this doesn't work, ask the
condo hoard to conduct a hearing on
the level of noise. If they find itto be
unreasonable, the. woman can be
fmed.
Dear Ann Landers: I have some
suggestions for all your readers who
may want to .get a puppy and don't
know anything about animals.
I. Do not let your dog have the
run of the house until the animal has
proven it can be left alone. Until it is
about 18 months old, put your dog in
a penned area or outside if you ·are

not watching it. I am tired of hearing
about people who beat the dog
because it tore up the house. A dog is
like a small child. Would you leave a
2-year-old child alone in a room
with fine antiques and china?
2. Beating a dog does not train it.
It only trains the dog to fear you. If .
a dog does something bad and you
hit it two hours later, the animal has
absolutely no recollection of what it
did and no idea why it's being beaten. Even if you put the chewed-up
chair leg in front of the dog, it will
not make the connection.
3. Dogs learn with praise and
posiiive reinforcement. lf there are
ongoing behavior problems, take
your dog to obedience classes, ·or

call your vet or local humane society
for advice.
4. It takes time and patience to
have a well-behaved dog. I have had
many dogs, and it takes about a year
for an animal to stan trusting you
and wanting to behave for you. If
you keep acquiring dogs and giving
them back when they . misbehave, .
you will never have the kind of dog ,
you want. --An Animal Lover in St.
Clair Shores, Mich.
Dear St. Clair: Thanks for a
splendid letter. Any dog that lands in
your household is · a lucky dog
indeed.
•
Send questions to Ann Landers. {:reators
Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite
700, Los Angeles, Calif. 90045

Pet care: Controlling flea infestation
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County
Humane Society
Yes, it is as you feared. Those nat,
-small dark brown or black bugs you
find scurrying over your dog or eat's
skin are no doubt fleas. There may be
only a few, but they represent only 5
percent of the total flea population .
Count on it, for every ont you find
on the cat or dog, there are many
more. And in warm weather, fleas
thrive. The poor animal plagued by
neas can be seen continually scratching, licking, biting-- perhaps suffering hair loss and open sores. But that
animal is doing all he/she can do to
bailie the biting of these pests. Now.

it's up to you.
Many of us have discovered the
hard way that you can't get rid of
neas on cats and dogs simply by buying a nea collar. The solution is a
multi step process that must be followed, particularly now that the
warm weather is upon us . The most
common cause of allergic dermatitis
in the cat, and the bane of many aq
infested dog, neas carry tapeworm.
among other things.
To determine jf your pet is under
siege, check the lower ponion of the
animal's back, the base of the tail, the
lower abdomen, and under the neck.
Pan the hairs and run your hands over
these areas. You may see neas, or nea

"din," what looks like small specks
of dirt scattered among the hairs. This
is the nea's fecal maller, which contains dried blood sucked while the
nea was feeding on your cat or dog .
Understanding the proce~s of getting rid of fleas begins by understanding the life cycle of the flea.
Adults females deposit their eggs on
various places, including the host -your dog, for example. The eggs and
flea feces fall off the dog on to the
carpet, the grass, and the animal's
bedding. The larvae hatoh, feed on
adult nea fetes, molt twice, then
pupate inside silk cocoons which pro-·
teet against treatment. Finally, adult
neas emerge from cocoons and seek

-

Mormon descendants near
completion re-enactment

a warm animal host on which to feed
and reproduce. Although the pupae
(the resting stage of the nea) account
for only 10 percent of the total nea
population, they can account for I00
percent ofthe flea problems after you
have initially treated the animal and
the house!
So first you treat the animal with
shampoo, powder, or spray, followed
by a nea dip for dogs. Read the label
carefully; some of these products
cannot he used on young, lactating,
or pregnant animals. On the same
day, you vacuum the house, sofas,
under furniture, concentrating on
areas where the animal spends a lot
Continued on page 7

AMIE AND ANDREW FIELDS

Elliott-Fields
Arnie Lynn Elliott, daughter of
Herb and Marcia Elliott, Rutland, and
Andrew Wayne Fields, ,.on of Larry
and Linda 1 Fields, Syracuse,
exchanged wedding vows in a cere- _
mony at the t,!iddlepon_ Church of
Christ, 4:30 Pjm· on Apnl 12.
· Mike Finntciirri and AI Hartson
performed the double-ring c~re!"ony '
following a program of_mustc by ,
Marlo )Nhite, pianist and Delores
Green, soloist. The church was decorated with a brass ~ archway
decorated with r;ed and white roses ·
and baby's brealh.lted and1white but:
terHies marked the pews, and candelabra were used in·the windows.
Escorted to the' altar by her father,
the bride wore a forrhal ' wedding
gown accented with pearls in heartshaped formations on the bodice and
· a cathedral train .trimmed with pearls
and sequins. Heq veil was held in
place by a lace headpiece, and she
carried a c~ading bouquet red rose
buds.
'
Matron of honor was Angela
Arnold of Rutland and the maids of
honor were Rebecca and Brandie
Elliott, both of Rutland, Joy O'Brien
of Grayson, Ky., Aimee Lemley of
Rutland, Ann Riffie and Jennifer
Fink of Middlepott. they wore red
sleeveless full-length satin gowns
with 'white sheer capes. They carried

wine glasses with candles and nora!
cascades.
Larry Fields served as best n;~an
for his son. Ushers were his brother,
Kevin Fields, Tucker Williams, and
M1chael McKelvey, all of Syracuse;
B rent Ftelds, Hartfor~. W. Va.,
Bryan Anderson, Syracuse, and Jason
Shain. Racine.
.
For her daughter's weddmg, Mrs.
Ell•ott wore an tvory tea _length satm
gown and a corsage of tvory roses.
mrs. Fields was in a red tea length ·
gown and had a corsage of red roscs.
·
The reception· was held in the
Middleport Church of Christ Family
Life Center following the ceremony.
The red and whiie color scheme was ,
carried out with balloons and noating
candle arrangements on the tables.
Kelly Swi~her registered the_guests,
Kathy Stewan and Myrville Brown
served the cake, and Sharon Diddle.
the punch. Also assisting with food
was JoAnn Hays.
The couple honeymooned in the
Poconos. They r:eside in Syracuse.
The new Mrs. Fields is a employed
as a regis1ered nurse at Holzer Haspita!. She graduated from Hocking
Cnllege. 1be groom, a student in
mechanical engineering at Ohio Univ"rsity is employed at Ravenswood
Aluminum as a co-op engineer.

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is
p•blislled 85 a free service to non·
profit p-oups wlshin&amp; to annoutic:e
lllftlinc and special events. The
calm dar is notcleslped to promote
sales or fund ralsen or any type.
I._ are printed 85 space pennits
aad CliDIIOt be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days. ·

TUESDAY
,
RACINE-- RACO. Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. Star Mill Park, New members
welcome.

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Emergency Planning Commiuee
(LEPC), regular meeting, Tuesday,
· II :30 a.m. at Emergency Operations
"nd EMS training center located
behind Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy. Agenda. LEPC compliance report. Haz-mat plan update,
MONDAY
.
LETAKI' --1be Letart Township ~pdate of LEPC projects, LEPCIEOC .
Trustees will meet Monday, 6 p.m. at opcmtions in disaster. QuestioM to be
directed to Robert Byer, director,
the office building.
992-6617.
REEDSVILLE -- Ri vervicw
Community Vocational Bible School,
Monday through Friday, 6:30 to 9 WEDNESDAY
p.m. at the Reedsville Methodist
EAST MEIGS -- Athletes inter. Church. Cooperating Churches ested in playing junior high football
Cooperating churches are the to meet Wednesday, 6 p.m. at Eastern
Reedsville Church of Christ, Eden school. Helmet fitting · following
United ·Brethren Church, and the meeting.
Long Bottom and Reedsville United
Methodist Churches.

The Sentinei ·News Hotline

992-2156

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips

97/98 ESCORT

CASH· BACK

OR

1997 RANGER _

artistic, both senior and junior, first,
second and third places $5, 4, and 3,
Artistic arrangements, specimen and horticulture, $1.75, $150, and
flowers, and educational exhibits $1.25, first through third respectivewill be featured in the 1997 Meigs ly.
The special awards will be senior
County Fair nower shows which will
carry out the ·theme, "On the (F)air best of show, $3 ; senior reserve best
with NBC, CBS, ABC, PBS Floral of show..$2, and senior horticulture ·
sweepstakes, $3 .. creativity award,
Broadcasting."
$3,
junior best of show, $2, Junior
. The shows will be staged on ·
reserve
best of show, $1 , Junior horMonday. Aug. II. and Thursday,
ticulture
sweepstakes, $2. and junior
Aug. 14. in the ~enior fair building.
All classes are, open to any Meigs honorable mention, $1.
Classes in the adult artistic design
Countians Exhibitors do not have to
belong to a garden club to display in category in the Monday show are
"Wings" an interpretive design; "The
the fair flower shows.
1be only requirement to exhibit is Waltons", an antique feeling;
the purchase of a season ticket from "Touched by an Angel", inspirathe Meigs County Fair Board. The tional ; "Dr. Quinn, Medicine
deadline for entering exhibits is 4 Woman" , using herbs and other
p.m. on Aug. 2.-That may bedone by foliage materials; "Friends" two conmail or in person at the Fa1r Board tainers;"Gilligan's Island" special
Office on the Rock Springs Fair- · class for underwater designs: "Guidgrounds, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Aug. I ing Light", an · illuminary design.
and 2. No entries will be taken by There is also an invitational class
teleph.one. For infoimation, residents which is open to anyone, "Golden
may call the office at 992-6954 on Girls", featuring yellows.
The Monday show junior artistic
either of those days.
Judging of the exhibits will he classes are "Barney and Friends",
done by an (}Ut-of-county accredited using. some purple, and"The Flintjudge of the Ohio Association of Gar- stones", using stones.
den Clubs at ·I p.m. on each of the
In t~e Thursday show. the adult
artistic arrangement 'lasses are
show days.
Ribbons and premiums will be " De~igning Women", hogarth line
awarded in three places in eaeb class, design ; "Frugal Gourmet", featuring
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

4.9%APR

sa,299
.AFTER REBATE

1997 EXPLORER
OR
MOUNTAINEER

France remembers Jews rounded
up by French policemen during Wll

!EXTRA.
COMING tuESDAY, mLY 2ftB, 1917

Theme announc.ed for '97 fair flower shows
Sentinel News Stall'

1997 ASPIRE

T:he Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 21, 1997

1997 CROWN
VICTORIA

5.9%APR
/

Sentinel
BABY Sentinel
. The Daily Sentinel BABY Sentinel is a
Special Ed~ion 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.
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge f,or each
phc&gt;tOIJra~•h If more than
one child is in picture
Pictures must
enclose an additional
$2 per child.
be In by
(ENCLOSE
Tuesday,
PAYMENT
July 22th,
WITH
t997
PICTURE)
Pictures can
be picked up
after August 4

ever.
· Chairmen of the show are .. Pat
Holter, Betty Dean, Judy Bunger,
Debbie Miller and Dorothy Karr of
the Chester Garden Club. Members
of other garden clubs serve on the
various committees. Fair board member Addalou Lewis is superintendent
of the. nowers and plants depanment.

Pet care: Controlling... Continu~frompage6
of time, then immediately discard the
vacuum bag. Also wash noors and
the animal's bedding (in hot water).
Then spray or fog the house, includ. ing the dog's house. And. spray the
yard. (All these anti nea remedies can
obtained from your veterinarian;
don't rely on the drugstore.)
Because the only warm host left

the

fruits and vegetables; "Date Line" a
tall creative line design; "Bewitched",
a modem rcnective design" American
Bandstand"
vibratile/abstract;
"Roseann", featuring roses; "Jeop·ardy" mass arrangement. The invitational class is "Home Improvement'',
using treasured wood.
The junior classes are "Bananas to
Pajamas", using fruits or vegetables ;
and "Road Runner", using roadside
material.
The horticulture division both
days provide classes for roses, gladioli , dahlias, zinnias, marigolds,
cclosin, sunOowers, hosta, caladium,
and collections of squash and gourds
in the adult division, and zinnias,
marigolds, sunflowers and marigolds
in the junior division.
There arc also classes for hanging
petunias as potted plants, and other
potted plants along with educational
exhibits, which will remain on dispia~ during the week. Educational
exhtbits are.not for competition how-

may be you, newly emerging adult check for neas on your cats and dogs
'
neas might seek your ankles for a lit- with a fine, nea comb.
Best
of
all,
your
vet
will
have
tle nibble. Your impression may be
some
of
the
new
products
that
fleas
that the fleas are worse than ever. But
off with monthly treatments of medbecause adult fleas
continue to ·emerge over a two~ to­ ication you apply to the back of the
four-week period, and sometimes :neck. Check out these new products!
longer, you may need to retreat in ' Your · fellow creatures will thank
about two weeks. From here on, you!

Send To:

,
I

.,.!

II
i

.,,_

I

·,

:1

r---------~Q!.~2~Z~..t!!!!!l~~OJJ..Q~!.o_______ ,
!CHILDS NAME(S) &amp; AGE(S):
I
~PARENTS' NAME:
1ciTY &amp; STATE

I
I

I
I
1
1

. ,

The Above Information Will Be UsedlnAd

It tri~~P~h;;~N~~~~~~~~~~~~~S~ub~m~i~tt~ed~B~y~:~~~~~~~~
~--=-~--------------------. ·-·
.
I

.'

The Daily Sentinel
"BABY SENTINEL"

�'
hge I• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middle~ Ohio

Monday, July 21,1917 .

The Dally Sentinel • Page a

Pomeroy • Middleport, OhiO

lHere. are some
·
sc~nes
from
·
Chester/Shade
Day
activities}:::
.
.
v •
.
...

70

Fomeroy,

ROIEIT IISSELL
COitSTRUCTIOII

FAMILY DENTISTRY
• 304-773-5822
U.U L

s.-..., CDPJIA

• Remodeling

• Siding ·

252to

....

RACINE MowER CuNIC
Paru and Se"'icell

..

Free Etrtlmatea

1

OUTSTANDING BAKERS ·These plea went
judged the best at Cheltar/Shsde Day• and
were auctioned to benefit continuing lmprov•
menu at the Chester Courthouse., L·r, Bunny

-

Kuhl, first place; Betty Toney, representing Jo
Hill, ilecond place; and Judy Bunger, third
place.

. \
\

...

ltli

Dealer tor:·
·Brtgge &amp; Stratton • lfTD- Murray· McCollough •
Echo- Ryobl· Roper • Rally· Hydro Gear
AND OTHERSII
"""'' &amp; Stnltea:llnlw Slnb l1ilni
Olltloer P-lqulf•••• Assodallal: CertJIW 2 Cycle

••

• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio
(614 948-2804 .·

'

.LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

..

~

For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally • WHkly •
Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
MiddlepOrt · ·

1·800·486·1590

KENNY•S
AUTO &amp; RENTAL CENTER
264 Upper River Road

···-· · ·· - -

Complete M~~ehlne Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
.. 8:00a.m. • 12 noon
.·Saturday
•
g Bend Fab,·.catiOn
.Bl ·
r
Machine.' · We.lding shop

FALUNG DOG· James Burna of Gallipolis, known aa "Failing r
Dog" had his teepee"' up on the Chester Common• Sl~rdly.
He and hla wife, known aa "Butterfly Women, • took turns sitting
at the .

FIRST SETTLERS • Canoe In hand, Coy Starcher and Alan
Hohler portnyed firat Chester settler~ in a Saturday morning
"tlm•llill event, • which Included American Indians, settlers, and
later, John Morgan's raiders and Union cavalrymen.

CHECKING the toy water
gun of Lian Hoffman during
Chester/Shade Day activities
Saturday Is Nancy Hollister.
Also pictured art Fred and
Pauline Hoffman, and grand·
daughter Marlee Hoffman. On
right Is Elizabeth Schaad. .

Public Notice

Public Notice

250 Condor Streel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivision on NicholS Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773·5861

Till VIllage ol Pomeroy Ia ;Ohio and ahtoll M¥1 an A.M.
Paye llrat $3oo tor each 1115,111111
accepting appllclllon• lor riling ol A+ or blttar. Til• and every accident (no
Hellth Care, Htha poaltlon of Chlat of lnaurance Agent muet •l•o deductlbll)
end Convaloacont
Poll co. All lntoroatod ba llconaad to do buelneaa Wallnua Pickage: S200
appllcanta ahould aubmlt" In the Stata ol Ohio.
lnaured for
their reaume 1nd a1a1ement
The Vlll8111 of Mlddlapon
ol quellllcatlona to the rtHrv.. the rtghlto accept
Rell GuarantM
VIllage Ofllcea In Pomoroy. or reJect 1ny 1nd all
.,JI••II·IIn Proacrlpllona, 10
Salary ahall ba $2D,OOD quotation• or to requoa1
eupply • $5.00
minimum. Appllcanta ohall futuro bid quotatlona at 111
18, 20,21 3tc '
be a realdonl ol tha VIHage dlocrellon.
ol Pomoroy or ahllt be
Any blddor wlahlng to
willing to ...-ocall
tho to
eubmlt
conlln11
ol thewithin
VIllage
tho11oltemalo
which orequolallone
apeclflld t::::::::-t.:=:::::::::::::;:::~
Corporallon llmlta within alx may do so wllh full
monthe of hie or hor explanetlon olthe opllona.
SlfAIPfiiiiiG ·
appointment ae Chlol. Tha Pollcl11 muet heve t
applicant ahall H raqulrld guorantold rate lor ot looei
SfiJ~(f
to paaa 1 phyalcal twelve montha.
'
exlmlntllon, given by a SPECIFICATIONS:
llconeod phyalclan,
stso lnd!Yidual/$450 tam·
iii 1 DfSCOUftf
ahowlng that he or ahe lly, colendar yur deduct·
mo•u tha phyalcal lblo10120%co-p1 yto$5,000
fO 4•1f &amp; FFA
requirement• nocaaoary to 12,000,000.par paraon tlleperlonn· tho dulloa ol Chlel lima maxlmume·
. . .llftHrl
1
ol Pollee. Application• lhlll $20 co-pay Doctora Olllco
IIU'•P'S
C"S•A•
be occoptod lor an Vlelta (No dlductlbla)
r,
II• 111•
lndtllnlte period o!Uma.
lncludea: X·roya,
11 ~"'IIi•
(7);..;_2_t,":"'28_,(;..;8)_4_,1_14-tc-- work, and Dl1gnoollc
1
Public Notice
~t11ornlty 11 1ny other RelldenUal Heating
949•2,47
lllnel&amp;.
PUBUC NOTICE
$ 7.00 prllcrlptlon ·card
&amp; Cooling
Saturday, July 26, 1110:00 (to 111 uald 11 phannocy)
Auto Air Conditioning
• •m., the Home National
1•...•11111
nc1
a1nk will offer lor aalo It
,,...
on a
public oucllon at Marino
Card of Thanks
Strvlce
Sorvlc11, 2131 Karr Str11t,
American • Stlndard,
Syrocu11, Ohio, the follow·
. ·Janltrol &amp; Helling &amp;
1 in .......... $10.00
1
6
14
ln~~n Qulchlll Wattrcrlfl, ' COk.l '
Cooling Equipment
12 iit :........ $11.00
Strill 1 XMRBZB54IilnA
ut 1111 things bt dont in
R.S.E.S. Ctrtlfltcl·
in ..........$12.00
1963 Johnaon 75. HP lovt
Art Certified
Motor, Slrill 1 2313394
The loss of Thdd
Don Smith
16 in ... ....... $14.00
The Ierma of the aalo·are Johnson, a .son and a
37814 Peach ·Fork Rd.
cuh.
Homo
Bank
pomeroy, Oh. 45789
20 in .......... $16.00
ro11rv11
the Nallonal
right to bid
11 f.ather, can never be
the oalo end or the right to replaced. At about the
· Phont 814-992·2735
romovo any or ell ltema same time the Vicki
!rom tho Hit et ony time.
Pullins home burned to
21 23
(7) 11 •14• 18• 18• • etc
the ground leaving the
family devastaled, and
Public Notice
all very sad. After Todd
was laid to res1 his
PUBUCNOTICE
The Vlllege ol Middleport family gave all of his
wlahea to receive •••led household possessions
blda lor Hoapllallzatlon
lnouranca. All blda ehtoll be to the Pullins family,
received In, end bid showing thai their loss
opeclllcttlona and 1 llat ol would not be in vain.
covered employua mey be
obtained !rom the VIllage The Pullins family wish
Olllcee, localed ot 237 Race to say Thank You I For
StrHI, Middleport, Ohio. All sharing your love with
tDropoalll muat be aub· us.
inltild by 2:00 p.m. on July·
Vicki, Kayla, Deana &amp;
25,11187.
Kathy
The lneuranct Company
muet be llcenlld to do
bualne.. In tho~S~t;l=t•~otJ::====---:-.1

21/!"

Me•gs
Refngeration
•

IMiF'.&amp;
.,TOR"
r."
••
o--~...T
~
.
PRil:ES''

..

Tree

(614) 446-4759

FllllltHIIut lllyl II 11M

Sentinel Classifieds

IS COMING AUGUST 7,1997
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30.TH
CALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.

Must have an EPA Refrigerant Certification,
knowledge of oil, gaa &amp; electric furnaces,
Including air conditioners &amp; heat pumps.
•Excellent pay baaed on experience
•Paid v~~eatlone and holldiiY•
•P1Id overtime and medlcallnaurance
•Year around emplOyment wtth new •Ute of the art
aarvlca van with t~a aufiPlled.
Call Bennette M.H. Htg. &amp; Clg. at 446-9416 or
1-800-872·5967 or send resume to 1391
Safford School
OH 45831.

I .

EXT. 105 • DAVE HAR

EXT. 104
,.

(Paymonllbaoedon II&gt;P'OYeCI cra&lt;ll)

1~~

1391 Sa1lord School Rd.; Galllpolll, OH

•

l

Wllldaws

lng Timber And Land, Pine, Pulpwood, And Saw Timber, 614·8828402.

Managemtnl Potihon A.vailabl~
At local Retail Store, Pleaae
Send Retum._ To: P.O. Box 1•1.
Galltpolil, otio 45631 '
Mobile X·Ray Tech , ytaekend1
Cell 1-800-999-9109 In Gellipolit,
ORo Area.
Need (I Ladies To Sell Avon Call

614-446-3358.

Needed· manager of flower stq,,
roost have e,;perience in all IJpel
ol arrangements, full-lime poSition,
send resume to, John Wyatt, 158

Bunerrut. Pomeroy, Oh.
010 Seeks Team GoQd Pay, EJcellent Driving Record,· 814·2561021 .
Part-Time Bartender Wetlctnc:ll
&amp; Nlghlll. Send Current Reaume
to: CLA .,7, c/o Galllpollo Dolly

T1ibtlno, 825 Ti"Nid Ave. GaiNpollo,
Oh. 45631

Part· Time Call In LPN Needed
F01 ICFI!A FocilitiH In GlllipoiiO.
Marietta, &amp; ChiiiPIIIIe. 114-

446-4814.

Patilion Open For Part-TIIM Humane Olficer Fo1 GaRil CO.nty To
Investigate Animal Abu11, Nt·
5887.
Qlect And Cruelty Cuat. Sue·
c11sful Completion .of Ohio
EMPLOYMENT
Peace Officer' • Training, Valid
Driver's license And Dependable
SERVICES
.Transpora.-ion Required; Mu1t
love Animals. Preference Will Be
Given To Candidates With PrGYIous Experience And lOr Knowtedge 01 Ohio Animal Ctualty
110 HelpWanted
AVON I All' Areas I Shirley Lawo. Pay By The Call PIUI Mileaoe. Liability Insurance Provided.
Spo•n.3DH7S.1•29.
II Interested Please Submit R•

Wanhtd: Used Hardwood Flooring
In Good Condition, Call 81tt·245·

leR~~~-.J;I----

~=-:.:'.: :'"__
':o=- ----==~--,
r,....,
r--

Local Area Pick Up
Dlacarded Appllancea
&amp; Mlny MNII.

a14-m-402s

Call a am-8 pm

ACCESS To Human Resource oumo Including Ttvoo Rtlortnooo
Development /ACCESS Head By July 30. 1fi7 To Gallo Cou""
Start Is Accepting Applications Anirr&amp;l Wellare league, Inc:., P.O.
F"' Tho roHowing ~sijon:
Bo1 218, Gallipoli' OH 45631 .
MENTAL HEAlTH SPECIALIST: Postal ·Job• 3 Positions Avail·
Applicants

Must

Have

A

able, No Experience Nacesaary,

Bacheloru De!Jee in Social Wor~ For lnlormallon, Call 818-764·
I
i
Counseling 01 Related Field. 11023, Ext 72Cie.
'
Umestone, · in
L
..,.,,vi
Mental Heullh E•pe•ianca Wo•k· Rewarding And Challenging AJsi' 0 nuny...
ing Wllh Young Cnildran And tlon .e.vallabla For An LPN With·
Gravel, Sand,
Thoh Families Pralarred. Begin· lng
To Work With The Dementia
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
CLASSIFIEDS ningRareDIPay$10.00/lt.
Population In A Secured Alz~p~licanots For lhi• Position May heimer's Ulit. Pan·Tlme, 2 P.M ..
10 P.M. Shill With Full-Time Pos·
614·992·3470
To Jeannie aible
In Near Future. Unique,
Man'
Ro- PrOYen P1og10mrl!lng And Upbtal
Succol!lul Stall. App~ In Pinon
ii"A~iCWmcemeniS-I ;~::~~~~~!:~:~~~~~ P.O. ao. At Scenic Hills Nuramg Center,
311 Buckrldgo Rd•• Bidwell. OH.
NO PHONE CALLS, PlEAS!!.

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Aodtsprings Rellabillallon Cen1w
il •-ng a luH timelpolt tiino fWI
for 11·7 shift. E~~:perlenca preferred, but will consider the right
condiclatt. E•collont benefit package fot fuU 11m&amp; and pari lime employees. Apply at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, 31759
Rocksprings Road, Po!'f!E'roy, Oh.
45769.
The Area's lar·
gest And Oldeat Maintenl.nce
And Janltorill Supply Company
Ia Presently Seeking A Sales
Representative for Gallia. Jackson And VInton Countill. The
Selected Candidate Should Live
In GallipoUs And Ba Familiar Witll
ThaseAr881.

992- 2156

Roso II Seel&lt;ing An E•porlenced
Sales Representative Who H..
The Ability To Deal Wilh The
Many Preltnt Customers And ·
Also Call On New Prospective .
Kittens To GIVeaway. 614·367· ComputiSr Users Needed. Work
OD.
own hours. S20k to SSOk/yr 1·
Poodle To Good Home, House· 800·348-J 18B 111508.

Every Tuesday Night
Buy

1 Get 1 Free

Tomato pickers &amp; packers
Gary Roush &amp; Sons

. (614) 247-3901
General Refuse
Service
is now accepting
Residential Trash
Service for $11.00.
We can also provide a
90 gallon cart for $14.50
per month.

Call1-800·967-4774

614·247·3421
.After 6 or .leave

broken, Good Companion, 814· QQNT BEAQ JHIS!

44HI372.

Joe Wllaon

Will Your Utilities Put You

$1,500 REWIDII

In The Poor House?
Consider:

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
·1927 Cross St,
Racine, Oh.
Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller

THEMAPI..ES

Family Night

Letart Falls, Ohio

BENNETI'S
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; wv
t14 448 e•18 .

·.

.

1-8Q0.2111.s800

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

Bob Morris

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

•RtJIIac.-1 Wiltlows

"Build Your Dr•ana"

HELP WANTED
TOMATO
PICKERS

Easy Bank Findng
Air Conditionm Installed 528" amonth
Heat Plnps Installed 538" a month

1:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

Shopl1ard Logging Buve1 01 Sllln-

To place aa ad, call

Help Wanted

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED

812·2772

vage \llhides. Selling parts. 304·
7?a-503:1.
.

·

~oducts,

1·614·742·2925

.THE MEIGS COUN[Y FAIR EDITION

. 1537 BAVAH PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

J &amp; D't Auto Parts. Buying sal-

JEFF WARNER INSUUICE

DREHEl'S
SAW CHAIN

11 o

Buvtng Standing Pine, 1 Ac,.
Tract Or larver, 614-258-6038.

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Ot Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, IQOO Easl·
em Avenue. Gallipolis.

&amp;
INSULiliON

"W. .,_ rM.-.,"
\.L_ _ _ _..:
..
(LimeSton.
L Ratea)

25211.

360° Communications

Ohl 45831

s····-···G
°

o

·
WV10234n

Antiques, top prices paid, River·
lnt Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner, a 14·9St2·

Galbpolio. OtH5631.

I

Quality Window Systt?ms
.

1t0 Court St:
992-•119

·1111111n. 81+9Q2·7441.

Chestar, Ohio

WICKS
,, HAULING

25 YE4RS IN BUSINESS

Antiques, furniture, glass, china.
coins, toy1, lamps, guns, tools,
tttates; also appraisals, Osby

985-4422

•luilcl Garages
•Sientt Daors &amp;

Wanted to Buy

;t.vonue, Galipo~~ 61&lt;1--4o48-2&amp;12.

.
Dll't • Sand .

aw

CELLULAR PHONES

Public Notice

Public Notice

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Abaolule Top Dollar: All U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proofn tl.
Diamonds, Antique JeWelry, Gold
Rings, Pr•1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqu isitions JtwelrV
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Umestane • Griivif1

742·2925

call614-843·5426
L..-----------!"'-......1
~====(:;:N:;:o:;:S:;:un~d~a~y;C;al;ls:)==211:-;::"=i"'
. -- ··- .. - .. ..... .. -. ..
SOLID ViNYL
,....

Fru Eatlmataa

SERVICE ·

•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Sawa
·~-:. ;::;:•7
Leading CrHk Rd.

614·992-7643

90

DUMP TRUCK

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~ t .~~~~~~
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

773-5185 Or 304· 773-5447.

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

992-5042

Gallipolis, OH

Local Retail Busineu Seeking
Full Or Pari· Time, Salts Clerk
Must Be Ava ilable To Work 1:30
To 8 P.M. 6 Days Week, Experi ence Preferred Will Oiscull Benefits. Send Detailed Resume W.ilh
Personal &amp;. Profession References To : CLA 415, CfCI Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. B25 Third Avenue,

full time auctioneer, complete
auction
aervice.
l lctnlld
UO,Oh lo &amp; West Virginia. 304·

Re L
TIUCKING

·

I -~:!2M.

Auction
end Flea Maltcet

. 992·90571NI/1

ELIM
HOME CARE

.

80

Rldt Pvurson Auction CompanW',

a-au,

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

992·5535

Oppo1w nil)' For Somoono Look·
lng far Additlonll Income, TD
Ouollfy, Mull "-COl Cllll 8
With Hazardoue Mat•rt•l • En-dor....- Coil 81~22U. 0.

Lie. wv 011030

Roofing, Painting
Gutters
Guarantee«!

FREE

AUTO RENTAL
614-446·9971

CONSTRUCTION

Help Wanted

O.Uvery Ortver S.UOnal, ferr•
lgOI II Stilting A ..._.. Oo!OI·
lrJ Orlw.r To Work Ttvough Fall
And Winter Seeton. E1cellenl

JC

•Complete
·Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare

"Stop putting off those much needed
home improvements." Call Today!

• Mowers • Chain Saws • Waedtallrs • Authorized

the Ohio State Harmonica Championship,
which helped kick off Chester/Shade Days Friday evening. Othenl pictured are, front, 1-r, Mark

•New Home•
•Garagea

• Garages

Rt. 1' Box 44-C
Mason,WV

Financing )lwough Norwell Financial

• Additions

• Decks
• Roofing

•New Homes

Hai'I'J H. BoUlton, D.D.S.

Vois, AkrOn, second place; Ed Koslewlcz,
Chesterland, third place; and judge Dabble
Hamper of Strongsville. Back are John Ander·
son, Pomeroy, and Bill Cuckler, Athens, both
judges.
·

110

Middleport
6 VICinity

~ IASON DENTAL CARE

HA·;MONICA WINNERS · Ryan Tackett of
Plymouth, eecond from left, won first place in

Yard Sale

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

ALLPRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.

.

1·614·992·7022

.......

•.•,,,..,
FREE EST1MATES

D. Gea17's

WILL BAUL-JDI'rCALL.
992·7074

Gravel, Umeatone,
Top1oll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

ca.-w.a.ul).

•1
YOUNG'S
bRPENTER SERVICE
·.tftoom Acklltlona 1.

iNawOarsgH
oEitctrlcal 1 Plumbing
ofloofiiiiJ
ol!dlldor A Elltlrlor
oPaln!IIIIJ
. '
· Alao Concrila Work '
.(FREE I!STIMAtES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill

88242111

-

POIMI'Oy, Ohio

No Credit. No Problem! NO
MONEV DOWNt Tre1t Younelf
To Our FREE Truck Progr•m.
Clooo "A" COL &amp; I Yr. OTR I·

IIJ0.377-31gl.

Found: on Rt 62 at moulh ol 8
Mile Rd, red I while male Baa· E11pertenced Carpenw With Own
Tools, References Required, Cell
glo. 304-875-1344.
614·•41-1138 Between 8:30 And
Lost: -whiaketa•. Iaroe bCack and 4:00.
while mala car with white whiskers, Middleport vicinity, 814·1192· E11peritJnced Hair Stylist Wanled,
For Modern New 5alon. 814-441 3957.

1880. 614-2!!8-83:)8.

LOST: qald chain wtdiplama &amp;
graduauon cap, "G&amp;", lost bet·
ween Gallipolis pool &amp; Krogera.
304-875-7576.

-d.
70

Yard Sale

.

Salar'f, Commiasion Bonus. ~ Full
Size van. Heallh Insurance, Profit
Sharing And An

On ~Going

Train-

ing Progam.

·

P.lnae 'Send Reaume To:

Rose Products
And Servicel, h:.

545 Slinmel Road
ColumbUs, Ohio 43223

Ann: Steve Blake
I---------:snepna1d Logging Anyone E•·
patience With Chain Saw, Also
Skiddef ~tor, 814-682-&amp;402.
Help Wanted : Timber Cutter 1
Power Saw Operator, Loader Operator, Sickle, E•perienced Only
Need To Apply; Call 614-6827455.
1

u~~~~~ifs
WIRELESS
COIIMUNICAOONS ·
United States Cellular Is bpandingllsTeam:

We Are Seeking ProfesSional
Sales Consultan ts. The Desirable
Candidate Uust Bd An · Aggres·
sive Self-Starter. With Effective
Communications Skills, A Solid
Work Ethic, A Posi tive Auitude,
And Must Posses GOod Customer SGrvice Skills.
E•perience Required.

Howard L. Wrftenl
ROOFING
~utters

.

814-992-3120

60 Lost and Found
FOUND: 7· 1B ·g7 Small black

Ntw St1rt In Your Own Truc:k.

Rose otf&amp;rt An Excellenr Smrtlng

NEW-REPAIR

Quality Work at
• Fair F'rlcel
550 Page St.
.Middleport, Oh. 4518o
Home Ph.
.

Drivers: Only In Amerlcl • A

Scottish Terrier, Poplar Heights

992-4025

·r

814-Q4g·2822.

..... ao.-875-28115.

to.

Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
For further details call today ~

l'llppioo, "ti-e bold &amp; tho beautilur
or •1he young &amp; the restless·.

Unless yau want to Lose W.lghl
&amp; Feel Goaot. CALL NOWI (304)
S62.C373.

Customets.

Downapoutl
Outler Creanlhg . ,
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

'

949-2168

. Don Oe.-y, o-r
i
.. ·t==
· .:;::
. _;:::::
-. J! ... . ...... ......"'"""""'
&lt;ll&lt;lltfh

_j

~, ..

Tal~ Uve To A

CORPORAL ELEORIC

Real Gifted
Psychk

Dally Rd., Racine

. 814-949-3060

1·900·868-4900
Ext. 1817
$3.18permln.
Mull be 11 yra.
Str·U (819) 845 1434

-·-

I

John Wllllania, Owner
Ucenaed Electrician
work ouarenteed
Free E111mat11
Providing Quality
Rtlldtntlel Service.
Z4 Hr. E""'f~MC)'
S.tvlce

WANTED: P•rt· Time Position

A..lltblo AI " Communlly Group

Home For Persons With MRIDD
In Bldw•ll. Hou11: • ·8 P.M., Frl;
8:45A.M. -7:15P.M .• Sal: 8 A.M
.·
8 P.M .. Syn; 2 ·Hour Wooitly Staft
Meeting; Or As Otherwllt

Schldulld. High Sctl004 Ol!&gt;omo I

GEO. Velld Orlver'a License,
Good Driving Record And Three
Yeara Licensed Driving ~Jperl­

enco RtaUIIId. Sll11y: $5.50 IH1,
To Swt. TIOinlng Provided. Sind
R11uma To: P.O. Bo1 804, Jackoon. OH 45640: ATTN: Cecilia.
O.lilllno F01 ;t.pplicon,.: 71231V7.
Equal OpporWri~ Employer..

'

'

�AILEYOOP

hge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 21 , 1997

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
37- ratlnga
40 Encour.ged
42 Old ege
43 - out (atrtlch)
44 Pot-eu-46 J.,cove&lt;
48 Fance parta

ACROSS
1 Penny
5ll-•prud

PHILLIP

ALDER

• Slllll( -.)
1a llu111an ruler
13 Like aummer

50 Full of .current

drinka
U Guido'a high

North
07·21·97
• J 10 6 5 2
• 7 5

New·1997 14 Wlda-t balh, telllll
down, S139rmo, with approved
credit can 1'·8:X).el1.fl777.

1ee1 doublowldo 11445 down,
$2211/mo. Fr.. dell..., I IOIUp.
t-~~XH~~t.om.

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vine Street. Caii814-44B-7398,
1 Bodraom In Golllpollo, No Pall, HI00-499-34118.
V.,tb.814-&lt;1411-lli03.

11112-221L

2bdrm. apta., tala! electric , ap-

• 3

'
':

Standard.

1994 full size Conversion Chevy
van, 44 ,000 miles. 10 d&amp;tk CO,
power N:;, 814-992-1!910.

FurniUe, 814-441-74«.
Poly'e- I Ulld Fumlu,.
2101--

Motorcyoles

740

Aper1mlnt For Ronr !New Haven,
WVA. One Bedroom, Furnished,
Phone 81 • .e98-2813.

gg2-2591 .

$1,500, 814·992-6387.

BARNEY
.

I

1

;:.. '

1988 suzuki 4 wheeler. new en- ;

./I

GOODJ II
WHAT DO I
DO FIRST

1.991 Kawa saki EX500, $1,500.

1

614-258-6012.

:

The Honors Bridge Club in New
York City puts out a monlhly news
sheet. (What do you think it is
called?) It contains information about
the classes and duplicates in the club.
And it contains a couple of bridge
problems. Here is on~ . from last
May 's issue.
The reader, sitting East, was
· shown only his hand and the dummy's.on his right. He was given the
bidding and asked to plan his defense
after his panner. West, had led the
heart king. (If you wish, you may
now test yourself by covering the
South and West hands.)
West's three hearts was a weak
jump overcall, showing a decent six card suit and some 6- 10 high-card
points. North bid what he hoped his
partner could make. ·
As East, you can sec three tricks :
two top hcans and the club ace. Bul
where is number four? If panner has .
the advertised six hearts, declarer
holds three. So, you,can overrutT the
dummy on the third round for the ·
fourth defensive trick .· However,
there is a catch. If you overtake with
the hean ace and immediately return
a heart. when your partner plays a
third hean, declarer will discard
dummy's club. This classic loser-onloser play will save the contract.
· The answer should be clear by
now. After winning trick one with the
heart ace, cash the club ace before
returning your second heart. Partner
should play a third .heart, allowing
you to overruff the dummy to defeat
the contract.
If your panner switches al trick
four, send him to Honors for lessons
-- and have him read copies of Honorable Mention .

1993 Kawasaki Ninja BOOAA, :
$2,500, 614-448-95C3.
_ ,

,

• Wll CIHn Hou111 -~~. Or EliwMkly, Trustworthy, RIBsonable,

814-441...QII0.4.

304-e7S.6310

:

.

Buslniss
Opponunlly

and tires. many new pans, good

top
Interior, asking $2fSOO, besl ofler

or trade !or boat, camper or
something of intertst, 614·992·

ALL STEEL BUILOINOS, 40•26 3078·

$54.900. ~14-821! - 4950.

210

rebuilt engine and lransmiulon,
V-8 aulamatic, air, PS, PB. cruise,

~~~;~~~~~~~IUt. Alpine stereo, recent paint

Wll haul jurllc ar oaoh away. ~sr Middlepqrt· 3 umts, new windows
and carpet , painted, clean,
plcilup laed. 304-1175-5035.

FlrJANCIAL

::---:-::.---::---=---:--ci'081 Bu1ck Regal Sporl Coupe,
two door, approx. 35,000 mile• on

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No

Newly remodeled three bedroom,
one ·and 1J2 bath home in Middleport. 614-992-3465 alief 5pm.

Pats, Rllerence And Oepaail Re-

quited, 61,.-448-1519.
Furnished Efficiency $185/Mo.,
Ulillliat Paid, Share Bath, 607
Second Avenue. Gallipolit, e14·
4411 314HI1or 7 P.M.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
2 Meter Ham Aadlo $148.95; T•
pan Microwave, ,,.g,gs: JCPen-

Wu $4,880 Now 12,880, •ox57

1982 Malibu Chevy Wagon, v~e.

W.s $8,818 Now $5,818. Other

Automatic , 1/·6, $600, 090 61•·

Slzos Avalleble. Chuck I-BOO- 256-6109.

320-2340.

Bfoct. brick, aewlf pip", wind·
owa,lintel, etc. Claude Winllrl,

1AS3 Olds Omega, 4 new 11res.
new banery, new exhaust, 79,000
actual miles, no rus1, $1:695, 614·

560 PelS fOr Slit

C1lindar, Auto, Hogh Molaaee,

nsy VCR $79.85; Savannah VCR Rio Grande, OH Call 81•·245- 992-6824.
$69.95; Sony CO Pls,ar $59.85: 5121.
BQ Channel Scanner

,a. .

l5; 30

Channel Hand Held Scanner
$69.95 ; 16 Channel Scanner
$'*SUI5; Smith Corona Typewriter

11i183 Pontiac J20C0 Wagon •

10 Purebred St llomard puppill,

Good Wont Car, 614-4.S.8516.

;'
--

1993, 883 Harley Oawiaan Sport·

,.., $8,500, 8t....,..gs.a

~

1985 F.L. HTC Elecua Glide -

Clasalc, MfleaUa : 13,300, Manf ~

Emaallika Newl·8t4-«B-1522. ,
tees Honda Accord 'LXA, 4
Doors, AuiO, AJC, PW, PB, PM,
PS. Ercellent, 2•.000 Miles,

81~

~-8491 .

-

Honda 4 WhM~f, TAX 125, 614t
~500 .

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
'88 lnYidar 17' boat, walk·thru
windshield, 130 Mercruiser witt!
tllllnleu stHt .prop, am1m stereo 1
casune, min top. fu ll cover, al· ~...!
ways garage kepi, excellenl to

THE. BORN LOSER
.,
,..Ol.~CKYIN'OUTLOOD!

c:oncltlon, 614-lliZ.S124.

-

$69.95: Eltctrontc Ke,board Ytt checked. at1o11, cule and ue• Plymou th sw, good tJres, 180 lslandr Baja U86 1110 Mer- "'ll
$6e.e5: Zonllh Consolo T.V. cuddy, f250each, li4-985-3477. ntwf baltl!r)', needs head gatker. auiser18 F1181, 614-408-8857.
i
$400, 614-992-SS.S.
$145.99; J.&amp;B Technolog' 372
2 AKC Malo Chow Puppies, 2
1878 Galaxy 19tt. In/Out bOard, .
Slt11e Roull 1611, Galipolla.
2 Vacuum• 1 Canister, 1 Upright,

814-44 1-&lt;1804.
24,000 BTU Air COndiUaner 220

VOlt, 3 Years Old, Excellent Condition, $375, 61•·441·1138 Days;

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
F.. turlng Hydro Bath , Don
Shelll. 373 Georgn Creek Rd.
11~.0231 .

Air Conditioners Re-Conditioned
AU Sizes Guaranteed, 814·886·

742-2259.

thlp In Open Uatket High Profit

Are you buying new furniture?
Sell yDUr used furniture to the Pomeroy Thrift Shop. There is • real
need for couchet. breaklast and
dining room sets. We alto buy
baby beds, strollers. pla,.pent,
toddler car seats and walkeri.
Call 614 ·9~2- 3725 TueSda~ thru
Sa t u r~J'. 108m-4pm at 220 East
Ma1n S~eet, ~merO'f.

factory direct. High profit poten·
tlal, tales or construction. (303)

7511-3310 Ext 7950.

230

Professional
~Ices

DOWN, 1 .11'11. APR
FIXED BUYS ANY SINGLEWIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE,
UII .OO

Boats By Redwing , Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony Lama . Guaranteed
lowest Prices At Shoe Cafe, Gatlipolls.

30&lt;-736-3401.

...... 304-675-21·~

mond Kings If you .hawe catds to
sell, let me know. Call 614·949·

:1196.

Concrete a PlalbC SeptiC Tanks,

300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron

Evans Enterprites, Jackson 1 OH

12J50 Monarch Plus. All Contents
2 AC Oak Oinelle Stand Up
Fteeier Much More 61'*· 256·

;-~~,

Mobile Home 12x70 2 Bedroom,
All Electric Wa1her D~e r HookUp Mull Be Moved OH-441-

)
'

1870 Skrllne 12'x60' Mabile
Home 2 Bedroom~ L1ke New Gaa
Furnace, Fair Cond11ion, $2,500,
814·497-f..l95.

ortgln, or any lntentiort 10

Living Room And A 198ft l2x42
Add·A· Room Four Bedroom•. 1.

make arrt such Pteference,
llm1141lan ordtS&lt;:rtminalian."
Thlt newspaper wilt not
knowingly accept
ad't'Brtlsements for real BS18te

wlllt:h IS In vtolallon of 1110
taw. Our rei~rs are hereby
lnrormedlhat an&lt;IWOI!ngs
· lldvettlllfd In lhlt newspaper
are a~allable on an equal

0765.
1979 14,70 Schull Wilh E•pando

Renllll Wanted; Homeowners Ra·
614-446-6922, 614-441 ·5187.
locating Need 3 Bedroom Ohio

Homt, to c ..nry. Goad Roldo • Sleep in~ roomt wilh cooking.
Schools, Within 1 Hour Of Galli·

polls,--. 814-4511-1228.

RENTALS

61•·379-2957 After 4 P.M.
1988 14ll70 Clayton Newport,
2bedroom, 1bath, cl•, new car·

pe~ 1 porch wirool. $13,500. 31).4.
875-&gt;1825.

460 Space tor Rent
For Rent 2 Trailer Lots, TeenS
Run Road , County Water, tO
Milas From Gallipall!!il, St501Mo..

Call814-245-5565.

1987 Clayton 1•x70 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Flraplace. Central Air,

Also tra1ler apace on river. All
hook -ups. Call attar 2:00p.m.,

304-773·5851, Uason WIJ.

nace, Heat Pump, And Carpeting.

$16,950, Cal614-245·55e5.

REAL ESTATE

Kings Motel lowes I Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled. HBO,
Cinemax, Show time &amp; Disney.
Weekly Rates, Or Momhly Ralls,
Conatruction Workers Welcome

112 Balli~ Farrill Roam, New Fur-

197&amp; ·1•x70 Schull With Expanclo
Living Room And A 1986 12x42
Add·A-Room 011 A Rented lot.
Four Bedroomt, 1 1/2 Batht.
FsmJ iy Room. Undei pinn ing, 2
Co~ered Porct11t1, And Outbuild·
itlg, Upgradll Include New Fur·
nace, Heat Pump, And Carpeting.
Porlable Olthwaeher Stayt,

AKC Rag Boxer puppies, de·
clawed I tails docked. 111 thota

•-

-

· 3Q.4-67S.3866.

AKC Reglllered Champion
Bloodline Boxer Puppies, Tails
Oo!illtd, Dew Clawa Removed,
Ve(Ctlackad, Wormed, Si• Fe·
males; Ont Mala, 614-446-7166.

1988 Ford Taurus , exc. running

1

Qutboafd, SQ,8QO, 814•992•2770. •

I

Bay1iner Bow Ridef BoaL V,. '
8, Power Custom Trailer, Loaded~ 1

.1886 Toyota Cemry, cruise. lilt,
interminenr wipers, cold air, new
t~res, excellent inside &amp; out,

Musl SeH, 61'4·448-~ .

AN Kawauki Jet Skis
Price'&amp; Under lrwlce

OOOZXI
750 ZXi
750 SXI
750SX

1987 Ford Escort GT, 5!11pd, good
d •2300 304..S75-37fl1

con " • '

·.

·

1967 Red Trans-Am, Automallc.
5.0 U1er Engine, Low Mii9Bgt, Elt·
cellem Condition. SS.SOO 080,

614·367-7386.

1988 Gr01nd Pnx, New lnteflor, &amp;
Tires, Pioneer AMtFM CO Stereo,
Excellenl Shape, 614·445-1638,

After 5.

"'

1

BIG NATF.

8U$1NESB CLQSEOUT

$2495." 81 •-992-682•.

/

Only 12 Left

WE e&lt;1TH LOVE CHEE Z.

.· '

I)OOO~ES,

LeN£ CAim&gt;OIIiKC:&gt; ...

."'

.S.ND I: tlA"E.
IN COl'\!'\ON, NATE~

VOl)

SO t1UC:H

'

'

....---

'

/

HAMILlllN WATER SPORlS
PROCTORVILLE, OHIO
1-tl14-88f.N7e
-------------------- ~
Fishing boat 14ft. trailer, 20hp. '
Evinrude engine tsoo. 304-882_....

2715 ..

AKC Registered Male Shellle 3

NO, I ·REALIZE
'f'OU'RE NOT PLA'f'l ~6

814-245-5836.

new
tt'tncaa.

located On Route 7 Wat&amp;f Pa1d,

875-5162.
HouH For LHie

St251Mo.. 614-245-5024.

$350/~o., Plua

Damage O.posl~ 61 •·385-4778.

Hou .. in Pomeroy fer 11le or
ren~

814-11112-3090.

In Middleport, 4 bedroom, brick_
new carpet, $350• depoaiVreler·
encea. uti!ltltt not Included, no

-814-1182-3457.
Or laaael 3br, 2 112 bath, 3 car
gaf'lge w/car lift, swimming pool

wldecll. "Ita 70x50 building, lo-

cated on 23 .::reL ~-175-5431 .

Mobile home sne ava1l8ble bet·
wean Athens and Pomeroy, call

614-385-.o367.

MERCHANDISE

1-----=---JET

AERM10N MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; AabuMl k1 Stock.
Cal Ron EVIN, 1-t0().537-t528.

MarkJ~I Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Champion Sired, 12 Weeki old.

Browns T~stwor!hl

.,.....

~

Aegitterad Austral ian Sl'lepherd·
1 Puppias,
Red Merrme·a, &amp; Blue

(Serious Inqu iries Only I) 6H·
446-4015.

&amp; 60 Olda Cui·
1111 &amp; 80 LeMan•. 2.8 Chevy
V.8 wltrans, auto. 80 &amp; 81 VW
Rabbits.
Dodge OmnJ. 85 :
Cavalier. 76 Oids, •S5 wlfront ,1
wheet drive. 30•·578-9005.
I

a•

ibu·u bo f1oo!ini on acloud with
lire buys rou'll find In .lire
clonifitds.

Full line of auto body panels,
paints and auppliea, also glass. •
light a11embly. Oxygen and ac•
tylene tanka filled and exchanged, • ~
New

ou

I MONDAY

"I

614-74~·2792.

570

Musical
Instruments

e Piec:a Ro~ce Drum Set. $150;
Epiphone Guitar 1150, 614·387·

Re-Eslablish Credirl Mull Make
$150 Week Take Home, 15'4
Down On Cash Or Trade To
Qualify For This Bank Financing.
No Credit Turn Down!lll et• -4~1 ·

"t

tanks, 1 ton truck -

0657.

0607.

580

Assume l.aan : 1996 GEO Tracker

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

4 speed au1o w/overdrive, 4 door,
cru ise, loaded. pay olf $1,.,DOO
firm. 304-675-5729 alter 5pm.

Motor Homes

1981 26 Fr. Tieske Class A Mo·
fPr Home, •54 Chevy Engine, Unit
Wi th Al l Extr&amp;!ll , Must Sell For
Whats Owed, 61•-4-48-1311.

,,

1993 Fifth Wheal camper, Sand- , t
piper by Cobra. private bedroom, J •
complete bath, 'Sieepa 6, central ' 1
air, gas furnace, $8000, 1514·992· ! •
2393 or 614-9A2· 28Btl, as- for •
Bolly.

William• Farm, Syracuse, Ohio,

814-182-3885 da,a or 61&lt;-9e2581l8 Mningl.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Locally This r.tonth.
· TruckS. 414's, Eu:.

1·600·522-2730, X3901.
Upton Used Cars At. 62·3 Miles
Sauth ol Leon, WV. Financing
Available. oo•_..SB-1068.

1ablished te75. Call (614) 4460870 Or t-800-267-0576. Rogers ~
Waterproofing.
.
--------------~---- 1~~ ·

Appliance Parta And S&amp;rYica: A/1
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ell- - •
ptrltnce AU Work Guaranteed ..,. ·
French City Ma~tag, 614·446: "'r:

7795.

ol 1

.

nv

Save Hundreds On Aes1dentla! · :.;

Roofing, JB Roo!ng, llecillng IS~­

Ing, Free Ettlmatelt Work Guer-

-··

ortteed, 814-388-8879.

' "
~~~::::---~ " ~

840 Electrical and

·

RetrlgeratiOn

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

'- " I '

.'"'

AelkMntial or comn:-erclal wltlng, +- •., 1,
urvice or repauL Mut,. u.

new

ce..,sed electrician. Ridenour

Eleclrlcel, WV000308, 30•-67517118.

instrument today. Your friends will be
Hill Station, New York, NY I 0156.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In busi - eagerly trying to get in touch with
ness matters, pay heed to your intu- you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. i9)
ition today, even if your logic dictates
otherwise. Your inslincts will be Peruse the advertisements today and .
BERNICE
cht;_ek p~t your buying so'!!ces. Your
more on target.
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) A instincts for spotting bargains are
BEDE OSOL
loved one might require lender treat- sharper than usual.
ment today. You won't reach this perPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It
son with pragmatic app,roaches, bul will be of great imponance to you
you can through his or her emotions. today to function as free and indeLIBRA(Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) It won't . pendently as possible. Avoid involveTuesday, July 22. 1997
be
necessary for anyone to look over ments that restrict your mobility.
In the year ahead, ways will be
your
shoulder today. You will do a
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your
found to put your anistic, literary or
good
job,
as
you'll
take
pride
in
doing
compassionate
urges will be easily
musical taleniS to constructive uses.
things
well
without
supervision.
friends who need
aroused
today
by
There is a market for the gifts in
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24-Nov.
22)
You
help.
If
a
few
sacrifices are
your
which yoq're endowed.
might
be
in
love
with
love
today.
but
required, they won't deter you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
· TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The
Endeavors that permit you to use there is nothing wrong with that. This
your imaginative faculties ~ill be the abrasive world has many empty wann, gracious vibes you emanate
ones you'llthoroughly enJOY today. spaces that should be filled by a today will be obvious to all you
encounter. The world will 'see you as
Use your gifts to help make your day. .romantic.
.SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. a friend and treat you like a pal.
Trying to patch up a broken
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A goal
romance? lbe Astro-Graph Match- 21) Even though there will be a number
of
other
interests
vying
for
your
that
proved to be too difficult yestermaker can help you understand what
ll)tention
today,
it's
best
you
give
day
could
be a piece of cakelor you
to do to make the relationship work.
'family
matters
top
priority.
today.
Where
obstacles previously
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
.CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-Jan.
19)
.
existed,
you'll
now find stepping
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
stones.
Your
telephone
could
be
a
very
busy
...

ASTRO·ORAPH

".1

WATERPROOFING

Uncondillonal·liletime guarantee.
Local reference~ furnished. Es·

6323.

1997 t4x70 2 ai 3 Bodroom,
down, $te51mo. Only 11
Oakwood Homes, Nilro, WV 30•755-5885.

Francisco
38 Aliment

39 Singer Adams
41 Become mort
profound
45 Common
practice

47 Ratldld
48 Steal
49 And
51 Coast Guard
women
52 Chlld'o toy
53 Wide ahoa

....

55 One with a

bell?
57 JFK sight '

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrjy Cipher ci'W)togr~mt •re crealed from quotai!OI'II by l•mou~ ~. pest Md P""ft
Eactllefttf In the e¥lhraf .aandl lot anolher. Toc:My't c:M· J ctqUIII P

, RP

NHRW

AWEWHIX
8 F G I ,

LG

AFAADLEN
L' R

GFV .KHSW .

IXW

YHLILEN

KIIV
ELSZ

WUJDIIt;:W.'

Ll

1111

KHDCII ,

IIIE

XLG
VWSWEI
GDFRJ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "Never ·do anything you wouldn 't want to be eaughl
dead dotn~." - John Carra~.
·
TIIAT DAILY

'urnn

let1ers of the~~~~::~~;;;;;:;:;::;~
0 Rearrange
four Krambled wordJ be

•

low to form four simple words

KIPPUC

I I I· I
LIBOR

H T A y c~

I_ I_ I_

I
I.~N:;.,'

My COUSin IS a real dead
beat. He-is very w~ling to do al·
. - - - - - - - - . , most anything for a buck but

Q- ~::pi:~

1ho chuckle Quoted

by flll 1ng in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 be!ow.

SCIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

·1

Fran! clips for 71

$100 080. (61&lt;)4•1-1417 Leave

Now Open: Beach's Farm Markel,

R&amp;GFeed

32 Auld Lang 34 - - my
hurt In San

Beautilul AKC, Black WITan

KILL ROAaiESI
Stalt Route 1150. AI Evergreen CARS FOR $100 1Trucks, boar1,
ENFOIICEIM OverNit4 Roach Home
Grown Tomatoes, Half Run- ~ · wheelers , motor names, lurni·
Spray Or Overnlte Peat Control ner Green Beans, Corn, Fresh ture, electronics, computer&amp; etc.
SERVICES
conconuatt. MakU Up 10 2 Gil· Watermellons And Cantalopea, bl FBI, IRS, DEA. Avaiable 1our
Ions For F111 And Ludng Roach Wa Also Buy Local Produce area now. Call 1·800-513·•3•3 l-:--:--------'---t_
Control. GUAIIANTEEDI Avail- Open 9-7 Oaoly, Call 814-446E" s-9368
810
Home
able AI Thtst Patllcipatlng 1911&lt;.
.
Stores:
1960 ·1990Ca" For S100III
.Improvements
Seized And Sold
O'dells True Value
Swett cam and pepptf't. 1011m·?
Centroi SUpply
Val"' SUpply

31 Arduous
journey

A PRINr NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

"OLD' MAIDP

90 Cavalier, Aulomatic, 2dr. Air,
a &amp; radia1ors. 0 &amp; R Auto, : j ,
83,000 ·Milea. $2,500. (81•)- wheel
Rlple,, WV. 30•-372-3933 or 1· ·
Aegiltered miniature Chihuahua, 3799047
600·273·9329.
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repalrt. sevtn months old. 1150, 814·
Problems? Nlld Tuned? Call tho 1182-3119 or814-992-364a
A -Need A Car? Na Credit, Bad
Campers &amp;
Credit BankruPICI? We Can H~p 790
pial'~) Dt. 81~4525
Homellte 330 Wilh New Chain,
Looks And Runs Uka New, S200,
15 Minutes Ftom Galllpolla. 81..._
378·2801 .

utterance

Ireland
-r-+--+--1'
Hosiery
"
problem
like a bug In
a rug?
28 Ancfenl serf
· 30 Stand

- _ , l__.J__.J.I.-,..L---1.
1.-.L

760

Montht Old, Sholl I Warm.ed,
.,........1767.

24
25
26

1-s.-rlT_,Wirzg~I.,I,~A...,RI_E,"TI--il

C&amp;C General Home Main· ...,,"
tenence· P•lntlng, winy! aiding, ,
carpentry, doors, wlndow1, baths,
motM!e home repair and more. For ''"' '
free aaUmata call Ct'tet, 61•·992· ,.1,~

$8~5

'04E BOTH

--~----~~--------...
1988 Pontiac LeMamr,For Sale New Detuxa Aluminum Boat Trail-·· ·
Or Trade, Runs &amp; Look!ll Good, er, Holds Up To 28 Ft. Boat, ·;:
12.500, 614 418 9862.
•
$995, 814-256-1050.

M•rile's, $100, 014-388-9925.

10$4 After 8 PM.

Acre Land, Scenic Road, Vinton,
$10,000 Or Best Offer, 614·•48·

AKC Reg Blood Hound Puppies.
-old.304-1182-36t3.

1979 Starcrall. 11 112 It open

cond., $1,200 080. 304-675· 21 Fl
5320.

1995 Chrysler Cinut, loaded,
Pure Bred Beegle Pupe For Sale, 26,000
miles, $12,000 or trade br
814-38Ull!1.
truck ol eQual value. 8U·I•A·
CUb Cadet 1872. 18 ttp., 80" . - - Rat Tauier Puppies, 7 Weeks 2•52.
dock, hydrootall~. 450 hra.,
$4000, 814-e92-8488 dayti or Old. scony Luou 814-367-7518.
1995 Salum SC2, Automatic, Air,
814-ml2-2219 -*'go.
Aaa Tenior one male, Born 51281 Cruise, AMIFM Cassette, Trunk
Release, $12,000 cat After 5 P.M.
e1. S75.oo (814)-446-8508

Nitro, WV 304-755-5885.

to aciVet1ll8 ·any pteleie.nce.
NmHtlllon or dlacrtmtna1i0n
btlled on race. DOlor. rallglon,
, . famllalstatus or natiOnal

ft14 ~

I

I

Wheels. Sharp Car. St.900: 1990 bow, 140 hp. Mercury outboard,:. I
:- 1
Dodge Caravan, Au1oma1ic, 2.5L, $1950 OBO, 814-742-2367.
4 C11.. 25MPG , Clean, Reliabe
1988 Ranger 373V 18' \2 ·2•~ 1
Vehcle, $3,!100. 614-446-7215.
Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinru""' :

1·800·537-8528.

tion. $999 Ocnwl on select multi·
sections. 2-3 or 4 Bedroom moclels available.O&amp;kWood Hames

1872 Freedom 2 Oedrooms. 1

AKC German Shepherds,

4cyl, 170hp, motor. $4,100. 304·
675-7"J4,

AKC Registered Vcrkie puppies,
to go S350ea. 304 -895·

6668.

All real 111818 a&lt;Nenlllng tn
tnls 11 subjact 10
1110 Federal Fair Housing Ac1
of 1868 wntcn makll HN~

'

7 · Registered
Auatrelian
Shtphtfd Pupplet, Blue Menilll,
&amp;tack Tries &amp; Aad Trias Vet
ChecMd. 814-388 B'M

1985 Merc ury Grand Marquis,
Automalic, 302, V-8, Remaru.~lac­
tured Engme Has Only 35,000
Miles. Full Power: Aluminum

Buying aponoCIIIdal
ready
I will buy ony EUtll or now Dia- 39211.

Snt.OO DOWN e.U'!Io APR
HARTS MASONARY - Block, FIXED BUYS ANY DOUBLE·
brick &amp; nme· work, 30 yeart ex· WIOE ONLY AT .OAKWOOD
perlence, reatonabta rates. 30•· HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE
ee5-358 . liter 8:00pm, no jab 10 31).4-736-3401.
1nt1l ar "' BIG. WV-0~1206
tTIMEDNLYI
8-L·O.W-Q.U-TI
l&lt;e)'IUOkes Plus, Ratumt/Secr•
$499 Down on select single sec·
tar•l Service, cal 814-7&lt;2-7404.
livln~ston't basement water·
proahng, all basement repairs
done, free tltimates, lifetime
guarantee. 1Oyrs on job ex peri·

7 ·8 Week Old Dalmatian Pup $50 Each, Call Tom MIICh~l

pies,

Air C ond i tioner~ Different Slua,
John Deare Lawn Tractor, 1982
Toyota Corolla, Brown Rocker A•
diner, 614,...46-1810.

7531 .

320 Mobile Homes
StHI building dealership avail·
tor Slle
able In open rrerkat Deolent bul

11"-258o-&amp;IDB.

Al614-311&amp;111122.

Convenience Store Fof Lease,
lnciUdtl AI Equipment, SL Rt 33,

Potanllll. COnatrucUon Or SaloL
303-758-4135. Eort 8200.

~

614-446-3&gt;08 e..,;ngL
7 Alurnlrolm- co~
S.36t36 2-60~ $25.

Bu llt·in oven $20. Stove top 4·
burrers $20. 30•-675-4038.

Now Haven W.VA., 814-8982813.
Pr•Englneortd Sllll Bl&lt;lgL Notlonlll Co"""'ny A,.rdl"!i Dllolor-

AKC Female Pomeranian Puppill, 3 AduU Chow, AKC R~ls ·
llred. 1 ChinetH Pug, AKG Rf9-

Saarinen

By Phillip Alder

• 1

110 Autos tor Slle

Dawbor

19 Relalld
21 Conine

Information
and puzzles

gine, clutch, brakes, c~ atn an4_
sprcrl.ets, $1800, 814-992.&amp;4S6.. .....

TRA'NSPORTATION

remark

11 AclrHI

7 - Haute
8 Whirlpools
9 Architect

Opening lead: • K

I'M GO.IN' TO LET
YOU HELP
ME COOK
SUPPER
I!

1

1979 Yamana 1100, 14,000 or•o•nal mllet, excellent condition('

I 6

10 D11p1raglng

5 Fesltnlng
8 High card

East
All pass

Soulb

••

,1

DOWN
1 New Oeal
program
office job ·
33 Baseball-game 2 Singer Plnza
3 Anti-drug
divisions
officer
35 Sinewy
4 Foreat unlla
36 Actor - Julia

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

;--:.

1975 HO Sponster (1000+-t, many
new parts. rnJSt seel $4900, 614·

By owner: Mount Vernon Avenue,
Point Pleaaar'lt. 6 rooms, 2 or 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, large kitchen,
baaeme~t. vinyl siding, fenced
backyar\1. Re~uced to $87,000.

aA9842

auction
24 CUrvy letter
27 Uke'(&amp;uft.)
21 Does a mall-

a KJ 7

eil2-5578 IIYOf1ingL

300-075-SOFA 1'7832)

Will Babysit In 111 Homo, E•pe&lt;l~ lnl)aJcarw, 81.w41-1797.

•A3
. • 10 8 6 l

" 10 8 4
t K 7

1

HHUJ Dodge Dakota Extended
Cab 4x4, bedliner, V.O, power op.
liont, 27.000 m:tas. 1\B,IKIO, 114- '

0ptn e:30 - 5:00 MIIII-Sot

GREAT PRICE
GREAT LOCATION

• Q 4

South
aAK987

Kitchen Car,iot, te.50 Sole On At
Room SIZt Carpeta, Mollohan

torlpm.

Eaot

• 3

•KQJ 9 6 2

Klng-aize wararbld , new semi-

Conao.e for rent-lbr, kllchen,
1-800·83'7-1 bath. $175/mo. +utilities, 112mo.
rant tw deposit 30H7S.24e5 af-

\\lest

• 4 2
• Q 10 6 5

pMancea furnllhtd, laundry room wave manreu, liQhted mirror
lociUdes, doll to 1&lt;1\001 In town. headboard. $150. Maytag Appllcadona avollable at: Village $75. Electric drJif Sl'!i. 304-77SGtHn Apll. t49 or caN 814-1182- 5870-4pm.

:1711 .EOH.

eAQJ95

EEK&amp;MEEK

1 r.d 2 -.om-..-~ turnilhed and unfurnished, security GOOD USED APPLIANCES
dtposlt required, no pet1, 814· Washers, dryer•, rtfrlgera1orl ,

info

53 House wing
nota
54 Tempo
15 GIOIIY fabric 56 Epic poem
16 Social mlallt
58 11awn goddess
17 Bar order
59 Selvea
18 Atlantic or
60Seta-n
Indian
· 61 Comedian
20 Hardahlp
•
Phlllpa
22 Panlclpale In a 62 Knots In cotton
winter aport
fiber
23 Ending lor
63 Jog

Nimbus- Obese - Icily - Volume - BOUNCES
If you drop the ball, figuratively speaking, you shouldn't
complain how it BOUNCES.

JULY 21

I

�Ohio Lottery

.NV.Mets
sweep
Reds 5-3

Pick 3:
314
Pick 4: ·
8107
Buckeye 5:
10-13-15·31-37

Sports on Page 4

Chance of ahowera
tonight, low near 70.
Wedneaday l', ahowera,
high In the mld-80t .

•

"

',
I

7

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\

ent1ne

I .

I

I

1

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'

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41, NO. till

o1m, Ohio VaiJev Publllhlng

eom.,.,,

2 Sectlona, 12 p. . . . 311A Gllnnoll Co. New . , _

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 22, 1997

At drowning scene

,

Kauff recording ·reveals violence
.•

!

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
(Editor's Note: The following story contains language references that
may be objectionable to some readers.)
· Jealousy and greed may have
been the primary motivating factors
in the death of school teacher Todd
Johnson earlierthis month. Johnson
drowned in Leading Creek after an
altercation with Jason Hysell and,
allegedly, Willie Kauff on July 8.
A tape recorded interview
between Willie Kauff, and Sheriff
James Soulsby and Herman Henry of
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation reveals first-hand details of
the events leading up to Johnson's
death . That interview, in its entirety,
was played for County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien at a preliminary
hearing on Monday morning. Kauff
is charged with ·felonious assault.
According to Kauffs scenario, he
met Hysell-and Johnson. Hysell's girl·
friend Melinda Stanley, and Kauffs·
sister and brother-in-law, Cynthia
and Clifford "Boomer" Smith at the
home of Belinda Grimm on Bradbury
Road on July 8, to find the four drink·
ing heavily, and anticipating a fight
with Walter Haggy.

'

"Waller was coming by," Kauff
said in the statement. "He and Jason
had had a fight the night before, and
Jason wanted backup."
"It was something about Walter
messing around with Melinda," Kauff'
said. "Jason was pretty upset about
that."
Haggy did show up while Kauff
was there, but ·nothing carne of his
visit, other than a discussion between
him and Hysell.
"After Walter Haggy left, Jason
told me, 'I'm going to f... sqmebody
up tOday and I want you to see i)."'
In the course of the afternoon, two
unidentified women came to the residence and sold 10 valium tablets to
Johnson for $20, according to Kauff.
Johnson, Hysell and Stanley all took
the pills. Shortly after that, Hysell
decided that he wanted to go swim·
ming at the Mal loon's Run swimming
area, and though Kauff said that he
~idn't feel like going, he acquiesced.
"I didn't want to upset Jason, so I
went," Kauff said.
Kauff said he planned to ride with
the others to the swimming area, and
then drive the Smiths' car back to
Bradbury. Kauff. Stanley and Hysell
rode with Johnson in his truck, vop·ping by the Hilltop Grocery neariij.ut-

....---------

land to get orange drinks, with the
Nonetheless, Kauff hit Johnson
Smiths following in their own vehi· repeatedly, he said in the statement
cle.
"Every·time Todd told Jason a PIN
Shortly after the group's arrival at number, Jason would hit him," Kauff
the · swimming area, an altercation said. "He took a lot of blows to the
arose between Hysell and Johnson. head ... he was pretty much helpless."
Hysell, Kauff said, was talking to
As the beating continued,
Johnson, who was still in the driver's "Boomer" Smith got in the truck and
seat, from outside of the truck.
.i'threw Johnson's credit cards to ·Kauff,
"Jason started yelling something who said he put them in the glove
about 'respect,"' and started beating compartment of Johnson's truck .
on Johnson, Kauff said. Kauff spec·
"Jason told me to take the speakulated that Hysell may have .been ers out of the truck, and to take what
angry because of a remark that John· I could get," Kauff said. "Cindy start·
son had made en route to the swim- ed handing me the CO's, but Boomer
ming hole about Kauffs work in the didn't want them in t~e car; so Cindy
tomato fields .: or, more likely, started throwing them in the weeds.''
because.Hysell was jealous of John·
Johnson's truck had been parked·
son and Stanley.
near the edge of the creek, and even·
''Todd just kept asking 'why', and tually, Johnson, dazed from the beatJason went ballistic," Kauff said.
mg, shd down the bank and mto the
It was at this point that Hysell water.
demanded Johnson's wallet, contain·
At that time, Kauff said, Hysell
ing several credit cards, and asked turned to him and said, "Finish it."
Johnson for the personal identifica"I didn't know what he meant, but
tion numbers for the cards. ·
I didn't want Jason to beat the hell out
According to Kauff, Hysell hit of me."
. Johnson with a club, dragged him out
Johnson tried t\) pull himself up
of the truck and -told Kauff to grab from the water and back .on to the
Johnson's hands, to hold him steady. creek bank, but, apparently helpless,
"You know, I didn't know what to failed to do so.
do. Everything was happening so
"Boomer yelled, 'he's going
fast."
Continued on page 3

EPSY SPEAKS - Ohio Senate
Leader Ben
DColumbua, gestures sa he speaks about the Senate Democrat'•
pl!ln for achool funding at the Ohio Statehouse In Columbus Monday. The committee will focua on companion legislation to tighten flnanclel and management practices in local achoollflatrlcts_.
On right Ia Sen. Unda Furney, D·toledo. (AP)

Ohio lawmakers slow
school funding debate
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Besieged
R-Reynoldsburg,
and Senate Presiby a flurry of late-arriving alternative
dent
Richard
Finan.
R-Cincinnati, are
plans and disagreements over prop·
eny tax relief and the amount of•mon- still trying to round up the votes
ey needed to provide an -adequate before the Aug. 6 deadline. to place
· education, lawmakers were begin- the issue on the November ballot.
Finan refused to comment on the
ning · to put the brakes on a new
process.
school financing plan.
"I just don' t want to get into the
"We· ve slowe~ the process
down." Senate Finance Chairman nitty-gritty because it doesn't get me
Roy Ray. R-Akron. acknowledged · anywhere," he said. · "We're still
talking. "
Monday.
Democrats have consistently quesAsked whether his committee
would vote this week as planned on tioned the Aug . 6 timetable and
a proposed $1.1 billion sales iax urged Republicans to allow more
·
increase, Ray added: "That's prob- time for debate .
"At Jet speed we' re rushing to
lematic."
Instead. the committee will focus determine what makes up ·a 'thorough
on companion legislation to tighten . and efficient' system of education,"
financial and management practices said Rep . C.J . Prentiss. The Cleveland Democrat was referring 'to the
in local school districts.
Ray'S assessment came as Senate section of the state constitution the
Democrats and the former House high court cited in its March decision .
Meanwhile, former HdUse EducaEducation Committee chairman
tion
Chairman Michael Fox . Rreleased alternalives to Gov. George
Hamilton,
dismissed the 'loinovich
Voinovieh 's plan to raise the state
sales tax by a penny per dollar. The plan as inadequate.
"We have a choice of doing some·
money would finance a package of
school reforms desi,gned to satisfy the thing that sells. well with focus groups
Ohio Supreme Court ruling tl]at ... or doing something that we know
declared the current school funding works for kids," said Fox, who was
stripped of his chairmanship last
system unconstitutional.
Among issues still up in the air: month after the state inspector gen·
the amount of property tax relief for eral .detcrmined he illegally accepted
· homeowners. More breaks for prop- an airline ticket and lodging from a
erty owners probably would mean lobbyist. .
Fox's 103-page proposal recomless state aid per pupil ~ and could
jeopardize court approval of the plan. mends changes in Ohio's collective
House Democrats and some con- bargaining laws that would, make it
servative Republicans also are easier to fire bad teachers, set mini inclined to use the state income tax mum teacher salaries, give more
for schools ·rather than the sales taX parental control over school building
decisions and create char1er schools.
increase.

KAUFF APPEARS- Willie Kauff, left, appeared Monday mornIng In Meigs County Court to determine probable cauae for fel~
nlous aasault charges In the death of Todd JohnsOn. Alao pictured Is Jeff Miller of th~r Meigs County Pro&amp;eclltlng Alton)ay'a
office.

Retired auto .workers to visit Pomeroy
· Jerry Rought recently announced his development is taking place.
more planning on the pait of the
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
intention
to
retire
on
Aug.
22.
Questioned
by
Councilman
Scott
supervisory staff on how manpower
Sentinel News Staff ·
Funding for water and sewer pro- Dillon was the delay in razing the is utilized was again discussed. It was
A tour boat with 40 passengers,
mostly retired auto workers from jects was discussed along with the house at_the corner of Sycamore and proposed that supervi.sory personnel
Michigan, will be docking .at the possibility of applying for Issue 2 East Matn. Vaughan explamed that a . be required to present regular reports
ttme hm1t on gcttmg the house down to Council o~wprk planned and comPomeroy levee Friday, John Musser · funds for street repatr.
Vaughan
noted
that
he
had
talked
.
was inadvertently omitted from the pleted. .
announced at the Pomeroy Village
with
Buckeye_
Hills
representatives
contract.
He said. however. that the
At-the suggl'o&lt;tion of Councilman
Council meeting Monday night.
regarding
grants
and
low
interest
contract
docs
provide
that
the
village
Larry
.Wehrung, workers will be
Councilman Musser said that the
(two
percent)
fimding
for
sewer
pro·
not
pay
the
$1,200
until
the
lot
is
asked
to
do some blacktopping at the
boat will arrive about 5 p.m. During
jects.
cleared.
He
citc.d
that
as
a
possible
Houdashclt
residence on Union
the two hour stop, passengers will be
The
possibility
for
another
water
incentive
to
those
tearing
it
down.
Ayenue
to
rcdirecl
water which now
taken on a walking tour of the downproject
was
also
discussed
and
the
The
need
of
repair.
to
the
Pleasflows
into
the
front
yard,
and do some
town area. some stores will be open
mayor
su~~~sted
that
the
villa~e
pur·
ant
Ridge
hill
was
again
discussed
by
corrective
work
at
the
entrance
to his
for shopping, and Trinity Cliureh will
sue
funding
for
that.
The
Phase
3
Council
and
the
mayor
said
that
while
driveway.
Wehrung
also
asked
aboul
serve homemade ice cream.
"Hopefully if this visit goes well, water project would be line replace- th~t road has been given "top priori· repairs of a hole on Lincoln HeighL•
Pqmeroy will become a permanent ment from the old Salt Works to But· ty status, nothmg seems to happen. left there after the water department
stop for the boat which goes up and ternut Avenue at a cost of about He said that he had heen up there made some line repairs.
recently and "couldn't see where
Benny Wright was commended
down the Ohio six or seven times a $300,000.
.
fur his work in village youth proMayor Vaughan read a letterfrom anything had been done ."
year," said Musser.
Councilman Btll Young sa1d that grams and akttcr of appreciation will
In preparation for the visitors, he Lebanon asking that the village
.
announced that a work detail is protest an . "anti-annexation bill" the least wh1ch shou!d be done for the be sent to h1m.
Rought presented estimates from
planned for this evening (Tuesday). which is currently moving through 10 or 12 fam1hes who res1dc on
Lots of help is needed to clean up the the Legislature. The letter indicated Pleasant R1dgc JS that the road be a dealer on hrcarms wh1ch have been
cn~liscatcd by lhc department. He
area along the parking lot, said the that if the bill is passed, it .threatens "leveled out some way."
councilman, who suggested that the "home ruie" because it takes annex- • He also reported on erosion of was authorized to dispose of 1he
only thing workers need to bring are ation out of the hands of political sub-. Spring Avenue and the threat to weapons, along with some old bicydivisions and puts it into the hands of motorists. He su~~cstcd the area be cles which are in storage.
trash bags.
marked to alert motorists until such
Council moved into .excculivc
Mayor Frank Vaughan reported the courts.
Vaughan said that while this pos- time as repairs can be made.
session to discuss jx:rsonnel. Others
thai interviewing for the position of
Also discussed by Council was the • aucnding besides those named were
police chief is continuing and more es no problem to lhc village now, it
might
in
the
future
'
s
hould
the
village
grass
on the riverbank and the pot· were Council members Geri Walton
applications are expected as the result
of some advertising. Chief of Police want to i~corporate an.area where holes in the streets. The need for andGcorgeWrighi,alongwithClcrk·
Treasurer Kathy Hysell.

Insurance recommendations presented
By BRIAN J. "'EED
Sentinel News Staff
An update on the condition i&gt;f
Meigs County's employee health
insurance plan was givep when the
Meigs County Commissioners met in
regular session Monday afternoon..
Tim Smith and Bob Miller, representing Ohio Benefits Group, an
insurance consulting firm, presented
the commissioner with an analysis
and recommendations for improving
the condition of the county's selfinsurance health plan for county
employees.
·
The plan is now administered by
Medical Claims Services of
Ravenswood, W.Va: In a self-insurance program, employee premiums
are used to pay employee ~laims . In
recent years, however, the commis~

sioners have absorhed all cost
increases, and 'the Claims fund has run
dangerously low. On more than one
occasion, the commissioners have
subsidized the fund with money from
the county's general fund. so that
claims could be paid.
"We've taken a look at what can be
done and what can be done quickly
io the beneftt of the board and the
county's employees," Smith said.
The contract with MCS is due for
renewal on August I.
The most dramatic recommendation is to offer two plans to the
employees. The first plan would be a
continuation, at a htgher premium of
the county's "ftrst dollar" plan, which
offers I 00 percent coverage on basic
and major medical benefits. The
deductibles would remain the same,

but the employees' premiums would
be increased from $30 and $200 per
month for si ngle and family plans
respectively, to $50 and $250 per
month, respectively.
The second plan would he a comprehensive · rnajor medical plan,
which would cost employees $25 per
month for si ngle coverage and $175
for family coverage, and would,have
lower coverage levels. There would
be no dcductibles under this plan.
·Instead. a $10 co-payment would be
. required for office visits.
The firm's other ·recommendations to the board include the fol lowing:
· Retain MCS "'the plan admin·
istrator, due to high quality service
and continuity of service to employ ees;

. Change the plan's life insurance
provider to save money;
• Increase dental bcncfil' to provide incentives for preventive care;
and
-Eliminate dental and vision ~ov­
erage from the aggregate stop loss
program to reduce daims exposure
(this would nol eliminate ~.:overage
for employees, but would change the
method that underwriters calculalcd
costs).
The hoard took no action on lhe
rirm's recommendations.
The board also approved payment
of bills in the amount of $635,609.67
with 409 entries. ·
Present at the meeting were Commissioners Janet Howard , Fred
Hoffman and Jeffr~y Thornton, Clerk
Gloria Klocs, and reprc.o;cntativcs of
several counly agencies.

GOP remains divided over Medicare changes
"That's got to be part of a bigge~
.· WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
negotiation," Sen. Pete Domenici, Rgressional Republicans. working to
N.M. , the Senate Budget Committee
form a united GOP position, have
chairman,
said Monday. ·
been unable to agree on ground·
The
'ilecisions
came as Republibreaking changes to Medicare.
c~ns
tried
to
forge
a unified position
Mapping !heir budget~balancing
on
measures
aimed
at balancing the
bill, GOP leaders also failed Jo decide
.
budget
by
2002
while
cutting taxes
whether they should' raise the tobac·
by
roughly
$135
biliion.
The Repubco tax to provide more money for
lican-controlled
House
and Senate
children's health. The Senate voted a
approved
similar
versions
and are
20-cent·a-pa&lt;!k increase; the House,
nothing.

,.

now try ing to work out·the.ir own differences to prepare for bargaining.
with Pre.sident Clinton.
On Medicare, the Senate is insist·
ing on struclural changes that would
charge the wealthy higher premiums,
raise the eligibility age and force
those who use skyrocketing home
health-care services to pay $5 per vis·
it. .
Hou se Republicans, who suffered

politically for their attempt to overhaul Medicare in 1994, told Senate
negotiators lhat they will not go along
without stronger leadership from
Clinton, said House Speaker Newt
Gingrich , R-Ga.
"The senators felt strongly they
wanted to go back to him and urge
him to actually offer leadership,"
Gingrich said. "That's why wc'.re
still in abeyance."

r

I

'

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