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                  <text>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 .

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o1m, Ohio VaiJev Publllhlng

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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

'

�commentary

n..ct.y, July 22, 1117

One or two more interest-rates forecast

OHIO Weather
WediHSd•y, July l3

The Daily Sentinel
f#U8sfrd in 1948
111 e.illtnet, Pomeroy, Ohl•
114 ..14111 • Fu 892-2157

··.. .2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
IIOIIER I L. WINGETT
Publl8ller

CHARLENE H0EFUC1t
GMenl.........
,

MARGARET LEHEW
c-oller

Special interests pitch their
school plans to lawmakers
By PAUL SOUHRADA •
AaiOC!MH

p,_. WtiJi

COLUMBUS - IMI-.IIIIout hQw to fix Ohio's schools are not in short
supply around the Sl*ltofte. Ftguring out whtch will actually do the job,
placate the Ohio Supreme Court - and are politically feasible is a whole
'nother maner.
A steady stream of lobbyiSIS, economists, parents, teachers, school offi.
cials and public policy wlllills·paraded th~ough legislative committees over
the past two weeks. lbey'Qble to pitch their plans to legislators scrambling
to come up with some way to retool Ohio's schools - academically and
financially - under a self-imposed Aug. 6 deadline.
Some argued for hiJI\el: taxes. Others mamtamed taxes should be low·
ered. Most agreed there should be tougher academic standards, but d1ffered
on hQw to achieve them. ,
Many think public schodl. need more money; others say they should
spend what they already ptlnore efficiently. A few want to free parents to
send their children to priv* schools. Most opposed the idea.
Gov. George Voinovieh ltnd Republican legislative leaders have proposed
a penny-per-dollar incn:ase¥. the state sales tax to raise more than $1.1 bil.lion annually for Ohio schOIII$ ~ limited residential property tax relief.
House and Senate leaders f1Wt1o release their version of the plan this week.
which likely will include llli\re tax breaks for homeowners but dump a 12cent-a-pack increase in the s(ate cigarette tax proposed by Voinovich.
''1bis may just be a rare opportunity to do something for Ohio's schoolchildren," observed Rep. 'Ibm Roberts, D-Dayton.
Some speakers - like the leader of a coalition of I 00 business, education and civic groups - received a warm welcome and thoughtful consideration of their ideas. Others,' li polite "Thank vou. Next witness."
Conservative Obio University economist Richard Vedder testified for
over an hour, but doubts his•views will be reflected in the final package.
"I pessimistic," said Vedder, who proposed selling the Ohio Turnpike
and turning the state's prison~ ov~r to private contractors to raise money for
education.
"We .were going through sOme very elaborate exercises to give the public a chance to air their viewi, but the deals are being cooked behind .closed

doors."

i

Democrats, in fact, abruptly cut off a local school superintendent testifying in the House Finance Committee last week to attend a closed door meet·
ing - with Voinovich and his staff.
· "The committee hearings were just no longer productive," explained
Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron. "We think we should resolve these issues, and
we should resolve them nowt · - _
The high court gave the Ugislature untit March to develop a response to
its order declaring the current system unconstitutional, but Vomov~eh and
other top Republicans wanllbe voters' stamp of approval on whatever they
design. Aug. 6 is the last day to put issues on the November ballot.
"Everything is on the table," said House Finance Chairman Tom Johnson, R-New Concord.

Barry's
.. Wo,rld

AccuWealhe.- forecast

I am woman, hear me snore
e•ecutives. "This summer's slate is damn movie. And thus split iheir (and, incidentally, 93 percent were
Feel like seeing a movie? Let's shaping up as possibly one of the vote. Feel like seeing Nicholas Cage white). So even if things improve
check out your options.
most unprofitable in recent history," play a misunderstood convict? Then next year -- let's be crazy dreamers
lbere's "Men in Black," a movie Michael Yocco of the media- the world is your oyster. Feel like and say women get I~ percent of all
about two guys who run around in research firm Kagun Associates told seeing a movie where two people directing jobs -· it still looks pretty
black suits and fight aliens.
the New York Daily News late last have a conversation about some- bleak.
There's "Batman and Robin," a month.
'
Come on. guys, we ' re not asking
thing other than magnetic force
movie about two guys who run
Hollywood producers made a fields or home-brewed explosives? you to do us any Favors. We ' re not
&amp;r(lund in tights and fight criminals. couple of miscalculations this sum- lben you' ve got problems.
asking you to hire women d1rectors
There 's "FaceiOff," a movie mer.
OK, I said the good news was and tell women's stories to be politabout two guys who trade faces.
First. they spent too much money. that many Hollywood producers ically correct. We're asking because
There's "Nothing to Lose," a According to David Davis, vice have realized that there was a slight women have money and we like
movie about two guys on a bad road president of the invest~~:~ent bank glut in hoy movies this year. The bad movies and if yOU make the right
trip.
Houlihan, Howard and Zlikin, sever- news is, that trend doesn't seem movies we will dig deep down into
There's "Con ·Air," a movie al hundred million dollars more likely to change anytime soon.
our little Kate Spade handbag• and
about a bunch of guys on a bad plane were spent on this summer's mov•es
Though there have been a few give that money to you.
trip.
than on last year's. So even if box women appointed to high-level posiNow why is that so hard to underThere's "Wild America," a office sales end up equaling last tions in Hollywood in recent years, stand?
movie about three guys on a bad year's, Hollywood is still in trouble. overall this is still an overwhelmingcamping tnp. ...
"It is posSible that the return on the ly male preserve.
San Eckel is ILwriter for NewsOh, I'm sorry. D1d you say you investment forthissummer could be
Consider a recent Director's paper Enterprise AssodMioa.
wanted to see somethmg that .wasn 't . a debn, " Davis told the Hollywood · Guild study. which revealed that 91
Send tom-nts to tbe author ill
an action movie or a guy buddy Reporter.
percent of all the directors !)ired in care of this newspaper or send ber
movie? You say you want to see a
Second. they all made the same the United States last year were men e-mail at saneumaol.&lt;.,...
movie that has more than one major , _ _ _ _ __:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,
female character? You say you want
to see somethmg that doesn't end
with a tedious 25-m,inute chase·•
Well , then I hope you haven ' I seen
"My Best Friend's Wedding" yet .
But chances are, if you have the
aforementioned requirements, ' you
HAVE seen " My Best Friend's
Wedding." Chances are, you were
one of the people who made thiS
romantic comedy one of 1be most
profilable movies of the summer.
After all, what choice did you havc'1
Here's the good news for those of
us wh&lt;&gt; are weary of the annual summer testosterone rush: The blow'em-up movies haven't done so well
thiS season.
Though there were definite hits
like "Men in Black," there was a lot
more bad news for studio executives. There were total disasters like
"Volcano," "Speed 2" and .. Bat~
man and Robin." And then there
were disappointments like "The
~ftl'l\ Mf.r9111.
Lost World" ·- which started out
]IWIIIffiee.a.com
strong but then suffered a very sharp
decline in the weeks after it opened.
It all makes for nervous studio

,,,,,

' ' ''' •I Columbus! 82•

Ice

Ohio
Tomght...Cioudy with a chance of
showers north and thunderstorms
south. Lows in the 60s.
Wcdnesday... Cioudy with a
chance of showers north and showers and thunderstorms hkely south
and central. Highs mid 70s to lower
80s.

should be compulsory.
Beryl Magilvay, the director of
San Francisco's new B'nvironmcnt
Depanmcnt -- which commissioned
this document -- stated that the purpose of the Sustainability Plan is "to
create a healthy society that respects
organs of crooners, whenever my
the needs of all its members, &lt;111d the
charming little urban center
needs of the natural systems of
becomes the object of derision, well,
which they arc a part "
it's embarrassing really.
Well. again. how can you quarrel
Someone might sec me, after all.
with that'! I'd love to have my needs
with my little collection basket. Some
met by the city of San Francisco, in
reporter will ask what e•acUy I intend manner.
a natural way.
lo do with Tony Bennett's heart once I
But, how do I put this'!
·- Goad ~roccry stores into carryfind it. There's amarkct for these Ing healthier food .
A city is not natural. Anythmg.
--Encourage "green buildings."
things, you know. (Nol that I'd tell a
natural in a city only occurs because ·
journalist that.)
.
These would include low·Rush its citi1~ns o.nd corrupt officials
Why arc people hooting al us'! 10ilcts. solar power. tinted windows deem it to be appropriate to the
I'm not talking about Manny Ihe and windows that open .
image of the city.
Hippie, or the Apache Whiskey R•t-- Build more garages, especially
A• far as meeting my needs, San
ual. (And if you don' t know what ncar shopping areas.
Francisco is doing a pretty good Jllh
I'm talkmg about. all I can say is
Now I cant quarrel with most of already, without dollar one from the
"Thank you." )
thiS.
taxpayer. (Of course. my needs arc
No, in case you havcn'l heard, the
But, how can I put this'!
simple. A variety of movies, lxKlk
If you wanl to become a major stores, lattcs, interesting people and
hard·working government of San
Francisco spent untold thousands of' urban center, you don 't go around topics for columns -- what cis.: is
taxpayer dollars to fund a three-year snatching hamburgers from the there?)
study. which has culminated in a ISO- mouths of its citi1.cns. If some furApparently, this kind of urban
page "Sustainability Plan." According bearing . socialite ha.• a splash too planning is very popular in Western
to the San Francisco Chronicle, thiS much ObsessiOn chnging to her ori- Europe. But, then again, Europe has
document involved some 400 people fice.. annoymg as it may be, you a history. And they're used to govfrom c1ty departments, private busi- still don't want some functionary ernment intrusion 10 their hvcs.
ness and non-profit cnv•ronlfll!nlal issuing her a citat1on for it. I like They can w~gh earnest utopianism
groups.
fruit trees as much as the nc~t guy. against something concrete, like
Among its suggestions:
but I don 't think possession of one mass executions.

By The Associated Press

Showers and thunderstorms will
conttnue to develop over Ohio. Temperatures will be a tad bit cooler only
climbing into the upper 70s m the
nonh to the middle 80s in the southcast.
Weak low pressure impulses will
rcma1n fairly slationary over sou1hern
Ohio both tonight and into Wednesday. Ohioans can expect the chance
for a scattered shower or thunderstorm to remain in the forecast
through Wednesday. The main focus
for the actiVIty however w1ll fall
across the south.
Low temperatures for tonight will

In addition. they know in their
souls what London, Paris and Berlin
(for example) really are.
America is different. .
When you think of San Francisco, what comes to mind? Hmm.
Irish coffee, coffee, cable cars, Fisherman's Wharf, Alcatraz, Golden
Gate Bridge. And of course, there

Continued from pap 1
under,"' Kauff said, "and Jason staned to get undressed . I started to leave
at that point."
Shortly after Johnson went in the
walcr, an unidentified man and hiS
son arrived on the scene, lookmg for
1wo other swimmers.
"Someone came down and wanted to know what was gomg on. We
1old h1m thai some guy was drownmg and we couldn't get to him."
Kauff said.
"Melinda just went ballistiC. She
kept yelling. 'we d1dn't mean to hurt

arc lhc SfDSclcss assnssinations 1

.

By DeWAVNE WICKHAM
Gannett New• Service

CHICAGO - No one asked the
leader of the free world about the
head of the P·Funk All Stars.
The deal struck belwecn Whttc
House staffers and organizers of the
National Association of Black Journalists' convention was that Pres•·
dent Clinlon would answer only four
questions after addressing the
group's annual meeting last week in
Chicago.
Just four chances for the linear
successors of Frederick Douglass,
'
Ida B. Wells, W. Monroe Trotter and
- Cnrl Murphy to take-their measure
of the man who claims to know
Dear Editor,
,·
Every spring and sum~ an overwhelming number of cats and kittens more about black folks than most
are surrendered to the AthCIIs County Humane Society Cat Shelter. Sadly, other white polilicians. As it turned
approximately four out of five of these cats must be euthanized because of out, the questions put to the prcsi·
lack of cage space, food. and money for medical services. Alth_ough our dent dealt broadly with affirmative
organization provides shelter to Athens County cats. we have also received action, education and a highway
construction project. The answers
requests to accept cats from other counties m southeastern Ohio.
Please do not encourage non-Athens County residents to surrender am- they evoked revealed little al5out the
mals at the Athens County ijumane Soc1ety Cat Shelter. Our shelter policy soul of Bill Clinton.
To get to that would have
is to refuse cats and kittens from anyone living outside Athens County. Refer
required
a question about George
individuals from outside Athens County to local animal shelters anq humane
Clinton.
societies for help.
·
.
Back in 1992 when Bill Clihton,
If you have an interest in developing an animal shelter in your county,
1hen
governor of Arkansas and the
contact us at 1-614-592-6047 for more information. We welcome individuDemocratic
nominee for president,
als to visit our cat shelter and learn more about way~ to help lost and abanmade
his
first
appearance at an
doned animals.
NABJ
convention,
he knew nothing
Sberry Meyers
ACHS president of tbe other Clinton. Before Bill
Clmton entered the presidential race,
Nanette Rorick George Chnton was better known to
Cat Sbelter director most African·Americans, the NABJ
Alllens president said at the time to a chorus

Letters to the editor

No out-of-county cats

.

of laughter.
Bill Clinton, standing nearhy,
looked miffed.
Three years later during a White
House meeting with a small group of
. black columnists someone asked,
"Did you ever figure out who
Gcor)l,c Clinton k1"
The president must have anticipated the question.
"George Clinton w~s the governor of New York, the only person in
American history 10 be governor of
New York more than 18 years," he
answered smartly.
"He served 21 years as governor
of New York in two different terms,
once for 17 years at a pop."
Wrong1ans wcr.
For a ·man who claims a special
closeness to African-Americans,
Clinton was once again stumped by
a mention of this black icon.
"There's another George Clinlon,"
someone said to him. "I bett~rc 's a
lot of them," the pres1dent responded, sounding a bit defensive. ·

Yeah, hut only one George Clinton who leaps to mind for most
black bahy boomers. He's the musical legend whose merger of rhythm
and blues with rock and roll produced the psychedelic funk sounds
of the '70s and '80s. One of George ·
Chnton 's many. h1ts, "One Nation
Under a Groove," became the party
anthem for the gencr~tion of
African· Americans Bill Clinton
grew up with.
It's probably true that the prcsi- ·
dent understands black folks better
lhan most other white politicians.
But that's no reason to give h•m'
absolution in what he says and does
about the thmgs ·that concern black
folks- or for black journalists to let
him ofT the hook during the question
and answer session that followed his
NABJ speech.
.
One of those pers&lt;ins who got
p1cked to question Clinton should
have asked why he agreed to cut $5
billion wortb of school construction
money from the budget before com-

'George Clinton was the governor .o f New
York, the only person in American history to
be governor of New York more than 18
years," he answered smartly. "He served} I
years as governor of New York in two different terms, once for 17 years at a pop."

New York'' Well, Disney's kind
of taking over Manhattan, so New
York doesn't count any more.,
bener. If we want to make Alcatral
a scent-free environment, I won 't
stand in anyhody's way.

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhiO direct hog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday as provided by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Markel News.
BarTOws and g1lts· mostly steady :
demand and movement moderate .
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 58.50·60.00, few 60.50; plams
59.50-61.00.
u S. 2-3. 230·260 lbs. 53.5058.50; 210-230 lbs. 48.50·53.50.
Sows : steady 10 weak.
US . 1-3 300-500 lhs . 43.00·
46 00; 500·600 lbs. 46.00-48.00. few
over 600 lbs. 48.00-49.00.
Boars. 40.00-43.00
Estimated rccc•pts: 31 ,000.
Pnccs from Producers Livestock

(To receive a complimentary

Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1-1100989-DUCK or write Duck's Breath,
408 Broad St., Nevada City, CA
95959.)
lan Shoales is a syndicated
writer forNEA.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS zt:J.91illl
Publl ~hed t very t~ftemoon. Monda) thro"&amp;h
Fnday. Ill Coun St , Pomeroy. Ohto, by the
Ohto Valk:y Pubh ~hlnl CompAny/Gannet:t Co.
Pomeroy. OhtO 45769, Ph. 992-21 56 S«ond
c lu.~~ po11lt1[!C paid 111 PomerO)I. Ohio.
.

Mrmbm The AuC~Cul.led Preu, ::md tht Oltio
Newspaper M~ i 3tion

POSTMASTER: Send addreu correcuons to
The Doily Stnt1nel. Ill Court St., Pomeroy.

Ohto 45769

'-'

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
Ry C.rricr or Motor Routt
One Week ..... ....... . .. .... .. ........ .... .. Sl.OO
OBC Month............ ... .. .......... 58.70
One Year . ..
. . .. . .................. $104.00

\

d~iver's

license su$pended for 99 years

forecasL ..
Thursday... A chance of showers ...Mainly south and east. Lows in
the 60s and highs 1n .the upper 70s to
lower 80s . ·
Friday... Dry. Lows in the 60s and
highs in the 80s.
Saturday.. .Dry. Lows 65to 70 and
1
highs 85 to 9().

CAMBRIDGE (AP) Joy punishment is permanent revocation. but he d1d tell The Datly Jeffersoman Thompson's hcense suspension could
Thompson could be 135 before she is The old law classified all offenses as for a story puhhshed Saturday that he be hfted one day, 1f, for example, she
needs to dnve to work . But first . she
' misdemeanors, regardless of the would app~al
legally allowed to drive again .•
A 99-j;8ar license ' suspension is will have 10 complete the rest of her
Her drivers' license has been sus- number.
Ms. Thompson. 36, of Cambridge, unique, said Leo Skinner, spokesman sentence , an alcohol rehabilitation
pended for 99 years following her
was arrested Jan . I 0. She pleaded no for the Oh10 Department of Public program. and other requirements
fourth drunken dnvmg conviction.
imposed by the court.
"I don't believe these people contest June 17 and was convicted Safety.
He
said
the
dcpartmcnl
does
not
He said he has 1m posed 99-year
and
sentenced
Thursday
by
Ellwood.
should be driving for a very long
keep
track
or
hlctlme
suspenSions,
He
also
ordered
her
to
spend
a
license
sustxnstons 10 two or three
time ," Guernsey County Common
drunken
drivang cases he has
year
in
the
counly
jail
and
fined
her
but
he
estimated
that
thousands
of
Pleas Judge David Ellwood said
motonsts
have
lostlhelf
liccn&lt;e
per·
received.
$1.250
Monday.
Ms. Thompson could not be manently. Generally, the suspensions
"This judge has taken the position
A state law that went into effect in
that
the rationale of the law is that the
reached
for
comment.
There
is
no
are
imposed
indelinitely
and
the
October makes a fourth drunken driLegislature
wanted to get tough on
phone
listing
for
her
in
Cambridge.
motorist never gets the license back,
ving offense within six years a felony
four
or
more
DUI offenses in six
Her
attorney,
Charles
McKnight,
d1d
bottom out-in the lower 60s across the and allows a min1mum license sushe said.
not
return
a
call
scckmg
comment,
years,"
Ellwood
said.
north to around 70 degrees 1n the pension of three years. The m~ximum
Ellwood said a portion of Ms.
south. Afternoon highs on Wednesday w1ll warm into the mid 70s in lhe
north to the mid 80s in the south.
The record high temperature for ,
Meeting set
I. K.E.S. to meet
this date at the Columbus weather
An organi,lltional meeting fur all
A
picmc
of
the
Meigs
County
station was 104 in 1901.1be low was
girts
playing volleyball at Southern
I K.E.S., members, families and
50 m 1966. Sunset today w1ll be at
High
School, grades 9 through 12,
gucsl, will be held Monday at the
8:55. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
will
he
held on Thursday at the high
club house. Trap Shoot6 p.m.. cat at
6:22.
school
cafelcria
al 7 p.m.
Jessa Mae "Mazie" Brannan, 83, Middleport, died Monday, July 21, 1997, 7 p.m . Take own table service and
Across tbe nation
Thunderstorms were rumbling at Holzer Med1cal Center, Gallipolis. Arrangements will be announced lat· covered dish.
Party planned
across the Mid-Atlantic early today, er by Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
A retirement party will he held for
Reunion planned
while the Northeast saw mostly fair
The Beegle family bi·nnnual Pastor Glen and Madchne McClung
skies except for light rain m New
reunion will be held Aug. 2 at the at the Pomeroy Church of the
York.
·
Everett E. Levacy, 79, Chester, died Monday, July 21 , 1997, at his reSI- Mc1gs Multipurpose Building Senior Na,arene Saturday. 6 to 9 p.m. The
Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights. puhlic " invited to atlcnd.
dence.
A retired coal miner and member of the United Mine Workers, h.e was Reg1strat1on at II :30 a.m. Square
born March 26. 1918, in Pratts Fork, son of the late lames E. and Clara May Dance at 8 p.m. Ronnie and Lcanna Night swimming planned
London Pool at Syracuse will
him , we didn't mean to hurt him ."'
Beegle's· Home. Take lawn chairs,
Alkire Levacy.
.
. .
'
have
nighl swimming Monday and
"This guy was going lo gel help,
He is survived by a son and daughter-m-law, W1lham and Stella Levacy snacks. More information may be
Tuesday
from 7 to 9 p.m, On Aug. 2
and Melinda said, 'whatever you do, of Letart Falls; a daughter, Betty Levacy Holter of Chester; five grandchil- obtained by calling Sherry Beegle
a party will be !JI'Id at the pool from
don't call the law,"' Kauff said, "and dren; 14 great-grandchildren; a twin brother, Ernest Lcvacy of Lancaster; a W1lcox, 742·2278.
7 to 10 p.m. There will he a D. J. to
~old him, "Buddy, get whoever you brother, James Levacy of Marion; three sistefl', Margaret Bobo of Columprovide music.
can."
bus, Anna Mae Smith of Logan and Clareda Kalholch of Logan ; several
Johnson was pronounced dead nieces and nephews.
after being transported by Meigs
He was preceded in death by his wife. Bcrn1ce Bass Levacy; a grandEMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital. . daughter; two brothers and four sisters. .
.
·
.
Within 24 hours. Hysell· had pled
Services will be Thursday, II a.m. at Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy, w1th
guilty to Johnson's murder, and was the Rev. Sherman Johnson. Burial will follow in Gilmore Cemetery, M•n·
sentenced to 15 years to life in ersvillc.
MIAMI (AP) - A week after npcr Lee Miglin- were c11mm•lled
prison. O'Brien turned Kaufrs case
Gianni Versace was gunned down at with a claw hammer and a gardening
Friends 111ay call Wednesday, 7·9 p.m. at the funeral home.
over to the Meigs County Grand Jury
his Miami Beach villa, authorities !&lt;XII.
The mtcnsc nat1onal manhunt l'or
after yesterday's preliminary hearing.
have reportedly used bullets 10 lie the
the
27-ycar·old Cunanan continued
slaying to two olhcr killings behevcd
as
mvcsti~ators
fielded hundreds or
to be the work of the shadowy
lips Authorities have said he may
Andrew Cunanan.
Association
In one of the strongest links yet in still he in south Florida, pcrhap~ diSHog market trend for Tuesday:
the cross·country killing spree, The guised in drag.
Kimbcrl; Prosperi was hired as inslrumental music teacher and band
While lhcre have been numerous
steady.
Miami Herald reported today lhatlhc
d~rector on a one year contract when the Eastern Local Board of Edureported
Slghlings of the reputed gay
Summary of Monday's auclions at
gun
used
to
pump
two
shots
into
the
cation met in special session Friday mght.
•
·g•golo.
the
FBI said none has been
Hillsboro and Creston·
back
of
Versace's
head
"definitely"
The board also accepted the resignatiOn of Gregory McFann as clc·
vcqlied.
Hogs: higher.
was used in earlier slayings.
mentary principal, and reviewed progress on the new construction and
Butcher hogs: 58.00-62.00.
The bullets that killed architect
renovation at the high school.
·
Cattle: steady tu 1.00 higher.
David Madson in Minnesota and
Slaughter steers: choice 62.001 · cemetery caretaker William Reese 1n
67.50. select 58.00·63.00.
New Jersey came from the same .40Slaughter heifers : choice 61.00A math proficicncy..workshop will be offered at Meigs High School
caliber handgun u&lt;ed m Versace's
66.00; select 57.00-61.00.
slaymg. an unidentified law enforce·
on Tuesday, Aug . 5 from 9 a.m . to noon.
.
..
Cows: steady to strong: all cows
The workshop will give activities and strategies to fac1htatc lhe pasmen! source told the newspaper.
47.00 and down .
sage of the Ohio 9th Grade Proficiency Test, accordmg to Wendy Halar
Madson 's body was found May 3,
Bulls: 2.00 lower: ·all hulls 55 .50
of the Meigs Local School DIStnct, who IS coordmatmg the worksho~.
Reese's six days later. Two more
The presenter, Dr. Almeqdad1. IS an assistant professor a1 the Umand down.
killings in which Cunanan " a sus·
Veal calves: lower: choice 62 .00
vcrsity of Wisconsm-Park&lt;~de 1n Mathematics Education and Techpeel- that of Jeffrey Trail in 'Min·
nology. He prcv1ously taught at the high school level and at Oh10 Umand do...,.
ncsota. a former Navy ofliccr whom
Sheep and lambs: steady to lowCunanan considered one of his best
versity while pursuing hiS Ph.D.
er; choice wools 87.00 and down;
Registration is required to attend and those mtcrcstcd may contact
fncnds: and wealthy Chicago dcvcl' Halar at992·2153. Those interested arc encouraged to reg1ster"' soon
choice clips 64.25 and down &lt;fceder
lambs 62.00 and down: aged sheep
as possible so thai lhe right amount of handouts and other material.
I
47.00 and down.
may be secured.
Veterans Memorial ·
Monday admissiOns - Robert
Dempsey, Middleport.
John W. Moo,.;. 43. of Pomeroy, was cllcd for failure to mamtam
.Monday discharges - none .
Am Ele Power ......................43'1•
assured clear distance followmg an accidenl Saturday on the Dollar
Holzer Medical Center
Akzo ......... :............................70\
General Parking 101.
.
·
Discharges July 21 - Linda
AmrTech ...............................66\
Pomeroy police reported thai Moore was backmg out ol a parkmg
Davis, Goldie Wllhams , ()arvin
Ashland 011 .............................49
C~ lOON! AIR FORCE eM.
,.. ---!'~'!!~--~-~~,
place
when he hit a concrete post. There was moderate damage to the
AT&amp;T.....................................35~.
Bloomer. Margaret Poston, Oathcr
IMGAIIIM..U IAT\.IRDA~Y
Bank One ................................50
rig~t fronl of the vchicl:.
Helm, Geraldine Wallace .
L
Bob EvaM ...........................1&amp;"1.
----------~
( Publi~hed with permission)
·-"
Borg-Werner ···v·..................51'·
Champion ........•....................1 Bh
Chllrm Sh~ ............................s~.

Meigs announcements

Jessa Mae Brannan

Everett E. Levacy ·.

Cunanan nowhere to be
found; search continues·

Stocks

City Holding ............................33
Federal Mogul ......................36'!..

Gannett ............................... 102'1.
Goodyear .............................. 62~.
Kmart .....................................10\
Landa Entl ............................... 27
Ltd ......................................... 20'J.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19,,
OVB ......................................... 38
one Valley.............................44'J.
Peoples ................................ 38\
Prem Flnl ...............................28'1.
AoclrNell .............................~ ...64
RD·Shell .....................~ ......... 54h
Sttoney'1 ..................................61,1.

given earner each week.
No !l.ubscnption by matl permitted in n'l't'as
wht:rt: home e:nnift servtce iJ avnilnble.
Pubhdler ~ the right 10 adju.~l ra.lea dur·

ing 1ne subs&lt;:ription period. Subsc:rlpuon rate
changes mil)' be imp)emenled by chonamg1he
durobon of lhe tubteriptioo

Star Benk .............................45'1.

Wendv'l ................................ 27'1.
Worthlngton ............................ 19

MAILSUIISCKtmONS
1-MdpC..nlJ

lltllaO.- Melp CooftiJ

~=: : : :::::::: ::·::·:·:·::::;:. :. :::::r~~

Music teacher hired

Hospital news

Subscribers 'not deslnng to pty the Cllfrier may
remit tn advance duect to The Daily Senrnw:l
on a three, ~~ or 12 month bM.i1. Credit wtll be

tl W..b ················· ............... ... -.127.30
~ Weeb ............. ... ..................... ~ .. S-53.82
Sl W..b .... . .... ............. ...............•:SIOS.~

.----Local briefs---.

Math workshop offered

SINGL&amp;COPY PRICE
Oruly .............. , ....... . ...... ..... l!l Ccnu

~l~ ............. - ...........llo ......... $109.72

•

Drunken

Extend~

Today's livestock.report

·

ing to the NABJ convention and
declaring that, "We need an initiative to help repair" the nation 's
aging school buildings. A disproportionate percentage of black children
attend · class in those crumbling
buildings.
In his speech, Clinton acknowledged the d1vision among members
of his race reconciliation advisory
board over whether the centuries-old
rift between black and white should
be the primary focus of their yearlong work. .
Someone should have pressed
him to settle this issue, rather than
allow it to fester.
When Clinton talked so glowingly about the country 's low unemployment rate, one of the journalists
should have asked him ·why black
joblessness is nearly three times the
nat10nal average - and wondered
aloud what he intcnds •to do to close
this yawning gap'/
But no one d1d ,
Instead he was given a bye by
journalists who should have held his
fec,t to the lire. Their questions tested neither the depth of Clinton's
support for black causes nor his
claim to understand us - and pre·
sumably the 'things that concern us
- better than most other white ·
folks:
They didn't a.•k the president
about George Clinton, but lhey
should have.

Clo&lt;:ly

Greenspan is a ·new age' econ!&gt;- world last December when he mused
misl," said Sung Won Sohn, chief about " irrational exuberance." And
economisl at Norwest Corp. in Min- since then the Dow Jones industrial
neapolis. "He does not want to pro- average has continued to set records,
mote the view that he has become breaking through the 8,QOO.mile·
le ss lproa~ t i ve again st inflation stone ·last week.
"Greenspan is aware that the
because that would hurt the Fed's
boom in the stock market is fueling
credibility."
With the current economic recov- a lot of confidence and a lot of
ery already the third-longest in U.S. wealth," sa1d Lyle Gramley, a fanner
history, Congress Will be probmg {or Fed board member. " He will remmd
assurances from Greenspan that he people that asset price inflation can
and his Fed colleagues won't repeat be a source of economi c instabilily."
previous policy mistakes. Both the
Only twice before have stocks
two previ ous record expansions - in soared as they have this year after
the 1960s and 1980s - were ended huge run-ups the two previous years,
by Fed pohcy miscues.
worriers note - m 1929 and 1987.
"lnflallOn still remains the mosl The 1929 surge ended with the Octolikely threat to end this expansion." ber crash that brought on the Great
Wyss said. "The danger is that the Depression and the 1987 rally came
Fed w•ll not tighten soon enough and 10 an abrupt end with the 508·point
inflation will gradually begin to nsc loss on Black Monday, Oct. 19.
- JUSI as it d1d m the 1960s and late •
Greenspan received kudos for hiS
1980s - and that Will crcale the handling of the 1987 ep1sode, makImbalances that bring on 1hc nex1 ing sure lhc Fed supplied enough suprecession .''
pen to the banking system to keep the
Analysts also believe Greenspan stock market plunge from spiraling
contmues to be uneasy about the huge mto a financtal pamc. TreaSury Secrun-up in stock pnces. The Fed retary Robcn Rubin s31d Sunday the
chairman rattled markets around the govcrnmcnl is prepared 10 take similar steps in the future .

Kauff recording•..

earthquakEs and humorless young
people with tanoos . My kind of
town!
What about Chicago'! Machine
guns, corruption, riots, welfare.
MinnC!'p&lt;llis/St. Paul'1
Prince, "Mystery Science Theater 3000," Ganison Keillor, winter.
Scanle?
Starbucks. Bill Gates.
San Antonio'/ The Alamo.
New Orleans'? Food, music, par·
tics.

Pr. Cloudy

next meeting on Aug. 19, if Signs
have emerged by then that tight
labor markets are beginning to fuel
inRationary pressures.
The Fed did make one pre-emptive move against inflatton in March ,
a tiny, quarter-point increase in the
key federal funds rate, the interest
rate banks charge each other. But Fed
policy-makers passed up chances to
raise rates further at May and July
meetings even though it was apparent the economy was exceeding the
Fed's speed limit
That led 10 talk that Greenspan
was becoming a devotee of "new
economy " theories - believing that
increased global competition and
improved productivity of U.S. businesses means the economy can grow
at a faster rate with lower unemployment than previoll!!IY believed
Without higher inflation.
While ·politicians find this view
with its low interest rates very attractive, many Fed observers believe
Greenspan will continue lo voice
skepticism aboul whether the economy really has entered a new age .
" I don' t think Chairman

Showers, thunderstorms will
continue over parts of Ohio

When you think of 'Fris.co, what comes to mind?
·· Ban cars in five to I 0 areas of
the city.
--Eliminate free parking for most
workers. ~
·· Limit the use of perfume.
-· Put fruit trees in every yard.
-· Raise and harvest fish in the
city
·· Get people 10 cat less sail,
sugar and fat.
-· Force home sellers to plant
street trees if none exist.
-- Kill feral cats in a hum~nc

Sunny

WASHINGTON (AP) - Could
Alan Greenspan be turning to some
newfangled economic theories as be
prepares to enter his lith year as
chairman of the Fede1al Reserve? ,
Don't bet on it.
Private economists are dismissing
talk that the bedrock Republican
conservative, firsl appointed Fed
chief by Ronald Reagan in 1987, has
· lost any of his inflation-fighting zeal.
They believe Greenspan will lay
those concerns to rest, first in his
midyear report to Congress today and
Wednesday, and then later this year
when they believe he will direct a
round of interest rate hikes to cool off
the economy.
"I think there will be one or two
more · rate increases, '' satd David
Wyss, economist at DRI-McGraw
Hill Inc. "The economy is running a
lillie too fast, lhe.unemployment rate
is a little too low and the good luck
we have had on fringe benefit costs
and commodity pnces IS gomg to run
out one of these days ."
Wyss and other analysts said the
central bank could resume raising
interest rates, possibly as soon as their

Today's weather forecast

~~~

Every once in a while, the place
where Tony Bennett left his heart
becomes the laughing stock of
America. Since I live in San Fran·
cisco, and.spend many hours searchmg the foggy streets for tbe vjtal

I

,,,,,

Clinton got off too easy at black journalists conv~ntion

-- ,,,

conditions

By S.. Eckel

By lan Shoale1

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 22,1997

Ptlge2

r

-·-·-

Stock report• are 1he 10:30
a.m. quotH prpvlded by Adveet
of Galllpolla.

Driver cited

Meigs EMS logs 13 calls

Units ofthe Me1gs County Emer- treated at the scene;
9:16p.m., Dusky Strcel. Syracuse,
gency Medical Service recorded 13
Samuel
W111iams, Pleasant Valley
calls for assistance Monday. Units
Hospital . Syracuse squad assisted .
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
CENTRAL DISPATCH
10:59 a.m., South Third Avenue ,
10:23 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport, Jessa Brannen, Middleport, Robert Dempsey, VMH
POMEROY
Holzer Medical Center;
.
11 ·58 p.m.. state Roule 124, Deb1:48 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, Paul
orah
Clay. HMC.
Bush, Veterans Memorial Hospital,
RUTLAND
Pomeroy squad assisted;
4:56 a.m .', Salem Street, Verna
2:35 p.m., state · Route 124,
Martin,
HMC;
Reedsville, Norma Evans, VMH;
12:49
p.m., Krauser Road, Patty
4:07 p.m., Second Street,
Sham,
HMC;
Pomeroy, Betty Armentrout, VMH;
4:28 p.m., lacks Road, Julie
6:44 p.m.. Union Avenue,
Pomeroy. Joyce Jewell, VMH, Combs, HMC;
5:35 p.m., state Route 124,
Pomeroy squad assisted;
•
i43 p.m., OBNC, Hilda Smith, Charles Hatfield, HMC.

rto Yfll Our 'friends &amp; Customers

'

It's ~een Yf 9reat 'five Years

•MJ~g~~~ .
The Areas

Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-7494 or
1-800-272-5327

National Award

Studio

�•

_,

Tuesday, July 22, 1997

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

.

·

Tuesday,

car.''

STEALS SECOND- The Cincinnati Reds' Eric League game In New York, where the Mats won
Owens slideil Into second base for lhe steal In 5-3 to sweep lhe four-game series. Second basefront of New York Meta shortstop Ray Ordonez man Carlos Baerga covers lhe play In the disIn the second Inning of Monday's National . lance. (AP)

Carl Everett is one of the reasons
why the Mets are winning. He homered twice in a game for the third time
this season - the second against
Cincinnati- and drove in four runs
as New York won its fifth straight,
completing a four-game sweep.
· "The entire team is hungry. We
can smell victory in the air,." said
Everett, whose II homers are 10
more than he hit last season.

At 56-42, the Mets are 14 games
over .500 for the first time July 23,
I 991. If they play well on their II·
game road trip, which stans tonight
at Los Angeles, attendance at Shea
Stadium might pick· up even more
when they return home.
"It's a pretty good little team right
now, " manager Bobby Valentine.
said.
Everett hit a 449-foot homer into
the mezzanine to put the Mets ahead
in the second inning. He walked with
the bases loaded in the sixth to force
in New York's second run, and
broke a 3-alltie in the eighth with a
two-run drive off Scott Sullivan (1-

3).
"Our repons say he's a dangerous
hitter," Reds m~ager Ray Knight
said. "He's improved. He hits mis-

takes."

·

··

Last year, Dallas Green benched
Everett, and the outfielder's agenl
asked for ·a trade. Valentine, who
replaced Green late last season, has
given the Everett a chance.
"His talent's just coming out,"
Valentine said. ·:It's tough to play

By R.B. FALLSTROM
MACOMB. IlL (AP) - Asked
how the Orlando Pace talks are
going. Jay Zygmunt, the St. Louis
Rams' contract negotiator, just shook
his head and tried to change the sub-

tuka last year, and that holdout last- number of ways to say that there's no
ed 28 days, until Aug. 16.
news.
A sampling:
"He will be a Ram," coach Dick
Vermeil said. "We'll gel it done,
Sunday, July 13, the day before
sooner or later."
the rookie report date: Venneil notes
Teammates don 'I know what to there was a three-hour telephone sesject.
think. Running back . Lawrence sion two days earlier, but no comThrough Monday, Pace has ·Phillips wouldn't presume to offer munication since. "So it doesn't look
missed four days of full-squad work- advice, but he knows his 2 112-week like he'll be here. I didn't expect him
outs, three of them two-a-days, plus holdout was not'beneficiallast sum- to be here."
two more two-a-day sessions with mer.
Tuesday, July IS, .following the
rookies. From all indications, there
"I really am not in a place to tell first rookie workout without the
will be a lot more days without big him what to do," Phillips said. "He . offensive line's meal ticket: There's
No. 76 before his deal is finally has to do what he has to do and been another three-hour session to
done.
hopefully he'll be in here soon."
report, and a speck of optimism.
The Rams know it'll happen, but
" When you ' re communicating
The Poston brothers did not
only after much posturing and much return telephone calls from The and the tone of voice is respectful
'
between two parties, I think you
wasting of lime. Carl and Kevin Pos- Associated PreSs.
ton, who represent the mammoth for·
Vermeil fields the Pace question have a positive chance of getting
mer Ohio State offensive tackle, had daily, and to his credit he's found a things done."
Michigan running back Tim Biabu-

when you think today 's your last
chance."
Everett is hitting .321 ( 18-for-56)
in his last 16 games to raise his average to .274.
"He was one of tbe .guys I was
talking to when I said I wouldn't
judge them on the past," Valentine
said. "I was going to give them a
chance, and I wanted them to give
me a chance."
Greg McMichael '(7-7) pitched
one inning and Franco was perfect in
the ninth for his 25th save.
New York won with just four hits.
Reds stancr Dave Burba gave up
only one in 5 2/3 innings, but
allowed three runs mainly because of
five walks.
"It feels like the season· has
changed dramatically with this
series," said Knight , whose. team
dropped eight games behind division-leading Houston in the NL
Central. "We can't seem to score
more than three runs. The pitchers
have done a great job, hut we've got
to give them some breathing room
once in a while."

trade was fnnounced on the publicaddress system, then cheered when
Daulton emerged from 'the dugout.
Schilling ( 11-9) needed only eight
innings to set a career high. for strikeouts. He leads the Nl w·tlh 191.
· Schilling fanned one more than
both Pedro Martinez and Jeff Juden
of Montreal this season. The major
league high this year is 19 by Seat·
tie's Randy Johnson, who lost to
Oakland 4-1 that night.
·
The game was tied at 2 in the seventh when Pittsburgh's Keith o .,ik
reached third with one out. The
'Pirates put on a suicide-squeeze
(play.. but Polcovich could not reach
an outside pitch and Osik was tagged
out.
Two pitches later, Polcovich hit
his second home run.
"When you get a semi-pitchout
with Schilling throwing 97 mph , it 's
tough to gel a bat on it," Polcovich
said. "I JUSt continued to battle ·up
there and ... ended up getting a pitch
I could putt he bat head on."
- AI Martin hit a two-run homer in
the sixth for Pittsburgh.
In other NL. games: San Diego

defeated Florida I0-2, Montreal
slammed Colorado 8-4, St. Louis
downed San Francisco 7-2 and
Atlanta beat Los Angeles 5-4 in 10
innings.
PadJU 10, Marlins 2
Wally Joyner and his San Diego
teammates teed off at Florida. getting
15 hits until Marlins outfielder John
Cangelosi took over to pitch a scoreless ninth innmg.
Joyner vient 3-for-4 with two
walks, scOred twice and stole two
bases. Needing a home run to com·
plctc the cycle, he flied out against
Cangelosi.
·
·
Cangelosi became the first position player to pitch for the Marlins,
and allowed just a walk. He also
pitched for Pittsburgh in 19.88 and
Houston in 1995, and has given up
only one hit in four shutout innings.
Tony Gwynn ended his longest
hitless drought of the season at II atbats with an RBI single. He went 2for-17 in the four-game series, leaving him at .385. ,
·Expos 8, Rockies 4
Henry Rodriguez broke a 7-fur(See NL on Page 5)

Logan notches 12·-8 win over Meigs
in .American Legion tournament play
'

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Logan took advantage of three
big innings and held off Meigs to
post a 12-8 win over Meigs in
Eighth District American Legion
Tournament action Monday evening
at Meigs High School.
Meigs will now travcl .to Beavers
Field in Lancaster to play the loser
of Monday's game between Pickerington and Oak Hill today at 5:30
p.m. Logan will•play McAnhur at
Pickerington today at 5:30.
Meigs took a 2·0 lead in the first
inning oil a single by Josh Mcrcklc,
a walk to Dan Metts ana a double off
the bat of Jeremiah Bentley. ·
Logan bounced hack to score four
runs in the top of the second inning
and a single run in the third to take

a 5-2 lead.
Meigs scored a pair of runs'" the
third inning to pull to withm 5-4.
Corey Williams Chad Burton and
Joe Kirby all singled and coupled
with a sacrilice lly plated the runs .
After logan took advantage of
another 'four run inning to take u 94 lead Meigs again started to chip
away. A two run·tofth highlighted by
a Dan Mells double and a Collin
Roush singled pulled Meigs to within 9-6.
Another 1wo run inning in the

sixth pulled Meigs to within 9· 7.
Meigs scored the two runs without
the hcncfit of a hit.
Meigs pulled to within 9-8 in the
eight inning when Scott George was
hit by .a pitch for the second time in
the ·game went to third on a hit hy

Williams ami scored on a passed
hall.
But three errors by Meigs in the
ninlh inning allowed Logan 10 plate
three runs and· win hy a 12-K score.
Williams picked up the loss '"
rcliCJ' of Brad Davenport, Collin
Roush also saw mound acti1m .
Welch was the inning pitcher.
Cook had four singles to lead
Logan . Wolfe added three , and
Hymc had two singles.
Williams and Roush each had a
pair of singles for Meigs. Mens and
Bentley added doubles . Burton and
Mercklc had a single each.
Inning ll!llls
Logal
041-040-003~ 12-11 -0
Meigs
200-221-0IO=K-10·5
WP-Wclch
LP-Williams

AL standings

n:

Ballimore ............... ~
New York .............. ~
Ttvnnro ... , ........... 4~
lkrmil ............... ..4~
Bo~ttm ......., ........ ..4!1

Toni~ht's ~ames

DH. Aliama ( ~t...JUUJ. IJ-J i1nd NeoJt~-11!
I J-2) ;tt Cllicago Cubs {Gomwlcz 7-2 and
MulhllllmN.I tt-9). I 11m
Color:ulo (Swifl 4-:1) o.~ t Muntn:;d
(1\.-rez 9-6), 1 J:'i )Ull

k~'t'•

(GuoJCII J-J), J:{Y.i 11111
S.:aut.: ( Oiivar~~ ~-61 :11 CLEVE.

Easttm Db·lsion

Iom

Wednesday's gam~
ChkiJ¥o Wh11e Sox ( Bo.~IJwi•• 7-!}J 111
lkrmrt \BI:ur K--l). I :0~ p.m.
Anah1=1111 (W&lt;~ I~Illl 11·6);11 N Y Y:m-

J7

I. f&lt;l.
Hli

(ill

41
49

~17

471J

.1'·
l.l

52

464

5 .~

.4.59

14

1
:

J~

Ctncral Oivi!lion
CLEVELAND .......ll 41 m
C1m:a,:o ............. ,.. "ill 47 :'ilS
Milwnuko: .......... ..4~ 49 .479
Mitlt~I!Oiu ......... ..44 H
.45g
k;an.ta.' Cily ... .'.,. Jl( ~5 ..Ujq
WeJitm DiYbion
Scali It .................:'15 4J .:'i61
Anaheim ...
."i4 4J .li57
Texa, ................... -11 50 A~5
Onklmtd ....... 40 60 400

LANO (Colon 2-)J, 10511.111.
OiiLiathJ (Wuj~icdlllwd.., 0 -71 :11
Boshm (~al:dicld -l- 10) 7 : 0~ p.m.
Milwaui.:L-c (O ' Anm:r~ll·-l ) 011 Ton111111
{Clemen~ 1~ -.,). 13!1 p.n1.
Ki\n~1s Cily tDddk.'f M·Yiat Mimll'Su·
Ill (T~wli.shury 4-11 ). II 05 p.m.
Baltimore tMuui11 11 10--l) :11 T~a.u
(Wttt 1 0-~l . MJ~ pm.

By The Associated Press
Play after play, No. 99 in the blue ·
jersey is stuffing things in the middle of the line or hustling to chase ·
down a runner.
Christian Peter, clearly the most
visible newcomer in the New York
Giants' training camp, is taking full
advantage of a secon'd chance.
"This has been a lot of fun," said
the former Nebraska nose tackle, out
of football last season after a bout
with alcoholism and legal problems
ranging from sexual assault to urinating in public.
''I'm having a good time. but I
feel rusty. I feel as long as I stay
focused and study and work hard. it
will all come into play."
New England selected Peter in the
fifth round of the 1996 draft. but cut

By The Associated . Prase
When Wilson Alvarez became the
first Chicago White Sox pitcher to
strike out four batters in an inning,
he had something else on his mind.
"I don't think about that,"
Alvarez said after becoming the
28th pitcher '" modem major league
•history with four strikeouts in an
inning. "But I like to~ in the history book when the White Sox win."
In the seventh inning. Tony Clark
was first up for Detroit - and the
first to strike out. When Phil Nevin
fanned on a wild pitch, he reached
f'irst base safely... But Alvarez (9-7)
then struck out Melvin Nieves and·
Orlando Miller to end the inning.
"We didn't swing at many ~trikes,
and when you don't make the pitcher throw.strikes. he doesn't have to,"
Detroit manager Buddy Bell said:
"Wilson picked up early on the trend
that we weren't swinging at strikes."
Alvarez worked 7 1/3 innings,
sjriking out nine and giving up three
hits in Chicago's 3-0 win over the
Tigers.
"Wilson's pitched outstanding

.. .

•41..111&gt;·-..
.Y' '• .~,.
~··

.,

.:~

BRAGG SCORES - The Boston Red Sox's
Darren Bragg (56) slides into the plate ahead of
Cleveland pitcher Jaret Wright following a
passed ball in the third Inning of Monday night's

American league game in Cleveland, where lhe
Red Sox )IliOn 3-1. Home plate umpire Martin Foster prepares to make the call. (AP) ·

Red Sox defeat Indians 3-1
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND(AP)- While the
Boston Red Sox might have to wait
until next year, Steve Avery has
apparently refused to.
.
Hc '&gt;becn running out of time for
three years now.
· Avery, once one of base hall's
most . promising young lefties. had
his best outing for his new team as
the streaking Red Sox beat Cleveland 3-1 Monday night to take three ·
or four from the Indians.
Avery (4-2) cupped an encouraging road trip lor last-place Boston.
The Red Sox have won six of eight.
inclutling live of six games on this
trip that began with a two-game
sweep in Baltimore.
"We're showing people we can
play some baseball," lirst baseman
Mo Vaughn said.
·
With that delightful delivery of

18-6 season with Atlanta in 1.993.
Cleveland this season, becomtng tbe
"I'm much more aggressive, "
ftrsl Boston pitcher to beat the Indisaid Avery, who lost a no-hitter and ans three times in a season since
shutout in the SIXth inning but won · Roger Clemens in 1992.
his second straight start. "The only
"I like the mound, and I know
thing I'm worried about is taking the some or their hitters pretty welL"
hall and throwing 1t as hard as I can. said Avery. who played with current
I'm not worried about making it sink Indians David Justice and Marquis
or anytbing. I'm just throwing it."
Grissom in Atlanta.
Given· Boston's predicament Avery, 3-1 with a 2.33 ERA in
14 1/2 games out of first place- it
four starts sin~:c ~.:oming off the diswas easy just to sit hack and enjoy abled list, didn't allow a hit until
Avery, who signed a $4.85 milli&lt;in Julio Franco lined a clean single to
contract with the Red Sox for this center leadtng orr the sixth. He
season. II' he keeps pitching like this, allowed one run and four hits in 7 213
Avery will either earn his keep ·or inmngs, pitching into the seventh for
pique interest from a contending the third straight time.
tcain looking lor pitching as the trade
Nonetheless, Omar Vizquel wasdeadline approaches.
n't impressed.
" I want to stay here . These guys
"He didn ' t have much;" said
have treated me well," Avery said. Vit.qucl , who had two of Cleveland's
"lftbey fceltbe need to trade me, I'll
rour hits . "Fastball, chungcup, a litjust try to stay healthy and pitch
tle culler. The hall was right there all
his, Avery was dazzling om:c again somewhere else."
the time. We didn't sec the hall I
- a high-humming fastball. the lluAvery has done nothing but guess."
.
cot motion, and then a tantalizing impress the Indians, who could usc
Maybe Vit.qucl wil.' just upset that
changeup. He bounced on the mound . another pitcher for the stretch drive. Boston look the season series from
with confidence rarely seen since his The 27-ycar-old lefty is 3-0 ag~inst
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Houston 111 PIKJCnill. 10 11m

(An Rcltl"S b-4 ).. K O:'i p.m

-

Philiidel(lhla (8\!e\.:h 0-5) nt San r:run(Gunlner 10-4), 10 05 fl m

&lt;t:t~to

NL standings

.w
Al l:mm ............ .. h.'

rum

-'·

,.

7':

Monday's siores
Cbi~o

White Sox l Oelroil 0
Bosto11 J. Q.EVELAND I
N.Y. Yankees 7, Milwaukee J
Btllrimon: .li. Texas I

Flurida ........
N~w Ynrk ....
Mo!lln=al ..

Phil~ljlhl:L ,

10:7), 7.05 p.m.
·
ChiciiJO While SoJ. (Darwin 4-7) 111
Derroir (Moehlcr 6-8), 7:05p.m.
StQftle (Fauero "8--!1) IU CLEVELAND
(Hmhiser 9-S). 7:0:"i p m.
.-.Mheim (Spnnger .li -3) nl N,Y. Yan·
ltees (Cone 10-4}. 7:l1 p.m.
Milw111kec (Eldred 9-9) at Toro'n1 o
(Hemaen 9-7). 7JS p.m
Kan14S City CROiado 7-6)111 MmneiOIa (Robenton 7-7), 8:0~ p.m.
Ballimorc: (Ericbon I J.)) nr Ttxns ·
(Burkett 7-8), 8:3' p.m.

t,',

. ~J6

JO
]2',

(Morgan J-7). 7.J:'i p.m
Houston (Hoh 7-6) ot St Louu (SitU-

' tt

.ll:'\6

41
Sn 42
. 5~ 45
....... 29 67

. ~77

. ~

.:«l2

(ill

51
Ptttsburgh ........... .49
St looi1 ............. 4S
Ctncinn:lU ............. 42
Otknt.o
.... 41

411
49
~0

:'iS
57

.500

I',

.490
..J.l~

2~

NL games ...

Frand~e o

...... 55 44

. s~

t.o. A"s"" · , ...... ·52 47 .m

Sn11 D1ego ., .. ,.... ,.. .47 52
· Colorado .......... .45 :'\5

.475

. 4~

Monday's scores
Piusbur!h ~. Ph ilatlclptli&lt;~ 2
A1lama ~ .Los Angel~ 4 ( 10)
Snn Otego 10. AondD 2
N.Y Mt:li .t Cindnna11 ·'
Montreal 8, CoiGtado 4
S1. Loui1 7. San FranclKo 2

Basketball

9 '~

J·
II

10 '~

WNBA standings

Houston ............... !!

Charloue ............... 6
CLEVELAND . . :'i

Phocni11.

I. f&lt;l.

lill

61~

J'·

2
!'i
6

8

R:'i7

"iOO

J8~

~
6'~

Western Conference
8 J .127

Socr.unento •..........5
Los Angeks... .... :'i
Utah .................. J

FcHltball
10 .lO

nurFALO Ull.I.S:
Kcnd:~ll

.

Transactions

Rch:m~'cJ

WM

JunlC.\ .mliDit IJWOI)'IIC Prmu.

CAROLINA I'ANTHU:S·t•lacctl 1.1!
Jnn .I ~V I Crl Oil thC I'CSCfYC·fCIIfL'tJ h..:l

adm•m~lr:IIIUII .

OAKI.I\NI&gt; kAIUI ~RS : Sii(IIL'd UU
t'iilvin Bn111ch.
·
SAN IJII:(i() CHI\IWERS: Rdc:1scd
WR Jimmy Oltvcr mul WR Sk.'vc D.mld\
Si!(IM.:d WR IJmninn Juhn S~ III.
SAN FR/\NC:ISCO 4tJENS W:UYCtl
I' Tud.:L-r l'hillitts .

Baseball
Major Lugue Ba~ehall
MLB: N"t~mcd S~ilmn Robinsun three·
tor uf.educn~ional programming.
Amtrlcan U..~ue

DETROIT TIGERS:

A~:tivuteJ

LHP

~

9
II

.JIS5
157
.214

list. Rek:asc:d RHP J o~ Bootisla.
National Lncue

CIN CINNATI REDS : Ass ign!!d C
Brook Fordyce Hl lnd1nnopolu of the
Amcncan A.uocialion
COLORADO ROCKIES: Placed SS
Wall Wc1ss on the 15-day di5abled lt sl .
Recalled INF Crnlg COLmsdl from Col ·
orudo Sprin}!S ur .the P:IL' tfh: Coasl
L..!a,guc.

Eastnn Conrertnce

n:
NewYork ....... 12

Itam

h~.:qu~.:

MIAMI DOLPHINS Sigi1cd WR
Scoll M11t~· r 111 a UIIC-~;Ir Clllllnu;l. Rclcn...cJ C C.1l Di~t.un .
NEW YOkK JETS : Tcnum:.rcd .tl~t:
i:llnll'it~o:l ul l.ll llubby Huu., lllll ~ctiulcd
()It Glj!llll Full!)' fmm lhl: physic:tlly un.
••l'llc lllt'H.'rfunn li.~t. AIUIItUik:L"II ll~e ~'i l(·
llHI I•.m. ul l ~:11 Kirw:lll. dirL'i.:lur ul j)l:!ycr

Just i n Thompson from J.li-d:•y di5;~blcd

1-1), IOJSpm. ·
Pmsburah (Lieber 6-9) nl San Otecu
ISmith J-1), IO: J~ n m

II

W,Ulll'rn DiYision

Soo

•Iemyre 9-6), 8:05pm
geles(Reye:~

. "iL~

AI R

Florida (fernnntk~ 10-~) lll Cmcmna11

N.Y Mets (Bohanon I-l l :11 Los An-

Ctntral Divl!lion
Houston .

Tonight's games
Oaklmnd (KIU'say .\-9) af Bosron (Se le

6

:'ill

L f&lt;l.

Lu~ An~clc .~ .

I'

, N111tioo111l •·o.thalll .u-.u~:
i\RIZONA CAIWJNAI.S : An nuum.:cU S l~rk C01.~ tlc, 01. /\lien IA{irarfcntcid and 1)1. M:m Rke lcrt dunp.

]I Ill

Wednesday's games
Atl:mHI (MillwoOO 1-IJ :11 Chicag1.1
Cubi (TiLpani 0-0), 2:20p.m
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f&lt;:aslnn Division

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Wednesday's gaml!~

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(Ciuulioii J :'i-J). 10 . 0~ r m
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PHILADEI.PHIA 7l!Di.S
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.MIAMI HEAT· .~ittnctl

Monday 'S scores

PHILADELPHIA PHILLI ES: Tmded
OF-I B Darren Daullon to F1orida for OF
Billy McMillon. Assigned McMillon to
Scnmrdn-Wilkes Bnru of the lntcmiliiOO·
a.l league. Pur~h:as~d rile contr:.~t of OF
Tony Barron from S.:ranlon.

Bosketball
4
4 1~
6'~

N1tional Bukett..ll .4.uocl•tion

DENVER NUGGETS : Stgncd F
Tony Bailie to a 1h~·~1r contract

Oh1o River Campground
Come and See Our New LOOIK,
Great Fishing!
Super Group Rates!
Church Directory - Fax SAruir·,.·
We offer 10% Discount to Senior Citizens
Racine, OH

$t. Rt. 124

Call Ken Rausch Mgr.

ditions Monday evening at Meigs High School.
Meigs will host lhe Blue Devils in the season
opener on Aug. 29.
·

.

him days later after coming under
tire because of his legal problems at
Nebraska. The fanner New Jersey
prep star stgned·with New York in
December.
''I' m doing the best I can. If it's
ilot good enough, at least! can look
at myself and say I did the best I
could." Peter said Monday after a
practice at Albany. N.Y. "I can' t
change what has happened in the
past. I can just go forward ,' that's
what! plan on doing." ·
· Peter joined the Giants after
agreeing to panicipatc in a rehabilitation program that included substance abuse treatment and psychological counseling, treatment for
attention deficit disorder and a program to complete his undergraduate
degree. He did all that, and is off to

a fast start in camp.
five·ycar contract with an op.tion for son.
" I would say from the first day I a sixth year. The Detroit News and .
Colts: Trev Alberts failed to show
laid my eyes on Christian, he is one Detroit Free Press said the deal is up for sc heduled shoulder surgery,
guy who has gotten better every worth $34.56 million , an average of the latest move in a confusing staleday, " defensive line coach Denny slightly more than $5.7 milliOn a sea- mate between the linebacker and
Marcin said. 'He has done everything and even more than we have Kyger Creek LL Tournament continues
asked. He knows he has a second
chance and he IS making the most of
it.
In second-round action in lhe with a 2-for-3 showing. Also getting
Lions: Barry Sanders joined Kyger Creek Little League Tourna- hits were Corey Longstreth (1-2),
Detroit for practice at Saginaw Val- ment Monday· night at the Kyger Call and Fackler (both 1-3).
ley State, a day after becoming the Creek Employees Club field, HarAlso getting htls for the Redmcn
highest-paid player in the NFL.
risonville OK Fackler defeated the was Burns (1 -3)
"I feel rusty, " said Sanders, who Rio Grande Redmen 6-3 in the first
lJ!llls
missed ' the last minicamp and held game of the doubleheader before Innin&amp;
Rcdmen
010-002~3-3-3
out (or the first three days of full- defending champion Little Hocking Harrisonville
102-03x~6-5 -0
squad drills under new coach Bobby knocked off Point Pleasant NationWP- Stanley (Call save)
Ross. "I have some catching up to wide Insurance 7-3 in the nightcap.
LP- Halley
do. But I'm not too far behind."
.The running back agreed to a
Harrisonville 6, Redmen 3
Litde Hocking 7
Harrisonville' 1-0 lead lasted until
Nationwide lmurance 3
the Rio Grande second, when Cody
In ·the nightcap, Little Hocking
Caldwell (2-3 at the plate) had a · overcame the 3-2 lead Nationwide
triple scored Charlie Burns (1-3 at · had in the fourth with a two-run raJthe plate) tied the game at l-1.
ly ·that put the Washington County
Harrisonville, took the lead for crew ahead to silty.
good in the third, wheri doubles by
Nationwide shook off Little
has not lost since June 21 at CleveBuzz Fackler, Wes Call and John . Hocking's early 1-0 le.ad when Seth
land. Loser Bryce Florie (1 -2) made
Stanley generated two runs.
Gaskins' tw 0 -out single sent Jared
his first major league career start
Stanley. the starting pitcher, Billings and Rocky Nibert home.
after 134 relief appearances. pitching
fanned 13, walked three and gave up Little Hocking ,.hehind 2-1 after an
five innings.
pne hit in his fivc-mmng stint: Call, inmng, tied the game at 2-2 m the
New York took a 3-0 lead in the
inc closer, struck out two. walked second.
,
first inning with the aid of two errors.
none and gave up two hits to get the
After Nationwide regained its
three stolen bases and a hit bauer,
save..
lead in the thtrd , Little Hocking
then added a run in the second on Pat
, Morgan Halley, who took the scored the tying and go-ahead runs
loss, struck out four, walked none after its first two hitters were retired.
Kelly's RBI double.
After Milwaukee closed to 4-3,
and gave up five hits in a complete·
Clint Scars, Little Hocking 's
the Yankees added three runs in, the
game effort.
starter, struck out six, walked five
Stanley led Harrisonville 's hitters and surrendered two hits '-- Nibert
ninth on consecutive run-scoring
singles by Paul O'Neill, Tino Martinez and Charlie Hayes. It was Mar-.
tincz' league-leading·92nd RBI.
Orioles 5, Rangers 1
Rafael Palmeiro put Baltimore in
front fo'r good at Texas with a tworun homer to back Jimmy Key 's sixhit pitching for six innings.
Kev ( 13-6) struck out seven and
walked one to pull out of a tailspin
during which he had lost five of his
previous six decisions. Key outpitched Darren Oliver (6-10), who
allowed four runs and six hits in 6
113 innings.
The Rangers have lost six of
eight .
Palmeiro, who played for the
Rangers from 1989-93, put the Orioles in front 2-1 in the sixth with his

..

Hlatorli::al LOok

949-252&amp;
,,'

(Continued from Page 4)
76 slump in a big way, hilling a
grand slam with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning at Olympic
Stadium.
Rodriguez was 0,-for-4 in the
game and hitless in his la.'t 13 at-bats
when he hit a 1-2 pitch from Darren
tjolmes (3-2) barely inside the right. field foul pole.
. Rodriguez has 19 home runs, two
of them slams. Montreal stopped "
three-game losing streak and sent .
Colorado to its 16th loss in I K
gpmcs.
Braves S, Dodgers 4
Jeff Blauser singled home the
winning run with two outs in the hottom of the lOth at Atlanta. The
Braves went 6-6 on their longest
hpmestand of the season.
Blauser's single came one batter
after Rafael Bclliard was thrown out ·
at the plate trying to score on Mikc
~ordccai 's grounder to third haserqan Todd Zcile.
Tom Glavine pitched six innings
before leaving with a · slightly
snraincd right hamstring, but said he
dncs not exrx:ctlo miss a start fur the
Braves.
Raul Mundesi and Eric Karros
homered for Los Angeles and Fred
~cGritTconnected for AtlaniQ.
Cardinals 7, Giants 2
. Gary Gaetti homered, doubled
twice and drove in three runs as St.
Louis won at Busch Stadium.
The Cardinals won three of Jour
from tlie Nl West leaders, who fell
to 4-8 since the All-Star break.
San Francisco leadoff hitter Dar·
ryl Hamilton was ejected for arguing
a called'third strike to open the game,
and Giants manager Dusty Baker
also was thrown out in the dispute.
In the founh inning, the Cardinals
announced they were playing the
game under protest. because the
Giants' Bill Mueller was listed twice
on their lineup card.

lndianapoli,.
The No. 5 pick in the 1994 draft
was scheduled for reconstruction of
hts right shoulder. which was firsl
dislocated in college at Nebraska.

Harrisonville &amp; Little Hocking win

1 I

ChiSox shut out Tigers 3-0
to trim Tribe's division lead

(Sm1ley K-10&gt;. 7 : l~ r m.
Houstoo (Hamptun 6-7) at S1 Lou1 s

Florida (A ,

GEmNG READY - With the season opener
with Gallla Academy just 40 days away, Mike
Chancey and lhe Meigs Marauders kicked off lhe
. 10-dsy Instructional period in the hot humid con·

Peter gets fresh start with Giants; Alt retires after 13 years

Scoreboard
Baseball

.....

NFL teams continue pre-season camps

Pirates get past Phillies 3-2;
Braves win and Giants lose
By BEN WALKER
AP. Baseball Writer
The fans at Veterans S\adium in
Philadelphia got their last look at
Darren Daullon in the Phillies
dugout, and gave him a standing
ovation.
Later Monday, after cheering Curt
Schilling's IS-strikeout performance,
the crowd had good reason to wonder whether it has seen the last of the
Philadelphia ace.
Schilling, the subject of several
trade rumors, set an NL high for
strikeouts this season. But the lastplace Phillies lost 3-2 to the Pitts·
burgh' Pirates when rookie Kc,vin
Polcovich hit a tiebreaking home run
in the seventh inning.
"My goal is to win," said
Schilling. who increased his leagueleading strikeout toial to 191.
"Strikeouts didn't help me win
today. To strike out 15 and lose docsn't mean that much."
Before the game, the Phillies
traded Daulton, who began playing
lor the Phillies in 1983, to Florida foroutfielder Billy McMillon. The
crowd of 19,303 booed when the

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Holdout makes Pace miss ~~
workout sessions with Rams

Page4
22, 1997

Mets ·t ally 5-3 wi,n over Reds
By RONALD IJLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Mets are looking at the standings every day for the first time in
years.
''We all are. We'd be lying if we
said we didn't," closer John Franco
said after Monday's 5-3 victory over
Cincinnati pulled New York within
a half-game of Florida in the NL
wild-card race.
"It's been such a long time since
this time of year when the games
meant something," Franco said. "It's
so exciting to come to the ballpark.
In years past, I hated getting in my

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

for us I don't know how long now.
lt's been a lot.'' White Sox manager
Terry Bevington said. " He had an
excellent changeup. It was probably
his best pitch besides his fastball."
Alvarez, who has won six of his
last seven decisions, usually rates his
changeup as liis third-best pitch, but
he relied on it against the ligers. ·
"In the first inning, I threw a coupie right where I wanted and said,
'Oh boy,that's going to be my pitch
tonight, "' Alvarez said.
_ Robello Hernandez pitched the
ninth for'his 25th save. He struck out
three and worked around twllinficld
errors.
Frank Thomas, who ended a 1for-13 slump with four hits Sunday
at Baltimore, hit a two-run homer off
Justin Thompson (8-7) in the first
inning. Thomas was 2·for·3lo raise
his American League-leading average to .375.
In other American League games,
New York downed Milwaukee 7-3
and Baltimore slopped Texas 5-1.
Yankees 7, Brewers 3
·Jn Milwaukee, Andy Pellille
picked off two batters to run his
·Jeague-leading total to II as he won
his founh straight decision.
Pettitte (12-5), who gave up three
runs and nine hits in..:6:.:2/:.:3..:i:::n:.::ni:::n!:g:::s·_..:l:.9,::1h:..:;:ho:::m::;:::er~--------

( 1-2) and Gaskms ( 1-3) got them in his four-tnning stint. Ben Gum ,
who wa's intentionally walked three
times, relieved Scars in the filih .
Gum struck out six, walked one and
gave up no hits.
Ntbcrt fanned 12, walked as
many and gave up two hits - to
Josh Blackburn ( 1-1) and Mall Middleton ( 1-2) - in taking the complete-game loss.
lnnjng tl!lJih
·Little Hocking
110-203~7- 2 - 1
Nationwide ·
201-000=3-2-1
WP -.G um (in relief of Scars)
LP- Nihert

-·-

Here is the agenda for the next
three days .
'
Tonight - Chester vs. Point
Pleasant Hardware at 6 p.m.; Gallipolis Reds vs. Bidwell !I at 7:30
p.m.
Wedni!Sday- New Haven Reds
vs. Bidwell I at 6 p.m.; Pomeroy
Yankees " · Racine at 7:30p.m.
Thursday's quarterfinals Kyger Creek Raiders vs. Home Care
Medical at 6 p.m., HarrisonviHc vs.
Little Hocking at 7.30 p.m.

__ ____

(Continued from Page
4)
:__
lndl·anS .. ._:____

Cleveland 6-5 after going 1- 11
against the Indians · last season.
Cleveland is sputtering as the Scottie Mariners arrive today tor a three,
game scnes.
"I don'tthink we're in a slump,"
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
,,aid. "I think you have to realize
they pitched very well against us."
After Franco led off the sixth with
a •inglc, Avery then had Vizqucl's
grounder go off his glove for a hit.
Grissom sacriticcd the r,unncrs to
second and third, and Tony Fernandez hit a sacrifice Jl y that cut
Boston's lead to 2-1.
Boston added a run in the seventh
on Reggie JeffersOn '~ R'Bt single .
Heathclilf Slocumh puched the nimh

lo r his 15th save.
Cleveland rookie Jaret Wright (2·
I) was impressive again, but lost for
the tirsl time in the majors. He
allowed two runs and live hits in six
innings.
Noles: Red Sox shqrtstop Nomar
Garciaparra wns hack in the lineup
a day after getting hit on the lel't
elbow by a pitch from Charles Nagy.
... Indians catcher Sandy Alomar lel't
the game after the fourth inning
because of a bruised left knee . "It's ·
nothing serious," Hargrove snul

InJured Cleveland pitchers Chad ·
Ogea and Brian Anderson should be
ready to throw off the: m0u1H.i soon.
Jack McDowell is still relegated to
long-toss exercises.

TAKES CUT- Meigs' Chad Burton takes a cut .at a pitch during
·Monday's American Legion Elghlh District tournament game
against Logan at Meigs High School, where Logan won 12·8. (Sen·
tlnel photo by Dtlve Harris)

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR EDITION
IS £0MING AUGUST 7, 1997 ''
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30TH
CALL ,992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.
DONNIE RIF EXT. IOS • DAVE HARR EXT. I04
A

�•

-.

TUIIday, July 22, 1997

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

22,1997

Mets tally 5-3 win ·over Reds ·

car.''

STEALS SECOND- The Cincinnati Reds' Eric
Owens slides Into second base for the steal In
front of New York Mets shortstop Rey Ordonez
In the second Inning of Monday's National ·

League game In New York, where the Mets won
5-3 to sweep the four-game series. Second baseman Carlos Baerga covers the play In the dis- _
tance. (AP)

Carl Everell is one of the reasons
why the Mets are winning. He homered twice' in a game for the third time
this season - the second against
Cincinnati- and drove in four runs
as New York won its fifth str~ight,
completing a four-game sweep.
"The entire learn is hungry. We
can smell victory in the air," said
Everell, whose II homers are 10
more than he hit last season.

At 56-42, the Mets are 14 games
over .500 for the first time July 23,
1991. If they play well on their II·
game road trip, which starts tonight
at Los Angeles, attendance at Shea
Stadium might pick up even more
when they return home.
"It's a preuy good little team right
now," manager Bobby Valentine
said.
Everell hit a 449-foot homer. into
the mezzanine to put the Mets ahead
in the second inning. He walked with
the bases loaded in the sixth to force
in New York's second run, and
broke a 3-alltie in the eighth with a
two-run drive off Scoll Sullivan (13).
"Our reports say he's a dangerous
hiller," Reds mtftlager Ray Knight
said. "He's improved. He hits mistakes."
Last year, Dallas Green henchcd
Evcreu, and the outfielder's agent
asked for a trade. Valentine, who
replaced Green late iast season; has
given the Everett a chance.
"His talent's just coming out,"
Valentine said. "It's tough to play

By R.B. FALLSTROM
tuka last year, and that holdout lastMACOMB, Ill. (AP) - Asked ed 28 days, until·Aug. 16.
how the Orlando Pace talks are
"He will be a Ram," coach Dick
going, Jay Zygmunt, the St. Louis Vermeil said. "We'll get it done,
Rams' contract negotiator, just shook sooner or later."
his head and tried to change the subTeammates don't know what to
ject.
think. Running back Lawrence
Through Monday, Pace has ·Phillips wouldn't presume to offer
missed four days of full-squad work- advice, but he knows his 2 1/2-week
outs; three of them two-a-days, plu"s holdout was not beneficial last sumtwo· more two-a~day sesSions wilh mer.
rookies. From all indications, there
"I really am not in a place to tell
will. be a lot more days without big him what to do," Phillips said. "He
No. 76 before his deal is finally has to do what be has to do and
done.
hopefully he'll be in here soon."
The Rams know it'll happen, but
The Poston brothers did not
only after much posturing and much return telephone calls from The
wasting of lime. Car~and Kevin Pos- Associated Press.
lon, who represent the mammoth forVermeil fields the Pace question
mer Ohio State offensive tackle, had daily, and to his credit he's found a
Michigan running back Tim Biabu-

when you think today's your last
chance."
Everell is hilling .321 ( 18-for156)
in his last 16 games to raise his averagelo .274.
.
"He was one of the guys I was
talking to when I said I wouldn't
judge them on the past," Valentine .
said. " I was going to give them a
chance, and I wanted them to give

me a chance."
Greg McMichael '(7-7) pitched
one inning and Franco was perfect in
the ninth for his 25th save.
·
New York won with just four hits.
Reds starter Dave Burba gave up
only one in 5 2/3 innings, but
allowed three runs mainly because of
five walks.
"It feels like the season has
changed dramatically with this
series," said Knight, whose team
dropped eight games behind division-leading Houston in the NL
CentraL "We can't seem to score
more than three runs. The pitchers
ha\'C done a great job, but we' vc got
to give them some breathing room
once in a while."

trade was announced on the publicaddress system, then cheered ,when
Daulton emerged from the dugout.
Schilling ( 11-9) needed only eight
mnings to set a career high, for strike. outs. He leads the NL with 191.
Schilling fanned one more than
both Pedro Martinez and Jeff Juden
of Montreal this season . The major
league high this year is 19 by Seattle's Randy Johnson, who lost to
Oakland 4,1 thai mghl.
The game was tied at 2 in the seventh when Pillsburgh's Keith Osik ·
reached third with one out. The
Pirates put on a suicide-squeeze
play, but Polcovtch could not reach
an outside pitch and ·Osik was tagged
out.
Two pitches lat~t. Polcovich hit
his second home run :
"When you get .a semi-pitchout
.with Schilling throwing 97 mph , it's
tough to get a bat on it," Polcovich
said. " I just continued to. battle up
there and ... ended up getting a pitch
I could putt he bat head on."
AI Martin hit a two-run homer in
the sixth for Pittsburgh.
In other NL games,' San Diego

defeated Florida 10-2, Montreal
slammed Colorado 8-4, Sl. Louis
downed San Francisco 7-2 and
Atlanta beat Los Angeles 5-4 in I0
innings.
Padres 10, Marlins 2
Wally Joyner and his San Diego
teammates teed off at Florida, getting
15 hits until Marlins outfieljlcr John
Cangelosi took over to pitch a scoreless ninth inning.
Joyner went 3-for-4 with two
walks, scored twice and stole two
bases. Needing a home run to complete the cycle, he ·nied out against
Cangelosi.
Cangelosi became the first position player to pitch for the Marlins,
and allo.wcd just a walk. He also
pitched for Pittsburgh in 1988 and
Houston in 1995, and has given up
only one hit in four shutout innings.
Tony Gwynn ended his longest'
hitless drought of the season at II atbats with an RBI single. He went 2for-17 in the four-game series, leaving him at .385.
Expos 8, Rockies 4
Henry Rodriguez "hrokc a 7-for(See NL on Page S)

Logan notches 12-8 win over Meigs
in American Legion tournament play
By DAVE HARRIS

a 5-2 lead.

Sentinel Correspondent

Meigs scored a pair of runs in the
third inning to pull 10 within 5-4.
Corey Wtlliams Chad Burton and
Joe Kirby all singled and coupled
with a sacriljcc ny p_latcd the runs .
After Logan took advantage of
another four run inning to tak~ a 94 lead Meigs again started to chtp .
away. A two run fifth highlighted by
a Dan Metts double and a Collin
Roush singled pulled Meigs to within 9-6.
Another two run inning in the
sixth pulled Mctgs to within 9-7,
Meigs scored the two runs without
the benefit of a hit.
Meigs pulled to within 9-8 in the
eight inning when Scott George was
hit by a pitch for the second time in
the game went to third on a hit by

Logan took ndvnn"tngc of three
big innings and held off Meigs to
post a 12-8 win over Meigs in
Eighth District American Legion
Tournament action Monday evening
at Meigs High School.
Meigs will now travel to Beavers
Field in Lancaster to play the loser
of Monday's game between Pickerington and Oak Hill today at 5:30
p.m. Logan will play McArthur at
Pickerington today at 5:30.
Meigs took a 2-0 lead in the first
inning on a single by Josh Mcrcklc,
a walk to Dan Metts and a double off
the bat of Jeremiah Bentley.
, Logan bounced back to score four
runs in the lop of the second inning
and a single run ill the third to take

Wtlliams and scored on a passed
ball.
But three errors by Meigs in the
ninth inning allowed Logan to plate
three runs and win by a 12-8 score.
Williams picked up the loss in
rc,lief of Brad Davenport, Collin
Roush ·also saw mound actiun.
Welch was the tnning pitcher.
Cook had four si'nglcs to lead
Logan. Wolfe added three. and
Hyrne had two singles.
Williams and Roush each had a
pair of singles for Meigs. Melts and
Bentley added doubles. Burton and
Mercklc had a single each.
lnnjno Ml!h
Logal
041-040-003= 12- 11-0
Meigs
200-221 -010=8-10-5
WP-Wclch
LP-Williams

By The Associated Press
Play after play, No. 99 in the blue
jersey is stuffing things in the middle of the line or hustling to chase
down a runner.
. Christian Peter, clearly the most
visible newcomer in the New York
Giants' training camp, is taking full
advantage of a second chance.
"This has been a lot of fun," said
the former Nebraska nose tackle, out
of football last season after a bout
with alcoholism and legal problems
ranging from sexual assault to urinaJing in public.
,
''I' m having a good ·time, but I
feel rusty. I feel as long as I stay
focused and study and work hard, it
will all come into play."
.. New England selected Peter in the
fifth round of the 1996 draft, but cut

By The Aasoclat,ct Preas
When Wilson Alvarez became the
first Chicago White Sox pitcher to
strike out four bailers in an inning,
he had something else on his mind.
" I don't think about that,"
Alvarez said after becoming the
28th pitcher in modem major league
history with four strikeouts in an
inning. "But I like to he in the history hook when the White Sox win."
In the seventh inning, Tony Clark
was lirsl" up for Detroit - and the
first to strike out. When Phil Nevin
fanned on a wild pitch, he reached
first base safely. But Alvarez (9-7)
then struck out Melvin Nieves and
Orlando Miller to end the inning.
"We didn't swing at many strikes,
and when you don' t make the pitcher throw strikes. he doesn't have to,"
Detroit manager Buddy Bell said.
"Wilson picked up early on the trend
that we weren't swinging at strikes."
Alvarez worked 7 113 innings,
&gt;triking out nine and giving up three
·hits in Chicago's 3-0 win over the
Tigers.
"Wilson's pitched outstanding

Ameri~an League game In Cleveland, where the
Red Sox won 3-1. Home plate umpire Martin Foster prepares to ma!&lt;e the call. (AP)

Red Sox defeat Indians 3-1
By KEN BERGER
I M-6 season' with Atlanta in 1993.
Cleveland this sea."'"· becoming the
CLEVELAND (AP)- While the
"I'm much more ,aggressive,"
first Qoslon pitcher to heat the lndiBoston Red Sox might have to wait said Avery. who lost a·no-hitter and uns three times in a s.cason since
until next year. Steve Avery has shutout in the sixth inning but won · Roger Clemens in 1992.
apparently refused to .
his second straight start. "The only
"I like the mound, and I know
He 's been running out of time for thing I'm worried ahout is taking the
some of their hitters prclly well."
three years now.
ball and throwing it as hard as I can. suid Avery. who played with current
. , Avery, once one of baseball's I'm not worried ahout making it sink Indians David Justice and Marquis
most promising young lefties; had nr anything. I'm just throwing 11 ."
Grissom in Allanl~l.
his best outing for his new team as
Given Boston's predicament Avery, 3-1 with a 2.33 ERA in
the streaking Red Sox beat Cleve- 14 112 games out of first place- it
titur starts since coming niT the disland 3-1 Monday night to take three was easy just to si_t back and enJOY
abled list, didn't allow a hit until
of four from the lndtans.
Avery, who signed a $4.K5 million Julio Franco lined a dean single to
Avery (4-2) cupped an cncourug- contract with the Red Sox for this
center leading off _the sixth. He
ing road trip for last-place Boston. sea.&lt;on. If he keeps pitching like this,
allowed one run and ,four hits in 7 213
The Red Sox have won six of eight. Avery will either cam his keep or innings. pitchmg into the seventh for
including five of six games on this piqu~.: intcresl rrnm a contending
the third straight time.
trip that hegan with a two-game team looking for pitching as the trade
Nonetheless, Omar Vi1.qucl wassweep in Baltimore .
deadline approaches.
n't impressed.
"We're showing people we can
"I want to stay here. These guys
"He didn't have much," said
play some baseball," lirst ha.&lt;eman have treated me well ," Avery said.
Vi1.quef, who had I wn of Cleveland's
Mo Vaughn said
'' II" they feel the nccil to trade me, I'll
four hits. "Fasthall, changcup, a litWith that delightful delivery of just try to stay healthy and pitch tle cutter. The ball was right there all
'his, Avery was dazzling once again · somewhere else." ·
·
the time. we · didn 't. sec the hall I
- a high-humming fastball , the llu·
Avery has don ~· nothing but guess."
cnt motion , and then a tantalizing impress the Indians, who could usc
M•!Ybe Vi1.qucl was just upsclthal
change up. He bqunccd on the mound another pitcher for the stretch drive. Boslon·look· the season series from
with confidence rarely seen since his The 27-ycar-old lcl"ty is 3-0 ag~inst
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

£1fltm Di.-ision
~

L l'tl.

lil!

. ~n

J':

.47Y
.464
.4..'i9

IJ
14 1:
l.'i

8olumon• ...........59
New York ........... .'i6
Townlo ........... 4.'i
Delnlll ............... .A.'i

:l7
41
ol9
:'i2

BCI~Itlll .

~J

. . 4~

. 61~

Ctnlrll 01\iMiun
CLEVELAND ........~) 41 '..'i,q
Chk"~" ........ lO 47 .m
Milwbukc:c .......... -l~ 49 47 9Mmt~IIOfa ........... -14 .'li2
4 .~!t
Knn,;uC11y ......... JK 5.'i 409

)' ·
7
9

-13
4J
Tell.:u ......... .. : ...... 41 50
Oakland .............. 40 60

557
4K .~

400

• 7'
16

Chicaso White Sox J. De1roi1 0
Bos1on .1, CLEVEL.AND I
N.Y. Yankees 7. Milwnuker :l
Ballill'IOre .'i. TuiLI I

Tonight's games
Oakla~

(KIVsay J-9) &lt;tl Bo5ron (Sele
IQ-7). 7:0!1 p.m.
Chicago White Sol (Darwin 4·7) at

Detroit (Moehlcr 6-IH. 7:05p.m.
Sc:nttlc (Fassero 8-.'1) ar CLEVELAND
p.m,
A.naheim (Spnnger !1-~ ) :11 NY. ·Ynnkees (Cone 10-•'J. 7;.1!1 p.m.
Milwaukee: (Eldred 9-9) :u Toronto
(HeniFn 9. 1). 1·.J.'i p.m
Kansas Cny (RoAdo 7-6) at Minneso·
lA (R(Ibtnson 7~7). 8:0!1 p.m.
Baltimore (Erickson ll·:'ll ul Te1ns
(8urteu 7~8). 8::l!l p.m.

.

NL standings
ll: 1

l'tl.

G.l!

-H
42

.'i77
.'i71
5.10
.102

6
61

A1l:mw .
. .. .td
Floridu ............... 56
Nt!'lll York .
. ~6
Ml)ntrt=&lt;li ... .-....... .'i2
Philndelphm ........ 2'1

.ltl

-1~

07

b)O

10

.\2',

Dl~ls.ion
............... ~ I 48 .'i l !i

C('nlr;tl

Huus1on
Pinsburgh ........... ..41l 49 500
St. Louis .............. .4t! 50 .490
Ci nct nnati ...........42 5~ ,-tU
. Olh:n,_o ............ ,.4 1 57 AIK

ID-_4). JO:OS p m.

44 .:'156
47 . ~2!i
.'i2 .47.\
'i~ .-l.'iO

Monday's scores
Pi11Sburgh .l . Philmlclphia 2
Atlan111 :\, Los Angeld 4 ( 10)
San 011'~go 10, Florid;t 2 .
N.Y. Meu :'i.Cmcmnll-11 J
Montre:ll S. Colomdn 4
St Looi17. San Francisco 2

Allanta (Mil lwood 1- 1J itt Clm:.,,_u
Cubs (T11poni 0-0l, 2:20p.m.
, P~-~~~delphia (~ . Lei_ter 5-10) :n S:111
Fr,tn~•sco

(Estes 1.·4), 3.35 p.m.

Florida (Frnmndez 10-11) ;u Ci111..irma1 i
(Morgun .3-7), 7:.3.'i p.m.
Hous1oo (Holl 7-6) ill St. Louis (Stmll!!m)'Tt!' 9-6). 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Men (Bohanon 1-1) :11 Los 1\rt·

aclcs IReyc! 1-1).
1':

2'·.
tl

J

t1
10'·:

IO J~

p.m.

Piusburgh (Lie~ r 6-9) :11 San Diegu
!Smith 3- ll. 10:351'1.m

Basketball

9'~

Wtskrn Di•ision

San Fran ~u\:o ........ ~~
Uu Angeles .......... .'i2
San Otego .............47
Colorado .... .......4~

ds~oiGurdncr

Monday's scores
l1l&lt;lrlnlll' 1'1. l.u\ Allf.l'll.'~ fW
Pl1111.11i~ 70. SamlnlCnln ~7
Toni~ht's ~ames
Uiah :11 New 'r url. 7 10 11 m

Wednesday's ~ames
N..!w Yurk "' Clmrluu~:. 7:]1111111.
CLEVELAND HI L11~ An!!t!b 10 '\0
Jl.lll .

Transactions

NL games...

Elllfltrn Conrtr('nct
~ I. fJ:I.
NcwYurk ......... 12 2 .R57
Houuou ..............8 5 !i l.'i
Ctmrlottc ......... , ..... 6 6 ... 500
CLEVELAND ....... ~ 8 J85

I.um

·

3'~

.'i

6 '~

W~rslcrn Conf('JtfK'('
Phoc:nil ................ 8 3 .727

Sncr:untn1o ............ 5
Lo1 Aneelcl ............ ~
U1ah ..................... J

8 JHS
9
II

J57
.214

4'~

6\

UTI\H JfiZZ · Si}!Rl'd G
Vaughn 111 a lhn.-c·yl'ilr ~.:tllllr;ll:l .

J i t ~: qul'
•

F•••thull
.

Ngliunlll

fo'eolh:~lllnllut

Akii.ONA CARDINALS · 1\n lltiUitccrJ S t:nc Cuslll', 01. Allen 1&gt;-.&lt;imlknrdt.l :~nrJ DL M"ll Ri...c.: ll'f1 ump.
UUFF/\1.0 BII.I.S : tt..:k:t~cJ WK
Kcnditll Jan...:.~ ;m1IIJD Dw;&amp;ytll: f'ruvu.
CI\IUJI ,INI\ 11ANTHEI&lt;S : 1'1 :11.\..'\I I.R
Jun f:v,cn un !Ill! rc~~r..,..:- tclln:t.llisl

MII\MJ DOI.I'HINS .' iifntd WM
M•ller 111 a tlllt:-yc111 ~u1tlw~1 . Mclc:L'It!d C CHII&gt;ilun
NI:.W YOkK JETS: Tcmll ll;Jt.._'tlthc
l'llntrad ur l.ll Uuhhy Hnu,tun Activ&lt;tl'-'1.1
Olt Glc11n h1lcy frt1111 lhe t•hysll':tll)i un:•hle tu lk'r(urm lbt An!llllltll:t:(llla.· ~\i):­
tMIIIl/1 Ill I'm KlfYio;lll , tllrel'lcor or plii)'t.:f
:•tlmuuslra1111n.
OAKU\ND RAIDERS : S1~11~d IJU
C01 lvin llrntll'h.
'
SI\N DU,:G&lt;&gt; CHI\IHil ikS : l&lt;cktr;ctl
. WM Jimmy Oltvcr 111111 WK S1cvc IJ11nid~
Sijllll.'t.l Wk IJ:ttniun lnhll snll .
SI\N 1-'R/\NCJ.'i('f) 41JERS : Wai ..,l!d
P TuL·kcr l'hillillS. ·
S~.:,,u

"I would say from the first day I
laid my eyes on Christian, he is one
guy who has gotten better every
day," defensive line coach Denny
Marcin said. 'He has done everything and even more than we have
asked. He knows he has a second
chance and he is making the most of
it. ..
Lions: Barry Sanders joined
Detroit for practice at Saginaw ValIcy Stale, a day after becoming the
highest-paid player in the NFL
" I f~el rusty," said Sanders. who
missed the last minicamp and held
out for the first three days of fullsquad drills under new coach Bobby
Ross. "I have some catching up to
do. But I'm not too far behind."
The running back agreed to a

Juslin Thompson from 15-day lliliablcd
Int. Released RHP Jose Bautista.

•

NaUonal lAI«Ut

CINCINNATI REDS Assi·gncd C
Brook Fordyce 10 lnd1annpoh5 of 1hc
Auodiltinn

Lcugue.
·
fHILAOELPHIA PHILLI.f:S. Tmdell
OF-18 Onnen Daulton 10 Florida fot OF
B1lly McMillon Auijned McMill on to
Scronlon-Wi lkt=s Bane of the lnternntion·
al l.enguc Purch:ued lhl' contrm.:l of or
Tont Barron rrom Scran1on.

National Buldb.U A.IMriatlon
DENVER NUGGETS : S1~ned F
· Tuny Ban it loa 1hroe,.Jct1r contract

Ohio River Campground
Come and See Our New Look.
Great Fishing!
Super Group Rates!
Directory - Fax :--oAtrvtr·~:~·
We offer 10% Discount to Senior Citizens
Racine, OH

St. Rt. 124

Call Ken Rausch Mgr.

Hlltorlcal Look

949-2526

five.year contract with an option for
a sixth year. The Detroit News and
Detroit Free Press said the deal is
worth $34.56 million, an average of
slightly more than $5.7 million a sea-

son.
Colts: Trev Alberts failed to show
up for scheduled shoulder surgery,
the latest move in a confusing stalemate between the hnebacker and

Kyger Creek LL Tournament continues

Harrisonville &amp; Little Hocking win
In second·round action in the
Kyger Creek Lillie League Tournament Monday night at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club -field , Harrisonville OK Fackler defeated the
Rio Grande Redmen 6-3 in the first
game of the doubleheader before
defending champion Lillie Hocking
knocked off Point Pleasant Nationwide Insurance 7-3 in the nightcap.

with a 2-for-3 showing. Also gelling
hits were Corey Longstreth (1-2),
Call and Fackler (both 1-3 ).
Also gelling hits for the Rcdmcn
was Burns (1-3)
l!min&amp;~

Redmcn
010-002=3-3-3
Harrisonville
I02-03x=6-5-0
WP - Stanley (Call save)
LP- Halley

Harrisonville 6, Redmen 3
. Little Hocking 7
Harrisonville' 1-0 lead lasted until
Nationwide Insurance 3
the Rio Grande second, when Cody
"In the nightcap, Little Hocking
Caldwell (2-3 at the plate) had a overcame the 3-2 lead Nationwide
triple scored Charlie Burns ( 1-3 at had in the fourth with a two-run ralthe plate) tied the game at 1-1.
ly that put the Washington Co~nly
Harrisonville, look the lead for ·crew ahead to stay.
good in the third , when doubles by
Nationwide shook off Lillie
for us I don't know how long now. has not lost since June 21 at CleveBuzz Fackler. Wes Call and John Hocking 's early 1-0 lead when Seth
It's been a lot," White Sox manager land. Loser Bryce Florie ( 1-2) made
Stanley generated two runs.
Gaskins' two·out single sent Jared
Terry Bevington said. "He had an his first major league career start
· Stanley, the starting pitcher, Billings and Rocky Nibert home . .
excellent changeup. It was probably after 134 reiief appearances. pitching
fanned 13, w·alkcd three and gave up Little Hocking, hehind 2-1 after an
his best pitch besides his fastball. "
five innings.
"ne hit in hi s five-inning stint. Call, tnning, tied the game at 2-2 in the
Alvarez, who has won six of his
New York took a 3-0 lead in the
ihe closer, struck out two, walked second.
last seven decisions, usually rates his tirsl inning with lite atd of two errors, . none and gave up two hits to get the
After Nationwide regained its
changeup as his third-best pitch, but three stolen bases and a hit batter,
save.
lead in the third, Little Hocking
he relied on it against the Tigers.
then added a run in the second on Pat
Morgan Halley, who took the scored the tying and go-ahead.runs
"In the first inning, I threw a cou- Kelly 's RBI double .
loss, struck out four, walked none artcr its first two hitters were retired.
ple right where I wanted and said, r
After•Milwaukee closed to 4-3, · and gave up five hits in a completeClint Scars, L1ttle Hocking's
'Oh hoy, that's going to be my pitch' the Yankees added three runs in the
game effort.
starter, struck out six.. walked five
tonight,'·" Alvarez said.
~inth on consecutive run·scoring
Stanley led Harrisonville's )litters and surrendered two hits - Nibert
_ ~oherto Hernandez pitched the singles by Paul O' Neill, Tina Mar·nint~ for11is 25th save. He struck out tinez and Charlie Hayes. It was Marthree and worked around two. infield tinez' league-leading 92nd R!ll.
errors.
Orioles S, Rangers I
Frank Thomas, who ended a 1Rafael Palmeiro put Baltimore in
·for-13 slump with four hits Sunday front for good at Texas with a twoat Baltimore, hit a two-run homer off run homer to back Jimmy Key 's sixJustin Tholflpson (8- 7) in the first hit pitching for six innings.
Key ( 13-6) struck out seven· and
inning. Thomas was 2-for-3 to raise
his American League-leading aver- walked one to pull out -of a tailspin
age to .375.
during which he had lost five of his
In other Amencan League games, previous six decisions. Key outNew York downed Milwaukee 7-3 pitched Darren Oliver (6- 10), who
and Baltimore stopped Texas 5-1. .
allowed four runs and six hits in 6
Yankees 7, Brewers 3
1/3 innings.
In Milwaukee, Andy Pellittc
The Rangers have "lost six of
picked oiT two batters to run his · eight. .
P-almeiro, who . played for the
league-leading total to II as he won
his fourth straight decision .
Rangers from 1989-93. put the Ori-.
Pettine (12-5), who·gave up three ales in front2-l in the sixth with his
runs and nine hits in 6 213 innings,
19th homer

(Continued from Page 4)
76 slump in a big way, hitting a
grand slam with two outs in the hot----~~~~--------tom of the ninth inning at Olympic
(Continued from Page 4)
Stadium.
• • "-------------------for his 15th save.
Rodriguez was Q-for-4 in the Cleveland 6-5 after going I- ll
Cleveland rookie Jarct Wright (2game and hitless in his la.'l 13 at-bats against the Indian s last season.
1)
was
impressive again, but lost for
when he hit a 1-2 pitch from Darren Cleveland is sputtering as, the Se&gt;tliolmes (3-2) barely inside the ri~ht- tic Mariners arrive today for a three- the lirst time in the majors. He
allowed two runs and five hils in six
field foul pole.
game series.
Rodriguez has 19 home runs. two
"1 don 'tthink we're in a slump," innings.
Notes: Red Sox shortstop Nomar
of them slams. Montreal stopped a Indians manager M'k
1 e Hargrovc
Garctapnrra
was hack in the, lineup
three-game losing streak and sent said. ''I think you have to realize
a
day
after
getting
hit ·on the lcrt
Colorado to its 16th loss in I~ they pitched very well against us."
elbow by a pitch from Charles Nagy.
8/'me~.
After Franco led off the sixth with
... Indians catcher Sandy Alomar left
Braves S, Dodgers 4
a single, Avery then had Vizqucl's
the
game al'!cr the fourth inning
· Jeff Blauser singled home the grounder go off his glove for a hi I.
because
of a brui sed lcrt knee " It 's
'winning run with two outs in the hot- Gnssom .sacri liccd the runners 10
·
nothing
serious,"
Hargrove s~11 tl ....
tom of the lOth at Atlanta. The second and third, and Tony Fernanlnju"red
Cleveland
ptt&lt;hcrs Chad
Bravcs went 6-6 on their longest dcz hit a sacrifice lly that cut
Ogca
and
Brian
Anderson
should he
homestand of the season.
Boston 's lead to 2-1.
ready
to
throw
off
the
mound
soon.
Blauser's single came one bauer
Boston added a
in the seventh
Jack
McDowell
is
still
relegated
to
ajier Rafael BcUiard was thrown out ,on Reggie Jefferson's RBI si ngle .
long·toss
exercises.
at the plate lrymg to score on Mtkc , Heathcliff Slocumh pitched the ntnth
l\1ordccai 's grounder to th trd baselllan Todd Zcilc.
Tom Glavinc pitched six innings·.
before leaving with a slightly
snraincd righi hamstring, but said he
docs not expect to miss a start lor the
Braves.
Raul Mondcsi and Eric Karras
homered for Los Angeles and 'Fred
l\1cGriff connected for Atlanta.
Cardinals 7, Giants 2
Gary Gaetli homered, doubled
' twice and drove in three runs as St.
Louis won at Busch Stadium.
The Cardinals won three of four
from the NL West leaders, who fell
to 4-8 since the All-Star break .
San Francisco leadoff hiller Darryl Hamilton"was ejected for arguing
a called third strike to open the game,
and Giants managcr,Dusty Baker
also was thrown out in .the dispute.
In the fourth inning, the Cardinals
TAKES CUT- Meigs' Chad Burton takes a cut at a pitch during
announced they were playing the
Monday's American Legion Eighth District tournament game
game under protest because the
against Logan at Meigs High School, where Logim vyon 12-8. (SenGtants' Bill Mueller was listed twice
tinel photo by Dave Harris)
on their lineup card.

Indianapolis.
The No. 5 ptck in the 1994 draft
was scheduled f'or rc..:onstrucllon of
his right shoulder. which was first
dislocated in college at Nebraska.

( 1-2) and Ga.,kins (1 - ~) got them in his four-inning stint. Ben Gum,
who wa~ intentionally walked three
times, relieved Scars in the fifth .
Gum struck out six, walked one and
gave up no hits.
Nibert fanned 12, walked as
many and gave up two hits - to
Josh Blackburn ( 1-1) and Matt Middleton (1-2)- in taking the complctc-gamo loss.
lnnlnc tl!1U;
·Lillie Hocking
II 0-203=7-2' I
Nationwide
201-fl00=3,2-l
WP -.Gum (in relief ol' Scars)
LP- Nibert

-*-

Here is the agenda for the next
three days .
To,night - Chester vs. Point
Pleasant Hardware at 6 p.m.; Gallipolis Reds vs. Bidwell II at 7:30
p.m.
Wednesday- New Haven Reds
vs. Bidwell I at 6 p.1i1.; Pomeroy
Ytmkces vs. Racine al 7:JO p m.
Thursday's quarterfinals Kyger Creek Raiders vs. Home Care
Medit.:cal at 6 p. m .~ Harrisnnvtllc vs.
Little Hocking at 7:30p.m.

run

Amuitlln Leagut
DETROIT TIGERS: A..:li\lal~d LHP

Basketball
4 •

a fast start in camp.

j

Baseball

COLORADO ROCKIES: Placed SS
Wall Wtin on 111£ 1 ~- da y disabletllist
Rccnlled JNF Crnlg Counsell from Col nr:uJo Spring~ of the P11cifil.: Cuusl

lil!

him da7s later after coming under
fire because of his legal problems at
Nebraska. The former New Jersey
prep star signed with New York in
December.
"I'm doing the best I can. If it's
not good enough , at least I can look
at myself and say I did the best I
could," Peter said Monday after a
practice at Albany, N.Y. "I can't
change what has happened in the
past. I can just go forward, that 's
what I plan on doing ."
. Peter joined the Giants after
agreeing to parttcipatc in a rehabilttation program that included substance abuse treatment and psychological counseling, treatment for
allention deficit disorder and a program to complete his undergraduate
degree. He did all that, and is off to

lndl"anS

MaJor Lt•cuc U.nall
MLB: Nomcd ShiU'Of\Robinsun llireclor of educ;;uiomtl progmmming.

tur~ricDn

WNBA standings

.MIAMI HF.AT Si!tlll't l Ci CIHtrll'~
Snuth It! ,lthrt-:c-yc:.r nnur.~~.:l
I'HII . I\IJI ~L PHI A 7fli :KS : 'ill!llt:d F
Marku Milic

Hnuslnn ,11 Hh!)I.'IIIIIO. 10 fl.lh.

Wednesday's games

t:uslrrn Oivishm

Iwa
~6 1

Monday's scores

{l-lm hi ser9·~); 7 ·05

S1.'11Hh: (O iivu rt: s 5-6),,, CLEVE LAND (Colon 2&lt;tJ. 7-U.'Ii p m
Oakland (Wojl'ICdwwskt 0-7) at
Bto~tun (Wi!kdicld -l- Hll. 1 O'li p.m .
Milwauk...-c (U 'Amu:o K--1) at Torontn
tCicmt:ns 15-.l). 715)'111
Knnsns C11y (Bd ...'hcr M-!J) HI MiRII\."511W (T!!wkshury -l-H). H,O.'i fl m
·
B:LIIll'llllrl' (Mu~~lnll 10- -l ) at Tu,ls
(Will 10-:'i\. ~ ).'i l'·m

11'·

Westrrn Di¥itilWl
Se:\11~ .... , ............. ~~
.A.nuhc1m ...............~

OH : 1\llwua(Maddull. J.' - ~ ami Nc;tttll'
D-2) &lt;~I Chi c;'l!o Cuhs 1Gunzalc1 7-2 :md
Mulhull:md b-9) I p m.
Color:uJu (Swifl .&amp; -J) :11 M1mtrc:li ·
{Perez 9-6), 7:.15 p m.
Floridu (A . lcic~r tl-6) :11 Cincmn:ui
(Smiky H- 10), 1 J.'i p.m
.
Hous10n (Hampwn 6-7) lit St. Lou is
(An Bl'IICll b-41. K : O~ p.m.
N.Y. ~e1s (Clark 7-b) :u l...,~ . Anl!-elt.'s
1Cant.l1orta :'i·.l). 10 05 p.m.
Pil,tsburgh ((ur~t\'U 6-6) :&amp;1 S1111 Dit.:~u
{H"m•lton ll-.31. 10.05 p.m.
Philad!.!lphin (Bt.-ech 0-5) m Sun Fwn-

Wt\111! Smc (Ba ldwul 7-9) at

Dt-1ru11 (81;ur H-1 l. 1 ·0~ 1'-"'
Analli!HII (Watson K-6) 111 NY. Y;mkL-e• (Guutlcn 1-3). I ·05p.m

AL standings
I.um

Tonigbt's ~ames

Wednesday's games
Cht.:a~o

diti_ons Mond~y evening at Meigs High School.
Metgs wtll host the Blue Devils in the season
opener on Aug. 29.- ·
·

·

ChiSox shut out Tigers 3-0
to trim·Tfibe's division lead

BRAGG SCORES - The Boston Red Sox's
Darren Bragg (56) slides Into the plate ahead of
Cleveland pitcher Jaret Wright following a
passed ball in the third Inning of Monday night's

GETT1NG READY - With the season opener
with Gallla Academy just 40 days away, Mike
Chancey and the Meigs Marauders kicked off the
11ktay Instructional period In the hot humid con-

Peter gets fresh start with Giants; Alt ·retires after 13 years'

Scoreboard
Baseball

number of ways to say that there's no
news.
A sampling:
Sunday, July 13, the day before
the rookie report dale: Vermeil notes
there was a three-hour telephone session two days earlier, but no communication stnce. "So itdoesn'tlook
like he'll be here. I didn't expect him
to be here."
Tuesday, July 15, following the
first rookie workout without the
offensive line 's meal ticket: There's
been another three-hour session to
report , and a speck of optimism.
"When you 're communicating
and the tone of voice is respectful
between two parties, I think you
have a positive chance of gelling
things done."

NFL teams continue pre-season camps

Pirates get past Phillies 3-2;
Braves win and Giants lose
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
1be fans at Veterans Stadium in
Philadelphia got their last look at
Darren Daulton in the Phillies
dugout, and gave him a standing
ovation.
Later Monday, after cheering Curt .
Schilling's 15-strikeout performance,
the crowd had good reason to wonder whether it has seen the last of the
Philadelphia ace.
Schilling, the subject of several
trade rumors, set an NL high for
strikeouts this season. But the lastplace Phillies lost 3-2 to the Pills·
burgh Pirates when rookie Kevin
Polcovich hit a tiebreaking home run
in the seventh inning.
"My goal is to win," said
Schilling, who increased his leagueleading strikeout total to 19.1.
"Strikeouts didn't help me win
today. To strike out 15 and lose doesn't mean that much."
Before the .game, the Phillies
traded Daulton, who began playing
for the Phillies in 1983, to Florida for
outfielder Billy .McMillon. The
crowd of 19,303 booed when the

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Holdout makes Pace miss
workout sessions with Rams

Page4

By RONALD lliLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Mets are looking at the standings every day for the first time in
years..
"We all are. We'd be lying if we
said we didn't," closer John Franco
said after Monday's S-3 victory over
Cincinnati pulled New York within
a half-game of Florida in the NL
wild-card race.
"It's been such a long time since
this time of year when the games
meant something," Franco said. "It's
so exciting to come to the ballpark.
In year's past, I hated gelling in my

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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v

THE MEIGS tOIJNT-Y FAIR EDITION .
IS COMING AUGUST 7, 1997
ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS JULY 30TH
CALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION.
DONNIE Rl
EXT. 1OS • DAVE HARR EXT. 104

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Plgt I •The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu•day, July 22, 1997

A
nnd
Lan ers

IWT. .... ...,., , . _

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De.- Ann Landers: I am a widow
and n years old, and I don't do anythins right ~ing to my kids and
the health experts.
·I have been smoking for SO years.
My diet is crazy. I love spaghetti for
breakfast and enjoy pigging out on
pizza at midnight. I never exercise
and routinely circle the parking lot

unull find a space d1rectly m front
of the store. I read all night and get
up at6:30 a.m. and go to work.
'I am a foster mother and have.
twins who are 7. I have taken care of
h 'ld
d .
h.
fi
34 c 1 ren unng I e past 1ve
years, and two years ago, I w~
voted Single Foster Mother of the
Year. I have two great daughters and
a wonderful son, plus terrific sonsin-law. My six granddaughters and
one grandson are fantastic. (Show
me a grandmother who doesn't think
her grandchildren are fantastic.)
1d
'1 h
.
o manage to get a year y p ys1cal, never take p1lls, hardly ever
. have a cold and never drive 1n ternble weather. My mother was one of

..

14, and most of them lived into their

90s.

My dear husband died a few
years ago, my apartment burned
down last year and my old car is
.
d
.
g01ng stea y With my garage
mechanic (wish I were). I have very
little money and some personal fam'ily problems like everybody else,
butltry not to --:orry too much. .
I do have a sense of humor about
everything. including myself. I'm 20
pounds overweight but keep promising myself I'll get into a bikini next
·
·
summer._! plan _for the future as ifl
were gomg to hve anothe• 50 years.
Do you think maybe 1 have lost my
marbles and don 'I know it" Be hon·

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'-

est with me, Ann ... M.W.B. Bristol
RI
• . •
.
h
M.W.B .: I don' t think you
ave ost your marbles, but I do
believe· you were awfully lucky to
have inherited such fine genes. It
would be a good idea, however. if
you took better care of yourself.
If that garage mechanic isn't
already spoken for, I suggest you go
after h1m. A romantic interest in the
s_unset years could add a lotto your
hfe. You have proven what 1 have
been saying for years --J·ust because
there 's snow on the roof doesn't
mean there's no fire in the furnace.
De A L d
S
1
ar nn an ers: evera years
ago, you printed this ess~y. which

De

f

has been

used b Alcoh 0 1· A

'
he h
•rom I
orne.
Rugs from the floor, food from
tbe t~ble,
..
Lmmg from tbe stomach, VISIOn
from the eyes

Y
•cs nonyfor ?ver.20 ye~. f~d :o~
pease pnnt II agam.
I m ~~
deserve_s to be seen by the present
generation. -- Houston
De H 1
Th k
r
k" ar I dou~ on:
an you or
And judgment from the mind.
as mg .
o~ I k~::W when I hav~
Alcohol Will remove good repu~~~ ~o~ ':'~· WI Ao~ compresse muons. .
.
:
vent
e •nes. n ffectJve SolGood JObs, g~. fnends, happ1AI h .
.
ness from children s hearts,
versa~f; 1 IS ~ product of amazmg . Sa~•ty. fr~edom, spouses, rela1
llonsh•p.s. . .
. .
·
II whe• remove slams from design. Man s ablhty to adjust and live
er c 01 s.
w1th h1s fellow man
It will also remove tbe clothes off
And even lif. · 'tf
our back.
e use ·.
Y If . .
.
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.
As a remover of thmgs, alcohol
Al'c'o'hsoulsed -'t"t sufficient fqua~llty, ,has no equal.
WI remove umuure

~ous

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McDonald 's has been testing the
there, hot and steamy even before the
cus10mer has the money out of his tech~ology in 64 stores around the
country . . including Pueblo, Colo.;
pocket. .
·
Shreveport, La .. ; Columbus, Ohio;
McDonald
's
is
putting
the
"
fast"
.
back into fast food as it works to lure and Grand Rapids, Mich. The chain
more c ustomers hac k. New technol- last week approved an expansion of
ogy being tested here and elsewhere the test to stores in the San Diego
has automated the preparation of fries area, spokeswoman Julie Cleary said.
McDonald's, based in the Chicaand drinks and made it easier and
faSier to prepare better-tasting made" go suburb of Oak Brook, has been
struggling to boost sales while fendto-order f&lt;fod.
"Some people have·the mistaken ing off competitors such as Wendy's
impression that you can improve the and Burger King. It has shaken up its
quality of the food , but only at the domestic mana~ement. introduced
expense of serv-ice." Bigari said. new promotions and sandwiches and
" We've proven them wrong."
slowed expansion - with little
immediate impact on the bottom
line.
Analysts, franchisees and customers say McDonald's must focus
on its (ood if it hopes to expand its
domestic operations. The chain last
week reported that second-quarter
by Bob Hoeflich
sales at domestic stores open at least
a year declined despite marketing
campaigns including Monopoly, discounted Chicken McNuggets and
Congratulations are in order for . front · of his Pomeroy theater. Mrs. Teenie Beanie Babies .
Pearl and Clara Stahl Gilkey who will Underwood also recalls returning 10
. Executives have hinted for months
observe their 68th wedding anniver- Pomeroy for the funeral of her at changes in the way the company
Grandfather StiveFS.
sary on Wednesday, July 23.
Mrs. Underwood was only a year
Pearl and Clara were married on
July 23, 1929. at Newark, Ohio. or so old when her. family moved
Pearl is 92 and Clara is 89. Cards and from Pomeroy to Highland, Ill ..
messages will reach them at 31671 where he younger brother, William,
Deadman's Curve Road, Pomeroy, was born. The family lived in Highland about 10 years then moved to
Ohio 45769.
·
Tremon. Jll. , where they resided,two
Arrangements have been com- · years before settling in Lawrence,
pleted for Gen. James V. Hartinger, Kansas. Her father wa.&lt; employed by
(R) to visit locally and hold a session ·Reuter's Organ Fac10ry during all
at which he will autograph his book, these moves and it almost figures that
"From One Stripe to Four Stars".
he 1llUSt have worked at one time at
. General Hartinger, a former Mid- the Pomeroy Organ Factory.
dleport resident as you remember,
As a young child. Mrs. Under·
will be at the Middleport Library wood recalls summer trips back to
from J(} a.m . to 12 noon on Aug. 20 Pomeroy with her mother, her older
to autograph his book.
sister. Dorothy, and her younger
You still have time to purchase the brother. Willie. with her father stavbook if you want and you ·can do this ing in Highland to work at the organ
by calling 1-800-999-1195, the Chi- factory joining hisfamily in Pomeroy
nook Book Store.
General during his vacation
Hartinger's wife, · Mickey, will pe.
Nancy and Fred Combs found
accompanying him on the trip back their visit to Pomeroy very interest~
home.
ing and rewarding and hope to return
to Pomeroy in the near future for
Nancy and Fred Coombs. 711 more research .
West Delaware Ave., Urbana, Ill.,
In case you need family 1\istory

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Beat . of. the ·send ...

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KIDDIE GAMES • Games 8nd
children - . part
of CheltllriShedit Daya.
two youngsters_. among 1111ny
boya and glrla who partlelpated In the games.
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C:CI.ISSIONER AI EXANDER • Pomeroy Attorney I. Carson

Crow po111av-ct Wlllam Alexander, a 19th-century Meigs Coun·
ty Commluloner during Saturday's tlmellne. 81(tlllt. Also portraying put commlulonarl ware Attornay Charles Knight of
Chaslllr and ·. . - t comml11ioner Jeffrey Thornton.

Parade participation topic
of Chester D of A meeting
Parade participation was planned daughter, Martie Holter, all received
when the Chester Council 323, scholarships from the Naiional Board
Dauahtcrs of America, met recently this year.
at the hall.
A picnic preceded the meeting
Final p!IIIS were made for partie· held at the hall with Esther Smith.
ipation in the Chester/Shade Days Ella Osborne, and Ruth Smith as
ob!lervance held Saturday where Ada hostesses.
Morris, foundcrofthectiesterCoonEsther Smith presided at the metcit in 1934, was hjlnored. She is no'!:_ · ing with Gol4ie Frederick reading
at the Rock Springs Rehabilitation -from Mark 4. The pledges were givCenter.
en. Others attending were Elizabeth
The group will also participate in Hayes, Jean Frederick. Marcia Keller,
the · Founder's Day parade at Everett Grant. Charlotte Grant. Gary'
Coolvi!le, Aug: 2, 10 a.m.
Holter, lnzy Newell, Delores Wolfe,
Talnng part 1n the July 4 parade at Julie Curtis, Scottie Smith. Mary Jo
Rutland were Everett Grant, Chi!J'· Barringer, Laura Mae Nice, Thelma
IQ\te Grant, Gary ; Holte~, Brenda - White, Jean Welsh. Opal Eichinger.
Holter Lemley, Juhe Cun1s, Mart1c Doris Grueser, Enna Cleland, Jo
Holter.
Ann Ritchie, Bob Ritchie, Opal HoiIt was announced that Helen ton, Sandra White, Ruth Smith,
Wol_fc's gra~. Andrew Wolfe, Guests were Ryan and J. J. Bailey of
Dons Gruesers granddaughter, Tara Cold Spring, Ky., grandsons of Mary
Grue~r, and Mary K. Holter's grand- Jo Barringer.
.

Bible school a first for country church
For the first time, or '!I least for as
remember. the St.
John Lutheran Church
"bl on Pine Grove
Road will have a B! e school.
It is scheduled to be held Monday
th~-h
,• ....,. Aug. I, 6: 30 to 8:30 p.m. for
children preschool through sixth'
1
grade.
Theme will be "Adventure Fair".
There will be singing, Bible lessons
and crafts each evening.
_
long~ anyone can

Pre-registration is requested to
determine the amount of materials
needed. For infonnation or to register, residents may call Louise
Michael, 985-4237; Joyce Bartels,
9852970; Margaret Parker, 992-2264,
or Jill Burdette, 667-3993.
Interim pastor George Weirick
and members bf the congregation
invite neighborhood children to
attend the Bible School.

Home delivery 9ffered.by library
The Meigs County Public Library
is offering a new service --• home. bound delivery.
Once a month books and magszinc are delivered to the homes o.f
those who have difficulty getting out
and about. There is no charge for the
service.
The librarian reports that residents
may request specific titles or suggest
subject matter and then let library
personnel select books which they
feel are compatible with the interest

D of A members have picnic
and another at Coolville's Founder's
Day prqgram, Aug. 2.
A reading was given Erma Cleland on bad days, and another was
given by Laura Mae Nice titled "You
Deserve a Little Lift."
Door prizes were won by Cleland,
Nice, Sandy White, and Goldie Fred-

. were in Pomeroy recently doing

Games were conducted by Barringer. Others attending were Marcia
Keller. Thelma White. Mary K.
Holter, Delores Wolfe, Pauline Ridenour, Jan Frederick. lnzy Newell.
Opel Eichinger, Margaret Amberger,
and Ella Osborne. Guests were Bar·
bara Sargent. Sandy White and Dave
Barringer.
.
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Parker returns from trip west ·

Valley.

.

FACE ART· Gwen Hall of Cheater displayed her artistic talent
by offering face painting at Chester/Shilde Days. Little JennHer
Starcher, &amp;, was one .of Mrs. Hall's 1111ny subjects.

to

Mandy Hill Boso graduted from
Hocking College, Nelsonville, June

home .

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The Dally Sentinel

• nd.·IIDDU dpJed to promote

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs Local Board
of Education. regular meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday, board office.

•nt'al Md .,e-W nuts. The
ala or fud rsllen ol any type.
I ' - prillted •
permlls
Mil ""'""' be paruteed to 11111 a
apedflt •mber o1 daya.

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. TUESDAY
RACINE- RACO, Tuesda f, 6:30
p.m. Star Mill Park, New m Jmbers
welcome.

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIOS -- Athletes interested in playi111 junior high football
to meet Wednesday, 6 p.m. at Eastern
school. Helmet fitting following
meeting.

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POMEROY -- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's Fellowship, Thursday. 7 p.m. at Zion
Church of Christ. Rutland to have
devotions.
RACINE - An organizational
meeting for all girls playing volleyball at Southern High School. grades
9 through ) 2, will be beld on Thursday at the high school cafeteria at 7

p.m.

MANDY BOSO

has a supply of the
commemorative edition
for Middleport's
Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50 and can
be picked up at
The Dally Sentinel
from
•
8am-5pm
Mon~y · ,Friday.

C.omfnunity calendar
RIJTI..AND -- Rutland Garden
Club, annual picnic. home of Pauline
Atkins, Wednesday. 6 p.m.

'
Soulhern Ohio Corrcctionallnstitule
in Lucasville were approved by the
Board . Also, 1he OVAL Board
approved the renewal of the Books
By Mail Services contracts with
Muskingum County Library System
in Zanesville and the Ella M. Ever- ·
hard Public Library of Wadsworth.
Director Eric S. Anden;dn updal·ed the Board on several develop·
mcnts. OVAL has been selected to
coordinate the merger of several
regi onal library system data bases
and provide new data 111 a web ·
accessible form. He also reported that
income from OPLIN train in~ will be
· significantly less than expected.
. Founded in 1973, OVAL is Ohio's
cation, and resource sharing activities
for 1997-1998. The legislature appro- oldest charlered regi onal library syspriated $435.759 for operations for tem . In cooperation with member
the year. A cornerstone of OVAL publi c libraries, OVAL provides
state-funded' services for the coming resources sharing, library develop·
year is sixty-eight workshops and ment and hooks by mail services to
users' groups coordinated by Member more 1han 260,000 residents in
Services Librarian Gail Zachariah.
Athens, "Jackson, Lawrence. Meigs.
Affiliate "Member Conlracts for P1ke, Ross, Scioto and Vinton coun·
Pickaway-Ross Joint Vocational tics.
School Districl in Chillicothe and the

Remodeling on the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries headquarters in Wellston
was discussed at last week's meeting
of the Board of Trustees.
Prior to the meeting the building
committee reviewed a proposal. by
MGB Architecture of Lancaster .for
the proposed work. Wanda Eblin of
the Meigs County District Public
Library in Pomeroy, reported the
results of that discussion to the entire
board. Since several things need
clarification, a dedsion was post-·
poned.
The board ratified the contract
with the State Library of Ohio to pro·
vide administration, continuing edu-

.15,
a diploma in licensed prac·
tricalwith
nurst'ng.
She also received the1r· Joyce D.
s h
mit Award, the selection being
made by her Classmates. She plans to
work over the. summer and then
return to Hock•"ng College 1·0 the fall
to earn her associate degree in ours-

of the patron.
Large print books and books on
tape area available also.
The homebound service is available to individuals in private homes,
nursing homes, and the senior citizens centers.
For more information or to get the
service started. residents may call
Affirming effect
992-5813.
In 1979, the U.S. surgeon general
The bookmohile will not be oper- affirmed that cigarettes cause heart
ating until school starts. it was report- disease, cancer and other diseases.
ed.

'Be com..ualty Calendar Is
palllllhed • • r- ~ervlce to aoa·
proftt..,..... willllDa to an-nee

OVAL. remodeling
project discussed

Mandy Boso
earns d1'ploma

ingMandy resides in Great Bend
. Comedian coming
Middleport on Aug. 8
with her husband. Charlie. and son.
Mike Warnke "Live" will be pre· ..,ica's #I Christian comedian. There is Dylan. She is. the daugher of Rcta
sentcd at the Ash Street Freewill Bap· no admission charge. A love offering . Hill, Ravcnswmd, w. Va. and the late
tist Church at 399 Ash Street, Mid· will be received.
George Alhcrt Hill.
dleport. Aug . 8, 9 and 10, 7 p.m. r-------------_;.---~--.;,.
Warnke has been descnbed as Amer·

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FRIDAY
RIJTI..AND -- Rutland Church of
God, ·weekend revival, Friday and
.Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday. 10 a.m. and
6p.m.
CHESTER -- Harvest Outreach
Church in Chester, three night .
revival, Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.;
Sunday. 6 p,m.
SATURDAY
RACINE -- Huqson reunion, Sat·
urday, 5 p.m. at the Star Mill Park,
Racine. Potluck, table service to be
provided.

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SUNDAY
CHESTER -- Chester High
Sehool Class of 1931, annual picnic,
Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Teachers and
classmates invited.

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does business, promising new tech- ,we ' re going to see (McDonald's) a

nology and new dishes that can bes1
be served with that technology.
To

cmph ~size

that direc tion ,

little more nimble. in days ahead,
working to address some of Iheir

it's easier on the crew. And from a
customer standpoinl, the perceived·
qualily is dramalically different." ·

competitive shortcomings."

The hrains of the operation is a

McDonald 's last week appointed . Bigari is onc ...franChi scc singing computc,r system that instantly transmits orders to the kitchen , allowing
Tom Ryan, a former Long John Sil· the technology's praJSes
"The underly1ng technology pre- workers to prepare hot, made-forver's and Pizz.a Hut executive, as vice
presiden.t of menu management to pares 1he best food you can gel," he ordeo food and raising the restaurant's
said. "Then the facllhat ll 's all fresh efficiency level substantially,
oversee food development .
. McDonald 's executives say.
But the new equipmenl. which has just makes it all the better."
Behind the counter, two of his five · The computer e'ven "senses"
been Jested quietly Jar the pasl four
years, cou ld do more for McDonald's Colorado Springs restaurants have a increases iQ custome r traffic and
than any other in itiative - if il is futuri stic feel. with computer screens orders workers to make up particular
embraced by franchisees, who would everywhere and digital clocks ticking sandwiches in advance. It also can
have to spend tens .of thousands of off'thc lime lo pre pare food.
perform analyses that tell owners the
In plain sight of the customer, a right number of workers for anv Jtivdollars to remade.!.
Analysts say it's no surprise

computer-monitorcd machine dumps

McOQnald 's is moving against its

frozen fries into a basket that in tum
competition, which have seen strong is dunked into hot oil for cooking.
sajes gains while revenues at McDon- Then the machi ne shakes lhe fnes
·aJd's stores open at least a year have and dumps them into bins for serving.,
been slipping. Although the domes- Robot machines elsewhere prepare
tic business has been down recently, drinks so quickly that a woman's
it is by no means out, said Merrill large Diet Coke is poured before she
changes her mind and orders a reguLynch analyst Peter Oakes.
"McDonald's is like a big battle· Jar med1um Coke.
"So much of this is so radical ,
ship that's slow to tum, and the competition is presenting more of a chal· something we 've ·ne ver done bcf~re,"
_lenge today than what they saw even Bigari said. "It's kind of fun. it's kind
a few years ago," Oakes said. "But of entenaining. but at the same time

en hour of the day or week.

In the kitchen, McDonald's has set
up computer-run holding bins that
regulate temperatures for cooked
meat to keep it hot and juicy. By
keeping track of the lime meat was
placed in each bin; store managers
know exactly when 30 minutes have
passed. At that point, McDonald's
says restaurants should throw out the
food, even if it remains hot.
. The bins allow staff to wait for
orders to appear on an overhead compuler screen and made sandwiches
quickly, no matter what the order.

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Elliott, Arnold marriage revealed

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Angela Faith Elliott, daughter of
Marcia and Herben Elliott, and and
Randall Luther Arnold, son of Cheryl
Smith, Middleport, were married on
March 23 at the home of the bride's
parents in R11tland.
JoAnn Eads, mayor of Rutland,
performed the double ring ceremony
at 2:30 in the afternoon before fami ly members and several close friends .
Given in marriage hy her parents,
the bride was attired in a pale peach
knee length dress. Her attendan\,
Stacey Srickles. Columbus. wore a
mauve pantsu it .

. Brian Smith, Middleporl, served
·• as best man for his brother.·
A reception honoring the couple

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infonnation, you might give the

some genealogy on behalf of Nancy's Meigs Museum a try. You'd be sur·
Mother, Mildred .Zweifel Under- prised at the amount of material on
wood, who cherishes many memories hand there.
·
of Pomeroy.
Mrs. Underwood is now 88 and
Racine's Jack Lyons is laid up at
his
home with a leg problem which
lives in Lawrence, Kansas . where her
has
been bothering him a bit-lately.
father William Zweifel worked for
He
has
been ordered off his feet for
Reuter's Organ Factory. · He married
Emma Stivers of Pomeroy, and the at least two weeks. Energetic Jack,
couple lived in Pomeroy ·before mov- who's keeps on the move more than
the Energizer Bunny. is gonna hate
ing.
While here Mr. and Mrs. Coombs thai. You might want to drop him a
visited the Meigs Museum to pick up card or note.
information Mrs. Underwood recalls
Those rains weren't very well dis~
that her father's youngest brother,
Nyman Zweifel, died tragically at the tributed were they? Not only are the
age of 29 in Pomeroy while he was flowers sickly but the grass looks like
trying 10 lift some heavy films left by its about to make the trip . Any~?ric
delivery people on the sidewalk in know a rain dance? Do keep smiling.

crick .

Nellie Parker returned recently
Mis . Parker then visited her
from a trip to the West Coast where cousin. Eleanor Avery, at Seattle,
she visited her son and his wife , Eric Wash. Joining them for dinner were
and Jan Parker at Livermore, Calif. Jim and Colby Hess, Issaquah; Jenine
They attended Aldersgate UMC. Kirk. and Erin Smith, Woodinville;'
Can Francisco where they heard their Debbie Carefoo!. Edward Parker and
friend the Rev. Mary Elyn Bahlert, Tammi, Arlington . .
·preach. They atteaded a performance
Mrs. Parker also visited her son,
of the San Francisco Symphony Edward. and granddaughter, Tammi
. where George Gers hwm
· · mus1c
· was an d fnen
· ds, Dcbb.1e an d M"1ke carepi ayed and p1cnJc
· · ked on J.u1y 4 att hc foot ncar Ar1·mgt on. Th cy an d Ray
home of Linda Ott.
and Devana Cannon toured the Mt.
Other ht".ghlt'ghts .of th'e trt'p were S1. Hc1en area where thc cart hqua kc
· k"mg peac hes and tomatoes al 1he an d vo 1cano of May 18 . 1980. devp1c
farms east of Livermore, visited Jeff aSiatcd a wide area which is slowly
K k1 h
f "W · F'
.
un e • aut oro
anmng ~re s.":, recovering Its natural beauty. .
toured st·mson Beac h, pon Reyes
Mrs. Parker VIS· ·lied ather "•TIC nd s m
·
~t
t"
d
01
1
h
p
·f
1
Ef'
Adk.
D
c
'
~ a 1on, an
ema a ong t c ac1 . tlc area, uc
ms, on are1oot,
· 0ccan and re tumed horne v1a
· Napa an d Ph ~ 1rIS ward be~ore rcturmng
·
1c

July 22, 1997
Page7

...

PRESENTATION • Dr. Ivan Tribe of the University of Rio Grande
1111de a prasent•tlon about American · Indians during
Che•ter/Shade Days on Saturday. His presentation was 1111de In
conjunction with historical reenactments.

Members of the Past Councilors
Club of Chester Cooncil 323, Daugh·
ters of America, enjoyed a picnic .
recently at the home of Mary Jo Barringer, Alfred.
;
Erma Cleland had the blessing. A
patriotic tape was played to open the
meeting. followed by the pledge and
Lord's Prayer. Barringer read scrip·
ture from John I, Chapter I and members answered roll call by saying
what they are thankful for in America.
Officers' reports were given and ·
officers for the ne•t si• months were
installed by Barringer. Plans were
made to participate in parades, the
one at Chester/Shade Days Saturday

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) - McDonald's owner-operator
Steve Bigari issues the challenge:
Order anything you want and watch
the new Golden Arches at work.
·
The battle is engaged. and the
~lock starts ticking. One cheeseburg·
ec. extra pickles, add sorrie bacon,
hold the mustard. One Arch Deluxe,
~xtra mustard. One Quarter Pounder
with cheese, e•tra pickles, ketchup,
mustard and no onions. Two Crispy
Chicken meals and one Grilled
Chicken meal, with two medium
drinks.
Forty-two seconds later, it's all

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Tue~ay,

McDonald's putting the fast back in its food

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The Daily Sentinel

ByThe ·Bend

Good gene&amp; make a difference in this unhealthy lifestyle

was held at the liome of the bride's
parents. A three tiered ivory cake was
served with other refreshments.
· The'couplc took a wedding trip to

Mynle Beach. S.C. They now reside
on Salem Street in Rutland.·

The new Mrs. Arnold is a 1991
graduate of Meigs High School and
a 19943 graduate of the Tri-County
Adult Education Center. Nelsooville,
where she studied medical records.
She is employed at Veterans Memorial Hospital
.•
Arnold graduated from Meigs
High in 1989 and from the Buckeye
Hill's program in police work in
1991. He is employcd .at 1hc Meigs
Coumy Sheriffs Office.
(

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CELLULAR
Pomeroy 204 West 2nd Street 614/992-7970 Gallipolis 1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441-0547
Athens 1100 East Slate Slreel 614/594-4800 Jackson •384 Main Street 614/286-6073

�•
Pige 8 • The Dally Senllnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday,

July 22, 1997

Tueeday, July

22,1817

, . Deily Sentinel• , . . .

Shopping for college should start early-By

MARK CURNUTTE

,

The Clnclnnetl Enqulrw
Selecting the right collep at the
right price is among life most
daunting experiences for high school
students and parents. Shopping for a
college can be made e.Sier by starting early - many college admissions
counselors and educators reco-wad
the sophomore year Of high school.
And while lechnology ,1111d the
Internet are the rage today wi!h their
virtual campus tours and on-line
applications, they are no substitute

for communication, campus VISits
and hard work, experts say. Students
still need to write the pernonal essay.
Remember, too, families uen 't
just shopping for a college. They' re
selling a product too -the student.
The first step is for the student to
honestly answer these questions:
- What do I want to study?
- What kind of town do I want

home?
.
- What kinds of activities outside
of class are imporulnt?
Once these questions arc
answered, the vast majori\y of the
3,550 U.S. two- and four-year colleges can be eliminated.
"There isn ' t a cookbook or a road
map to follow. The process is unique
to each studen~ " says Jim Williams,
to live in?
director of Enrollment Seryices at the
· - How big a school is accept· University of Cincinnati.
able? ·
·
After narrowing choices, parents
- Is it imporQint to stay close to and the student can zero in on figur-

ing oul bow to pay for a college education.
. Adding housing and other living .
expenses to tuition, the averaae fouryear cost at a public university is
more than $44,000, nearly $94,000 at
a private school.
But figure to add a year or two to
!hat time span. Fewer lhan one-third
of college students earn their degrees
in four years. According to Money
magazine, 55 percent of students now
take six years to earn their degrees.
. For most families, college is the

-----.,.-Chivalry takes some knocks--South were spent in or around doorways where I found myself a part of
the following formation: one gliy
holding the door open, a couple
more guys lined up next to him and ·
then me looking around for whoever
it was they were holding the door
open for.
While I was slow to realize that it
was little-ol' -me they were waiting
on, I was quick to get used to the custom. Once I returned to the "every-

man-and womaq-for-themselves"
West I found·myself running straight
into the differences between the tj\'o
cuhures.
II wasn't just doors with those
Southern Gents. They pulled out my
chair, woiited on me at meals and even
offered to help me with my travel
plans.
.
,
' The only drawback I could foresee to being treated like a lady, is 1hat
eventually I might be exptcted to act

Life gives good reason to be paranoid

Aboololl Top Dolor: All U.S. Sllvor And Gold Colno, ProoiHll,
Dlamolldo, Anliqve - ,, Gold
o, Pr•11311 U.S. Currency.
Etc. A04Uitlllono ~
• M.T. Coin Shop, 151 '8o&lt;:ond

second-biggest purchase behind their ,than it does at colleges - is an idehomes. Heno's how and when to start, al time to visit campuses, counselors
say. Students should attend classes
shopping for college .
OIOosing classes for high school and stay in dorms.
Colleges encourage the visil Mosl
is ,when the actual planning process
begins,
offer phone Jines dedicated 10 nothing but scheduling campus visits for
In~, a high school curriculum
that challenges the student and · prospective students.
includes advanced placement. and
By the first semester, students
honors cournes is·the No. I atlribuie should have nanowed college choiccolleges look for in a high school stu- es - and applied- to a half-dozen
dent, according to the Fairfax, Va.- schools. Application costs for fourbased Independent Educational Con- year colleges range from $25 to $60
sultants Association.
(such as at Harvard Un'iversity).
S1udents and parents continually Many community colleges don't
should think about college during the chatge an application fee.
firnt 1wo years of high '!"hool. Ninth
While money has to be considand IOih grades are not too early to ered. cost shouldn't automatically "
attend college nights at local high limit choices. For instance, some
schools.
families · might rule out private .
For many students, career choic- schools, thinking public schools are
1
es can begin to come inlo focus dur- more afforadable.
ing the first half of high school. But
Not necessarily.
students shouldn't worry if they don't
· Here are some basic tips regarding
know what to major in. Counselors financial aid:
advise studenls to stay flexible and
- Identify the colleges and unitake a hi'Oad, ~hallenging course versities you 're considering and
schedule that could fit into different determine their financial-aid filing
areas. . .
·
requirements and deadlines, which
These arc also years to· begin vary from school to school.
building a resume !hat appeals 10 col- Expect 10 spend some time
leges by adding reliable work expe- with one or more of these need-based
rience or community service activi- financial-aid forms. The Free Applities to in-school activities.
cation for Federal S1udcn1Aid (FAFCollege-bound students should SA) is required for everyone applytake standardized tests- ACf, SAT, .ing for federal aid. II should he comPSAT - before the end of lith pleted as early as possible af1er Jangrade. Taking them then allows for uary I.
- Don 't assume your income is
the retaking of entire tests or partictoo
high. Na1ionally, nearly 60 perular segments of the tests if better
cent of college students receive some
scores are desired.
aid.
Other questions to consider:
For school year .1995-1996,$50.3
- Geography. A majority of stubillion
in tolal aid from federal,
deniS choose a college ~ithin one
slate,
and
institutional sources was
day's drive of home.
awarded
to
students, $3.3 billion
- Will the student apply 10 colleges whose admission policies vary? higher than the previous year.
Bu1 increasingly, 1hat aid comes in
Many counselors sugsest applying to
at least one school that is an acade- the form of loans. The federal student
mic "lock" for the studenl and anoth- aid program has moved from a granter that is a "reach" - a school that centered approach - free money to
might be a bit beyond high school needy students - to a Joan-oriented
academic and standardized test per- system.
formances.
Twenty years ago, students look
·out $1.20 in loans for every S I in
- .Private or public'
- , Independent or religiously grants. That ratio is now $3.80 to $1.
affiliated?
.And the average student Joan Campus size and student-profes- more than ~.000 a year - is seven
sor ratio are other major factors that times what it was in 1975.
sway students' choices, says Meg
- Bring extenuating family
Winchell, director of admissions at financial circumstances to the attenNorthern Kentucky University, High- tion of college financial-aid adminland Heights.
istrators. Some private schools· may
Parents have some concerns that · W'lflt your child as a student and
their children might not consider, so might be willing to increase the conit's good to work as a team.
tribution.
"Parents want to know how safe
their son or daughter will he on campus," Winchell says.
-Visiting college campuses is the
moSI important step in making this
choice.
Spring break for juniors in high
school - which usually comes later

like one.
As a born-and-bred Westerner I
can build a decent fire, find my way
out of the woods and even treat a rattlesnake bite -but put me In a social
situation that calls for daint:y ladylike
behavior, and I'm at a loss.
My biggest challenge is the mastery of small talk. which I have small
tolerance for. After a morning of talking about nothing but the weather, I
sat down to lunch wilh the intention
\
••
of getting to know my writing-conference colleagues better.
By the lime the pecan pie was polished
off, the people at my )able knew
By HOLUS L ENGLEY
Disease Control, lots of newspaper 17 people electrocuted every year by
all
about
my marital situation, my coGMnett Newa Sarvlce
and magazine articles," she says. "I hair-dryers; ·
.
dependency issues and my dog's
You have no idea how mllllb _._. basically spent a lot of months holed
- Or one of 200,000 seriously massage therapist.
ger lurks nearby.
, , · i·
. up in the San Francisco Library.
injured in the bathroom;
' In return, I knew that !hey all
Even right now, w~'re in
"I read anything. And it was like
- Or one of the 300 Americans thought' it was an unusually warm
your own home. (One iii
:Arner- mining ·through .the computer lines. killed every year by lightning (which.
• icans will be injured by a toilet seat You'd hila key word like 'bacteria' strikes .the earth 6,000 times every day.
In the end it all worked out fine.
in his or her. )ifelimei mos~· Vf the and it would take you off into strange minute);
My
new friends were kind enough to:
injured will be. men.)
. •.
diseases. I'd spend hours and hours
-That you might be infected by expand their definition of a lady, and
Or later, in your car. (1'hil palms getting deeper and deeper into horri- flesh-eating bacteria (which happens
I tried to tone myself down a tad.
of toll booth colleclors are a t[/jmcu- ble things."
more often than lightning deaths);
Although it has been a relief to be
Jarly fertile breeding VO!Iild for
(Body odor .could indicate the
-That you might be laid off from back among more familiar customs,
harmful bacteria.)
onset of lrimethylaminuria, a persis- your job (dealh rates are significantI must admit! miss the special treatOr on the job. (More t1u1e 2 mil- tent and highly offensive smell of rot- ly higher among the unemployed);
ment I received in the South.
lion physical as5!'ults happen ill U.S. ting fish, possibly caused by depres- That you are the one in three
Some women say that special
workplaces every year;·7,000 - I t sian or paranoia.)
. men over lhe age of 60 who will suflreatment
for us females shouldn't be
in death.)
,,..
We ue Jiving, she says, in a para- fer from impotence;
encouraged
because il is based on a
Just ask C9J11Uon TuUie,.uhor of noid's paradise.
·
.- That you might be hospitalized more tnpitional, 'often demeaning,
"The Paranoid's Pockel Guide" "I think we are learning more aboul and fall out of bed (men are twice as
view of ~men .
(Chronicle~ $ 10.95), whose little lhe dangers around us. For example, likely to fall out of a hospital bed as
I think it sets us back to confuse
book (1431iages, lhree inchei .,_five computers and the electromagnetic women);
chivalry
.with chauvinism.
·
inches) is a compendium of hug;: per- rays that carl get out. We have no idea · - That Legionnaire's disease is
Chivalry
is
based
on
respect.
waiting tolhappen of the long lerm affects of comput- growing in the showerhead at your
. sonal cauistrophes
Times have changed; women have
1
ers."
...'"
~ ~ ·-'
local health club;
changed, and our traditions should
... to you.
··"'
Or, for that matter, of eating in
- That a manhole cover will
Such as:
.:;;~.,
restaurants. tLegal preservatives used explode and kill you (It happened in change to keep up. Bu1 I say rather
than doing away wilh chivalrous
-Merely opening an automobile in salad bars can cause life-threaten- New York in 1989);
acts, we should expand on them.
fuel tank can generate a sp..t of sta- ing allergic reactions.)
- That ·you will be one of the
Chivalry is not exclusively in the
, tic electricity that will ignite gasoline
"I try to stay away from the.nou- more than 5,000 people who will
realm
of the male. We can all make
fumes and envelop your head in a•ll velle cuisine stuff," she says, "where injure themselves this year playing
gestures
that show our respect for one
of flame.
~ ·
the food is carefully arranged on.the pool;
another, regardless of our gender. We
,.- Electromagnetic intedeRnce .plate. Because I know that someone's .
- That yod will visit a friend,
the old traditions of respect
from a nearby cellular,telephone can fingers have been running through mislake the door leading downstairs can·take
and balance them with lhe new ideals
activale your motorized wheelchair ' my leafy·greens.
for the bathroom door and injure of equalily.
and dump you over a cliff.
"The truthufthe matter is you're yourself in a fall;
Men and women can both reach
- Farmers can be killed by poi- never safe. You can stop living ... or
-That if you're over 35 there is for the door handle and walk through
sonous gases generated by large you clio just go on and enjoy it."
a I in 17 chance you will suffer a seri- together although I'd count on a few
manure p1ts.
And some diseases, she says, are ous heart atiack while having sex;
bumps and bruises until we get all the
All !hose things act~al'* hap:- - just:not worth worrying about. Take
-That if your gas barbecue fails details of the new system (like wi~er
pened and Tuttle says they re JUStthe bovme spong•form encephalopathy to ignite promptly, you will inhale gas doorways) worked out.
dangerously sharp tip 'of the paranoid - Mad Cow Disease ..:.. contracted which will then l&gt;e igniled by the
by eating ,infected beef. After malch in your hand, filling your lungs
person's iceberg.
"There's so much bad stuff out researching the disease, Tuttle says with fire ·and causing death· by suffothiere," she says, laughing, "how can she no longer worries about it. ·
cation; •
·
By LESUE BOYD
it. You should write it down the same ".
you not be paranoid? You can read
"Because I know enough about it
Our Bla1lallcs show that maiUre
way you would tell it."
- That a case of diarrhea mighl Gannea SUburban _.......,.
drivers and home owners have
the paper every day and fincl some- to realize once you get it your brain be the beginning of a case of the When I first saw the o.Jd family phoKcmptbome advises people to
fewer
•nd leu costly !oases
. thing !hat's just going to sca111 you.
turns into a spongy mass and you deadly Ebola virus;
to, it was just a picture taken soon take a dozen or so of lhcir favorite
other
age groups. So h's
th8n
"A small bit of informatiOn com- won't care," she says. "You won't be
- Thai you'll cam Jess money after the tum of the century, a group family . photos and write captions,
only
fair
to
charge you Jess for
·bined with a healthy imaginalionand as bothered as the people around because you're heavy (employers · of stern-faced people dressed in their much tbe way my father did with his.
your
lnsur•nce.
Insure your
that's all you really need lo be: para- you."
pay overweigh! women an average of Sunday best for the camera. ·
."Like every family, mine has ·
home
and
car
wilh
us •nd save .
noid."
Begin optional trim
20 pereemlcss per hour than'women
But tht;n I read the story my father boxes and boxes .and boxes of ramieven
more
wl1h
our
sjlecial
Tuttle's book is a wareh~ of
Still, there are reasons to be afraid of average weight);
wrote to go with it, about where my Jy photographs," he says. "Putting
mutll-pcllley discounts.
small bits. (Excessive blinklni could
.,
- That your pet might succumb great-g~an~pareniS had come from them in albums and captioning them
be dryness of the eyes{ or ble... very afraid:
to ~'high-rise cat syndrome," leaping · and whal happened in the lives of is something I oughl to do. I admire
pharospasm, a rare condition that
- That you will be infected by inexplicably to its dea1h from your !heir children afterlhe photo was lak: people who can do that. Most peacauses eyelids to shut permanently.) microbes left behind 'in your airline apartment windowsill (!hey hit 60 en.
pic's pholographs are like mine.:..... in
Tuttle Jives and works in San seal by a tlalulent previous occupant; miles per hour after falling five stoThe people in the photo have all hags and boxes in the attic or the closFrancisco (an earthquake killing at
- That plastic mini-blinds in ries; then they hit the ground);
died now, but! have their stories.
et."
least 1,000 JM&lt;ople occurs some~here your bedroom are giving off brain-That if you urinate while swimAfter my falher died in 1990, my
The photos will spark memories
in the world once a year), where she damaging lead dust;
ming in a South American river, a sister and I di&lt;covcrcd an autobiog- of family stories. Write about them,
gathered most of her informalion.
· -That your employer is dipping candiru fish may be drawn by the Jiq- · raphy he had been working on, and paying auention to details - how.
"ll's all factual and came from a inlo your 401(k) savings program;
uid warmlh inlo your body, e•pand iL&lt; dozens of newspaper columns with Grandma wore her hair, 1he fact that
variety of sources - lhe Centers for . . .,- Thai you mighl be one of 1he barbed fins and have to be surgical- stories aboul his life. h was like lind- sbe always had her needlepoint in he•
ing a buried treasure.
hands when she sat.
ly removed.
Look through letters and journals
I come from a family of storylellcrs, bul mosl of the stories aren't for fodder. Keep a journal yourself.
written down , and even though I
Elderly relative.' arc a great source
write for a living. I lind the prospect of informa1ion, says Kcmpthome,
of penning lhcm intimidating.
and most love to 1ell their stories.
Mosl people do. says Charley
If 1 don' 1pass those stories on to
Kempthorne of Manhattan, Kan., my children and grandchildren, they
while others were already in Califor- related to the family. Prosecutors said aulhor of "For All Time: A Complete will be lost forever. 1 know I can't
By BETH J. HARPAZ
""' ~·
nia when they were recruited. Most they were all illegal aliens and all bu1 Guide to Wriling Your Family Histo- whte it all down at once, bul 1 can
Aaaoclllllld Preu Wl1lliL ,
·
ry" ($15.95, Boynton Book Heine- slart.
were
then flown from Los Angeles to one is deaf.
NEW YORK - Delf.. .itan
Alfredo
Raslrian-Paolclli.
37:
Jose
mann) He also gives workshops on
"People will reveal some really
New
York
and
housed
in
two
apartimmigrants were bealtll, A&amp;~ually
Paoleui-Lemus,
28;
Santa
Gonzalez,
the
subject
and
publishes
a
news
letinteresting
things if youjusllct them
ments
in
the
borough
of
Queens.
assaulted, cjeprived of
and
21,
and
Rosa
Maria
Beltran-Sanchez,
ler,
LifeSiories
($24
for
a
one-year
talk,"
says
Kcmpthomc. "We're all
Services
The peddling ring was discovered
threatened by a family that forced
25,
were
arraigned
on
federal
charges
subscriplion).
slorytcllcrs.
I
don
'I
think
il's
done
just
them to work peddling lrinkeb on the Saturday after four workers brought
214 EAST MAIN
"People arc intimidated by a to entcnain. We're 1clling stories to
a note to a police precinct. It of conspiracy, 'smuggling, harboring
street, according to court p~, ..
_POMEROY
One man from Mexico Ci'r told described how "the boss" of the and transporting illegal aliens. All blank page in front of them," he says. help define who we arc."
were
held
without
bail
and
ordered
to
992-6687
"They
don'l
know
where
to
start.
'But
For
information
on
LifeStorics
or
police that his haby boy ,was taken operation "Jured deaf people" here
return
Aug.
4
for
a
hearing.
I !ell !hem if someone were to ask Charley Kcmpthorne's hook, call .
Auto-Ownera IJUuiu11ee
from him five years ago by the same wilh the promise of better jobs, then
Federal prosecutorn also request- you to 1cll a story at the dinner table, (800) 685-7330 or write to him at
LHe Home Car Business '
people who forced him to work, The forced them to work selling key
n. if, p,.j&amp;,.
New York Times reported toda~. He .chains and other trinkets. on street ed arrest warrants for Adriana Pao- you wouldn't go into the next room 3591 Letter Rock Road, Manhattan,
leui:
Lemus,
29:
Adelia
Paoleui,
59,
and
rehearse
the
story
before
you
tell
Kan.
66502-9317.
corners
and
·
subways
and
.look
ail
said his·captorn told him the~
and Raul Alanis, 24. They were
'
1aken to a co~vent, and he I
for their earnings.
arraigned Sunday on state charges of
Authorilies
found
57
people,
most
the child wi!houl succe.s. . ,
assaull,
grand larceny, harassment
fW tH ... lllplltH To 11hlce 11 111', c1D
·of
them
also
unable
to
hear
or
speak,
The man was part of) ~ of
and
coercion
and
held
on
$50,000
living
in
two
homes
in
a
JK,avily
Hisviclims who were hudlftedl.'ilrOOnd
H2·2156
sigillangua~c interpreters MoM&amp;y a, panic neighborhood in Queens. The bail each.
a motel, answering questions from group included 12 children ages 6 .
Several lawyers have already said
police investigating the .Paoletri fam- months to 16 years.
110 HelpWinted
that
some of those charged with .
Relldentlal Heating
lnvestigatoo found $35,000 in
ily.
' '.
&amp;Cooling
A complaint filed M&lt;-~ U.S. cash i,n one house, including $10,000 exploiting lhe peddlers were themselves
being
exploited.
"There
may
Auto
Air
Conditioning
Dislrict Court described • wetl"orga- in $1 bills, according to the federal
have
been
victims,
but
my
client
was
Jllllalllllon
lnd
nized business run by the Paoletti complaint.
Mu•l have an EPA Refrigerant Certification,
not
'One
of
the
people
taking
advanStrllct
A second note said "lhe boss"
f!unily in which each nu:mbet had an
knowledge of oil, g•• • electric furnacea,
tage of !hem. He was more a victim
Amtrlcan • Stlndlnl,
assigned role - recru•~ngw.ollllrs, punished those who didn't bring in
_
Including
air conditioneR a heat pump1.
:than a victimizer;" Bruce Mcintyre.
JanltrOI Htltlng
bringing them here, runmng the hOus- enough cash, and sexually abused a lawyer for Paoletti-Lemus, said out•Exeentnt
pay
baNd on txptrltnce
Cooling Equipment
·
es where they lived, colle&lt;:ti~lllon­ some of the ·women.
-PIIId
V1ICIIIons
•nd holld8yn
·
R.S.E.S. CartHitd •
Prosecutors did not name "the side court.
ey, punishing those who did llot'bring
-PIIld
ovnrtlrM
and
mlldlcllllnnurance
All CartHitd
in enough cash, and tracldng down boss," who is still at large, but lhe
•Ynr
lrOUnd
empJoymnnt
with nnw ntlllt of the art
Sentinel
Don Smltll
A congressman proposed giving
Times identified him as Reinaldo
workers who tried to leave.
..vice VIII with -IIUppllld.
37114 PWtch Fork Rd.
special visas to the 57 victims Clueified•
It said the wortcers were IURd here Paoletti.
C.ll Bennttta M.H. Htg.l Clg. at 448-8416 or
nearly
all
of
them
bert
illegallyso
His
sister,
brolher,
sisler-in-Jaw,
011.
41711
wilh promises of better jobs, IIJillC of
1-1110-872-5187 or And reiUmt to 1391
992-2156
Phonel1wt2~
them smuggled across the ~~ molher and cousin were charged, they can stay without facing deporSafford
School Rd., Gallljlotla, OH 45631.
..nborder into Southern C.,., •• · along with two others who ue not tation.
By CHRYSS CADA
.
Fort Collin• ColoracloM
After several days of running into
doors, llhink I'm finally gettingqver
my culture Jag.
.·
I shouldn't be $Urprised by-tlie reentry problems I've 'lad $1nce Jelling
home from Virginia.:... ~er all, I had
just as many adjustment problems on
the other end of the trip.
Many of my f~rst houri in the

Family·memories need recorded

Give Mature
Drivers, Ho•
O•nersand
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special
· Savini•·

~

~ MASON DENTAL CARE
FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822

IJIIIIa

J.........,

A1.1,Box....C

CDPJU

Muon,WV

Flnlnclng lllfouglt Nolwlll F1111n cIll

2sHo

R~frigeration

S.ntiHI Classifieds

HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDED

a

'-or.

a

• Roofms

eAdditiou

• Remodeling
• Ganges

• Siding

"Stop puuing offtlwle much needed
lwme improvementl." Call Today!

992·2753 Free Eatlmat• 992-5535

FrH Eatlmetee

-

DIIIELS

BISSELL BUILD~RS, I

· •Small Engines

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

tRUCKING ·
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

985•4422
Chester, Ohio

•Chain Sews
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. offAL 7
Uedlng CrHk Rd.

614-992·7643
sun,nAv Calls)

INSULATION

HUPP'S
SHAIPflllli
949·2647

(Paymenls booed on approved credit)

•Free 5 Year Parts warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

BENNETI'S MOBILE HOME
· HEATING &amp; COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WI/

814 441 9418
1-800-87'2-6187 1391 Saflord School Rd., GaHipo!ls, OH

I::==~WW.ws

PRI~"

HELP WANTED
TOMATO
PICKERS
• Bob Morris
Letart Falls, Ohio .

614-247-3421
After 6 or leave

W.niOd: Ulld Hanlwood Flooring
In Good Condition, CIIJ 814·2451887.

'

EMPLOYMUJf
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areal I Shlrloy
S,...a, 3(14-87!&gt;-1•211.
ACCESS To Human R11ourC1

Dtvllopmtnl /ACCESS Haad

in a hurry... TRY
CLASSMEDS

MENTAL HEAL'fll SPECIAliST:
AppiiCIRII

Mull

A

Have

Bleholorl DtiJH in Sociol Work,

Callnaeling Or Related Field.
Mental Heallh Experience WorkIng Wllh Young Children And
ThtNr FamUiet Prelerrtd. Begin·
.Mg Rail 01 Ply $10.00 /Hr.

AtJt JOUIICE f.lf fiTS

005

Far Ttw FaUowing Posi.an:

Panonala

· I wtl nol be rolponoillle lor any
dlbll oilier lhln "" _, HIIIDicl

E.30 Announcements

Applicanll For Tl'lia Poaltian May
Submit A Rnume To Jeannie
Williama; Human Resource ManIQtr, Acceu. To .Human At·
aource Developmtnl, P.O. Box

318, Goll;polla, OIU51131 ,

8pm.

Givteway

The Deadline For Accepting Ap-.
plicalions It Tu11day, July 29,
19Q7 5:00 P.M. Far Addilional In·

lormallon Call 61 ...01 ·3010 8:00
·!:00 P.M. Monday Thru Friday.
Accesa To Human Reaource De·

Ing For An RN Or. LPN In A long
Term 'core FaciDIY. Apply In Por·
oon AI Scenic Hills Nunlng Center, 311 Buckrldge Ret, Bidwell,

NO
PLEASE.

110 Court Sl
1112-4111

Female Black I Whitt. Kltttn,

Awn $8 ·$18/Hr, No Door -To •

11..-511.

WVIG23477 .

113 W. 2ND ST. .

Dalmatian, approxlmatalr 1a

PorMroy, Ohio

1~211-58011

··-·

POMEROY, OH.

614-992~5479

Custom Homes

Remodeling

LOHG•s
COnSTRUCTIOn .
• Vinyl Siding • Garages
New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.

Free ~tlmetes

Call614e843·5426
, IIDLIIII

'I ICIIBIM
U - ' - a Gravel

MBJ

Septlc:Syntenia
. Trailer I I ·
'. HouR Sltea .
Reuot~~~ble

"Bufld rour DNana"

Rata

· Joe N, Sayre

.. .......

KINGS' .

._ ,.

3351 Happy HolloW Road
Middleport, Ohio 45789

New Homes, Additiona.
Rooling, Siding, Pole
Barns, Decl&lt;a, Painting
CaH Us For A Fl'fltl &amp;tlmalll

614-742-3090

Sayre Truckittg Co.,

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-742-3324
614-742-3076

614-742·2138

Mr/171111

OH.

PHONE

CALLS,

Door, Oulck CaSh. Fu" &amp; Relax·

lng, HI00-738.0168 lndiiiWII!&gt;

pla~r

piano, includ·
30&lt;~-

Babysiller needed in my home
lrom 8am-5pm. Mull have refer·
tnCet. Stnd 10 Box G·12, "ftPt

Ualt Chow! Shtphtrd dog to
good counuy ,..,, llie
ch1ldrln, 81&lt;1-ti2-203.'1.

Pleuanl Register, 200 Main St,

lng muolc IOIIo, noec1 ropalr.

e7S-211:W.

.

Poodle To Good Home. Hou11brok.,, Good Companion, 11•·

..1-a:m.

60

_ _,Found
1~~
•nu

PI Pleasan1 WV 25550.
Computer Usar• Needed. Work
awn hour~ . $20k to $501Vyr 1-

8Q0-3.4&amp;.718&amp; x,608.

·

Drlvora: Onlr In America- A

New ltert In Your Owo Truck.

No Crodlt, No Pro..oml NO

Found: Blanda 'Golden Ro~iovtl
114-3117-nSJAddoan-.
Found: on AI 82 at moulh ol 8
una Rd, rod &amp; whllt malt Btl·
:;gil::..3110=-8.:::15-:.:,_1340::..;_:,._ _:--:-l
Found: Sol 01 Kero In Fronl 01
St " - - Epiocopal Church; Koy
Chain SOyo Tho Pool Hal 0t ~

MONEY DOWN! Troal You,.oll
To Our FREE Truck Progrom.
Clloo "A" COL a 1 Yr. O~ I•
~4101 '
·
E•pari.,.od Cor- Wilh Own
Toolo, Rtlortncto Aequirod. CIH
11._..,.113e Bo-. 1:30 And

Pleasant, For More lnf0rm=-1ion

Experlenctcl Halr SWylill W&amp;nlld.

Cal81,._...&lt;4333.

For Modorn Now Salon, 1.1&lt;\-0•1·
1880,814-258-8331.

Loll: "WI'i-1". llrgo block ond
whltl male cat with whhe whisk·

•:ao.

ers, lliddlepotlvlclnlly, et•-112311157.

70

Yard Sale
APPLICAllON DEADLINE:
. JULJp 1m

GaHipoila

BEGINNifG: .IULX 21

&amp; VIcinity
E•n Nk:e, Elll,. l..lrgo, Melli atlice Delle; IIIII Chrlo!mao Lon·

1Mt

QuallllcaliOnl:

1) llanlgemtnl C1pa1i111y
2) Knowledge 01 Dlopalchlng

gabtrger Batklt With Lid. liner,
Protector, 1808 E111er long•·

Procedural, DJapalchlnQ Equip-

tor, 1 Wooden Olnene Set. &amp;1•·

out E1perltnce In The Field 01

ment,CompuwrEquipmlnt.

berger Bookot Wllh Llnor, ProiiC- 3) A l,llnUnum 01 5 Yooro Prov~

Will Your Utilities Put You

$1,500 REWIRDII

In The Poor House?
Consider:

For Information
leading to the
· prrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
~ 927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh,
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller

·~

FREE ESTIMATES

D.Gea~'s

&amp; Sons

Location

Lond, Plno, Pulp-

Sow Tknw. 11-2·

-ald. 114-7&lt;12·1003.

Tomato pickers &amp; packers

NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Get 1 FREE After 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizza's w/1 item $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA

w

wood,
80112.

Quality Window Systems

1·614·992·7022

t-A~IILT

Ina l'lmbor W

7 Pupploo: Pori lob &amp; Part S.
Huaky, leo BIUo Eyoo, 110·387·
01121.

&lt;=)

~

Golllpoh.

ShooNrd Logging 1111yor Ot 511ft-

Ae A NURSE, Do You Prelet
Working 12 -Hour Shiftl? Wt
Havt A Part-Time Position OPin-

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

(614) 247·3901

Or

2 Kl11011o To Good Home, llolhof velopment It An AAIEEO EmHlmolo)'an I 1•·441·1D71 AftM 8 pqor.
P.ll.

"FACTORY
DIBECI'

'I'IIE MAPLES

Gary Roush

"'" -

1-614-742-2925

1112·2772
8:00 l.m.-3:30 p.m.

:ItS YEARS IN BUSINESS

·JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

Easy Bank Rnantlng
At Conditionen Installed '28" amonth
Heat Pumps Installed 138" amonth

c~,.

Trucka, taoo Wadel• Of" Newer,
Smllh Bu~k PonUoc, 1&amp;00 Ellt·

10 in .......... $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .... ...... $12.00
16 in .... .. .... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

40

•

·.l b••

Clean Ltlt Modet

DIEHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

... coll304-e1S-70114 -

~60° Communications

Mabllellalullr
MdBeai,_.PI

Buying Standing Pint, 1 Acre
TIKI Q&lt;l.olgtr, 814-25H03&amp;

W.nted: Craft ltema an eonalgn.
· mont r... local anop. Far lnlormo·

CELLULAR PHONES

·'

Ina Antiqull, Pomaro,.. Ohio,

Run Uoort owner, 614 -811f2·
252111•

........cusro•
,

Llnct.nbera

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

AniiQ\IM, lOP prlcet Plld, River·

MIDDLEPORT

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Complete MachiDe Shop ServiCe Fabrication
Steel Sales, Wtldiaa SupPlies, IDdustNI Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Rep!Kement
Monday-Friday- 8:00 a.m.-4:30p.m.
Saturday , 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

. 114-ft2-7...1.

Starl Ia Accepting Applicatianl

J&amp;L

I•Sto111 Doors &amp;
Wlntlows
Addlllotls

S.V.T..,

-

2J~Dfuo•••
fo4-H&amp; ,A

537 BRYAN PLACE

742·2925

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 614-843-5426

l.la H

•Lawn Mowers

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

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

992-9057m...,

..'

_,._

a' Atwdlllln: ClriiiW 2 Cydl

250 Condor Street
Pomeioy, Ohio 45769
A Division oo Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

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

For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally • Wnkly •
Contract
Family Atmoaph1re
209 S. 4th SlrHI
Middleport
992-5042

• State Route 338 • At VIne • Recine, Ohio
614 949-2804

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

Roofing, Painting
Guttera
Gu•ranteed
rz-•~

ELIM
HOME CARE

• Mo-. • Chllln S.. • WM111_,. • Authotlled
Delllrfor:
-Brlggn &amp; Stnmon • MTI). Murqy- McCollough •
· Echo- Ryobl- Roper • Rally- Hydro G.r
AND OTHERSII
. . . . &amp; SINIIII: ..._Seniti Tt I II ·

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Uc. WY 011030

985-4473 .
7mltfn

Anllq-, IUrnllvoe, (llaoo. china,

colnt, aoya, llmpt, guns, tools,
tatatat; 1110 appraiula, 01~

lftrl(l

•NtwHomtt*
-Garages
-complete
.. Remodeling . ,
Stop &amp; Compere
FREE
ESTIMATEES

•Decb

Pam and Se,;,~ell

Ottw Peww E: \ •

IIIAJNIII.

cottmumo•

RACINE MOWER CUNIC

~rauce

.Meigs

IOIIIT IISSEU

"

RR2&lt;!!!'fER~ ·

Business
Services

........ Oollpolo, .......21M2.

l!!:!mes

Bai'I'J B. Boutell, D.D.S.·

Mexican' peddlers threatened,
assaulted, prosecutors say.·
rood

Wlntad to Buy

10

WILL um.-JUS,. pu.,
992·7074
Grav,J, Umeetone,
Topaoll, FIJI Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

I

992-4025
Howard L Wl'fll!HI
ROOFING

···~Shop
Quality Work at

NEW-REPAIR
Guttera

a Fair ~rtcel
550 PIIQII St.
MiddlepOrt, Oh. 45710
Home Ph.

Dowr18polila

614-992-3120

-

DonGury,o-

Gutter Cl8anlng
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

949-2168
31171M/TFN

(Ume StoneLow Rales)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dally Rd., Racine
614-949-3060
John Williams, Owner
Ucensed E~trlclan.
Work Guaranteed
Free EatlmatH
Providing Quality
Realtlentlll Strvlct.
24 Hr. Emerr~ency
Service

FREE
Local Area Pick Up
Dlncardld Appllencte
&amp; Many Mtllllt.
614-1112-4025
call a am-a pm

t3.11permln.
Mull ba 11 yra.
Sar.IJ (111) 141 1434

P.M.
.
!i7l ChOYJ Vega 3!50 Foul Bolt The Salary Foo Tlio Position Will
WoW.. All Now Porll Runo Groo~ Bo Nf90UIIod IIIHd On Qualifi·

In-

Race Or Str11t Ready, 14,000,
814-258-1521-

YoJd -

Muot

DEAQUtE: 2:00p.m.,

McCombs. On Hannan Trace
Saulh 'OJ 775. New Lawn Furniturt. &amp; Craltl, Ruga, Oithtl,
Ciothet, Jamt &amp; Jtlllll, New
Handmade Ouilll, Oulllt Will Be

1~ ON Rerlulll Price. Big

Boko Sale Will Btntlil Our

Schools. From Oalllpolil Ro'ure
141 Soulh To 175 Soulh Go I 112
Milll To Han,..n Tract Road On

Ltft,=Jul:::.1~25=1h:.:,..:l~20::111.;;;,_ _ _
::
1

-..,

Local buainnt hat rull dmt posilion available, hourly wage plus
same 11!11 convninions. Mutt
be a good peopl• person, baaic:

Local Non Prolil Agency 11 Seeklng A Pan-Time Executive Oirec·
day ltltert tfll ld 11 10 run, tor. The Dlretlor Works Under
Sunday I M~:~~~ndq: edition· The Oirecdon 01 A Voluntftf Ad-"I::::;OOpm:::;;;.;,Filda~t~--~-·l visort Commlnee And Accom Advance. DHdllne: 1:oopm Utt

pt, p' Jtallnt .

-

1 VIcinity

·
Ill Flower EllS Yord Sale RCI7
Thur 8am·8pm. July 24th Vour
support avealiYH.

Auction
and Flea Market
llorke~

Hondor·

t·e. Craltl,

Rlcll Ptar~on Auction ComptlnV',
full lim• auc tio·netr, compltte
aucUan
ltrvlce.
Llcenud
181,0hlo &amp; Wo11 Virginia, 30•·

773-5715 Or 300-713-5&lt;1-17.

10

Wtnted to Buy

pUshoo. Wo•k Through A Cod•o

Of Service \/olunletrl In A Var·

iery or Communiry Strvictt,

·

Tho ldool Candidate WUI Bo Elf&amp;cllvt At Lending An Ellorl To
lnCfllll Tht Organizttion'l Protile, Community Awtrenna And
Funding Ltvtl. lnttrllltd lndi·
vidu111 Sttould Send ~ Currtnl
Reaume To: CLA 4HS, C/o GaUl-

polio Oolly Trllluno. 125 Third
All.,..o, Go"'"ll~ OH •!1831.

Local Rtllll Bu1ine11 Seeking
Full Or Part· Time, 51111 Clerk

Mull Be Available To Work i :30
To 8 P.r.r. 8 Daro WHk, Exped.

ence Preferred Will DIKUII

8ifti.

tftll. Send Deralltcl Rttuma With
"-roonol &amp; Prolooalon Rolaranc-

u To : CLA •15, Cio GalllpaUa
Oa;ly Trlbuno, B25 Thlnl Avenue,
Golllpol~

OH ~5831 .

·

llanogomonl Poolllon Avalllllle

J &amp; D'o AulD "-"'· S.ylng oaf,
..licln. Soiling porto. 304·
713-5033.

/

Some Personal Care, Orivert Utense Required. Good Wagtt,
Roam &amp; Baonl, 014-287·5354.

AU Yord S~IH Muot Be Pold In

furnilutt,
lOY&amp; varleiY. 304-e76-5000,

Free

Housekeeper For Disabled Prtc-

• - · -v,,
·ccmpulor, !Yping or&lt;l phone oldllo
needed. Send resume c/o: The
&amp; VICinity
Dally Santino!, P.O. Bo• •211·•&amp;.
==-===~~~~~ Pomoroy, Ohio •S71li.
·

aon, WV. Everyday

Johnoon ·

•-.
PC uaera needed. $45,000 in come pottnlial. Call 1·800·51343-43 En B-9:168.

Mkldlepon

an~quet. ttadlng cardt,

20 Yra. Elrp. - lno. Ownor: -

livo Actio~

VoritiY acing Columbuo AIIU011, U'"·ln,

01 Baked Goods, Fr11h Made
Donulll COtfle All Dl~ Ouiltll

Crawkmro Flea

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

cations And ExpeJierx:e.
Gtllit Councy Adrlt:rtt To All
Slate Pol ;.ito Por~a;ning To Equal
OpporiUnily EmploymoniiAftlrme-

the dor .....,. tho od
APPLY TO:
le
to
""'·
8onday
odlllall a:ao
Gollil ComlY eanm1-.
•
p.m.
Gob Caunly Cou"""frldiJ. Mondoy odhlon
18 LOCUli Slleet Room 12112
• 1D:GO o.m.letUniiJ.
GoJI;poll&amp; 0Na 4!e31
CommuniiY Yttnl And Bolle Salol
Phone: 8t•...a-o:t7•
AI: E&amp;E Country S10ro, Nioly ·n· HOME TYPIS. .

80

TalllUve To A
Real Gifted
Psychk
1·900.868·4900
Ext. 1817

..e.ens Boloro ID A.M. /After 1 Emergency S..VIcea

AI Local Retail Store, Pluu

Sand Ro1ume To: P.O. BoK

Golipol&amp; Oli. .5131.

1~1,

�•

P1lge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday, July 22, 1897

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

. BRIDGE ·

NEA Crossword

PHILLIP
ALDER

House and property, approx. U·

1853 John Dure B, tuna good.
3 pt., $etiO 0110, 114-

cres. Ideal 111arter home. Beech
St. I'OITlOfOJ oH. 3CW-882·20n.

-

Newly remodeled three bedroom,
one and 112 bath home In Mi4dlepon, 614-992·34S5ah&lt; 5pm
Three bedroom, two bath, on
large corner lo1, located 33184

New lima Rd.. Rudand, $35,000
OBO, $41 ·763·5762 evenlne•
only.
Two Bedroom House, Close Ia

~~~;;k,l
ou• E:a:periance
odgo 01 Olllo
Lawa. Pay By '1111 Call Plus lllle8$0. Liability
Pro¥1&lt;1od.
11 lntorootod Plea11 Submit Reo
1uma Including TtvH Reference•
30, 1$$7 To Gollio Coun~
''
An
WalloteL.aague, Inc., P.a
lloll218, Gllllpolll, 01145631 .
, POST.U.oiOIIS
112.88 /Hr. To SterL Plus Bene·
fila. ·Carriers, ~ortel'l. Clerks,
Computer TrolneoL For An Appllc:atlon And E.am Information,
Call1-600-63e-54113, En 843e, $
A.ll. To I P.M. 7 1J¥.
Polloi Joba 3 Positions Available, No Experience Neceuary,
For Information, Call 8t8-78411023, En 7206.

By::.T

- n g And Challenolng POollion Available For An t.JIN Wishi"'I To Work With Tho Dementia
Populallon In A Secured Alz·
lloimer'a UniL Par&gt;Tlmo, 2 P.ll. ·
10 P.M. Shift Witb Ful-lime Pollibla In Near Future. Unique,
Proiten Pro'gramming And Upbetlt

Succellful Slaff. Appfv In Perton

AI Scenic Hllll NUisfno Center,

311' Sudtrk:lga Rd., Bidwell, OH.

NO PHotE CALLS. PLEASE.

Rocl&lt;apringa
Rehttblllation
Center
Ia
ooeklntl a lui
~etport dmo RN
tor 11-7 thlh. EJCperiance prelerred. but will canalder.lhe rlri'Jt
candidate. Excellent benefit packaga for ~I
and part ti1w
'ployeea. Applv at Rockaprlngs
Rehabilitation Center, 38759

•mt

. ~~ringl Road, Pomeroy, Oh.

Sal

Or
e
1411.00 DOWN, 1.19'11. APR
FIXED BUYS ANY SINGLE·
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES OF BARBOURSVILLE,
_304-_131__3409_._ _ _ _ __
DOWN 1.11'11. APR
FIXED BUYS ANY DOUBLE·
WIDE ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES OF BARBOURSVILLE

I1••••••••oiiiiluu.oo

!TIME ONLY I
11-L-Q.W-Q.U.TI

AI realestale advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
the Fodefal Fair Hooslng Ad

~::".:.,"':'.:!:~":

sections. 2-3 or 4 BediCom mod-

ela ""'"-~ Homes
NibD, wv. 304-755-5885.

Of 1968 which makes h ilegal

to advertise ·any preference,
llmttallon Of dlsctimii"'StiOn

based on race, COlOr, religiOn,
. sex familial starus or nal:lonat

ortgin, or any imemion 10
make any such preference,
limitation or dlscrimina1ion.•

This .....
~~r
will not
~
knowingly accept"
adw!rttsements 1or real estate
which is in violation of the

taw. Oll' readers are.hereb'f
Informed that an dwellings
advertised in this. newspaper
areavailableonanequal
opportunitY baSiS.

12x50 Monarch Plua All Ccntenll
2 AC Oak Dinette Stand Up

freezer Much lloro 814-256-

6668.

---~------

1970 Skyline 12'x80' Mobile

Home 2 Bectooma, Uke New Gas
Furnac:e, Fair Condition, $2.500,
814-497·2395.
.:.;..~....;:=.;._ _ _ _ __
1979 14x70 Schult With Expando

Living Room And A 1DSO 12~~:42
Add-A-Room Four Bedrooma, 1
112 Ba1ht. Family Room, New Furnace,.Heat Pump, And Carpeting.
CaR 614-245-5565.
1G8314x70 Nashua 3br, 1 bath,
carpet throughout, new central
air, front parch, on rented corner
lot, very nice $15,000. 304-6751705 alter &lt;4 :30pm. SeriOUI In·

quirn only.

II Ptellntly Seeking A Salll
Ropreoontatlvo For GaHia, Jack· 310 Homes for Sale
son And Vinton count1e 1• The
Stlocttcl Candidate Should Uve 12 Rooms Rench Style Home·
In Galipofia And 8o F..,.iar With 3Bedro~m; 2 112 batho, lor~o
Thel8 Aras.
kitchen &amp; dining room a famtly
rooms, 2 porchtatscreened. 2 car

garage, 8110 mile out Sandhill
Rd. and loll mora. 304-875-4571.

3 Bedroom Home With Garage &amp;
Bam, Maintenance Free, Localeel: Addison Township, 6 t4·446·

47$2.

~19:-:Bc-7-:C::-Ia..:y_to_n_1_4Xc-70-:3-:B::-od-:-ro-om_s_,

2 Baths, Fireplace, Cenlral Air,

614·379-295 7 After 4 P.M.
1988 14x70 Clayton Newport,
2bedroom, 1bath, cia. new car·
pet, 1~porch Wlroot st 3,500. 304675-4625.
;;.;.;:..:;::..:.;__ _ _ _ _ __
1990 Clayton Norlhrldge t4x70, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Ftreplace,
CA; Furnished, 2 Porches, Out·
buildtng, Perfect Starter Home for
AYoull\j Couple, 614-5~521 .

Salary. Commilslon Bonus. A Fun 3br hoUse 2 bath, full basement. 1993 Fleming 14x70 2br. 1bath,
Siu Van. Helllh lnauranca. Profit 2813 Maple Ave. Pl Pleasant central air &amp; heat, e~Cc. cond.
Sharing And An On-Going Troi~· 814-446·3629 or 304·n35163.
St 3,500. 304·273-3214 or 304-

ingPropam.

8.8 Acres, 2 year old sectionil

773 5957
"
·
1994 14X70 Oakwood 3br, 2ba,

3br, 2 baths. Central air, NICE I
RoiiPntducll
Somerville Realty. 304·875-3030 St6,000 080 304-1175-436!.
And Servtcoo.-...
or304-675-3431 JeenCast~
So45Sdmmol Road
New-1997 14 Wlde·1 bath, $6191
ColunDIO. Otia.t3223
All brick, 3bedroom Rianch, full down, $139Jmo, with approved
: SlM Bake
basement .. central air, Camp crediL can·1-800-691-6777.
Ann
--:..:.:~~:..:.:,---::-I Conley. 304-675-t371 or 3041997 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
-Shephard Lovglng Anyone Ex· 675-1283.
S995 down, $195/mo. Only at
parlance With Chain Saw, Also
AlliENS ,MORTGAGE
Oakwood Homes, Nitro. WV. 304SI&lt;lddor0poralllr,814-882·6402.
COIFANV
7555885.
When the bank says no, let
Help Wanted: Timber Cuuer I
AlhensMortgagesay~slllet
191ii7 14~~:60 3 or 4 Bedroonl,
Power Saw Operator, loader Op- our ataffhalp you getlhaloan you $1,359 down, $229/mo. Free air,
erator, Sickle, E~eperlenced Only
need.
skfrltng, &amp; delivery. Only at OakNeed To Apply, Call 814-882WI .,....liloln :
wood Homes Nitro,WV. 304·755·
7456.
Financing lor hou... and mo5885.
Vocalist Wanttcl For llatal Band,
Stl' bllo
1997 doublewlde s 1445 down.
1
Mult Be 18, Dependable, And
rtm 111oy_.,. anc ng$229/mo. Free delivery &amp; ~arup.
Willing To Do Wha1 It Takoo,
H..,.l...,_omont.. Bill Cono
1-800-691-6777.
814-4o18-28511.11-7-71110.
oolld111on· lnvoe1-t Prvpo~
1y· Calli out tor eny nHII.
4 Bedrooms. 2 Bath&amp; S500 Down,
180 Wanted To Do
No appl&lt;aoon foe- Alll"'"1' of
S2251Mo., 304-736·7295.
credll welcome to apply.
ANY ODD JOBS: Exterior paintCall today t&gt;r a free ana~sisl
FACTORY DIRECT.
lng, ahruba &amp; woad&amp; trimmed,
80CJ..1121o1402/814o592oo101l6.
NO MllOlE MAN.
iandoc:aping, oldowalko odeod,
AnENTION HOMEOWNERS!
SAVE SSS$.
lawn cll8, eiC. Call Bill 30&lt;4-675- Attend 8 free mortgage informa- Oakwood Homes is the only
7112.
tlon seminar &amp; .learn: "How to dealer in the tri-state area lhat
eave $25,000 or mare from the builds and sells their own
Cetdlled Nurtlng AulsbtentROuaiJ. Interest ugu are pauing on yOur homes. For factory direct pnce1,
ty Cart At Reasona le 1111, home or ';,gbiJe hom'e, WITHOUT shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
814-4411-1 754·
REFINANCING I "How to gat a TRO, WV. 304·?55-SMS.
Experltncod c:arpentry and rerno- REFUND from )Our lender on in- IT'S BIG . 1997 4Bfl, 2BATH
dellng. ln1id1 and outside, terest you\te 0118rpaidi •Mortgaga DOUBLEWIDE . $1,949 DOWN,
docks. vinylaldill\j, add-on addt- strat&amp;eies auch aa: "How to eet a $3t9JI.10. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
tiona, cabinet retaclng or newly home Improvement loan or con- SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
rebuilt. Ralerancti·Free Eltl- aolldate bills when my bank HOMES, NITRO, wv. 304·755·
-.11m ShuD 1104-875-1272.
oays no.• and 'How to lind the 5885. Umiled Oiler.
monft1 t need even it ·I have notGtorgtl PortatMe Sawmill, don't so-good to just plain •bad" credit large- selection ol use~ home. 2
haul your logo to,. mill just call WHEN: Stwrday July 26,1997 at or 3 bedrooms .. Starti"'!Bt $3495.
_.75-1g57,
10:00AM·1t :30AM. WHERE: Ma- Quick delivery. Call1 ·800·837·
son County ltbrarv. Paint Pleas- 3238.
Home Or Office Clunlng, Relet'- ant, WV. Call Premier EquilY
~rA~.I14-245-5887.
MOrtgage at 1.e88-343-4738 And Limited Olfetl 1997 dOUbi8Wtd8,
PllueSindAeaumeTo:

!'!'"'":,

Reserve Your Seat Today!

I

· I'

3br,

$1799 down, $27tl
delivery &amp; aetup.

Aot,n'l Home Cleaning: WHidy,
111-welkl)', Excellent References! Cape Cod Home; 5·8R's. 7 mileai!~~~~;~H:orllll:s~,~'NI:t:ro
C.U Anylime, 11.....a-2315 If No South or State Route 71. 3 Acres..
Anw~M l..w Ua•••aa
(614)-258-1997
· S&amp;M Watt·r Ha-.llng Servlcel,
'"Where Purity Is Our Paa"llon•
Give U1 A C•ll Tod•y: 304-675-

Counfry home 20 minu1es from
Pt. Pleasant off Rt.2 18/acres
fenced In, garden spot, pond, oa·

rage; barn. 3br, liwing room,
kitchen, bath , pantry. 3 season 1-'----~-..,---Witl
porch, spiral stair cue, lron1 &amp;
Aepo'1f Onlr, 3 lart,
"'!~~!!~~~!!;;~~ 1 back porch, walk-in clo .. r1 &amp;
lina,nclllio avallab e. 304·
small study, 87% complete.

:1111.

~~~5035.-·
fi~JMJCIA L

Rou1e 218. WiU Sell All or Parta.
$25,000, 81 ...256-6574

__ __

Apple

New Log Splitter ' 25 Tons On
·~~~:~~::.;;~~
y
Wheels . Woodburner Stove,

Lore• Antique Corn Sheller, 3
Oval Fuel Tanks On Stands,
~ et4 388 oe ·o E\WinQL

,

County, Scipio Township. SR U2
~uat on SR 143). Dwner'lir8nclro,
Call for good map, 1 -e 1 4-593·
85o45.

Nlntando 84 w/gamo 1175. Sony
Pill)' Station w/gamo 1175. 304·

~~~~~~~::~1~67~5-~12~72.=------------~:
Old Dreuer, 614-24!;-M87.
.. aepar. 2 yrs. old: 5 hp.

shrecklll, never ulld,
copier, tabla top, reduce•.
onlareeo: 13 quartar type vending
candy macl11noo; tall colored with
oak stain stand•: ttart your own
busine" 6t4-W2-8970.

Three Scenic ·water Front l:.ota
Raccoon Creek, Older Mobile
Heme, Rural Wa!M l Sap;c Syl1111\ 814-$27'8575.'

360

Real Estate
wantld
·wanted: 300 Sec;luded Acres In
Ohio Wllh All Mineral Rlyh11 And
No Dovolopmont Potential. Craig
Landefeld, 80410 .Apache,
Washington, Ml 48094. PhOne
810.-143$." .
Rental Wanted: Homeowners Relocating Need 3 Bedroom Ohio
Homo, In Counry. Good Roads I
SchoolS. Within 1 Hour 01 GaUl·
polio, H-1'911, 8t,...58-12a.

$65.000. 3114-576-3158.
For Mit, 1 bedtoom home In Pomeroy, will sell on land contract,
814·9V2-SB58.

jp;;;;;;;;:jlci.(ii;;;;d,""'i5

• K 10 7

:

1815 Toyota SR5, ...:-runn.,, VI.; .
Price rG&lt;Iuced· t953 Ford 2000 4•4. 3o,oooml.. oil alectric;-;
·, .
tractor, 11111 powtr, 3 pt. new ra- $21'.000080.--3323.
diator, rebuilt .motor, bruah hog,
•
IIIOW'~ dsc, $31100, 8t4-99~2143 730 vans 8t 4-WDs
~
or l14o992-6373 aliar 5.
1184 Bronco II. 4 WD Standard,
1894 Ford 1320 4 WD 5 Ft Naw 81....e-7834.
Holland FlnlohlnQ _Mower; 4 Ft.
Doclgo 4WD, 311 motor,
King Kutter Brush Hog. 5 Ft King _t984_poin~
$4000, 814-742-2!;54.
Kutttt Scraper Blade Call 814·
-34311
tU84 lull aizt Convtraion Chevy
550 gallon plastic water atorage van, 44,000 miles, 1a deck CO,
N;, 81-2-6970.
tank. 3 point hitch cone cedar/ lordli:zor opr-. 55 gallon trait- 1905 Mercury Vtllager air, tilt , '
., type high prt11ure orchard/ eruiae, am-fm c1uaetta, pw, pi, ;
muiU purpou oprll)'er. UNd very power seats wllumbar, approx. ,
fialo. 304-67!HI40e alter liP"'
46,000 mllol. $18,000. 304-8$5- •
3864.
,
461 N.H.~. $2800: two 150
gallon Ru-..ald Willi~.. 1gg5 Tovota Tacoma 4wd, tic.-..
S100 ead), 114-247·1100.
·
cOnd. 24,000 miles. Mu 11 ltll."~04·675-3290 or 3C4~
, J
We make trr"draullc hoM aaum- 111.500.
I .
bNII. Sider'&amp; Equipment 304· 71'3-5182
•
8~1421.
.18te Orand Carawn 8 Pasung- •
er, 22.000 Miles. V-6, Auto. Load-~
630
Livestock
ld, Under Manufactured WarraR- '
1$$0 AOHA llrooclllare Boy 151 ly $16,000, 0 .B.0 . 614-2511-1252. I
Good Blood Llnoo, Gon~o. Good 114-256-1818.
Olopoahion, Broke To Ride, Roa- 1808 Ya,llama 350 Warrior.
sonable; Cl•s•y 1987 ~eanURQ. u.eoo.!!CW· 773-5434.
Colt, Big, Ganoe, Good Olapo.,.
tion, Good Conllrmotlon. Eltc:oilent 740
Motorcycles
Bloodlinet, For Mora lnlormatiOn.
Calf 614-25HOII5.
1975 HD Sportster (1000+). many

• 8 2

• J
tQ765 2

air;

South

u.soo.

•A

South

01.' BULLET'S
:GITTIN' FAT,
PAW!!

SOME VARMINT
MUST BE FEEDlN'

viiTtl ALl,. Ttlt
m
PISAS'Tt, ,.,OVItS ~
GOMING OUT, 1
T~OIJGtiT IT
viOVLP IE A
GOOl&gt; TIM~
•
TO PITGtl MY
IOG,APtiY.

House For Lease $350/Uo., Plus
Damage Depos~ 814-385-4na.

1193, 883 Harley Davison Spor.;
:;-~$6~,.,:;500:.::_,6:;1-::H~46-:,.1154:.;...3:....-:,.,..•'
19$5 F.L .- HTC Electra Gllchl '
Classic. Mileage : 13.300. Many :

--------------------·

1884 Plymouth SW, good tlrao,
new banery, naodl t.ad oalll&lt;eL
8144182-5145.

ecoo.

446-ll500.

750

THE BORN .LOSER

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Housa in Pomeroy for sale or Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Rafrl· l!f!~~~~~~~~=
rent, 814-$$~31190.
grators, 90 Day ·Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 814 · 446 ~ Trampoline $120; Nordic Aider
In Middlepon, 4 bedreom. briclc. 77$5.
$200, 614-24~1~.
new carper, $350+ depoaltlrefarencea, utllilles not Included, no Fenc;lng, BatketbaU Backboard, Two Fronl loll, lot 1140 Space 3
Bdck Pavers, 614-44fl.-0026.
&amp; 4 In OA1o Vallav Memory Gar- 614·992-3457.
dens, 614-245-5139.
Small 2 Bedroom Home With GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Range And Refrigerator, City Washers, dryers, refrigerators, Used Garage Door Opener 140;
Schools, No Pets, $300/Mo., Plus ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78 8' x6'6. Garage ·Door $50, Two
Utilities, $200 Deposit Required, VIne Street, Caii814·446·739B, 4' xs·r Sliding Patio Doors No
References R,equlred, Call 614· 1-600-499-349$.
Track S30, 814·3118-11285.
446·406g , If No Anawer leave
Building
M'-nage. No Calls Alter 8:00 Green Refrigerator froat Freo, 550
P.~
.
$150; Harvest Gold Refrigerator
Su 11 s
UB8 Toyota Camry, cruile, lilt,
Frdst Free, $150; Whirlpool Re- . --,=,-,..:.PP.:..,._•=--- lmannlnent wipers, cold air. new
friQerator Verr, NiCe, 1 Year War- ALL STEEL BUILDINGS, 401C26 tlreJ, tltellant ln1lde &amp; out,
ranty $300; Ar Conditioner -5,000 w $ 4 680 N S2 980 4o 57
420 Mobile Homes
$2495. 814-992-8824.
IUSJNESS CLQSEOUI ··r :
BTU, '1125: Westinghouse Air
as •
ow •
• II:
Conditioner
1"1,000 BTU s2so:
$8,1U8 Now $5,618. Other 1N6 Grand .Prix, Now In tor lor, l
tor Rent
All Kawaoaki Jet Sltis
G. E. Washer sgs; L1aytag Wash·
1
Avatlable. Chuck 1 ·800· Tints. Pion- AII!FII CD Stereo.
Plice's Under lnwi&lt;:e .
320
2340
2· Bedroom Mobile Home, You er $150: Hotpomt Dryer $95;
•
·
,. '
/
Exctlont Shape, 814·448-1838,
Pay Utiliti11, &amp; Deposit,' In Porter Eleetric Range, $95; Hotpoint
brick, sewer pipes, Wlnd- AhBrS.
•
Area $250.tolo.• 614-388-9182.
750
SXI
Washer &amp; D_ryer Set $205 Each,
1 I etc. Claude Winters.
1 Year Warranty, Skaggs Ap 7!iO SX
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, All pliances,
'"''""''· OH Call 614·245· 1888 Pontiac laMana For Sale
76 Vine Street, GallipoOr Trade, Runs &amp; Lookl Good,
Onty 12lefl
"' 1
Eloc:trlc, $250111o., $250 Dopolli~
111, 814·448· 7398. 1·868-8t8·
$995,1!4-258-tOSO.
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS • '
814·387-7802.
0126.
PROCTORVILLE, OHIO . :
560 . Pets for Sale
1aeg Escon, AUto, l.ir, Good
1·&amp;14-886-1979
2 Bedroom Trailer For Renl: 8 Klng· size waterbed, new semi7 ·8 Weak Old Oalmation Pup- Condition, $1500. (814)il56-14fi 1·::-:-:---:---.---::-~~- •1
IIIIo Down 218, Galllpoll' $2251 wave mattress. lighted mirror pies,
$50 Each, Cat! Tom Milehell
Fiahing boat 14ft. trailer, 20hp.
Mo., + Deposit, References Ra·
1888 M.u•tang,· 4cyl, 5sp\i. Evlnrude engine $800. 304-882; :
$150. Mayl8g washer At8t4-388-9922.
quired, 8t4·448-8112, 814-258- headboard.
$1,1100. !!CW-576-$005.
27t5.
••
$75. Electflfl drye' $75. 304·773825t .
1
7,
Registered
Australian
5970 after 4pm.
1
st'iepherd
Puppies,
Blue
uerrllls,
Cadillac
Sedan
DeVille,
4
New
Deluxe
Aluminum
Boat
Trail""
Mobile Home 2 bedroom $235. Kttchen Carpet, $6.50 Sale On All
New Michelin Tiret, Rem- er, Holds Up To 26 Ft. Boa~i
plus deposit and References re- Room Size Carpe1a, Mollohan Black Tries &amp; Red Tries Vel
qu ired. Bidwell, Oh. (614)-388- Furniture, 814-446·7444.
I ·;~~L~oc:ai~~O~w~N~d~,~E:u~ol:len~t
·
· Cllecked, 6t 4·388·83811.
$7,$00, 81 .... 411-4676, $2,500, 614-448-9662.
8312
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
760
Auto Parts &amp;·
;
Used Furniture Star,, 130 Bula~ Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Accessories
1
440 Apartments
vilte Pike, Gaa Cook Stove, Hide1
·
A-Bed Couches, Televisions, Shee t~ a 73 Georgos Creek Rd. ~:~u~ w~~~~~~~t f.:~:.$t~:g~
tor Rent
1
14·
v·
•
Budllll
Price
Tranamiuionl,
080, 81 U48'8827.
•
Oetks, Typewriters, Baby Bed,
1
Starbllg at $99.00 and Up. Uud I 1
1 and :' bedroom apartments. fur· Mattresses, Beds, Dinettes, AKC German Sh ep her d9• 814 • 1992 Eagle Talon, 4 cylinder au- Rebuilt.
All
Tvpas.
Ovtr
10.000
,
nished and unlurnlshed, tecurity Much Morel 614 ·446·4782. Hrs.
742-2259.
·
mmatk:, se,ooo milal, amroot ex- Transmissions, Ac;ce11 Tranaltr •
deposit required, na pa11, 614· 10-4, ChOck Us Out
AKC Reg Bload Hound· Puppies, Cll'-'11 candilian, runs lika new, 1· Cues &amp; Rear Ends , 614·245· · :
9$2·2218.
!Mksold.3114-882·36t3.
304-n35305altar6pm.
5677
,
530
Antiques
I
I llodn&gt;om In Galipolio, No Pet&gt;, Buy or sell , Riverine Antiques,
1994 Dodge Grand Caravan Front clips for 71 I 80 Olds Cul- •
very Nioe, 814-448-1903.
112&lt;4 E. Ma1n Street, on Rt124, AKC Regia1ered Champion Leather Interior, Fully Loaded, last I 80 LeMan1. 2.8 Chevr '
Bloodline Boxer Puppies. Talll Caplain Chairl, 68,000 Milea, V.8 w/lrana. auto, 80 I 81
2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap- Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10 :00 Docked, Dew Claw• Removed, 814-~26.
R bbl
8 0 d
0
a.m.
10
6.00
p.m.,
Sunday
1:00
to
Vet Checked, Wormed, Six Fe· .:.,;.;~;...;.;.;;.;;__ _ _ __ 1 • 11 · 4 0 go mnl. It' '
pliance• furnished, laundry room
Cavalier.
78
Oldo,
•55
w/lronl~
6:00p.m.
6t4·
992·2526,
Run
faclllli11. doH m school In town.
rilaln; One Male, 614-446-7168.
1$$5 Honda Accord LXA. 4 -droe. !!CW-576-9005.
,
·
AppUcatlons avallable at Village Moafe owner.
AKC Ae ·
--t Yo ki
•
Doors, Auto, AIC, PW, PB, PM,
Green Apta. 149 or c:a11Bt4-992g11ter..., r • pupptel, PS. ExcBIIenl, 24,000 Miles, 814· full line of auto bodv panel•.!!
540 Miscellaneous
3711 .EOH.
ready to go S350ea. 304-egs. 448-6481.
palnla and auppllaa. 1l10 glass,....
31126
Merchandise
__
.
tight
Oxygen and ac.. •
3 Room Furnished Apartment,
1 1$$5 Stwrn SC2, Auto. .tlc, N&lt;, 'tyleneaoumllly.
tanks filled and oxchangotl,.·
151 Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 24,000 BTU Air Condilianer 220 10gal tank aet up apeclals. Fllh Crulae, AMIFM Callette, Trunk 814-742-2712.
, ,..,
Ne11 To Bo111rd Library, $350/ Voll, 3 Years Old, Excellent Con- Tonk &amp; Pet ShOp, 24t3 Jaellaon - . .. 112.000 Call Allor 5 P.ll.
4
~o .. Plus Depool1 Required, No dition, $375. 614·&lt;441·11!lB Days;
~. Point Pleaunl, 3~ -875- (Serlon lnqulrlll Onlyl) 814· New CIIJ tanks, 1 ton lrucll-'
Pels AlloWed, Relerenees Ra· 614-446·3108 E~emngs.
448-4015.
wheels &amp; lltdiators. D &amp; R AulD,
quHted, Call Debbio Or Judy At
Ripley, WV. 304-372-3933 or 1·
3 ¥ear old Ranch Kmg nding
814-448--1323
23 T-Bucket kit car w/aluminum 8()0.273-D329.
mower 1 2.5hp. 42~cut, main· Give your dog a break from 1\lm- mag wheels, car is not complelApartment For Rent !New Havan, tenanc;e agreem8n1, snow blade, mer heat. Ask R&amp; G FEED I od, sell with or without 351 Clo· 790
Campers &amp;
WVA. One Bedroom. Furniahed, chaina. $750 firm . CaS! iron bath SUPPLY. 814·$92-2114 about veland engine, completely ro·
Motor Homes
HAPPY
JA¢K
PARACIDE
Phone 814-6118-28t 3.
tub. 304-675- 1183 after 5pm.
done , to many a•uu to lisl.
SHAMPOO. Kills fleaJ &amp; ticks on $2,500 OBO lor both. 304·882· 1981 20 FL Wliderneu Camper, i
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Are. you buying new furniture? contact. Checks doggy odor-.
AC, Awmng, Good Condition~ :
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Sell your uaed rurniwre 10 1he pg. , Contains im perma11YJn•l
' 3172 ar 304-882-2821 .
ESTATES. 52 Wottwood Drive meroy Tlmft Shop. Therli is a real
A Naed A Car? No Credit, Bod $3,001!, 614 ·311&amp;-&amp;117.
o
from 1280 to $334. Walk to ohOp need let couches, breakfast and Pure Broil Bnele Pupa For Salo, Creilt, Bankruptcy? We can Help 1 81 28 F '
,....: 1I
Ra-Establioh Croditlllull Make tor$ Homo, 454
t. Tooske Claso A 11 "''
1 m0¥181. Call 814·448·2588. dining room sets. We also buy 614-3116-8721 .
CI\Wy Engine. Uri! "'
Equalllouling Opporiunity.
baby beds, strollers. playpens, Rat Terrier Puppies, 1 Weeks $150 Week Tallt Home. 15"1ft
. All Ex1raa, Uust Sell Fo~
toddler car seats arid walkers. Old, Scony'l.uc:a~ 8t""387-7518.
Dawn On Cash Or Trade To
ow.4 614-446-1311.
·Convenient to PVH, 2btdroom. Call 81&lt;4·992·3725 Tueiday thru
Oualily For Thla Bank Financing.
kltct.n, bath, LR. No pet~ S3001 Saturday, 10am-4pm at 220 Easn
51281 No Credit Turn Oownsll14-441 ·
mo.l300 depolit. 304-875-57e6.
0807.
Main Street. Pomeroy.
!;!~~~~!;
Conaga for rent-1br, kllchen,
Boots By RG&lt;Iwine. Cnlppewa, 570
Musical
bath. S17Simo. +utilities, 112mo. Rock1,
Lama. Guaranteed
I
rant br dopoaiL 3114-17'52495 &amp;I· Lowest Tony
Pr~es At Shoe Cafe, Gal·,
natrumtntl
ter8pm.
lipolis.
e Piece Royce Drum Set, $150;
Downlown Gallipolia: Modern 1.
Epiphon&lt;&gt; Guitar StSO, 814·367·
Buytng sports cardel
Bedroom. All Electric. Carpeted, I will buy
any
Elites or new Dia- 0657.
Complete Kitchin. Elac:tric Heat 1
mond Kinos. It you have cards to
1980 -111110 cars ror ltOOIII
Air Condl*&gt;nlng. 814-4411·0139.
Fruits &amp;
sell, let me know. Call 614 · 1ii4~- 580
Stizod And Sold
Locally TNsllonth.
Vegetables
Furnllhod 1 bedroom, upper lov- 3098.
TNcltl. 4X4'~ Etc.
11, deposit &amp; reloronces required. Chest type freezer 15cu. ft. white,
1·800·52.2-27311, X3901.
304-675-2144 or 304-875·3653 leather look top. $200. 304·8t5- Now Open: Boac:h'o Farm llaritot,
State Route 110, At Evergreen
alltlr s:oopm.
3864.
Horne Grown TomatoH, H~ Run:
ner Green Beans, Corn, Fresh
Furnlaned 2 Bedroom Ape.rlment,
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks, Watermtllon• And Cantalapes,
Across From Park, AC, No ·Pets, 300
2,000 Gallona Ron We Al10 Buy loCII Produce
References. DopooiL 1325/llo.. EvansThru
Enterpnses, Jac;kson, OH Opan 9·7 Oally, Call 814-448·
11 ...46-1129!, 8t.....a.o577.
Hl00-537·9528.
1984.
Furnished !t Rooms &amp; Bath, No
SwHt corn and pepp«a, 10~?
~~~. Reloranc:a Md O.pollt Reo
JET
Williams Farm, SyracuH. Ohio.
qulrod, 814o-o4411-15111.
AERATION IIOTOAS ·
Repaired, - 1 Rebulk In s-. 814·V92' 3gas day I or B14-992Furnlahod Enlcloncy $1 $5/llo., Coli Ron Evans, H100.531·152&amp;
51168 """""'s'L
UtUitiOI Paid, Sharo Bath, 807
Second Avonuo, Gallipolis, """ FARr.1 SUPPLIES
U8 3844 AIIM 7 P.ll.
CLi&gt; Cadet 1872, 18 l'p., 60" mower deok, hydrostatic, 450 hrt.,
&amp; liVESTOCK
Graclouo living. 1 and 2 bedroom. $4000 , 614·192-6468 days or
aperunenta 11 VUiaeo Manor and 614·992·2219 even~rts.
Rlvorolda Apartmento In lliddl ..
port From S238.-f304 ·. Call81,._ :Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs. 61 Farm Equipment
$$2·6084. Equal Houli"'l Oppor- · Problema? Need Tuned? Call tha
wnlloo.
10 FL Cal1lo Trailer In Good Conpia(10 Dr. 614-448-4525
clition, 814-448-2514.
Lafayette Mall: Large 2 BedHomollto 330 Wllh New
101rt OFF all firm tr1c1or parb.
rooms, 2 aathl, 1450/llo.. ln- Looks And Runa Uke Now,
Sider's Equipment. 304-875·
cludoa Utlfitio' Dopolit'Requlrod, 15 Minutes From Gallipolis,
7421 ,
014 146 2177.
3N·2tl01.

, ,.WAA.T'!&gt;
"(~

.

§OOP

CfTI\E
[»..'(7

·'

7 Deeoratlvti trim

1 Child's toy

a Draw out

2 Shoe part
3 1ncrea11
4 Headliners
5 - and mo
6 Vases

9 Pel . . 10 Alflrmstlona
11 Change the
clock

West

Nortb
Pass

2•
Pass

J•

Pass

Eaot
Pass
Pass
Pass

..

-""'A"''"'

.,

'*

1 I-lEARD VOU ! '1'0U DON'T
I-lAVE TO '&lt;ELL At ME !

6 44 0 231

It is standard advice to a novelist:
Write aboul subjects you know. This
applies to canoonists as well. If you
have read Peanuts for any length of
time, you know the interests of
Charles Schulz: golf, religion. baseball, football, hockey and -- surprise,
surprise! -- bridge .
Many years ago. Woodstock and
his friends were playing bridge -in
Snoopy's house. (One cannot really
call Snoopy's house a kennel, as it
contains many things, including a
pool table.) And suddenly from May
6 to 9, inslead of working as mechanics on Snoopy's Sopwith Camel, the
birds were back playing bridge. The
ftrst two days, there were six-card
end positions. In the fourth, no diagram, just Snoopy answering a bidding query. And Thursday, there was
this deal. Lot's speculate how the bidding and play might have gone .
·
It looks nonnal for North-South to
reach four spades. In thts auction,
North's cue-bid shows a maximum
pass with spade support.
West would probably lead the club

19 Type of cltlnCe
23 Cone-ahapecl
ohelter
25 Bandloader
Arna
26GrHklel1er
27· Above (poet.)
29 Type of road
30 Run• an
engine In
neutral
32GuHboAirlca and
Arabia
35 Firat
performance
36 Comedian
Phlllpa
'S7 Pallid
. 42 Avilllon bofO
Chuck43 Pair
45 Armadillo
46 Kind of
poetry
47 Zlnc49 Conaume
to1ally
(2 wdl.)

52AD«**e

53 Walked
55 ScoulahGaellc
56 Emu,.1a a
lion
59 Gravel
ridge

'
CELEBRITY CIPHER

o

by Luis Campos
Celebtity Cipher etyptog~•i• n «MNid from QUCI&amp;IIion8 by IMIOUI PIQPII:, put and pr...nt
•
Each »&gt;ter m!Ae c1pt.- stands kif anolhef Todly.. cUI: R ...,._ P

•AJ

NCA

XVJTIF

JMioiZLG
N JAG

D

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BVJ

ZA

c· A

.U G

' H

RSZOCHG

ZA

RTUIZL

NCEG

NJSG

I Z MG.'

'HVJNCX

G.
FGBGD.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My game is bubbling beneath 1he surface. I'm jusl
wailing for it to explode.M- Nick Faldo, on his recent slump.

wo••
IAMI

TIIAT DAllY
'UULII

10.

•

1

mg:

DOWN

clothing size
31 Coarse hair
33 Seed covering
34 Guah
38 lrrllated
39 House wing
. 40 - La Oouce
41 Small hole

By Phillip Alder

Autos to.r sale
1083 Olds Omega, -4 new Urea.
ballefy, , _ ullaua~ N,OOO Extrul U1rie Newl814-t48·1522.
•
oewa1 miiH. no "'IL $1,895, 114- '
$112-61124.
Honda "Wheeler, TAX 125, 81 ~

Household
Goods.

28 Women's

Write from
knowledge

lf1MJSP0RfAIION

51 o

62 Cupid
63 - Major
(constellation)
64 E•pertllyer
65 Took the bus
66 Equal

Opening lead: • 1o

:' .........,.,. ,.,~..... ...,......"''

MERCHANDISE

iaencumber

21 Collar ohope
22 Fulure ll.Bs.'
exam
24 I.e .. In lull
26 Kentucky blue
grass

MY DAWGH

RENTALS

Available soon. Clean 2bedroom,
new appliances, baaament. References. Depoait No pets. 304·
675-5182. .

name

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

no

• .J8542
.•AQ965
• K 52
t K 9 4 3

$$2·25111.

1 Bodroom Houoa In Mason, Ude
ltiea, Rent $300/Uo., + Deposit.
614-256·14811.

(2 wds.)

East

K1096

44 Long time
45 Solo
1 Actor Mon1and 48 Moved In water
5 Noel
50 Communion
Q Unit of ll!lh1
veuet
12 Orylng kiln
51 ABA member
13 Type of t01t
54 Water willow
14 Wide s
llze 57 Jac kie 'a 2nd
mate
15 Non-profit rg.
58 Pl1a-bread
16 Hookllko p
17 Snaky leHe
sandwich
60 Finnish first
18 Painting sty
ACROSS

20 bry, •• wine

• 9 8 4
+ A J 10 8
• ~ 73

naw pariS. musl see! $4800, 614-

------3401-:::.-:::-:-~--- 410 Houses for Rent

a••• And Oldest Maintenance
· And Janitorial Supply Companv

Rou Ollora An ExOIIIent Starting

. Thollortgogo Savings
Prouroml

f

"FiOii"Procluctl, The Area'l Lar-

CuiiOmll"l.

,

320 Mobile Homes

I.AI..EI.

Ro•l• Seeki~ An Elpet'ilnced
Saloo Representative WhO Hoo
The Ability To Deal With Tho
Many Present CuJtomera And
Also Call On New PtOspectJY.e

HOW'I

Central Supply
VlloySuppiy
Browns Trustworthy

Milea From GaHipoHa, on State

17,1100oadl
remote, beautllul land; MeiQI

loans tool

0'- TNI Vllut
R&amp;GF""

For Sale Or Trade&lt; 32 acres 5

Uae That Mortgage Payment for
Something Bener Than lnrerestl
·*Pay your monoage oft 5-15
years soonetl
-·Save $25,000-$75,000 or morel
-*Make sure your Le nder isn't
misc;alculating your mortgage
and c;ostlng you lhousandsl

Toll Freo
1o888-34:1-4736 EXT. 11

Uvlngston't basement
proofing, all basement
dono, !roo eotlmatll, I
euarontoo. 10yro on job
erce. 304-675-2145.

20 Acrft 1 2bt ~allor, city - ·
loc111d on Bud Chanin Rd.
1•2,000. 30~·675 · 1•82 . after
IIQm.

Grove-Scenic Valley.
Beau~ful 2acrololl, P&lt;Jbilc water.
C. Bowen Jr. 304·578· 2338 or
Wtdge ReoJty 3114-4175-2122.

C.ll torfrMinrorm~tlon

ln..,._

350 LOIS &amp; Acreage

Gallipolis, new siding, New Wind·
O¥WS. Al l New Kitchen, Wil Take or
Trade In $35,000. Phone 614·
387·0403 after 3pm 614· 446·
3362 Asll For Shelie

-·Program wor1ris on mobile home

'1.000080.3114-571o81121.

742·2387.

MlCUIIeporl· 3 unltl. new windows
and carpel, painltd, clean,

SS.,IIOO, 614-628-4950.

--~~~- ·
1983 lauzu wudl, Itt bod, 1•

Puzzle

I WASN'T '(ELLIN6 ... I
WAS EXPRESSIN6 M'f5ELF
FORCEFULI..'&lt; !

As West is marked with the heart
ace, it looks as though South .must
the diamond queen to get home.
po,ssilble line is to draw three
of trumps ending in the dum.then to call for the club queen.
/\l""'"" East plays low, declarer dis.,.IRIJ'-'1 cards a low bean. West wins and
returns a club.
Now South knows West must
have led from club length. As West is
also known to have started with
three spades and alleast five hearts.
clearly he is shon in diamonds. After
ruffing, South plays a diamond to
dummy's ace and finesses through
East to make the contract.

Is ·jU Rj&amp;p. ,o Gj. ~ -~,·

. •_ · office: "Then:! is ooly one smart
r-'"""::'~-=~-=--:-:---, animal in the world and every
.

.

.

.

ur-1, -G ~~~:~:.o~:~~klo quo~d

1-._,..:.1R;_Inl',.:-0rlN;_Arl--.wnl

1.

LET'S TR'f 601N6 BACK
TO '1'ELLIN6 ..

.

.

.

•

•

•

-.

by· filling in \ the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

VWsi'

~ill be (looting on o cloud with
~ ~ yflu'll find In the

class!('Jeds.
~9ll'l~!.. &lt;3ETit\E
SOME O'tf-10 ~Ill&gt; TN All

MWJS cPI\Nr VP
'tilE MiV/ .

. ASTBO·GR.APB

I

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Major changes could be in the offing for you in the year ahead. Some
will be self-induced, others will he
·detennined by outside factors. Both
are capable of producing ultimate
benefits.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You may
find the assislatlce you've been see~­
ing 1oday that will finally help you nd
yourself of some burd_ens you have
been putting off for qwte some ume.
Loo, treat yourself to a birthday g~ft.
Send for your Astro-Graph _p _redictions for the year ahea4 by matling ~2
and SASB 'to Asuu-Graph, clo this
newsp~r. P.O. Box 1758, Murray
. Hill Station, Ne.w York. NY 10156.

o

•I

Be sure to state your zodiac sign: . .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Even r
though you're likely to be in a sociable mood today, you 'II still he very
· selective regarding the comJ&gt;anions
· you'll choose.·
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) This is
a good day to spend some time clean- ·
ing out your home-and office by getting rid of things you know you' ll
never use again .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Con·
versation partners will immediately
· sense you're not given to making idle
remarks.·When you voice an opinion, •
you'll truly have something to say.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec.
21) You are now in a favorable
growth pattern, so be alert for two or
more opportunities that have longrange possibilities.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
Both today ana tomorrow, conditions
will he tnDYe receptive than usual for
advancing certain self-inten:sts about
which you feel strongly.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Heed to any hunches you get today

"

relating to career or financial moves .
Your; intuition can supply you with
insights your logic can't perceive:
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) One
of your affiliations. might ask you to
rake &lt;irf new responsibilirtes today.
Do so willingly, because it c ould
offer unique benefits.
.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprii19),Citallenges will stimulate your abilities
and feelings of self-worth today. You
may volunteer to tackle something
that intimidates others.
TAURUS (April.20-t-fay 20) It is
important !oday you have faith in the
final outcome of events. If you do not
waver and continue to think win, 1he
results could be significant.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Today
you might have an opponunity to
transfonn something that is presently ouunoded. You will know how· to
make things functional once again.
CANCER (June 2I -July 22) A
presenrinvolvement may be destined
to play a more significant role in your
future affairs. This person possesses
a strong, positive personal.ity.

ITUESDAY

Pickup • Broil- Yacht - Waiter - WORK for IT

My cousin is a

real dead beat. He is very willing to do
almost anything for a buck but WORK for IT.

JULY 221

�•

Ohio Lottery

Reds snap
losing spell,
drop Marlins

Pick 3:
3864
Pick 4:
9888
Buckeye 5:
3·4·6·9-35

Sports on Pages 4-5

Chance of shower&amp;
tonight , low In 60s .
Thursday, showers, high
innild-80s .

•

ent1ne
.

~.41,N0.&amp;9

.

2 SIC1Iono, 12 Pogoo, 35 conll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 23, 1997

C1817, Ohio Volley Publllhlng Compo~ny

A Gennett Co. Newapoper

Officials want to improve standards for schools
.

.

Legislature's responses to the Ohio
By PAUL SOUMRADA
Supreme Court decision in March
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, - Students - and that tossed out the state's school fundtheir schools- would have to bring ing system.
The proposals are de signed to win
up their grades under le'gislation
being considered in the House and voter support for a proposed pennyper-d.ollar sales tax increase that
Senate.
While the House Education Com- would raise .an extra $1.J billion for
mittee discussed new academic stan- schools. Republican legislative leaddards and measures designed to low- ers, at the behest ·of Oov. George
er truancy and dropout rates Tuesday, Voinovich, · want both the accountthe Senate Finance Commiuee debat- ability packages and the funding
. cd legislation to tighten school finan- mechanism to clear the Legislature
by the Aug. 6 deadline to place an
cial and management practices.
Both commiuees were expected to issue on the November ballot.
"There 's no question the accountvote today on the bills -two of the

•

.

. .

I

ability package is crucial to what
we 're doing with the voters out
there ... said Senate President Richard
Finan. R-Cindnnati.
But Finan conceded that the funding part remains a stumbling bl ock as
lawmakers continue to struggle to
find an adequate mix of new school
money, residential property lax cuts
and reductions in current state spend-

measure learning through the lOth entire accountability issue is contin- power from parents. and their ability
grade. And all students would be gent upon providing. more money for to innucn'c th ings."
required to pass the reading section schools.
·
The leader of the coalition that
of .the fourth-grade proficiency test to
School districts that don 't meet successfully challenged the school
move on to fifth grade. High school either the academic or mailagcmcnt funding systems diSmissed the cnlirc
students also would have to take goals would face incrcasmg levels of . debate over accountability.
more classes in science, math and state supervision - up to complete
" It 's a diversion,'' said William
other basics to graduate.
takeover of day-to-day operations.
Phillis. execut ive director of the Ohio
The legislation discu~sed in the
That concept doesn 't sit well with Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
Senate would require school districts the more than I 00 conservative School Funding.
As long as the debate focuse s on
to balance their budgets, set aside activi sts who packed the Statehouse
ing.
The .House academic standards specific amounts of money for books atrium and· spi lled oul of co mmittee academic standards and management
plan would scrap the current ninth- and other !llaterials, building repairs rooms into the hallway.
issues, lawmakers don't have to talk
"This is a move toward state con- about the real issue- money, Phillis
grade proficiency test, which is now and' emergency expenses.
Senate Finance Chai1111an Roy trol of education ," warned Philip said.
reQuired for graduation, and replace
it with a tougher test designed to Ray, R-Akron, to.ld reporters that the . Dudek of Alliance. "It takes ~way .

Gee visits Pomeroy Livestock
royalty
named

·'·

Livestock princesses and runnersup were selected Tuesday at the Rutland Civic Center in preparation for
the I34th Meigs County Fair which
will be held Aug. 11- 16 anhe Rock
Springs Fairgrttunds,.
Named as royally were: Melody
Lawrence, wool princess, and first
runner-up Mendy Guess; Jessica Barringer, beef princess, and first runnerup Myca Haynes; Jessica Wheeler,
horse princess ,-and~first runner-up
Ca5saodra Smith; Melissa Houser,
poultry princess, and first runner-up
Jennifer Smallwood; Bethany Cooke.
rabbit' princess, .and first runner-up
· Andrea Neutzling; Kim Mayle, sw.ine
princess. and first runner-up James
McKay. ·
Chris Barringer and Odic Karr
were named swine and rabbit prince,
respectively.

FAIR ROYALTY • Livestock royalty for the
1:Jolth Meigs County Fair were selected Tuesday following judging at the Rutland Civic Center. Named were, from left, front row, Wool
Princess Melody Lawrence, Beef Princess

Jessica Barringer, Swine Princess Kim Mayle
and Swine Prince Chris Barringer;· back row,
Horae Princess Jessica Wheeler, Poultry
Princess Melisss Houser, Rabbit Prince Odie
Karr and Rabbit Prlncesa Bethany Cooke.

FBI swamped with reported sightings of Cunanan
The Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee made a
brief stop in Pomeroy Tueeday afternoon as part of his state tour
program. Gee met with OSU alumni Hal Kneen, president of the
Meigs County Chapter OSU Alumni Association, and Pomeroy
attorney Jennifer Sheets. Kneen Is shown here presenting Gee
with a basket of Melga County tomatoes and two historical
tabloids published by The Daily Sentinel.

Union workers strike
again against GMC
. DETROIT (AP)- Union worken went ·on strike today against
General Motors Corp. for the sixth
time this year - this walkout at a
· pl~t that builds transmissions and
w~~ls for many GM vehicles.
A tentative agreement was reached
early today at another key GM pans
pl¥&gt;t in Indiana. averting a strike that
also could have crippled North Ameriqn production.

At · the GM Powenrain Group
pl~t in the Detroit suburb of Warren.
2.~00 memhcrs of United Auto

Workers Local 909 went on strike
shortly after midnight Tuesday.
The strike could force OM's North
Al!lerican assembly plants .to shut
down by Friday. according to a comP..,Y source who spoke on condition
of anonymity.
"We· ve been nt it all day and into

~Ita

the night. hut it does not appear that
we have made enough progress to
avert a stl"ik.c at this particular
moment." UAW spokesman Reg
McGhee said early today.
Talks were scheduled tb resume
late this mornmg. GM spokeswoman
Darla Park said.
The Warren plant makes transmissions for several front-wheel -drive vehicles. including the hot-se lling
Pontiac Grand Prix and OM's new
generation of minivans. It also prodw.;cs steel wheels and control arms.
the company smd. giving no details.
. The union is upset over the No. I
automaker's plan lu transfer wheelmaking operations l'iom the Warren
plant and replace it with work transferred (rom the Buick City complex
In Flint. Mich .. The Oakland Press of
Continued on page 3
·'

•

has not only captured the national designer Giorgio Armani and model
spotlight but held it since Versace's Naomi Campbell were there , and
July 15 slaying.
.
Sting and Elton John sang a mournFBI agents were sent to Lebanon, ful rendition of Psalm 23, "The Lord
N.H., where a man fitting Cunanan's is my Shepherd."
description bought an undisclosed
Versace's lite was insured for $21
item at the Triple Play sports memo- million by Lloyd;s of London, an
rabilia store. A clerk told police the insurance market spokesman said.
man's pockets were stuffed wi'th The money · was to be paid out
cash and he left in a dark gray Mer- regard less of how Versace died and
cedes with Florida plates.
was intended to help his company
"These sightings arc coming in all weather any short-term problems.
over the country, so we ' re just -sendThe FBI has acknowledged there
ing agents out to try to verify them, .. were missed opportunities to catch
FBI spokeswoman Mary Jean Fryar Cunanan, who left a well-documented trail before hcing accused nf
said. "He could be anywhere.''
In Greensboro, N.C. , an anony- . shooting Versace at his South Beach
mous caller told police his wife saw mansion.
But the agency hlamcd media covCunanan at a Wal-Martlatc Tuesday.
erage
for scuttling one promising
The man wore glasses, a baseball cap
lead
.
and aT-shirt with an AIDS message .
Invcstigah1rs suspct:t Cunanan had
He and another person drove off in a
already
killed David Madson and Jefreddish -orange sports car with a
frey
Trail
in Minnesota and developFlorida license plate.
er
Lee
Miglin
in Illinois by early May
As police scrambled lo check the ·
when
agents
traced cellular phone·
sightings, 2,000 mourners gathered at
calls
from
Migiin's
stolen Lcxus to
a Milan, Italy, cathedral to pay their
the
Philadelphia
area.
respects to Versace. Princess Diana,

But those clues were leaked to the
media, and a~thorilies say Cunanan
dumped the car and struck a~ain,
killing cemetery caretaker William
Reese in New Jersey on May 9 and
stealing his red pickup truck.
"The media got to that real quickly and that opportunity was ruined," .
said Coiecn Rowley, an FBI spokes.woman in Minneapolis.
After Reese's killing, Cunanan's
trail cooled. In eluding police, he may
have heen the beneficiary of plain
luck.
A monih before Versace was
killed. Cunanan parked Reese's pickup truck in city garage. It wasn't·
discovered until the day Versace wa&gt;
killed . Police discovered later ihat
Cunanan had stayed at a $39-a-night
motel four miles from Vorsace's
home for as long as two months.
On July II, a sandwich shop
employee called pol icc when he
noti.ced a customer looked ltkc the
picture of Cunanan he 'd seen on
Fox's "America's Most Wanted."
The man left he fore ,police arrived.

a

Ex-college controller accused of taking more than _$1 million

MANSFIELD (AP) -A former comment Tuesday. A phone listing
college controller took $1.1 million for her in Shelby was disconnected '
from a state school and used the mon- and her auorncy did not return ca lls
ey to buy mobile homes and furni - seek ing comment.
Ms. Johnson apparently used the
tun!. stare Auditor Jim Petro sa id.
Petro accused Doris Johnson on money to buy and sell mobile homes,
Tuesday of stealing from North' Cen- give cdsh to family mcmbers.and purtral Technical College during a sev- . chase vehicles , appliances and.furniTenoglia said Dunwoody had a
en-year period. The auditor said Ms. ture, the audit said.
prior juvenile record for a fel ony sex
· College officials notified authoriJohnson 's was the worst embezzleoffense which resulted in his being
ties when they discovered money
ment
case
ever
at
a
state
college
in
placed in a juvenile detention facilimissing in October. The school also
ty . In addition, Dunwoody was deter- Ohio.
"Too much authority was being requested the audit. wh ich will be
mined to be a sexual predator and,
placed in one person 's hands," Petro turned over to the state allorney genunder Ohio law, he will be required
eral's office and the college's hoard
to report to law enforcement once said. "There was no segregation of of trustees.
responsibility at all. "
every 90 days for the rest ·o.f his life
Petro rec ommended that Ms.
Petro released a special audtt of
following any release from imprisJohnson
be ordered to reimburse the
the two-year school Tuesday. The
onment.
school.
Tenaglia commended the Meigs report said Ms. Johnson diverted
The audit , covering Jurie 1989 to
money to herself from the college and
County Department of Human SerJune 1996, found that Ms. Johnson
vices, the Meigs Co.unty Victims' tile NCTC Foundation, ·a nonprofit was solely responsible for deposits,
corporation esfablished to raise monAdvocate J:onnie Dodson . and
disbursements and accounting of all
authorities in Morgan and Perry ey for the school.
Ms. Johnson was indicted in April transactions at the school, including
counties for their cooperation and
on two counts of aggravated theft. financial statements. She also could
assistance in the investigation and
transfer 'money between college
She is awaiting trial.
prosecution of the case.
She could not be reached for accounts without obtaining approval

man sentenced on rape charges

A Malta man pleaded guilty in the
, Meigs County Court of Common
. PQ~as Monday IO raping a minor male
child near Burlingham.
. George Lewis Dunwoody, 24,
was charged in connection with the
rape that occurred on April 2.
Dunwoody was set to stand trial
today, but the trial has been canceled
in the wake oflhe plea.
·
Judge Fred W. Crow In, acting
· upon the recommendation of assistant
Meigs County Prosecuting Allomey
Christopher Tenoglia, sentenced
Dunwoody to the maximum of I 0
years in prison.
"Dunwoody will not receive 'good
time' credit while he is in prison and
"-· will serve the full 10 years," Tenoglia
said.

M1AMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - .
With the nationwide dragnet for
Andrew Cunanan coming up empty,
there is growing unease that the man
suspected of killing Gianni Versace
and four. others could be anywhere.
The fear was illustrated Tuesday
when Cunanan was reponedly seen in
New Hampshire at noon and in North
Carolina nine hours later. Neither
sighting - like dozens of others
before them - was verified.
And in San Diego, authorities
promised jiuery residents extra protection at Saturday's g·ay pride
parade . Some fear the 27-year-old
Cunanan will return to his hometown
to mingle among an expected
250,000 revelers.
: "I think that of any place in the
U.S. he' s most likely' io show up, it's
here .'.' said Brett Dcffcbach. who
lives in Cunanan's old neighhorhoo!l
in Hillcrest. "He's so unpredictable.
who knows what could happen ."
Indeed, the man voted " Most
Likely Not to be Forgotten" by his
high school classmates 10 years ago

accounts simuh.ancously. Private
auditors had been making si milar
recommendations since 1991.
Petro said investigators rrom his
ofllc c could not he sure they found all
the missing money hccausc 'records
fur the college. fuundation a.nd Ms .
Johnson's hank accnunts were int.:ompiete.
Auditors ~aid ~ tlc spent ahoul ·
$1.65 million from January 19KX to
Nnvcmbcr 1996. while her total
sa
lary for the period was about
has acted on some of Petro's rccom·
$255
,000.
mendali ons: spliuing the accounting
duties at the college and auditing all

and had unlimited access to unused

checks, the audit said.
Ron.ald Abrams, president of the
2.400-student college since February, ·
said Ms . Johnson avoided detection
by shifting money hetwecn accounts
. whenever there was an audit.
"A lot of money was involved
over a numhcr of years," he said.
"But the coll ege found the prohiem
and took steps w correct iL"
Abrams said the college already

P&amp;G drops price of top-selling Folgers
CINCINNATI (AP) - After a
series of price increases, coffee
. drinkers have reason to rejoice. ·
The Procter &amp; Gamble Co. said
Tuesday il would cut prices for Folgers canned ,offce, the best-selling
brand in the United States. It marks
the first decline in a liule more than
.
a year.

~

P.S,G plaris to lower the price of a
) 3-ounce can of Folgers by 30 cents,
to $3 .06. h also will reduce the price
of a 13-ouncc can of decaffeinated
Folgers by 30 cents, to $3.76.
The change, effective Sept. B. does
not alter the price of Folgcrs instant•'
coffee.

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