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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Marlins
pound ·
Reds 8-1

Pick 3:
025
Pick 4:
8030
Super Lotto:
17·20.22·33-40-45
Kicker:
888176

Sports on Page 5

Partly cloudy tonight, .
low in 60s. Friday. partly
cloudy, high In mid-80s.

entine

•
IIIII. 41, NO. 70
01117, Ohio Vlllley PubiiiNng Company

2 5ectlono, 12 Pages, 35 conta

Po?'eroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 24, 1997

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Health department
seeks levy renewal
.

The Meigs County Health Departme-nt will ask. voters in November for
continuing funding of its programs.

. A resolution was passed on Monday by the Meigs County Commissioners . authorizing the agency to

natal care onll what arc known. as
''wc ll·h~1hy'' pn1grams.
A well ness hlock. grant. wh1ch al:oi-(1
is m.atchcd with local funds. provides
ahstim:m:e education in loc:.1l sch(lols.
This year. the program will OC avail·
;.~hie tn 'itudcnts in all three local

u~ed

tires.

Jacnhs &gt;aid that lhc hoard aiS&lt;I
uses locally generated funds as "seed
money." which csto.1hlishes pn1gn.uns
that ar~ l:ncr clig:ihlc for state and

ICderal

doll;~rs.

seck the renewal of a one-mill. fiveyear levy, to conlinuc local funding school districts.
A preventive health. ·progr&lt;.1m
of I he various programs operated l&gt;y
lhc department
focuses &lt;m drug and ak(lhtJI &lt;~dUicti(ln
According 10 Jon Jacobs. admin- prohlcms. and nutrition cc.lur.:ation.
islraiOr althc department: the levy is among other wpil:s.
currently generating appro,.imatcly '
The dcpanmcnt also pro~· idc s
$1 KR .OOO in tax revenue for the environmental services. such as w~ucr
hcahh depanmcnL hascu on 95 per- testing. sewage ~nnits. home loan
cent collc~.:tiuns .
The funds that arc generated local·
ly arc used. in part. as local match-

ing funds lor stale and federal prosuch as the child and family
health prngram. which provide pre-

gmm~.

Riffle, owner of McCulloug~ &amp; Riffle Drugs in
Pomeroy, shows some of the cigars available
in the store's cigar counter.

CIGAR SELECTION - With cigar smoking
now enJoying an lncrea . . In popularity, local
cigar aalea are Increasing as well. Here, Chl!ck

.

'

Cigar chic... or health hazard
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
For many, cigars represent modem
chic, a status symbol ... or just a cigar.
Once thC domain of stodgy old
men. cigar ~making is now cool.
thanks in part to movies like Independence Day and Jerry McGuire.
Women executives and youngslcrs
arc lighting up.
The word 'cigor' comes from the
Spanish word 'cigarro'. The people of
the West Indies were smoking cigars
when Christopher Columbus came to
America. ,A.nd they didn't always
come in sweet smelling cedar l&gt;oxcs:
in the old days cigars were packed in .
pij!'s !&gt;ladders to keep them moist.
President
Clinton.
Arnold
Schwart.encj!gcr. Dennis Rodman.
('huck Norris and James Bclushi. to
name a few. arc cigar smokers.
•Ci!_!ars nrc also increasing in popularity locally. According to Chuck

Rifllc. owner of McCullough &amp; Rifnc Drugs in Pomeroy. sales of cigars

14 10 19. smoked at least one cigar
last year.

rhc'-tjuali)y expected lrom a cig~r with
mirrc and Chuck's name on it. !love

While male teenagers were the
l&gt;iggcst users of cigars, with 42 percent claiming they had tried at least
one. And nearly three perccQl of all
the teens surveyed had smoked 50m
more cigars last year.
"These alarming statistics c'1ln he
duo in pari -to several factors. Mosl
obviously. cigars arc becoming fash·
ionablc. Movie stars and super mod-

~

els arc often seen with cigars in

here l&lt;might arc aware of thai and arc

advertisements and interviews. Cig·
ar bars arc trendy with young pro.·

have im:rcascd at the store.

Earlier this month. Norris · ;mu
Bciushi shared their Lone Wolf hranu
of cigars with the "in" L.A. crowd at

Schwarzcneggcr's and Maria Shri ver's Schatzi on Main
"We worked hard .. arc still work·
ing hard -- to achieve and maintain

p:nod cigar." said Bclushi :" l want
to make a gnod cigar. I think the folks

enjoying ~ good cigar. I get excited

fcssion~ls ."

ahout this. Smoke more. man . just

MD. of The Ohio Stale Univcfsily's
James Cancer Hospital and Research
Institute .

smok~."

'

·

And people arc smoking more .
from 1993 to 1996. cigar consumplion rose 44.5 ·percent. according to
the Centers for Disease Control.
A. rcccn1 CDC study found an

estimated six million tccnagcs. more
than 25 .ricrccnt ufho'ys and girls ages

Pre$idents who smoked cigars
The following Presidents of the United States all had
one thing in common. they all smoked cigars 1
John Adams
1797- 180 I
James Madison
1809-1817
John Quincy Adams'
1825-1829
Andrew Jackson
1829-1837
John Tyler
1841 -1845 .
Zachary Taylor
1849-1850
Andrew Johnson
1865- 1869
18~9-1877
Ulysses S. Grant
Chester A. Arthur
I881-1885
Benjamin Hamson
1889-1893
William McKinley
. 1897- 1901
William H. Taft
1909-1913
Warren G. Harding
1921 - 1923
Calvin Coolidge
1923~ 1929
Herben Hoover
1929-1933
John F Kennedy
1961-1963
Lyndon Johnson
1963: 1969
Richard Nixon
1969-1974
Bill Clinton
1993-

said David E.

Sc~ullcr.

··As we know. teens arc very per-

ceptive to what's the latest 'cool' thing
w dn. " Schuller said.
.
But no

m~Hcr how. 'cool' or '~ ic'

ci,;ar .10rnoking may appear. it is just ·
~~s

deadly as cigarette smoking.

acctn;ding to Norma Torres , RN.
nursing Jircctor at the Meigs County Health Department.
Bcc;;Jusc cigar smukc .i"' rarely
inhalcJ.thcrc is~~ growing f~sc sense
or scc.:urity that cigar smoking is safe.
she pointed out. In addition. Congress
did not explicitly include cigars in the
IIJK4 law reqUiring hcai.Lh war~ings

on t.:igarcucs. so cigar packages hear
no warnings from the U.S. Surgeon
General.
"Cig;1rs arC just as deadly as d~·
ar~th.:s." Torres said. Lidding·that ci~ ·
ur smokers increase their risk of lung
am.J other types nf cancer. lung dis·
case. lu::;1rt auacks and stroke~ .
TmrCs noted : most of the same
can.:inogcns and canccr-pnH.Jm.:ing
chemicals found in cigarettes arc
found in cig01r:~: overall can~.:er death:-.
among men who smoke cigars arc ~4
percent higher than among nonsmokers: s1udics indicate lhat ail
tnhal·co users arc .five to 10 times
more likely tn get cancer of the
mouth or throat than their nonsmoking.countcrpmts: dgar smokers have
four \0 10 times the risk or non ·
~ontinued on page 3.

Middleport•s fire protection classification upgraded
lire department and water supply . .
HulTman e xplaincd.
The \·illagl! rcccOvcd a totall-rcd~.· illat!c's fire prntcction classification
~~as improvc&lt;j from a Class 6 to a it of 5~.24 points with a max-i mum
credit possible of 5~.24 and narrowpa.&lt;S 5 effective July I.
. The depar1mcnt had requested the ly mi ssed the four rating which
jnspcction from the Insurance Ser- would have l&gt;ccn rccciYcd with a
vices Office based upon several credit of 60 poinls. HolTman added.
The deparlmcnl credited several
improYemcnlli which had been made
factors
in the classification improve11ince ils last inspection in 1983.
·
ment.
In ihe lcllcr from lhe ISO. the
"First.
the
residents. in the village
inspector stat~d "the new classificahave
proviqcd
outs landing support of
tion may res11,il in a decrease in the
the
department
through the years with
qdvi_sory property insurance calculatheir
financial
suppon
of the lire protion for many insured properties
within the •illagc," according to tection levies in place." Hoffman
fr!iddleport Fjre Chief David Hoff- said. "Tht: tax leYies are used to
finan ce lhe purchase of the fire
man.
The ISO rajes three different areas department equipment necessary to
1vhen perfoqnin!r an inspection : prolectlhe viifage." ·
receiving and h(ndling lire alanns.

The Middleport Fire Dc~artmcnt
·recently rctei&lt;c-d notilication that lhc

OPEl

MOII.-FII~

SAt9-6

· OPEN

MOl·FRI.
SAT. 9-6

The cooperation with the Pomeroy
Fir..: Department resulted iri a mutu&lt;~.1 agreement hctwecn the villac:cs to
provide each other with an '"extra
engine company on all structure

fires. he said. On all structure fire
responded to by the Middleport Fire
Department. the Pomcro'v Fire
Department responds with a fully

Services oiTcred lhrough the
health derartmcnt arc generally. availahlc cithl.!r free of charge nr on :.1 slidmg fcc sc;.Jic. Even in in~tances
where a fcc is levied. lhe fcc is usu~t lly considcmhly lc:-;s than cu:-;t.
An at.:lual cost for scrvi~.:cs is calculi.!tct.l hy the Uepanmenl. and the
J~fl~crcncl.' hct'-'!'ecn the cn:.;t of pro··
inspccti&lt;ms. sanitation nuisance c~nn ­ vu.Juu.! thai ·se rvice and the fcc
plaints and sulid waste and hat,ardous -e harg~d lh..: puhlic i:-; made up nY th!:
1
1c vy·gcncn.ued runc.ls.
waste investigations .
Recently. the departm ent has · Tile ~cncral clcctilm will he hCid
hcgun tn rnnnitor the recovery ;m Nov~mhcr 4 .
process involved in th_e recycling of

Suspected serial killer
is found shot-to-death
By EVAN PEREZ
Stanley Trail of DcKall&gt;. Ill..
Associated Press Writer
father of Jeffrey Trail. nne of I he men
MIAMI BEACH. Fla. -And1cw Cunanan is hclicvcd I&lt;&gt; have killed.
Cunanan. lhe suspected serial killer said. ''I'm very glad lhat he's hccn
who eluded a nalionwidc manhunt stopJl!!d and 1ha1 nol&gt;ody else got hurt
for nearly three months. shot himscl f when he· g&lt;&gt;l stopped. Bul I take no
10 death in a houschoal just 2 112 J"Y in his death. TI1a1 doesn't help me
miles frr'Hn where Gianni VersaCe was atall."
l
gunned down .
"Thai 's one of the had things
"All across the nation. our citizens al&gt;out him dying like this : Nohody
1
c~n sumd down and l&gt;rcathc a sigh of will he able to ask him ." the elder
relief. The reign of terror hrough1 Trail said. "Nobody will he ahle 10
upon Us hy Andrew Cunanan is tell me why this happened ...
over... police Chief Ri~hanl Barreto
And investigators had not found a
said today.
~uicide nnte as of early today. leav·
As the sun pecked over lhc hori-. ing unsolved much of 1hc mystery as
zon. Cunanan 's hndy was removed lu what may have triggl.:"rcd the L:ross~
from the lloaling home more than I 4 country killing, spree.
hours after the siege hcgan Wcdnes·
More lhan 100 police and FBI
duy.
:.~gcnls surrounded the noating.· two·
The suspcc1cd .&lt;e rial killer's lace story home Wednesday night after a
was "hlnwn off." said John Walsh of report of a gunshot c:oming from
Fox 's "America's Mosl Wanted:· inside.
·
who visiled the scene. The sholln lhe
"The hcst guess .. is that Cun~m~m
face slowed 1hc idcntilication , II was killctl himself as a carci;~kcr arrived
more than 10 hours hcl"ore rmlice In cheek on 1he property. Mwu-Dadc
-confinned the hody in the house was police director Carl~1s AI vo.m::·z ~01id.
Cunanan.
Poli~.:c on the outside h[ld nn idea
"The shot to lhc face made lhc Cuoanan had shot him se lf. They
illentilicati(m of the h(1dy much morl.:" shouted. "Come tiUt! C(llll!..' out!·· hut ·
uiflicuh. " Metro-Dade Mayor Alex lh!: man hdicvt.:U hiding in:-.idc did
Pcncla.&lt; said. " in addition 1t1 that. I he not rcsrnnd. They waitcJ f11r hour~
only olhcr availal&gt;le nicthod of idcn· he fore . ~oing in and finding
tifying the holly was fingerprints."

Cunano.m\ hot..ly.

.

RICHARD BARRETO
(Miami Beach Potlc.e Chief)
"There was ~•n unprecedented
level uf pressure put on this man hy
l;~w enforcement and medi~1 exposure. " Barrel&lt;&gt; said ... I 1hink he was

a desperate person. He wa~ in a situ~atiun where· it was very. very ditfa\:uh
for him to move ahcmt."
Barreto suid Cunanan was identi ·
lied l&gt;y his lhuml&gt;prinl and lhc gun
Continued on pa~te 3
.

Republicans want Democratic
support for ·school funding plan
COLUMBUS (AP) - Repuhli- R-Rcynoldshurg. &gt;WU hi partisan supcans in the Legislature said 1hey need . port was her goal '" welL
hipani~an suppon for the school
'" The important thing i:-. lhat we
funding plan they in lent! to take to want to make th 1' a hirarli 'ii.tn eiTorl.
voters on Nov. 4.
We want cvcryhody to haVe the
But two Democrats said Wcdncs- opportunity ur have their inpul in the ·
day thatlhcy didn't exactly l&gt;uy iL
l&gt;ill." DaviJ&gt;on &gt;aid.
Rep. C.J . Prentiss. D-Cicvdand.
Lawmakers arc workim.! toward
complained alter acling Hnw;e Edu·

cation Committee Chuinnan Rep.
Randnll Gardner. R-Bowling Green.
canceled plans lo hear anlcndmcnts
on a school accountahility hill .

instcad .Gardnerdiscusscda sctof
rnustly technical amc·ndmcnts lhat
will be vOted on next week. along
wilh more suhstant ivc amendments .

t•lday lt ~ dis~..· u~s I he

funding r•~~.:kagc .
Sen. Roy Ray. R-Akrnn.annount:t:d lhal the finan~..·c commit ·
teL: w(JUh.J not rneet

~1gain

until Mon·

Jay or Tuc&gt;uay. '!11e fult Senate had
hccn

lcnt~lli\'oly

sL:hcdulcd u•

V(JIC

em

Jhe hili 110 Thursday.
an Au!' . 6 t.ICadlinc to get "a sc hool
Sen me Minority tcader Ben Espy.
funding p~ckagc on 1he Nov. 4 l&gt;ai - D-Columhu&gt;. welcomed the l&gt;rcalhcr.
lnt, Legi,lai!Vc leader&gt; and Gov. He rcncwcU his n:quc~l that GOP
ticnr~c Voinovich would like to sec , lcaLicr ~ -.nap their plans f(,r a
account:.thility rnC'asurcs in place a' a Novemhcr vote on the tax plan . rcc way In sell 1hc package - which mnmcnding instcud a srccial dcl:linn
include)., a pcnn y-pc r-t.lullar im:rcusc
in the ~ale~ ta lC- to the voter:-..
The House academic :-.lanc.lard'

Bu1 Ms. Premiss said the committee

plan would scrap the current ninlh-

should have moved the amendments
Wednesday.
·
"To go throu ~h this c harade ... is

grade profil:icncy test. which is now
required for graduation. and rcplm.:c
it with a tougher test c.lc:-.1gncd to

not necessary... said Ms. Prentiss.
who earlier had signed a letter 10

"i ng_sL: hL:dul"ccJ ftlf

measure learning through I he 1Oth
grade. And ali s1 udc01s would he
Gardner asking for more time to . required to pass the reading section
manned engine.
study
the aCl:buntahility issues. .
of lhc limrth-grauc proticicncy tcsllo
The Middleport Fire Department
Gardner
paused
when
a.&lt;ked
after
moYe on to liflh gra~e . High school
rciUrns this service to the Pomeroy
the
hearing
if
there
was
any
friction'
students
also would have 10 take
Fire Department. he explained.
between
him
and
Ms.
Prcntis.
s
.
•
more
classes
in science, . math and
"The village council and mayor
"I'
m
going
lo
work
every
way
I
.
o1hcr
basics
lo
graduate.
have also been cooperative through
can
with
Rep.
Prentiss.
Quite
frankly.
Meanwhile.
1hc Senate Finance
lhe years and supported the departwe
disagree
on
some
of
the
issues,"
Committee
put
ull'
a vote scheduled ·
menl's efforts while the vi llage's
he
said.
"
I'm
willing
io
talk
about
on
a
bill
reqUiring
stricter linancial
mainlenancc department has worked ·
absolutely
anything...
.
practices
for
schnnis
. And the House
10 maintain lhc water system," he
House
Speaker
Jo
Ann
Davidson..
Finance
Commincc
canceled
amCCIsaid.

in January or Fehruary.
E., ry said Senate

President .
had
as ked him for a one-on-one meet in~ .
and lhal indicated the Senutc plan
might he m trouhlc .
'Thai nnly happens when they
need support from lhi s side nf the
aisle ," he said. "They don't have support ror their idea'\." .
Ray hinted I hat the House 's pmblc.ms were the reason for the delay.
"The Senate is prepared to vote on
both hills,:· .~e said, referring to 1hc
accountability legislation and the
proposed sc~!lPi fundinl! paduigc.
, lll.hidsl)ll~ 'rSspondcd that the
House and Senate art on the same
page. but that both chambers have
been busy studying the vorious

Richaru Finan .

1ssucs.

R - C~ncinnali .

?

�Commentary

"

Thursday, July 24, 1997

Pagt '2
Thuradlly, July 24, 1117

OHIO Weather

I De.a

Friday, July l5
AccuWeather• forecut for daytlme coodltions ltld

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Strwt, ~.Ohio
614-9112-2158 • Fax 912-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlallar
MARGARET LEHEW

____

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GOP malcontents: Wrong time,.wrong place
By TONY SNOW
CtNIDn~

'E.stahfisfutf in 1948

MX 1Dt1.......,17.

'

Crime stats down, but
fear persists in capital
By JANEUE CARTER
AeaoclOd PrH1 Writer

WASHINGTON - When Republicans took over Congress, they
mherited the IItle of World's Most
Dosorganozed Political Party E~hibit
one: Last week, as Senate investigators were e~posong grimy misdeeds
by Democratic operatives during
Campaign '96, GOP upstarts in the
House of Representatives were fi~­
ing to bump off Newt Gingrich.
It is difficult to imagine somethong dumber than trying to snuff a
chieftain in the middle of pitched
battles with the White House over
welfare, health care, taxes and
troops in Bosnia. But more than a
dozen restive conservatives gathered
on the evenmg of July 10, prepanng
to mount a putsch agaonst theor
fuhrer. Just to prove their senousness, they drafted a "pnvileged resolution" to unseat Gingrich.
The malcontents cited the usual
complaonts. Gongnch os too scatterbrained to serve as an effecuvc
leader He comes up with thousands
. of ideas a year, but can't distinguish
between Nobel Prize nominees and
idiocies.
He cuts deals without consultong
anybody. He engages on compromoses that make hom and hos monoons
look like fools . And although he fancies homsclf a master of political
chess, he has zero insunct for what
Boll Clinton woll do ne~t
Lately, the spCaker lias seemed as
mercurial as the Queen of Hearts. The
day of the would-be revolt, he spoke
m favor of shoppong·Natoonal Endowment for the Arts fund to state agcncoes Purists saw thos as an act of yellow-bellied treachety, since Gmgrich
and all other Republican leaders had
promised to koll the NEA with a big
rock. The speaker supponed the failed
compromose because he thought it
would soothe tensoons between govemment-phohes and moderate
Republicans who want to continue
subsidozing obscene art and covoc ballets.
Tactical blunders of thos sort have
led some to wonder what planet

WASHINGTON - Patnc1a Robmson knows fear. Ever smce her son
Parran was gunned down two years ago, she has escorted her surv»vmg son
to school each day.
The school in northeast Washington is just two blocks away but Robinson is not taking chances. Si~teen-year-old Parran was the same dostance
from home when he and another friend were gunned down.
Darren, 14, is "the only child I have left," Robmson said. "It's hard for
me to let him out"
In a city where the White House and Congress talk often about dramatiC
steps to improve the local quality of life, Robmson's fear is not uncommon.
As cnme increased over the years, so did anxoety among Washington 's
543,000 res1dents.
A consullants' report that sparked changes in the police department
detailed wodespread criminal chaos. Homicides alone increased 169 percent
over the last decade.
.
' Police in March launched a cril"c-fighting initiative aimed at restoring
the public's confidence. Four hun'llred officers were redeployed onto the
streets and more are on the way.
The "zero-tolerance" push is showmg resulls, police say. Crime overall
has dropped 16 percent this year. Homocodcs are down 25 percent, from 221
at this lime last year to 164 so far in 1997.
But statistics alone cannot still the fears of resodents who have witnessed
a spate of horrendous cnmcs.
,
This year, three city police .officeti; have been slain: A 12-year-old was
- kidnapped and killed in a gang-related incident on his way home from
school. Last month, there were eoght homicides m a 36-hour period.
Three weeks ago, a 7-year-old boy was shot to death as he sat in his
father's car outside a fast-food restaurant Two weeks ago, three Starbucks
Coffee workers were found shot to death m a back room of theor shop in the
fashoonable Georgetown neighborhood.
The recent slayings prompted _House Speaker Newt Gongrich to challenge By Ben Wattenberg and
Denlel Wattenberg
President Clinton to come up with an anti-cnme plan for the cuy.
Not planning to sec "The Lost
"Enough is enough," Gingrich, R.-Ga., wrote Clinton. "The citizens of
World"
again (this time with your
this city need action and they need it now. "
White House aides noted that the president alread~ has proposed that the eyes open) no matter how many
federal government take over the coty's prisons and courts, freeing money times you sec the TV commercial?
Consoder two recommcndatoons for
for other needs.
The latest hogh-profile crimes make the healing even harder for voctims even more ternfyong summer alternatives Philip Roth's latest novel,
like Robinson
"It dod something to my wholclamily,:· she smd. "Some mornings, I "American Pastoral" (Houghton
Mifnin. 1997), revisits the lost
don't even want to get up."
Even her home feels dofferent since Parran's death. Robinscin saod. She world of America m the 1960s.
lovecl the working-class neighborhood when she moved there 13 years ago. "Russoa's War," a 10-hour series
now amng on PBS, e~tcavatcs docuHer family lived nearby. She krn;w her ncoghbors . It was sale.
ments
and hostoncal film from prc"It was a place where you could SJ! outsode and talk all mght," she saod.
voously
secret Sovoct . archovcs to
,But as crime spread, she and other residents felt they were loving under
reconstruct
the lost world of Premier
siege.
Stalin's
Russia from 1924 to
Josef
Parran and two friends had gone to a movie on nearby Prince George's
1953.
Each
IS
a ma."crpoece in us
County, Md., the night he was kollcd. His mother encouraged him to go there
medium.
And
each is far more
because she believed it was safer.
frightening than a bunch of animatromc dmos
Roth's novel IS m•crocosrnic,
exostcntoal The documentary os
macrocosmlc. ep1c . ""American Pastoral" is a study of what happens
when one decent and conventionally
successful businessman -- Swede
Lcvov -- suddenly finds that he has
become 'he "plaything of histoty."
"Russia's War" is the chronicle of
what happens when the histoty of a
massive natoon becomes the plaything of a runaway odcology in the
hands of a psychopath -- Josef Stal-

m.

!NfERE;TING IN
'111E Hl.WT FOR
RED OCTORER'

Today in history
By The AIIOCIIIted

"'

P11111

Today os Thursday. July 24. the 205th day of 1'997. There arc 160 days
left m the year.
Today's Highlight m Hostoty.
One hundred and fifty years ago, on July 24, 1847, Mormon leader
Brigham Young and hos followers arrovcd in the valley of the Great Salt Lake
m present-day Utah.
On this date:
In 1783. Latin American revolutionarY Somon Bolivar wllli born in Caracas. Venezuela.
In 1862, the eighth president of the Uno ted States: Martm Van Buren. doed
on Kinderhook, N.Y.
In 1866. Tennessee became the fin;t state to be readmitted to the Union
after the Co vii War.
In 1923. the Treaty of Lausanne. whoch settled the boundaries of modem
Turkey, was concluded m Swotzerland
.
.
In 1929, President Hoover proclaomed the. Kellogg-Bnand Pact. whoch
renounced war as an onstrument of foreign policy.
In 1937, the state of Alabama dropped charges against five black men
accused of raping two "'hote women in the so-called Scottsboro case.
In 1959, dunng a visit to the Soviet Unoon, Vice Presodent R1chard M.
Nixon got onto a "kitchen debate" with Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev at
a U.S. exhibition.
In •1969 the Apollo II astronauts, two of whom had been the first men to
set fool on'the moon,.splashed down safely in the Pacific.

John T. Roach Sr.• 77. Hartford, W.Va. doed Wednesday. July 23, 1997
in Holzer Medical Center
He was a supervisor for the food dcpanmcnt at Lakon H"'pital for 27 years,
and a U S Army veteran of World War II
Born Aprol ll. \920 on Clifton. WVa .. he was a son of the late Ernest "Bud"
Roach and Laura Virginia (Keams) Roach He was also preceded on death
by three sosters. Lola Gobbs Black, Sam Gwlym and Margaret Smith, and a
brother, Darrell V Roach.
Surv1vmg arc h1~ wale Anna Carroll Roach . a daughter and son-JO·law.
Delores Ann and Dale W Cunnongham ol Hartford. son and dau~hlcr- on-law,
John T Roach Jr. and Gcorgcona Roach nf Hanl&lt;&gt;rd. two sosters. Virginou
Smuh of Bridgeport, and Ada Fraley of Addoson , three brothers. Wilham J.
Roach of Monimnce. Moch . Le.-tcr R Roach of New Haven. W.Va .. and Donald E. Roach of Hartford. and five grandcholdrcn.
A gravcsodc sco voce woll he held Saturday at II a.m. at the Zerkle Cemetery. with the Rev. Donald·E Roach ollicontong There woll he no calhng hours
In hcu ot flowers cnntnhutums n~&lt;~y he made to the True Gospel Church
The F&lt;)glcsnn~ Funcrnl Home. M.L"iOn W.Va .. 1:-; m charge c•l armngcmcnts.

Clarence A-. Se~rls
The lamoly of Clarence A. Searls, KO, Bodwell. who docd nn Tuesday. July
22. 1997. requests that mcmoroal conlnhuloons he made to the Amero can He an
Assocoatoon. Mc1gs County Chapter, on care of Nancy Camrbcll. Meogs County Courthouse, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. or to the Shriners Hospi'tal Burn Unu.

P~eu

The novel provodes a hogh-resolution' study of one man's confrontation with revolutionary passoons
The documentary offers a wideangle survey of a vast empire's
encounter with revolutiOnary pa.•soons. But both ultimately arnvc at a
somolar and crucoal onsoght that ha.'
shaped the major horrors of thos century · When revolutionary ends
dctermmc means. personally or
nationally. the pastorals end. the
wars bcgon, and the bodies pile up
The actiOn m •• Amcm::an Pastoral" IS faorly somplc. Seymour
"Swede" Lcvov os a legendary hoghschool athlete (and, to ncoghbors on
hos Jewish enclave in Newark, N J , a
symbol of assimilation into the AmerIcan cultural maonstrcam.) He marries
a Catholic beauty queen. takes over
hos father 's glove factoty, and
attempts to smk roots among New
Jersey 's Yankee gentrY on rural Old
Rimrock The apolitical Swede would
like to make gloves, not war, and
enjoy his old stone mansion, pnzcwmning cattle and oohcr totems of hos
American pastoral.
But history. m the guose ol hiS
teen-age daughter, Merry -· a hnght
but emotionally diSturbed stutterer - has other odcas for him. Radicalized by the Vietnam War, Merry
transforms herself into a Weatherman-style voolcnt '60s revolution-

ary. In the lexicon of the tome, she
"brings the war home," blowong up
the Romrock post office. The blast
kills an innocent country doctor.
Critics on the left have furiously
denounced Roth's novel as a badly
disguised social and political allegory that romanticizes a complacent
nose-to-the-gnndstone
postwar
Amcnca whole carocaturong and tnv·
1ahzon11 ' 60s odeahsm Most galhng
of all for the left. Roth seems not to
take the ideals and rhctonc of '60s
&lt;adicalism at face 'value. Instead. he
shows contempt hy reducong profcss.cd New Left ideals In mere
screens for more obscure and
ajlgrcssivc underlyong droves, as m
Swede's appraisal of Rita Cohen. his
daughter's presumed odcolngocal
catechozcr:
While Roth's novel shows how
hostoty acts on an_ indovidual consciOusness,
"Russ1a's
War"
describes how an mdovodual cunscoousness, Josef Stalin ·s; acts on hos
nation's tortured history. Stalin,
explains hos Russian biographer
Dmitri Volkogonov, was gropped by
··a powerful addiction that lasted his
whole life-- an addiction to power."
In riveung and often grisly detaol,
the first four segments of "Russia's
War" trace the course of Stalin's
remorseless drove to achieve Inial
power. ho. ncvcr-cndong murderous

Democrat" he'd claomed to be on
1992 or a McGovcrn -Mondalc
about to lose its soul Woth the retread exemplified by the admimsdcpanurc of communications dorcc- trauon 's 1994 health care plan
"The problem In the first two
tor Don Baer, II 's open to question
whether President Clinton's legacy years was that we were playing a
woll be that of an activost New congressional game and George
Democrat or an Eoscnhower-like Stephanopoulos was our native
place-holder.
guide," saod another Clinton staffer
"It turned out that Congress dodAs chief specchwritcr heginnmg
m March 1994 and top message n't know where ot wanted to go and
stratcgost smcc August 1995. Bacr we lost out. After the Republicans
has been trymg to help Clinton get took over, the prcsodcnt began to
across that he's doong somcthmg look to people who could help hom
new woth government· govong people exccutc 1his own ideas"
-the lools they need to make the most
The key figure on remaking Clinof the or own lives.
ton's image, of course, was outside
Even Baer admits that the effort guru Dick Morris, around whom
has not been entirely successful. The fanned a gang of cenlnsts that was
press, partocularly, os fi~ated on the responsoble for fashoomng Clmton's
odea that Chnton 's agenda os merely 1995 balanced budget proposal,
a seroes of mocromitoallves addmg composong the line that "the era of
up to nothong
bog government os over," and argu· Baer and hos allie• on the White mg for his 1996 welfare reform sogHouse insist -- correctly -- that this nalurc
Baer, who as a speechwnter
IS all wrong. "You make streets safe
from gang violence -- that's a big penned Clinton's memorable line to
deal even if you're not doing it with veterans ofthe Normandy mvasion bog bureaucratic programs," Baer - "we are the choldren of your,sacnsays. "You expand NATO, you fice" --became a key member of the
change the fundamental character of Moms group, along woth domestic
the Democratic party, you balance policy advoser Bruce Reed, sincethe budget --these are all bog deals." departed specoal advoser Bill Curry,
A former assostant managmg edo- and now-deputy chief of staff Rahm
tor at U.S. News &amp; World Report, Emanuel.
'
Liberals on the White House
Baer was hired to write speeches at a
time when confusion reogned about staff, inclnding first lady Hillaty
whether Clinton was the "N~w Rodharn Clinton, wanted Democrat-

purges of Communist party rivals
real and imagined, hos brutal campaogn to collcctov11.c Russia's va.•t
peasantry, hos onsanc decapitation of
the Red Army (over half its senior
command eliminated through arrest
or c~ccullon) as a rearmed Nazi Germany prepares for war and genocide, and hos devious hut ultimately
self-deluding nonaggression pact
woth Hiller m 1939 on exchange for
three tasty Baltoc morsels and a h1g
bite nf Poland
From his emergence as Lenin's
unchallenged successor until his
· death. Stalin would. in the words of
thi.s unflinchmg Russian mdictmcnt
of Stalin's rc1gn, .. wage war on his
nwn people -- for 30 years manopulating loves woth propaganda and
slate-sponsored hcs. controllmg
them not through personality or
political genous. hut hy the hypnosis
of terror"
"Amcncun Pa.sliii'JI" and "Ru.~sia's
WfJI" interpret two truly lost worlds in
ways that arc sure to open your eyes to
the plague ol modem times. the SIL'I·
pcnsoon of independent stand;uds of
morahty in the scrvocc ol revolutionary
rcrvor
Ben Wallenberg is a senior fellow at the Americ:an Enterpme
Institute and moderator of PBS's
"Think Tank."

l~ses

'soul'

oc acuvost Ann Lcwos to get the top du_ces a fantastic product."
commumcaloons JOb m 1995, but
Some "Bacr moments," accordMoms, Vice President AI Gore, aodc ing to Morns and other aides,
Jack Quinn, and now-chief of staff include Clmton's 1997 State of the
Erskmc Bowles got 11 for Bacr Unum line that "the enemy of our
mstead.
umcs is macllon," Clinton's dcci" At that point," Baer says, soon to follow up the Madrid summot
"there was confusoon about what last month wuh triumphant visots to
we were . The analogy I usc is that Warsaw and Bucharest, and Cllnwe wanted 1o he a news magazmc, ton's 1996 tram trip to the Democra- .
but some people thought we were toe convention.
Vamty Faor .and others, the New
As Bacr prepares to depart to
York Daoly News I became like the help found a new magazmc wnh his
managing editor of message."
onctomc boss. Steve Brill, the quosOthers claom he was much lion around the White House is:
more: a key stratcgi~ thonkcr (espe- What happens now? Morris Jlredicts
cially after Morns' 1996 departure a period of "chaos and confusoon"
on disgrace), "keeper of the New as Bacr's two successors, Lewos and
Democrat llamc" , omprcsaroo ol former New Yorker writer Sodncy
schcdulong, speeches and viSuals, Blumenthal, get organized.
Both lohcrals and longtime
and Intermediary between roval
factions led by Morris and liberal Hlllaty Clonoon loyalists, Blumcndeputy chief of staff Harold Ickes
thai has Bacr\ ability to shape
"He helped make Clinton the "vosum" and Lewos lll~Y be able to
'cducauon president,"' said one make the commumcatoons trams run
Whuc House aide "Unlike 'I! lot ol on time, hut they wollonevuably laek
US," said another. "he knows what a
his centnst sensibility. Paul Be gala,
news lead os and how to get one."
the mcommg Whuc House political
Yet another staffer sa1d, "He's dorector. IS described as a social
the architect of how the Chnton moderate hut is definitely a "cia"
prcsodcncy should he voewcd --he's ) warfare " economoc liberal.
the Michael Deaver of this adminis'But there IS a Clinton legacy to
tratoon, but also the Ted Sorensen." be left, and woth Bacr's departure,
According to Morris, "Baer is there 's a danger 11 will get lost.
vety compulsive, very anal. He's
(Morton Kondracke Is execudroven to make sure that evety detail live editor of Roll Call, doe newsIS covered. He's a grinding force that paJH!r of Capitol Hill.)
makes things happen, and he pro-

•
•

POINT PLEASANT,. wva
The National Guard Armoty near
Poont Pleasant will he the site of a
July 29 workshop on the regional
»ran spark.
To 'be held by the West Vorgmoa
Pubhc Port ~uthonty from 4-7 p m.,
lhc mccung 1s the seventh tn a scnes
of 12 work,hops scheduled throughout the area 10 prclv1dc rcstdcnts wuh
mlormauon about the critcna and
pnx;cs.., mvolvcd 1n !-;C\cctmg a sttc
lor a regmnal trao!&lt;ipark. and to seck
pu,hhL com ment on the stx sues currently under study. oncludong one on
Masoo County.
Prcvtou~ mceungs were held 1n
Charleston. Huntington. Wonfield ,
Molton, Belle and Hamhn, whole
aUd1t10nal meetings arc scheduled ror
July ~ l 1n Beckley. Aug. 5 on Flatwoods. Aug 7 on Ropley. Aug. 12 on
Wollla~nson and Aug 14 on Parkcrs-

John A. Smith
John A. Smoth. Rae one, docd on Wednesday. July 2\ 1997, at Holzer Medocal Center on Galhpohs Arrangements arc under the dorection of Foshcr
Funeral Home on Pomeroy and woll he announced.

Meigs EMS logs 13 calls

Across the nation
A hogh pressure system should
Ram soaked the Southeast early
Umts of the Meogs County Emer- PoMEROY
shove the clouds out of Ohio's skies today, bronging floods and tornadoes
gency
Mcdocal Servoce recorded 13
12·29 am . Countty Mobile Home
tonight and produce mostly sunny to the Carolinas "0' the remnants of
Park,
Dexter, Tess Haskons O'Biccalls
for
assostancc
Wednesday
Unots
skies on Fnday, the National Weath- Hurncanc Danny dossolvcd overness
Memorial
Hospital.
head. Storms also hit the northern rcspondong included:
er Scrvoce sai~.
8.14
am
.,
volunteer
fire departThen , no more ram 1s In the lorc- Pla1ns wllh wmds reachong 90 mph on CENTRAL DISPATCH
ment
to
Umon
Avenue.
brush
lire. no
12.54 p.m .. Salser Road, Racone,
the Dakota•.
qlSt through the wcc~cnd.
mJunes
reported,
Heavy showers fell across the Car- John Allen Smith. Holzer Medocal
Low temperatures tomght woll
I 40 p m.. state Route 7, Tom•·
generally drop onto the 60s Highs on olinas and areas of eastern Georgia Center;
Jones,
Camden-Clark Memonal Hos4.11 p.m., Overbrook Nursmg
this morning, with possoble tornadoes
Froday woll he in the 8Qs.
The rccord-hogh temperature for reported on South Carol ona. where Center, Moddlcport, Paul Londsey, pital, Tuppers Plains sguad assisted
RACINE
Veterans Mcmonal Hospotal;
this date at the Columbus weathcr- one person was kolled
9:05 p m., Third Streci . Kelly
Charlotte. N C.. got nearly 6 1/2
6·52 p m , Flatwoods Road,
slallon was 102 degreos on 1934
Smder, treated at the scene.
while the record low was 52 on 1947 onchcs, of rain on Wednesday and Pomeroy, Moe a Reese. VMH,
1·53 p m , Rocksprings Rchabili- RUTLAND
Sunset tomg~t woll be at 8.53 p.m another 5 mchcs or so were forecast
5.21 p.m. , Meogs Mone 31.
tatoon Center, Pomeroy, Clyde
for the regoon today.
. and sunnsc .friday at 6·24 a m
,
I
Corbon. O'Biencss Memorial Hospi- Charles Chambers, HMC,
5 43 p m., VFD and squad to slate
tal ,
Route 143, motor-vehicle accodcnt.
CHESTER VFO
11 ·04 p m . transfonner fire on Todd Workman, refused treatment.
Moldred Phillips, VMH, Central DosBaoley Rood, no onwroes reported
patch
squad assostcd;
MIDDLEPORT
Obltuart•• ' are pald announcem•nta arranged by lacol luneral homea.
p
m
,
volunteer
fire
depan9.30
7.18
p.m.. Beech Grove Road.
ObltuoriM. are publlohtd aa ~ueo1ed to·-~ 1hOM cluktng more
lllfornmlon thliiJ le poo¥1ded In the ICCOIIIpenyinG DMth ~
ment and squad to Broadway Street. Tammy Kennedy, HMC.
~as odor at Cheryl Lillie rcsodence .

~ ~ /:~/~~,, Q_
bitua,r y

With Baer leaving, White House
By Morton Kondracke
The Clinton Whole House staff os

• IColumbus las• I

WVA

By The Associated

Terror a Ia.Rus.se; terror a Ia Roth

Barry's World

I

High pressure.to
bring nice weekend

FRED '
l'HOA1f50N
\W4S MUCH tftORE

.
,A;I
•
I
Airport w·o rkshop set
tfj •v.Otlces in Pt. Pleasant July 29·

John T. Roach Sr. , ·

Rumors new: One group said the effect that he had nothing to do
Gingrich inha!lits. Like a piecocious
teen, he often becomes so enchanted House Majority Leader Dick Armey with the ugliness.
with his intellectual dexterity that be was willing to step in if Gingrich got
Gingrich didn't necessarily
ignores crusty realities. At the same the heave-ho. (Armey's stall says emerge a more powerful leader for
lime House members were schem- just the opposite was true: He his trouble. He survived because
ong , to dump him, for instance, his refused entreaties, and told the mob nobody wanted to play Brutus to hos
stall was lealting rumors that he to go home and get some sleep.)
Jullus Caesar
might run for president.
But as Noetzsche observed, that
Another group saod Armey was
Washington is a town where the unacceptable and Paxon ought to whoch doesn ' t koll us makes us
urgent overwhelms the important, and accept the scepter (Pa~on partisans stronger. And in this parlous time,
in the case of this insurrection, high say their man stayed faithful to the · Gingrich has yet 'another chance to
address hos weaknesses. ,
temperatures and late hours conspired speaker).
GOP members almost unanito tum a gripe session into a crisis.
In any event. those who spoke
Some senoor Republican leaders met boldly Thursday night turned timod mously recommend somple;changes
with the rebels and came to the con- at high noon the next day. The for the speaker:
'I
Fittingly. Gingrich ~ontrols his
clusion that the Jacobons had enough prom1sed vote never took place.
votes to send Gingrich packing -- pro- Gingrich survived. And in the after- destiny If he learns how to step
vided Democrats played along.
shocks, Pa~on resigned his position back and lead at the same time, he
The math reportedly inspired and the once-tight club of GOP lead- will remain m power as long as he
\11
House Majonty Whip Tom Delay ers turned mto Paranooa Central. wants.
and House Leadership Chaorman Fonner brothers in anns wondered
Bill Puon to recommend a mossion who was plotting to do what to
Write Tony Snow, Cre..on
-to Gingrich . They urged fellow whom And, on a sure sign of trou- Syndicate, 5777 West Ctnhlry
members of the leadership to tell the ble, evety GOP leader but Republi- 81Yd., Suite 700, Los An&amp;elel,
speaker he was kaput and prepare can Conference Chairman John Calif. 90045.
for some sort of transition.
Bochner issued press statements to

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Jessa Mae .. Mazie .. Brannan Suspected serial kille'C;
Jessa Mac "Mazoc" Brannan, 83. M\ddlcport, died on Monday. July 21 .
1997, at Holzer Medical Center m Gallipolis. She was born on Bradbuty on
February 17, 1914, daughter of the late Alpheus and Eduh Winkk:r Russell
She was a homemaker and a member of the Moddleport Church of Chnst
Survovong arc two sosters, Flora Dell Grucser, Moddlcport, and Susan
Raw longs, Delaware, Ohoo, and several mcccs and nephews
BeSides her parents, she was preceded-in death by her husband, Carl Brennan , on 1993; three sostcrs, Clyda Allensworth, Edythe Jay. Gertrude Miller.
.
Gladys Russell, and Bernocc Fox
Servoces woll be held ai II am. on Saturday at the Middleport Chapel of
ohc Foshcr Funeral Home. Inc. Bunal will follow on Rivcrvocw CemeterY
AI Hartson woll officoate
Fncnds may call at the funeral home on Frodny from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
pm
In loeu of flowers. the famoly requests that donatoons be made to the Middleport Church ol Chrost. Stcwardshop Life Fund, 437 Main Street. Moddleport, Ohoo 45760

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndoanaOh"' dorcct hog pnces at selected
buymg poonts Thursday as provoded
by the US Depanmcnt of Agriculture Market News.
Barrows and golls. 1.00 to 1.50
lower; demand light to moderate on
a moderate movement
U.S 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
poonts 56.50-58.00. plants 57.25·
59 00.
U.S 2-3. 230-260 lbs 52.0056.50,210-230 lbs 47 00-52 00.
Sows· weak to 1.00 lower.
US 1-~ 300-500 lbs. 42.00-44 50.
few 41 00. 500-600 lbs 44 50-47 00.
lew over 600 lbs 47.00
Boars 38 00-41.50.
Estimated rcccopts 30 000
'

The Daily Sentinel

Pnccs trom Producers LlvcAssociation
Hog market trend for Thursday·
I 50 lower
Summary ot Wednesday's auctions at Gallipolis and Mt. Vernon
Hogs: 1.00 to 2.00 h1gher.
Butcher hogs. 55.00-60.10
Callie .steady to strong.
Slaughter steers choocc 64 0067 75: select 64 00 and down
Slaughter heofcrs choocc 62 .()()66 50 . .select 62.00 :lnd down
Cows. steady; all cows 46 25 and

!'ritOCk

down.

Bulls steady. all bulls 57 00 and
down .

Sheep and lambs 3 00 In 5 00
lower: chmce wools 70 00-75 50.
choocc c)ops 7 I 00-76 50. Ieeder
lamhs 79.50 and down: aged sheep
53 50 and down

(USPS lU-960)
Pubhd1ed every artcmoon. Monday through
Fnday Ill Cou11 Sl . Pomeroy, Oht(). by the
Otuo V;~Jiey Publt5hm&amp; Comp:m~ICiamru Co
Pomem~ Ohio 4~76Q , Ph 992-21~6 Second
~ Ia~~ pm;ta~e p;ttd nr Pnmeroy. Ohto

Mtmbtr: The Am'ICtoucd Pren and the Ohm
NC!w~ pnpcr AWJCt&gt;ll tO il

POSTMASTER: Send addre~~ correct ton~ to
Senttnel. I II Court St, Pomeroy
Oluo -l'i/69
~ 03tly

SUUSCRIYI'ION RATES ,
Bv C•rritr Gr Mocor Route
One Momh .•••••..•.•••••.•..•••••••••• . .. $8
70
OneWeckh
5200
One 'r'cnr
$10400

Dmly

SINGLE COPY PRICE
. . , . :-~ CenL'

Sub~nbel'l'l

not de!\tnng to pay the camn- mny

remit m :tdvnnce dtrect to~ Datly Senunel
on " three, StA or 12 monlh ba.vs C~dtt will be
gJVe n co.mcr each week
No ~ ttb ~cn puon by m:nl permtued m

nmJ"-

where home camer ~mre 1~ uvmlabk:
Publtd~et rc~rve~ 1~

nahtto adJust rate! durtng the 5Ub ~c nptton penod Sub5cnpdon ntle
change8 ltllly be tmpk:memed by ..:hnnging r~
dunuroo or thf' ~ubscnpuon
M~IL SUBSCRIPTIONS

lmldt Mtlp County
IJ Weeb
26 Weeb

l 2 Wceu

.

.. .

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

$27.30
. SS3.82

SIOlS6

Rates O•ttklt Mtlp County
J3 Weeb . ..
.. . .
. $2925

26 Wceb
s2 wceu

. . SS6.68
........ suwn

li""""""""""'='""""""'"":"""'""""""'"'ii

Stocks

Am Ele Power ..................... 43"1.
Akzo ...................................... 70'.1
AmrTech ............................... 66~
Ashland 011 .......................... 49~
AT&amp;T ..................................... 35'.1
Bank One .............................. 50'1.
Bob Evans ...........................16-,.
Borg-Warner ......................... 55'4
Champion ............................. 19),
Charm Shps ..........................521,1.
City Holding .......................... 33'1.
Federal Mogul ......................37'1.
GenMtt ...............................102'Goodyear .............................. 63'1.
Kmart ..................................... 1o~.
Landa End.............................26~
Ltd ........................................ 2o"t.
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19'/o

ova .........................................38

One Valley ............................ 43~.
Peoples ................................. 37'!.
Pram Fln1............................... 19'1.
Rockwell ............................... 64'1.
RO-Shell ................................ 54'1o
Shoney's .................................51J.
Star Bank .............................. 45'1.
Wendy's ............................... 26.,_
Worthlngton ........................ 19Y.

--·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Galllpolla.

' Continued from page I
found ms1dc the houseboat was simolar to the one used on three of five
ktllings tn whtch Cunanan was a suspect.
The 27-year-old Cunanan shot up
to the top of the FBI's most wanted
list as the pro me suspect on the slayongs of Versace and four other men in
Minnesota, Illlnoos and New Jersey.
Aftcr the Versace slayong on July 15,
Cunanan abandoned a stolen pickup
truck bclongong to one of his voCIIms
on a parking garage and vanoshed.
"We were probably prepared for
somcthong like thos." saod FBI
srokcswoman Coleen Rowley. "A
person who ts usmg desperate means

and cxhohltong thos kond ol voolent
hchavoor. you have to he prepared for
a vety voolcnt conclusoon."
-Rcsodcnts ncar the houseboat had
reported sccmg a man matchmg
Cunanan \ dcscnpt10n alter Versace
was shot to death on the Iron! steps
of ht-; m,msmn On Wednesday, a
caretaker who slopped by the home
called pollee to report a gunshoo
The houseboat os 2 112 moles
from the \{cn.. a!.:~ mansmn and about
a mile I rom the hotel where a man litlmg Cun.man''\dcscnptum stayed lor
a'\ long as two monlh'\ hclon: Vcr~

sacc's slayong
For four hours pollee wanctl.tJUt~
~1dc the houschoat. whu.:h sns on a
hr.mch ol tht; lnuaco.1stal Waterway
called lndoan Creek.
Aller linng volleys ol ! e.1r ga.,, the
SWAT oeam walked slowly on a line
1

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wcdnesddy admossoons - Hayman Barnotz, Pomeroy
Wednesday doschargcs - no~e
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July B - Alben
Vancooncy. Devon Pnce. Thomas
Lambert, Eliza Canter. Mrs Fronk
Stewafl and son
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Reynolds. daughter, Moddlcport, Mr
and Mrs. Frank Stewart. son, Wellston.
(Published with permission)

onto the house. After nearly an hour.
ms1dc, pohcc announced then search
had come up empty
Aller another room-by-room
search they found the hody ol
Conanan who had hccn dcscnhcd hy
l11s mother as a gay gigolo
Pohcc were slowed by the tear gas
and lound Cunanan's body several
hours later Barreto saod officers nevcr tired a shot. Cunanan sullcrcu a
self-onflocted gunshot wound . onvestigators sao d.
A source told The Assocoatcd
Press that the body was found on the
second noorofthc houseboat, where
bedrooms arc located. lnvcst(gatots
suspect the shot that the caretaker
heard was the suoc1de shot, the source
saod.
A .40-calobcr handgun , »he same
type of weapon Cunanari was
hchcvcd to have used m ht~ crosscountry ktlhng spree, was found ncar
the body. accordmg to tclcvisoon
repons.
Cunanan had eluded an ontensovc
nauonwode search whoch generated
hundreds of soghtongs all over the
country. He managed to escape capturc even though hts p1cturc was plastcrcd on televisiOn, newspapers. the
Internet and wanted posters.
Records showed the houseboat,
wh1ch had Occn vacant for several
months. 1s owned by Torstcn ReJneck. He 1s listed as the owner ol the
Apollo Sp,l. a gay health spa m Las
Vegas Clmk County (Nev.) Lli.:cnsmg Bureau showed Rconeck is a Moami Bc.u.:h resident Rcmc~,;k 1s not list~
cd in lot:~d phone t.hrcctones

Clarification
The Walter Haggy to whnm rclwas made m Tuesday's edotoon
of The Daoly Scntmcl. on the stpry
rcgardmg the Wolloc Kauff prellmo nary hcanng, IS Waller Haggy II ol
Moddlcporl, and not Walter Haggy ol
Rutland.
crcnc~

Authonty Board
"The selccuon proccss . .must lirst
he undcrst&lt;K&gt;d by the puhhc and
1ncludc an oppurtunny for all mtercstcd parttcs to exprcs!'i thctr vtews

Gallipolis livestock results
Produc~rs Livestock Market
Report from Galllpolos for sales condueled on Wednesday, July 23.
Feeder Cattle-Steady/Stronger
200-30011 St. $85-$105. HI $79$1 02 , 300-400# St $82-$97.
Hf $70-$91 500-650# St $72$87, Hf. $68-$82. 650-800# St $65$78; Hf. $62-$73
.
(Feeder Callie sale IS the second
Wednesday of each month)
Cull Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $42-$56.
Medium/Average $36-$41

Thon/Loght $31-$34, Bulls $46$57.
Back To The Farms:
Cow/Calf Paors $350-$725. Bred
Cows $285-$400: Baby Calves Sl $120; Goats $28-$56.
Upeomong Specoal' - Spccoal
Feeder Callie and Bn•xl Cow sale.
Wednesd.1y. July 30. 12 p m
There w1ll he a sale ohc week ol
the Gallla County Junmr Fair
.For PLCA loan rates and ~urrcm
raocs. please cuntacl Duu~ Evans at
1-800-641-PLCA

Cigar chiC.d!E_ontinued from page I
smoker&gt; of dymg Irom laryngeal. oral
or esophageal cancer
The Amencan Dental Assocoatoon
began a natJOnwulc anti·C agar campaogn thos past spnng. wammg that
even occasiOnal cigar smoking may
contribute to serious oral hcahh nsks.
If you arc thmkong about smoking
co gars, consider the followong:
~- C1gar smokers. many of whom
smoke an average ol c1ght c1gars per
week. often suffer !rom stamed teeth
and chroniC bad breath
-- Cogar smokers who say they
don't mhale arc still at nsk for oral
and pharyngeal (lhroat) cancers
Whether ohcy mhale or not. the cogar comes m contact with the lips.
tongue .md mouth tissues The c1gar
smoke permeates the mnulh. nose
and throat.
-- C1gar smokers may have the
same nsk for emphysema as tlo !..:1@:atettc smoker~ . A Damsh study lound
no d1ffcrcn~n nsk ol emphysema
hctwccn ~cnl dgarcttc smokers
and fonncr sr'nokers who swirchcd lo
cogars or popes Thcor rosk was
reduced only ol all tohacco consumptiOn dcclmcd.
-· C1gars produce secondhand
smoke JUSt hkc ctgarcttcs

-- Rcscarclj..llnks cogars with cancers of the mouth and lungs. as well
:is wnh stroke. heart allacks and lung
disease.
Pioneer psychoanalyst and cogar
smoker Sogmund Freud, when a•kcd
of a cogar actually represents a phallic symbol, reportedly responded that
"sometimes a c1gar 1s JUst a c1gar"
Freud later died of mouth cancer.

NICOLAS CAGE

FACE/OFF'
AND

WALTER MAITHAU,
JACK LEMMON IN

OUT TO SEA,.,.

~--~ISUXJU-

a•n

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

~~A!!!!!!!,'
Summer FurnituN
Clearanee Sale
Lo-Back Chairs .. ., .. ,.. ., ........ .,.,., '89
Hogh-Back Chairs ........ ., . .. .. ..... '99
2-Seat Gliders ............. .,., ... ., .'229

~~~~~Lou1ngers ....... ......... ., . .,.,.,., .. 1 1~9
Tues.- Sat.
9:30 to s·oo
Monday Noghts til 8:00

,.....,...-_,..._._.,.,
L
-----.-.----~

~·

Commissioners to
meet on Friday
The Meogs County Board ofCommlssJoners wall meet m spec1al sessoon Fnday, 2 30 p.m at the Commossooncrs Office on the Meogs County Courthouse m Pomeroy to doscuss
county employee Insurance coverage.

hurg
"Th1-. proJCl:t h;i-. hccn a source ol '
great puhhc mtcrcst." s~ud Edward
Cohen. v1ce ~.:hamn.m of th~ Port

and opinions These comments will
then be used to help us on the final
selccuon of a sue." Cohen added
Department of Transportation staff
woll he on hand to screen a video
explammg the tran&lt;park concept,
answer partiCipants' questtons and
present cntcna for site sc lcci!On
The live selection crncna featured
at the workshop arc phy socal fcatures
such as tcrraon. utility ava~labolity and
access. environmental com:crns
oncludm~ aor. land ancl water ompacts
and threatened or endangered
spcctes: communal)' concerns such a~
displacement, traffic, traveltime nnd
noise , need for developable land
around the sne; and cost
Workshops woll not include evaluatoon of engineering datc.' whoch os
stoll heong developed and ,expectcd 1&lt;»
be presented on August.
Parllcopants may submu thcor
comments ctthcr an wntlng or on
vodeotape at the workshops. or may
sent them hy Aug. 25to West Vorgonoa
Public Port Authoroty. Room 931.
Capotol Complex Buoldong 5. 1900
Kanawha Blvd East, Charleston
WVo 25305-0440 for conSidcratoon
durong the fmal selection. Sue recommendation 1s c~pc~.:tcd m August

.9Lndersons

�Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

NOTHING RUNS
UKEADEERE'

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II

MUF~R SHOP

992·2196

992·2196

&lt;tt\-~u.n~

Parts
sat Stew Meedowl

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

Muffler-&amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Across from Galli a Auto Sales on old Rte. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8·3

411 IIOUIII'niiiD .

-

Iii

Guaranteed Service

"Sports

The Daily Sentinel

PageS .
1997

Oak Hill's 13-7 w n
eliminates Mei·g s
from Legion tourney

"l·l1M

AftOOLEPORT, 0~

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-111

Thursday, July 24,1997

·106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

..

992-2825,
••

•

l

HE WINSTON CUP CIRCUI
II NASCAR'i llr$t.major expansion
lnlo tho potenl St. I..OLJII mortcol
wt'ill '"' St. loull

*"

the

CIIAFTSIIAN TRUCK SEIUES:

a..w.v

COlliNG UP: July 27, ~ P8fll

TOD&lt;Iki, Kiwl.
AIOUT THE TRACK: Hear1land Parlo

Parte raoo, cNck out Qwtie Glao'a:

Is a retativety nat, 2.1-mlle road -

IOCaltd Just a couple o1 blocka ~

THIS
St. Rt. 248

the Gateway Atch.

On TV All nmes Eaatern .

Chester

Phi Parsons Is CIIIOIIdue for a victofy.
Dick Triclde's experienoo could help
on a new track. Kenny Wallace Is
making a opocial ~In front
of w11at Is .aantlally a hometown
CfO«d.

985-3301

Into tho mill

• ARCA Broollyn 200

•

ille Fmdv LaJoie,

12:30 p.m.'• SaiUfday • ESPN
8 Busch Qr.ncf N.uonal Gattw.y 300

Elliott Sadler.
THREE WHO COULD SURPRISE:

I p.m. • Saturday • CBS
• NASCAR Crllftamln Ttvclc Lund Look 275
2 p.m. • SUnday • TNN
All limes ptovided by TVE and NASCAA Web sites.

Wl-.

For Homeowners
Insurance

. -~~
WARNERU
-.,.y= =
1

Cai JEFF

,,.. _....,,_.,_o.. ...

1.

.

OUICH
1. Rlnly l..&amp;Jr*t, 2,843
2. T~Bodlnl. 2.806 .
3. Phil P..aN, 2,417.

.-n Gordan. z.eee

6. OM Earnherdt. 2,415
7. Bobby Labonte. 2.241
10. Te&lt;j MYIQriWI, 2,005

FROM LAST WEEK WINSTON CUP: Dale Jarrett dorrl·

CR.lfTSIIAN TRUCK SEIU!S:

nated the Pennsylvania 500. pulling
tar aflead ot Jeff GordOn in lhe c:t)Sing
laps lor .nls tlllrc viCtory ol the season
and 11th of his career. Gordon took
0\'er the po.nt lead from taammate
Terry Labonte, wile) firiahed 351tt
Jeff Burton continuea hit 001 streak,
fi115hiog third ahead of Tecr Muqav~ ,
who had a strong race Sunday.
Ford dnvt'lf8 took sevfll"1 of ltl&amp; top
10 spots, wrttl GordOn and rookie
Mllce SkiMer representJng Chelly.
Kyle PBtty placed the lone Pontiac In
the top 10. finishing eighth.

Ron Hornaday Jr. di'M Oale anr:i
Teresa Earrt\al'df'e CheYrolel to 'f6'.

.........

i\loooalute LeweNI

......,.,. on Nlssan
£111'11 " Trucks

Ditto

....
"'"''
"""'
..... ,.

-

Mihf 500, Dovel-, Del
Pocono 500. Long Pond. Pa.

....
=

::1:

1-

I

..
-

• UJ

1M

&gt;

&gt; -c
a: 0
Q

GIS

z

Ill

::1: !:I

&gt;
'Z

~ a:0
a: !

0

Co)

&lt;
U)
::&amp;

.

·~
~

·,

CK

...

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.,

0

.0
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........
""""
.......
"""""
.......
iJO"Oili

J. """"'

'"""""''

(G. Bodine)

l""""'"l
(J , Butlal)

l"""'l

(A. Wallltlt)

tOauoni

t"""'

(MMil)

1""'1

•(8. Labonla)

•(Gcnon) ,

Th8 incident, on lap t27, lllo

Dale - - . Joo
· Wsiiy
Koi\ny-llldaooby

Col-.
_.w_____

-=

Hamilton.

NA1CAR 'n1le WMi: llol:or·

---·hlo

'Tilly

w.n'

going

10 hOle! on 10tn1 po6m IMd."'fWWY·

---~-

t.tNeen bf'oiWWI. Alk ""
Bodinoo."

FROM THE ARCHIVES:
Thortcll hiiiOf\' of
NASCAA:
II ~ had not been for hlo
· ability to 110mlnale action
on _, oho&lt;t ttacka In his
n'"ive Sooth Carolina,
Cate Yarborough mlghl
nENer have been able to
alfOrd a Winlton CUp

career.
in h~ ft"' five 1"!1" as

a driver in NASCAR'a
"major leaguoo; YIObor·
ough WI ....,tad In a grand
total of 12 rac:ee and
made $535 in priZe

money.

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

WHY I UIIE -

Tell ualn 100 word8 or a
why &amp;8rtlng M~.tnla
,.... tawr11o - ·
0no- w\1
.drawn f and tJe
·
wWin«wilriCIIYeanc.
SinO your '"'"I 10'
NASCAII This-, I lib;

otoTtolllllonGaatlo. 2500f.
Franklin Blvd .. Glstonia, N.C.
28054

·
J....,
~·A&amp;&amp;.,

ENieleiO ol GUf
WMIMt WMk't

wmer.
138 top 10s, almost $10 mil-

lion in career earnings.
• LAST RACE: Anlshed
20th in Pennsylvania 500
• ARE YOU SUPEASTJ.
"You
out of
good·iuel&lt; charmS after a

nous?

run

while. Four·teaf cfol.ler.
Those i;nle Buddhas you
can buy at the imiV'II't stores.
-'
Throwing salt ave&lt; your ielt
shoulder, rigltt ShOulder 01
some~

else's str:lukier.

What else can you do? I'm
afraid to hold a mir10r. I don'l
knOw" that I oouid stand
seven years of this. Hey,
andlllls is

has

a guy ..m

1 - in luck.
. At least, not

good
·
year."
HOW MUCH Of 11tiS
SEA&amp;ON'S PRC)IIU;IIS
HAVE IIEEHATTRtBUT·
ABLE TO SAD LUCK?
"The first race at Pocono,
some grwndnog dacided 10
take a stroll ... during my
quallfyir:tg lap. What kind of
deal is that?
• WHERE DO YOU 00
FROM HERE? "Our goao
the rest of the year are aimpie. We waniiO win a raca
rWo and finiSh in the top
tO of the points. We feet we
can do both:
We feel very capable of
doing botl'l . This is a winning
race team and outstde of the
bad luck. nothing has
cf1anged 11\at"

or

WHO'S HOT:
• Jolf Burton hoe finlohed
In the top 10 five t1mee 1'1
lhe lui M'Vtn r.cee. He

"poln1s-.

~llftll
thlnf.placolinloh in ll1e

Pemlylvanil 500.
· WHO'S NOT:
• Forget OoJa Eamhiwdt'l
problema. Oave Marcil'
lilt vlaory wu ~t race~

ago.

aDd Brooke's faith commitment.
I understand some or the drivers.
crew and families .tlcnd a Bible
study the nigh! before each race.
Could you share more about this in
an upcomiag NASCAR page?
AriOR.RSOnlor Minister, Am l!apliBt
Church Of Andenlon, Ind.
Dear NASCAR fan,
Motor Racing Outreach, an
organization whOK hudquartcrs is
IOCikXI al Charlotte Motor Speed· 1,.
'Nay, sponsors a wide range of aCiivitics lk:sigt1Cl! to kNc the spiritual

.Valley
Lumber &amp;
Supply Co ..

noo;Js of the drivers. mechanics.
pi1&lt;rtw members, team owners
and otbcrs. The mollt visible is the

'Ne&lt;:kl)' church service, typically .

held so1"11C'Nhcrc in the garage area
shor11y after the completion of the
pK-r.cc drivers' m«ting.

555 Park St.
Middleport

992-6611

you've got 1 quntJon or 1
comment:, write: NASCAR This
WNk Your Tum, c/p 1M

H

WHO'S HOT - WHO'S NOT

.... -togo&lt;ilo&lt;
in !he """'*'~~·" quipped.
Bobby nled up 11th, while hili
placo.

IL

II
z
....
0
1M

U)

OK, 50 tl'l ool 1TkJCh ~ 1
rivalry, becauM theM bi"Oihl!rlare
Bl adePI u anyone In lht epon at
putti'1g thtllr best face fl)nll8rtl.
But aoobylid bump TOII'f from
behind, and dle1'811iting IOCktlrW

-

-..&gt;

-·- ·--)

......
"'""""'
....,.,
.......

jn18M;1Mtpi1M,
ond his Lorry lkCturoownod Chrilolot loon) 11avo
on trock in
,..,.,
PubiJcty, Marlin contlnu••
to proclolm hjoloya11y to
McCiu,.·, but h11 111mt 11wty1
COCMI up Whirl.VICincltl
OCCUf wtlh otMr top tQmL
• AGE: 40
• SPOUSE: Paula
• CHILDREN:. Steadman
(181. Sulherlin (7) .
• CAR: No. 4 Kodak
CI1&lt;MOfet Monla carto.
owned by Larry McClure.
• HOMETOWN: Born in
Franklin, Tenn., lives in
Columbia, Tenn.
• AECORO: 389 starts, 6
wins, 9 poles. 56 top fNes,

--gotlfng

Bobby Labonte vs. Terry Labonte

\he- Cup po;nt -

CD

toQithlr IUCCQifui ...IOM

Mhbii•Jihii\'IU'ili

lcnocked Terry from f'nl 10 tNftt In

~

Sttrlng u.rtln ts hiving 1
dlftlcuiiiNIOIL
Al1lr winning--Doytono !IOOund pulling

~

e. ~

......

CK

NASCAR This Week

Crashes too mucli
10. Ricky Rudd (I)
Seldom beals himself

......

a:

., Mlltl DlttH

B. Ted Mlllgi"IVtl (Unranllod)
Ouielly doing ql
I. Emlo Inion (8)

~ .00. Brot*lyn, Mldl.
Celllomia 500, FonW\1, Cali!.
.koly.
Papsi 400, Da)'lona
.1\Jiy 13 Jitly Lube 300. loudoo, N.H.
.koly20
~111500. Lang Prod. Ptl .
Brk:kyanl o400, hianltpalit
Aug. tO Bud at the Olin, Walhlnl Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 17 ITW ONtiu G . Btooldyn. Midi.
Aug. 23 Goo;iy'a !!00. Brillol
Aug. 31
Mounlllin Dew Soulhem 500, CWington
Winllon Cup -400, Rich'noncl
Sept,._ New Hampshire 300. L.oudoo. N.H.
Sept 21 MBNA 500. t:lo¥a'
• ~ 1a1t yeaf'• pole and race Wir'rW

· Jline 15

:::J

Sterling Marlin hllo hlcl a rough - n , but Ia hoping to 1111 untraclclclooon.

Dolt Elmhardt (7}

ON THE SCHEDULE

ltl

Dar NASOO This Week,

polnta lead.

1.

..

As a relatively new NASCAll
. Wini1011 Cup fan, I wan110 express
my appreciltion for the full p1gc of
NASCAR rttw1 carried in our
Andci'SQn Hcnld·Bultclin here in
Anderson, Ind.
I particularly follow the amulna
am:r of Jcft' Gordon. A rcctnl
issue of USA \Ycckend iracluded In
Q~r Sunday paper hid a wonderful
front-page story on Jeff and his
wife, Brooke. As a pastor, I found it
· par1icularl)' KJIIifying lO read of Jdf

remalriog.
Mike 8!1salin!lhed second and
rookie Stacy Corrcxon placed 1hlrel.
Alch Bickte lolshed f1ft!t and kept his

There evecy week
3. Terry L.obonlo (2)

2131 Karr St. ':
Syracuse, OH
614-992-6520

•Chlp"Adon

the 11ny oval at Erie, COO.
Talking abovt hOI drlwtfs, tbnaday
won his lt'1ln:l straight raee after win'*'ll the pole. The WIMer U88d a
strategy of conseMng his tlrn, then
charged into the lead wtttl 381ap&amp;

8. Ruoty w.n- (e)
Needs a vlc1c!y

Marine Service

Birmingham. Ala.

'"""""SUporTruao "&lt;101y, ,.. on

1. Jell Gordon (1)
Up hoot again
a. Marl&lt; Marun (3)

Boats New &amp; Used
"Professional Servic$
••
Guaranteed"

be~.

Weekly rantcings by NASCAA Thie Week writer MOI'I1e Dutton. Last
week's ranking Is in parentheses.

Roogh day
4. Dole Jand (51
\'Alan he's right...
5. Joff Bul1on (4)
New kid on block

:::l

a message on my answering
machine: "'Yates Is dropping
·
Ernie (1'\'an. He will regret iL"
She loved Dany Allison like
her own sons and stayed with 1211
after his dc:ath. We see something
in Emit that l don't think Yntes
sees. If you remqve his car's
mechanical problems, accidents ,
not his fauli, etc., you' ll find !be
best driver in -NASCAR.
Good luck, Ernie. You're the

9. Aic.tcCM&gt;II,1,814
10. ~ kWn, 1.103

1-742.Fu:tl--1

In.._..,.,..,...
_,_

My mcm, Ma.rpret Williams,
~ft

a...

. Ollloo: . . . .,.

Gnton au.tt., 25 E. Fr~nll:lln
Btvd., Glittonll, N.C. 28054

t . IMiat Is ll1e college limo , _ of Jolin

Anclretti?
2. In whit seuon did Randy l.aJolt win n11 firlt
Busdl Grar.::! Nati:loal riJI:8?
3. Who are the 1hi'M car owners for whom
Teny L.abOnte hal won W1n1t0n Cup raoet1

ern
of u. Willi
Kevin Hamli'l wu

~

byAictwdChld-toho&amp;d
up Childreu' aecc:rld taam with ·

rooi&lt;ledrivorMhSI&lt;-.
·(s I« iOn " 9 ) -

lfO!ll pue l•l -

JOiUI1(' "(g)

ua6oH Afi "E
'116111

?;

·a&amp;oto:&gt; (·ad) UOfi'IJOW .,

BIBMSN"If

AROUND THE GARAGE

·Geoff Bodine finds financial aid to back team
Bodine's No. 71eam is believed
Monday night at dinrter ... Some- give me '50 laps to do it, and I
to be: Rick Galles, previous!)'
"NASCAR
This
tlllltoa
Week
how it came up, and I §aid I
, broke !55 seconds on m)' fifth lap.
aai~ in lnd)'Cars and spons
WNG POND, Pa. - Geoff
could run a lap thai fast at Indy.
It was a piece of cake."
cars. A Galles-owned car pro(Dale) Earnhardt be! me that I
Childress last competed as a
Bodine has apparently rescued
rouldn't run in lht 5~'s (seoond5). driver on the Winston Cup Seriis
his Winston Cup Ford team from ·ptlled AI Unser Jr. 10 his first
financial oblivion with the addi- Indianapolis ~00 victory in 1992. I told him a 55-flat would be easy in 1981 .
HE'S STIU GOT II:
for me to Nil. (Mike) Skinner
He did no1 divulge flow much
tion of two investors.
To win a bet, car owner
jumped in there on the bet, and
he won on tlie bet, but said he
Bodine talked freel)' about his
return to basically a driver 's role, RicRard Childress climbed back . the next day Rusty Wallace
planned to buy a S2,500 bottle of
jumped in on the bel and David
wine to celebrate.
bu1 would not name the inveilors behind the wheel of.one of his
Olevrolets last week during a
AJien (of Champion Sports
ANOTHER YEAR wmt IIKEY:
besides sayine. "The)"re not
test session at Indianapolis
Group)jumped in there, too. ·
' The Wood Brothers have Cllct·
c:clebrity·type people. These are
Motor Speedway.
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Here's &amp;be story,. in Childress' ran 55.40 on my fourth lap, and
the business community, nationtheir contract with driver Michael
words:
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ytallrip, meaning he V:.tn be back
wide 'and worldwide."
·~We were discussing stuff last
What can I say? They said ltley 'd in t~ No. 21 Citgp ca£
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For More Information

'

el League game In Cincinnati, where the Marline won B-1. Because
Cincinnati pitcher Scqtt Sullivan dropped the bell alter making the
teg, Hemandez reversecl"tha .call. (AP)
·

'

team and drNef .tononv
l!onoon: ' I J _ i l r _
wear out pr8I'TI8tllely on the
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Oak Hill exploded for six runs in the
hottom of the sevemh to take a 134 lead.
Meigs closed out the scoring in
the eighth. Sisson reached on an
error. Williams walked and· Dill
reached on an error to load the bases.
Sisson score~ on a wild pick-ofr
attempt with the others moving up a
base. Josh Men:klc walked to load
the bases and Scou George walked
to force in a run . But Mark Bums
retired the next three bane" and end
the threat.
Men:kle wa.• the starter and los·
er for Meigs. Morgan Sullivan was'
the winning pitcher. Kirby had a
double and a single to lead Meigs.
Roush had a pair of singles and Chad
Burton and Pete Sisson each added
a

~iilglc.

!oojno lllllb
Meigs
(JOO-OOJ-130=7-7-1
Oak Hill
OI•0-600-61lx:;l3-l t-5
l&lt;l!&lt;h Merckle '( L), Matt I:Jill (4),
Scott George (7) and Matt Dill. Dave
Metts (4), Matt Dill (7)
Morgan Sullivan (W), Mark
Bums (6) and Jamie Gruher

!Marlins notch 8-1
!victory over Reds
:ay JOE KAY
:,-; CINCINNATI (AP) - Darren
ll)aulton reached third for another
bfl;tonishing triple, then headed for
:!J.le dugout and a drink during a time·
:!!"t for a pitching change. He got
.much more than a sip of water. .
~ The Florida Marlins gave their
:llcwest teammate a round of high.:tJves to celebrate his best moment in
:llJl 8-1 victory Wednesday night
~ver the Cincinnati Reds. ·
'' "That's learn baseball," Daulton
:Said, recalling the reception. "That's
:..hat winning breeds- enthusiasm.
::fhat's the way it's supposed to be."
.: ·. That's the way the Marlins hoped
:It would he when they got him from
;Philadelphia on Monday, bringing
:ftim over from the worst team in the
~ajor leagues. The Marlins need
more sizzle on offense, and that's
;..aclly what Daulton gave them . in
:his first stan.
, Daulton tripled home a run as pan
:of a live-run sixth inning and scored
:on a jarring slide into a Reds reliev•cr after a pitch got away from catch:er Joe Oliver.
.
·
: The former catcher played !law:lessly at first base- his fourth stan
;there overall- and went 2-for-3 at
;the plate.
i " It makes me feel good," said
1Daulton, limited to one pinch-hit
:appearance on Tuesday night.
:.:They're not all going to he like this,
)rust me. I've got a job to do . lfl do
)I and we win, it's a plus for the
Jcam." ·
• Perhaps it's just coincidence, but
· Daulton's arrival brought an upturn
ln the Marlins' oflcnse, which ranks
bear ·the bottom of the National
l-eague in homers and' runs. Florida
J!it live homers and scored 14 runs
~hile splilling the lwo-gamc series
with Cincinnati .
i
: On Wednesday, Bobby Bonilla hit
two-run homer - his second of the
~cries- oiT Mike Morgan (3-8) to
~lart the five-run sixth inning.
J;:harles Johnson homered on· Scott
:;ullivan to complete the rally, one of

his three hits .
"It was nice hitting," manager'·
Jim Leyland said. 'Tn1 very tickled
about it. We got some big hits."
None wi II be remembered more
than Daulton's triple, which drove in
Gary Sheffield to make it4-0 in the
sixth. After nearly being driven out .
of the .game by bad knees, Daulton
has hit a career-high seven triples
this season - the same number that
Dei on Sanders has.
"I think it's a lack of power," said
Daulton, who has tripled .in each of
his last three starts. 'T d rather have
seven homers. I'd rather jog around
the bases."
He dashed home moments later
when Sullivan's pitch got away from
Oliver, jarring the ball loose after the
rclicvenagged him. Umpire Angel
Hernandez called him out initially,
then reversed the call when he saw
the ball rolling on the ground.
"I don't know exactly what hap·
pened," Sullivan said. "I made the
tag. I don't know if I was swinging
my 1lfiD and il hit my knee or the turf,
but the ball came out.
"I tried to block the plate with my
leg. When he slid in, something had
to give, so I started to roll over.".
With such a big cushion. all Alex
Fernandez ( 11 · 8) had 10 do was stay
out of a big inning. He allowed only

...

·~
a

si" hits over eight innin~s . losing the

shutout when Reggie Sanders led oil
the eighth with his third homer in
lwo games.
Fernandez threw 140 pitches on a
muggy night a.• he helped the Marlins break out of a three-game losing.
streak.
'' It's more magnilicd hecausc we
lost three in a row," Fernandc1. said.
"We' re in late July, we need a win .
I'm not saying it's do-or-die, but I'm
selfish when il comes to wins.''

The Reds arc getting few of those
these days, losing fove of their last
si&lt; to fall nine games hehind in the
NL Central. A lot of the damage has
hecn self-inllicted.
(See NL on Page fi)

•

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"'
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, YOU'RE OUTI - Home plate umpire Angel Hemandez (back to
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COUIIO.

By DAVE HARRIS .
Sentinel CorrHpondent
Oak Hill took advantage of two
six run innings to defeat Meigs 137 in Eighth District American Legion
Baseball Toomamcnt action Tuesday
evening at Pickerington.
The loss ends Meigs' season with
a 10-18 mark.
Oak Hill scored a single run in the
bottom of the second inning. and
added a big six run inning in the lifth ·
inning .to take a 7-0 lead .
Meigs came back in the sixth
inning to score three runs to pull to
within 7-3.
Dan Metts walked to lead off the
inning and advance on a single by .
Joe Kirby. Collin Roush was safe on
a fielders choice with Metts going to
third . Chad Burton singled to score
Metts and Pete Sisson singled to lood
the bases. Benji Manuel was hit by
a pitch to force in a run. Matt Dill
reached on a fielder's choice to score
the third run of the inning.
Meigs pulled to within 7-4 in t)le
seventh. Kirby dou~led with two out
and score on a single by Roush. But

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Pomeroy 204 West 2nd Street 614/992-7070 Gallipolis 1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441-0547
Athens II 00 East Slate Street.6~4/594-4800 Jackson 384 Main Streel 614/286-6073

�Pegl I • T1le Dally Sentinel

ThurMay, July 24, 1tt7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Kyger Creek LL Tournament continues

Ohio Unlversilf
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Reds &amp; Yankees enter quarterfinals
lr 0. SPENCER OSBORNE

Randall Sham:u to Hollanbaugh to giving way to Johnson. 'They comOVP Stllff Wrillr
third baseman Raysean Allen.
bined to strike out six and walk one.
In the conclusion of second-round
In lhe fourth, Litchfield's two-run
New Haven 's hitters were Litchplay in the Kyger Creek Lillie homer ~as the centerpiece of New field, David Smith (both 2-3), lan
League Tournament Wednesday Raven's three-run rally. Bidwell, Smith (1-2). Roush ( 1-3 &amp; a double),
night at the Kyger Creek Employees helped by two New Haven errors Ryan Mitchell (1-3) and Thlloh (1 Club, the New Haven Reds outlast- (Johnson, who reached on an error, 4).
ed Bidwell "I 6-S in the opener scored when third baseman Anthony Innjna i5t111i
befooe the Pomeroy Yankees downed Mitchell threw the ball past first New Haven
020-301=6-8-2
the Racine Tornadoes 7-2 ·in the sacker Tony Tulloh after fielding Bidwell I
100-103=5-3-3
nightcap.
Allen's grounder), cut the Reds'
WP- Justin Roush (R. Mitchell
·
Reds 6, Pirates S
lead to 5-2.
save)
Bidwell drew first blook in the
New Ha-.n's last run came in the
LP-Brown
first inning, when No. 3 hitter/first sixth, when Anthony Mitchell, who
baseman Donnie Johnson airmailed reached on an Cf10r by right fielder
Yuba 7, Tomadoa-2
Justin Roush's first pitch beyond the Daniel Perry, scored on a wild pitch
Kyle Hannan cracked two homers
left center field fence with two out.
during David Smith's at-bat.
and accounted for three RBis that
· Roush retired the next eight batNew Haven needed that run to helped make Pomeroy the team that
ters he faced, including six straight
we.ather Bidwell's victory bid in the completed the quarterfinal picture. .
' strikeouts in the second and third .
bottom of the sixth. Perry, who
In the firs~ the Yankees weath- ·
The New Haven second was reached on Anthony Mitchell's error, ered surrendering two walks and a
when the Pirates got 1wo defensive · scored ahead of Hollanbaugh wild pilch by stranding two Racine
plays that·almost got the!V out of the · (reached on the sbonstop's error) and runners in scoring position. Then
inning.
Allen (the only batter reliever Ryan Pomeroy cashed in on pitcher Justin
On Anthony Mitchell's popup, Mitchell walk.ed). They came .home Connolly's throwing er.ror to first in ·
Johnson dropped the ball. but main- when Brandon Coe lined Roush 's 0- an attempt to retire David McClure.
tained sufficient presence of mind to . I pitch down the right field line for· The errant throw helped Ty• Ault
throw the ball to second in time to a double.
.
score from third.
get Ryan Mitchell at second base.
Coe made it to third on the outHannan, like Au II, reached on an
On Caleb Litchfield's fielder'sfield relay to the infield. But Adam error .in the outfield. His hustle
choice grounder, shonstop Charlie
Schullz, who staned the game in left helped him beat right fielder B.J.
Hollanbaugh fielded the ball and
field in the No. 9 spot but l)atted in Mamhout's throw to third. Hannan
retin:d Anthony Mitchell at second.
the No. 6 spot previously occupied scored on Brandon Ramsburg's twoLitchfield, who reached on the play,
by Brown, struck oui on three pitch- out flare single to right.
scored the tying run on David
es to end the game.
.,
Pomeroy entered the founh with
·smith's ground single to center.
The numbers: Roush lasted four a 3-0 lead. Hannan, who led off the
Ian Smith, the Reds' No.8 hitter,
innings before giving way to Ryan inning, drove Connolly's first pitch
took Chris Brown's first pitch and
Mitchell. The pair combined to strike beyond the left center field fence.
lined ado11ble down lhe left field line
out 14 (Roush had eight of these), Two innings later, Hannan's second
that helped David Smith score the
surrender three hits (Allen went 1-~
·
t, which came with Jeremy
go-ahead run. But lan Smith was
while Johnson·and Coe each went 1- R sh aboard, became the centerretired at third base by the last
3) and walk one.
.
p' ce of the Yankees' four-run
.
throw of a relay from center fielder
Brown lasted two
before ·
'

from both teams. In the fifth. Chris
Pickens hit a fielder's-choice
grounder near the third base line.
Ramsburg, who ieachcd on a flare
single to right, eluded Connolly's
stretch tag between third and the
plate and scored.
· Raci'ne, which before the sixth
had put only two runners on third,
avoided the shutout ·when Cun
Crouch, with Joey Phillips aboard,
turned Roush's 1-1 pitch into a twoout, two-run horner to left. Bot pinch
hitter Tommy Theiss grounded out to
first to end the game.
Roush struck out foUr and walked
three to earn the complete-game victory. Connolly struck out six and
walked one in a complete-game
loss.
Pomeroy's hitters were Hannan,
Pick.ens, Ramsburg (all 2-3), Mike
Wamsley (1-2) and Ault .(1-3 &amp; a
double).
.
· Racine.'s hitters were Crouch (23), Justin Allen." Adam Ball an~
Phillips (all 1-3).
looinaJAIIIa
·
Racine
000-002=2-S-3
Pomeroy
200-14x=7-8-0
WP- Jeremy Roush
LP - Connolly

It

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Theiss reunion held

cruiH.
·'
.

~-

J

&lt;

f. it '

,..

•

Tile Theiss reunion was held at
Star Mill Park on July 13 with 116
descendants and guests attending.
HighlightS of the program included·n:c«1Jlnition or those present from
the th(fd generation of 'Luben and
Louise Hille Theiss. Others recognized 'were oldest woman and man
presen't, Maye Mora, Pomeroy and
JQe Chapman, Phillipi, W.Va.;youngest girl and boy, Rachelle
Davis, Middlepon, and Russen Gene
Beegle, Ponland; Traveling the farlhest, Dorothy Salmonsen. Fla.

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0tllltroy Yankeee' Kyle Han""n (n,
watchea
drive clear the
center field fence for 1 .solo
homer In the fourth Inning of Wednesday night's Kyger CI'IMik Lit·
tie League Tournament second-round ga!IM agalnat the Racine Tornadoes. In the sixth, Hannan cracked 1 twCHUn homer that completBd a thrae-RBI effort that pu•hed the Yankeea to a 7-2 victory.
1

(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osbome)

·

.

Scoreboard
Baseball

. -llh-·

Wednesday's scores

ALsWldings

~.

TQronlo II. Milw:.ukcle 0

l!Lfd.WI

8altimon= ...............61 37 .622
New York.. ............ ~ 41 -~""

Toronlo ..................47 .&amp;9 .490
Dftroi1 ...•...............41 52 .475
8ollon ....;..............46 ~ .460

~llha.EVELAND
...... ~2 42 .m
CJikaio ................. !iO 49 - ~~
Milw•kee ..............., Sl
MiMeloea ..............4!' 53
~CiiJ ............W - ~

.469
.459
.411

D

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· ou~~nc~

.................41

61

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Oakland IRiaby ().3) at Botnnn (Stir-

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T~a:;u: (Hill ~-7) 011 Chi r:&amp;(!o While Soa
(l&gt;rabek 6-7), X:O~ p.m.

A bridal shower was held recent- Edith Banon, Patty Banon , Kasi
ly honoring Deanna Denny Williams Williams, Penny and Cour!ney
at the home of Crystal Hood. A wed- Knapp, Connie Enslen, Terri and
. ding cake was served with mints. nuts Roxanne Williams, Wanda Williams,
and punch. Games .were played with Loraine Venoy. M~rgaret Edwards,
priies being awarded to Patty Banon, Mae Smith. Nelia Seyler. Kay Rupe,
Loraine Venoy, Iris Williams and Shelly Hutton, Betty Van Matrc,
Mynlc Grover, Hope Eblin, Marcia
Margaret Edwards·.
Hostesses for the event were C.rys- · Houdashelt. Ranee Hardy . Brandy
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Kanw Cily ~ . Minne.uJin I
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Nancy Yost Circle gave the invocation. and David Kucsma was master of ceremonies. Descendants of
Julius Theiss, Emma Theiss Hoff!'IWI, Herman Theiss, Caroline Volz·
and henry Theiss were introduced
and gave updated information on
their · branch of the family. Those
attending came from Maine, Mary-land.Missouri . Florida, Illinois, West ·
Virgwia and Ohio. Games were
playej~ with all panicipaiing receiv" ·
ing prizes. Pictures were iaken and a
reunion planned for next year.
·

Bridal shower held 'for Deanna Williams

lktroil tl, Olh.-..tto While So" 6
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1996 CHEVY CAVAUER, auto., air, spoiler, stereo, tilt, crulae .......... ~.................. ~ .. ,.........................................$10,600
1995 FORD MUSTANG Air, auto., stereo, PW, PL, tilt, crulse ............................................................................$13,600

1994 GEO PRIZM Auto., air, Cassette, tilt, cruise~.................................................! ........................................... ~ ••• $8,"990
1996 PONTIAC SUNFIRE, Air, stereo, 5 speed, sharp..................................;.................... &gt;.................. ;............... $9,900
.1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V6, auto., air, PW, stereo, tilt, cruise, #GM1485A ........................................ $9,400
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP VI, auto., air, stereo, tilt, crulse ............................................................................$13,800
1994 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER V6; a~®., air, PW, PL, stereo, tilt, crulse...............................................................$18,600
1994 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLIH.eather, loaded, V-8, power roof ................................................................$16,900
1995 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC VB, loaded .. :•..•..•.. ;.........................................................................................$14,400
1993 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LARADO PKG. 4x4, loaded.,........................................:................................. $14,995
1995 CHEVY C1500 WT PICKUP, auto., air, sharp ........:.....................................................................................$11,495
1996 OLDS DELTA 88 V-6, auto., ~lr, more ............................:.............................................................................$16,400
1998 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME GM 1526 2 Dr., V-6, 29,000 miles, extra clean ............................................·$12,800
1996 BUICK REGAL V-6, auto., air, loaded .........................................................................., ...............................$11,800
1916 CHEVY MONTE CARLO Z-34, 30,000 miles. Sharpl ......·.~···~········· ............................................................. $14,500

1993 CHEVY BEREnA Auto., air, cassette .......................................... u·•·•uu·························..............................~$6,900
SEDA·N DEVILLE

300·8 cyl, auto, air cond,
AM/FM atereo, PS, PI,
ahort bed•

V-8. Loaded! .................:.........................

MAKE YOUR BES' DEAL!!!
Air Streak Shark I cleated

ETC, ETC, ETC.

. Choose tba Iabate or Law Financing!!
If you have bean
Ia buy a lew Cu or truck....

Also In ltOCk:

• Lind Shark HI
• Open Field Mid
Dttachlble

All pre-owned cara and trucke eold with a Umltad Power

Treln Warranty except where factory werranty appllea.
Alk about our wide range Jlf extended lti'Yict plane.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc·.
. 219 N. Second Ave.

B.Jrlkruj)t slow credit no cred 11 ? Let us

s h ow you h ow you can dnve a r1ce car
now' Ask for Mr Barcus

All prices Include rebates
to dealer.
All ~-u clferl ~
\0 GMAC i:rodn apprbval.
Taxes &amp; Fees not
. lndudod .

992-5627
••

.'

I

•

,

'•

1995 CHEVY
S·10 BLAZER
4 Dr, VI, auto, air ·cond,

LT PKG.

revival , Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.;
Sunday, 6 p.m.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND .. Rutland Church of
POMEROY ·· Fellowship meetGod, weekend revival. Friday and ing, Faith Valley Tabernacle Church .
Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday. 10 a.m . and on Bailey Run Road , Pomeroy, and
Light House Pentecostal Church of
6p.m.
Grove City. Guest s'pcakcr.Gcorgc
CHESTER .. Harvest Outreach Scott of Huntington . Pastor .Emmcn
Church in Chester, three night Rawson invites public .

NO MONEY DOWN

'

RED CARPET
LEASE

Thursday, 6-8. p.m. and Saturday, 46 p.m. at the United Methodist Youth
Center at 106 W. Main St. Subject:
Resolving conflicts without violence.
All welcome. For more information,
contact Rev. Keith Rader at 9923317.

--1997 BUICK LESABRE

Now O!IIJ

"'

aeat,more.

calendar----

•
6th Annual Annirersary.Sellabrafion Confinuesl

1995 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL.

1997 FORD
CONTOUR 4 DR
4 cyl, auto, air cond,

RACINE - An organizational
meeting for all girls playing volleyball at Southern High School.. grades
9 through 12. will be held on Thursday at the high school cafeteria at 7
p.m.

DO

auto, AJC, tll1, crulle, PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr
Hal, IMther, loaded!

1997 fORD
ESCORT 4 DR
4 cyl, auto, air cond,.

lowship. Thursday. 1 p.m. at Zion
Church of Christ. Rutland to have
devol ions.

THURSDAY
. .
the ·
and 30 percent of the
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
POMEROY-- Meigs Local Board
deaths involved children under the . of Education, regular meeting, 7 Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
age of 15.
.
7:30p.m. at the post home.
p.m. Thursday, board office.
About one-third of these ·people
were injured while the lawn mower
POMEROY -- Meigs County
POMEROY-- Work.shop on nonwas being loaded or unloaded from Churches of Christ Women's Fel- violence sponsored ·by God's Net
Camiyorous lawn mowen
a trailer, worked on or stored. Anoth&lt;otild COIIJUDie inaoc:ent &lt;bildren
er common "noq-mowing" injury
Question: My husband and I have involves y(,ung children playing on
been discussing whether we should parked mowers.
let our 10-year-old so~ mow the
When the mower was in operagrass. He is large for his age, so I tion, 83 percent Qf the injuries were
think· he is strong enough to do it. to .the operator and 17 percent to
Could you give us some recommen- bystanders or passengers on the
dations on how lo decide? ·
mower. The most common types of
Answe~ Mowing grass is a ritual
injuries were children being run over
of the growing season f9r city, sub- or backed over by anothe.r operator .
urban and rural residents. The and falls from mowers or from cans
'
I
drudgery of this task is omn assigned being p~d by mowers .. Jn nearly 71
to the adolescent children of the fam - percent Pf these injuries, there were
ily. And I understand your CQOCern. cuts or amputations -- usually to the
Mowing appears deceptively safe hands and lower arms or to the feet
and easy, whether it is done with a . and lower
push-type or ride-&lt;&gt;n power mower.
As Y9~ arc aware, mowing grass
But, in reality, it is potentially very is dangespus. The American Acadedangerous.
my of Pl!diatrics and the Council on
The federal government imposed Child and Adolescent Health have
new rules a few years ago that have made some recommendations about
made push-type power mowers con- power mowers that should help you '
siderably safer. New mowers are decide if your son is old enough to
required to automatically slop the mow yoor grass. In summary, they
blade when. the handle is released. rccomflltnded that children should
There arc also regulations that make not be allowed to:
•
it more difficult for the blade to strike
% play in 'areas adjacent to where
an object and throw it back. at lhc mowers are being used.
operator. These changes have reduced
%ride with the mower operator or
the risk of injury from thrown objects ride in carts or trailers being lowed
and the risk of being mangled by a behind the mower.
moving mower blade.
% ):ilay on or around the mower,
Ride-on mowers and lawn tractors even with adult supervision.
are responsible for more injuries
% operate a mower until they arc
than push-type mowers. There are at least 14 years old and have
Auto., air, till, SE Pkg., cassette, rear speaker.
presently about 7.7 million such rec~ivcd proper training in the oper2 TO CHOOSE FROM!
mowers in usc eve,Y summer in the ation of the.mowcr and its safety feaUnited States. These larger and more ture!ii. '
•
$750 RHattOR
powerful machines are responsible " They also recommended that
for more than 19,000 injuries and 75 · young children, particularly those
deaths each year! Of this frightenin2 under 5, not be allowed outdoors. at
APR for 48 mths.
APR fill' 60 •••·
number of acCidents, 25 percent of all while mowing is being done. ·

EXPLORER XLT . .3111. VI,BRONCO
auto, air cond,

LOADED!

The Community Calendar is
publuhed as a free oervke to DOll·
prolit groupa wishing to annoWKe
meetlnc ud specja[ event.. · The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or lund raisers of any type.
lltms are prinltd as spa&lt;e permit.
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
spe&lt;ifae number of days,

(Editor's nott: The following
&lt;olumn wu wrllltn live yean ago
and is bel111 rerun now In the inter•
est cl publk safety durin&amp; Ibis summer mowing season.)

-·-

Here is the quanerfinal slate.
Toni&amp;ht- Kyger Creek Raiders
vs. Home Care Medical at 6 p.m.;
Harrisonville vs . Little Hock.ing at
7:30 p.m.
. Friday - Point Pleasant Hardware vs. Gallipolis Reds at 6 p.m.;
New Haven Reds . vs. Pomeroy at
7; 30 p.m.

-----~ommunity

Family
Medicjne

VI, auto, air cond,
AM/FM CIIH, tin, CNIM,
PS, PI, PW, PDL, Pwr
IIM.4daar.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

. I

,.

,

�Page a• Tht Deily s.nunet

Pomeroy .• Middleport, Ohio

Racine Grange .di~cusses school funding dilemma

•

Racine Grange met recently this
week with Charles Yost, master, presiding. 1be lecturer's program for the
meeting consisted of information
and discussion on Gov. Voinovich's
current legislative Proposals to satisfy the Ohio Supreme Coun's equitable funding of Ohio schools.
Though no actiori was taken at this
time, members npress opposition to
the sale of bonds because the lick of .
money now cannot be accomplished
by putting it off to the future.
1be second opposition was to an
amendment to the Ohio Constitution
which would take the power of the
Ohio Supreme Court to determine

what is fair for Ohio schools' and give
that power to the Ohio Leislature.
1be reason for this opposition is that
the Ohio Leislature has shown that it
cannot provide fair funding since a
lawsuit had to be filed to fon:e fair
funding.
·
Keith Ashley, legislative director,
pointed out that the Ohio Bicentennial Commission is being appointed
with 39 members plus 13 ex-officio
members of the Ohio government.
The appointments are being made
unfairly. Of the 39 appointees, the
lieutenant governor has been appointed who will be occ.upied next year in

running for Conress. Also, former Meigs County Fair.
house speaker, Vern Riffie, who left
1be · Grange voted to propose
his legislative position under a cloud, amendments to its constitution to
was appointed. Further, not one but move its meetings to the first Thurstwo positions are being held for peo- day of the month ar7 p.m.; to raise
ple in Ross County. Also, Ashley dues $2 ptr year; and to begin biensaid, people art being nominated who nial election of officers. 1bese will be
never requested a position while oth- voted on at the Aug. 21 meeting. That
ers who are qualified 10 serve and night will also be election of officers.
want a p(lsition arc being denied.
Rachel Ashley will be running for
The master noted that Racine female Youth ambassador for Meigs
Grange had won first place in its County thi$ year, Rachel and her sistheme
ter W~itncy arc currently attending
class in the Racine 4th of July parade. State Grange Youth Camp. Emily
The Grange will now prepare fur Ashley ju.t returned from State Jr.
competition in fair booths 31 the Grange camp.

Foundation Scholarship, James T.
Shipman Scholarship; Junior Amy E.
Dooley of Middleport, marketing,
College of Business Scholarship •.
Victor l. Cody Scholarship; Junior
Edward Alan Bach-Davis of
. Pomeroy, electrical and computer
science, ·E. Vance Springer Scholarship;
Junior Kelley J. Grueser of
Pomeroy, music, Kibble Foundation
Scholarship; Senior ·Tracy Lynn
Wolfe of Pomeroy, nursing, Barbara
J. Woods Betz Scholarship and
Dean's Scholarship; Senior Gregory
Allan Duvall of Portland, industrial

'

technology, Creed James Scholarship
Fund and Kibble Foundation Scholarship; Sophomore Brian Alfred
Anderson of Racine, electrical and
computer $Cience, Robert and Margaret Walter Scholarship, Kibble
Foundation Scholars~ip and Helen
Hoover Memorial Scholarship';
Sopbomore Paul William lhle of
Racine, management systems, Dean's
Scholarship; Senior Freddie Allen .
Matson of Racine, accounting, Kibble Foundation Scholarship;
Senior Junella Ann B~gle Maynard of Racine, nursin~. Area Six
Health Services Scholarship, College

- Hymn sing
planned

Local artists
invited to display
works at Jackson
Art Festival
Festival

992-2156
.

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

D·IAMONDS!
'

at Gya[Jntaed
$299
·con11lare at $599

SAVINGS

$769
compare at
$1,099

of

A-:

30%

M.tga County, Oh)o
John Mlllllf, Prnldenl

to

$1,299
tompare a t s
$1,875

Scott Dillon'

00/
,0 .

G-v-Wrlghl
Girl Wilton

LlrryW.mung
WIHIIIII Young
(7) 17,24; 2TC

.

Public .Notice

Diamond
Anniversary

110

Ohio.

PASSED: July 7, 11117

Kllhy Hyoell,

Clarlf/Tflllllm

Frank A. Yaughln, Mayor
Johnllu...,,
P,.ald•rlt of Council

(7) 17, 24;

2TC

Public Nollce

Bands
5
1110 d Reo. 5199 ................................

99

1/4 d..... $399 """""" '"''="""""" s1991.2d .... $599 ................................ 5299

COIIMNY MEIGS I!IINE

NO. 2 ADDENDUM TO PART
I, lTEII G Cll
LEGAL NOTICE

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

f.lLCQUISifJI09{S

10 in .......... $10.00

!flf}{.f£ Jf£W££/R,9'

121n .......... .$11.00

lWO LOCATIONS
Com1r 2nd II Grape, GIIHpolle, Oh 44&amp;-2842
t1 Mill St, Mlcldl1p011, Oh 1112..fZSO

14 in ..... ... .. $12.00

16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

El9*1 Jewelry R!pllr Service!

1·614·742·2925
(

7/2211111

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gord Coins, Proofu11,
DiamondS: Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
, S!erling, Etc. Acqui1itions JW~tk'y
· U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
~venue, Ga!lipoUs, 614-446-2842.

~n.emhrt

HU;P'S CUstOM
SHAIPIIIIIIG

Antiques, furniture, glass, china,
coins. toys, lamps ~ guns, tools,
ettates: also appraisals, Osby
Martin, 814.gg2-7441

949·2641
005

Personals

· Antiques, lop prices paid, River·
ine Antiques •• pomeroy, Ohio,
Ruil ~oore owner, et•·992·
2526.

I will not be r11ponsibfe lor any
debts otheJ than mv own, Harold

Clean late t.todel Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 t.todels Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
lonely white/male looking for let· ern Avet'lJe, Gallipolis.
tars and friendship. Wr ite to:
&amp; o·s Auto Parts. Buying lal·
Dennie Baiedan t252-92Q Jvage
vehicles. Selling pafts . 304·
s.o.c.~
P. 0. Box •5690 Lucasville, Ohio 773-5033.

E.Roso.

1

45899.

Public Notice
Ohio.
Tha application
'IICIJoe-n! oppllOitlon to
Coli
Mining
and propOIII to exp111d IM
-motion P«rnnt Nurnlllr aru for room and pillar
(longwall
D-0355·5, to th• Ohio mlntng
Diportmont of Natural cllwlopment).
Aeaourcea, Dlvlelon ot
TM oppl- II on fill
Public Notice

lllnel and Atcl•;wtlon. The lithe -

prop-.! coot
and
,..,amtllon
will
be
tn
County,
Columb
Town•hlp, S.cllon 11;
FriCIIOIII 17, ·11, llld 24.
TM pup-.! underground
mining ·lfll IIICOIII(IIMII
13 uraa room 111d plllt!
tnd IaloeNII on the
AliMony 11nc1 Yalel Milt 7 1/2

20 Yrs. E&gt;ip. •

Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.,... ~~a~••••••

Find the IMst b•r• In the

Sentinel Classifiads

of tllo llelp

County RKordor, Molga
County Court Houae,
leeonll StrMI, PorMroy,
Ohio 457it lor public
vtewtng.

w--

To phlce •• •d, c•ll
992·21

tnil/or requ..tl for an
- - ' COiot.NUOIIMY lMo
unl to lhl Dlvlaton of
Minta and Rulamatlon,
1155 Fountain Square
Court, Building H·3,
minute u.s.o.s. quldnngle Columbua, · Ohio . 43224·
mapa, blglnnlng 1.1 mllel t 317, -In 3D d8p of tllo
north .1111 of Point Roell, loll dll• of pubiiCIIIOn of
Ohio and oxtondlng 2.1 lhll notlcl.
rnllea Hit of Point Rock, m 11. 24. 31: 1117: 4TC

"*""'"

60

THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 31,1997

4:00P.M.
Loclltlcl on St. Rt. 7, btllwHn Pomeroy &amp; Chlltar,
Ohio, 1t five Pointe. Watch lor lighted sign at
Flatwoodi .Rd. Mr. Neville 11 -vlng from llllg1
Co. and hae clVHd Dave's Swap Shop. Everything
to be auctioned.
"GUNS"
Mossburg 835 pump 3~" mag., Reminglon 7400-270
ca., Remlnglon 788 ca. 22-250, Rugan &amp;Fort1111011t 22
long rilles, Martin, Lakefield 22 bolt ICtion, 12 ga. H&amp;R
single shot, 357 mag. lnterarms made in Brazil Model
92, Winchester Model 1300, Mossburg Reminglon 12
ga. pump, Remington 16 ga. pump, Stevens &amp;
Winchester 12 ga. pump, Mossburg 20 ga. pump,
Sears Model 200 12 ga., Remington Sportsman 46,
16 ga. auto., Winchester. 12 ga. MK auto., 12 ga.
single shot (H&amp;R &amp; Stevens), double barrel 12 ga.
(Richards, Stevens, M.W. &amp; Sears), Connecticut
Valley Arms 12 ga. single shot, Hiawatha 12'ga. single'
shot, Gamestep 12 ga. boR acti011, 12 ga. single shot
S&amp;R, 22 single shot, Wlnchester70-270, Remington
Woodm11ster Model 742, S&amp;R 3030, 762 Mllmater
Japan - army rifle, 50 ca. New England &amp; Plain man.
muzzle loaders, Crossman 22 pellet gun, approi&lt;. 50
guns to start salting at6:.oo P.M.
"MISC."
Fenton clocks, lamps, glass basket, McCoy COOkie jar,
brass items, 2026 Uonel train, showcase, 40 &amp; 200
channel scanners, Sharp cash register, Ventura guitar,
Alvarey mandolin &amp; case, Duel( case XXX &amp;old Henry
knives, toys In .boxes, Po~n chain saw &amp; case, 15
speed mountain bike, Wards air compressor, stereo
w/bOse speakars, stackable shelves, pictures, books, ·~ I
3 &amp;2 block &amp;tackle, Rown Town &amp; Holmes amplifiers,
1ishing tackle!!, over 100 lures &amp; lots more, lighted
flashing sign. . "HOUSEHOLD"
'~
Kenmore washer &amp;dryer, approx. 4 yrs, old &amp; rocking
chair.
'"'&lt;
"TOOLS"
Mac &amp; Craftsman toot boxes (Craftsman, Stanley,
Mac, Ridged, Nappa) open &amp; box end, sockeiS.
ptiers, screwdrivers, pipe wrenches, hammers, ~e
grip, misc. power .tools, all kinds &amp;sizes, hundreds of
tools.
"MAC TOOL aox•
Large stacked tool box and an kinds of tools in ~ wilt
sell as a unit. This will put you in business. This is the
only ~em. so will reserve.
OWNER - DAVID NEVILLE
Celli
P08Hive ID
RlfrHIImentl
DAN SMITH - RACINE, OHIO -AUCTIONEER
•Auct~oM~r'a Note: Mr. Neville Is a llcenaed gun
dealer eo the guna ean go to other etlltla. He wiD
do paper work. There 11 a nice collection or tools,

Tomato pickers &amp; packers ·

113 W. 2ND ST.

(614} 247-3901

..-· ..

FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Gall FREE After 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizzas w/1 ~em $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Free Estimates '

Call 614·843·5426

3127nFN

'

Cuatom Homes

UULIII I

Remodeling

PAUL HILL
FARM
LETART FALLS

en Adl Thla Ad Will On run OM tlnll.

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

$1,500 REWARD!!
I

Auto Air Conditioning
lnltllltltlon llld
Sel'\ice .

American.~.
Jlftltrol • Healing •
Cooling Equlpmtnt
R.S.E.S. Certltled·
Arl Cettlfletf

DonSmlth .
37114 ' - " Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, OIL 41718
Phone 114-812·2735
1/rt/1-

'filE MAPLES

PIZZA EXPRESS

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according t6 your .
income. Lovely apartments featuring wallto-wall carpeting, with aU appliances·.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years ofage or handicapped .
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
. · For further details call today ( : )

Wagner Lane, Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAND OPENING
SATURDAY 26th
4 p .m. -11 p .m .
Come In and sign Up lot
Door Prizes
•Color TV. •Microwave
•Compact Discs

.

BIG Y AD &amp; BAKE SALE
SATURDAY, JUI:.Y 26
Masters ies., St. At 124,
Reedsville , between RiveNiew .
Sign and Forked Run.
Lots of goodies.

I

Easy Bank Anandng

Air CAll.._, Installed 2r' a month
Heat Pllnp$ Installed 13r a llllllllh
1

(l'ayrr-* bUid on IJIPf'NOd &lt;ndll)

MOOSE LODGE #731
Return of the Band
"AMBER"
With Amber Criscp
Fri. &amp;Sat. Nights 9· 1

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thennostat

HOME ·
HEATING &amp; COOLING
serving Southeaitem OH &amp;WI
tU 441 .411
1oiCJO.I72-a&amp;71391 Stlflotd School Rd., Galllpolll, OH

•
'

Il!.IJtii'IIIl· [

)!)" •• .,..;

• !.J.

. \. •.

WILLBADLJUS'r GILL•
992·7074
Gravel, Ume1tone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No .Minimum.

~----~-----~~,

I'

1·614·992·7022 .-;;;.......

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone involved
.. stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller!
Contact:
Ron Miller
992-4025

•

.,,

9926, Mason, VN Special
Meeting Sat., July 26, '97.
All members are
requested to attend.

70

Yard Sale

. . . .s).

•

FREE ESTIMATES

D.

Gear~'s
Bod~ Shop
· Quality Work at
a Fair Price!
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760 ·
Home Ph.

614·992·3120
Don Geary, Owner
4/411fn

Howard L. Wrltesel
ROOFING

P.M.

101 Buhl Morton Road, Jadlson

Pike, House On Hill Behind Foo·

efland, 1hur1dar 241h ·l!B1h.

3 Yard sates In Pallial, Friday
And SIU!Iay, 25111, l!BII, 8-5.

AJ,LYord--

a. Ptld In Advlne».

982-6215

1-

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ouallications:

1) Management C.pabilifY
2) l&lt;nowledge or Dispatching
Procedures, Dispatching Equip-

ment, Computer Equipment
j) A. Minimum Of 5 Years Previ-

1111 dow boloro
old
~lito M'l. Sunct.y

ous Experience In The Field Of
Emergenc~ 5ervk:es.

t,.

ldiUon- 2:00p.m.

Frld11&lt; Mondoy ldltlon
·10:00 a.m. Stturd.,.

The Salary For This Position Will
Be Negotiated Based On Qualili·
c81ions And Experience.

1:::===:------

Li me StOne,

; Bake Sale Will Benefit Our PC users neoded.· $45,000 in·
Schooll. From Gallipolis Route· come potenlial. Call 1·800·513·
Gravel, Sand, ! 141 South To ns Soull Go 8 i/2 &lt;343 Ext l!-9368.
Miles To Hannan Trace Road On
.
To. p Soil, fill Dirt . loh, July 25111 &amp;261h.
Housekeeper For 01sablodPrac·
'
liclng Columbus Al!orney, Uve·ln.
Friday, 7/25, 8·3, 68 Carman Some Personal Care, Oriv~trl li·

"===="==
·="===: .Drive.. Tara ESiales, Antlqueo, censo Required, Good Wagoa,
r
614 992 3470

Crafts, All Sizes Clothing, Lots Room &amp; Board, 81 ..~267·5354.

Everything!
IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT
COR P0RAL ELECTRI( .July
25lh, 26lh, 27th, 9:00-5:00, OPPORTUNITY Abovo A'"'rage
Dally Rd., Racine

· 614-949·3060
John Williams; Owner
Licensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Pro idl Q alit
V ng U
y·
Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emernency

Local Area Pick Up
Dlac;arded Appliance•
&amp; Many Metals.

949·2168

Call 8 am-8 pm

::~

S•rvlc•

FREE

614·992-4025

79 Burnon Road, 1981 GMC Jimmy Full Size 4WO; 1989 Mekure

lrv:ome. Call&amp;14-44&amp;-7..1.
.
·.
Scorpicco Large Two Door Sale Locall&gt;u"ne" has lull omo posJ.
~a,. Mor8 hems!
' l ion aYaitable, hourly wage plus
:::-:--':--::-c:-::-:-:-:-'--.,--- some salos commissions. Mull
Fri, Sat, 9·3, Gills Cioming 0-12, be a good people person, basic
Ladies, Wedding Dress, Books, computer. typing and phone skills
Toy~ a Miles At 218.
needed. Send resume c/0: The
.
Daily Sentinel, P.O. Box 42Q ~ 48,

Moving Sale: Friday &amp; Saturda~ Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
July 25th, &amp; 26th, At 382 Kerr 1:-:-:-:::-:-;:=;:-;----:-;::--;Road, ~ M1ies From Ho~or Hospi- Local Non Prahl Agency Is Seek·

1a1

Off St Rl 160 8 A.M. To • P.M. ing A Pan-Time Exocuovo Oirec·

No Early Buyers Please. Cherry
Bookcase Regular Complete Bed,
4 Drawer Vanity, 4 Drawer Cheat.
Wood Dining Table With • Paddad Wood Chairs Recliner 2
Padded Swivel RoCkers, Squ~re
Ped'esta l Table, Uaplt Colle&amp;
Table. Glass Stere o Cabinet
Drafti ng Table And Machine, otd
Stand lamp, 8 HP '?rnamark Rid·
ing Mower, Tools J1g Saw Puz·
Zlefl, BoatdGames, Toys, &amp; Misc.

tor. The ·Director Wo rks Under
The Direction 01 A Volunteer Ad·
visory Comminee And Accom plishes Work Through A Cadre
01 Ser't'ice Volunteers In A Var·
iery Of COmm.mi~ Services.
Th e Ideal Cand1date Will BeEfle cti~e At lend ing An Effort To
Increase The ~rganizatlon'a Prol1le, Commuhlly Awareness Aeld
Funding level. Interested lndl·
vi9uals Should Send A Cunent
Resume To : ClA •06, Uo GalliMovlng SaN!: Thurs. Fri. 5at. 9:00· polit Daily Tribune, 825 Third
S:OO, 231 Second Avenue, Furni· Avenue, Gallipolis, OH &lt;t5631.
lure, Baby Clothes, Tool Chest,
Misc. 614..C46-1295. .
Secretary /Rtc:eprionilt. Ealllb·
llshed Downtown Real Eatatt
Pomeroy,
Businau, Rtspanalble Person

::::-:--::--::--'-::7'::--:-::::-

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

992-2156

tnz

p.m.

QfAQL If£: 2:00

HAULING

WPEN1lR SERY!CE

Cla&amp;&amp;ifiede

BEGINNING: JULY 21

WICKS

·~

Sentinel

APPLICATION DEADliNE:
JUL)' 2' Jlpl

Big Yard Sate : 1GOO Jackson
Pike, 9·? Friday 2511, I Saturday Gallia County Adheres To All
,__.,;;,;;.,;....;---.,;,..,;- 201h, loll Of Stuffl
State Policies Pertaining To Equal
Oppcwruniry Employment IAftirma·
(Lime SloneCommunity Yard And Bake Silas live Action
, At E&amp;E Country Store, Nisly ·n·
Low Rates)
McCombs, On Hannan Trace APPLYTO:
South 01 775. New lawn Furni·
GaNia COunty Convniuianara
ture. &amp; Cralls. Ruga, Dishes.
Ga~ia county Courthouse .
; Clothe&amp;, Jams I Jellies, New
18 Locust Street. RtMJm t2D2
Handmade Qujlls, Quilts Will Be
Gallipolis, ana ~5631
111% OI.Reouiar Pr~e. Big Vlrioly
Phone:61H46-4374
Of Baked Goods, Fresh Made
Donuts &amp; Coffee All Oay, QuillS &amp; HOME fYPlSTS,
,-

YOUNG'S

Addlllone
oNaw GarlfiiM
•Eiectrleel &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting
oJntfrlor &amp; Etterlor
.Painting
Alao Cone,..lil Work ·
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG ftl

E•perienced Carpenlef ·With Own
Tocls, Relerenc:aa Required, Call
614·•41·1136 BeiWHn 8:30 And
4:00.

Protector, 1998 Easter lone~a­
berger Basket With Liner, Protec·
ror, 1 Wooden Olnene Set, 814·
..6-8778 Bebro 10 A.M. /Ahllf 9

614-742-3090
614-742-3324
614-742·3076

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutt~r Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
3117194/TFN

II00-3n· 31Dt.

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
E•perienced Hair Stylist wanted,
E - Nk:e, Ex118 Larqo, Molal 01· For Mo~ern New 5alo,_, 614....41·
fica Desk: 1996 Chnalmas Lon - 1880, 814·256·6336.
gaberger Baokol Wllh Ud, Liner,

Call Us For A Frl16 EsHm~ts

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

.

ROUTE?

....---'---·-------, '·
Ladies Auxiliary V.F.W.

Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Siding, Pole
Barna. Decks. Painting

3351

Joe N. Sayre
Sayre Truddng Co.
1j
614·742-2138

Drlverw: Only In America • A

SL Peters Epiac:opal Church, Key No Credit. No Proltlaml NO
Chain Says Tho Pool Hall Of POint MONEV DOWN! Troot Youraoll
Pleasant. For Mora. Information To Our FREE Truck Prograr11 .
Cllto "A" CDL • ., Yr. OTR I·
Cal61"-448-4333.

L-----------~--------~~~~~~ .~---------~~~~~~~ ~--------~~M

614-247-2012

"DRIVING TIME"
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
Saturday 9:30-1:30 .
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

H - l•pro•-••

Llllllltone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syetenia
Trailer &amp; 1 .
• . Houee Sites .
RIIUonable Rates

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

KINGS'

IXCAIA'rl.

Mil

WANTED
TOMATO
PICKERS

...

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings •
• Room Additions
Over 20 years expenence.

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Gary Roush &amp; Sons

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hours. S20k to S50kl~r 1·
800·348-718a xt508.
·

Found: Set Of Keys In Front 01 Haw Start In Your Own Truck .

_CO"STRUOIO"

360° Communications

Lost and Found

Found: Blonde Golden Retriever
81 ..367-7753 Addison area..

LO"G·s

CELLULAR PHONES

PUBLIC AUCTION

~G~al:ll:po:I:•:·::H:4i:58:::31:.:·~·lmost
newauctiOn
onn. The
gun~wlllatan
nlllngare
at 1uaacl,
p.m. few
But the
at.-ta
at 4 P.M.

6 Cooling

.•

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

Business
.Meigs
Services Refrigeration
Realdtntlal Helling

Wolfe birth
announced

9~5-4473

·to 4·H &amp; IIA

ANNOUNCEMENTS

..

Help Wanted

~::•:or:.

25210

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

I'

SOUTHERN OliO COAL

Mutt have an EPA Refrigerant Certlftcetlon,
knowledge of oil, gaa &amp; electric furnacaa,
Including air condltlonera &amp; heat pumps.
•Excellent pay baHCI on experience
•PIIId Ylcatlons and holideya
•PIIid overtime and lllldlcallnaurii1Ce
•Y•• around emplOyment with new atate of the an
Hrvlce van with toole supplied.
Call Bennatte M.H. Htg. &amp; Clg. at 44&amp;-9416 or
1-800-872·5967 or llfld reaume to 1391
S fl d S h
I 0.
:c:oo:lR:d:·=·

Other superior Quality
diamonds to $1 0,000

Financing through NorM~! Flnancllll

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

25% DIIIOUIII • :-::90:--:-W:::-an-:t-ed:-to-:B:-u-y-

Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. llvu Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. .
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main
Service
Pomeroy, Oh. ·
Week
'HI9

·HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN NEEDm

visit!

Una L RoUitolt, CDPXA

~ Remodeling

7J3.578S Or 304-173-5«7.

Kennelh Mc0JIIol9l, R. Ph. Chal1el Rltlle, R. Ph.

ORDINANCE 1148
Southern Ohio Coal
An Ordinance to amoncl ComjMny, 11e1p MIM No. 2,
Ordlnonc• 84t and P.O. Box 410, AU..a, Ohio
•otablloh oalarloo for 45701, 1111 aubmlH.cl· on

Only Acquisitions offers you
superior Quality diamonds at
compare al
far better prices! The
· $4,500
difference is so evident and
the prices will certainly
amaze you! Our friendly
· experts eagerly aw11it you

304-n3-5822 .

Uc. wv 01t030
Roofing, Painting
Guttera
, Guaranteed
• Q1NIIftJP
Wor............
Free Estimate•
992·9057,n111 mo

•Garages
•Complete

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine.&amp;Welding Shop

FAMILY DENTISTRY
At. 1, Box 44-C
M11on,WV

•New Homes

SIAJ,II•G
SEIVICE

Pharmacy

...........

Kltlly Hyull,
Cllrii/Trlltum
VIII. of POJIIII'OY

&amp;a, B. Bouton, D.D.S.

JC
CONSTRUOION

IOIERT BISSELL
COIISTIUCTIOII

RiCk ~lliOf\ Auction CO!IlPMV.
lull time auctioneer, complete '
auction
aenrice. lleenslld
fBI,Oh iO I Wesr Virginia. 304·

SWISHER LOHSE

~=

·Sup-erior Quality

" MASON DENTAL CARE

Complete Ma~hlne Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Weldint Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday·Friday- 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. - 12 noon

~-------------------------~

c....,_

The Sentinel News Hotline

Expires 8-9·97

.

IUjMNIIOry jMriDnnel for
B• II ordolntd by 1111
tho Vlllag• of Pom•roy, Council or the Ylllllg• ot
Ohio.
Pomwor, DNa:
B• II ordaln.ct by th• ll.ctlon 1: That the
council ot th• Vlllag• of 11lerlla .ol tho vorloua
aervleea, general, atrHt,
Ponlltoy, Olllo:
s.ctlon 1: T1llt tho llllry pollee lnd -·nplovof tllo Cht.l of Polle. of tllo 111111 .M and ••• Mraby
Pomeroy
Pollet •lllblttMd II rattl Ill
O..,.rtmtnl, lholl "" lnd Ia lorth on Exhibit A, alt8chld
hor•by •etabllahed II Ill• Mrllo, which •xhlblt lholl
rata of 120,000.00 por par. " and 11 Mrtby ldoptad
s.etlon 2: T1llt tllo lllory and•pPICMCI.
s.et1on 2: Thll Ordlno.of tht Tax Admlnl-or
hu bHn amend.cl to an ahlll loki •ffKI end lMo In
lull lore. 11 at July 12,
hourlywap.
s.cuon 3: T1llt tllo ...., 19117, upon Ill pnup tnd
of the VHIIIge Admlnl- ..,....,... by tllo Cowlcll.
ahafl b• and 11 h•r•by PIIHII: July 7,11117
lltllblllhed II lhl rat• of A-:
KIIIIY ~~yoe~~,
128,000.00 I* par.
,
- n 4: T1llt the llllry
Yllllga oll'omltoy
ol th• Str..l SujMrvlaor
llelp County, Ol1lo
111111 b• and 11 h•raby
John MUIIII', Pnaldlnl
•llllbiiiMd at .... rata of
SCCIIt Olton
120,000.00 I * par.
- I I : T1llt tllo lllary
of the Flra Clll•t ot th•
Larry Wlltrung
PorMroy Fir• o.partm•nt
Wllltlm Young
111111 bt and lo h•r•by
••tablleh•d II the rata ol (7) 17, 24; 2TC
$1,200.00 I* yar.
Public NOtice
8: T1llt tllo •llry
· of tllo Clarll of a.ch GroYI RESOWTION 2.87
C•m•tory ehell b• and lo
Be It reaotvacl by tM
hor•by ••tablloh.cl ot th• Council
of tM Vlltql of
rato of $800 00 por yNr.
Pamtroy, 111 mambara
s.et1on 7: T1llt t11o ullry 1111ra1o concuntng:
of th• Zoning Offlclr lholl
th• Cllrii/Tb• and Ia h•r•by citT1llt
1111 VHIIIgt of Pomeroy,
"tabtllh.cl 11 tho rat• of tronafar th• aum · of
$1,200.00 por Yllr.
130,Dtiii.OO (thirty lhou•ncl
Section 8: WHEREFORE, dOIIIN)
from tilt Gtn.rll
IIIla Ordinance 111111 takt Fund lo tllo
Slrtll Fund for
effect and lMo tn run . _ u
Ill•
DjMfltlon
of currant
of July t2, 19117, upon n•a • ..,.., .... Thlllllolutlon
II
pa1111111 and approval by d..ntrl on Mnt,...ncy for
tho Cowlcll.
11i• OjMfltlon of currant
Puud: JUly 7, 11117

TO REUNITE • A reunion of former membera of the Gabriel
Quartet Is planned for the 12th annual hymn sing at the Cart Gor·
by Farm near Langsville. The •lng will take place on Saturday.

Artist registration forms for the
.
16th Annual Foothills An Festival are
ready.
_
1be Festival, held at the indoor
Lodge at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp, 5
miles nor\hwest of Jackson, will run
•I
from Oct. 17-19.
Artists are invited to exhibit in the
following categories: OiiiAcrylic, ·
Pastel/Drawing, Photography, Prints,
Three Dimensional Work, and Water·
color. Juried booth spaces are avail1/4ct
able to exhibiting anists.
· The show is professionally judged
but not juricd. Artists of all ages and
experience are encouraged to enter.
Entrants arc limiled to 4 works per
category: Entry fees arc.$5 per piece 1/2ct
or Sl6 for 4 pieces . .
A total of $1.210 in cash prizes
sponsored by the Sands Hill Coal
Company and CclluarOnc will he
awarded. Dozens of purchase award
patrons select artwork during a Preview Reception. sponsored by Big
Bear. on Oct. 16. ·
·
Foothills Art Festival is a program
of the Southern Hills Arts Council.
Residents may call the Council at
6141286-6355 or write Box 1"9.
Jackson, Ohio 45640 for further
information or entry forms. Registration deadline is September 12.

Austin Tllomas Wolfe was bom
June 10, 1997 at Camden-Clark
Metllorial Hospital in Parkersburg,
·W.Va.
He is the son of Todd and Tina
Wolfe of Shade. He weighed n'ine
pounds, four ounces and was 21 inchealoog.
His paternal grandparents are Tom
and Rose Wolfe of Racine and
Shirley and Roger Lude of Syracuse;
t1111em11 grandparetns are Roger and
Bllbln Bissell of Chester, and Sue
Haning of Columbus. .

'I

Public~

non-elected

ton, WY. Ev.,yday 8·1. Cr&amp;lla,
anciquet, trading urcfl, furniture,
101'1. varitly. 304-&amp;75-5404.

Up to $5.00 off any prescription .1
Limit 1 per Customer per prescription I

varlouit non·•leoted
An Ordinance to lrMnd aup•rvloory and nan·
Ordl,nanc• 842 and IUjMNliOry llllplOyHI Ol
eotabtleh oalart•• lor the Vlll181 of Pomuoy,
v1r1ou1

Crawford"s Flea Warker. Hender·

I
ISwisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacyl

of HHS Alumni Scholarship, Dean's
Scholarship; Senior Belly Christina
Kuhn of Reedsville, music, Kibble
Foundation Scholarship; Senior
Stacey A. Neff of Shade, psychology,
Katherine E. Parrett Scholarship and
Dean's Sc.holarship; Junior Andrew
W. Fields of Syracuse, mechanical
engineering, Dean's Scholarship,
Charles and Evelyn Matthews Schoiarship and Kibble Foundation Scholarship.
Approximately $2.9 million in
university schohirships has been
awarded to 1,641 students selected to
receive 2,134 scholarship awards.

Auction
and Flea Market

I~-------------~-~---------~
.
COUPON
.
I
I
I

ORDINANCE 847

. Singing by the Gabriel Quartet
and a reunion of former group members are planned for the 12th annual
hymn sing at the Carl Gorby Farm,
located at · the junction of State
Routes 124 and 325, two miles west
of Langsville.
.
1be event will be held Saturday.
A fellowship hour will be held
from 6 to 7 p.m. Concessions will be
available, and those attending should
take lawn chairs.
Also scheduled to sing are the
Builders Quarte~ Cottageville, W.Va. ·
. and "Joy" of Huntington. W.Va.

80

We honor most third party
prescription plans. Your Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists,
Chuck,
'
Ken &amp; Ron are here. to fill your
prescription nee(js.

I

Public Notice

The Daily Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio

Quality pr;escriQtloD Service
·at Comoetltlve prices.

OU upperclass scholarships announced
Ohio University announced the
names of its upperclass scholarship
recipients for the 1997-98 academic
year.
LoCal recipients were: Sophomore Melissa Marie Dempsey of
Chester, journalism, Kibble Founda. lion Scholarship; Junior Todd
Miu:hell of Coolville, art, special talent award; Senior Matthew Wayne
Clark of Langsville, biological sci- ·
ence, Kibble Foundalioo Scholarship;
Sophomore Brent A. Sm. of
Langsville, biological science, tibbie
Foundation Scholarship; Senior
Stephen John Smith of Langsville,
physical science/astronomy, Kibble

Thursday, July 24, 1897

. Thursday, July 24, 1tt7

• Top • Trim ·· .Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 Ym. &amp;p. - Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

. Free E11imate•

Must Ha'e All Typing Olllci
Skills, Aclvarlioing E-lm Not
AMuot 8111 A.Ptual Sand R""mo
TO&lt; P.O. Box 783, GaRipolla, Ohio
45831, All Ropllu Strlcny Conll-

Ail Yard Saln Musl Ba Paid In
Advancti. Deadline: 1:00pm the cienlial.
day before lht ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday tdUion· Shephard L9Gl!lng Anyone ExI:GOpm Frldoy.
perltflCI Wllh Chain Saw, Also
Oporalof, 814--&amp;102.
Pt. Pleasant

&amp;VlclnHy

Help Wanted : Timber Cuttef 1

Power

Saw Operator, Loodet o,-

t.tt. Flower EMS Yard Sale Rt.87 aralor, Sickle, Experienced amy
Thur 8am..flpm. July 2•th Your Need To Apply, Coil 814·81274~5.
aupport S8'Y8s liYet.

.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

-•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

BRJDOJ:

NEA Crossword Puule

PHILLIP
ALDER

Kn............ . . ~=. .
ACROSS

. 3t DondllvH

1 Olplomocy

41 Dtllllrec
42 Food .-.tve

-

5-ng1o

t DlneiiUng

540
Local Reali Bu11neaa SHking
Full Or Part·Time, Salea Clerk
Rental Wanted: HonwtOM,.. Al-locating Need 3 Bedroom Ohio
Homo, In COUn&gt;Y, Good Roads &amp;
Schools, Within 1 Hour Of 0.111-polil, HM Pall. 81H~12211.

ence PfefrHred WII .Otacuu Ben·
oiO. Sond Dollllod Reoumo With
Ptraonal I Profession Relerenc11 To: CLA •ts, clo Galli poll•
Daily Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
the F~al Fair Housing Act:
ot 1968 which makes it Ulegal

Galipoll. Ol:f &lt;45631 .
Management Paaltlon Available

limitalion or discrimination

Galllpolis. Rio Grande, a Paint

make any such preference,

PlaasantWnt Varginia

Umftalion or discrimination.·

Mobile X· Ray Tech, Weekends
Call 1· 800-999·V709 In Gallipolis,

This newspaper wiD not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which is In violatoo of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that an dwellings
advertiSed in this newspaper
are avaMable on an equal
opportunity basts

Ohio Area.
Needed- manager of nowet" shop.
must have exper"""'e In all')'peS
ol arrangemenm_ lullo1ime pos1tion.
10, John Wyatt, 158

Oh.

010 Seeks Team Good Pay, e1•
rd 8U 258celtent OrivIng Rac:o •
•
1021 .

1 TillE ONLVI
S..L-0-W-()-U..Tl

-·-'1111,.._

.... IYI Do- on~ .~..vo.&amp;. - ~.....Down on llllocl n&gt;~ldion. $999
section~. 2-3 014 Bedn:lom rnocf..
eltlllailable.Oakwood HDRM
Nitro, WV. 30+755-58a5.
1969 ·Statesman with 3 add on

roOI'I'!I, sill on 501100 lot, n•
gu furnace, hot water hNtlt' lnd
roof. Trailer I lot '12,000 firm.

304-882-3997 ~L
197J Ux70 Schult With E•pando
l iving Rgom And A 1988 12JI42
Add· A· Room Four Bedrooms, 1
112 Bath~ Famiy Room, New Fu•
nace. Heat Pump, Md Carpeting.
Cell 814-2.5-SSiiS.
1ge3 14x70 Nashua 3br, 1 beth,

Pleasant Valley Hospital current·
ly has an opening for an e1petl·
anced PC/Network Speclatlat A
qualifi ed
wUI
hi h 1 1
g with
eve
ence
conntCIIOn and

310 Homes for sale

end networ~ usJng

col. Wuat have a
or
Com·
equ ivalent experience
puler Science or related field .
Send resume to Personal II
Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520
Va118y Or., Pt. Pleasant, WV
25550. ANEOE.

12 Rooms Ranch Style Home·
3Bedroom, 2 112 baths, large
kitchen &amp; dining room &amp; famll~
2 porcheSisc:reened. 2 car
garage, 8/ 10 mile out Sandhill
Rd. and lots ITIOfe. 304-67~571.

Postal Jobs .3 Posiliona Avail*
able, No Experience Neceuary,
For Information , Call 818·78&lt;1·
10:;23:::,:
, E::11.::..;.721l6=·:,__ _ _ _ _
:

2813 Uaple Ave. Pt. Pleasant
614-446·3629 or 304--773-5183.

3bl' house 2 bath, lull basement

4 Bedroom Spiil Solid LeYel With

15400 Sq. Ft. Including Full Base-

RIWBrding And Challenging Peal·
tlon AvaHable For An LPN Wish·
ing To Work With The Dementia
Populali.on In A Secured Alz·
heimer's Unit. Part*Time. 2 P.M.·
10 P.M. Shih With Full·Time Poa·
slble In Near Future. Unique,
PrCMtn Programming And Upbeat
Successful Staff. Apply In Person
At Scenic: Hills Nursing Center,
311 Buckrldge Rd., Bidwell, OH .
110 PHONE CALLS, PLEASE.

1988 14x70 Clayton Newport-.
2bedroom , \bath, ell, ne., car·
pet. 1 porch Wlrocf. $13,500. ~
675-&lt;1625.

1993 Fleming 1-4170 2br, 1bath,
central air &amp; heat, e1c. cond.
$13,500. 304· 273·3214 or 304·
773--5957.

r •.,._,,,,.

:.:.:~=-------AlliENS MORTGAGE
COMPANY
When the bank says no, let
Alhens Mortgage say yes!! let
ourstalfhelp yougetrheloenyou
need.
We speciltizeln :
Financing tor llouaas and mobile hoiMI
Self-employed· refiRinclng·
Honw lmprovernen1s· BIU Conaotldatlon•lnv•tment Pfvpet"
ty- Cash out tor any need.
No application tee. AliMa or
credt weiconTe to apply.
a. 11 today ro r a 1ree ana 1ysII
s
800..929--14021614-592-4001.

Vocalist Wanred For Metal Band,
Must Be 18, Dependable, And
Willing To Do Whal It Takes,
514-44&amp;28511, 814~7-711110 .

1.987 Clayton 14x70 3 Bedroornl,
2 Baths, Fireplace. Central Air,
614-379-2957 Altar • P.M.

41220 Williams Rd. Shade, 15
minutes from Athens or Pornet"oy,
on US RL 33, S&amp;Yen1y acres more
or less, 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, family
room. barn &amp; out bu ildings,
$6 5,000, call 6.14•992•5345 even·

brick, 3bedroom Ranch, full
b~~~~~:e~:;,.1':~'~-~ll•:a~lr, Camp
i-:.
or 304·

Tomlc:tUe'a Entertainment
Open and growing for future empfovment positions: securily, pizza
maket'a. t2od prep and musicians.
need apply, Tomacelll's Enter·
1ainment. 202 Norlh Second Av•
fl.le, Middleport.

message.

1990 Cla~n NMhtidge 14x70, 2
Bedrooms. 2 Balhs. Ftreplaca,
CA, Fu'rnl shed, 2 Porches, Out·
b.lildlng, Perfect Slatter Home For
A '!bung COuple, 614-59$-3521.

ing~

Sales Repres-ntalive needed.
Send resume to WBYG, 303 8th
St. PI Pleasat11 WI/ 25550.

carpet throughout, new central
front porch, on ren[ed corner
very nic e $15,000. 304-875after 4:30"'m.
,.. Serious in"'ires only.
1986 Knox 14170 2br, 2 bath
$3,000 down-take over payments. 304· 882· 3627 or leave

ment With 2 Car Garage, Gas
Heat, 2 Uiles From Gallipolis On
Bu~ille Ptke, On 1 112 Acte Flat
Lot, City Schools, $129,000 Or
BaSI Ollor, 614·441Hi390.

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen[er 8 _8 Acres, 2 year old sectional
, Is seeking a full time/part time RN 3br, 2 baths. cenualalr, NICE I
tor 11 - 7 shilt. Experience pre· Somerville Realty. so•~e7.5. 3 030
rerred, bur will consider the right or 30&lt;t·615-3431 Jean Casto.
candidate. Excellent benefit pack·
age br fulllme and part lime employeas. Apply at Rockspring s
Rehabililation Center, 36759
Rockspnngs Road• .Pomeroy, O_h_.
45769.

410

based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin,oranyintention to

McDonald'• II Now Accepting
'-'"' t1o na, ..,.
•·piY In PoriOn ~••·
"..,.....a

•

RENTAL S

to advertise ~any prefefence,

At local Retail Store. Please
S.nd Reaume To: P.O. Bax 141,
Gallpol~ Ohio 451131.

~

c

1994 14170 Oakwood -3br, 2ba,
$16,000080.3CM-675-4361 .
New·HI97 14 Wide-1 batt\ $6991
down, $139/mo, with approved
credit Call HII0-691·6777.
1997 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$~ 95 down, 195Jmo. Only at

*

Oakwood
Homes, Nitro, WV. 304-755-·5885·
1997 14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom,
$1,359 down, S221tmo. Free air,
Skilling, &amp; delivery. Only al Oek·
wood Homes Niuo, WV. 304·755·
5885.
1997 doubl ewld~ $1445 down,
$229/mo. Free delivery &amp; setup.
1·~1-Gn7.

4 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. $500 D:lwn,
$225.-Mo., 304-7J6·7295.
FACTORY DIRECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN.
SAVE SSSS.
Oakwood Homaa Ia lht: only
dealer in the tri· atale area the I
buildL and utla their own
homes. For factory direct "'rices,
"
shop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl·
TRO, WIJ. 304·755-5885.
IT'S BIG. 1997 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1,949 DOWN,
$3 19/MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLV AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304 *755*
5885. Umited Ot\:tr.

ATTENTION "HOMEOWN£RSI
Attend a free mortgage inform&amp;·
tio'n seminar &amp; learn : ' How to
save $25,000 or mere !rom the
interesl you are paying on your
home or mobile home," WITHOUT
REFINANCIN G I 'How to get a
REFUND lrom yol.lt lender on interes! you'll's overpa id! •Mortgage
stra tegies such as: ·How to get a Large seleclion ol used home. 2
borne Improvement lean or con· or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $3495.
---~--:o:::--::---1 sollda te bills when my bank Quick deliv&amp;ry. Call1 ·800·837·
Wanted
Do
says no." and "How 1o lind lhe 3238.
.,.,.,,...,=:-:::::::-::~~:-::;:::-1 money l need even il I hall'e not·
so-good 10, just plain •bad" credit limited Offer I 1997 doublawide,
WHEN: Salurday July 26,1997 at 3tlr, 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
10:00AM ·11 :30AM . WHERE: Ma· month. Free delivery ' &amp; seiUp.
30•1-il7'5-l son Count~ Librar r. Point Pleas· Only at Oakwood Homes, Nifro
ant, W\1. Call Prem1er Equity WV.304·755·58S5. .
Mortga ge at 1·88S..343 -473B And
CWifted Nuillng Auisqmt Ouali· Reserve Your SeatTodayl
Ne.w 1997 14X70 three bedroom,
ty. Care At ReasonabJe Rates,
includes 8 monlhs FREE lot rent
8"1 .........1754.
Cape Cod Home; 5·BR's. 1 miles Only $181.86 per month with
South o! SIBle Route 7s. 3 Acres.. $1050 down. Call 1· 800· 837·
EQiri8nCid carpenlry and remo· (614)·256- 1997
3238.
~ellng. Inside and oulaide,
aokl, vinyl siding, add-on addi· Counuy home 20 minutes from New Bank Repo'sl Only 3 leh,
tiona, cabinet refacing or newly Pt Pleasanl off R1.2 18/atras owner financing available. 304·
rebuilt. Rehuences·Free Esli· fenced in. darden spof. pond, ga· 755·7191 .
,..._JimShuD~75-1272.
rage , barn . 3br, living room, =;;;;;:;;;y~~~;.~~
kitchen, ba1h, ~pantry, 3 sea.son, l ~
Rd . Glenwood, 15
GeorfH Parlable SawmiD, don'l porch, sp~ra l staircase,
i
Milton Exit. Johns
hiUI your togs toN rnlU just. can ba ck porch, walk· in closet &amp; Creek Rd. 2 bath, 3 bedroom, on
304-87~1857.
1 ma11 study, 97°1. complete. 1 acre. Cl!y water, central air.
Home Of Office Cleaning, Refer· $85,000. :l04·576·3156.
$35,000. 304·562·5840.

Wa Are- Now Accepting Appllca·
tiona For Self Motivated Men I
Women Who Would Uke To Earn
$15 To $20 Per Hour We Also
Offer Paid Vacations IBonus Pro·
gram I Comprehensive Benefit
Pkg. &amp;Aust Be Able To Start Righ1
Away Call Ua Man Thru Fri 9:00
A.M. To 5:00 P.M. Toll Free 1·
aaa..n2· 2455.

180

To

. ;.;;;..____..,..--,-...,..I

era&amp;. 814-245-5887.

For sale by owner, 4 bedroom
house, 1+ acres, with outbuild·
ings, ale. Immediate possession,
price reduced , $16,500, S14·

HOUII
Cleaning, ' carp&amp;ts
cleaned. Aea•onabie. Referenc·
es on request . Call after Spm

~92·4514 .

304-882·20a8.
1

For sale, 1 bedroom home in Po·
meroy, w111 sell on land contract,
614·992·5858.

W kl

RobWn'a Hom• Clean ng: ee y,
EM-weekly, El"'llent References!
Call Anyllmt, 81H.6-2315 II No

L•ve 11euaga.

-S&amp;M Water Hauling Services,
·where Purity 11 Our Pass ion·
Glv• Ul A Call Today ; 304·675·
3711.

~WIIjiflllobriW;.ilil;'jln;iM~y:jH:j;o;;;m;;;e~,Ex;;;;:
____.In"---. 81++t1·1797.

...-u

......,_.

FINANCIAL

I

House and proper ty, appro1. 4a·
cres . Ideal sta rl er home. Beech
St.. Pomeroy OH. 304-8S2·2Dn.
3 Bedroom Hou5e 2 Car Garage,
NIIW Roof, Carpel, Above Ground
Poo l 10x 10 Ou tbuilding, 1 H2
Lot s, Elleellent Cond i tiOn, La·
Grande Boul ~va r d &amp; Green
Schools, 614;446-730 7.

Business

Middl epor t· 3 units, new- windoWs·
and carpet, pa1 nted, clean,
$54,900, 614·826·4950.

Opportunity
INOI'ICEI

Nevorlr remodeled three bedroom,
one and 112 bath home in Mlddl&amp;port, 614·992·3465 after 5pm.

21 0

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busi ·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until YO'! have . investigated

1he otlorirO.

Thre e bedroom, two bath, on
large co rn er lot. located 33164
New Lima Rd ., Rutland, $35,000
OBO, 941 · 763·5 7l32 evenings
only.

Pr•Englnoerod Sleei Bldgs. NaCklr'lal Company Awarding D&amp;aler·
ohlp In Open Market. High Prolil
Potential. Canatruc:tlon Or Sales.
3CXH58-113!1, E11. 8200.

230

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARV • Block,

brick a stone work, 30 yura ••.
perlenca, reaaonable ratet. 304·

IIII5-35D1 aner o:oopm, no job 10
11111111or.,BIG. WI/.Q21200
i(IWIUVkN Ptus, Reaumt/Secre·

llriol SoMca. r.al814-7o42·7.0..

.

Uvingaton'a baaemenJ water·
prooflng. all basement repairs
don•, frH eatlmates, liletime
guarantH. 10)111 on job experi·
..-...~75-21•5.

Miscellaneous

Palesline Rd . Glenwood 15 maes
from Millon E111. Johns Creek
A.d. 2 Bo droom, 2 b ath mo bll a
home
3/4 acre. Cily water,

I ~~~~n~ew=-c=a~rpe=t~$=3~4,=00=0.
1·•

Houses lor Rent

1 Bedtoom House In Uuon, Utif.
ltlea. Rent"I3001Uo., • Oepotlt,

81.·2511-14811.
AvaHalrlt ooon. Clean 2bedroom,
new appliances, basement References. Deposit No pets. 30417!&gt;5112.
Clean 3br hou11 In Henderson.
&amp; referenteL
304-875-1 972.

'300/mo. + depos11

Eqcudlo9 Homo Fot Loaoo, 2,000
Sq. Ft. Near Golf Course $8501
Mo., Available lmmecllalely, 61 ~
«8· 2957.
.
House In Pomeroy for sale or
...~ 614-992-3090.

Graclouo living. 1 and 2 boclroom Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
apertmtn.11 ar VIHage Uanor and Rockr. Tony lama. Guatanteed
RiVIfaldo Apertmenll in Middle- Lowest Prices At Shoe Cafl, Qa)...
port From S236-l304 • Call 5 14· Rpo~s.
992·.5084. Equal Housing Opper·
Buying sport• clrdsl
1Uni1H.
I will bY~ any ~lites or new Oia·
lalarane Mall : Large 2 Bed· mond Kings. If y® have cards to
rooma, 2 Baths, $450/Uo., In· !iell, let me know. Call1514·84g.
ctudel Uti~ lilt. Deposit Required, 3098.
814--2-&lt;77.
Chestrtpe fretzer 15cu. ft~ white,
tea1her look top. $200. ~· 115·

no-

Small 2 Bedroom Home With
Range And Refrigerator, C1t1
·Sohoola. No Pel&amp;. 13001110., PIUI
Ullliliea. 1200 Deposll Required,
References Required, Call 614·
448·4069, It No Answer Leave
Manage. No Callt Afler a:OO
P.M.

420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
· WI·
llarong at l2e0·$300, tar and trash Included, 614-9922167.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home. You
Pay Utilitiet, I Otpotit, In Portlf

Area l250111o.,.61 .. 388.Q1112.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, All
Eitclric, 1250/Mo., 1250 Deposl~
614-367-7802.
Tnallor: 2 BR'o. 1250. Month, DefiO!Ii~ No Pelll.
Localed Kemper Hollow Rd. (614)

.46-7321 .

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedl'oom apanments, furnilhed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 6 14*
892·2218.

1 Bedroom In Gallipolis, No Pels,

v.r -· 814-446-71103.
1 Bedroom Near Holzer E1tra

Nice, Cenual Air, $269/Uo., +
Ullillles, Depoall Roq. 614-446·

21167.

2bdrm. apts .. total electnc. IP·
pllances furnished, laundry room
laciHties, dose to school In town.

AppUC:atlona avaita~e at: Village
GrHn ApiL ••g or call81•·gg~.

3711 . EOil

3 Room Furnished Apartment,
051 SecOnd Avenue, Gallipolis,
Next To Bossard library, S3501
Required ~ No
Pets AUowed, References Re·
quHIId, Call Debbie Or Judy AI
814-4-16-7323.

Mo.. Ptus Oaposll

Cottage for ·renHbr, kitchen •
balh. $175/mo. + utilities, 112mo.
rent ror deposit 304·875-2495 af.
""epm.
Downtown Gallipolis: Modern 1
Bedroom, All Electric, Carpeted,
Complet• Kilehen, Elec1rtc Heat 1
AJt Conditioning. e14-4-46-0139.
Furnllhed 1 bedroom, upper level, deposit &amp; refinances required.
304·675-2U• or 30•· 675·3653

ahar 5:oopm.
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartmenl.
Across FrOm Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Oepostl, 1325/Mo .•
814-&lt;Ma-IZIS, 014-0148.0577.
Furnlthed 3 Rooms &amp; B:ath, No
Plill, Refarl&amp;fiCI And Oepo!lit Re·
qulred,61.....a-1519.

Unfunl shed 2 Bedroom Apart·
ment, 322 Third Avenue, 151-4·
2M-11103. From gAM . .0 P.M.
Upstalri Apartment For Rent •
1300.00 Mon1h • MUll Par For
Gao &amp; Phone • Klo;hon One
Large Bedroom • Living Room
And Bath • E,.ollent Condldon.
No Pets. Deposit Required. Can
Be Seen At 1403 Eastern Ave·
nut, GaiNpoliS. Ctll114-«8-451•

HOW?
Thollortgago S.vlngo
Program!
Calf tor Freelnformltlon
ToUF100
1-8811-343-4736 EXT. 1i

Weal .

RL 62·3 Mile1:
.

i

•

Molel Lowest Rates In
Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Sl\owtime &amp; Disney.

Dr

Rata,

Sleeping rooms wilh cooking.
Also trailer apaca on river. All
hook-ups. Call alter 2:00p. m.,
304-773-5651,Mason WI/.

460

Space lor Rent

Mobile home si1e available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
614-385-&lt;367.

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

Goods

• A 82

G(een Reftigerator Frost Free,
S150: Harvest Gold Refrigerator
Frost Free, $150: Whirlpool Re·
frigerator .Very Nice, 1 Year War·
ranty $300; Atr Conditioner 5,000
BTU, $125; West inghouse Air
Coridili oner 11 ,000 BTU S250 :
G .E. Washer $95: Maylag Wash·
• , $150 : Hotpolnt Dryer $95;
Eieclric Range, $95; Holpoint
Washer &amp; Dryer Sal $205 Each,
1 Year Warranty, Skaggs AP·
pliance1, 7B Vine Street, Galiipo·
lls, 614-446· 7396, 1·888·818·
0 12B·
King -size waterb&amp;d, new semi·
wave mattr.e ss, lighted m1uor
headboard. $150. 304·773·5970
alterolpm.
Kitchen Carpet. $6.50 Sale On All
Ra-om Size Carpets, Mollohan
FurniNte, 614-44&amp;-7444.
Used Furniture Store, 130 Buia·
· I Pike, Gas /Electric Cook
Automatic Washer, Mat·
tresses, Beds, Oinenas, Hlde·A·
Bed Couches, Telell'isions,
Desks, Typewriters , Baby Bed,
Gill Shop, 614·446·4782, Hrs. 1()..

••

520

Sporting
Goods

Hand guns for sale this week
only. call614 ·992· 4148 to make
appointment: Rassi 38 stainless,
$150; Rossi 38 blue, $99.50; Be·
te!la 9 mm, $90, Astra 32 au·
tomatic , $85; Beretta 25 automat·
ic, $110; Ruger 22 automati c:,
$1 35: Ruger MKII 22 automatic,
$115: Ruger .single sill22, $159;
H1gh standard 22 magnum. $125:
Ruger Super Blackhawk 44 ~g ·
num, 7 tl2" barrel, $191 ; 22 D~r­
inger, $50: Mitcl"'ell 44 magnum,
$150. Pnces do not Include Brady
Bill.

530

Antiques

pan Microwave, $4a.o915 ; JCPen·
nay VCR $79.95: Sylvania VCR
$69.95; Sony CD Player $59.95;
80 Channel Scanner $84.95; 30
Channel Hand Held Scanner
S80.95; 16 Channel Scanner
$"19.95; Smith Corona Typewriter
$69.95; Electronic Ke"yboilrd
$69.95: Zenlttl Console T.V.
$1&lt;5 .99 ; J&amp;B Technology 372
Slate Route tOO, Gallipolis.

For Sale Or Trade : 32 acraa 5
Miles From Gallipolis, on Stale
Route 218. Wil Sttll All or Part1.
$25,000, 614-l!M-41574

24,000 BTU IJr Conditione( 220
Vo lt, 3 Yeara Old, Ellcellenl Con·
difion, $375, 814·441-1136 Oars;
814-4411-3108 Evorings.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques.
1124 E. Main S1tee1, on At 124,
Pomeror. Hour~ : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6 :00 p.m., Suncta11 :00 to
6 :00 p.m. 614· 992*2526. Ruaa
MooreCJitlllfl8!".

540 Miscellaneous
Merchallcllse

2 Meter Ham Radio S14iil.lil5; Ta·

10 7 6

South

:THAT MEAN OL' JUGHAID!!
' HE KEEPS TRYIN'
TO KISS ME II

••8 83211.

I

QUICK II HIDE IN TH'

WOODS, MARY Be:TH !!
HERE HE COMES!!

By

1758.
1993 Dodge Caravan 3. liter•
65.000 Miles. Air, cassene. Ex-:
cat tent Condilion, $8,800, 614 ~

630

'!

«8-8854

Livestock

71 o

1998 Yahama 350
$3,600. 304-773-5ol34.

DOGS
CATS

Autos tor sale

740

Full tize truck topper 1415; new
portable phone, willaell at1/2
pric:A&gt;, $25: 814-~l-l0-45.

1980 Harley Oavtdson Sport..,a(\
1000, rebuilt engine and lrauol
nis$!0n, $3500, 81-4-742-2820. -.I

eft-

992·2591. .

'"ll

197&amp; Chevy Vega 350 Four Boll
Mai-le All New Parts Runs Great,
Race Or Street Ready, $4,000.
81 .. ~1521 .
.

1982 Harley Dav1deon Srur!
call 1314·992·0028 dayt or 81.992·5047 evenings.
~

1979 Chevy Malibu 2dr, 350 en·
gine. loaded, auto, eac. cond.
$4,000.304-675-7879.

1995 F.L. HTC Eleelta Glide
Classic, Mileage: 13,300, Ma~
Extras I Like Newl614-446·1522.. ·•

1980 Malibu 350 Au1oma1tc, 2
Doors. Loaks Good, Runs &amp;
Drivel Grear, But Needs New
Reartnd, $1,500 61H4IHI191!.

750

1984 Marqur1 TopaZ, au1oma1jc,
PS, PB, neodl work, $500 firm,
614-941-1900.

Boats

.

&amp; Motors

lor Sale

1
1

-, I

..;

~!~.!~~~~1~. ·~~ 41_~::~~~ .Mer·:
1978 Galaxy 191t. lniOut bott.e;
4cyi, 170hp. motor. $4, 100. 1
675· 7346.
,1

30rr.:

'

Two Fronl lois. lol t1 48 Spaar 3
I 4 In Ohio Valley Memo~y Gardona, 81-.245-5139.

1985 Olds Calais, $200, 61H•2·

2820.

S1950 OBO, 614·742·2337.

Building

""1985 runtiac Sunbird, Runs
Good. $900 080, 814-..6-4397.

1988 Ranger 373V t8' 12 ·24-:Y!
Troll ing Motor, 1so XP Evinruda
Oulboard, $9,000, 61•·992·2770.• •

SUpplies

1986 BuiCk Park Avenue, loaded,

21 Ft Bay6ner Bow Ader Boat.-¥-8, Poww CusiOm Trailer, loaded.!
Must ."
.;1\1111, 814-446-2030.
1

10 Purebred St. Bernard puppies,
vel checked, shott, cute and
cuddly, 1250 each, 814-D85-:M77.

7 -8 Week Old Oalmatlon Pup·
pies, $50 Each, CeQ Tom Mitchell
Al61•·388-11122.

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
614-446..0231.
AKC champion Boston tarrier
pups, lhrat males, 614·D92-2329.
AKC Min Pin PlJppiGI, 8 Weeks
Old, Red Mates, 1st Shots,
Wormed, 1250, 81 .. 258-1Q92.

air cond1tk»ning, e1cailant ·condl*
don, $11195, 614-7•2·3076.
1gaa TO)IO!a Camry 5 Speed, AC,
PB. Cru111, Tit, $1,200,-Firm,
614· 441·1316.

PS,

1987 Chavy Cavalier lor pariS.
1200 OBO. 304·882·3997 even-

1979 Statcrift, 17 H2 fr . op8~
bow, 140 hp Mercury 6utboac0 ..

51 Child'• card

¥;:of

10
Clllh
11 AppriiH

DOWN

1111Chlne

o-,.
2
1

34 Ouart.rblc:k

Johnny-

Lollon

4

10~

5 Pul21nd 2
logether
.
• All........
1 ABA member

11 llllp ol(llltpul)

9 Po4tllcalconventlon

20--1111

a Fahhlul

lngredlenl
3 Jack orq-n

36 Ml111kta
37 Vacallon apol
36--laav

New Deluxe

Wury

11 Ciwmlllry
lerm

,.,.

1890 Cadillac Sedan DeVIIIa, 4
Doors. New Michelin Tires, Rem·
ote Slarl. Local OWned, Excellent
Condition, $7,900, 614-448-4876,
Alia' 8 P.M.
1994 . Dodge Grand Caravan
leather Interior, Fully Loaded,
Captaln Cha iu , 66,000 Miles,
61.-4o06-0026.
1995 Chrysler Cirrua, loaded,

26,000 miles. $12,000 or trade klr
truck or equal value, 614· 949·
2452.

T

760

WHEN I'M OVT WALKIN6,
I ALWAV5 FEEL SAFER
WITH MV D06 FOLLOWIN6
R16HT BEHIND..

2sg,=t.n
21

Pass
Pass

Boundary

21.._-'aln

All pass

30 Ac:lor Caoper
31llllllln

25 Ft B0 1 '

Auto

Parts &amp;

..

5677

_,_
....__

an 11 cloud with
the buys yi&gt;u'U find i1 the

7·

cknslfrrds.

Motor Homes

il THURSDAY

.•

,,•

~19;;8:;-1-;2;:-0-;:F::-1.7.w::-,,:-:de-r-ne-,-,-:C:-a-m-P8~
1rw!

••

810

s

ASTRO-ORAPB

I.

580

Now Open: Beach'• Farm Markot.
Stare Roure 160, At .Everprun
Home Grown Tomstoes, Hal Runner Green Beans. Corn, Fresh
Watermallons And Cantalopes,
We Also Buy Local Produce
9· 7 Dally, Call 814·•48·

19110 · 1990 Cars For $100111
Seized And Sold
Local~ This Monlh.
Truck' 4•••a. Ell:.

'""

41 Ra:aa ' •
47 Wrlllf

45~dlll
K·1

50Tneolcocle
51 ,.rUit

52=

Amerlcln
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

55·=cil

by Luis Campoa
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EactJ.at~er.,., lht cipher_. tor anochtr.

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PREVIOUS SOlUTION· "Basic research is when
what I'm doiflA."- Wernher von Braun.

I'm doing wnal 1 don1 know

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

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7

.

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SLOSEN

:~

After going over our family
budget my ~usband muttered,
'These days a run for your
lmoneyisa··· ··· · ..!
.

I I. I' I I e

Suckle • Filth • Wafer· Ens!gn • INSECTS
I never seem
upset about anything, but I know
even the mightiest animal is annoy.ed by the smallest of

INSECTS.

'

ROBOTMAN

wheels &amp; rad1ators. 0 &amp; R Aula,,
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1· •
000-273-9329.
.
.--:

&amp;

45 CcwM•id

8
Complete lh,o chuckle qUOiod
by f1lling in the miuing words
L....,..&amp;.-..1.'-....L..-L.-.1..-.J y011 davalop
from step No. 3 below.

You'D~ floaOOg

:

Campers

I am writing !his column on a
plane to Cape Town, Soulh Africa. I
am going to edillhe Daily Bulletins
at !he Zone 4 Championships. (Zone
4 is lhe Bridge Federation of Africa,
Asia and the Middle East.) While
waiting lo check in for the flight OUI
of New York, I noliced there was
somelhing in lhe pocket of one of my
· bags. Illumed out to be lhe London
Times of Salurday, March 2, 1996! I
had bought il and never looked at il.
Well, once aboard, I turned 10
Roben Sheehan's bridge column,
and he featured !his deal. II occurred
during lhe Macallan lnlemational
Pairs in London. Three pairs ended in
lhree flo-trump, bul only Seymon
Deutsch from Dallas made il.
1be other two declarers won !he
first Irick and ran lhe diamond queen.
When this losl, East cashed the spade
10 before playing a club 10 his part·
ner's ace. Four more spade tricks lefl
lh~ contract lhree d.own. True, when
Wesl played the diamond 10 under
the queen at trick 1wo, perhaps the
declarers should have changed tack.
It was mosl unlikely West would play
the 10 from the doublelori king-10.
DeuiSch, judging thai lhe spades
were likely to be blocked (as Wes1
probably would have led lite jack
from a suit headed by !he ace-jack10), won the firsl (fick and immedi·
alely auacked clubs. West could win
wilh lhe ace and play spades from !be
lOp, bul DeuiSCh 's nine conlrolled lhe
founh·round of !he suit
However West defended, DeuiSCh
was sure to win allcasl 10 tricks: one
spade, four ·heans, one diamond and
four clubs.

_,40Dtr.awll
..

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

:::-------....
New gas tanks, 1 ton leu &lt;!a:
790 ·

..-+-+-I

••
•

Full line of auto body panels..
paints and supplies, also glanJ
light assembly. Oxygen and ac.-1
lylana tanks Iii lad and eachangill&amp; t
614·742·2192.
.... .

......

33.,_..ol .

Phillip Alder

I FEEL THE
SAMe WA'(.

Budget Price Transmissions,,
Slarllng at S99.00 and Up, UsOO If
Rebuilt, All Types, Ovet 10,000:
Transmtn ions, Access Tran&amp;fer,
Cases &amp; Rear Ends, 614·245.t

8wks old. 30+882-3813.

1-800-522·2730, X 3901 .

Dbl.
3NT

Eaal

PEANUTS

Al~minum Boat Trail·'

Accessories

1989 Escort, Auto, Air, Good
Condition, $1500. (814)256-14119

2a
Pass

••

.

"

22Prlcldy24TV-·

.,

I!!~~~~~·0~::..:~·~~·J·'

ing•
1.988 T-Bird ted, aluminum
whaela, all power, ac, new lires
$1,200 080. 304-675-3304.

West . North

~•

AC, Awning , Good CondiliGirl\'•
•1 I
· 1995 Honda Accord LXA, 4 SJ,QOQ, 614·388-3417. •
Doors, Auto, AJC, PW, PB, PM,
AKC Registered Champion PS, ExceUent, 24,000 Miles, 814·
SERV ICES
Bloodline Bo1er Puppies, Talis 448-6491 .
Docked, Dew Claws Removed,
Home
Val Checked, Wormed , SiJI Fe· 1995 Sarurn SC2, Auromatic, Air,
Cruise. AMIFM Cassette, Trunk
males; One Male, 814-44&amp;-7186.
f1o!oaw, s12,ooo can Af1et P.M.
Improvements
1Ogal tank set up specials. Fish (SerioL:Is Inquiries Onlyl) 614·1--~~~::~-::
Tank &amp; Pel ShOp, 2413 Jackaoo o446*401 5.
Ave. Point Pleasant, 304·175·
1996 Chrysler Cirrus like New, Unco nditional lifetime guarant&amp;
2063.
23,000 Miles, Light Gold, $13,000, local relerences lurnished. ~
614·367·7055.
labiiShed 1975. Call (61•) 4441 0r ·800· 287..0576. Rogers
Full Blooded COllie Pups, ND Pe·
pers $50; With Papers $100,. 1 23 T*Bucket kit car wtaluminum 1Waleroroo,fiir.,
Blue Merle Male $t50, 814--441· mag wheels. tar lS no! complat ·
ed, sell with or w11hout 351 Cl'·
1Da3.
veian d engule, comp letely re· Appliance Parts And Servtce: All
Ran Terrlor one male, 8om 51281 done, to many utras to list. Name Brands Over 25 Yeara EJC·
97. $75.00 (81.)-446-6508
$2,500 OBO fo r both. 30o4·882· per ience ~II Wotlt Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 6U· 4o46·
3872 or 304-882·2821 .
While mala Poodle, S 125; while
7795.
female Poodle, $100; 014·992· 96 Plvrnouth Neon, 13,000 mites,
36,000 mile warranty, 2 door, ale, C&amp;C General Home Ma in - ~
78&lt;1 .
tenence· Paint ing, vinyl siding:•·
$10,000,614-742-1800.
carpentry, do ora, windows, balhlt r
Fruits &amp;
mobile home repair and more. Foi
Vegetables
tree estimate call Che( 614·992-"
6323.
' II I
112 Runner beant, jou pick $10
buollot. 304&lt;175-2579.
AKC Reg Blood Hound Puppies,

~
~

1975 HD Spormlar (1000.), .....,

1984 Renault, 41sp,. 104,000 rrilet,
$000.00 or 080. (6U)·256-1233

Pets lor sale

GOMfS
fi,ST.

TU,T&amp;..~S

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans EntarPJise-.
Jackson, Ohio, 1·800-537-052ll

560.

W~IGtffVf, W
...

Motorcvcles

1978 Chevy Manza 4cyl. auto,
dal~ $300. 304-675-3824.

Block, brick, I!Mer pipes, wind·
elc. Claude Winllrl,
Rio Grande, OH Call 614·245·
5121 .

{

Warrior~

new parts, roost seal $4800, 61._.

ows. lintels,

MII-U,

TRANSPQR-;-ATION

1973 Oldlmoblle Omega E1cel·
lent Condition, 33,000 Original
Milet, Asking $3,800, Or Bast
Ollar. 614-245-SI'o03.

ALL STEEl BUILDINOS, •o•28
Was lo4,180 Now $2,980, 40157
Was 18.818 Now $5.818. Olhor
Sizes Available. Chuck 1·800·
320·2340.

o,

"%-f.

Packard Belt Wul.medla Compul·
er 75Ml Pentium. Compaq 15
Inch Co lor Monitor, Complete
System$850, 81 ....... 1155.

SUMMER IALE: Conlral Air
Conditioners : Full 5 Year warranty. "tf Yc;tu 0o111 Call Us We Bolh
Lose!• Free Estimates! Add-On
Heal Pumps Only Slightr Higher.
Call Uo Today. 1Q87 lo The
Twenty Seventh Year In The
H~dng &amp; Cooling Buslnesll 8144411-6308, 1-800·2D1.QOQ8.

t4e'S 6lJA~ANTtel&gt; FOrt Tvlf:NTY "'
-YeArtS
TfN l

·STO~E

PET

.

Sears, 30• Whole House Fan,
41100 CFM Call1._....7315.
.
Sega Satum game~ b lila, 814742·1068.

olllclol

23 Actor Chaney
24 . , . . . _
27 Model Ki.. 28 Mfnlmum32 Fonner 'a

IMIIIy

Uauay ferguson diac, 2·14"'
piQWt.. 18h.. Ha~ wagon. 30o4·458·

1994 · Jeep Cherokee, •3,0IJI!ll
1910 ADHA Brood Mare Bey 151 miles, 70,000 mile warranty, new
Boys 26• bike, .\·1 $45. Man's . Good Blood Llneo, Gtnde, Good tires, loaded, S17,000, 814·742·1
size 4o4 leather Jackel $76. li,ke
Disposition, Broke To Ride, Rea· 11100.
new. Call 30-4·675·3485 a!ler
aonable; Clasl)' 1g97 Weanling,
Spm.
Colt. Big, Genllo. Good Dilpoal- 1995 Mercury \/1t1ager air, till,•
don, Good Conlirrrlllion, E•ceilenl
·
am·lm cassette, pw, pl.:
New Log Splitter 25 Tons On
Bkx:tdlinet, For Mort .,lotmation,
wll umbat, approx.,
Wheels Woodburner Stove,
Cal 514-2511-11065.
. $16,000. 30..095-•
large Antique Corn Sheller, 3
Oval Fuel Tanki On Stands,
Phone: B1..:188·9Bol0 Everings.

One Diamond Sel o48 Pts. $395;
Emerald Ring &amp; Earrings S275,
6 t 4-446·4714.

. n-

21

Over the
Atlantic Ocean

New 19• color TV wlremote S135.

~d Dresser, 81H4&amp;-5887.

IXCIIIRIIIon

56 Flnnlah flrsl

Opening lead: a 6

lor S1o ·or • lor 118. 304·895· ·

JET
AERATI\)N MOTORS
Repawed. New &amp; Rebuill In SIOCk.
Call Aoo Evans, 1·B00·537·GS28.

o

2NT

Good uood 1i&lt;oa t&lt;" &amp; 15" 17. . 2

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call Uw
"'""'Dr. 61 ....8-4525

,,en
V.'*lan

Dealer: North

Cub Caclo11872, 11 !'1&gt;, ISO"',.,....
er d~ck , hydrostatic, 450 hrs.,
uooo. 514·9Q2·8•88 dar• or
614-992·2219 ovenillgL

3295.

limaa

4t Furloua
14 Splniah gold 53 Nopllft15 lnlenH hell
54 Army-unHorm
17 lluaolan . _
color(2 - -1
ollllon
56 Mined18 Uoaqullo
57 Jo~ut

Vulnerable: Neither

Hl00-537-9528.

550

$200; 814-448·4342, 614· 446·
3040.

•

Concrete &amp; Plu11c SeptiC Tanka_
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Entet"prises, Jacbon., OH

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri·
wlgsme 1175. Sony
gra tOr!l, 90 Day Guarantee!
wl game $175. 304·
French City Maytag, 814· 446· ~~~~;___ _ _ _ _ __
7795.
·
I·
NP -4540 RDF Cannon copier
Fencing, Baskelbell Beckboord, 1850, OBO. 304-875·2170 call
Brick Pave11•.81•-4•1Hl028.
beiWeen 10am &amp;3pm.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhers, dryars, refrigerators,
rariges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street. Call 814· 446·7398,
1·800·499·3499'.

oK842

10

• 53

Ev8ty!l\ing You Need For First
Year Rio Nuralng Student. Bookl,
Uniklrm, E1c, 614-441·1348.

Rooms

• 9 7 3 2

oQJ963

450

Furnished

Easl
• ·Q 10

aAJI643
• 10 8 8 .

LOVIIOI~ 81•·378·2720 liFTER

Dntpeo &amp; Sheer• 81•

3 Year old Ranch King ri dlrig
mower 12 .5hp. 42•tul, main·
lenance agreement, tnow blade,
cha tns. $750 lirm. Cast iron bath
IUb. 304-675-11113 after 5prn
Use Thai Mor tgage Payment for
Something Beuer Than Interest!
·'Pay your mottgage oil 5·15
years sooner!
-·Save $25,000·$75,000 or rrorel
.•Make sure yo ur lender isn·r
mi scalculalirlg your mortgage
and costing you thousands!
.'Program works on mobile horne
1001

I

Cars

A 7 5

•KQJ94

GP.M.

FO&lt; Appoin1monL

$195/ Uo.,
We atwood Home Show, Inc. I Ul:llililll
Bath, EI0 7
ChiCk thll outl Umltad lime oft· Second Avenue, GallipoliS, 614·
4411 3144 Ahor 7 P.M.
et. No dOwn pey1111111 to quatllled
buy 1,.. Double widll aa low 11
Middl&amp;pc)rt. one 1 bedroom, one 3
S249 per month, lingle widas u
bedroom, clean, new carpel and
low as S148 P4N' month. Call for
windowt, references and deposit
freeapproval. 1-800-25t·S070.
-Ired, 81·-826-~50.
.
330 Farms for sale
OLD ASH VILLAGE
40 Acre Farm, Mobile Home, FORMERLY L..IURElAND APTS
Wilh Drilled Well. Tobocco Baoo, Under new managomanL Manag·
Slanding Timber. Mlneraf Rlghll er Andrea Van Meter. Newly ren*
And Morel $52,000 814·251i· ovated, now like new, 2bedroom,
carpetec:l, appliances furnished,
6832.
plenty of closet space, central
heaVair, trash &amp; water paid, laun350 Lots &amp;
dromat &amp; pla.,.ground on sight,
20 Acres &amp; 2br traUar, city' water, CIOII IChaotl stor.es. Man·
sight
located on Bud Chanin Ad.
$42,000 . 30•·875·HB2. allor
10·2
9pm.

Acreage .

o

5 Speed, Air, 59,500 Mllea, AI~
lnt $3,850 OBO, 814·258·6:WO, •
814-258.&amp;487.

South
a K975
• J 4

WID $300 ; Refrigerator .$200;
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
King Size Mattress &amp; Bo1 Springs

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wellwood Drive
ffOm $280 10 $33&lt;. Walk 10 shop
&amp; mCNies. Call 614·446· 2588,
Equal Housing Opporhrni!y.

10 FL Calllo Trailer In Good COn·
cl1ion, 814-oU&amp;-251 • .

1ell3 Dodg• Shadow, 4 Cyfindtl!'

3684
Two bedroom apartment in Mid- -:-- · - - , - - - - - dltpor~ no pall, 11•-992·5858.
Complete King Slz a Walerbod :

In Middleport, 4 bedroOm, brick,
new carpet. $350+ deposit/refer·
ences, ulilitfes not Included, no
61.·992-3-157.
Older couple moving out of the
Five ~~~ 8181. and 'M)Uid likli to
ren1their newly remodeled, air
condlt!onecl, two bedroom home
1or $375 month. Interested per·
aons mar caH 81H92-2001 . Al&gt;aolulotr
pe11.

Farm Equipment

07·24-17

• 2
•AKQS

·

45 WOI'IIIII*, II

(2 wdo.)

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

MerchandiSe

Mu st Be AnHa!&gt;le To Work 1:30
To 8 P.M. 8 08y1 WHk, E•perl-

.Oullwle,

12Jal13 lnfllcl on

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

'\..

rmJav. July 25, 1997 ·
New experiences will enhance
your leadership qualities in the year
~ad . Desliny ·may place you mthe
forefront of somechmg ImpressiVe;
ii'll help show you're made of che
right scuff.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
you're likely co be both i~aginati~e
aqd lucky .. This is a wmmng combl·
nlllion that could express iiSelf in ben·
e~IS for you. Devise ways to improve
your lot in life. Get a JUmp on hfe by
uqderslanding the influences lhac
gQvern you in the year ahead. Send
fO.. your Aslro-Graph predictions
t&lt;ljlay by mailing $2 and SASE to
A1tro-Graph, clo this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Slation,
'N~w York, NY 10156. Be sure 10

state your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Play
your hunches today, especially !hose
that you feel can contribute to !he
security of your loved ones. Your per·
ceplions are feasible.
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Mixing
wilh a large group could cum oul to
be.advanlageous for you Coday. People who are in positions lo help you
mighl be in auendance.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Conditions becoming more receplive,
and soon you should be reaping
rewards from ambitious seeds you've ·
been planting. Keep lending your garden.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Assignments that will be easy for
you to perform 1oday might be too
difficuh for your associaces. Do not
delegale critical tasks; do.lhem yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Persons whom you've considered 10
be lucky charms CI!Uid work cheir
magic OI)CC again for you today, espe· ~ially in commercial endeavors.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ID-Feb. 19)
This is a good day to negotiate a sig-

are

nificant contract. Be fair wilh your
counterpart and you might receive
some benefiiS wilhoul requesting
!hem.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) The
kinds of opponunities !hat surround
you_ todlly at lhe workplace are
grander than usual. Anything is possible, so make something happen.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) 1be
impression you'll . mike on olhers
today will be of a lasting, favorable
nature. Your aclions and demeanor
will draw people to you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II is
10 your advanlage today lo seek closure or tie down siluations !hat are
financially meaningful to you. Prof·
ils are probable.
GEMINI (May 21-lunf20) Fun
and excilemenl could be wailing for
you today ou1 where th_?brighllighls
are shining. Do no~prive yourself
of having a good time by being a loner.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) There'
are a number of possibilities for mate·
rial gains !hat could be !Ufing !heir
appealing fealures for you today. Be
sure to exercise your Mic!as touch .

JULY24I

�Ohio Lottery

SeaHie
defeats
Cleveland

Pick 3:
034
Pick 4:
0209
Buckeye 5:
13·19-27-29-35

Sports on Page 4

Clear tonight, low In
60s, Saturday, partly
cloudy, high near 90.

•

ent1ne
'«&lt;I. q, NO. 71
.
cum, Ohio Valley Publlohlng company

'

'

'

2 SOCIIona, 12 Pages, 35 coma

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 25, 1997

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Ground ·broken
on TPCWD water
treatment plant
expansion project

•

WATER mEATMENT PLANT EXPANSION GROUNDBREAKING
• Breaking ground on the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
treatment plant expansion Thursday morning were younger relatives and children of district employees and board mem~a.
Shown are, from left: front, Tyler Circle, Benjamin Buckley, Megan
Williams, Deve,n Baum, Travis Tackett, Tanner Tackett and Joey
Blackston; middle, Edna Wood, Derik Baum, Robby Caldwell,

Patrick Johnson, Miranda Buckley, Erin Weber, Erica Poole, Stacy Smith, Katalyn Williams and C.J. Williams. Also shown are,
at rear from left, TPCWD manager .Don Poole, Edna Wood, Carl
Barnhill, Delmar Baum, Lindsey Lyons, Harold Blackston,
Howard Caldwell, Bill Nease, David Weber, Tim Baum and Coun·
ty Commisaloner Fred Hoffman. Commission President Janet
Howard is shown kneeling at right

Meigs County produce... ..better late than never

..

By JIM FREEMAN
another matter -- tractors used in harSentlnel News Staff
vesting were left mired ·in the fields.
"Better late than never" could
"This is a busy time of year," he
well be the motto for Reedsville and said. "Getting it harvested is a night·
mare."
Letan Falls area farmers this year.
Following a "cold spring, crops
One common theme: the lack of
were late in getting read.y for har- quality help -- la&lt;:al workers who will
vesting, but now fanners and their. show up on a regular basis and work
w_orkers are hustling to g~t the harvest the ·long. hot'110urs n01:essary to get
6ut of thelields and into the paek1ng thHrops in.
,. , .
The workers that did show up
houses.
Now some farm~rs are coping Thursday a&lt;:casionally had to wade in
with another setback: a violent thun- the mud and water to pick tomatiles.
derstorm that swept through th6-. _ For most farmers, Thursday's
Letart Falls area Thursday morning, storni was a minor setback at most,
· knocking over 1omato plantS and · but Harry Hill of Letart Falls said
·
most of his tomato crop was .ruined
flooding fields.
While some parts of the county by what was most likely a "little torreceived very little rain, parts of Olive nado".
and Letart townships received up to
Wind and water damage was
three inches of rain, farmers report- apparent around his house. Next
ed. ·
door, a garage overhang had been
Reedsville and Portland farmer flipped back on top of the garage by
Tyrone Brinager said some of his the force of the wind.
crops were left standing in water after
Hill said he was going to sell his
the storm.
remaining tomatoes as canning tomaBrinagcr said he had good crops. toes.
but getting to the sweet corn was

..

DAMA~E • Sol1)8 Ohio River crops, being harvested
now following a colder than us.ualspring, sustained another set·
back resulting from Thursday momlng thunderstorms. Here, Har·
ry Hill of Letart Falls checks out a flooded hot pepper patch.

Mason .man killed in logging .accident
A Gallipolis Ferry man was killed
in a logging accident Thursday afternoon on Plca.•ant Ridge. according to
a Mason County Sheriffs Department
spokesman.
Michael Anthony Smith, 40, was
killed i"nstanlly when a dead and rotted tree, adjacent to one he was cutting fell on him around 2:20p.m. The

Charleston .Gazette reported vines
had grown between the trees and as
the one Smith was cutting fell, the
vines pulled the dead tree down on
his head. The trees were approximately 10 feet apart.
A spokeswoman for Coroner Breton Morgan reported Smith died of

head and neck injuries. No autopsy
was done.
Smith. ·a self- employed logger,
was the son of E. Owen and Merle
Smith Sr. of Gallipolis Ferry, and husband of Nancy (Price) Smith.
Funeral services will be Monday,
July 28. at I :30 p.m. at Mt. Carmel

Church, Gallipolis Ferry, with Rev.
Lee Baird officiating. Burial will follow in Mt. Carmel Cemetery.
Friends may call at Deal &amp; Brown
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m.
The sheriffs department is also
invcsligating three accidents which

occurred Thursday.

Hope for answers lost after Cunanan's death
MIAMI BEACH. Fla . (AP)- In himself with a .40-caliber semiauto- Diego, Cunanan owed hundred&gt; of
the end, Andrew Cunanan was sliH in matic handgun . the same type of dollars to the Palomar Medical Ccncontrol. Rather than get caught, the weapon linked with Versace's death .ter, where he had gone in 1995 to he
tested for sexually transmitted dis·
suspected serial killer put the barrel and two other murders.
The
FBI
reported
finding
several
cases.
He tested negative for anum·
of a gun in his mouth and pulled the
items
that
might
he
evidence
in
some
ber
of
diseases. but it wasn·t clear
trigger, leaving behind a slew of
of
the
five
slayings.
A
small
safe
ncar
whether
he was tested for HIV. the
.
' questions and a trail of bodies.
the
body
~
"
may
contain
more
evistation
said.
Why did Cunanan kill five men on
Cunanan arso was thousands of
three mont(Js"' How did he elude one dence related to the five homicides.··
an
FBI
affidavit
said.
dollars
behind in credit card payof the FBI's most fera&lt;:ious dragnets"/
Police
found
no
suicide
note
from
and
was $46.000 in debt by
ments,
And why did so clever a man stay
Cunanan.
May,
KGTV
reported.
close to the scene of Gianni Versace's
"He may have felt he had .done
Fox
said
Cunanan
's self-destrucmurder'/ .
what
he
had
set
out
to
do.
He
had
tion
fit
in
with
his
forceful and
"People tliat are penned in are
evened
the
Score
against
part1cular
lnanlpulative
personality.
The flameither going to let the police kill them
people
or
society
as
a
whole
.
a
nd
it
boyant
Cunanan,
he
said,
wasn't
the
... or he's going to take his. own life,"·
was
over,
he
was
satisticd."
said
·
type to spend the rest of his life
said David Fabianic. a criminolojfiSt
at .the University of Central Florida. James Alan Fox. dean of the College bet\ind bars.
"He was still calling the shots, lit''It"s sha¥~e that he's dead so we of Criminal Justice at Northeastern
University in Boston.
erally and figuratively," said Fox.
can "t find c~t more about him ...
According to K.GTV in San "He maintained control to . the end.
lnvestigptors said Cunanan shot

a

Ho~~se

He became hi s ow n executioner
rather than the state of Florida."
William Espos ito, lleputy director
of the FBI, said in Washington that a
nervous. agipted Cunanan contacted
"an associate" within 48 hours or
Versace 's slaying, trying. to obtain a

false passport .
Cunanan's body was fou nd in the
upstairs master hcdroom of a hou.liC·

boat 2 112 miles from the Vcr&lt;acc
mansion. where the Italian fashion ·
designer was gunned ilown J4ly 15 .
Cunanan. a 27-year-old described
by his own mother as a gay gigolo,
was the FBI's most-wanted fugitive,
the prime suspect in the slay ing or
Versace and four other men in Min·

nesota, Illinois and New Jersey. He
managed ,to elude capt ure even
Continued on page 3

approves E-check bill; rejects teen driving

COLU-18 US (AP) - E-chetk
has check~d out of the Legislature.
The Hot•se on Thursday voted 6925 to acce1&gt;t compromise legislation
that would replace Ohio's unpopular
vehicle emission test with a more
basic tail~ipe test in northeastern
Ohio and tpe Dayton area.
The bijl goes to Gov. George
Voinovich, who has promised to veto
it.
":fhe people whQ are currently

subject to E-check will still have to
take a test, and will have to pay more
under this bill," .explained Mike
Dawson, Voinovich's spokesman.
But backers say the legislation is
the best compromise · they could
design to appease motorists who
complained about long lines, inaccurate results and damage to their automobiles.
The Senate approved the bill 249, meaning both hl)uses could con-

ceivably override what would be
Voinovich"s seventh veto si nce taking
office in 1991.
Rep. Tom Johnson, R-New Concord, said the new·test- along with
other measures, such as reformulated gasoline - will allow the state to ·
comply with federal clean air standards.
The House, on a 49-47 vote, also
rejected a compromise version of a
bill that would let teens get' their

•

•

learner"s P-\ll.ffiil at 15~1'12 while
requiring them to spend more time
driving with an adult.
But some opponents of the version
worked out by House and Senate
negotiators earlier this week object•
ed to a provisipn added to prohibit
16- and 17-year-olds from driving
between I a.m. and 5 a.m. unless they
are traveling to or from work or a
school function .

By JIM FREEMAN
. employees.
Sentinel News Staff
In 1971 the water.treatment plant
Ground was broken Thursday was placed in operation and had a
morning on a $3.375 million water capacity of 1.2. mi Ilion gallons daily.
treatment plant expansion project for In 1995. the maximum daily demand
the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water was 1.26 million gallons dail~.
District.
exceeding the plant's current capaciThe Ceremony was held at the dis- ty.
.. We felt it was our duty to gel
tr.ict"s treatment facility at Long "Bottom. Children, wcating little hard hats water to everyone we could ," Blat.:k~
ond am1ed with small shovels, lined stan said of the early hoard mcmhcrs,
up in two rows and performed the "We would like to sec cvcryon~
have a line run right hy their hou se."
ground breaking ritual.
"We always had good, dedicated
District manager Don Po9lc intro·
duced Harold Blackston. president of pcnplc ... we've hccn success ful ," he
the TPCWD board of directors, who added.
briefly outlined the district's lean
Dave Douglas re presenting the
Rural Development Agency. form erbeginnings.·
..
The district was founded in 1969 ly Fanners Home Administration,
and began in the showroom at Baum said some people take having water
Lumber in Chester. The first office for granted .
"When you don't have water availconsisted of a card table and hod
cardboard boxes for fili ng cabinets. able. you know what it's like not w
The existing offices were opened on have it," he said.
Former district manager Lindsey
Dec. 20, 1975. and were remodeled
Lyons
called the district "one of the
in 1993.
The initial cost of the district was greatest successes of Meigs County.''
Plant' improvements c,lrc expected
$3,408,966. and the district had 250
miles of water ma:ins, seven storage to double the plant capacity to 2.4
' tanks and eight booster stati ons. million gallons daily including
Today the disujict has 600 miles of ~proved chlori~ation and chemical
water mains; 15 storage tanks and ll!ed fll\'ilities, greensand filters, softeners, stand-by power, a brine tank,
eight booster stations.
The number of customers being red water filter, metering. a high serserved in Meigs and Athens' counties vice pump and a laboratory.
In addition to the water treatment·
has risen from I ,400 with four
Continued on page 3
employees to 4,280 customers and 13

State board OKs
funding for next
phase of US 50/32
A request for funding to hire a
consultant to appraise and purchase
property on the next phase of US
50/SR 32 widening in Athens County -- from Guysville to the former
Maine Truck Stop -- has been
approved by the Stale Controlling
Board.
In a release from Nancy Pedigo,
pub Iic information office of District
I0, Ohio Department of Transportotion. M. E. Turnkey Services, Inc .. of
Westervi lie is the consultant.
ODOT and Turnkey arc to sign a
$160,000 conlract Tuesday. John
Dowler, District 10 Deputy Director,
said that Turnkey wdl hcgtn working
immediately after the ~.:o ntract is

signed.
.
Dowler abo reported that ODOT
is advertising for hids for a second '

l:Onsuham to apprai'se and purchase

property on the fourth and final
phase of the US 50/SR 3.2 widening,
from the fonner Main to the junction
of County Road 65.
. He adviSed that the district's goal
is IO purchase all residences involved
in both projects by the end of this
year. "We can't promise we'll reach
our goal , hut we're going to try, s~id ·
Dowler. We know that homeowners
want to begin reestablishing themselves as soon as possible, he added .
This is the main reason that
ODOT is contracting the real estate
work, according to Dowler OOQT',
own real e&gt;tate office for the Southcast Region o.f the state i!-. in l:hargc
of three districts.
;'That department docs not have
Continued on page 3

Buffington Island festivity begins
The annual reenactment of the Battle of Buffington Island at Portland begins today with the arrival of Civil War rcenactors from scv ~
eral states representing Union and Confederate Infantry, cavalry and
artillery.
,
. The sternwheeler P.A. Denny left GallipOlis earlier today, bringing rcenactors to Portland.
·
Oflicial activities get underway Saturday at 10 a.m. when the Civil War c·amp opens to the public with period music by the Faire Wyn,
ds and demonstrations.
A welcome and program prese ntation will be hcid at I p.m . including an update on the "Save the Battlefield" effort. A children's program by the Faire Wynds will begin at 2:30p.m. and unschedu led battle skirmishes will be held in the area from mid to late afternoon portraying Morgan's Raiders invasion of Portland. Times and places will
he posted atthe event .
A one-hour boat excursion will be offered Saturday, I0 a.m. and
again in the early evening at a cost of $10 per person.
A battery of the 1st Ohio LightAnillery will have two restored Civil War Napoleon 12-pound gun' from the Ohio Statehouse at the reenactment all weekend , and will participate in the Battle of Buffington
Island reenactment on Sunday.
The camp reopens at 9 a.m. Sunday with. a ch urch service at 11
a.m.

At I :30 p.m. the Battle of Buffington Island reenactment wi ll take
place at a location to be posted ·:inhe park.
All activities. with the exception o(battlc skirmishes and the reenactment, will take place on the park grounds. The event" is sponsored
by the Meigs County Histoncal Society in cooperation with other area
organizations and businesses and the 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry is
serving
as the .host unit and sponsor for the P.A. Denny.
.

.

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