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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Harrisonville
wins KC LL
tournament

PICk 3:
158

Pick 4:
4415
Super Lotto:

Sports on Page 4

2·15·32·34-41-42

Kicker:

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Muggy tonight, tow In
60s. Tuesday, partly
cloudy, high In the 801.

•

entine

.•

- · 411, NO. 72

011*7, Ohio Volley Publtllllng Company

2 SICIIOrll, 12 PlgM, 35 cents
A Gannett l;o.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 28, 1_997

-...,.r

Ohio battered
by weekend thunderstorms
.
'

By The Associated Press · ·
and park areas.
A section of Interstate 70 about27
Ohioans slogged through another
day of record heat as road crews miles cast of Columbus remained
cleaned up a closed interstate high· closed today after storms Sunday
way that backed traffic up for miles. · night pelted the Buckeye Lake area
In Meigs County, power outages and sent the already overnowing lake
were reponed widespread both Sat- and nearby flooded culverts onto the
urday and Sunday. Some outages cast-west artery.
All four lanes were expected to
lasted up to six hours. The Sentinel
tried to contact American Electric remain closed until this afternoon.
Power officials for information on the state patrol spokesman Lt. John Born
outilge5, but was unable to get in said today.
A heat advisory issued by the
touch with proper authroities. It is
. believed no m'\ior damage was done National Weather Service remained
· in Meigs County other than broken in effect today. Highs were expected
tree limbs which clogged some road$ to hit the 90s but the humidity was

expected to make it feel like I05.
degrees outside. It felt like 115
degrees outside on Sunday around the
state, the weather service said.
Relief was in sight: Forecasters
predicted that an overnight cold front
tonight would sent temperatures back
to the high 70s on Tuesday.
Storms that hit the Buckeye Lake
area and surrounding central Oh10
counties Sunday night caused funnel
clouds m Fairfield, Knox , Licking
and Perry counties. No injuries or
major damage were reponed.
More than 800 worshipers
escape~ injury when a tent where a

Battle commemorated over weekend

BY THE BOOK • What's the safest way to
IOid a cannon? By the book. Here Capt. Doug
Lantry of Columbus, a member ot the 1st Ohio
Light Artillery Battery A reads a copy of the
Hunt-Barry-French Manual, 1864 Edition, to
other reenactors practicing loading two of the
Steamy July weather greeted
participants and spectators
alike for the fifth annual reen·
actment ol the Batde of Buffin·
gton bland at Portland over the
weekend. ,
Bullets and cannonballs
.. were the blgest menace during
the actual Civil War battle
whkb took place July 19, 1863,
between Confederate General
Jot.. Hunt Morgan's 2,000 cavalrymen and about 8,000 Union
soldiers, but the heat and high
humidity presented the largest
threat Sunday during the main
reenactment which was held at
a nearby fann.
The Meip County Historical
Sodety has·been using tbe event
to draw awareness to plans by ·
Richards and Sons Gravel
Company of Racine, a sub·
sidiary of the Shelly Company
ofThomvUie, to mine gravel in
a 600-acre area associated with
ihe battlefield.
Confederate reenactors John
Moore and Gregory Wines of ·
Albany said the site needs to be
protected both to preserve
Ohio's only Civil ~ar battle·
field and to avoid disturbing
unmarked Confederate graves
, believed to edst in the Portland
area.
.
Although the two area from
· Ohio, they enjoy portraying
Confederate soldiers since they
fought under fewer regulathms
concerning the types of
weapOns they &lt;arried ~r uni·
forms they wore. For instance,
Moore
(portraying
an
unmounted cavalryman) sport·
ed two belts, a Remington
revolver, knife and a sawed-off,
double•barreled muzzleloading .
shotgun .. a particularly dead·
ly weapon for dose-range fight·
log and a favorite of the Confederate cavalryman.
Reenactors were joined this
weekend by members of Bat·
tery A ol the 1st Ohio Light
Artillery .who brought two nf
the refurbished &lt;annons from
the Ohio Statehouse.

l

..

(

tour' cannons from the Ohio Statehouse. The
manual, which appears to make a relatively
straightforward ·taak seem complicated, was
actually designed to protect the gunners from
accidental discharges and .o ther hazards.

MAKI~tG HAY FORK· Mike England of Green Sulphur Springs,
W.Va., likes making lhe things the old·fashioned way... In !his
case a hay fork. England was one of several exhibitors anend·
ing the annual reenactment of lhe Battle of Bullington Island at
Portland over the weekend

church service was being ·held was and Perry counties, but there were no
picked up by wind. The Rev. Sam major injuries. ·
.
Luke ofihe Princeton Pike Church of
· Throughout central Ohio. the
God warned the congregation to . stormed downed power lines. causing
leave just as the winds hit the tent and' at lcast45.000 customers to he with·
spun it around.
out electricity. Some lost phone serOne minor injury was reponed. vice as welL Flooded streets and
and church services resumed:
downed trees slowed travel .
As temperatures rose well into the
In Licking County, residents 'were
90s across Ohio on Sunday. crews not allowed to drive for several hours
worked to restore ,power and fix dam- when up to siK inches of rain fell.
age from tornadoes. and rains that hit along with one-inch haiL
the night before.
Four people in a Baltimore home
On Saturday night, several torna· were hospi tali,ed when they were
does and funnel clouds were also ovcn.:omc by fumes from a gasoline
reponed in Fairfield, Knox, Licking or diesel generator in a poorly vcnti-

Black support grows ·for
school-voucher program~
By ROBERT GREENE
AP Education Writer
WASHINGTON - A growing
impatience with public schools
among_black Americans is adding
new fuel to the congressional debate
over taxpayer suppon for private
schools.
Nonpanisan polls have found an
increase of almost 10 poi~ts in I g
months in the percentage of blacks
supporting the voucher concept,
which would help the urban poor
finance tuition at private - even
church-operated- schools.
The question is coming before a
Senate subcommittee Tuesday, and'
black parents arc being brought in to
testify in suppon of state voucher
progrnms already in usc in Cleveland
and Milwaukee.
Conservative Sen. Dan Coats, R·
Ind .. the suht.:ommittcc chairman.
said he called the hearing 10 prove the
issue is more than a right-wing auack
on public schools in favor of private
or religious ones.
"Our focus here should he not on

what this might-or might not do 10 the
system." he · ~a id, hut on children\

· welfare. ·
To drive home the point. he and
liberal Rep. Floyd Flake, D-NY. a
member of the Congressional Black
Caucus. talked up the issue in interviews lust week.
Coats·, a longtime supporter of
vouchers, is pushing bills to create a
pr'ogram of federally supported
vouchers in the District of Columbia
and anolhcr tn help poor families at
unsafe schools.
Flake has been an outspoken sup-

porter. He is pastor of a church in
Queens that runs a school but says the
school would not hcnelit from voucher legislation he suppons.
Despite opposition from teacher
unions, the Clinlon administration
and the NAACP, Flake supports legislation to set up a voucher systems
in Washington and in·· poor commu·
nitics.
. ._
The NAACP voted at its annual
convention this monlh w oppose
voucher plans. It did so only after

deleting language that would have
condemned charter schools. public
schools run hy parcnls. teachers ur
private t&gt;rganizalions.
Flake suid opponents arc at least
listen ing. The 30-memhcr black cau- .
cus ~chatcd vnuclle.rs just this past
week.
''This is a phenomenal step." ·
Flake said. "Ordinarily our posture
has heen: ' Public schc.x&gt;ls at all costs.
N(&gt;thing else can ever he considered.
We ' rc not even ~oing to hear it."'
Dis.'iatisfacthm in puhlic education
is indeed growing.
The Joint Center for Polilical
Studies. which empha.,izes studies
affecting hlack Americans. found in
polls last Murch that suppon for
vouchers amtmg bla~.:ks has out·
grown suppon among whites.
Whites were evenly divided at47
percent. pro and con. But 57.3 percent of blacks surveyed ravor~d
vouchers. up from barely 4K percent
in January 1996.
Support was largest among the
young and the pcx&gt;r.

Republicans demand independent
counsel on .campaign fund raising
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Republicans
arc. stepping up their demands that
Allorncy General Janel Reno appoint
an independent counsel to investigate
illegal campaign contributions, saying her reluctance to do so verges on
political meddling.
That reluctance, said Senate
Majority Leader Trent Loll. R-M iss ..
o11,Sunday. is :_:becoming more and
more indefensible and I have to soy
there is growing ~.:onceni ahout her·
actions."
·
Loll, appearing on NBC's, " Meet
the Press." said he did not advocate
her resignation hut "the pattern here
i'S ex tremely dist"urhing. and if it continues. 'we' re going
,, to have 10 dn
snmct hmg more.
He did not say what that might he.
although other .GOP senators. led by
Sen. Arlen Specter. R-Pa., have
pushed i(JT liling a lawsuit to forte the
Justice Department to name an independent c{&gt;un~cl.
Reno has argued that the charges

Legislature t

DRUMMER BOYS· Too young to fight, drummer boys on both
sides often led their troops to baHie... and still fought on occa·
slon. Here two drummer boys practice !heir trade. Modem reen·
actmant rules prohibit youngsters under 16 from carrying
firearms.

latcd basement. The injuries were nl
serious. said Fairlield County sher
1IT's Lt. Darrell Ball.
Weather also may have caused
house to collapse. he said. No one
was hun.
Lightning hit the Modem Finance .
building in downtown 11/cwark. starting a fire tho! caused $20.000 in damage. said Assistant Fire Chief Vince
Wallar.
· In South Bloomfield. a boil order
was issued because storms caused a
power outage which shut down a
water treatment plant, the Pkkaway
County sheriff's office said.
·

COLUMBUS (AP) - School
reform will continue to be the topic
this week as the Legislature scuics on
ho,w to pay for education and new
requirements for students.
Tentative ·agreements have hec n
reached on ~everal issues. although a
final deal has not been worked out,
said House Speaker Jo Ann David·
son. R-Reynoldsburg.
" Let's put it this way," she told
The Cincinnati Enquirer for a story
published Sunday. "There is hope."
If the Legislature approves a funding plan by Aug. 6, it would go to
voters in a statewide referendum
Nov. 4.
Legislators have to come up with
a new way ·IO, pay for education
because the Ohio Supreme Court
declared in March that the current .
system, based primarily on property
taxes. is unfair to poorer districts.
Many lawmakers want academic

of illegal '-=ampHign contrihution:i
The hearings have 'cunccntnncd
from foreign t:ountrics do not meet on whether China •ried to illegally
the · standard!ti for n&lt;Jming an indc- funnel money into political cam· ·
pendent counsel - credible evi- paigns and what mlc, if any. Huang
dence that cahinct-levcl officials and the ln~onesian company, the Lip· .
(,;Oinmined criminal wrongdoings .
po Group. had in that alleged con·
. Instead. the Justice Department is spiracy.
conductiQg it!'i own investigation.
" I am very disappointct.l in her
and has fun her angered Senate performance ... Sen. Pete Domenici.
Republicans hy taking time in R-N.M .. a member of the Governapproving immunity for witne!'ises mental Affairs Commiucc holding
they want In call hcforc the Senate the hearings, said of Reno. "h is
committee nnw conducting hearings ohvious to me that things arc taking
on c1.1mpaign fundrai!tiing irrcgulari- too long and they aren't g:,;ing rast
tics.
·
·
enough and smnchody over there is
" To stand in our way is. I think dcl~aying them . She has lost a lot or
uncon sdon~lhlc is u very strong word.
crcdihi lity with this senator." he said
hutth:tt's what it is." saicJ Specter on on CBS' "·Face the Nation."
J,.oll, us ked if Reno was playing
"Fox News Sunday."
The hearings go into their li&gt;urth politics and doing the White House
week this week, with Specter saying hiJdin'g, responded, "it certainly
they will provide evidence of direct ,...l looks that way.··
links hctwecn the dates Johnny
Justice Depanmcnt spokesman
Huang. former Commerce Dcpan- Bert Brandenburg said ihat II of 20
ment oftil:ial and Democratic Party n..:yucsts fnr immunity have hecn
fund -raiser, received CIA briefings granted and "it would he a mi~tokc
and when he called an l.ndonesian to say that we have not hccn pro-·
· ny with tics to China.
cessi ng immunity rcyuesls."

n school reforms .
refo . tied l&lt;l the change' to help exclusively to primary and secondary
justify what ~ould ·he ~.:ontrovcrsioll schools. It also includcs·ruupcrty ta,.;
Lax increases.
relief.
The package includes a re4uireThe Enquirer reponed that the
ment that fi1urth-graders pass '' state will .phasc in funding for ail-day
statewide reading test hcforc ad vane· kmdcrgartcn. Tcachcr·to-pupil ratios
ing to fifth grade. The hill also of 1-to-15 in kinderganen through
replaces the test that measures what thlfd-grade would he required for the
&lt;~ student has learned through cig1ll eight largest urhan distri«.:ts.
grade~ with one tha.t measures learn·
Voinovich had supported guaraning through the lOth .grade.
teeing $4,269 for each stuilcnt hy
Many funding plans have be;cn budget year 1999. The Senate, which
suggested so the content of what is in wanted to reduce the amount by
the vers1on up for legislative votes is $200, ts now ·wolhng to reduce il hy
not entirely clear
. $50, the Enquirer said.
But apparently it will not include
The ·academic accountnhility bill
a proposa l from Gov. George includes school performance audits
Voinovich and other leaders to and requires districts to have batincrease the cigarelle tax from 24 anced budgets and a five-year budget
cents a pa~k to 36 cents a pack.
forecast, the Dispatch reponed.
The Columbus Dispatch reported
It also requires districts to start an
Sunday that the compromise includes emergency fund and to save 4 percent
raising the sales ta. from·s percent to of their budgets for building repairs
6 percent, with the money go ing' and maintenance. the ncwspaJicr said.

•

�Monday, July 28, 1997

CoiJ!mentary
'

'

The Daily Sentinel
' 'Est#SfisML illl!UI

.2.

A Gannett eo; Newspaper
H06EAI L WINGETT
PuiiiiMr

•.

IIAAOARET L£HIEW
Conii.CIIF

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111 Cowt ltrwt, "-eey, OhiO
11+1112-21111• Fa1112-2157

CHARLENE HOEAJCH
O.lef8lll••g•r

DOD lets sloppy contractors off hook

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Standards debate leaves
state school board behind
By PAUL SOUHRADA
p,... W1ltw
COLUMBUS- As the school funding train leaves the station, will the
stale School Board be left standing on the platform?
That's what some members of the 19-member board want to know.
"It does appear we're bccominsless relevant," Diana Fessler, an elected
board member from New Carlisle, complained last week.
"In the past. the governor has expressed a desire to exen more control
over education," Ms. Fessler said.
The bolrd's problems with Gov. George Voinovich came to a head iri
199S '~n he won legislative support for a plio that allowed him to appoint
eight people to sit on the board alongside the II elected members.
Voinovich- the self-described .' 'education govemor"- had proposed
dumping the board, but agreed to the hybrid as a compromise.
Since 199S, the Legislatuno has taken away the board's authority over the
school technology and school building assistance programs and instead created separate commissions to dole out hundreds of millions of dollars.
"We just continue to piecemeal the authority of the board," Ms. Fessler
said.
.
· · No# lawmakers are foc!lsing on improving schools academic performance 110d tightening their manasemenl and budget practices in response to
the Ohio Supreme court decision declaring the state school funding system
unconstitutional. Voinovich and legislative leaders figun: voters won't
accept a proposed $1 billion-plus tax increase for school.s without some
assurances the money will be spent wisely.
Again, the board has been left out of the loop.
Voinovich and some Republican lawmakers, however, objected to the
bolrd's decision to require competency testing in the arts, foreign language,
consumer education and technology.
How much of that will wind up in legislation now being debated in the
House?
·
"Precious little," Sen. Gene Watts, R-Galloway, quipped when asked that
question by reporters.
. "There are certain things they can do well, and things they can' t," said
former House Education Chainnan Michael Fox, R-Hamilton.
"They didn't do the infnstructurc stuff well. The information system is
mess. And they've had authority over pr-Oficient/deficient schools since
I989," Fox said. "It tabs them a long lime to do things."
And with the lawmlkers facing a March 24 Supreme Court deadline to
fix Ohio's scl!OOI, time is in shon supply, he added.
One key role the board will play~ in writing the state's proficiency tests,
which will determine ,whethet studentS nio~ on to the next grade or gradu. ate from high school, Fox said. The board also will contin11e to design
teacher training standards IIDd decide which teachers get - and keep their teaching certificates.
"Ultimately, they are in charge of standards."
Rop. Gary Cates, R-West Chester, agreed that the coun decision has
added new sense of urgency.
AIIOCillllcl

dontracting 0111 worit to private
companies is as much a pan of military life as Saluting an officer. The
Dcpartmcnt of Defense has far too
many responsibilities to handle in- house. Hiring private contiactors to
run government-owned manufacturing facilities is usually a sensible,
cost-effective way to ensure that the
military meets its varied obligations.
But several recent congressional
investigations have found that the
contractOIS aren't shouldering their
share of responsibility for cleaning
up the environmental mess that is
often left behind. For example, auditors at the General Accounting
Office recently reported that "the
government could pay hundreds of
millions of dollars to and on behalf
of DOD contractors for (environmental) cleanup."
In other words, taxpayers ·- not
. the companies that made the mess-arc footing the bill to remove the
hazardous waste left behind by careless contractors. Officials say the
, blame lies with the Pentagon, which
doesn't do a verY good job of requiring contractOIS to share in cleanup
co~.
•
Federal law would be on the
DOD's side if it pressed contractors
to pay a fair share. The law designed
to handle the cleanup -- commonly
called Superfund -- holds that operators of federal facilities arc at least
partially liable for cleanup of contamination that they cause. This provides a fioancial incentive for con. tractors to keep things iidy. But if a
company suspects that it won't be
asked to clean up its own mess, then
it has little reason to run a sanitary
operation.
Unfonunately, that attitude has
been prevalent at many DOD facilities run by contractors in recent
ye.ars. The problem, say investigators, is that the Pentagon has failed
to develop .a uniform policy for
enforcing the Superund law.
The DOD "needs (to provide)

bener guidance," a GAO official
involved in the investigations told
our reporter Walt Bmon. "They still
arc not being consistent with their
policies for recovering cleanup
costs."
·
·
With no standard DOD policy to
guide them, the services have raken
different approaches in asking contractors to share the costs of cleaning up contaminated sites. Only the
Air Force and the Army Coqls of
Engineers have successfully gonen
some contractors to share cleanup
. costs of government-owned facilities. ·
The Navy does have a cost&lt;sharing policy, but it's not enforced. The
Army, on the other hand, does not
even have a policy. Instead, the
Army pays for cleanups directly out
of its own funds. The lack 'Of coordination between the DOD and the
various
branches leads to confusion.
Perhaps the biggest problem is

that the DOD's estimates for
cleanup costS at contaminated sites
are often at odds with the estimates
made by the sci'Yices. For example,
at the Twin Cities Army Ammunition plant in Minn., the difference
between the cleanup cost estimates
made by the DOD and the Army was
$37 million. And at a Fon Worth,
Texas, Air Force plant, the cleanup
estimates made by the DOD and the
Air Force differed by $30 million.
AI just nine plants studied by the
GAO, a. ·cumulative difference in
estimates of$111 million was found.
Needless to say, it's difficult for the
DOD to recover cleanup costs from
contractors when officials aren't
even sure how much money to ask
for.
Under pressure from lawmakers,
the Defense Depanment appears to
finally be taking some action. In a
prepared, statement responding to
our inquires, DOD officials said that
they ' ve recently" began to "exam-

inc more closely the possibility ·for
bringing cost recoverY and contribution claims against... parties wbo
may have contributed to the contam. ination at DOD sites."
Defense officials have enlisted
the belp of the Justice Depanment in
this endeavor, and have also
promised to issue "uniform gqid:
ance" to the military services for
sharing cleanup ·costS with. contractors.
It's about time the DOD moved
to remedy this situation, especially_
considering that the Superfund law
has been on the books for 17 years.
Only the Pentagon, whose muddled '
finances can't stand the scrutiny of
· an independent. audit, could lind a
way to waste money trying to clean
up. waste.
Jack Anderson and Ju Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc:.

Nat Henlotf

Letters to the editor

them with beliefs contrary to their
own.
We do no1 object to the existence
of parochial schools or their
attempts to spread their beliefs
through their schools. They just cannot do it with state tax dollars."
Voucher supp&lt;iners often mike
the point, however; that ·it is the parents who receive the public voucher
money and
·
Therefore, they say, · there is no
direct public aid to a religious inslilulion.

Bu1 in 1973, the Supreme Ccun, in
Sloan vs. Lemon. said thai no matter
how these state anangements to reli-

gious schools are designed, "the Stile
has singled out a class of its citizens ror

a special economic benefit.... AI bouom.
its inlendcd cqnsequence is to serve and
support religious inslilutions."
That "violates the conslitutional
mandate against lhc ·sponsorship' or

'financial suppon' or religion or religious institutions ...

Unless ttie Supreme Coun has
decided to · entirely discard the
Establishment Clause, the time has
not yet come for the state to support
religious schools. Nor should it.
Nat Henlotr Is a nalionaUy
renowned aulhorily on the First
Amendment lllld the rest of the Bil
of Rights.

PubliC snores as media ignores Senate hearings

By Joaeph Spear
Middleport

· Thou shalt not kill
Dear Editor,

1 would like to respond to the letter that was wrinen about Jason Hysell.
The young lady wrote: "Nobody should judse him except God". Well, God
is judging him. God says "Thou shalt not kill."
.
.
1 have known JasD~_~ sniCe he was about .10 ye~ old. ~e has been m
constant trouble ever ~mce ~n . Yes, at firs111 was mmor ,thinl!s but we see
how it ended up. It's JUSt hke alcohol and 'drugs: first 11 s a hule b1t then
after time it's like a raging volcano.
The only thing that can happen is it has to erupi. That's just wha.! Jason
did-- he erupted. He took a VCfY precious person from this earth before his
.
.
·
umc.
I would have liked this young lady to have stood in front of Todd's family and friends, also the children of Harrisonville Elementary, and told them
this brutal act of violence was an accident.
I know Jason had a vefY hard life, but so do a lot of people. They manage to overcome and function well in scx;iety. So should his childhood be
used as an exeuse for this brutal act? Thais how th1s world explains everYthing thai happens: "Biune eveeything I do on everYone else." It's time for
people to stand up and tab the conseqoences of their actions.
Jason has been in and out of the system for quite a few years. To say he
was in shock or that they convinced him it was best, in my opinion that's just
n0110. Someone that has .been in prison time after time knows the laws better than anyone else. ·

,
C.•my Morrit
Rutlud

The right wing is annoyed about
the lack of news coverage being
accorded the Senate's hearings on
campaign financing.
Heck, I can tell them why this is
so in one word.
Z-z-z-z-z-z.
What? Oh, sorry about that. I
. must have dozed off.
Actually, . I need nine words to
explain the dearth of media focus:
~hearings are boring and they are
p isan crap.
- . ey arc being cQIIducted by por·
tentous, sclf"infatuated ~li!,icians
who ~ave a consumm~te Interest 1n
showmg up the opposmon and ~ro
interesL in fixing the system.
All of America knows this is true
except for the ideologues. They, of
course: attribute the indifference to a
"liberal media" conspiracy. Fox
News is OK. The channel that is
owned by conservative Rupert Mur.
doch ·and presided over by former
Nixon strategist Roger Ailes is
broadcasting much of the hearings
live. But the rest of the stiuions ..
ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC,
PBS, even C-SPAN -- arc clearly
covering up for their pal .Bill Clin·
ton.
"LIBERAL MEDIA YAWN AT
REVELATIONS IN CAMPAIGN·
FUND HEARINGS," read the headline in a front-page "analysis" in the
Washington Times on July 14. The
&amp;

same newspapers and networks that •- especially.. since fair-minded peO"lavished tons of air time on Water- ple know · that the accusers are as
gate and Iran-contra," read the guilty as the accused, if not more so.
Times anicle, "either ignored the
So the hearings are a bust and the
Senate ... hearings or presented sto- . conscrvati ves have dragged out their
ries arguing that the hearings don't all-purpose scapegoat. Pardon me
matter."
.while I yawn again. If there's anyAnd you thought conSerVatives thing more boring than these hearwere familiar with the..concept. of the ings, it's the right-wing plaint about

Actually, I need nine words to explllin the dearth
of media focus: The hearings are boring and they
are partisan crap.
· They are being conducted by portentous, self·
infatuated politicians who have a consummate
interest in showing up the opposition and t.ero
interest in fixing the system. - Joseph Spear.
free marketplace. When was the last the so-called liberal pre.ss and its
time they counted the channels on alleged conspiracy to soft·peddle
their cable systems? I've got 64, Bill Clinton's indiscretions and
most of which feature schlock, but cover up his trespasses.
all of which alford entertainment
What soft-peddle? Last year, sev·
that is far superior 1o . the Senate eral reporters stOOd up in the White
hearings.
House newsroom, demanded the
The point is, there is a lot of com- press secrelafY comment on whether
petition for the public's attention, the president had a sexually transand the networks are acutely 'aware mitted disease, and then proceeded
of i!. Indeed, they paid minimal to weave stories around the denial.
auention to last year's presidential
What cover-up? Where did we
campaign. Daily hearings that fea- hear about Clinton's supposed fling
ture posturing pols and mind-numb- with Gennifer? His alleged pass at
ing detail about campaign contribu- Paula? His draft evasipn, his ties to
tions simply are not going to hack it chicken tycoons, his White House

•

coffees, his rental of the Lincoln
bedroom, his China connection?
In 1994, Rohen Lichter and his
conservative Center for Media · and
Public Affairs examined 4,2S6
evening news stories broadcast on
ABC, CBS and NBC between Janu.
ary 1993 and June 1994, and concluded: "Overall, Clinton's 1V coverage has been negative by a greater
than 3-to-2 margin (62 percent negative vs. 38 percent positive)." That's
more than 2,600 negative stories in
17 rrionths, or five per day.
Even Newt Gingrich was compelled to acknowledge during .Clinton's first term that the president was
getting mauled by the media. "The
press overall has been verY tough on
the president and Mrs. Clinton," the
speaker said.
What conspiracy? In 199S,
William Kristol -- former chief of
staff to Vice President Dan Quayle
and currcn!ly editor of the Weekly
Standard .. delivered this .startling
confession to The New Yorker magazine: " I admit it. The liberal media
were never that powerful. and the
whole thing was often used as an
excuse by conservatives for conservative failures."
The truth emerges, though it doth
not prevail.
~.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated ·
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Dorothy M. Atkinson

Group paddles
on canal to
ball game

Dorothy M. Atkinson, 85. Leon, W.Va., died Sunday, July 27, 1997 in
PleasancValley Hospital , Point Pleasant. W.Va.
. Allllngements will he announced by the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va.

Delena Ellis
Delena Ellis, 58, Gallipolis, died Sunday, July 27, 1997 in the Holzer
Senior Care Ce nter.
Born July 14, 1939 in Grayson, Ky., daughter of the late Job~ Daniel and
Eunice Utley Simmons. she was employed as a truck driver for Logestic
E•press. Anaheim, Calif.
She was a member and past president of the Emblem Club 107 of Gal·
lipolis.
Surviving are her husband, Charles Edwards Ellis, whom she married July
21, 1956 in Sandusky; two daughters, KathrYn Lynn (Lester) Ward of Gal·
lipolis, and Sheri (Devi n) Slone of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; three sons, Charles
Daniel (Laura) Ellis of Pomeroy. Michael Edward (Martha) Ellis of Arkansas,
and Howard Eugene (1ina) Ellis of Rio Grande; 1.2 grandchildren; three brotfl..
ers, Howard Simmons ofTacoma, Wash., Billy Joe (Niota) Simmons of Gallipolis, and Harold Simmons of Tucson, Ariz.; and three sisters, Ann Vance .
Kathy (Fran) Mullen and Helen Simmons. all of Gallipolis.
She was also preceded in death by two sisters, Carolyn Ward and Mary
Parker; and a brother. Rohert"Bobby" Simmons.
' ·
Services will he I p.m. Wednesday in the Willis Funeral Home. with the
Rev. John Jackson and the'Rev. Mark Killen officiating. Burial will be in
. 1he Centenary CemeterY.· Fri~nds may call at .the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday.

A~

AKR,ON (AP) - There were 22
adventurous souls who paddled a
canoe up the Ohio &amp; Erie Canal to a
baseball game.
The groQp promoting . canal
restoration and preservation began
their trip in southwest Akron and
traveled through neighborhOOds and
industrial areas.
They ended the trek Sunday
behind the Advanced Elastomer Sys·
terns building (a former GOOdrich
ractory) on South Main Street near
the new minor-league Canal Park
baseball stadium.
The four-mile 1rip took the group
of inexperienced and veteran paddlers about I 112 hours,
" We 're doing it for fun - and
because we can," said Rocky Kurchak, 40, a program director wit~ the
Ohio Department of Mental Health.
The 170-year-old canal is there to
he used. he said. not just looked at
and admired.
He js a member of a neighborhood
group called the Hancock &amp; Carnegie
Canal Coal~on and are working
with ·other groups to clean, restore
and preserve the Ohio &amp; Erie Canal.
'

Stocks

Scott

Am Ele Power .......................43'1.
Akzo ....................... :................737

Paul A. Scon, 81, Middleport, died Saturday, July 26. 1997, a1 his homo. ·
. Born Sept 20. 1915, in Cheshire, son of the late Eb.a and Ether Fife Scmt.
he was a graduate of Cheshire High School and worked for 41 years wuh
' the New York Cen1ral Railroad and retired as a conductor.
· A World War 11 Navy Seabee. he was a member of the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 American Legion, Middleport. a SO-year member of the Middle·
port Masonic Lodge 363 F&amp;AM and a member or the Middlepon Church
of Christ.
·' · ·
·
He was a survivor of the Silver Bridge Disaster in 1967.
He is survived by his wife. Virginia Childs Scott of Middleport; two
dauehtcrs and so ns -in-law. Barhara and Bob Stonecypher of Columbus and .
Car~! and Forrest Bachtel or Phoenix , Ariz.; four grandchildren; fove great·
grandchildren : two sisters. Dorothy Roush of Cheshire and Genrude Hysell
of Addison: several nieces and nephcwj.
· He was prcceqcd in death by lhree hr01hers. Wesley. Vaughan and William
Scott, and by three sisters. Marguerite Kail , Grace Porter and Vale Sw1sh•
cr.
Services will he held Wednesday. II a.m. al the Middleport Chapel of
Fisher Funeral Home with the Rev. Harold Trncewell ollkiating. Burial will
follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
Friends may call Tuesday. 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home : Masonic ser·
v~rc&lt; will be held Tuesday. 8:30p.m.

The deep trouble with school vouchers

&lt;

I ·~ Death Notices I

Paul

.expanded the Milwaukee Parental ing out of religious instruction -- but
Advocates of publicly financed Choice Program to include the usc religion still permeates all the classvouchers for religious schools took of state vouchers in religious rooms in those schools).
hear\ when the Supreme Coun on s.chools. But any pupil can be
The judge presented a long.list of
June 2J reversed ' one of its own exempt from a school's religious these panicipating schools -- with
precedents. The Coun ruled that it activity if the parent requests it.
direct qu~ from them. For exam-·
does not violate the Constitution to
Law suits were brought challeng- pie, "The-l:ontinuing purpose of St.
send public school teachers -- paid ing the constitutionality of using Matthew Evangelical Lutheran
by taxpayers' money -· into public funds for sectarian schools. Church and School is to go and tell
parochial' schools to teach remedial Among the plaintiffs were the Amer- the pure gospel of Jesus Christ for
classes to disadvantaged children.
ican Civil Liberties Union, Ameri- the conversion .of unbelievers.... "
In dissc~t. Justice .David Souter cans United for Separation of
Said Christ Lutheran Church: "A
warned that the decision would lead Church and State, the Milwaukee prospective student whose -parents
to "direct state aid to religious insti- Teachers' Education Association and arc not members of a church will be
the NAACP.
tutions on an unparalleled scale."
, considered a mission ~ject. " And .
But Mark Chopko, general coun- • The consolidated case has been so it went down the line of schools
. sel fQr the United States Catholic up and down the Wisconsin courts eager to share their saving grace
(the state Supreme Court tied 3-3 ), with voucher students.
Con~nce, jubilantly said that the
Cour . majority had now provided and so far the most inOuential deciJudge Higginbotham deClared
stale' with a "blueprint" for vouch· sion has been made by Judge Paul that this voucher program violates
Lack.o f courtesy rampant
Higginbotham of the Dane County the section of the state Constitution .·
ers I~ sectarian schools.
Circuit
Court in Madison. Higgin- that prohibits "compelled support of
Dear Editor,
His celebration, however, is
botham
had based .his decision on· religion."
Wluit has happened to common courtesy and respect for our fellow man? decidedly premature, as ·is p iculhe
stale
Consti\ulion, but his findlarly illustrated by the arduous J ur. Furthermore, he said, the Wis:
I was in the funeral procession on Thursday, July 24, for my uncle,
ings
have
considerable relevance for
ney
of
school
vouchers
in
Wis
nconsin
Constitution makes clear that
Richard Caruthers. I was quite disgusted when out on the Route 7 four-lane
the Establishmen
sin.
no
funds
can "be drawn from · the
several vehicles pulled into the left lane and passed the procession. Wbat
·
With
greater
education
and
(No
state
or
federal
government
treasury for the benefit of religious
really blew my mind was, as the left lane ended, a car, a van and a pickup
poverty (ll'!lblems than any other · can aid one or all religions, or prefer · societies .... n
truck with a horse trailer pulled in behind the sheriffs car and in front of ·
school district in Wisconsin, Mil- one religion over another.)
Higginbotham went on to empha·
Fisher's hearse!
·
waukee, starting in 1990, pcrmined
In his decisi?~ · th.c judge n?led size that ·"pemaps the most offen·
It's really sad that these pathetic people have so lillie respect for the · any public school student to auend that th~ part1c1patmg rehg10us
sive pan of this voucher plan is thai
deceased and their grieving family and friends.
any non-sectarian school in the .city schoo~~ .m the Mllwauk~ voucher it compels Wisconsin citizens of
• plan announced fonhrightly that varYing faiths to support schools
I'd like to thank Sheriff Soulsby for detaining those ignorant people and at public expense. .
for allowing the procession to continue. Also thanks to the people, including
Then in 1995, the state legislature the.if. mission .is religious and that with their tax dollars that proselytize
truckers, who were polite enough to stop in the oncoming lane thus express- and governor Tommy Thompson rehg10us doctnne will be mst1lled m students and attempt to inculcate
the~r students" (except for those opting rcspccl. I appreciate you.
In closing, I'd like to say it's not asking too much to show respect and do
unto others as you'd have others do unto you.

Drama Bell

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mary

AmrTech ...............................66 1.

Ashland Oil .........................49"1.
AT&amp;T ....................................35"1.
Bank One .......... :..·................. 52'•
Bob Evans ...........................16"-

Borg-Warner ........................55'1•
Champion .............................18'1.
Charm Shpa ..............................&amp;
City Holding ..........................33'.1
Federal Mogul .......................36't.
. 10 2',•
Gannett ................................
Goodyear ..............................640
Kmart ..................................... 10'o
Lands End............................. 27\
Lid . ...............................~ ........ 21'!.

Oak Hill Fln1 ..........................19'.\

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

One Vatley ...............................43
Peoples ...................................37
Pram Flnl ................................. 19
Rockweii ..............................64'Y.
RD-Shell ............................... ss~.

Shoney' s ...............................5"1.
Star Bank ..............................46'o
Wendy's ................................27'!.
Worthlngton.:........................19'.\

c. Roberts

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotas provided by Aclvall
of Gallipolis. ·

MarY Corbetta Roberts. 63,8 Vinttin St. Gallip:olis, died Sunday. July 27.
1997 in the Holzer Senior Care Center.
.
.
.
Born May 9, 1934 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Corbett J.and Verg1e
D. Roberts, &gt;he was a clerk at Clark's Jewelry Store'" Gall1pohs. and was
a member of the First Baptist Church of Gallipolis. .
.
.
Surviving are a sister. Brenda (Dan) Morgan of Rw Grande; a Slster·m·
law, Phebe Roberts of Racine; and several nieces and nephews. and great·
nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by a brolher.. Rohert L. Roberts
Graveside services will be II a.m. Tuesday m the Oh1o Valley Mem.o~y
Gardens. with ~astor Archie Conn ofliciating. Friends may call at the WilliS
Funeral Home from 6·8 tonight
- .
.
Donations may be made to the Arthur G. James Cancer Research Hospl·
tal. 941 Chatham Lane. Suite 305 , Columbus. Ohio 43221, or the Holzer Hos·
pice, 100 Jackson P.ike. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .

,•
I

MAl((

Board to' meet
The Southern Local Board of
Education will meet at 7:30 tonight
at the high school.

from the mid 70s north 10 around ~0
south.
E•tended forecast . .
, .
Wednesday ... Dry. Lows 1n the 50s
and h1ghs m the 70~.
·
Thursday an~ frtday ... Dry. Lows
&lt;n
d h' h . th
70 .
55 to~., an 1g s'" e upper . '
to lower 80s.

Reunion announc:ed
The 27th annual Smith-Stohart
farm reunion will be held Saturday a1
fhe Racine American Legion hall.
Registration will begin at 10 a.m.
with lunch at noon. Those attending
arc 10 take a covered dish. Meat and

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21.).960) ·
1~ubli~hed every afternoon. Mond ay lhrough

1friday, Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy. Ohio. hy 1hc
~)h io V:~lh..-y Pt1blishing Cornl')anyiGannclt.Co..
flomeroy. Ohio 457(19, Ph. 992-21~6 . Sccorw:l
da~~ ~~a~ pnid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

'

.

Mrmbrr! The As~ociatcd Pre~~ - aOO !he Otlio
~ ~~w~p&lt;~pcr A5~oc i ntion .

· lj"'STMASTI!R: Sc11d addrc~~ correction' to
the Daily Sentinel. r II Court St.. romeroy:
f)hio . 4~769.

,,

SUDSCRti'TION R•TES
' Oy Cal'rltr Or Motor Routt

pRe \\'l'tlt ....... ..... ..... ......... ........................ $2.00
)ne Month ...............................................$8.70
)llC Yc&lt;U" ....................................... _...... St04.00

l

SINGLE COPY rRICE

j)aily ................ ....................................1 .~ Ccn111
!iuhmi ber.~

not duiring to p11y the carrier mDy
1emh in advance direct to The Daily Sentintl
.(Ill a three. ~ i" or j 2 month b:l~i,, Crtdit will be

1pven clllTiere:~ch week.
J•o ~ubu:ription by mllil permilttd in nrtllll
1rhere home t""arritr wvice ;, a11ailnble.
l'ub!i~her ~~~ 1 ~

ris,ht 10 ndjuRt rnle5 dur-

i 118 the 1u~cription period Submipti~n rote

, h;mge~ may be implemented by .chnogmathe
'~.mttio n of the AUbscri ption.

MA tL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Melp County

·

l~ =~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :~~i:~

ti2 Weeks ............... ,............................... SIo:!.56
Kilts Outlidt Mtlp CouniJ

!I~=~·· ·• :• · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·:• • ;;:.~

•il W..ks ....................... ,.............. .........SI09.12

stock Association:

Hog.niarket trend for Monday: 50
cents higher.
Summary of last week 's aur.:lions

table service to be provided. Games
and pri1.es will be awarded. There
wi II also be a.swimming pany at the
Syracuse pool starting at 6 p.m.

Fish and Game work session
The Mcig• County Fish and Game
Club will have a work session Satur·
day. noon at the clubhouse on West
Shade Road near Chester. Mccling
and barbecue will follow.

The Pomeroy Police Department
investigated two accidents. over the
weekend. one resulting in a citalion

for DUI.
Walter Knapp. 38. of Racine. was ·
cited for DUI and failure to control
after he struck a vehicle driven by
Caleb Shuler, 18, shortly after mid·
night on Sunday. According to the
Pomeroy Police Department. Knapp
failed.to negotiate the oil'-ramp of the
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge and went
in1o the Westbound lane. striking
Shuler's car. Knapp was treated and
released from Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Heavy damage was sustained by
hnth Shuler's 1989 Ford and Knapp's
1986 Pontiac.
There were no citations issued

after DornthyMcDaniol. 42. Rutland.
struck a parked vehicle owned by
George Gum. 72, Racine . on Saturday morning.

According to lhc police depart·
mcnt Gum was parked ncar the
Pomeroy Post Office at the time
Ml:Dlmicl striu.::k his vehicle.
Light ·damage was reported

Ln

Gum'S

to

vchiciC.

and

none

McDaniel's.

. _._ ).; Q~b,itu~ry

at Hillsboro. Eaton. Farmcrstown.

Lancaster. Wapakoneta. Mt. Vernon.
Bucyrus. Creston. Caldwell and Gal·
lipolis:
.
Hogs: 2.00 lower to 1.00 hi~.J1er.
Butcher hogs : 49.60-6J25.
Catile : steady to I .00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.00·
68.25: select 55.00-64.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0066.75: select 55.00-63.50. ·
Cows: steady to 1.00 lower: all
cows 49.00 and down .
Bulls: 2.00 lower to higher: all
bulls 57.00 and down. .
Sheep and lambs: steady to 5.00
lower; choice wools 87.00 and down:
choice clips 76.50 and down ; feeder
lambs 88 100 and down; aged sheep._,
57.50 and down. ·

Veterans Memorial
Saturday"admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - James
Radcliff.
Sunday admissions- hone .
Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 25 - Chelsea
Holter, Stephanie Beaver, Donna
Altizer, Mrs. Stephen Henry and
son , Carole Roush, Sarah Boyles.
Discharges July l6 - Jewell
Hunt.
Discharges July Z7 · - Jackie
Turley. Ryan Nichols, Bridget Trisch,
Stephen Hubbard.
· (Publishec! with permission)
The Mcusel brothers, Bob and
Irish. both had career hatting ayerages of over .300, Irish hitting .310
and Boh .309.

Police report two accidents

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Depanmcnt of Agricul-

Hospital news

Eichingers set reunion
Eastern Board to meet
The Eichinger reunion will he held
The Eastern Local Board of Edu·
Sunday at the Carleton School. Syr•· cation will meet in regular session
cuse. There will be a covered dish · Wednesday. 6 p.m. at Tuppers Plains
luncheon atl2:30 p.m.
'Eicmemary.

. The mercury shouldn't climb. out
ot the 70s on Tuesday under clear
skies.
. And the enol. dry condilinns
hh
k
should slay with us thruug t c wor ·
'd
week. forecasters SUI .
.
.
The record -high temperature lor
this date "' the C&lt;llumbus weather
stalion was 100 degrees in 1952

ture Market News:.
Barrows and gills: steady to linn;
demand and movement moderate.
U.S. 1·2. 230-260 lhs. country
points 56.50-58.00. few 58.50; plants
57.50-59.00.
· U.S. 2-3. 2.10-260 lbs. 52.00·
56.50:210-230 lbs. 47.00·52.00.
Sows: mostly steady.
U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs. 42.00·
44.50: 500·600 lbs. 44.50-47.00. few
over 600 lhs. 47.00. few 48.00.
Boars: 39.00·41.50.
Es1im:ued receipts : 30.000.
Prices from Producers Live-

I

twi UU 'uct AKl'&lt;(;

bag. Emily used pink Dural
material to create a jumper with
high waist, gathered skirt and.
big pockets, and Boyles made a
brown Dora( skirt to wear with a
knit shirt. All three are second
year 4-H dub memben.
. Righi, Miriafl! McLaughlin
judges a pants outfit made by
Ashley Boyles of Thppers Plains.
Ashley's costume consisted of an
ivory lined vest with e&lt;&gt;Ordinat·
ed black and ivory pants. She
received reserve champion in
the category of clothes for middle school.

Meigs announcements

Cooler weather on the way
8 . The Associated Press
. yCooler alf will move into Ohio
behind a frontal system that was
expcclc~ tn sweep across thc stale .
today.
·
Tempermurcs tonight will .drop
N
il1lo the 55-65 range. the. . auona1
Weather Service said.

''

With a matching "everything"

SHOI' f~ ttM HI~ CLASif(DI

Today's weather forecast .
Ohio
.
Tonight... Partly cloudy south car·
ly with a chance of thunderstorms.
Olhcrwisc ... Mostly clear. Lows trom
the upper 50s norlhwcstto the mid
·
..., . . th
""S SOU .
Tucsday ... Mostly sun ny. Highs

I

Dozens ot 4'11 sewing projects
were judged Friday afternoon at
the Senior' Citizens Center in
preparation for the Meigs County Junior Fair,Aug.ll-16, on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The annual style review will
take place at 2 p.m. on Aug. I~
·on the hill stage and at that time
grand and ~erve champions in
the various sewing categories
will be recognized, the fashion ·
board will be seleded, and the
parlidpanls
state
fair
announced.
Above, Jodi Chaffee of Rut·
. land, Emily Ashley of Pomeroy,
and Jessica Boyles of Thppers
Plains, · pictured left to right,
model their clothing projects.
Jodi made a hunter green coordinated vest and shorts outfit

Obltuarlaa art paid annou-manta arran~ local luntrat homaa.
ObHuarl• n pilllllaMd'aa'·niqu..t.d to ace
lie 11!-. cleatrlng more
lntarmatton thin Jt'
· In the _...,.nytng Dlath No-. ·

Ellenora (Joan} Landers
Ellenora (Joan) Landers, 63, or Pomeroy, departed this life on July 25,.
I997 at her residence.
.
Daughter of the late Martha Elizabeth and Gilbert Baumgard~cr, she
leaves to cherish her memories her husband, Raymond H. Landers, da~gh·
ter and son-in-law, Roberta Sellers and Dave of Magnetic Spnngs, Ohio, two ·
sons. Hoby Landers of Pomeroy and Mark Landers of Ru1land ; two s1sters.
Mary L. Roush of Syracuse and Martha Hudson of Columbus, a grand:
daugher, Amy Sellers and a grandson, ,Chnst~pher Sellers. great-grandeh1l
dren, Cierra and Dominique Call of MagnetiC Spnngs; several n1eces and
nephews; and special friends: Becky Hess, Kathy Arnott, and Johnny and
Bessie Landaker of Pomeroy.
.
She was also preceded in death by sisters Luella. Genev1eve and Ada,
and one brother, John Baumgardner of Pomeroy.
. Fnends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home 1n Pomeroy on Monday from
7 to 9 p.m., where services will be held.at I P:m. Tuesday, with Rev. Glen
McClung officiating. Interment to follow a1 G1lmore Cemetery.

�Monday, July 28, 1117

The Daily Sent~~!
t.~

Sports

•

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - How hot
was it'! So hot that an on-field thermometer registered IS2 degrees So
hot that playen couldn't touch the
artificial turf. So hot that Greg Maddux couldn't concentrate
Now, that's hot.
Atlanta's four-time Cy Young
Award wmncr barely made 11
through six inmngs SUnday. but held
on long enough to beat the Cincmnat• Reds 3-2 for hiS e•ghth consecutive win.
The Braves sizzled m their

J ••

""
"'

,,..
'"~

'"
"'
•

-

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
was a fill-in starter on the mound and
not much punch '" the Cleveland
bats. Not to worry. The guy dtvmg
around in the cloud of dust was
Omar Vtzquel.
Vizqucl, Cleveland's nashy, fourumc Gold Glove shortstop, saved the
day wuh four spectacular plays as
the Indians beat the Oakland AthletICs 4-2 on Sunday.
He twice robbed Jose Canscco of
hits. then added hack-to-hack brillanl
plays in a close garric in the seventh
mnmg. It d1dn 't matter that the Indians' hats fell silent or that spot starter
Jason Jacome was on the mound.
"He had an amazing day," srud
• Jacomc)2-0). tw1cc the beneficiary
of Vizquel's acrobatics. " Every ball
h11 his way he was diving and throw-

.~.

·.,...

'"

J11 ,

....

1\..1

.
•o'
·'

• "11

BEST OF THE TOURNAMENT- Harrl~anvllle
DK Fackler, which defeated the Kyger Creek
Raiders 9-1 In Saturdly night's Kyger Cr~ek Lit·
de Laague Toumlln*lt aemlflnal round, captured
the tournament championship Sunclly night by
belting New Haven 7-3. In front are (L·R) Cory
Longetreth, Justin .Workman, David Butcher,

Doug Dill and Josh Green In the mlcldill row are
Buzz Fackler, Jimmy Haning Ill,
Nathan
Stearn1, Kevin Butcher and bet girl
Gr~en.
Behind them are coach Jim Haning,
John
Stanley, manager Ben Fackler and
Lanny
Longstreth. (OVP photo)

RUNNER-UP HONORS went to lhe New Haven
Reds lifter their four-run loss to Harrisonville in
the Kyger Creek Little League Tournament champlonlhlp round Sunclly night. The Reds earned
their tltl&amp;-game berth after beating Point Pleasant Hardware 3-0 in Saturday night's semifinals.

In front are (L·R) bat boy Cameron Sayre, Caleb '""
Litchfield, Tony Tulloh, Ian Smith, Anthony
Mitchell and bat boy Garrett Underwood. StandIng are Justin Roush, Michael Jones, Ryan . '
Mitchell, Tyler Grinstead, David Smith and coach
Mike Mitchell. (OVP photo)
'"

"'

Kyger Creek LL Tournament ends

~

'

........
&lt;·

Arter that, the Reds never got a team field. to a third-place showmg
runner past second. Out-makmg over the West Virgin tans 1n the prethrows in the fifth by the armored . ccdmg consolatiOn game.
Fackler to third base, Stanley's last
Thompson's first-1nning blast ofl
four stnkeouts and Anthony stancr A.shley Pyles put the Raiders
Mitchell's h1tt1~g mto a game-endmg ahead 2-6. In the bottom of the first,
5-1-4 (third base-to-pitcher-to-sec- Hardware cut the lead m half when
ond) double play were as crucial to Lee Reynolds' groundout In shortHarrisonville's cla1mmg 11s firstlttlc stop allowed N1cky Stephens tn
m th1s tournament as tis three-run score l'rom third base
rally in the·fifth .
After a scoreless second, Kyger
Ryan Mitchell lasted four mnings Creek capitalized on two errors, one
before g1vmg way to Roush. The two walk and a base h1t to score the lour
combined to strike out eight (the runs 11 needed to put the game out nl
starter had seven) and walk four.
reach.
Hamsonvllle's h1tters were StanPoint Pleasant's last run came m
Icy (2-2 &amp; two RBis), Call and Fack- the filth, when B.J. Smith, who douler (both 2-3).
bled, scored on Stephens one-out
New Haven 's hillers were Jones llne-dn&gt;e single center licld
(3-3 &amp; three RBI~). Ian Sm1th (l-2)
In the sixth, Thompson's second
and Roush ( 1-3 ).
-- homer came oiT Smuh two ptlchcs
lnnjnal!lll.la
after Spaulding stole second '
New Haven
102-000=3-5-2
Spaulding lunned II. gave up live
Harrisonville
202-03x=7-7-l hits and walked nunc Pyles,
WP - Stanley
Stephens and Smith, PPH's pttch1hg
LP- R. Mitchell
relay team, combined to stnke out
Raiden; 9, PPH l
mnc (Pyles had four of these) and
T.J. Thompson h11 two two-run walked m .
home runs and Ryan Spauldmg
The Raiders' hitters were Thnmptumed m a complete-game perfnr- son (2-4 &amp; four RBis). Caleb D-olvtdmance to lead the Ratders. the lone son (1-3 &amp; two RBis). Joey Tabor
Gallla County survtvor 1n the 26- and Josh Wamsley (bnth also 1-3)

Hardware's hillers were Stephens
(3-3). Seth Matheny mid Smtth (both
1-3)
Inning t®lb
K.C. Ratders
204- 102=~ 5-1
P P Hardwaro
I(X)-0 I0=2-5-5
WP- Spauldmg
LP - Pyles
Notes: Between the ~..:onso l.1llon
and champ1onsh1p ~ames, the
KCLLT hoard nl &lt;hreclurs 111.1de
Calvm Mmnis the IW7 Hall ol
-Fame 1nductec. Mmnos. an employee of the Oh1o Valley Electnc Cnmpany, was honored lnr h1S 1play lnr
the Btdwcll P1ratcs m the 1970 and
1971tournamcnts. He led the P~ratcs
to runner-up honors m 1970 .md ,,

thtrd-placc finish 10 1971 In the
197 I consolauon game. he led the
Pnatc!' to VICtory hy lnmllng the
McArthur Merchants In mnc hit~

whole gelling four hils and scveml
RBis . . After Mmnts ' mductwn.
Ph1lltp Armstnmg, whti has sung the
Nattonal Anthem at the tourn.uncnt

Since 1991. reCCIVCd a special award
on behall of Ohw Valley Bank ol
Galhpolls 1n honor ol Bill Gray. who
dtcd curlier thiS year Mr Gray.. m
aSSIStant VIL:C president of corporU\C
conunum~,;attons

at OVB. w.Js m::uw

m youth uthlctn:s m Gi.IIIM County

years. Armstrong. a G.lllm Cou nty
Iom

ed by Jnsh Gulley. D:mtcl Roush :md

cu:vru ANU

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lK
'itt ""'

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oUI 'Q ..tHO

' Casey Taylor, mcmhcr!i ol Boy Scout '

Tr&lt;lop 2(K) ol Galllpohs N~eky ,
Craycr.1ft ol the Kyger Creek ::
.R.a1dcrs rcCCIVCtl a new hut for Jut- •·
tmg the lm~t homer olthc llJY7 tnur· •

Mtni'M!I6Ul ,

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:·,.•

.

,·
,.,.
r
r

RECEPTION COMMmEE- Several of the New Haven Reds come
to the home plate area to congratulate teammate Mich11el Jones (far ...::
left), who cracked a two-run homer off John Stanley in the third _
Inning ot Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League Tournament title game :
against Harrisonville. Though the blast put the Reds ahead 3-2, Har- •
risonville erased that lead and went on to win 7-3. (OVP photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)
;

=

Ullrich becomes first German to capture Tour de France title
"Nobody cun wm the Tour wtthout a slrong learn. We were a (cal
tcum, cvcrytmc sa~.:nficcd h1msclf I&lt;Jr
the others," Ullnch sa1d "That's the
only way such a victnry IS possthle "
Nicola Minall won the nnal stage,
a largely ceremonial ndc of99 nules
that started on Main Street m Dtsncylan4 Pans and ended on the
Champs Elysccs m Pans
The racelin1shcd with 10 circuits
from the Arc de Tnomphe to Place
de Ia Concorde. A streaker leapt onto
the road on the final strmghtaway hut ·
was qutckly removed hy pollee
Mmali won the spnnt ahead &lt;tf
Zabel. Henk Vogcls of Auslraha
was th1rd
Ullrich seemed the only constant
factor in this year's Tour de France.
a race marked by falls, controvcmal
spnnts and injury wllhdrowals.
He was considered among the top
three favorites when the race started
July 5 in Rouen . Ullnch stayed
close while Rus faded m the Pyre-

nee~

W1th h1s ~cmor tcounm.1te out
of L:ontcntmn, Ullrich wa~ .1llowcd tn

golnr the lead. and dtd sn on the second d.ry m the Pyrenees
He

(Cmcntcd th~tt With

.1

~:on -

vmcmg vu.:tory 10 tht.:

tit sltnnc tn-

al , w1nnmg hy more than three minutes He stayed close to V1rcnquc m

the Alps. cwn gmn mg another 40
sc~.:onds

.11 one 'it,lgc

.....
....

••
••
•

...
.~

..•

_ _ _ _.....;;,.._Sports briefs----- •
•
Football
GREEN BAY,.WIS. (AP) - The
Super Bowl champwn Green Bay
Packers lost hallllack Edgar Bcnncll
lur the season when he tnrc h1s lctl

Achilles tendon in 1he1r cxhthnion
opener Saturday n1ght.
'
Golr
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland
(AP)- Gary Player rolled m a 15loot btrdlc pull at the second extra
hole to heat cnmpatnol John Bland
and wm hts th1rd Scnwr Bnt1sh Open
title.
Bland, who led by two strokes
gmng mto the linal round at the par72 Royal Portrush course, finished
wnh a 70 to tic with Player at 10-

under 27M
Austr.rh.l's Noel Ratddfe mtssed
.1 ch,mt:c ul JIHnmg the two South

Alncans 1n the playoll when he
hogeyed the fmal hole for a 69 and
lied lor thrrd w11h England's J1m
Rhodes. who I~red a 6H lor 279.
WHISTLER. Bntish Columhta
(AP) - Greg Norman earned a
Can,1dmn skms record $275,(MX) lor
the two-day cve~t when he matlc an
M-Inot hlfdlc pull on the l~rst extra
hole.
Fred Couples fmtshed second by
w1nning $50.&lt;X)() and Jack Nicklaus
was third wllh $35,000 Nick Faldo
ol England, who had problems 'with
hiS pulling. d1d not win a skin.

•••

:J

:.•

•• ; •

I

••
•

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:•

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••

:•

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••

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NL standings
Ell:dun llh iNion

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Sunday's scores
lou1~

b. I-11W1Ua ..a

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CINCINNATI (~tmlcy 9. 101 m llurt ·
U.a tA Lcuer H·M. 71J;'i p 111
(.111~ 1)111 CuhM Cl'.ifwlli 1-tl l 11 Atl.101.1
fNt··•l!k ll· 2L 7-101'111
,
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(Hull 7·1'11 H (K fl m
Mnntr~nl(l 1 1."rl'1 IJ. fl) at l\lli•r.ti.lu
(Sw,rt 4-11 'i O'i r n1
Pitl~burt:h CI.J~·tli..'f h-I OJ at l11s Ant:~··
k~ tV.tkk~ "i-tJI. 10 O"i pm
rhtl.llklplma lM 1.~-·u~., 'i. JJJ,II ~:m
l&gt;ie~u1Snulh4· 11 IOO'it•m
Tht~!t~bay's ~ames
llttl ~hur)!ll ((\oul.~

IA~I.ICI!16-71

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l 'INl'INNA 11 fM•~rJ!.III 1- Kl 11 llt &gt;r11~ 1
ll1.'n1.arMII.&gt;.;: II · ~ ' 1 O'i/'111
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IMliiWIIIId 1·21 74(]11111
St I utm l(hl'llrlk' 1 · ~1 .11 H1ttulun
(M.e\ til lid~ 'i·fl), M(•'I rIll
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CISI.'II(blt'•'l-41

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AL leaders

tW.II.:dichl-'·121. 1m 11m
LANO tl'lar~ ().~) 7 O'i pm
Oaklan.J tRt.•y'"-s '· 11.11 NY

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l.u~ All}!ck.os 4 Plnl.d!lpllla I
S,m l&gt;ic,n :\ N Y

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Ci.truajlilrT.t ll•"fon, 7'i . (Irati,~ St;o~uk
7-1 I t.lartllk'f S+..'ank• 7.&amp; ( \ 11'1 S..•.atll.:
74 kl+.'r N'"~ 't'nrL.. 7~ . I" "' l 'l,trl. lk ·
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llMIUit• (.'hl'''l!" 71 lluhncr Sl,',altk 71
KIH I M.lrtll\1.'/ Nt'l\ 'r'••rL. 1J7 Ciral k) S..·.tttk t17 I lluiiUil\ l'hl~.tl!•' !\IJ
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Yurk. 1!1 I llkllllil• (111••'.1:'' 121

'''"'h.

UUUIJLES 0 Nelli N~w York H
Jnhn Valc111111 Rn~lnn \1 Cur a Se,mlc
&amp;.all~ 29
Rallln~l.k'f. Tuu

R l&gt;nvu
N C1nl·

21 Srmt:w r,,mrttu 21

M1lw.auk~o.-c

fRIPll:!'i G.lf'~I.IJl.lff,l BllSin ll 9
Jct~r New Yurt b. IJurmll Mllwuut'"'C
b Kn,,hf,auda Mllllh:MII.a 6 IJ!l qud
Clt:VLLANI) 1'1 , Ah~l.".l 1\n,aill:llll.ll 1

Gnndwlll 1 \.'ll.,\~ 't orrum.an

K.an~OL~

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P1t1;;bur~h 10 S.tn I r.mus ~u 1
HuustmtiJ Mumn::ll KIIIli

I I\)

Tocl11y's aama

•,.

14

St L.Jtll l l 1-lnnUu I
CINCINNATI7 All.ml:t 6 (II)

UH Snn

An.l~t:tnl (Spr l n~l."r

n.uncd the tnurn.uncnt 's top dclcnslve player

II

.JIO

l.m AnJ.:h: s 1 PM:tiklphM I
S.an llkp;n "i N Y Met~&gt; \

!kallk.·] N Y Vunkl..'C~ 2
U,tltunnre 9, Mtn,ne~ulaO

pitched .md played shunswp. w."

.&amp;ll

~~

Cnlnr:WI•.J

t'tty ;l rumnlu:!
Mtlwuukl.."'.: J I l&gt;..•lfnll 7
CLI~ \I ELAN I&gt; 4, Oulrii.Uld :!
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St

Sunday's Knres
Do"lllfl 6

.U
.J1

Atluma \ CINCINNATI 2

CLEVELAND tl. O;~U.utd l
·ronmlu 6 ~.~n~.t\ t'1ty "i
&amp;altlc 9, NY Y;,nkl..-cs 1
Dnstl)ll 1 Anat-.;un fl
Mllwuuk« l, lkiRlll I
O.t11unon: 2 Mlllllt:Mll.t I ( 121

·son got honor:-; lor mo'\t h1ts (II') and •
most home runs (live) .Stnkcout
.u.:c honors went to St.mlcy, who talhcd 42 m li\IC g.une" Little Ho~.: k ­
mg's Ben Gum drove live rnll:hcs
over the lcm:c to hct.:onic the wmncr
olthc home 1un "h::1hy. held he lore
the consol,111on game Pyle,, who

.IM'i

Sa1urd11y's Sf..'tlrts

,\ '.

Tue!lduy's Kames

on, was only a month younger than
Ullnch
Ullnch earned $360,000 li&gt;r the
-vi~iory. He and h~ teammates
earned thousands more from stage
Vlctoncs, such as sprinter Erik
Zahc_l's three wtqs.
Ullnch, born in the lormcr East
Germany, was the 1993 world amateur road champion. He moved to
Merdmgen, a small town near the
French border, 1n 1994 after turmng
pro.
Ullnch's fans, mcluding hts
mother Mananne. traveled to Paris
and waved banners and German
nags on 1he Champs Elysecs. The
German national anthem was played
as Ullrich moved up a step on the
podtum from last year.
In 1996, Ullrich was second by a
little more than a mmute to Te)ekom
teammate Bjarne Riis. who finished
seventh this year. ThiS time, Rtis and
the other Tele'kom team rode to protect Ullrich's lead

lor 11, because 1f I stopped the ball
there was no way I could throw anybody out," Vtzquel sa1d. '"Thts year
I'm able to du my thmg ... throwmg
on the run, throwmg in the air."

k1.

.&amp;IJ~

"iH -lK
~ 4Y

S.an l&gt;1cp:u

Saturday's M'orrs

Mason VFW II 1.~&gt;1 week Thump- I·

,

Lns

T cxa~ 4 t1nuj!O What~ Su.1. I

tcanunom:. rccctvcd a new R.awlmgs ...
glove lor pllchmg ~~ no-fiHter .l!!tunsl ~

~~J!"

San ('mfl(l!ii;V

n

Tc:&gt;•tlll

Anahctm

namcnt. He dtd (h" in the lourth ~
mnmg of the toum.uncnl's opcmng '

•
,.•

largest victory marg1n smcc Laurent
Ftgnon won hy 10:32 in 1984.
Ullrich wore the leader's yellow
jersey since the lOth stage of the
ruce, taking over the lead on the second day m the Pyrenees mountains
in the south of France.
On a bnght, sunny Sunday, he
rode mto Pans to limsh the 21-stagc,
2,455-mde race.
"I'll never forget this day my
entire life.'" he said. "A dream from
my youth was fulfilled."
He ended 39th for the day, the
same time as the rest of the pack, but
his work in this grueling three-week
test had been done well before
"Unbelievable," UllrJch said
"I'm overjoyed because I was afraid
of crashing up to lhe last meter."
The 23-year-old German IS the
eighth-youngest winner, younger
than five· time winners Bernard Hinault and Miguellndurain when they
won the first time. The late Jacques
~nquetil, another five-time champ•-

''La.'il year, Jl wasn't worth d1ving

S.:.mll." 19. I

WHtern DM.,..

Wfflkm IHd'lioo

~

By SALVATORE ZANCA
PARIS (AP) - Boris Becker.
Steffi Graf. Michael Schumacher
Now add Jan Ullrich_ '
Ullrich joined the list ofGcnnans
who have made 11 to the top of the1r
sport.
'
Becker and Grafhave won Grand
Slam tournament titles and been
ranked No. I in tennis. Schumacher
won the Formula One title twice in
auto racmg
On Sunday, Ullnch becam~ the
first German 10 win - the Tour de
France, acknowledged as the lop
accomplishment m cychng.
He will soon discover the "UIIrich-mania'" with the massive media
coverage that followed nearly every
move of Becker, Graf and Schu·
mncher. Ullrich is scheduled to be in
Bonn today for a reception.
In only his second Thur de France
-he was second in 1996- Ullnc~
finished 9 minutes, 9 seconds ahead
of Richard Virenque of France. the

replay on the scoreboard as the sellout crowd of 42.885 gave him a
standmg ovation
"He goes to the left, goes to the
nght. makcs·leaping throws." Stairs
mused. "He's everywhere."
The amaZing thmg was, none of
th1s seemed to amaze Vizquel.
"That's what I'm ~ere for,'" he
sa1d. "'I'm m the btg leagues mostly
lor my defense "
Vizquel proved he ,is all the way
back from ofT-season surgery on hts
throwmg shoulder. He admllted he
never would have been able to make
these plays last year

H A Rudf'li!llel.

~

CINCINNATI
Chat:;agn

7

~71

14

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Central DlwNan
'i7 ..IK ~ 1

Cnlt•r~Min

Seaulc

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1

Hnustuu

fl~

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'i:!

fhll.uk.olpln

t:astc-rn Oi\I'ISton
l!: 1.. ea.

n.lllvc and the son ol Rev. ,mJ Mrs
Armstrong or' B1Jwcll, 1s the
Franklin County rc}!mnal nun.t}!CI ol •.
OVB 's Colu mhus oltll:e The pre· •
•
scntallon olthc colors wus conduct-

Gene

•

THE BIGGEST UNIT - In Sunday's Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament champlonahip round, Harrisonville had the biggest unit .
on the field In John Stanley. The 6-foot-1 Stanley struck out 11, hit
one baiter and Issued no walks In a complete-game effort that helped
his club win the title and capped his drive to baing named the dia·
mondfeat's king of etrlkeouta. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

it on the money."
Vizquel rescued Jacome from a
rourth-mnmg jam by snanng
Canscco 's sizzhng grounder on one
knee- like a hockey goalie- startmg a 6-4-3 double play. In the fifth,
he dove to his left to grab a sharp
grounder by Scott Spiezio. then
popped up to throw him out.
"'I've seen him do that a mtlhon
Urnes." Canscco sa1d "You just say
next time. don't hu it anywhere ncar
h.lm."
Ah , but he dtd . In the seventh,
Canscco smoked a hard lmer thut
Vizquel snared while diving to h1 s
right. Then Vizquel ranged up the
mtddlc. scooped up a grounder hy
pinch-htltcr Matt Stairs and did a
360-degree spin before throwing
him out. Vizqucl, huffing apd puffmg from his hermes, watched the

Mmalrcul

Baseba ll
AL standings

and the ~urrounc.hng arc.1 lor m.my

-

. He allowed one run on four hits.
walked one and struck out five as he
improved to 11-11 ciiRer against
Ctnctnnatl. Going into the game, the
Reds ,were the only team with a winning record against Maddux. who
leads the NL m victories.
Maddux struck out Reggie
Sanders and Willie Greene to end llie
SIXth inning, then called it quits after
only 75 pitches - 49 ol them
strikes
··He struck out the two and was
rushmg htmscll like crazy JUSt to get
them out. to get off the field." man-

ager Bobby Cox &gt;Uid.
" That 's the

Wohlers Wohler&gt; got Hal Morri•nn
I've seen

a called th~rd 'lnkc to end the·game

him throw like that smcc I've been
catchmg h1m ," Eddie Perez said. "I

and gel h" 2~1h save 1n 27 chances

lir'\t 11mc

thmk u · ~ hccausc of the hcut ··

Asked what he felt like when he
lch the game, Maddux smd. "Mentally burned, · phy&gt;rcally burned,
mush-bram~d

You cnmc nul ol the
~arne before you lose 11 hccllU"C

that's wh.ll would have happened
They would have gotten mo1c th.m
three run&gt; 1f I'd have stayed 1n "
They only got one more on M1kc
Kelly\ mnth-mnmg drruhle oil Mark

Atlanta ft\on two of three m the
s1ahng weekend sc ncs - Jack
McKeon 's first as the Rrlh rna nag·

cr- and Improved to 7- 1 !hi&gt; sca"'on agamsl C1n~.:mnati
The Reds ha\- ~ dropped s~vcn o!
nmc ovcrull and may have hll ,, '"a)!
rn trade t.dk.., ns well Dmi..' Burh,t (h.
10). one pf the p 111.:h l'l "' thi.') \~
olh.:IL'Li h.H.l to l~.:,avc Sum.l.t ~ '!!·liiiL.:
tn the '\CI:O ilJ

lnOill ~ Wllh , l ' llll h.tL~

!See REDS on

Though back to his old form m
the field, Vizquel is having a sub-par
season at the plate. He's hatting .274
wuh two homers and 30 RBis
'"I haven't been able to hit the ball
that well lately," Vizqucl said. " To
be able to make good plays lor the
team feels good "
F1ttmgly, Vtzquel's only hn '" thiS
game was a liner pasta d1vmg Mark
Bellhom atth1rd m the ctghth
Jacome, acquired on outnghl
waivers from Kansas Cuy on May 8,

Jacome null~1slcd A\

,l,Ul\.' 1 Jnn·

my Haynes. whn was c.rlkd up

from Tnplc·A Edmonton to m.tkc h~&lt;­
tnst h1g: league start th1' yc.tr

Haynes (0- 1) walked '" '" 4 111
allowm~ th i L'~

mnmgs while
and live

1uns

h1ts

··1 like hili 'itull ' A\ m.m.t~L·r A1t

Howe s:utl ol Ha) ncs You kno w
h1 s ,\nn 1s thc1c Hl' still h.1d u' 111 the
game
MarqUt'i Gm,,om .md Tony hr-

mmdcz started

~~

lirs1-i nn1ng r.llly

allowed two runs and lour hils m live

WJih smglcs ~md .tdv.mt..:cd on .t wJitl

innmgs, walkmg one and slnkmg out

p1lch

two.
Jose Mesa struck out four

sacnficc lly. and F\!rmmdct scmcd
on an C1ror hy s hort ~ tor Tony
Batista

tn

three

innmgs ol scoreless relief M1kc
Jackson put the tymg runs on m the
ninth before Paul Asscnmacher got
two out for h1s first save stncc July

7 last season.

J1m Thome m.tdc

1l

1-0 wHh ,,

The lndwn s m.1dc 11 1-0 111 lhe
th11d on .1 sac- ll y by Giles
The A\ st.:oreJ twtt:c tnthc loullh
on Scou Brosius' RBI ,;rounJout .md

Pa~c

6\

Mark McGw1rc·s RBI "n"le
Giles

;Jtkkd

;Ill

111 \ Uf~.llll.l.:

Jun

tv.o-out RBI \!Il l ~ ni l Don
Wcngctt 111 the seve nth
Notes: I he lndJ.Hl;. toJa) pl.1y til~.
llf'il o! l w n d.ty-ntglu t.Jouhkhl'. llk r ~
m.u.Jc necessa ry hy r.unouh llll
pLa ye rs .~l "o have .1g1 cc&lt;.l to plu y ont'
111 Baltimore. hut 11 h.tsn't hccn
sdlct.lulcd yet
ML,,1 ' ' 1- 1 w11h"

\lilth

.1

l I r ERA Ill

il l'&lt;l. ts t

mg nul 30

111

19

' 'II"'

l! ollllC '

~2 1/3~ mmng"
Asscnllhlchcr, who h.KI Olll' s.Jvc l. l!.l
~c.tson. has not .t llnwcJ .t run tll lll
appc.tr.m~.:cs ( 12 1/3 11\ll l llgs. !lw
h1t :-.)
fo 111.11.. ~ 1oom 101 H.ty ncs.
the A"\ pl.tu:J oull1clJcJ D.unon
Ma ~horc on tht: IS d.1y DL M.t"ihmc
lh ~ lot..:&lt;.~tcd l11s lett shoultlc1 .ntcmpt
mg .1 d1vmg L:,tkh 111 the n111th mnmg
S.ttu 1Juy He suflcreJ the ,,tmc.

InJUry last Aug 12

Scoreboard

.....
·=

.•.
•••
..•

FACKl-ER SCORES- Htlrrl~anvllle's Buzz Fackler (wearing whlta
shlf1) slides In front or the tag or New Haven backetop David Smith
to acore In the fifth Inning of Sunllay's Kyger Creek Little League
Toumlrl*ll champlonehlp game. Fackler beat ehortatop Ryan
Mitchell's throw to the plate to ltart Harrl~anvHie's three-run rally.
(OVP phOto by G. Spencer Oeborne)

The g~ounds crews' thermometer
regiStered IS2 degrees on the turf
during the game. and another thermometer showed 109 degrees in the
shade of the Reds dugout. The official game-time temperature was 94.
"'It's not safe," said Atlanta's Jeff
Blauser, who had the plasuc bottom
of his cleats melt during Saturday's
11-inning game. " You've got a
chance to bake what bram cells we
have left."
"If you put your hand on the turf.
you couldn 't leaven. You had to pull
back,'" Maddux satd.

..,.

'·

Harrisonville defeats New Haven 7-3 to capture crown
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
sent Fackler and Call home to put
OVP Staff Writer
Harnsonville ahead 2-1. But New
In the the Kyger Creek Lillie Haven halted further progress by its
League Tournament finals Sunday. opponent when catcher Dav1d Smtih
the Kyger Creek Ratders defeated threw out Stanley at third on an
Point Pleasant Hardware 9-2 in the attempted steal during Nathan
consolation game before Har- Stearns' at-bat. Stearns struck out to
nsonville DK Fackler got past the end the mnong .
New Haven Reds 7-3 in the chamFollowing a 1-2-3 second frame
pionship contest.
for both clubs, New Haven made a
Harrisonville 7, Reds 3
move toward kdltng the deficit when
After·thc lead had changed hands Stanley's hilling 'fYicr Grinstead
three times in the champ1onsh•p with a pitch put Grinstead on tirst.
game, Harrisonville's John Stanley Then Stanley struck out Tony Tulloh
controlled the New Haven hitters to and Roush. Then Jones launched
the tunc of II strikeouts and no Stanley's first pllch beyond the ceowalks en route to leading his club to ter licld fence to put the Reds ahead
Jhc four-run victory.
4-2. Stanley contamcd the damage
In the lirst, the Ro;ds drew first by stnkmg out Ryan Mttchellto end
blood when Jusun Roush, who dou- the Reds' half of the th1rd
,
bled to center. scored on No. 3 hitIn the bottom of the third, Harter/shortstop Michael Jones' double · risonvillc's ptvotal rally began wnh
to nght center. However, Har- Fackler's one-out smgle to left and
risonville stranded Jones at third hiS reachmg second on Roush's
when Stanley got Anthony Mitchell throwing error to Jones. After Call
to ground out to short to end the hned out to th1rd and Dtll walked.
threat.
- • Fackler scored on Stanley's ground
In the Hamsonville first, Buzz singie to center
Fackler singled and Wes Call dou·
Dill, who went to third on Stanbled to put both runners m sconng Icy 's h1t, scored when Jones compositiOn. Alter Doug Dill struck out, milled an error on Stearns' grounder
Stanley's hnc-dnvc single to center Harrisonville led 4-3 at that pomt.

dugout - which Wll!l in the merci·
less sun all afternoon - and baked
on the field while Maddux (IS-3)
!ned to keep from melting down on
the mound.
·
"'It was hot, man," Maddux said.
"It was hard to stay focused because
11 was so hot I know you're supposed to let the other team worry
about the weather and you worry
about beating them, but it was easier said than done.
"' It's one ofthe few times it actually feels like a job."
It was a Job to try to stay cool.

Indians down Athletics 4-2 in ·finale of weekend serie.s
'"I!

..•...

.;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Braves survive 152-degree stadium and be~t Reds 3-2

28,1997

f

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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AN/\ HIIM AN(.J I S

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The Daily Sentinel
has a supply of the
commemorative edition
for Midd).eport's __
~ Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50 and can
be picked up at
The Daily Sentinel
from
8 am· 5 pm
Monday • Friday.

0

.'

' -

THE MEIGS £0UNTY FAIR EDITION
IS £0MING AUGUST 7~ 1997
ADVERTISING DEADLINE .IS JULY 30TH
CALL 992·2155 OR PLACE YOUR AD
IN THIS YEAR'S EDITION •
DONNIE RIF

EXT. 1OS • DAVE

EXT. 104

�Page I • The o.Ay 81: 11h.a

llondlly, July 21, 1117

By The Bend

NFL exhibition season begins

Torn Achilles tendon sidelines Bennett for rest of season
By'nwlaMCILIId ...... '
carried them to their lim Super Bowl in SIIIU!day's morning practice. He ed to he sidelined two to thn:e
underwent an MRI on Sunday and it
If the On:cn Bay Packers hope to title in 29 seasons.
weeks ..
...We've had to take hits alontz the 'disclosed a putial te1r of the anterirepell as Nf1. clwnpions. they ' It
. Miami's calamitous trainins camp
have to do it wilhoul one of their key way," coach Mike ftolmgren said. or cruciate lipment. Treatment and
has produced eight significant
-·we all say. players and coaches. rehabilitation of the injury has
running backs.
injuries. includinc five to receivers.
The Packers suddenly find them- that when something like this hap- already be&amp;WI.
Three Dolphins are out for the
McManus started 14 games, season: rookie receiver Yllil Green.
selves facina the 1997 season with- pens, the-next peison has to step up.··
That would be Le.vens, bigger and ineluding the playoffs, last season
out the services of Edgar Dennen,
the team's top drart pick. and key
who is out· for the rest of the year faster than Bennett but not as good after staning linebacker Bryan
special 1e9ms contributors Kirby
with atom Ax:hilles tendon in his left a blocker. Travis Jervey, the fastest Schwanz was lost for the seiiSon
Dar Dar and Larry lzzo. Staning
man on the roster. will move up to with a tom ACL.
leg.
defensive end Dan ·Stubbs will miss
Meanwhil~,
the
Jaguars at least three weeks with a broken
Bennett, the starter in ajob-shar- · No. 2 with Chris Darkins and Aaron
ing anangement with J:loney Lev- Hayden in competition for the No. 3 announced that coach Tom Coughlin hone in his left leg.
.
• has agreed to a one-year contract
ens, was ·lwrt in Green Bay's 20-0 job.
Tight end Troy Drayton has
The weekend marked the opening extension through lhc 1999 season.
exhibition victory over Miami on
missed two weeks of practice with a ·
" I'm very happy with what Tom sprained ankle but is expected to
of the exhibition season. including a
SIIIW'IIay night.
" I fully expected to go into the first-time game in Ireland in. which Coughlin has done in Jacksonville ...
return today. Receiver James Dye,
season splitting time with Edgar." Pittsburgh defeated Chicago 30-17. owner Wayne Weaver said of Cough- who is unlikely to make the learn,
Levens said. "Then our whole world Denver heat Buffalo 31 -10 and Min- lin. who took the Jaguars tuthc AFC underwent thu!ftb surgery Friday
changed. It's kind of strange. When nesota stopped Seattle 28-26 in oth- championship game in their second and will be sidelined three to four
year of existence. "Rewarding him
I carne 0ff the field and found out . cr action.
weeks.
is the right thing to do...
what happened to Edgar. I had to go
In other tminin~ camp news:
Eqles: Center Steve Everitt went
Dolphins: The injury hex continback in that series and I was kind of
Jacuan: Jaguars linebacker Tom
down with an Injury on his ninth play
in a daze. It hit me hard."
McManus will be out indefinitely ues to hit the Dolphins. This time. with the Eagles. Fortunately for
The Packers expected: to play after injuring his knee in a combined receivers Fred Barnett and Scott . Philadelphia, the mishap wasn't as
Miller underwent arthroscopic knee
another season with their tailback practice with Tampa Bay.
bad as it first seemed.
tandem approach this season after it
McManus injured his right knee surgery Sunday and both are expectEveritt. whil signed a four-year.

$1 I million contract after leavinJthe
Baltimore Ravens u a free asent,
rol.led on tlie ground in pain-as memben of his fonner team and his current team surTOUnded him during
Suurday's scrimmale at Lc;high
Universily. won 23-7 by the Eagles.
'"II was ~·" coad1 Ray Rhodes
said. "That's the last thine you want
is a good player l!Ctting hurt in one
of these. I held my breath.''
By the time Rhodes exhaled.
Everitt wa.• up and being helped off
the r~eld. Preliminary repons showed
a sprained left knee and left ankle.
But the 6-foot-5. 295-pound center
appears to be all right and should not
miss any significant time.
Ralden: Plit:Swilling returned.to
the Raiders· camp Sunday. three days
arter the ddensivc end departed
abruptly and told teammates he was
retiring.
·
The Raider.; also moved to add
depth at the position Sunday. signint!
Greg Townsend. a l'ro Bowl player

'"'

"They've got it' going well, and
it's not only ~oing against their divi Mike Hampton and the Houston sion, 'it's against everybody," E~pos
Astros can stand the heat of July.
manager Felipe Alou said. ''They
. Maybe playing home tzames in have a helluva ballclub. Their
the Astrodome has something to do starters. tbeir relievers, their defense
with it, but on one of the warmest and hitter.;, and they ' ve all been
days of the year throughout the playing together for awhile.
counlry, the Astros remained the
"They •re going to be tough
hotiCstteam in baseball. ·
against their division. They have the
Hampton earned his fifth victory ingredients it takes to win and
this month and Se111 Berry homer.ed they're doing it now."
and tripled as Houston won its ninth
In other games. it was St. Louis
straight Sunday, heating the Mon- 6. Aorida 4; Colollldo 4, Cubs 0; Los
tread Expos 7-2.
Angeles 7, Philadelphia I; San Diego
· Housron moved within one vic- 5, the New York Mets 3; while San
tory of its club-record I Oth straight Francisco and Pittsburgh split a douwin. The Astros have done so three . bleheader, San Francisco taking the
times. most n:ccntly from May 26- opener ~5 in 13 innings before PittsJune 4. 1989.
burgh won the nightcap 10-7.
"I just hope it carries on over into
Cardinals 6, Marlins 4
the.rest of the season." Hampton said
At St. Louis, Delino DeShields
of Houston 's winnintz ways. " I'm homered iwice and got his I.OOOth
just happy to see the team on a roll. career hit for the Cardinals.
We' re building confidence with
Dc)Shields hit a two-run homer in
every game.·To come back the w'ay the third off Kevin Brown (9-8), then
'we did liiSl night makes you believe · connected for a solo shot off Rick
you will never lose. I came out feel- Helling in the seventh.
ing great today...
St. Louis starter Andy Benes (7Hampton (8-7) pitched his fourth 5) pitched 6 2-3 innings of two-run
complete game in six starlli, scatter- ball for his first victory since June
ing eight hits with no walks und six 24.
strikeouts.
MOises Alou hit two homer.; for
"Confodencc has been the biggest Aorida. his second leading ofT the
thing for me.·· Hampton said. " Now ninth. and Charles Johnson homered
when I go out there. I believe that it's 'ofTT.J. Mathews to bring the Marlins
my game and I want to finish it."
within two before Dennis Eckersley
Exposstaner Jim Bullinger (6-10) got iwo outs for his 25th save.
allowed eight hits and seven earned- • Rockies 4, Cubs 0
At Denver, John Thomson
runs over 5 1/3 innings.
"When. you're playing good. it pitched eight shutout innings as Colseems .like everything goes well for . orado completed its first four-game
you, and they're playing real well sweep of Chicago.
right now," Bullinger said.
Thomson (3-6) allowed six hits.
Berry, whose lOth-inning homer struck out a career-high eight and
gallC Houston a 9-8 victory Saturday walked none for his first win since
night, hit his eighth of the sea.,on in June II.
the second, giving him homers in
Quinton McCracken had three
hits and Neifi Perez homered for
consecutive at-bats.
Colorado.'
Jeremi Gonzalez (7-4) struck our
Larry Walker three times. Walker
(Continued from Page 5)
went 0-for-4 and dropped to .386, his
"I've had soreness for uhout the lowest average since the first week
last month-and-a-half," Burbu snid. of the season.
Dod~tn 7, Phlllles l
"Some nighL,, I cnn' t sleep at all.
At
Los
Angeles, Roger Cedeno's
Other nights, it wakes me up ahout
homer
triggered
a live-run sixth
halfway through. I've heen working
inning
and
Tripp
Cronier
also homeon it. trying to get it hetter, hut it ha.'red
as
the
Dodgers
completed
a
n't gotten better.
three-game
sweep
.
."Today. it wa.• won&lt;c than ever.
Tom Candiotti (.7-3) won consecJack wanted to pull me artcr the lin;l
inning. hull said. 'Let me try to gel utive starts for the first time since
it loose.' But it didn't gcti&lt;Ml!O:. He June 21-25, 1995. The right-hander,
came out in the SC&lt;.'ond inning and demot..r;n, the bullpen in spring
said. 'You're done.' My legs were · training~owed one run and seven
hits in 7 1/3 innings.
starting to get numh."
During the game. Phillies generBurbu let\ al\er thmwing only 2K
pitches. Andruw Jones opened lhe al manager Lee ThomiiS said he
second hy reaching on shortstop would not trade pitcher Curt
PokeY Reese's ..:e&lt;md cm1r in two Schilling before Thursday's 'deaddays, and Perez aod Marl&lt; Lemke line.
Rookie Matt Beech (0-6) has lost
sinsled rur a 1-0 lend that marked the
end for Burha.
Perez, ,who has had his hest .;......_ S,orts briefs-games in Cincinnati. douhlcd to
Auto racing
open the l'ourth against Brett Tomko
MADISON. Ill .. (AP)- Elliott
and scored on Lemke's douhlc. After Sadler overcame sweltering heat to
Maddux's sacrifice. Blauser hit a . win the inaugural Gateway 300
sacrifice ny for a 3-0 lend.
Busch Grand National race at GatePerez love; to piny in Cincinnati.
way International Raceway on Satwhere shortstop Davey Concercion
urday.
- his hoyhood idol - wa.• u star.
Perez hit his lirst career homer in
Golf
HILVERSUM, Netherlands (AP)
Cincinnati in 1995. hnd two homers
in a game la.'t season and is 7-for-14
..,... Germany's Sven Struver fired a
5-undcr-par 66, including two
career against the Reds.
Maddux. who threw only 13 balls
eagles, and won the Dutch Open by
three shots over Ru.,scll Claydon.
and 65 strikes over nine irinings of
his last stan, saruggled by compari- .
Gene Tunney took Jack
son in the heat He threw 10 balls in
Dempsey
'• heavyweight tide in 1926 .
the first inning alone and went to a
in
a
steady
rain.
three-ball count on two hatters.
Outfielder Kenny Lofton
. probably wUI be activated during the
Braves' three-game home series
against the Chicago Cubs. Lofton,.
disabled by a strained groin, worked
out with the Braves in Cincinnati . ...
Andruw Jones went 3-for-26 during
a si~-game road trip to Chicago and
Cincinnati. All three hits were
homers .... It was a bad weekend for
the Reds on the trade fronl. Pete
Schourek. another pitcher they're
trying 10 trade, got rocked in the
series opener.

10 of his lirst II major league dccisions.
Padres 5, Mots 3
At San Diego, Ken Caminiti 's
seventh-inning bloop RBI double
scored Quilvio Veras .with the goahead run for the Padres. Tony
Gwynn tied the game with a sacrifice
ny, giving him a career-high 91
RBis.
Veras went 4-for-4 as San Diego
won its 13th in 16 games. while New
York dropped to 3-3 on its 11 -game
road trip.
Will Cunnane (5-2) pitched I 113
hitless innings for the win, a.nd
Trevor Hoffman. got three outs for

his 25th save. Takashi Kashiwada (3. I) took the loss.

Giants 6, Pirates 5 (13)
Pirates 10, Gianb 7
At San Francisco, pinch-runner
Shawn Estes scored from third on
. Marc Wilkins' (6-2) wild pitch in the
bottom of the 13th in the opener.
Brian Johnson opened the inninr
with a double, and Estes took third
on Ri~h Aurilia 's grounder befon:
Bill Mueller walked.
Wilkins' fir.;t pitch 10 Darryl
Hamilton was in the din and skipped
away tram catcher Jason Kendall,
allowing Estes to score easily.
Doug Henry (3-4) pitched one

•

. ' . . . .• . .

•.

...

'

~

.

·

Monday, July 28, 1997

Jo ..

consi1er thai · the child could be
handicapped? I have a 14·year-old

Ann
.
Landers

son who is attracti ve and norma l-

IW7. Lus An,ela Timu
S)'n.d~tlte

and Ctea!un

SyllllicaiC

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
:response to "Concerned in Min' ·nesofa." She had seen a young boy
:hit his mother while shopping. The
·mother was sort-spoken and lenient
:with the child. The writer was upset
:by the boy 's obnoxious behavior and
-blamed the mother for not teaching
him to be more respectful. You
· agreed.
· Did you or that writer stop to

looking. He is. however, developmentall y disaq)ed ·and has the cogn ilive abilities of a 4-year-old. When
we are out in p1ublic and his behavior
is inappropriatp. it is .Painful for me
to endure the disapproving glances
of onlookers,•'r
,
I once had my son wait f!lf me
. room at
outso.de Ihe ~ ~ o·es • changmg
mm·n
!:..
1
A
.
a Swl 1 g r 0 · w0 man W h0
was upset by Hos presence proceeded
to lecture me iobout the "tackiness"
of having a 'tloy that age han ging
around the women's dressing room.
She Sal'd H"'R
c ' 1eenage son would
know better, I finally had had
enough and replied •. " Well, that's

wonderful for you, but my son is
handicapped, so please mind your

everything 1heir child does. The federal and state gove rnments have
own business ." She was e mbar- take n away our pare ntal rights to
rassed. Her face turned red, and she disc ipline our own children. .Eve n
didn 't say another word.
kids who have been raised with the
Please tell your readers that utmost tolerance, love and respect
unless they ·can contribute some- sometimes fail to show those traits.
thing helpfulw a stressful si tuation, A friend of mine has a teenage son
they should Slay out of it. People who has been in trouble with the
need understanding and compassion law. When they were being questhese days, not judgment. __ Rocky tioned by the probation officer, the
p · Ny
son shouted obscenities at his mothomt, ..
er. She tapped him on the arm and
Dear Rocky Point: Your letter is a asked him to watch his language.
sple ndid example of the dangers of The police were called, and the
popping . off before know ing the mother was charged with child
facts. Thanks for the lesson you abuse. Where is the sanlly in Ibis'?
taught mi ll ions of people today.
Keep reading for more:
c h·ocago: r omes
· have ccrlam
· 1y
From Grand Island, Neb.: I'm changed since I taught seventh grade
tired of parents being blamed for in the Chicago public school system

in 1965 . In those days, ira student
hil a teacher, he (or she) was taken lo
lhc principal's oflice, and ·the parents had to come to school before
thai student was all owed back in
class. Today. my daught er i• a
teacher. Recently. a 13-year-old student slapped her. She just stood
there and did noth ing to protect herself for fear of being' arrested. I'm
glad I'm not teaching any more ..

Bay Shore, N.Y. : In loday 's sociely, ch'oldren have no respect for parents, teachers or aduhs in general.
Students in school will tell yo u thai
you are .violating their ri ghts if you
even attempt to reprimand them.
Th.IS happcned lo a rricnd of mine.
He and his wife went to a crack
house where their )).year-old son

, By ED PETE8SON,,
· Social Security '
: IILnagLr, Athens
· It's ihpt time of the month again
and there you are, standing in the
rioin ..~the heat.,. the snow... waiting for
the letter carrier to bring your Social
Security .check.
Or, maybe you want to go on

scoreless inning as the Giants ended hnmcr.
Guillen hit his eighth hmne run in
a season-high three-game losing
the
ninth otT Henry. Tnny Wnmack's
streak.
fourth
hit. Martin's RBI groundnut
In the nightcap, Kevin Young hit
and
Ynun~··
14th hnmc run nff Rich
a pair of two-run homers and the
Rodriguez
capped
the Pirates· ninth.
Pirates withstood three ninth-inning
Francisco
Cordova
(7-6) allowed
home runs to cam a split.
six
runs
and
II
hits.
struck
nut nine
Pittsburgh's Jose Guillen also hit
and
walked
none.
In
the
ninth.
he .• ·
a two-run homer in a six-run ninth
gave
up
'r.ve
st_
r
aight
hits
and
five
'
i1111ing.
The PiriiCs jumped on Giants run• withput recording an out. He
right-hander William VanLanding- ·allowed a twn-run h&lt;nncr to J.T.
ham (4-7) in the first on AI Martin'• Snow. his sctond of the day. and a
RBI single. Martin. who went6-fnr- three-run shot tn Rich Aurilia.
Rich Loiselle !!ave up Rick
12 with two doubles and four RB!s
in the doubleheader, singled to start Wilkins' sixth home run hefnrc !!CI·
the third and scored on Young's 13th tin!! three outs.

vacation, bi.od\lu can't leave until you
take Your soli!! Security check to the
bank.
·What are :¥ou waiting for--why
don't you sign up for direct deposit?
If you have not been swayed by
the convenience of having your benefi ts sent directly to your bank, consider what il ,costs to get a check. II

--no waiting for your r..: heCk to be
costs taxpayer.; 40 cents each lime to the governmenl and taxpayers
delivered or cashed;
someone gets a check. To process and will be $8.4 million a month.
--an-;1 know ledge your ·money is in
mail a Social Security or SuppleFor 20 y,ears, Soc ial Security benmental Sec urity Income lSSI)check eficiaries have known the freedom the bank every month.
costs 42 cents, compared to 2 cents and peace of mind that comes with
Those who have not yet signed up
for direct deposit. If you and the near, .direct deposit. They know with direct won't have to make the decision after
ly 20 milliOn Sociai'Security and SSI deposit the assurance of-- ,
January I , 1999. After then, a new
beneficiaries who still receive checks ·
'-no paper check to be lost or law requires all federal paymenlS be
change lo direc t 'deposi t. the savings s10len;
sem directly to a financial institution.

'

Bar S Brand Franks
12ozpkg 39¢

••

~

I

Total due at.

LGADi~'&amp;oNTH LEASE
First Mo. Pymt•....... l2&amp;1l
Down Pymt...........$1
Ref. sec. Dep ......... l3QQ

ooo

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

,

OR

ce Cream

Ketchup

1/2 g I.

3 Lb

box

99c

69c

Squeeze
28oz.

Limit 4 pi8111B41

Towels

tllillll&amp;fat _ _ _.._

s
CASH BACK

Del Monte

American Cheese

'

$6'1-

PER MONTH
. . ....

This means your benefits will be sent
~ectly to your bank or another
financial institution of your choice.
Co~gress has decided that we should
lake advantage of the savings
involved.
Ask a bank representative abo~t
direct deposit today. You can sign up
in person or by telephone.

Bounty

12 pk
12 oz. can

Total due at

,_,

.

Dairy Lane

LlmH3Piease

6.9 C

roll

Charm in

Products

'

lnce tion"*............ $1599

PER MONTH

Syndicate. 5777 W. Century 'Bivd.. Suite
700. Los Angeles. Calif. 90045

· Deutsch· lase Haus

51 Whole
loaf

s

Send questionsoo Ann Landers, Creators

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

Ends·&amp; Pieces
$ 79

..
•

s

placed agai~ st him. The boy may
have been young, but he certainly
knew his rights.
This is Ann talking. Any juvenile
authorities want to speak up? if
there is another side to this story, 2
would like to hear it.
Gem of the Day : It used to be
"Spare the rod, and spoil the child." .
Tod ay, it's "If you use the rod, you
could land in court."

Prices Good Tuesday, July·29th, ONLY
Fischer Bacon

24 MONTH LEAS!a
First Mo. Pymt• .......126a
Down Pymt.. .....:... S100Q
Ref. sec. Dep .. ....... m§

abuse, and a restraining order was

'

NO RAINCHECKS

n.ARESIDE ~ I.ARIA...

had been livi ng for several days.
They dragged him home. The boy
had his father arrested for child

It .cpsts more than you know to get paper checks

Toilet Tissue

2 ss

Limit 3

please

79c

4pkg.

Valley Bell

Carnation Evaporated

2% Milk

Milk

'
,.

12 oz.

$179

Idaho Potatoes
10#

$

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

us #1

1997RANGER

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

·

~Moth~r wish,es others would think before they judge

Reds...

N-•

The Daily Sentinel

------·------·-~--~-~~----~~l~(~--·----~~--------------------------------------------------·-------------------P-a~ge--7-

fOC" the Raiden in 1991-92 before his
career was sidetracked by weiJht
problems.
Swilling. 32. the NFL Defensive
Player of the Year in 1989 with New
Orleans. returned to camp for Su•
day's practice and will accompMy
the team to Austin. Texas. today for
practices with the .Dallas Cowboys.
Coach Joe Bugel said he had
received a call from Swilling on Saturday. The two met Sunday before
Swilling decided to end his retirement.
Redlldns: Rcdskins defensive
back Brian Walker and defensive
lineman Don Reynolds were liChed·
uled to undergo arthroscopic surgery
on their knees today.
They will miss at leas! tWo weeks,
with a more precise proenosis
expected artcr the ,operations. Two '
other reserves with knee injuries.
fullback Kerry Bennett and l'llteiver
Billy Williams. were to have MRI
exams today.

Astros down Expos 7-2; Pirates and Giants split twinbill
By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ
A. .oclllted Pntu Writer

\.

99

4

Doz
Llmlt3

Grade A Large

Lays

·Eggs

Potato Chips

c

6 oz. bag
Limit 4 please

5

c

298 SECOND
.
. STREET
POMEROY, O.HIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE July 29, 1997 ONLY

I,

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio.

Do you really
want a pet?
By AkiM Wllltl, President
Meigs County
HunlwM Society
You have to wonder about people.
Why do they have them, you ask'
What function do they serve?
1lle question revolves around that
pathetic-looking dog chained to the
leaky dog house in the back yard. or
across the road from the house.
Lying lonely on a pad of packed, bare
din. nexlto a water howl that is usually empty is the dog -- the "family"
dog.
He is seldom touched. largely
ignored, not taken to the vet. He is
never taken for walks, no children
brush his coat,or include him in their
games. His loyalty and devotion and
his keen canine appreciation of the
natural world !O completely unappreciated. When the family huddles
together durin~ a severe thunderstorm. no one gives a thought to his
terror and distress.
·So what is the point') Is the animal
there simply' to be a barking machine
to warn off intruders• If she or he has
any function for the family. that must
he it. What else could it be'
Is it possible the family likes the
sound of the whining, howling dog•
Do they find the sight aesthetically
pleasing'! Is this bedraggled. lonely
animal supposed to instill in children
a sense of responsibility•
These animals are suffering. And
if you think they arc not, cast your
mind back to one you once knew. a

dog like the one I have just described.
At first, he was a companionable,
outgoing, trusting young male shepherd mi~. But over the yelllli--having
been chained practically all his life-he has become either lislless or
hyperactive. Or . perhaps he has
become fearful and is now vicious.
Few people or animals care to
approach ·him.
Like humans. dogs arc "den" ani-.
mals. This dog's pack is the family in
the house just beyond his view.
Thousands of years ago. his ailcestor.;
lived in a small group and slept in a
den with the canine family. Unlike
pandas or tigers. who arc solitary
creatures. and tend to live alone
except at mating time: dogs will seck
others of their kind. They choose to
. live in packs: And we humans arc
their surrogate packs. To fon:c a dog
such as the one ahove to li vc outside
the pack is to deny his two basic
instincts--the need for a den and the
need for a pack. ·
His owners may be aware that the
law requires a ccnain length of chain,
the requisite water and shelter (with
hay or other bedding for cold weather). The owners may even dutifully
:provide these necessities. But the
psychological damage they are
inOicting on this dependent animal
cannot be measuted. One need only
look at this :·backyard" .dog's face to
know he is miserable.
Can't his owners tell. or do they
simply not care·~
·

Deadline for entering
fair exhibits Saturday
Exhibitors are reminded that the
deadline for entries in all depanments
at the Meigs County Fair is Saturday,
Aug .2. 4 p.m.
The secretary's oflicc on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will be open
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on hoth Friday
and Saturday for the convenience of
exhibitors.
No entries will be accepted after
the deadline nor will they he acceptcd by telephone. Entries may be
made in person or by mail.
Exhibitors must be holders of a
season or membership ticket to qualify to display at the fairs which will
be held Au~. l 1-16.
Questions regarding entries or the
. entry deadlines may he directed to
Debbie Watson, secretary. at the la1r
hoard office: 992-6954.
Also on Saturday campe!S may
come to the fair board office to select.
reserved parking places and pay the
$20 fcc. Selected areas have hecn
designated for reserved parking. For
~cncral parking there is no fc~ . The

· reserved parking fcc does not cover
admission into the grounds.
Beginning Saturday. campers may
begin selecting sites. For trailers and
campers the fcc is $60 for the week.
while for tents it is $25.
Membership and season tickets
remain on sale. Membership tickets
which carry voting privileges may be
purchased from any fair board me illber or at the Sugar Run Aour Mill .
Season tickets may be purchased
at Joe's Country Market, Rutland:
Waid · Cross Sons, Racine: Baum
Lumber Co., Chester, Sugar Run
Aour Mill. Pomeroy; Swisher-Lohsc
Phannacy, Pomeroy": Lillie John's
Food Man. Tuppers Plains and Middlepon; Gloeckner's Restaurant,
Pomeroy; Whaley;s Groeery, Darwin; Helen Baer, Syracuse; Dorscl
'Larkins, Long Bouom; Dan's Mid.dlcport; Five Points Express,
Pomeroy: Reed's Country Store,
Reedsville: and McDonald's of
Pomeroy.

wnl-

lonoty
lOOking lof Itt·
tefl and friendship. Wri11 to :

.~ MASON DENTAL CARE
~

Ba, B. Houston, D.D.S.
FAM.ILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822 RL 1, lox 44-C
U ... LIIeumJI,CDPJfA
Flnanclnt through Norwell Flnanclil

Big Bend Fabrication, .
Machine &amp; Welding Shop·
250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivision on Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-na-5861

Outdaor Power E....,_t Assodatlol: CerttiW 2 C~
• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio
(614) 949-2804

Circus
new fair
feature

Public Notice
The Vllloga of Pomeroy Ia
oecoptlng oppllcatlono lor
tho pooltlon of Chief of
Pollee. All lnlorootod
appllcanto ohould oubmlt
tholr r..ume ond 118tement
of quollftcotlono to tho
VIllage Offlctl In Pomeroy.
Salary ohall bo $20,000.
minimum. Appllcanto ohall
bo 1 retldtnl of the Vltltgo
of Pomeroy or ohtll bo
willing to reloCIIo within the
conftn.. of tho Vltlogo
Corporation llmllo within olx
montho of hlo or her
appolntmont 11 Chief. -Tho
applicant ohall bo required
to · .pooo a phyotcol.
oxomlrtlltlon, given by 1
llconood phyolclan,
thawing lhtl he or ohe
meeta the phytlcal
requlremenll neeettary to
perform the dutlet of Chief
of Pollee. Appltcatlona ahall
bo accoplld for an
lndeflnlte period of lime.
(7) 21, 28, (8) 4, 11 4 tc
Public Notice
tN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
BANK ONE, ATHENS, N.A.
PlalntiH
VI

appeora on
oudltor'o lox
dupllc81o for the yoor 1147
In the namo of the State of
Ohio.

Public Notice
altuatt In the County oi
lllclno to wtt:
Situated In Sutton
Townt~lp, Molge County,
Stole of Ohto and botng
Soctlon 31. Town 3 North.
Rtngo 12 Weal of the Ohio
Compony'o Purchooo and
being deocrfbeclll fotlowt:
Btglnnlng of 1 point In
the conterftne of County
R011d 30 (Foroll Run ROIId).
llold point being ·ol lht
Southaeot corner of Smllh't
Porcolt 11 dHerlbecl In tho
Melgt County Dood
Racordo: Volumt 323. Ptgt
3n:
.
Thence North It' 31' 4t'
Eoot 384.72 loot along tho
centerline of otkl County
Rood 30 to 1 point at tht
South- cornor of Blng'a

REFERENCE · DEED:
volume 278, Poge 23, tnd
Volume 312, Ptgt 211, Melga
County IIMd Recordo.
Audltor'o . Parcel No. Oi·
00213.000.
'
Stld real tllato
oppnlood ot Tbrto
Thouoond Sovon Hundred
ond 001100 Doll an
($3,700.001.
Sale of .nld reel Illite to
bo for not 1011 than two·
thlrdo (2131 tho oforeoold
appralood voluo. c..h In
hand on dote of nlo.
Said nte Ia IUbjiCI to
approval by tho common
Pleat Coun, Melgt County,
Ohio.
1.34 111:ra parcel:
Jamet M. Soullby, Shttrlff
Thonco North o· 47' 22"
Melga COUnty, Ohio Wool 11111.311 toot along the
(7) 28, (8) 4, 11 3 tc
Wt~t llno of the oold Bing
porcol ond along tht Woot
Public Notice
II no of 'Amberlllt''l 2.795
acre parcel to on Iron pin 11
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL the Northwaot comer of the
ESTATE
told Amberger 2.795 aero
The s- of Oh"', Molgo
ptrcel, patllng Iron pint at
County, Amertetn Mortgage 36.4 fHI and 363.78 foot for
and lnvollment Compony reltrenco:
.
• VI
Thence South 82' 17' 40"
Danltl A. NeaH, ET AL,
wool 3114.80 fHI to an Iron
No: 86-CV-118
pin: ThOnco South 1'1&amp;' 50"
In purauanct of an order E111 400.63 ftlt to on Iron
of ulo In the abovo entlttod pin found It tho Northtlll
action, I will o1111 for ule It oorner of Smlth't Porcolt
public auction on the front
dHerlbod In the Melgt
IIepa of tha courthouu In and
County
Dood Rocordt:
Molgt County, Ohto, on tho Volume 323,
Ptge 3n:
2nd day of Saptemblr, 1997
Thone•
South
18' 50"
11 10:00 a.m., tho following Eoot 418.12 taet 1'
otong tho
deocrlbtd rool etltlo.

BILL BUCHANNAN, aka
BILL E. BUCHANAN, ET AL
Dofondonlt
Caoe No. 96-CII.024
Ltgot Notice
Shttrlfl't Sate of Rt1l Eotall
At Shorllf of Molgt
County, Ohio, I hereby oHer
ror aale at 10:00 a.m.. on
Frtdey, September 5, 18t7,
A.D., on tho front atop• of
the Melga
County
CourfhouH,
l&gt;omoroy,
Ohio, .1
lo
the following dotcrlbod real

========:;

......,

Tho addrttl of told real
Illite II 51850 Joppa Road,
R11davlllo, Ohio 45772.
Sold reel Illite"It more
hilly dtlcrlbeclod followo:
Situated In tho County of
Melga, In the State of Ohio,
ond In the Townohl{l of
Olive and bounded and
deocrfbecl •• follows:
Bolng tn Soctlon 27 and·
28, Lot 262; being 1.50
aqree, near middle on north

llno north of road at aamo

.,....

20 Yrs. Exp. • tns. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Ealt line of the nld Smith

porcelo to the potnt of·
beginning, containing 7.52
acr11, ntore or ••••·
oxcoptlng oil logol
e11tmont1 ond rlghll of
way, petting on Iron pin It
273.1111 fHI for rlferlfiCO,
Tho abovo datcrlptlon
wae proportd from an
actual aurvey by Roblrl R.
Eaton, Ohio P.S. No. 7033.
May,1992.
Rtforanco IIMd: Volume
332, pago 639; VOlume 330.
Paga 221 and Volume 275.
Poga 235.Porcat 2. Tract 1.
Malga County Deed
RICOrdl.
Tho obove dotcrlbecl rHI
• - • 11 a pert ol the reel
ollato !hot hoo been
aoolgnld Audltor't Porcot
Nu- 111-1l11031.
Tarmo of 11te: Ten
percent (1ll'llol down at the
limo the bid II ICCiplld.
Balance to Ill peld wHIItn
thirty (30) dayo. Any tum
not paid within utd Thirty
(30) daya lhlll Iller I n at tho· rtlo of 10.00% per
annum form the dolo of .

......
Dopotlt to

Meigs
Refrigeration
I
I '

I

1/'D/1 mo.

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN
10 in .. ........ $10.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in . ..... .. .. $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

wolved Ia
oold to tho plantiH, flrtl
mollg~~aa

be

holdtr.

Pormlteo commonly
known oa: 44770 Foret! Run
Rd. Permtnent parco! No:

18-00031.0Q5

J-M. Soullby
ShttriH of.Molgt County
(7) 28, (8) 4, 113 I

Residential Heating
&amp; Cooling
Auto Air Conditioning
Installation and ·
Service
American - Standard;
Janltrol &amp; Heating &amp;
Cooling Equipment
R.S.E.S. Certified •
Arl Certified
Don Smith
37814 Peach Fork Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Phone 614-992·2735

H 14·742·2925

:

of

House • Mobile Homes •

:Micfiael rratrick
'Bissell

on fiis zotfi
'· 'Birtfiday.
Sadly missed by
:Mom, 'Dad, &amp;
Sistm

FREE ·
Local Area Pick Up
Discarded Appllencet
&amp; Many Metals.
6t4-992-4025
Call 8 am-a pm

Privacy Fence5 • Patio
Decks, Driveway~ • Farm &amp;
Heavy Equipmcnl • Remove
unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore the clean
natural look

LAVA WAY

BOYS &amp; GIRLS

RCLOTHING NB • 61
"FAtr: CLOTHING
DAILY!"·

~·

(614) 378-6194
378-6373
853-5280
I

.992-s1n

'

I

hairltd kitten wilh smoke tips to
good home, 614 -SI92-5847 or
614-Qiil2~47,

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Free Kittens. One Male, 2 Femll81, 7 Weeks Old, 614· -441 ·
0135.

Limestone • Gravil
Dirt • Sand

Frae Puppies, 112 Cocker, .112
Beoglo, 01 ....41-o417.
Gerbils 10 give away, 614 -992 -

985-4422 .

3020.

Chester, Ohio

Lono haired kinens. tree to good
home, """ .. ined, 61 4-643-526&amp;

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

742-2925
"W.SawYo•

M....,"

-·-

J&amp;l SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Mala Beagle 3yrs. old wfdog
hau•, OHCt• c;ounlry home. 304-

. 537 BRYAN

112._.,01d, 614-2!8-1274.

5711·a83.
Mala Chihuahua House Bfok9f1, 2

PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
m-2n2
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
•Replacemenl Windows
Garages

llllit Shelllo, 614-742-3168 .
Wlxlfd BrHd Puppiea, Mother is

a labrador Retriever, 5 Males, !1
Females (814)3-4

•1•11•

Two 9 Month Old White German
Shephard Pups, 26 Central Avenue, Gallipolis, In Evenings.

•Storm Doors &amp;
Windows ·
oR0011 Adilitions

Two• Tiger· Gray Kittens, 10
Wefta Old, Been Wormed, To

Caring Home only. 1614)4460317

loll: gray female kitten, 2 ·112
months old, Lasley Sb'eet. Pomerf11 viclrity, 614-992-5990.

·CELLULAR PHONES
POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479 .
SOLID VINYL
.REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
"FA~TORY
DIRE~T
PRI~ES"

Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.
992-4119

·

wv 110234n

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
&lt;Room Addltlono
-NewGaragaa
•EIIctrlcat a Plumbing
•Rooting
-tnlfrlor a Ellerlcir

.PalnUng
Alto Contrer. Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Y.C. YOUNG Ill

·-

992-6216
Pomeroy, Ohio

70

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Dally Rd., Racine

949-2168
311719otirFI'ol

Protector, 1998 Easter longa·
berger Basket Wilh Liner, Protector, 1 Wooden Oinene Set, 814·
44~8778 Sa lore 10 A.M. lAhar 9
!

P.U.

Service

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclrllly
All Yard Sal• Must Be Paid In
Ad11ance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ed 11 to run,
SUnday • Monday edition·
1:00pm Frldar·
Big yard sale- 1/4 mile off SR 7 on
143. Saturd.ay &amp; Sunday, 2627, rain r;ancels.

80

t=)

1·614·992·7022 ·~-

KINGS'

FREE ESTIMATES

3351 Happy Hollow Road

D. Gear31's
Bod31Siaop

Middleport, Ohio 45769
New Homes, Additions,Roofing, Siding, Pole
Bams, Decl&lt;s, Painting
CaH IJs For A FffHJ Estimate

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

• Top • Trim • Removal
• 'Stump Grinding
20 Yrs. Exp. - Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

Free Estimate•

Custom Homes

· Remodeling

Gravel, Umestone,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.
( J i e _.......l).

"Builcl Your Dr•am"
1991J Martin Street :
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• 614·992·3120

.,....

Don Geary, Owner

90

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Sayre Trucking Co.
. 614-742·2138

tmlrrfln

Wanted to Buy

Absolute TOp Donor : All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsots,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 u.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
AYBflue, Gallipolis, 614-446-2842.
Antiques, lurni!ure, glass, china.
coins, loys, lamps, guns , tools,
estates: also appraisals. Osby
Martin; 614-992·7441 .
An11quos. top prices paid, River-

ine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moo re owner, 61·H~9~ 2528.
Clean late Model Car s Or
Tfucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Sm1th Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, Ga llipolis.
J &amp; D'S Auto Parts . Buying salvage vehicles. Sell1ng pan s. 304-

773-5033.
Shephard logging Buyer 01 Staning Timber And land, Pine. Pulpwood, And Saw T1mber, 614-6826402.
Wanted - 1940 Racine yearbook.
caD 614-4 74-3885.

UDLIRII
Limestone &amp; Greval
Septic Systenia
Trailer &amp; 1
House Sites

WILL BAULJIS,CALL.
992·7074

Quality Work at
a Fair Price!
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
· Home Ph.

Rich Pea11on Auclion Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
ser~t~ice .
licensed
auclion
IBfi,Ohio &amp; West Virginia, 304·
773·5785 Of 304~173·5447. ~

E!;IPLOYMEN T
'SERVICES

IXCIVAftDI

MBJ

Auction
and Flea Market

Crawford's Flea Markel, Henderson. WV. Everyday 9-B . Crahs,
antiques• .trading cards, lurnilure,
JOYS. variety. 304-ti7S..S..04.

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

Home l~~~prowenlents

Catl For Products OJ Bus1nest

~bJnity,

1!114 ....41- 1D82.

,.
Edu cation, th e Meigs Local
SCI"ool Distric t is posti ng !he fol ·

lowing vacancy lor its regular
tea ch• ng stall: Tttle 1 Teacher at
Harris onville Elementary School
(Reading valodahOn PI'CiefrOO) .

•

·•

Babysitter Need ed Monday
T hrough Fri day 8:30 to 3:30
(B14136Hl2"
Comp~o~ter Users Needed. Work
own hours. $20k to $50k/yr 1·
800-348- 71B8JI1508.

Experienetd Hair Styli st Wanted,
For Modern New Salon, 6t4-441 1680, 614·256-6336.

Experienced· Mechanic Wi!h ·Molorcycle ATV and PWC Vear
Round WorK. Send Resume: CLA
419, C10 Ga111polis Daily Tribune
825 th nd Ave., GallipoliS, Oh10
45031
Full l1me Office Personal Needed
Wl\h Empha s1s on Collec tions ,
Otlite Dulles and heallt1 Core Envtronmem. Star ung Dale August
25 , 1997 Pl ea se Send Re:suma
and Sala1y ReQuirements to CLA
PO Box 418, CIO Gallipolis Daily
Tribun e, 825 Third Ave_., Gi\llipolls, Oh10 45631. Subm11 Resume
By August 15, 1997.
Housekeeper For Disabled Practicing Columbus Anorney, Uve-ln,
SOme Petaonal Care, Dri~ers licenai Required, Good Wages,
Room &amp; Boan:l, e 14- ~7-5354 .
Housekeeping Position Ava ilable
William Ann Motel , 918 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, Apply In Parson Uonday Through Tuesday, 8 .
A.M. To 11 A.M. No Phone Calla
Please.
Local business haa full lime posj..
lion a~t~ailable, hourly :NBge plus
some rain commlu lons. Muat
be a good people person, basic
computer, typing and phone skillt
needed. Send resume clo: The
Daily Senlinel, P.O. Bo• 429·411 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457e9.
local Non-Profit Agency Seeks A
Part·T1me Executive Oire.ctor.
Wortling Under The Direction Of
An Adv isory Comminee, Accomplishes Work Through A Cadre
Of Volunteers In A Var i&amp;tV' 01
Community Services. The Ideal
Cand idate Will De Ellecti~t~e AI
Leading An EfiO(t To Increase
The Organization's Profile, Communlty Awareness And Funding
level. Interested Individuals
Should Send A Current Resume
To: CLA 41e, clo Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Galli·
~lis, OH 45631 .

·.,
1

Management· Position Avai lable
At Local Retail Store, Please
Send Resume TO: P.O. Box 141,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

McDonald' s Is Now Accepting
Applications, Apply In Person At:
Gallipolis, Rio Grande , &amp; Poinl
Pleasant West Virginia.
Uobile X-Ray Tech, Weekends
Call 1·000·099·9709 In Gallipor.s,
OhioAr.,.
Needed· manager of Hower shop,
musl have expe1ience in all types
ol arrangements, full-time posilion,
send .resume 10, John Wyall,'158 .
&amp;nernut. Pomeroy, Oh.

Now Is the Time To Exchange
Your Hum=Orum Career For The
Erciting One Of Mom ~;Niver.

614-949·3060
John Williams, Owner
Uceriaad Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Fraa Estimates
Provldlpg Quallly
Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emergency

TilE MAPLES

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
614-446-9418
1-800-872-5967139t Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

A Hefbahkt Independent OisttM:Iu·
10r

010 Seeks Team Good Pay, Ex·
cellent Driving Record, 614·256-

sA

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING .·

HtlpWanted

1021.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Pomeroy, Ohio

EJV'I Nice, Exua Larva, Metal 01fite Desk: 1996 Christmas long.:aberg&amp;r Basket With Lid, Liner,

614.·992·3470
CORPORAL ELECTRIC

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
lo VIcinity

WICKS
HAULING

Howa(d L Writesel

1-800-291·5800

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

rh .!'
' '

B•autiful cream colOred, long

Call 614·843·5426

(Payments based on approved crec:ln}

Reedsville
Tom~to Pickers &amp; Packers
$4.15, 20 and under
$4.75, over 20
"
Paying daily during faijr
' '
week. Work until
.· I •
mid-October. .

""'olcl ~....... 304-1112·32:1!.

965-3683.

Air Conditione~ Installed !28"' amonth ~~­
Heot Pumps Installed !38"' a monlh

TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS

0 OFF SELECTED CLOTHING
MIDDLEPORT ON THE "T"

129 MILL ST.

Ro L. HOLlON.
·TRUCKING

LOST: Cooper, nose orange/white
Beagle. Laat seen 7118197 Pl.
Pleuant end or Sandhill Fld,
304-675-7566.

Easy Bank Finandng

247-2851 ; 247-4161

Kids, 8 14-441...()928.

Found- Flatwoods Rd. area, black
&amp; brown W'white pup, BOrder Collit type, 814-985-9829 or 614·

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

ROUSH BROTHERS
FARM
PEOPLE NEEDED TO
PICK TOMATOES

1 Month Old 1f2 Ron We iler, 112

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 ~ars experience.
Free Estimates

113 W. 2ND St

There will b\1 a Veteran's
Stand Down and senior
hea~h screening on July 29
from 9 a .m. to 3 p m. at the
Point Pl.e asant Senior Center,
101 Second Street, Point'
Pleasant. There will also be
informational booths, a flea
market, entertainmenl and
refreshments.
Everyone welcome.

.

60 Lost and Found

Roofing, Plumbing,
Room i\ddltiOI!S,

FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Get 1 FREE After 4 P.M.
2Large Pizzas w/1 ilem $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Pomeroy Location' Only

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
0

Free Eatlmatea

4 klnena, 3 male&amp;, 1 female&gt;, gray,
814· 742-2707. .

992-9057,,.,,

DRIBILS

We c1111 wash onything
Free Estimate

3 White Kin,ns: 11 Weaks old .
(114)-448-5

In The Poor House?
Consider:

Rllidntial &amp;Commerdal

011.

Zenith Floor Model T.V. Needs
Repai', 614·992-5567.

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

(614) 388·9865

3 kltlenl, one cat. 81~882·4180,
32523 Dork Hollow Rd, Pometoy,

LOHG'S
COHSTROCTIOH

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Drywall, SldlnK,
Concnte, Etc.
P. 0. Box 220 Bidwell,
Oh 45614

.

Two white ducks to giveaway,
814·1102-7841.

360° Communications

MANLEY'S

"'" ldcll, 614448-2317.

Worlnna~t~ldp

Will Your Utilities PutYou

AT

Community calendar

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

Giveaway
2 yMr old malo Collie dog, good

Lie. WY 011030
Roofing, Painting
Gutters
Guaranteed
Qualftl'

. CALL OUR OFFI(E AT 992·2155

.

PAGEANT DRESSES

$1,500 REWARD!!

il

HoT PRESSURE CWNIIIG

985-4473

(No Sunday Calls)

BUUEtlft BO~RD. .
·~ column lncll Wltkdays ,·
·.. ~9•, column.lndi 'S.unday

OHIO.VAWY

In loving memory

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
' 614·992-7643

hHou~ •••••• lcro11
·· Wit' AD.llr Sentliel

In Memory

40

•
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
·Remodeling
Stop .&amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

10125/90mn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~
Circus to be featured on Tuesday and Thursday at the Meigs
Cotmty Fair.

CONSTRUCTION

For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
Dally - Weekly Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport
992-5042

• Mowers • Chain Sews • Wtedeatera • Authorized
Dealer lOr:
· ·Briggs &amp; Stratton - MTD- Murray· McCollough •
Echo- Ryobl- Roper - Rally- Hydro Gear
AND DTHERSII
lrlllts &amp; Slrltlw. Maler Strvke Toclotll18

THE SCENE· Local kids will be the performers in the·Kids Day

ROBERT BISSELL

Donnie Bolldon 1252-Ut
S.O.c.F.
P. o. Boll 45111i U.coiYille, Ohio
4!11181.

Lab, To Good Home, Good Wilh

Part• and SenJU:e!l

Harrisonville news

POMEROY •• Meigs County Vet~
crans Service Commission Monday,
7-30 p m at the Veterans Service
Office.' Mulberry Avenue.
POMEROY .. Friends of Meigs
County Libraries will meet Monday,
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library . .

2!1280

RACINE MowER CLINIC

Alfred UMW meets recently

.
.'
MONDAY .
.
CHESTER -- Me1gs County IKES
picnic, family affair, Monday at the
club house. Trap.shoot at 6 p.m.• eat
at 7 P
·rn· Take table scrvtce and covered d1sh.

-

Maaon, WV

Complete Msehlae Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, lndWJtrial Gill
Racllator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday- 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. • 12 noon

110

AVON ! Ali Arus I Shirley
SpotrJ, 304-6 7S- 142V.

005

Kids Day Circus will be a new
feature of the Meigs County Fair.
Aug. 11 -16. and kids. hoth young and
old, arc sure to delight in the "Big
Top" circus acts performed by children who volunteer to join the circus
for a day.
Children, chosen by the ringmaster prior to each show. will get into
. the action as lions, tigers, magicians.
tight rope walkers. lion tamers. circus
strongmen. runny clowns and beautiful dancing ballerinas.
It's been described as a time for
"sparkles and spa~glcs and glitter and
glitz. thrills and chills and oohs and
aahs. magic and wonder and laugh·
ter and love. and linns and
tigcrs .... with little dare devils and
tight rope walkers and dancers and
clowns providing the fun."
Kids Day Circus is unique in its
purpose and approach. according to
ringmaster Jeff Mills. whn says it
takes local youngsters and puts them
in the spotlight doing a variety of circus acts. The performances. just like
in the big traveling shows. will
include spirited . renditions nf hig
hand and ragtime ern musk.
Performances will take place on
Tuesday
and Thursday under spondoor visitatian in the Tuppers Plains
.
sorship
of
Phil Montrosn and the
area. They will he teaching in the
Holnr
Clinic.
Gallipolis.
upcoming "Super Saturday" program. "You Can't Hide from God" on ·
•
Aug. 16. when area families will he
invited to free events with luncheon
provided and the children will take
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Howard
part in a "time machine" program.
attended the Gamble reunion at
In addition they will he handing Pigeon Forge. Tcnn ..last weekend.
outlitcrJturc. condu((ing home Bible
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Windon visitstut.lics for any area rcsidcnl who ed Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs.
would like. holding daily and evening Bob Alkire.
dcvntinnals. and assisting in worship
Mrs. Helen Davison of Centerville
services.
was the weekend guest of Mr. and
A gospc I meeting will he held Mrs. Cecil Blackwood
Aug. 24-27 with Gary Lutes from Mt.
Pleasant. Mich. Lutes and his family
lived and worked in South America
for nearly 20 years.

Charlolle Van Meter led the pro- society decided not to change its
gram "Revolutionary Hope: Ch~rch mcCting time. Rcrort was made on
in Community." when Allred Umted the duster hymn sing at the church.
Mrs. Henderson reported on her
Methodist Women met recently at the
Sunday School class work. Mrs.
church.
·
Featurin)! salt - "You arc tl1c salt Parker gave a missions report from
of the earth.'' and a candle - "You arc New World Outlook. "Love Shines
the light of the world." the program Out in W~st Virginia." concerning 1hc
told about John Wesley. rounder of spiritual and sndal work·at McDow •.
the Methodist Church. and the work ell Mission. Gary. W.Va.
Sarah Caldwell had the prayer calof Gmcc Murray. one of his lay leadendar
and chose Martha De Lc Rosa.
ers.
worker.
in evangelism and chun:h
Martha Elliott. O.ic Mac Follrod.
development
in Washington. D.C. Thelma Henderson. Nellie Parker.
The
society
signed
a birthday.card for
and Grace Murray took the pans of
her.
Mrs.
Caldwell
also read. "Diary
readers. All joine~ in reading the Purof
a
Bible."
which
described its
pose nf the UMW. Wesley emphasized both spiritual pnnc1plcs. pray~r. neglect by most of its family.
During the social hour. Mrs. Henregular Bible reading. study. worship
derson served sandwiches, cheese
and Christian service to all.
Nina Robinson opened the busi- curis. nuts and cherry cake. Mrs.
ness meeting with prayer. Sc;crcta~y Caldwell gave the grace.
The next meeting will be on
Manha Poole and Treasurer Os1e
Au~ust
19 at the church. Mrs. ParkMae Follrod gave their reports. 22
er
will
lead
the program and Mrs.
friendship calls wore reponed. The
Elliot! will be the hoestess.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9
AI JrJOUtJCU.1UJ TS

Sojourners to arrive _in
Meigs -County Aug. 9
A group of retired members of the
Church of Christ called "The
Sojourners" will arrive in Meigs
County on Aug. 9. They will he at the
Hickory Hills Church of Chnst 1n
Tuppers Plains to carry out an evangelistic mission program.
.
Traveling in motor homes wh1ch
will he parked on the church grounds.
the Sojourners consist of six couples.
They will he working with the Hickory Hills congregation for 20 days.
through Aug. 29. They travel
throughout the United State~ promoting Bible study and spreading the
message that people need to return to
God. said David Hannum. pastor.
He said that while the Sojourners
arc here they will he doing door-to-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 28, 1997

110

Help Wanted

Gov't Postal Jobs, Start $12.84 $16.74/Hour, Now Hiring In Ohio
And Other Areas. For lnlo !Application Call Betore Saturday 812,
8t8·506·5354, Ext. 7249.

VICTORY EXPRESS INC.
Numed Amcmg TOP PAY PACK·
AGES Nal'l T1uchload Carriers in
A Survey Of Driver Wages By
SignPosl Inc. •
·
LI.. TED TIME OFFER
Inexperienced Ori~t~ers Earn Up
To $61.50 P1r l)ay Whilo Training. Start Classes Before 8125197
And Earn ·Top Wages. Class _Sizes Are Limited SO DON'T DE·
LAY!
For More lnformatiQn And An
Application Cal! Your Future Eniptoyer TOday II
·

VICTORY EXPRESS INC.
1-100·543-5033

B A.M. · 6 PM. EST M-F
~OE
MIF •
'SigrPosl. Inc. ,
Fall. 19961ssue
Pleasant Valley Hospital cuuently has an opening lor an e11p4Jri·
enced PCINetworh Specialist. A
qua)ified candidate will hli~t~e
high level of technical experience with PC hardware, printef
connectjon and configuration .
and network .usmg lCPIIP protocol. Must have a degree or
equivalent Oxpenence 1n Com·
puler S c i~tnce or related field·.
s ~nd re sume to Pe- r:.sonal at
Plea sant Valley Hospital, 2520
Valley Or., Pl. P l ea~ant , WV
25550. AAIEOE.
Rockspnngs

Acha~ h tation

Center

1s scekmg a lull ttmclpart time RN
for 11 -7 shtl !. Exper ience preferred, bu t will consi der the right
candidate. Excellent benefit pa&lt;:k·
age lor" full time and pan lime employees ., Applv at Rocksprings
Rchabili talion Center, 36759
Rocksprings Road. Pomeroy, Oh.
-115769.
Salas people wanted :.Don Tale
Motors, Inc . 308 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ap.ply in person or call 6U ·992·
6614 or 1-800 -837-1 0S4 lor appointment EO€
Secretarv /Receptionis t. E stab·
11shed Downtown Rea l Estate
Business, Respons ible Person,
Must Have AU Typing, Ollice
Skill$, Adverti s1ng Experience Not
A Mus( But A Plus! Sond Resume
To: P.O. Box 783, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 , All Replies Strictly Conti - .
clemial.
Shephard logging Anyone E1·
perience With Chain Saw, Also
Skidder Operator, 614-ti82·6402.
Tom~catle'a Entertaln~Mnt

Open and growing for future employment positions: ~urity, pizza
makers, tood prep and musicians,
need apply, Tamacelli 's Entertainment. 202 North Se¢ond Ava·
rM.fe, Middleport

Vocalist Wanled For Metal Band,
Must Be 18, Dependable, And
Willmg To Do What It Takes,
614-«8·2659, 614·367-7ti)Q.

�...
Monday, July 28,1897 ·

Pegl10 • The Dally SenUnel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

320 Mobile ltomes

M, Ago Child: Will Do llallylll·

tlng In My Home. Reftrenc11
Avollablt. Non-Smoller, Doydmt
~114--711.

ANY ODO .10111: Ex10tlor

poln~

ing, ahruba &amp; wHCfa trimmtd,

landoctplng, oldtwalko edgad,
laWn Clrt, tiC. Coli lilA 304-8757112.
Ctr~&gt;«~r,

And Rtmodolinq Acldi-

tions, Oeckl, From Framtng To
Firill1 Work, 814-441-0124.
CO&lt;tilitcl Nulling AllioW&gt;t Quality Care At Rtaaonable Ratll,
·81.._17114.
~td c:otporu., ond ramcdellng. lnaldt and oulalde,
decko, vinYl oldlng, add-on iddltlons, cabinet refaclng or newly

rebuilt. · Rete"rericaa~Free Eatl-

Jim 304-e15-1272.
Georgn Portable SawmiH, don't

houl ,..,, logo U&gt; lho nA luot coli
304-875-1 g57.

Houle

cleaning,
carpets
dnnH. Reasonable. Reterenc-

•• on requul. Call after lpm

-

-20U8.

Robyn'o Homo Cleaning: Wttld,,
Bi--ly. Excellont Roloroncool
. Call Mvdmo, 814--44&amp;-2315 If Nc
-t--•go .
S&amp;M Water Hauling StrviCII,
"Whtrt Purity Ia Our Paoolon•
GIYt Uo A Call Toda,: 30•·87$·
5718.
.

Will Do Bobrlllllnd In•• Home,
814-448-Q522.

CoUntry home 20 m1nu111 lrom
Pt. Pleasant off Rt.2 11/acrea
- I n, gordon apot. pond, gorage, barn. 3br. living room,
kitchen, bath, pantry, 3 11a1on
porch, aplral ataircaae, lront l
back porch, walk-in clo..t &amp;
omall otudy, g7~ compltta.
1811,DOO. 304-51e-3t58.
For oalo by ownOf, • bad room
houtt, h ICitl, wllh outbullcf.
lngo, Ole, lmmodlalt pooMollon,
prlce reduced, t 18.500, 8 14·
11112-451• ·
For 1116, 1 bedroom home ln. PDmtrol', IMII 1111 on land contract
814-1112-5858.
HOUM lnd pt'Operty, approa:. 41·
cr... Ideal 1tar1er horne. Beech
St, ~ OH. 304-882-2Di7.

tI u:;;;;c;n.:IOI'~~Siifdle;;;i;;;;ji,
Umlled on11 1 1111

311f, 2balh, f17UI down,
month. Free deliverJ 6 aetup.
Onl
O k
dH
Nl
y II e woo
omal, lro
WV. 304-755-5885.

~

pliances Nrnllhad. IIU"*J room
lacilltiet, dOH 10 tchaol Jn IDWn.
Applications IYIIMabli It: VIUAOI
Green Ap1L 141 or calf 814-•2-

down...,.,.,..

-lrtd,8t..__.50.
·Modern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom aplrt·
manr 1 in Middleport, ate a
equipped kitchens, reference•
and depolltl required. Call e1•
992-7833 aftor 8:DOpnt
2 Btdroomo, 4 112 Milot

• 275/Mo.. 81•·256-IBU, 814·

•n•
-

P,.En.elnHred Steel BldgL Nadonal C~mpany Awarding Daalarlhip In ()pin Marken. High Profil
Or Sale1.

1

StHI building dealership avaUIn opan rnarl&lt;ot. Dealers buy
lieU&gt;, dlroct High P&lt;Dfit potential, ules or construction. (303)
7!11-3200 Elll 71150.

_......

VENDING: Lazy Man'l Drum.
.,._ Hours • BIG ... FM Btoch.
1-«10-120--4353.

_..

HARTS MASONf.RV • Block,
1 ...,. wor1t. ao yoaro tx·
...-.w:.. rHIDMble ra..s. 30~
ill5-311e1 olttr 8:00pm. no job 10

HOMES OF BARBOURSVILLE ·wantl'd: 300 Secluded Acraa In
304-73f-340t.
Ohio With All lolinO&lt;II Righto And.
No Development Potential. Cralo
ITNEONLYI
Lanc;leteld, 60410 Apache,
M-0-W-0-U-TI
Washinglon, Ml 48014. Phone
S4UII Down on ooloct olr9o- · 810-786-USII."
lion. $989 Down on ooloct mulli- ,
sec:dona. 2-3 OJ 4 Bectoom F1'IJd.. 15 or more acres with or without a
ela available.Oakwood Homu
houoa In Gallia or Malgo tounty,
NilrO, WV. 304-755-5ee5.
814-UU2-6737.

RENTALS

410 Houses tor Rent

Mrttl--'olnllln

thll ,..... piper it Utect 10
lito Fodof81 Flli" HoulfrG ACI
o1 111611 which makoo tt lllllglll

...........

llm-01--··
rna1ct ll"ti IUCh peNence,

-lor
Thll

nenpaPif wll no1

k-nglyrttl..,..,
which II I n - olllto
herOI&gt;)'
law.

a . . - ...

lnfoonod tltolllll-ngo
atlvof1ilodlntltls.,. tl'l8lloble on on equal
opporll.nfly basis.

f-lE AL t5fAfE

-t

310 Homes for Sale

,... houM 2 bolll, full
281S Maplt Ave. Pt. Plaaoant
814 ••• 3112110&lt;304-773-51113.

4 I!Hroom Spit l.oYel WitH !WOO
Sq. Ft Including Full Buament
Willi 2 Car Garaga, Gaa Heal, 2
Millo ffllm Gallpollo on BuleYila
P1M, On 1 112 Al:fe Flat Lo~ City
Scltoolt, $128,000 Or Ball Offer,

eu ue t'•.

•1220 Wllllamo Rd. Shade, 15
mlnuln from Alltent or l'oineroy,
on US Rt :13. _.., acroo """"
or ' - 3 bodraomo, 1 both, fomlly
room, barn l out buildings,
tes.ooo. cal e t 4-UIIZ-6345 .....

..

a.e Acr11, 2 wear old •eccional
Sbr, 2 baths, central air, NICEI

Somerlllle _,.,, 304-075-3030
· Of 304-875-3431 .leon Ctotll.

All brick, 3bodroom Ranch, full
besemenl, ~entral air, Camp
Conlor. 30•·875-1371 or 3o•875-1lllll.

-lht'.:r.'

AlHEIIII~~E

COIII'IANY
barl&lt; aoya no, lot
-llortglgt I&amp;)' yooll Lat .
..,, IIIII halp
lho loan you

.
_..... ..
.........................
. . ·.....__
•:c••·····
._
.....,..I
~=
.,

,

c.n-

1 ..... ,.,.,.,.

.,..111.,...,
Ctall ""' ...
lor """
- ·ot
ND
Altewll
Clllllllltty for I ftw
.......140:11114-·-·

eQ17542
Weol
EatI
e K 10 9 4 3
• 7 2
• J 3
• Q 10 g
• Q 7
• 10 a 3
e AK 9 6
• J 10 3
Sottlh

•
e,ooo :

1994 Chevy Corwerlion Van List ~·
F~r
r $31,000 Under

o

, Dealer New 122, 500 ,
59
:

M'
(

.

•

BARNEY

1005 Toyota Tacoma 4wd, exq, rl
cond. 2•.000 mi!aa. Mutt l ilt'.,......'

$11,500. 30H75-32UO or 304· •

GUESS WHAT I MADE

~... :

773-5182.

OUT OF AN OL'
CLOTHES

••
10De Grand Caravan 8 Passeng:..:'
er, 22,000 Miles, V·O, Auto, load-' '
ed, Under Mal'l!factured Warrart.;- !
118,000, 0 .8.0 . 81+ 256-1252,

8f4-2!i6· 1618.

I

350

Warrior.

$3,1100. 304-773-5434.

--

Problomo? Noed Tuned? Call lila
plano 0&lt;. 814-448..0525

JET
AERnTION .loiOTORS
Urifunlshed 2 Bedroom Apert•
Ropolrod, Now &amp; Rebuilt In Sltlck.
ment, 322 Third Avenue, 814- CoR
Ron Ewno, 1-800-537-85&lt;8.
256-1UCI3, front g A.M •.g ~M.

Up11alrs Apartment For Rent $300.00 Month • Mull Pay For
Gao • Phone • Kitchon One
Laroe Bedroom - Living Room
And Both • Excallant Condldon.
No Poto. Oopoolt f!oquirod. Can
Be Sean At 1403 Eaatern Ave·
nue,' Gaftlpollo, Coil 81 4-448·451•

Furnished

Rooms

Uoblla home she avellable bel·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
ttl 316 13117•

MERCf1MIOISE

HOusehold
Goods

1110

77115.

King Size Bed $45; Blllroom

Dress &amp; Shoes:8t4-3811-0ole0.
Ladies Wrangler J•n• like .New,
Size 11 Grut For Tt\8 Fair, 614258-6535 . .

304-57B-29Utl.
Reglttared Champion
Bloodline Bo11r Puppies, TaUt
Docked , Dew Claws Removed,
Vat Checked, Wormed, -Six F~­
nlos: One
8U..Ootti-71B6.

AKC

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Ma•.

.INEIGJ4T o.

AKc

Registered Yorkie puppies,
1 male, 1 lemale, $350ea. 3041195-39211.

Blue POint SilmaN Klltttt~ $50,
Col 81,_...12 Alto&lt; 5 P.M.

L-OSS

New Location
Clvloty'o Poll
20o1Nonh s-nc~-.o

GYM

MkhllpCU, CJtio ,

814-UU2..051 •• all pltiUpPIIoo,
bur ona g11 ona ftw. upirel July
31 .

7-1~

Roglllortd Auatrallan Shephofd
Pupploa $75,814-3811-119811.

THE BORN LOSER

Weimaraner Pups, e Weeks
Sltoto ' Wormod, 1200, 81 +371121.:1, 814-0U2-8712.

~

White male Poodle, $125; whlll
female Poodle, $100: 814-892·

n.t .

....

~

M .too 5Nt&gt; we: .51'&amp;.IN. ~ 1\.

~-r~
ll\1~

~"'-PAAO

Lim£

~u

,.1'10, [ 5ND IT~
('., 51JJtlto\Pi
LOI!6TER.
Dli'IN£1!:.!

Dt~!

FruHs&amp;

Vegetables
Baughman Farm, Canning To·
matoea For Sale $8.00 Buahel,
Alroad, P~kod, Bring V~r Own
Contllf-. 81+258-8535. ,

West

It
29

18
Paaa

4•

Paaa
Pou

North
INT
2NT

East

5+

Pass
Pass

Pan

Pass

Pass ·

Opening lead: • A

45 Hospital

employee
Playing in the South African
47 Slant
National Bridge Championships lhal
50 Contemptlbl.e
51 City in
preceded the Zone 4 Championships
b-+-l---+--!--+...J.,-~ 1
Oklahoma
in Cape Town was someone I hadn't
52 Grows old
seen in some . 12
• Bons
lmr+-+-+-+---1 ·54 A Slooge
Schapiro. He was ping Chris
55 Comparatl'"'
suffix
very, Craig Gowe and Wayne
win the National earns ude.
The top-mled evenl in Britain is
CELEBRITY CIPHER
lhe Gold Cup, which Schapiro has
by Luis J;ampos
won l 0 times. He was also part of
Celebnty Ciphef cryp!ograms are created !rtJm qiJ04iltons by llmol.l! paopkl, pas1 and present
EaUt letler lf'llhe cipher stands lo1 anotl'ler TOOity s ci!J6 D equai!S 1.)
that nation's only victory in the
Bennuda Bowl, in 1955.
' z RCOP PWTDVR HTWPS J T
To show he can still play wilh the
best of them, here is a slam he made,
XC .AJ .
HP
J Rp
T G
H S
UP A J
X Z G P
admiuedly with an assist from hi s
lefl-hand friend (Wesl).
FUTOZEPE
z E Z P _J T H T U U T M . '
Schapiro's raise to six diamonds,
in the teelh of his panner's unenthUBTCBRI
LZXX
BPXJZBA
(LTAJTW
siastic bidding, was op1imis1ic. But he
felt lhey were losing lhe match and
GZJBR.
needed a good result AI lensi thai
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'Tm my own h e ro . "~ Peter Fonda.
~as the excuse he gave me.
Ml could have been .tall but I turned it down."- S idney Lumet.
Declarer ruffed the club-ace lead
and cashed his two top beans. Now
came a low hean towaril the dummy.
!HIT .,,IT C..r~
WORD
Wesl ruffed.in with the diamond 5!'V·.
PUZILII \:)\,!;:a·
UMI
en (error one). Schapiro overruffed in
Eclltecl lty
lhe dummy, ruffed a club bac.k lo
Rearrange let:ers ~ the
hand and led another bean. After rufffour scrambled word s be L-_;;~T
low to form lour simple word5
ing with the diamond queen (error
two), Wesl exited with a spade (error
1hree). If he had led the club king , the
FOTEFS
contract would still have died.
· Gratefully, Schapiro won with ,
dummy's queen, .carefully ruffed a
club back to hand, cashed lhe spade
ace, and ruffed his last heart in the
I
3 .,.:1
dummy. ·East had left the 10-8-3 of
diamonds and South the A-J-9. Leading any card from_ the dummy
r
Granny always told
allowed Schapiro lo score the resl of
6
s
silence
was golden when you
· the 1ricks with a trump coup.
~==~==::, hold it long enough to - · · the ·
Nol bad for an 88-year-old, ch?

I

742-2387.
487 N.H. ltoyblnt. $2800: two 150
gollon Rui&gt;ltornld waiOr trough'~

8

'fears

Old

GOOD USEG- APPLIANCES
W•shefl, dryers. relrlge1ratofl,
range&amp;. Skaggs Appll1ncea, 76
Vlnt Slrat~ Call 614-448·73Q8,
uoo 48U 30UU.

Wa11r aohener for sale, t250,
procicti~ now, 8t,..7o12-2755.

1500• lb. r.1eo or hay, 120·$25.
f$14-742-3088 or G14--742-3l64.

Klnu-llze waterbed, ntw aemi wave manre11, lighted mirror
heldbolld. 1150. 30•·n3·5970

Bloc:k, bric:k. ~ewer
wind·
OWl, lintels, ete. Clau 1 Wiruera, Tobac:co water bed plant•. 304·

lfllr ....
Kl- C.po~ 18.50 Silo On All
Room Size C11pt11, Mollohan
FuniDirt, 814-447- ·
Lovo otat I rocllnor, '''· old.
.... c:ond. ,, 75. 304-773-6103.
Poay'o- a Uead Fum""" ·
~01 Jofloroon ,.,._
Opon g:ao • 5:00 lion-Sat

304-875-SOFA (~
Used FurniiUre Store, 130
Ylllt Piko, Gao /Eioculc Cook
SIOYto, AuiOmedc W.lfttr, Mat·
trlllll, Bodo, Olnattao, Hld•A·

Bed

Televlstona
DilkS, Tppewrltart, Baby Bed'
Gill Shop, 814-44•782. H11. 10:

4.

Couches,

550

Building
Supplies

JH:r.•·

te••l256--860t

Hay &amp; Grain

Standing hay available at
Springdale Farm on Rt 2. 304-

875-4573 belonl108m.

Rio Granda, OH Call 8U·2•5· 895-31154 ..
612t. '
.

swo1 B.ulldlneo Now, Englnotred

I DON'T KNOW ... I .
DON'T SEE IT

oow. Sldot'o Equipment. 304-8757421 .

Mare

c o r ·x

I

j j j

.1::.

1
-iAirTI....JI

1-,......,.,,;:,C...:Rnl7r'TIGi-a

Hutqvarna 1 Green Uachlne
lriiTmlf'l I bf'lllh CUtllfl on IIJI

Whi te

u:. . :;~,. . :E-r.~...:;.
,:l '1....-JI

1

$100 each, 81.·247·1100.

640

Brick-..

Fencing, Basketball Backboard,
81...04&amp;-0028.

I

11153 John Deere 8, runs good,
homamodo 3 pl, 1850 000, 81+

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jad&lt;oon, Ohio, 1-1100-537·115211.

TRANSPORTATION

40x80K12 Wao 115,500 Balonco
te.euo. SOxtDOxte Wao $28,200
Balance $11,g31 , 80xt50x1B 7:10 Autos tor Sale
wao $82,500 Bolenoo I29,IIUO 1· '74 Gfand Pol~ o40D '"'tomalic, oir,
800-5128.
dOOr, now txhouo~ good conlor ogo, 11800 OBO, 814·
560 Pelt tor Sale
11 .

mark

22 Shed

0

10 Ft. Ctldt Troller In Goclll Concitlon, 81+-2514.

JO 17X7 Double Dlok Grain llfiU,
IH 020 Grain llfiU, NH 256 Raka
JD 12" Disk Toylorway 18' FoldNew log ·Splitter 25 Tons On Up Disk JD 1210 •oo Bu. Groin
.Wheals Woodburner Stove, Buggy (81~)11611-5101
large Antique Corn Sheller. 3
Oval Fuel Tanka On St1nd1, Malley Ferguaof) 285 Diesel E•Phono: 814-388-98&lt;10 E'!Oringo.
cellent Condition 110,500
(814)411 2359
Nintando 84 wlgarr. 1175. Sol1)'
Play Sta!lon w/gamo 1175. 30+ Maney Ferauton disc, 2-u·
l:87:,:5-:.1::2:::n.~-----­ plowL 18ft. Hoy wogon. 304-458·
1758.
NP 4540 RDF Cannon copier
t850 OBO. 30•·875-~170 call Mlnna1pollo Molino 870 4cyl
baiWMn 101m &amp; 3pm.
die1el. Iron wheel wheat drill.
304-451-, 858.
Ona Diamond Sti 48 Pto. 13g5;
EmO&lt;alct Ring &amp; Earring I 1275, 630
LIVestOCk
11._.....71,,
lltood Mora Bay 151
Pockard Boll Muldmodla Compu~ IUUO AQHA
Blood Llnoo, Gent1o, Good
or 75MZ Pentium. Compaq 15 Good
Disposition, Broke To Ride, Aaa·
·Inch Color Monl1or, Complell sonable: Clatay 18tit7 Weanling,
,Syotom $850, 614-441155
Coli, Big, Gentle, Good Diaposl·
Full size 1ruck topper t45; neW lion. Good Conftrrretion, Etcellent
Bloocllintl, For More ln~rmalicn,
portable phone, will sail at 112 COI8t4-25H085.
price, $25; 614-i4i-2045. ·
Saga SaDirn gomoo lor .... 814- 2 Wether Go11t ., 1/2 Years Old
Very Tamo, $30 Each, 61H45742·1oe8.
53112.
SUMMER SALE: Control Air
Condilionera: Full 5 YH.r Warrln- ~ lolonll1 Old Brown &amp; While Sialty. "If You Don'l Call Uo Wa Bolli lion Col~ Will Load Wllh Halter,
Lout• Free Ettlmalesl Add~On $400, 814-251-1233.
Hoat Pumpa Only Sllahly H!Qhar. For renl· tmall 9rn &amp; patture,
Call Us Today. 1I'D7 ls·lhe suilllil lor horl8s, 814·742-3 132
Twtnt, SOYanth Year In Tho or B1H811...o8 IYtningL
Haadng &amp; Cooling Bullnoool 8t4..a-63Qe. 1-800-2J1.00US.
Palomino Gelding 10 Years Old.

10 Snow ve hicles
12 Germ ·

24 Dole's at.
25 How was - know?
26 Pol ka 28 Insecticide
30 S hip-shaped
clock
32 Atty.'s dag.
33 - lingua
(airline)
34 A Gershwin
36 Beast
38 Of the cheek
39 Airline info
41 Jane Fonda
movie
42 Muslim 's
faith
43 OuldOof
. area

h-1

1Wo lltdtoom aportmtnlln Mid·
dloport, no- 814-UU2·5858.

13 Sections

18 Openi ngs
21 Pronunciation

By Phillip Alder

610 Flflll Equlptnent
Grubb's Piano- tuning I repairs.

12 wds.)
9 Vam pire

First national title
in over 30 years

~~~~------~~-- /·
1996 Yahama

Sottlh

It

PON~TAIL!!

HANGER,
PAW!!

I

'

l DON'T WEAR A.
DADBURN

FARr.l SUPPLIE S
&amp; liVE STOC K

1g79 14K70 Schult Willi' EKpondO
Kine• Motel Low11t Rates In
Living Room And A 1gee 12••2
Town, Newly Romodalod, HBO,
Add-A-Room Four Bedrooms, 1
Clntmax, Showtlmo &amp; Dlono,.
tl2 881111, Fani~ Room. New FurWtaltly Ralfl, Of Monlltly RotH,
..... HHt Pump, And Carpodng.
COnstruction Workers Welcome
Call8 ••·245-5565.
A\'tlllablt ooon. Clean
81.__22. 81+1&amp;1·6167.
new appliances. baMment
For Sate By Owner: 1879 14r70 efances. t&gt;eposit No pets. 304· SIHplng rooms with c:ooklno.
. TraiSSr By OWner: 2 Bedrooms. 1 &amp;75-5 1112.
,\too lrlllff apace on '''"'· All
Bath, Central Air Conditioning ;..:.;:~,;=.-------1 ho9k-upo. Call attar 2:00 p.m.,
And New Plumbing In Bathroom. Clean 3br houM In Henderson. 304-773-5051, MalOn WV.
t.aehogany Walls And Calling•.
Good Condilion, S9.0DO, 814-11118· 1300/rno. • dopoolt I rtlortfiCIL - . . -~ lor Rent
=304:..:.;:8::.7:.5-.:;19::72.=-------l- _ . . .
32UO; Or81+6118-8!i00.
E.recutive Home For llul, 2.000 Hurricane, Main St. t,0001q. ft.
1986 Knox 14x70 2br, 2 b8th Sq. Ft. Noar Golf Cour11 18501 Ofllct Spaco •••llablt for '""'
$10,500. 304·982·3827 or leave Mo., Available Immediately, lt4- $4751nD. 304-&amp;e2..se.to.
mnsagt.

~-.::..:2115
=7:.:·:..·-~-----1

Steven1on
35011Mt'Vet'
36 Stag feature
37 ·1ncHa

I

........

450

1ggo Clayllln Norlltriclga 14170, 2 Frazlef's BonomiMIIIDn IrA 3br
9edro6ms, 2 Baths, Fireplace,
houoo, polntod &amp; - carpat. frw
CA, Furnished, 2 Porches, Out· Witei
l sewsge. 8405. 304· 502·
building, Portoct Slatter Homo· FOf
A'!bung Couple, 8t+5Q3..;162t.
Houae In Pomeroy lor salt ar
1994 1&lt;x70 Oakwcod 3br, 2ba, rent, 814-UU2-30110.
$18,000 080. 304-675-4381.
Older cduple movint~~ out of th1
New-1987 14 Wide-1 bath, $60~ Five A:Hntl ar• and would lka 110
down, $139/mo, with approved ren~ lhlir newly _remodeled, air
aeclt c81 1-800-691-6777. ·
comfitioned, two bedroom home
1"97 14JC70 2 or 3 Bedroom, for t375 mooth, lnrereated ptf·
•
sana may call 814·1112-2001 . Ab$g9s down, $tG51mo. Onl, at oolutllynolndoofpoiL
Oakwood Hornet, Nillo, WV. 304- =:=:..:.:::..:.;:=~:;::____
755-5885.
Thraa bedroom brld&lt; ranch style
home, LR, DR, flreplec:e, two
1997 1 4x80 3 or 4 Bedroom, bathl, gerage, on one acre on
$1 ,35g down, S2291nl0, Frat ·air, Fl8/tk Rd., cal 814-UUZ.ffll.l." ·
tklrting, &amp; delivery. Onlwo at oakwood Homes Ni'tro, WV. 304· 755- Three bedroom hOUII, 112 Valt
5885.
Slr•t, Pomeroy, Ohio, l2751ma.,
$100 dopo~~ no lnoldo poll, rtf·
1907 doublewide S 1•45 down , erencea ri(Jlired, 814-GD2..fJ558.
1229/mo. Free delivery &amp; setup.
1-800-891·8777.
420 MObile Homes
4 Bedrooms, 2 Balflt, S500 Down,
tor Rent
1221&gt;'Mo.. 304 •738· 7295 ·
·2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homoo
FACTORY DIRECT.
olardng at 1280-$300, - . • ·
NO MIDDlE MAN.
llr and tralft lncluclad, 814-11112·
SAVE-.
2187.
Oakwood Hom•• Is lhe only 1 : : = - - - - - - - dealer In the tri·ll11e area that
builds and ••II• their own
homes. FOr factory direct prJcea. IL&lt;oca•od
ohop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl· ;::::,::::,:;.._ _ _ _ __
TRO, WV. 304-755-5886. . .

•tateamao

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Day 304·875· 188SI after 7pm.

580

1 Boaters and
fedoras
2 Exclude
3 As you 4 Andea animal
5 Comedian
C8t0tr
5 Enemy
1 Yes - 8 In any wsy

24 Young goal
27 Otmoaned
28 Righi away
(2 wdo.)
31 tonntf

...

1894 ' Jeep Cherokee, 43 ,00a.
mllaa, 70,000 milt warranty, new :
tires, loi.cted, 117,000, 114-742;-,

ty

a1

9AK652
tAJ9542

81.-446-0028.

1800,

23 - Yoga1

eA8

1194 Dodge Grand Caravan ,
Leather Inter ior, Fully Loeded, ,.
Captain Chairs, 68,000 Milea.

William• Farm, sy;aCUII, Ohio,

ForAppoitlt•~

llntbllooordlocrimlnallon
... 1000, color, rollglon,
Ollgln, or ony - 1 0

18U Dodgo Arlll K-Car UOO
Bttow Average Mllfl, ono own"· Excellam Running Condldon,
7 -8 Wotk Old Oolmetlon Pup- CaM Afi• 4:00 P.M. Phone: 814 "
plot, 1!50 Each, Call Tom lolltcltoll - 2817.
cAI:,:8:,:1:,4-:,388.eu22::;=~~~-~~-l tU. Mercury Topaz, automatic.
-11 Week Old Reg istered Hlme- PS,4-848PB, natdo work, 1500 llrm,
1000 ·
layan Kllltno, I tOO, 814-245- 11
:530;::2.:..,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 IQU Montt Carlo SS copy,
A Groom Shop -Pet Groomlno. 11500. 8 1....,.2181.
Featuring Hydro Both. Don 1UU Noan 200-SX, Good 4 c,.
Shaoto. 373 GeDfgoo Crook Rd. llndor, 8 Plug Engine, 5 Spatd
014-448-a231.
trana., With AM FM Ceuette,
AKG champion aqaton terrier Dr~bll, Hit in Rear •250 Cash
IIUP&gt;. lltraa- 81Hgz.232Q.
(8")388-f181 AniJimt.
AKC Min Pin Pupplll, 8 Wotkl 1UU Torota Su1)&lt;11 bodY fair, onOld, Red Maiea, 1lt . Shots, glne bed. tODO. Turbo charged
Wor--' 1250, 81 4-258-IUU2.
lour cylndlf angina out 91 a tUM
.. ...,
Font Thundorblrd. t.OO."3Q.&lt;-8g5AKC Mini Dachshund Puppies 3671.
81+367-7705.
1085 Olds Calais, $200, 814-7,2·
21120.
.
AKC Reo Golden Relriever pupplea, ewkt old, tlrsl shots &amp;
wormed , ·r11dy to go. S250ea.

0'1-21·17

+KI

18113 Dodge Caravan 3. Lite~·
05,000 Milas, Air, Callette, E•· ' •:
celhmt Condition, ta,aoo. 114- '1:
44tJ.aa54.
•

814·8G2·3U85 dayo or 814-g92·

Estate
Wanted

304-882-31197 avaningl.

___...,_

EEK&amp;MEEK

Real

1888 Statesman with 3 add on
rooms, sha on 50r100 tor, new
gas furnace, · hot water heellr and
roof. Trailer &amp; lot $12,000 firm.

to~.,.,

N
• Q J e5
• 4

SwHt corn ond - ' · lOam-?

$7,1100 81Ch
remote. beautiful land; Yaigt
County, Scipio Townollli&gt; SR 892
Iilii oW SR 10). Clwnof lnanclng.
Oall for good rriap, 1·814·593·
1515.

Pr olelalonal
Services

.

. -11Mrww,2bodroom,

:51.,::.::-=.::"="''"'::'~wv.:.:._
· __...,.: CaMing Tomotou $4 Por lluohol
One bedroom apartment In Pt U-Pick, &amp;ing Own 'COntainer, 814·
Ploooant. Furnlohld. ver, clean 2• 7-2142·
&amp; rice. No ptll. 30+875-1388.
Compl118 King Size Walerbed;
Lo•naa~ 614·379·2720 AFTER
SP.M.

3011-1511-4135, E11t6200.

--21&lt;15.

Are you buying new turn lture?
Soli rcur used lurNture 1111ho Pomoroy. Thrill Shop, There io a roo1
OMcl lor c-ouches, brnkla11 and
dining room sets. We also buw
baby beds. ttrollers./laypent,
toddlar c:ar seats an walkers .
Call 814-1192·3725 Tueeday lhru
Saturdlly, 108m-•pm 11 220 East
Main Suao~ f'llmoror.

wa"'

IE YOUR OWN BOSS Local

Vend All For Sale Big Cash
Wldy Col Todoy 1!00-350-8383.

U¥1ntlton'l baaement water. prooflrig, all baHrnenr repatrs
dona, frH 11t1mate1, lifetime
.,.,.n.... 1Qrra on job experl·

-2824.

carpeted, appllenc:ll furnished, Boots By Red*lng, Chippewa,
plenty of clollt space, central Rocky, Tony lama. Guaranteed
- · · ..... 1
poltl, 1aun- Lowtst Prlct1 At Shoo Calo, Gal·
dromat &amp; playground on sight, lipolis.
CIOH 10 IChoola &amp; SIOIII. Man..;flng ipOitl cardll
ager l malntanance on sight. 1 will buy !lny Elite• or new DiaCan 90•-182-9718 Mon-Fri1D·2 mond Kings. 11 rou hove cordi to
or ltw appointment. Equal Houa- sell, lei me luiow. Call 814-G4ilno Opporcunhy. Whtel chair ac(:elaltMa. localld eth &amp; Geor'ge 3098 ·

,. oftlrirv.

W\1-021 Zlll

1gge World Book Enc,clopodlo
Set-21 volume, plus rafarenca
~de, nevet u•ed. -1500. 304·

OLD ASH Vli.AGE
FORMERLY LAIJREI.ANO APTS
Undof "'""'manaoamont ·Manao- Boanle- 1110 SoiiCI!on. 814.. -Van M-. -ly ron- Wl-92119.

.OHIO
CO.
recommend• lhll )lou do IH.IaF
·noaa wllll pooplt you knOw, and
NOT 10 aond """"'' lllrouoh lila
mail until you l'll.va lnveatfgated

-or 10 BIG.

••so:

-N.

Gallpollo, w...... s-. Refrlglf'IIOt Furnlahed, No Pets,

230

520

w.•

FI~JMICIAL

Construc~on

304-8 75-7154.

3711 . EQH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Hind guno for 1111 lhlt wttk
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON onlr, call 814·UU2·.,41 10 mako
ESTATES, 52 W01twood Drhro &amp;ppointmont: Rolli 38 otalnlou,
=-=~------,-. 1 !tom $280 to $:134.
10 ohop
Rooll 38 bluo, f9U.50: BoNew lank Rapo"el On~llalt.· 1 m!NIII. Call .l,4-o&amp;41-2511S. r•ua D mm, 180; Astra 32 au- 22 25
IUIOmtl·
owner financing lVI II1 · 304- .,;;;~~~~~()ppDrllrity.~~~~-IIOmt~
lc, 1110;t85:
Auoer
automatic,
1
71
1'SS- i •
Furniahld 1 beclroom, upper lev- •t35; Auger "KII22 eutomatlc,
Poltltlnt Rd. Glenwood. 15 al, dopoolt 1 rolormo roqulrocl t115: Rugor lingle oix.22, 1158:
lollloo from Milton oKit. John'• 30•·875-21•4 or 30•·875·3853 lftgh - d 22 "-"m, $125;
Crook Rd. Aohton Rd. Oulot allor 5:oopm.
R - Supor IIIICkhawk I&amp; magcounu, ll•lng. 1U811 2br, contrll Furnl·~ 2 ~ •po-• nu m. 7$112" blrrt( 11UU; 22 ~. 1, ~~ ..,•• on , ICrt or ·--M- _ _ .. " '··-·· 1~. SO: lolltchtU 44 ncm.
~
AcfOII From Pafk, AC, Nc Polo, il!ii. Prieto do not lncluda
Ownor will help wllll down PlY· Roloroncao, Otpooi~ $315/Mo., ·BIL
3 Bodroom Houot 2 Cor Ga~ago. mont 128,500. 30-0-582-5840 or 814 418 B2'!5 81H48-0577.
Roof, Corpot, Ground 304-576-2718.
Antlqllft
Pool 10x10 Outbuilding, 1 1/2 Palaollna Rd. Glenwood. t5 Furnllhtd 3 Roomo I Both, No 530
lots. Excellent Condition, ll· Mil f
lol'l
J h • C eok Pa•, R t - And Otpolll Re- Bu, Of ooll. Rlvorlnt Antiquo ..
Grandt Boulevard l GrHn Rd~~.'~t~n. ~~~·ou~ei :ou1ntry qulrwd,l1~1511.'·
1124 E. Main Straat, on At 12~.
Set-, 81 ........7307.
living. 1989 llbr. 2 bolll, cantral Furnlahod EHicloncy $tG5IMo., Pomoroy. Houro : loi.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 4:00p.m., Sundey 1:00 10
Uidcleport- 3 units, new wlndown air, city water on 1 acre af land.
1111181 p ald • Sha18 B1th • 1 o7 ·8:00p.m.
81,·812·2520, Ru11
and carpel, painted, clean, $29.500. Owner will help with Ut
SICond Avt..,t, Galllpollo, 814- - .
$54,~. ti4-Q..IU50.
down pawoment. 304·582·5840 or •u~
·
8 384~·~~~~ftor!!!_7~~~!M~-:_____
-57B-27ti.
. 540 Miscellaneous
_ , rornodoltd lllrot -oom,
1
W11twood Homo Show, Inc. Graclouo flYing. and bodroOfll
Merchandise
ono and tl2 r.111 homo In Middle- Chodt
thlo outl Umlttd dmt oil- aportmtn• It Vlllagt ---·-,port, 814-UU2-:M115aflor 5pn.
or. No
If qual- RiYt&lt;lldo Aportmtnto '"- ···-"• "Panox• Lift Choir 1160 And
Walker With Roller• t20, 814·
Palomino Moko Sixty lnchao buyers. Double wldes as low •• POfl From $231-t~ ·
Gatld, Excellent Troll Hone, 8 $241 ·per month. single widet as l92·50eA. Equal Hauling Oppat- 742-2323,
V...ra Old, Contact: Barbera Ste- low as 1141 per month. Call lor tun••
lrto approyal. 1·800·251 -5070.
Mlddltpofl· .,. 1 bedroom,.,. 3 1gge John llur GT275, Riding
_ , 814-7~2852.
~-•
· •••pot and Lawn Mowar, 17HP. 48 Inch CUI
330 Farms tor Sale
;-,:; ;;::::..;i c~apo 111 8t4-24S.522U

Will Oa House Cleaning. Refer·
IRCII Available, $5.00 Hour,
oo,dmo Qrjy, 814-258-1473.

Potential.

'white electJic range, JOta-~ue
print, sota I lova..et tbrown.)

2bdrm. apto., total -trlc, ap-

1UU7 , 41 70 """ bodroorn,
lncludoo 8 monfto FREE lot ,.,l
Only ' 111 ·88 por month wllll
' 1050 down. Coli 1· BOD·I37"

1188 lsuzu Trooper II 4JI4 , a ir.~ :
cru111, 51Pfed, 121,000 mUas, ,..
good condition, $3905, 81 4·002·
0053.
, ••

-

•""'

.

................................ '' ·.

Answer to Prevtous Puzz.te

40 Bikini port
41 Gym IH I
1 Crlft loudly
44 Counlfv ·
I Young hofNI 40 Futuro lL.BI.'
11 AvlotOf Etrhart
exam
.13 Olan 1_.,
118 Eocapo Cal.)
14 Hooted
49 Pert or the eye
dltcourM
53 Llll syllable of
15 Give another
a word
Ulleto
55 Vanlllallng
16 Goblet pa rt
57 Garme nt maka•
17 Flah oggo
58 Actor Nielsen
19 Having an
59 Overact
offenslve odor 60 Marsh growths
20 Unconcerned,
olhlcally
DOWN

ACROSS

l-IAS AN'r'ONE TURNEO
A OIEE5E8UR6ER "?

I'LL RUN 8ACI&lt; TO TI-lE
PRO 5140P. AND ASK TI-IEM ..

-.

IN

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

8 ~~~~~MBLE FORI

··~ 0-··
Wm'U be (looting on a c/aud with
the buys yt,u·n (Wid In the

classifM.

IMONDAY
Seizocl And Sold
Locally Thlo lolontt.

Trudls, 4x4's, Etc.·

1-800-522-2730, X31101.

790 . Campers 1c
Motor Homes ·
1979 Layton Filth Wheel With ·Hitch 26 Fl. Good Condition '

$3.700 6t4-367-Q632.

UpiOn Used Cars At 62-3 Miles
South ol leon, WV. Financing
Available. 304-458-1069.

720 . Trucks for Sale

SERVICES

810

Home

Improvements

11i188 GMC one ton wrecker.
$2500 080. 61+992-7553.

1080 Chevy Full Size Pick-Up
Truck, 79,000 Milas, V·8, Auto,
Very Nice, 614·2-45-5G87.
1986 S-1 0 Pick-Up, 4 Cylinder, 4
Speed, Run s Good, SSOO, Call

614-992-2191
HJ89 Ford E3SD 7.3 Diesel, AC,
Auto 1z Van Body $5,000 080.:
1991 Ford E~50 5.8 Gao , AC,
Auto 1Z Van Body $5,500 OBO.;
11183 Dodge D350 Cumi ns, le
Package. 'Club Cab, Auto, Air,
Raeae Hitch, Gooseneck Hitch,
lmmacu'late Condition; 1990 ford
F2:50 7.3 Diesel, Auto, 51 ,000
Miles, Work Truck, No Air or Ra dio,
Exc&amp;llenl
Condition

18,.)11611--'3101

"

..-

Appliance Par: s And Service : All
Name Brands OVer 25 Vears Ex· patience All Work Guaranteed, ' ·
French City Maytag, 814 · 44.6· 1
7795.
General Home Mlilin- tu tu.
tenence- Painting, vinyl siding, ,· fl.l
carpentry, doors, windows. baths, ..J •

C&amp;C

mobile home repair and more. For ... ...
free estimate call Chet, 814·i~2- .:~:-1
6J23.
"' !~~~
R&amp;F Masonry 30 Yea rs E.-peri- ·
ance, Brick &amp; Block Work, Ba11- ,,., ~
manto,Etc.l1+4-7t .
·
I I IIII/"

Save Hundreds On Ratldtnllal • · ~
Deddng !Sid- IIIIW•

Work Guar-

1 1'""
~

I I O'l

Electrical and

11711 Buick Elocllli, Good Wo•k
Refrigeration
-'KC Rog Blood Hound Pupploo, c., .._ Millo; 1887 Uncoln 302
8wklotd. 304-882-3813.
' loll Milo. Ill Ul 11377
,Ra,...,lldan,.....,da""l_o_r..;com;_--.,..,-.,.,ina.""""
custom van.
raised roof, 4 cap- new 11rv1ce or
Ma•U ~
lulllloodoll Lulll oollt :1::17U:.;.::C::htvy:.:;~M.:o=llb:.;u=
. 2::.d;..r,-3-50_o_n· 1
, bed/couch, cooler, censed electr.iclan. Rld1nour
male, one lemlle; alao glne, load~. auto, ••c. cond. rear air, TV, CB, sky lights. Will
Electrlc:al1 WVOOD308, 304·075old oablo and white 1o1,1100. 304-871&gt;7878.
trado lor land. 30+e75-3383.
17118.
-h: 814-742·1018.

..n

.....
'""'"

••• n o
~,

.•..,

"'' ' ~lt

;;;H

I

I

~!~~-~~::!=~.===~='- somclhing
ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
·
·
'
1 29 1997
.
Tuesday, Ju yhead· ou rna have
In lhe year~- thy
·~e had
. more: opportunmes an you aterial
. prevtously to mc~ase your!"
wonh Do nol hesitate 10 ask. or com·
·. h ·
·1h ourtal
pensauon I ailS on par WI Y
•
en~EO(J 11I 23.Au 2i)Donotbe
Y,
g. .
he f
a l.oner today .and depnve 01 rs 0

y~u~ ~c·o":fa"'~~s~- Invol~~~::~

wu nen s wt c . er up an
en rour day conSiderably~ w:ll.
Trytng to patch up ah ,_;ot ~
romance? The AslrO-Grap d a ~t
m~er can ~lp iweou r~rs;.n ':rk
lo _o lo rna e I re au on 1 ~: thi~
2 75
Matl $ · ~cf~ch~~;~· Murray
~~~~~~~. Ne'w ;~rk.
t!ll 56.

N'l

competitive d~velops
1oday where your career IS con.ccmcd. Lady Luck will do all she can
10 push you up front. Do not be mllm·
idated.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 2~- ~ct. 23)
Ad:n0wlcdge any crca11~e tdcas lh~l
come In you loday. Even tf lhcy can 1
be used im':"edialcly. pui them on
paper .for l uiurc reference . They
could be winners.
~tRPIO (Oct. 24:Nov. 22) A
rs n wilh whom you have cmoIt
I lies might prove lobe a beneficial channel for yo11 toda~ lo help
bring something desimble tnlo your
.
.
hfe.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21)Thingscouldworkoutnuherwell
today tn developments where you
serve as a panner, working in con·
junction with another for a common
cause.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Conditions that have a benign affect
upon your earning abilities look good
today. Watch for immediate ways to
increase your income;
AQUARIUS (Jan. "20-Feb. 19)
You will have anA-plus day thai will

jTH~

I

I

I

I

I

Blazon . Lowly- Viper· Yonder· WORLD goB Y
gett1ng upset w1lh my fnend's driving . She told

1 was

me that she drove the legal .speed limit and watched lhe
WORLDao BY

·~

JULY 281

.~ ,~
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If ·

·~

&lt;"' • •

-""

3802.

1975 GMC, 1 112 ton dump truck,

f

•·
\ ::

.. ..,.
..

1

h1

..

----------~---·

'88 Silverado 30 Seriet car haul·
er, one ton, 454, 4 speed, winch,
amlfm cassette with amplilier, •
new tires, lots of new parts. blacl&lt;.
runs llka new, $8500, 614· 742-

$3500 OBO, 6 t 4-992-7663.

•••

tho chuckle q:ated

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

!!if_

1980 -1990 Cara Far $100111

~ ~ompl•••

1L_.L...J'-..J...-l.--~--J you develop
by f•lbng in the missi ng words
from . step No. 3 below.

be very evident to others. You should
be well-received wherever you go.
Do not hide your light under a
bushel.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2qJ
Maintain high hopes today and be
petsisltnl in yourendeaV'!_!S· Evenls
mighl not stan outlo your liking, bul
they should conclude to your satisfaction .
ARIES (March 2 1-,o\pril 19) Dare
to be .a dreamer today ·and don 't be
afmid 1o think big. Trends are deveioping thai could allow you to turn
your wishes into realities.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
.
.
Malerial prospects look tnlerestmg
today, especially if you' re learned up .'
wilh an individual who has been
lucky for you lately ..
GEM'INI (May 21 -June 20)
Today, if your outlook is optimislic,
it will enhance your olher altrtbutes.
Donolletnegativethinket&gt;influence
you olherwise.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Olh·
ers mighl be deceived by outward
appearances, but not you. Your ~ro~?ing instincts that uncQver reality IS
one of your best assets today.

I I

WonG Wrestling Federa110n Monday Ntghl

�Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
shuts out
Marlins

Pick 3:
6·9-2
Pick 4:
5-0-7-0

Sports on Page 4

Buckeye 5:
11-19-25-29-32

Mostly clear tonight,
areaa of dense fog after
midnight. Lows in the' 60s.
Wedneeday, sunny. Highs
near 80.

en tine
\'1111. 48, NO. 73 .
Ct lt1, Ohio Volley Publlohlng Com pony

\

3 Section., 20 Pogeo, 35 conta
A Gonnen C&lt;&gt;. N-spoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 29, 1997

Commission continues insurance coverage plan

•

By BRIAN J. I'IEED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners have agreed to continue their employ- 1
ee medical insurance plan for another year. .
A contract with Medical Claims Service Inc .. effective Aug. I. was
approved when the board met in regular session on Monday afternoon.
MCS, based ,in Quincy, Mass., operates a regional office in Ravenswood,
W.Va. The finn acts as the third-party administrator for the county's sdf insurance plan.
The finn's president, William McKelvey of Quincy, and Vice President
Shirley Johnson of Racine met with the commissionerHo discuss the tenns
of the new contract. Under the plan, the insurance premiums are paid into a
fund which, in tum, is used to pay claims.
Recently, the commissioners have weighed their options with respect to
the plan, because of increased costs to the county and have retained Ohio
Benefits Group to analyze the current plan.

Other business ·
The reinsurer for the 19\18 plan will be the Can~da Life Co., with an aggrePat Holte r of the Chester/Shade Historical A&gt;Socintion reponed on the
gate stop loss of $704,000. That m~ans that the county's plan is liable for
only $704,000 in claims. Claims in e.cess of that amount would be paid by .recent Chester/Shade Days Celebration. Holter said that the event was suc the reinsurer. Last year, the county diq not exceed the aggregate stop Joss. •ccssful. rai sing ju!'t over $2,000 in revenue for the conlinuing rcstorat.!OO of
MCS will be paid $16,357 for administering the plan and processing the old Chester Courthouse.
Holter also noted that the repainting of the exterior brick was completclaims.
David Jenkins, representing 52 employees of the County Department of ed, and thai slucco had been applied to the two columns on the front of the
Human Services, was also in attendance at the meeting, and expressed con- building. The work. performed by Custer Stucco and Plaster of-Middleport.
·
cost at total of $12.82:1 .26.
cern for the future of the plan.
Some time ago, the group of DHS employees had presented, in writing ,
The new windows for the building have been ordered· following approval
a senes of concerns about the 'plan, proposing an advisory committee ,to by lhe Ohio Hi storical Society. The board authori,cd the installation of the
address the plan and requesting financial statements relating to the plan.
heating and air conditioning system. Most of the cost of the rcnovalion is
"I want to see you put a better hand on this insurance thing," Jenkins said : being paid with funds from a state grant .
1
No action was taken on Jenltins' proposals, although the commissioners
A bid for bituminous materials for August from Asphalt Materials Inc·.,
did ••press the intention to establish a committee. made up of representa- Marietta. was apprm·cd, upon the rccomm~.ndation of Engineer R.ohcrt Eason .
tives of the agencies participating in the plan.
(Continued on Page 3)
·

Accountabiiity accord still/eaves splits

J

COLUMBUS (AP) - Senate
Minority Leader Ben Espy has a
warning for his House colleagues.
The Columbus Democrat said
Monday that changes majority
Republicans made in a school
accountability package were
designed to win Democratic votes.
But he said questions about how to
par for aU-day kindergarten and
smaller class sizes in Ohio's poore~t school districts still need to be
answered. . '
·
, "Hopefully, they (House
Democrats) won't be bamboozled," Espy sai&lt;J.
He conceded that Republicans
-who control a 21-12 majority in
the Senate - don't need Democratic help to pass the accountabil..ity- .,d funding proposals, whi~h
could face votes today.
The two main provisions of the
bill sponsored by Sen. Gene Watts,
R-Galloway. remained. One woul&lt;L
replace the ninth-grade proficiency test with one that measures
learning through the IOth grade.
The other provision originally
required students'to have 20 credits to graduate, up from the current
18. But an amendment by Ann
Womer Benjamin, R-Aurora,
increases· the number of credits to
21, with the extra credit in business-technology, arts and/or foreign language.
"We've continuea to hold to our
principles. It must he doable, practical and affordable," Watts said.
The bill is intended to help sell
to voters a penny -per-dollar

Middleport to a·s k
voters .for renewal
of 2-mill fire levy
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council decided at Monday niglu's meeting to ask
voters, to approve a renewal of t,h~1

current 2-m ill levy for fire protection.
The levy, to be in effect for five
years, will be on the November ballot.
· . '
.Mayor Dewey Horton commended the Middleport Fire Department

"It was successful and they're
talking about having anmhcr one this
summer," said Horton, adding that
"ifs nice lo· have merchantS in lown
who are really interested in the community."
Council mcmhcr SanUy lannarclli reported that she had several calls
pertaining to problems on Broadway.
She said that over the weekend several homes were "egged." presum-

ably by older youth who .arc congregating above the pool.
The mayor said the problem of
has improved from a Class 6 to a noise and inappropriate behavior is
heing i!fldrcssed ·and tliat the area is
Class 5.
The new classifil:ation, according now being patrolled every :lp minto an earlier statement hy Middleport · utes.
Councilman John Neville disFire Chief David Hollman. "may
result in a decrease in the advisory cussed park vantlalism and comproperty insurance calculation for mended the police for their work in
many insured properties Within the handing a recent situation where a
youth was being dcstru!.:livc in one Of
village ."
COMPROMISE IN HAND - State
Gardner, R-Bowllng ~reen, left, gestured as .
Adopted by council at the meeting the bathn)oms .
her conferred Monday with Sen. Eugene Watts,
before announcing that House and
In other business. council:
was the 199M hudgcl. showmg anticSenate Republicans have reached a compromise over the academic IICCountablllty issues of
• Gave a sc~.:ond reading to an
ipated income of $1.269.987 and
Senate Subatltuta Bill 55. (AP)
·
expenditures of $1. 117 ,I 00. It was ~rdinam: c setting a flood plain permit
noted thai th~ hudg~t rellccts no fcc of $25 to comply with Federal
Democrats' concerns in private
Education Committee, which
increase in the state sales tax \hat
employee raise; '" 199R . Projected Emergency Management Agency
meetings last week.
adjourned late Mopday after
would designate about$ 1.1 billion
net from the village income tax for regulations ;
"I believed that most members
Democrats complained ·about a
a year for schools. Lawmakers are
• Named Peoples Bank as deposnext year was $197.000.
of the General Assembly lack of .specifics on funding. The
working tow:u-d an Aug. 6 deadline
The health insUranc ~ issue was itory for village funds ;
Republican and Democrat - truhearing was scheduled to resume
to put the package on the Nov. 6
• Agreed to install Caller ID on
again discussed without any action
ly sup1ported the content or Senate
today.
ballot.
police
lines at village hall to assist in
being tak.en. Four bids were opened
Bill • 55," Gardner said after
· Committee Chainnan Randall
at the mcctir\g and rcrcrrcd to coun- locating tallers who might need
adjourning the meeung. '"It's disGardner, R-Bowling Green, said he
The substitute accountability
cil's insurance &lt;.:ommith.:c for study. assistance but in panic hang up
bill was introduced in the House . . " thou ht he had answered the
appointing."
They were J'rom McNelly -Patrick before giving complete information,
&amp; Associates for Aetna, Nationwide . and also to help eliminate crank calls;
Downing -Chi Ids- Mu l.len -Musser
· • Accepted a grant_[rom Ohio UniInsurance for unspecified compa- versity which will allow the village
and DEP." The lcl!cr charged that arc issued. Schwartz wrote, can the cussing the controversial pulp mill' nies . and Bill Quickel for Medical to go on the Internet as a way of pro- ,
moting Middleport as a site for ecoCaffrey has been "adversely infllt- 1 company determine the "viability . project with state economic develop- · MutuaL
Horton
complimented
Vaughan's
nomic development.
'
ment officials and forestry officialS in
enced by the years of biased local and· financeability of a project."
for
hosting
a
pool
party
for
the
village
were
Horton,
Council
Attending
Schwartz said his company pur- mid-1988, when fanner Gov. Arch
media an ides and the reports of some
sued the project "in good faith" but Moore tried to Jure the project to the Saturday. He said about 500 auend- members lannarelli, Neville, Steve
. &gt;taff within your department."
ed the event planned by Don Vaugh- Houchins, and Rae Gwiadowsky;
·
Schwartz said his L:ompany has that DEP "repeatedly sought to avoid, Mountain State.
In a June 13 letter to Schwartz, an and Michl King, with assistance and Clcrkffrcasurcr Bryan Swann.
already spent $4.1 million on the block, or delay the issuance o( fi nat
Caffrey said he was concerned over from employee&gt; and vendors.
Apple Grove proje&gt;t. Of this total. $3 penn its."
million went tc pay outside c_onsulMark Scott, deputy DEP director. what he perceived to be a Jack of
tants and legal advisers.
told the Gazette Monday, "We good.faith effort by Parson.s &amp; WhitSchwafll insists the company has received a response from Parsons &amp; temore to proceed with the prOJCCL
done everything it can.
Whittemore on July 22. Currently, we He said the company hr.&lt; done little
"We await the issuance of the per- are taking a look at that response. We to help DEP process atr and water
mit in final form. having made avail- have not yet taken a position or quality permit applications. and to By JIM FREEMAN
were acccpt'ed as volunteer high
respond to challenge!~ from environable all of the material and analysis developed a reply."
·
school
foothull coa~,.:hcs .
Sentinel
News
Staff
necessary for the regulatory authoriScott said Caffrey will reply "fair- . mentalists. lahor unions and other citVoters
in
the
Southern
Local
Jim
Anderson wa"' approved as
izens.
ty and appeal process to reach a final ly soon."
School District will decide a 4-mill. volunteer golf conch. a position he
conclusion," according to the Jetter.
(Continued on Page 3)
Parsons &amp; Whittemore began disthree-year rcncwJIIcvy in the Nov. 4 has volunteered to do for several
Only when those "final permits"
years.
general ~ lcc tion
The Southern Local . Board of
Changes to the kindergarten
Education took action to place the schedule were discussed and
issue on the ballot during ·its re.gular approved . Instead of having students
meeting at Sout~crn High Sctwol in attend Monday and Wednesday; or
Racine Monday night.
Tuesday and Thursday, with . alterThe
levy
is
u
renewal
of
an
expirnating Fridays. classes will be held
dents and investors.
ing four-mill levy approvcd .hy vot- Tuesday and Thursday. and WednesThe agreement also establishes a
ers 1n November 1994 . ·
day and Friday, with ·alternating
new program of coverage lor children
In personnel matters. the · board Mondays.
currently without health care. Tobac- ·
accepted the resignati on of dcnnifcr
The change is because most holico taxes would rise to help finance
Montgomery O'Bri en as music days arc held on Mondays, meaning
the program. ·
'
teacher. She is moving from the area , those
youngsters
in
the
All sides described the agreement
it
was
noted
.
Monday/Wednesday
class
did
not
get
as tentative, subject to the drafting of
A lap Cri sp was hirc.d a~ head var- as many school days,
o(ficial legislation. · Republicans
sity
girl s basketball coach for ·the
The board also approved making
expressed confidence the package
1997-9R
school
year.
As
a
condition
the
stage at Syracuse Elementary
would be on the floor of the House
of
the
hiring
,
Crisp
resigned
as
School
into a classroom to facilitate
and Senate and passed by the GOPreserve
girb
basketball
coach.
the
moving
of a special education
controlled Congress by Friday at the
Jeremy Hill and Kyle W1ckline class ftom Letart Falls Elementary.
latest.
were hired as seventh and eighth Cost of making the stage into a class"We gave ground. The adminisgrade
boy s basketball coaches, room was estimated at $1 ,000.
tration gave ground, And we found
respectively.
for the 1997-98 school
The board approved the following
common ground," a happy Senate
year
whil
e
Jennifer
Lawrence was bids for lhc upcoming school year:
Majority Leader Trent Lon said Monhired as junior high volleyball coach. Heiner's Bakery, bread ; Broughton,
'FABULOUS AGREEMENT'- House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
day night as the two sides announced
Sam Shain and Trenton Cleland milk ; Michael's Icc Cream, icc cream
right, llltendad a newa conference Monday with House Budget
a tentative accord.
were
'accepted as voh.mtccr J~nior products; Snouffers, fire extinguish· " We couldn't be more pleased Committee Chairman John Kaslch, R-Ohlo, to discuss the tenhigh
footbal.l coaches, while Tim ers and equipment ; G &amp; M Fuel
.with the outcome," said White House tative bjllancad budget agreement. "I think It will sell itself," Gln·
Faulk.
Joe Kirby Jr. and Jamie Evans
grlt:h said. "It's a fabulous agreement." (AP)
(Continued on Page 3)
Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles.
for its service lo the village and not ..

ed the recent announcement that the
village's lire protection classifi~;ation

.DEP stance draws sharp response· from developer
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. The president of Pan;ons &amp; Whittemore, the Rye Brook, N.Y., compa:
ny that wants to build pulp mill in
Apple Grove, sent a harshly worded
letter to Jack E. Caffrey. director of
the DivisioMll' Environmental Protection,Ju{t week according to the
Charltfston Gazette.
·
In June, Caffrey warned company
officials he would revoke their air
quality permit if they did not indicate
whether the company plans to proceed with its $1.1 billion project on
the banks of the Ohio River in Mason
County, south of Point Pleasant.
In a July 22 letter, company president Arthur L. Schwartz described
Caffrey as "new both to the project

a

Southern Local placing
tax issue "back on ballot

Landmark budget deal
links White House, GOP
WASHINGTON (AI') - Republicans and the Clinton administration
united today in hailing a landmark
deal to remake the face of government by cutiing taxes and balancing
the budget. "This is a very strong
program for the country," Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin said.
"Its a very, very proud moment,"
Senate Budget Committee Chairman
Pete Domenici, R-N.M., said.. "It's
not everything Republicans wanted ...
it's not everything the president or
Democrats want.
"But it does a lot of good things
for the American people," Domenici
said in an early morning appearance
with Rubin on NBC's "Today" show.
"Both of us thought this was better
than having seven years of war. You
give some, we give some. We did it."
The tax breaks would principally
benefit families with children, stu·

- - - - - _ _ .,.t_

'

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