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Page 12 • The Dally Se!"tlnel

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B,eat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Young people involved in any
sports program at any of the three
local school districts ;md their1J8rents
stiould make a note that all sports
physical examifllltions for all three
districts will be given at. Veterans
Memorial Hospital this year.
The examinations will be siven on
Satun;lay, July 13, (or young people
involved in any sport. Athlete! from
Meigs Local · will be undergoing
physical examinations from 8 a.m. to
II a.m. Southern District athletes
will be from II a.m. to I p.m. , and
Eastern will be from I to 3 p.m. In
Southern, Dr. Douglas Hunter who
serves as team physician, will again,
I'm told." be doing some of the
required examinations at his offices
'. again this year. And, as I understand
it, the examinations are for athletes in
grades seven through 12.

Nan's daughter, Hannah, also
twirls and comJletes in indiviclual
events. She has won three twirling '
pageants and was also second runnerup in the ,Miss Majorette of Ohio
Pageant compe_ting against 21 other.
girls.
You'll be seeing the Dolls in the
July 4th parades at Rutland and Middleport and several of the groups
which make up the entire corps will
be performing on the stage at the
Dave Diles Park in Middleport at
7:30 p.m. following the parade.
You can look forward to see the
energetic group handled very well by
Nan at various other local events this
summer and fall.

PomerQy • Middleport,

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Tuesday, July·2,1996'

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inghQuse television . serie~- narrating, · , Margaux and her -sisters Muffet
an animal show called "The Wild llld Marie! were tht"'daughters of
Guide," her agent, David Mirisch, Jack Hemingway, ~.nQbet-Prize
told CNN lata Monday. But sh~ had · winning author's son,. and Byra L·.
been unhappy recently, he said.
~Puck" Hemingway, who died in
" For the past week or ten days, . 1988 at the lfge of 66.
she.hasn't really been the Matgaux
· A,lcoltolism and early deaths have
Hemingway that we aln.new as far plagued the Hemingway clan.
as having that 'up' personality,"
For Ernest Hemingway, one of the
Mirisch said. "We reaUy felt this most widely read American novelists
series was' going to bring her back of the 20th cent~ boozing and
and so until we get this diagnostic physical trauma led to depression,
repi&gt;n, we don 't know it it was an electroshock ther . a final mental
epileptic seizure or if it was an over- collapse and sutctde by shotgun to the
dose.''
,- headin 1961. .
""
She becall)e one of the nation's top
. Hts brother, stster and father alstJ
models when she was signed to a d!ed at thetr own hands. and two of
five-year Faberge contract in 1975 . . hts granddaughters- Margaux '!!)d
and she made her screen debut in her cousm Lonan Hemmgway 1976 in "Lipstick," opposite ~r found themselves_ going through
younger sister Marie!.
detox at the same ttme trf 1988.
MARGAUX HEMINGWAY
Hemingway, who was born in
"By a very conservative count,
The pink and burgundy house Portland, Ore., in 1955,alsoappeared more than 75 percent of my family
with the white picket fence was cor- in the 1979 film "Killer Fish," ha5 been alcoholic," Lorian wrote in
doned off with police tape lis neigh- "They Call Me Bruce?" in 1982 and Washington magazine in 1989. "This
bors, media and the curious filled the the-1991 film "Inner Sanctum."
alcoholism, passed along with the
block. .
.
_
A neighbor who _lives across the passion to write and the will to surHemmgway had battled alcohol m.• street said the actress moved there vive that passion,~
- s as clearly a herthe past and ~as treated at the Betty twa weeks ago.
ttage to me as are y d&amp;J:k eyes."
Ford Center m 1988. .
"She seemed nice," said Kristina
Afterdetox, Marg rllem:ingway
She had recently fintshed a West- Deutsch. "She had an old , ~ike and · said that "for a time, I was living the
rode it around the neighborl10od. "
life of Ernest Hemingway...

ment."

He also said it didn't appear to be
a suicide.
Friends said the 41 -year-old
granddaughter of literary great Ernest
Hemingway had not been seen since
Friday.
They went to he,r' building and
· :I don't.know if any of you were in w;ked a lat)orer to get a ladder, then
the Nelsonville-Logan area early climbed through a second-noor winSunday evening. I hope not. The dow and found her body. Gallinot
rains were torrential and at Nel- said.
Police were q;~lled at 2 p.m. to the
If you think keeping your one, sonville had flooded Route 33 requjrtwo, three or more busy and learning ing a-detour for motorists. Although studio a{lartrnent on a tree-lined street
is a chore this summer, then don't we've had a lot of rain lately, I haven't less than a block from the beach.
envy Nan Swartz who is putting in a seen it that heavy in a long time. '
busy summer with her 56 youngsters TW1te I pulled off the road to wait for
let-ups. Some other drivers did the
known as the Dazzling Dolls.
The younll, baton corps has been-a same. Others didn't. After all, they
bHSY SJ:OUp this spring and summer had just in the past few days legally
"
'
under Nan's direction . Members been given the green light to drive 65
NEW YORK (AP) - Front row nominee for his hit TV show "Mad December. It also featu~esm · than Cod in
_
have traveled to several NBTA com- in the Logan area and they weren't
tickets
to
two
Hootie
&amp;
The
Blowfish
About
You."
Eith.ll'
way,
he'll
be
pan
100
video
monitors,
inter.active'
,
video
petitions around the state winning a going to give fhat up--even though
concens cost up to $I 50 each - and of the September awards ceremony: kiosks, CD listening stations and a
•
total of three first plac~s and a 'sec- visibility was about zero.
BOSTON (AP) - Brian Austin
the
tickets
aren't
even
any
good.
He's
the
host.
performance
stage.
.
ond place trophy in the dance-twirl
Green wanted his debut rap album to
The band declared the tickets
Reiser, a previous best comedy
The red carpet was roll~ out be "100 percent me.:'·The answer?
Jack Grllenaway of Pomeroy did
division.
•
The Dolls pee wee team--those are undergo his planned major surgery at void after finding out they had been series a.ctor nominee, was named host Monday night for a guest lisl than Swearwords. '
Monday by ABC and the Academy of included Tracy Lawrence, Trisha
the five-year-o)ds--recently won the University Hospital in Columbus last scalped.
"I didn't want to beat around the
More
than
500
tickets
to
the
Aug ~
Television
Ans &amp; Sciences.
Yearwood, · Charley Pride, Little
Ohio State NBTA dance twirl team Tuesday and was taken out of intenbush
lyrically and not say what I truIt will be Reiser 's first appearance Richard and The Beach Boys.
championships making them eligible sive care on Saturday. Everyone 3 and 4 sold out concens at Jones
ly
felt,"
Green said Monday.
Beach will be reissued by telephone as an Emmy host. He does have expeto compete in the national champi- hopes the very best for Jack.
through Ticketmaster oil Wednesday, rience, though. He was the host of the
NEW YORK (AP) -The Chief'
onships at Notre Dame University.
The 22-year-old actor, who stars
said
Mark
Zenow
of
the
band's
Fish"People's
Choice
Awards"
and
"The
tains
have played their award-winPersonally, I'm really looking forThe Dolls also participated in the
co Management.
Grammy Awards " in 1994.
ning brand of Irish music all over the Go Fox Televisiolt's "Beverl'y Hill~
Point Pleasant stemwheel festival ward io the local tomato crop harvest
A
printout
from
.
the
promoters
Nominations
for
the
48th
Annual
globe.
Now, they're making their 90210," spoke at the start of ~r11\-city
parade Friday night and won first aren't you? You just can't beat those
tour to promote "One Stop Carnishowed
that
on
the
night
before
the
Primetime
Emmy
Awards
are
to
be
debut
on
daytime television.
place honors plus a cash prize of home grown tomatoes to spoil you
tickets
went
on
sale,
someone
in
the
val."
announced
July
18.
The
awards
cerThe
Chieftains
are
to
appear
on·
$100 which will be used to stage a ·for any others for the rest of the year. main box office at Jones Beach held
The albuin, which includes lyrics
emony is to be broadcast live by ABC ABC 's "One Life to Live" on July
Do keep smiling,
pool party for the girls.
about sex and violence, carries a
the first I0 rows for both shows, on Sept. 8.
30.
Zenow said. Two Jones Beach box
They'll perform "Song Without parental advisory warning.
"I spent a year and a half workoffice workers were fired.
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Vince Gill End," as the show's star-cro~sed
People who bought the tickets can hawked barbecued ribs and touted an lovers Patrick and Many see ~ach ing on the album. If I'm going to put
get a $25 refund - thdace value of Elvis memorabilia room as he and other at a pub and hear "their song." my name on something, I'm going to
"
.
the tickets - even though they Reba McEntire helped kick off the They'll also play "The Rocky Road make sure it's 100 percent me,"
apparently went for as high as $150. ·gala openi~ of the newest attraction to Dublin.'' •
.
· 'Green said.
"The chances are good they knew on the La~ Vegas strip - the Coun"The show is definitely big fans
the tickets were being scalped," try Star American Music Grill.
of their music," said Nancy Sherman,
After appearing at Boston_'s Hard
Zertow said.
The
restaurant
Is
filled
with
memspokeswoman
for the New York - Rock Cafe and Strawberries music
By MITCH WEISS
ment administrator. "The passenorabilia ranging frolfl gold records City-based soap ope.ra.
store. 'Green · plano~ to appear in
and JOHN SEEWER
gers have to be sober to keep their
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Paul and compact discs to saddles and souThe four-time. Grammy win~ers Ne~ York City, Toronto, Minneapo,.
Associated Press Writers
balance and maintain their compo- Reiser has to wait a few more wq:ks
MARBLI'!HEAD- Coast Guard sure if they need to find that life jack- to find out whether he 's an Emmy venirs from lhe National Finals are to'ki\:k off their monthlong. 22- lis, and Tampa and Orlando in FloriRodeo, which is held here each city U.S. tour Wednesday on Cape da.
Petty Officer Jon Menze spends hun- et. ",_
dreds of hours patrolling western
Boater Lenny Cohen, 43, of MooLake Erie each slimmer. After work, roe. Mich .. and his friends take beer
he·d like to spend more t(me on the out on his boat.
Why now for the book.,..
late-nighr' specials focusing on the have absot'bed more .than their share'.
water. But the thq_ught of sharing it
. "But we're careful," Cohen said. By FRAZIER MOORE
The idea, Koppel explains during Iran hostage crisis. Fran~ Reynolds He is, as any "Nigfltline" viewer
with some boaters keeps him on He said he would never drive drunk. AP Televlslcin Writer
knows, preternaturally smooth.
shore.
Coast Guard Petty Offit:er Scott
NEW YORK - Ted Koppel a recent jaunt from his Washington, anchored.
Reynolds, who already anchored
He is also funny (though he keeps
"I've seen some crazy things out Druckery of the Marblehead station would like to remind you that very . D.C .. home base to ABC News headquaners
in
Manhattan,
was
for
a
ABC
News'
main
event,
the
evening
this
facet of himself prctty private,
here. Some people are just so reck'- said it is difficult to tell whether a few people come on "Nightline" just
qu1ckie
book
to
mark
"Nightline's"
news,
was.n't
keen
on
moonlighting.
perhaps
not to run Da~ and Jay off
less. It scares me," Menze said, boater is drunk.
so their mothers can see·them on TV.
15
years.
The
network's
40-year-oJP
diplomatthe
air).
Such
is his gift that when an
standing in the back of a 41-foot
"It's not like a State Highway
No less than when Demi Moore
Except it wasn' t Koppel's idea. ic correspondent gladly filled in.
ABC News colleague greets him with
oast Guard patrol boat as it cruised Patrol trooper who stops a car on a flogs a film on ''The Tonight Show,"
When a rechristened. broad-based a request for an autographed book.b ut-In-Bay.
two-lane highway because the driyer politicos and activists flock to Hi• counterproposal? A more exhaustive
treatment,
a
collaborator
with
the
• don't know if I'd take my fam- is crossing lanes or weaving all over "Nightline" for self-promotion: to
program began that March ("what a Koppel fires back a raunchy reton. ·
time
to
bring
it
off.
and
a
moreoforHis timing is no less impeccable
ily in the water."
· the road," Druckery said.
crappy. name" was Koppel's initial
hawk a cause; to launch a trial balgiving
deadline
.
when
asked . about his future on
Ohio's lakes and rivers are becom"There are a couple of signs that loon: to exercise damage control or
take on "NiW!tline"), he was tapped
"So
what
was
supposed
to
be
·
a
"Nightline."
·
ing more crowded and more danger- you look for. If they are boisterous, place the desired spin on an issue. In
as itS permanent anchor. It was ~per­
celebratory
book
for
the
15th
don't
know,"
says
Koppel,
"I
ous - never more so than on the people are loud. We get complaints, shan. to funher their ag~nda.
fect marriage, and remains so.
Founh of- July weekend. The Oh10 too. People will call us and say, 'Hey,
"The show has enjoyed a great whose contract is up for renewal lit
Koppel's motives are fairly sim- anniversary· ends ·up being a ;Why
now?'
book
16
1/4
years
after
'NightDepanment of Natural Resources this person just left a bar and ·got on ple, and, if not ' pure, then at least
deal of good will," Koppel acknowl- . year-end. He will stay where he is "as
line'
went
on
the
air."
long as I'm happy doins it, w; long as
says the holiday weekend IS the their boat and they are highly intox- clear: We want a large audience. or
edges.
The
book
rem1ads
us
that
"Nightbusiest and most dangerous of the icated.'
we want to ge! the hot interview of
In person as on TV, Koppel has ~ something better doesn't come along.
line"
began
in
November
1979
as
'"And something better has never
year on Ohio waterways.
• Enforcement is no easy task.
·ce that sculpts his words and
the day.
"
America
Held
Hostage,"
a
series
of
come
along." Tiny pause •."Not yet."
People who work and pl_ay on the
Last year, Marblehead officers
so e:; your, ear. His eyes seem to
"Why people come on the prowater worry about bad dnvers and stopped 720 boats and cited 17 pea- gram is not always as cle!lr. Everynovice boaterS. Despite the fears,_a pie for boating while intoxicated.
body's pushing a product. It's just
record numlJcr of boats were reg1sThe station - the second busiest that sometimes the product isn't
tered last year- 394,855 in all.
in the nation after Key West, Fla. - clearl~ visible. "
There were 331 boating accidents has three boats and 27 people to
Koppel's viewer alert is a driving
reponed in Ohio last year, nearly half patrol as far west as Oak Harbor near themeJ)~a new book about his late. of them on Lake Erie, according to the Davis-Besse nuclear power plant night AB~ News prog.ram.
OUNR statistics. But that is far less and as far east as Vermilion. The sta- · Mainly. "Nightline: History in the
than the actual number; the Coast tion also covers the Lake Eric reson Making and the ~ng of TeleviGuard estimates that only 5 percent islands. It had 40 people on staff 10 sion" (Times Books) is that merriest
of all accidents ~re reponed .
years ago.
of all things to read : a nat-out success "
Thineen people died on Ohio
The station maintains an emer- story.
lakes and rivers in 1995. at least five gency radio system and is responsiIt tells of the convergence of
deaths resulting from collisions of blc for ·enforcing federal laws and three things: a man, a network's falboats. During the last 10 years, the con~_ucting search-and-rescue mis- IQw time slot, and the binh of satel average was 22 deaths per year.
sions. It shares responsibility for lite Jransmissfon that enabled what
Determining the actual number of mai)ltaining the safety of pleasure ' the bo"ok calls "intercontinenial
boatmg deaths is difficult because the boaters with ODNR and police. It salons'-'-=lhe TV interview as globODNR classifies some accidents as also is responsible for all commercial al Ping Pdng match , a form Koppel
resulting from swimming, even 1f a boats. ·
would largely invent.
person falls off ;t_boat and drowns. ,.
"We look for potential problemst
. Indeed, it ili;:6 measure of ''NightThere were I0 I people seriously E&gt;ruckery said duripg a recent day out line 's" success lha\ what began as a
injured last year :___ more than ever on patrol.
virtuoso per.form;mce -.Koppel's. of
before.
On that day, three · other crew COUI}.e. conducting those live interThose who patrol the water blame members watched for boaters. Traf- views - has become nothing less
most ac&lt;idents on novice boaters, fie was slow early on, but by 9 a.m., than an institution.
even though more than half of the dri- some 400 boats - yachts, 40-fOfll
And along with being an
vers involved in accidents said they cruisers. cigarette boats - had unmatched forum for exploring serihad at least I00 hours of boatmg apl!Cared in a radius of 1.5 miles.
ous issues, the series is a r.atings hit.
"A" Size-New, WMe
experience. About the same number
Druckery slowed the boat to a Ted holds liis own against the mon-_
said they had taken a safety course. crawl as he maneuvered through a keyshines of late-night rivals Dave
POTATO~S
"Some of these people ,put their maze of boats.
and Jay.
Just Like Home Grown•
boats on 1\UIO pilot," said P~l
He~ is that rarest of TV phenomHe
has
to
be
careful.
Many
boaters
~ Chrysler, 42, a fishing guide and life99
-ena; vinue coexisting with the bottom
lb.
long resident ~f Put-In-Bay, a reson are unfamiliar with the lake, its shal- line .
10 lb. b$g .
.
. village 38 miles east of Tole~ . low sections and rocky bottom. He " The new "Nightline ", book charts
"Then they go down to the cabin t~ said some boa~ run aground; others all this success. Co-written by Kopmake a phone call or check the get caught in rough water when the pel and td'ngtime "Nightline" proengine or whatever. So many times wind picks up.
ducer Kyle Gibson, it is a narrative
He believes boater education
you pass boats with nobody at the
Round Striped
courses would help reduce accidents. history, scrapbook, greatest-hits colwheal."
. loction. It is, at times, a meditation on
25lb. avg. ·
State Rep. Rex Damschroder, ROfficers also say alcohol and
ea.
_ )'
TV news, and on the world events
speed contribute to accidents: There Fremont, thinks so. too. He has intro- since 1980 that "Nightline'' has ~ris no speed limit on Lake Erie, ;md duced boater safety bills, includin~ lessly tracked.
··
passengers are allowed to drink on one that would require first-time
And
,there
are
also
moments
of
boatels to complete a safety course,
board.
.
repentance: the rare interview where
''A sober operator i; not eve_ry- then take a test to prove tbey J&gt;Used Koppel might have gone too far, or;'
tbing you need." said .Randy Snuth. the course. Those with prior experi- conversely, where a guest ate Kopthe watercraft division's law enforce- ence would be ~xempt.
pel's lunch. .

Concert tickets are·dectarerJw~~~~,.
.
nMassachuse~
. "" ;

Boat accidents
increase in Ohio

Good nighttime reading: Ted Koppel's •new book on

99¢

-

$2 ~:

~Nightline'

$249

99

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dead?;
Margaux Hemingway found
.
By SCOTT LINDLAW
Assocllted Preas Writer
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
Actress-model Margaux Hemingway
was found dead in her studio apartment by the sea on Monday,, police
said.
.
¥
The identity of the body was confirmed through dental records, said
Santa Monica Police Sgt. Gary
Gallinot. An autopsy_ was scheduled
to determine the cau?e of death.
"There was no sign of foreed
entry and no obvious foul play,"
Gallinot added. "No guns or illegal
substances were found in the apart-

....

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Ohio ·LQttery

Meigs Legion
defeated 18-5
by Gallipolis

•

Pick 3:

6.0·8
Pick 4;.

4·3·3-9
Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 5

.

Mostly clear tonight,
lows In the 50s. Fourth of
July, sunny. High near 80.

16-21-22-27·37

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entine
Vol. 47, NO. 48
2 Sactlona, 16 Pllgaa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, J~ly 3, 1996

I

GOP strategists
U-rge stronger
agenda for Dlo·le

Fourth. full of parades and fireworks
-

By JIM FREEM~N
Sentinel News Staff
Three day-long Independence
Day celebrations will be observed
throughout Meigs County Thursday featuring pllfades, entertainment and, of course ... plenty of
fireworks .
Themes to celebrate !,he United
States' 220th birthday will range
from "Family, Fun and Friends"to
"Fab 50s on the Fourth" and
"Olympic Spirit U.S .A."
Although the last few days have
been hotter than a firecracker, fore, casters are predicting a pleasapt
Fourth of July with highs only in
, the 70s.
In Rutland, celebrants at Rutland Firemen's Park will honor the
Olympic games with the theme·
"Olympic Spirit U.S.A. ," includill8
a craf~ show and games of their '
own.

.

A parade will be held at 9: 3(,1
a.m. and afternoon entenainment
will consist of a gospel sing and
pro wrestling at I p.m., the
Sy~mes Creek Band at 2:30 p.m.
I
and Tame As Can Be at 5:30p.m.
.
PARADE
PREPARAnONS
The
heat Ia on and school may be out, but the Meigs L~l
Entries in the cake decorating
H_lgh
School
Band
h81
been
praetlclng
for Ita two appearancu In locallndepandance Day
and pie baking-contest will be auc- ''
parades.
The
band,
ahown
here
practicing
1\ieaday, will perfdrm Ita patriotic potpourri In Rut·
tioned off at 8:15p.m. in addition
laJ1d
at
11:30
a.m.
anti
In
Middleport
at
6
p.m.
to Pro Player JI!FL Experience Hat
and official NFL game ball autographed by Green Bay Packers
parade, bicycle decorating and
Department and A_uxiliary will
rock 'n' roll with "Fab 50's on the
tight end Mike Bartrum.
horse and rider winn~rs will be
have cllicken b~ue •nd home- , Fpurth" a1 Dave Diles Park.
'
Firewo~ks will be at 10:30.p.m.
~ilnP,unc¢. ';·,
made ice cream at the fire~QIIse · .. The.event opens with a parade
In Ractqe, t~ theme .:Will _
be ' • .
. •.
.
.
starting at II a.m., and RACO will ..,..6-.,., followed by. entertain"Freedom,oFamtly &amp;; Fun, begm- _ · The maJonty of' events :Will .. ~children's g et starting at .,.; ment at 7:~0 .m. with ~ D~
niiig with a·flag-tliisi~g ~moil~ · A., take place 'at Slai\Mil(l!ark, includ- ··•''/190
,' 'ii.""' """'\"'l' ~-&lt;~. .-· ·zliiifJ;joll~,;: _, 'f;'i 11!,1,~1'";-f' • ~1'1' 1 '
at 9:45a.m. by Racine Poslli02 of ing a home run ~y at II .a.fl!., an
·
•
'
At 8 p.m., the "PabUiolis Fifties"
the American Legion, folio~ by
antique tractor pull at Star Mill
Entertajnment on the park stage
program featuring selections from
·a parade at 10 a.m.
Park at 2 p.m., the third annual , · will begin at 2 p.m. with the Billy . the Broadway musical "Grease"
The parade will form at SouthRacine Area COmmunity OrganiLee Show, Justin Diddle at 3 p.m. , will begin, also including other
ern High School at 9:15 a.m., pro· . - _zation Frog Jumping Contest at 5
and C.J. and the Country Gentlepopular songs from 1950s sung by
ceed down Elm to Third Street: to
p.m.; and a kiddie tractor pull at 7
men at 8 p.m. .
numerous local performers.
Vine, Fifth and back to Elm before
p.m.
·
Fireworks will be at 10 p.m.
Fireworks will be set off at 9:30
returning to the high school, where
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Meanwhile, Middleport _will p.m.
''

office.
"Firecrackers are the highest ca~se
of fireworks injuries requiring hospitalization. You'll probably be surprised to learn sparklers rank second .
Most sparkler injuries, such as burns ,
')&gt;uncture wounds, or serious eye
injuries, occur among preschool·children," said Owens.
Small fire!Norks such as sparklers,
smoke bombs, snakes, "f~n snaps"
and other "exempt" fireworks are
legal in Ohio .
Just because they're legal doesn't
· mean they're safe, said Owens.
"Smoke bombs can explode, while
'fun snaps' and other snapper-type
fireworks can cause serious eye
injuries."
The numbers tell a troubling story not only about fireworks-related
injuries, but also about the danger of
serious property damage caused by
the discharge of firewo~ks.
In 1993 (the latest year for which
national fire data are available) fireworks caused an estimated 30.200
fires which injured 66 persons and
• caused $21.3 million in propeny
(Continued on Page 3)

Sentinel to p·ublish Thursday
The DaBy Sentinel will be published Thursday and an earlier _publi·
cation deadline wUI be observed •.
• Its business aad advertising offices w be dosed for the Fourth of
July holiday.
•
Regular ~usiness boun resume Friday.

Analysts lo

WASHINGTON (AP) - Amid left ,to do," said California GOP
fresh evidence that President Clinton Chairman John Herringt011 . who ·
is vulnerable, many Republicans are nonetheless said he was convinced
worried that Bob Dole has not done . Dole's standing was improving in his
a better job ~pelling out his agenda .state. .
and closing the gap in the month
There was palpable r,clief and
• since his dramatic resignation from · optimism in the pany when.Dolc quit
the Senate.
the Senate to pursue the presidency
·The doubts about Dole are most full time.
pronounced in Wash-ington, where
some GOP lawmakers and strategists
Si.nce then, however, there has ·
are increasingly concerned that a been only a slight narrowin9 in the
poor Dofe showing could cost polling gap between ·Clinton and
Republicans their congressional , Dole, despite a significa~l deterioramajorities.
tion of Clinton :s standing on•qucsIn recent private meetings, accord- tions of trust, leadership and honesty
ing to GOP sources, some Republi- as attention has shifted to the White. cans have argued that Dole is doomed water and FBI files investigations.
to defeat and that party 'resources
Why Dole has not cut deeper into
.should be shifted to key congrcs- Clinton's double-digit lead in this
sionill ·races.
. period is the subject of considerable
House Speaker Newt Gingrich is debate in Republican circles.
Some argue that the horseracc
said to be among those forcefully
countering S!Jch arguments, by mak- numbers tend to ~hift last , and point
ing the cilse that Dole has. time to to a narrowing gap in two national
recover. Gingrich also has main- 1 polls this week as evidence the race
tained that Republican candidates will tighten . Besides. few Americans
down the ballot should work aggres- want to think about politics now, they
sively for Dole in any-event because add.
·
their races will be shaped by the polit"Ronald Reagan was way behind
ical climate at the presidential level: at this point in 1980,·evecyone wds
AIJtong stilte Republican leaders saying he was too old and lQo
and ac~vists, the ~ j~ more one extrell\~· lll'~ I ll'!l-~· in a ~anic," said ,
CJt (ruW.tio!l than·~~niGt ' Mt?( , RtJ~' f'iijll; ~ ¥'Jia·RilpUI)Iican ··•
believe DciJ~ ,ftas tfme ro·:o~reome . chaimlan. "tliCn people camo 'jljlck
Clinton's lead, but some feel Dole 's · from the beach and began lo focus on
l
opponunity tO' make a major splash what their choices were. Republicans
in the wakeof his Senate resignation are always 1behind at this point."
has been 'fr\Uered away. .
·others complaiA\!ilhat Dole will
"We have a little uphill struggle close the gap only if he docs a far betno~ at the top of the tick,et." says tcr, job spe lling out hiS campaign
Ohio GOPCha1rman Robert Bennett. agenda, beginning with an econom"1 think there are a lot of things ic plan .
• ·

GaUia prosecutor urges
Cremeans to license
'
mobile home property ·

Unsafe fireworks use
can--turn holiday·fun
·de~dly in just- a flash .
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
' The Fourth of July holiday is a
long day of carefree summer fun fot
families, neighbors, and friends to
enjoy, with picnics and g~therings
occurring on land and the rivers
throughout the area.
Sadly, the Fourth· is also our most
d~U~gerous holiday, with thousands of
• people seriously injured during the
, holiday each year in fireworks-relat.ed accidents nationwide.
According to the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission, fireworks were involved in approximately 11,600 injuries in 1995, with
2,441 of those injunes affecting the
eye. These figures are estimatet and
renect only injuries treated in hospital emergency rooms. The actual
numbers are highet.
Emergency rooms natio nwide
reponed that about half of those
injured are children under 15 years
old. Typic111 injuri.!ls include burns to
the eyeUace.and hands, with nearly 40 percent of those .injured being
'bystanders, according to Donna
Owens of the State Fire Marshal's

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SAFETY. FOR THE FOURTH - Mindy Curtll, Rutland, showa
aome of the amen flraworb that ere available for aale at Fruth
Pharmacy In Middleport. Flreworkaare legal for aale In Ohio, but
need to .b* uaad with the ume caution ~ larglr fireworks, accordIng to official• with the State Fire Marahal'l office.

GJ\LLIPOLIS - Gallia Coun ty Prosecuting Attorney BJcnt A. Saunders
has recommended that one section of propeny on Georges Creek Road owned
by-U.S. Rep. Frank A. Cremeans. R-Gallipolis, and hi s wNc Caro l be licensed
as a manufactured home park. ·
Saunders responded to a request from Stuan Lentz, sanitarian for the c&lt;iun- ty Health Depanment, to determine if the propcny the Cremeanses rent to
•
locate mobile homes requires a li cense. .
Under state law, licensing is req uired when three or more mohilc homes
are on,he same parcel of land.
•
' .
Saunders said "it is -the opinion of this office" ihat a 12.24-a.:rc tracl on·
the .northern ~ide of Georges Creek now con,tains three mobi le homes and
that section, must be licensed.
But a 2-acic tract on the southern side is exempt from licensi....,ctlusc
only two mobile homes occupy the section, Saunders said.
Based on a state attorney general's opinion, Saunders said the .norihem
section "would not he cons idered conti guous wtth the tract s of land located
in the southerly direct JOn of Georges Creek Road ."
"Therefore. the tract of land located on the north side of Georges Creek
Road and the tracts ... on the south side ... should be dealt with by your dcpanment separately in that they arc .n'lt contiguous." he added .
.. ';
The opinion arose out of questions r:uscd when 9-formcr tenant . Roben
Clark, complained about raw sewage running th,r.ot{gh the property, prompting the health department io find the Crcmeanst' in violation of state waste
disposal laws on May I.
--....,
Clark and his family have since moved from the site.
. Frank Cremeans told Gannett News Sef!Vicc last month he "couldn't
answer any questions" ahout licensing the site . "I don't know the issue," he
said.
The Crc'l'canses were not fined bceaus? they have hccn cooperating with
the depanmcnt in correcting the sewage problem. Lc~tz explained.
Lcl\tl said the Cremr.anscs have hccn Informed of the licensing rcqu(rcment and arc in possession of state regulations on operating mobile home
pa~ks. He added that Carol Cremeans has been " 100 percent cooperative"
with his office.
·
•
"They must try to get their plans submitted to the Ohi o Department of
Health in 90days," he said. "Once it 's in ODH's hands, it 's hard to say how '
long it will take for them to rcv 1cw it for us."
Lentz. who previously said &gt;~milar problem~ exist at other mohile home
sites in tJ1e county. noted that Saunders op1nion will be useful in correcting
II~,
potential violati ons.

i·n,g for .Fe.d to·apply.brakes on -·interest rates -soon

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER .
Those rate.reducti.ons, from last July throu~h January of this.year, did the.
AP Economics Writer
·
trick, restaning a stalled economy.
. .
WASHINGTON - Tb_e ~lings .!!'~X ~!!'~secret, but seldo_!!! has thll_ _,_ JOe II'Jl!!!m.i~ tbat_giOwth m@y be too rapid with the threat thattight labor
Federal Reserve been morc Jn 1he spothglU as ttoebates tliC future course markets and factories operating close to capacity could stan pushing pnces
foi interest rates.
·
·
higher. •
.
The reason for the unusual amot111t of interest this weetc.is a widespread
That is the reason man¥ analysts are looking for a rate increase, if not at
belief that the cen!fllt.bank is about_.t,o take its foot off the gas pedal and begin this week's meeting, 'then by the next session on ·Aug. 20, less than tiJree
• applying the brake~ to the U:S. ·economy by stani.nJ t~ raise i~te,e_st rate~. . months before tJ_te presidential ~lection. .
.
.
. ·
"'Die Fed is gotng to ttghten. The .only quesuon ts when, ' 511~ DaVId • The Fed sets m\erest ra1e poltcy etght ttmcs a,y~ at meeungs of tts Fed,
-:
•
era1 open Market Committee, composed of the Fed'.s. seven ~ members ,
550 an economist At 'oRI-McGraw Hill Inc.
~ 'ld be the first interest rate in~rease since Feb. I, 199.5, and would in Washington and five of its /12 regional bank presidents. c
fOllOW rpcriotl of monetary ease where thC •central bank ~ngin,ee~ three
• This week's t)Yo-clay meeting,.:which was·due to conclude ioday, marked
, rate cuts in an effort to~~ the economy from toppling into a recession.• · the flfSt ses~ion to be ~tended by two new members. Former White House

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35 cents
A Gennett Co. Newspaper

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budget director Alice Rivlin was sworn in as vice chairman lasl week _
St. Lou1s econ?m"t Laurence H. Meyer took office as a Fed governor.
. ~nalysts.sa1d 11 1s necessary to look no further than tr stnng of ree~nl
tsh economic repons to understand that th1ngs arc- movmg at too raptd a
forthe Fed 's comfort.
'
On Tuesday, the government reponed that s~les ot new hornes sbot up
7.5 percent m May to the hrghest level. ,~ a decade. w~de the Conferi\I!Ce .
Board sa1d the Index of Leadmg Econom1c lnd~eators rose a strona 0.3 pcrcent- tts ht.g~cst potnl sm~.Fehruary 1995.
.
.
"The feehng among tnflatton hawk_s on the board ts tha~
sootf to cool~ the economy, they w1ll fall beht.nd ~ cu~...
,,iihliil.~
up havmg lO Ught~n much more next year to control IRfl~ll?", &gt;
Jones. an economtst at Aubrey)SJ. Lanston &amp; Co. '" New.'tori(. -4•

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ta.r
111 eoan"&amp;treet

Pomeroy,

ObiQ /

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Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETt
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
General Manager

•

MAR~ARET LEHEW

Controller
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LEITERS OF OPINION are weloome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be 1n g~ taste, .~sing issues, not personalities.

Complaints likely under
new parking ordinance
Th~ village of Pom~roy is likely to come under fire for its new parking

Teach
. friendship, not haie

Dear Editor,
their belief that white skin is supeDuring the past week I've been riour and their hatred for anythmg
teachmg a remarkable group of d1fferent. What frightens me most is
young people at our vacation Bible - that f11r one short week a year we try
schooJ, We've had a great tum-out to teach children to Jove apd accept
a~¥pe. made good, lasting one another, whereas members of
tmpress1ons ~n these young lives. groups like these spend every day
::Jur theme thiS year has been based demonstrating hate to their own chiJ011 friendship; looking be}ond the
dren. Who do you-suppose will make
d1fferences betweep ourselves and the bigger difference in the world?
others to recognize the similarities.
Maybe the KKK could rally here
Therefore I was especially and leave again without having any
shocked and angered to hear that the direct impact on our daily Jives. HowKu Klux Klan may be planning a raJ- ever, I think that every time another
ly in our area.
pellion is taught to hate, it hurts us all.
.While I do not deny these people I know it hurts God.
~
their rights to free speech and assemAnn I.aComb
bly, I am frightened and disgusted by
Reedsville

Wants battlefield preserved

\,
d
. Th
Dear Edt.tor,
peop1e an terram. e one childwriting
in
regard
to
recent
hood
h h ·
m
Ia
memory t at as :remained
wr
m
,·ng
the
pro·'
.cles
·tten
conce·
artl
1
near1y unchanged to this date is the
posed strip mining for gravel in the , "Portland Park... . .
My bean was sickened when 1
vicinity of the Portland Park.
1 was.a resident of Meigs County read the article by Jim Freeman of
"'r.om 1942 to 1963' __ ages three The Daily Sentinel detailing the prothrough 24. I consider these my fo(- posed mining .
8

~~:f:te:~a:~~::~de~r~::~
onl;~,;~h~heR;:~;~~~:~s~~;~~
fromThRe accoinnce-JSusul.totonnoHfigmhaSnychooof lm
_ y terms of events that shaped our
/

.

school years in Meigs County includ- ·
ed a field trip and picnic to the Portland Park, home of t~e indian mound
and Civil War monument. "y
teach1
"'
ers took advantage of the historical
significance of the area·to expand our
education not only of the Civil Wai
as a whole but also how it touched
our community. The field -trips themselves were · memorable but also
directly influenced several family
outings to Portland Park during summer breaks thereby strengthening
·
h
my ue tot e area.
Since leaving Meigs County in
1963 • my work has taken me to most
of the world. On the rare occasions I
return to my childhood home I quickly notice changes in buildings. roads.

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country into what it is today. To subject the area 10 strip mining lthink It
would be not only an utter shame but
an insult 10 the memory of those individuals who fought and died at what
is now the Portland Park and Buffington lshind simply for the sake of
short-terrn profit.
ed Once the land has
been strip l)'lin it&lt;Oannot be restored
to its original state.
.
•
Your consideration and intervention 10 preserving this. historic site
wouldIfbe appreciated
by not only by
d h
myse an ot ers who may not be
aware of the intentions of Richards
an d Sons but also by future generalions of schoolchildren and their
families.
H ld R F be
-~I ' 'f,a r
115, · exas

h Is
• t0 ry -..

Muslim injuries concern Saudis
By .Jack Anderson
al1_d Jan Moll•
WASHINGTON -- If Saudi oflicials catch the terroristS&gt; who bombed
the Am~ric~ barracks in Dhahran
last week, they can expect a brutal
death at the hands of their captors.
But the death sentence won't be
handed down to avenge the murder of
the 19 Americans who died in the
blast. Rather, the death senterfce
would be handed down because the
: terrorists succeeded in wounding 147
Saudis and 1.50 Bangladeshi natives
. -- most of whom are Muslim.
Few Americans understand· the
complex religious Jiws that govern
j Saudi Arabia. a country that U.S. soldim have risked their lives to protect
since 1990. Freedom is minimal in
the royal lcingdt&gt;m -- especially for
( women and foreigners ,
Saudi laws are 'based on a premedieval system called "shari a,"
which dates to the days of
Mohammed. According to a top State

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Department expert: "sharia" dictates
that there are four capital crimes:
Adultery, which is punishable by ·
stoning to death; apostaSy from the
. lslamk faith; and murder, but only if
·a Muslim is killed. The death of a
Christi~ Jew or other non-Muslim
is not automatically punishable by
death,
The founh, and most serious, capital crime is "waging war against
Islam" br "undermining the community. "If the terrorists are captured,
experts predict this will be the charge.
But not because they killed American
· soldiers -- but because they wounded their fellow Muslims.
U.S. intelligence analysts initially
believed the terrorist bombing was in
retaliation for the beheading of four
Saudi terrorists on May 31 for a
bombing last November that killed
seven people (five of them Americans) and , )YOunded 60. An anonymoW! warning of "retaliation" if the
four criminals were punished came

·
Today is Wednesday, July 3, the 18Sth day of 1996. There are lSI days
·
left in the year.
Today's Highlightin History:
On July 3, 1863, the three-day C' ·it War Battle at Gettysburg, Pa. endl
ed in a major victory for the North as Con{cderate troops retreated ..
On this date:
1!1 1608. the city of Quebec was founded by Samuel de Champlain.
In 177S, Gen. (ieOtge-Washington took conunand of the Continental Army
lt Cambridge. Mass.
' · In l890,1daho became.the 43rd state of the Union.
· In J$98, tbc U.S. Navy defeated a Spanish fleet in the harbor at Santia10, Cubi, during the Spani~h-American War. •
.
·
In 1930, Conpss 'created the U.S. Veterans Administration.
In 1944. dtfring World War II, Soviet forces recaptured Minsk.
Jn)950; American and North Korean forces clashed for the f~tlime in

•
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on May 15, but did not stop the sentence from being carried out.
State Department sources say that;
on average, Saudi officials have e~e­
culed about one criminal per week for
violating "sharia." Beheadings are
unannounced, and usually occur after
Friday prayers in the main squafe of
the city where the crimes occurred. In
Riyadh. mosque-goers are tipped off
to an impending execution when
they see a black police truck pull up;
accompanied by an ambulance.
Executions are brutally quick and
simple. With the bound prisoner
kneeling on the ground, the executioner will lightly prod his buttocks
with a pointed stick held in his lefi
hand to produce a stiffening of the
museles. Simultaneously, with an
expert stroke from a sword held in his
right hand, the executioner sevelli the
neck.
To the Western eye, there is little ·
rhyme or n:ason to the laws that govern Saudi ~ife. For example, the law

· · E:~aNoR RooSe'kLT
at&gt;~D Gar-IPtir WeRta F1~, Dearz;
St!T DiD You Ha'te To
CotJ$llLT Rrc.thlf~D MiXoN
ot.f ,.H~ F.S:t. F';Le$.?

An acquaintiutce of m·ine brought
her elderly mother and father to San
Diego earlier this year from their
native home in Lebanon. As a.condi- ·
·tion of her parents' legal immigration
to this country, she signed an affidavit
promising that her noncitizen relations would not go on the welfare
rolls for at least five years.
But in a matter of months-- not
years-" her father violated this agreemen!. ij,¢ applied for, and was granted, taxlfayer-subsidized health coverage through the Medi~Cal program, which is California's version of
Medicaid. 'fo her credit, my acquainlance pleaded with her father not to
go on.the public dole. She.even took
it upon herself to sign him up for private health insurance.
But her father turned down the pri· vate insurance policy. He told her that
old friends of his, members of San
Diego's Lebanese community,
· '
d
m.orme ,him that the affidavit his
d h
· ed
11 b
aug ter stgn was a : ut-unenf
bl · · h
orcea e m t e courts. There was
absolutely nothing to prevent him
from receiving Medi-Cal or any other government
It · 1h· k. dbenefits.
fb
•s IS m o razen disregard

for U,)..S. immigration law that has
prQJflpted lawmakers in Washington
to include a provision in the pending
immigration reform bill that would
toughen requirements for sponsolli of
illegal immigrants. If tl\e provision
becQmes law, immigrants will no
longer think they are entiiJed to government benefits the moment their
feet touch U.S. soil.
' My ' Lebanese acquaintance's
father was able to qualify for Medi·Cal because he listed only his poverty-level income on his application.
But under the proposed reform, a new
means test will be created that takes
into account both the immigrant's
income and their sponsor's. If a
sponsor is earning sufficient income,
at least 200 percent abpve poverty
level, !hen their ..JIQ!JIItizen sponsorees are ineligible for public ass istance.
This reform has provoked much
sound and fury in the immigrant com·
.mimity. Immigration activists claim
1
the means est places a financial hardship on sponsors and that many
noncitizens will be denied health care
and other government benefits that
they desperately need.
But Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson,

who authored the immigration reform
provision, speaks for the majority of
Americans. "Why should the rest of
us cough up money," he asks, "when
the sponsor has n.ot done it yet. or has
not run out of money?"
Indeed, the way the Jaw is currently interpreted~ an immigrant
could COIJle to this country under the
sponsorship of a relative whose assets
place them among the Forbes 400,
and the immigrant would still be eligible for taxpayer-subsidizCd welfare
based strictly on their own income.
And it is because of this gaping
loophole in current immigr;uion Jaw
that4he number or noncitizens on the
public dole has exploded.in just the
past dozen years. Consider. for
instance, Supplemental Security
Income, a poverty program that
serves the elderly, blind and disabled .
The number of noncitizens receiving
monthly SSI checks has risen 580
percent since 1984. This amounts to
a $3.5-billion-a-year transfer from
taxpaying Americans to nontaxpaying noncitizens.
.In recent congressional testimony,
Norman Matloff, an immigration
researcher at the University of Califomia - at Oavis, explained why

allows for the protectio4f former
Ugandan butcher ldl Amin, bu! condemns Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Amin is cum:n~y living in exile in
the city of Jeddah ; where he evades
justice in his ni!.tive country. The former Uganda, now named Kampala,
has charged Amin with murdering
between 100,000 and 300,000 of hi s
own people in .a reign of terror -that
horrified the world 20 years ago.
Since Amin is a Muslim, and never killed a fellow Muslim during hi s
long and bloody reign, he is treated
as a dignitary. Under ancient rules
governing hospit;llity and sanctuary,
Amin is given a spacious apartment,
a luxury car and a generous monthly
allowahce by the royal family . .
Since Saddam's invasion of
Kuwait claimed many Muslim Jives,
he.&amp;an e~pect no mercy under Saudi
laws. Had Saddam been captured
during the Gulf War, CIA plan~ers
would have asked that he be turned
over to Saudi authorities for beheading under Islamic law. The CIA
feared that if Saddarn was captured or
assassinated by Westerners, he might
have become a martyr in the Arab
world.
In effect, Saddam has already
been condemned to beheading by
Saudi Arabia's hig~cst religious
authority. Sheik Abdulaziz bin Abdulla bin Baz, who issued a religious
decree 'in January 1991 calling Sad·
da'm "an enemy of God."
.

increasing · numbers of immigrants
have come to regard welfare a5 a
retirement system of sorts.
Many immigrants "do not ·consider receiving welfare to be a stigma," he noted. "On the contrary, tliey
view it as a normal benefit of immigration, whose use is encouraged like
a library card. They are unaware of
the "fact that welfare is only intended
as a safety net."

l

. I, is time that Congress changed
this mindset. The United States can
no longer afford to be a retirement
haven for poor, aged immigrants. If
they arc allowed to .take up residence
in this country, then their sponsors
must live up to their promise that
their noncitizen sponsorees will not
become a "public charge."
America boasts, by far, the most
liberal, the most generous immigration policy in the world . It is hardly
asking too much of those noncitizens
who choose to spend their twilight
years OJJ U.S. soil that they either pull
their own weight or get their family
members here in this country to take
up their slack. ,
1..--.l,~h Perkins is a colum·
nist fclr The San Diego Union- Tribune.

By Joseph Spear

-~.

In ·keeping with the tenor of the
times, the Spear Foundation is undergoing a painful downsiz1·ng.
This is no\ an easy task, given the
size of our little think tank to begin
wtth. But, in the interest of ma1·ntaini"" product qualt.ty, we w1·11 do
"e
what we must.
'
For example, we used to have a
GIT (Good Ideas-Team) and a DfNGBAT (Dumb Ideas and Notibns and
Grievous Bunkum Auditing Team).
Nc;&gt;w we will try to combine them
into a single idea-asse•sment
grou'p.
'
We're not sure what to call it yet, but
-we' re using the temporary "designsbon SFIAT (Spear Foundation Idea
Assessmeat Team). I guess it would
be pronounced like what you say

when you see an Italian car: "It's a
Fiat." S'Fiat... SFlAT... Oh, well, suggestions are welcomed.
Anyway, as son of a trial run, here
is an interim SFIAT report on some
current concepts, notions and ttends:
I. The printed page is a dinosaur.
A lot. of people have been saying this
~
for a wnile now. A recent example
from fellow columni~t Charles
Krauthammer: "The Gutenberg age
is going to end with the 20th ccntury. Fillifto go will be the newspaper.
Then the magazine. Then the book.. ..
They will all find a new life on the
screen, on.disk and online."
· BAD IDEA. I cannot be pelliuaded that text is real if it is QOt printed
on some tactile surface. Words cannot exist in the form of magnetic partides. Things thai are just out there.

_____...;.___

f 1
,
the KoreanM'ar.
·
·
In I
Algeria became independent afier 132 years of French rule.
In I971 , 25 years a~o. singer Jim Morrison of The Doors died in Paris
at age 27.
In I976, 20 years ago, Israel launched its daring mission to reseue about
a hundred passengelli and Air France crew members being held at Entebbe
Airport in Uganda by pro-Palestinian hijackers.
.
In 1988, the USS "Vincennes" shot down an Iran Air jetliner o~er the.
Persian Gulf, killing all 290 passengers and crew if1er misidentifying the
plane as an Iranian F-14 fighter.
Ten years ago: President Reagan presided overa gala ceremo~y in New
York Harbor that saw the relighting of the renovated Statue of Ltberty.,..

%2.

One y~ ago: Irish Republican Army sympathiu,rs rioted in Northe1n ,
Ireland's two· largest cities in outrage over·the early parole of a British soldier convicted of killing a Roman Catholic woman..

'

·
'floating in the ether somewhere, cannot poss1bly be words. When there
are no newspapel'l, magazmes an_d
books that can be held and fe. It, thiS
de·"
wor~ill be a dreary place IR ....
. .~l-SkiS should be banned. A
Clbzen s group on San Juan Island,
Washin,gton, recently managed to
pull thts off. The so-called :"wet·
bikes" were zippin• around the
•
islands. of San Juan County in
mcreassng numbers, chassng away
b'rd
1
1 s_and seas and dis_
turb_ing the
peace of the general populallon.
· AN ABSOLU1ELY DYNAMITE
IDEA. The Personal Watercraft
Industry Association is livid, but I say
ban these nmsy, smelly, hateful contraptions .for now and for always and
forevermore. What in the name of
Neptune gives spoiled brats the
notion~at they have the right to
destroy the peace of everyone? And
while we're at ii,let's ban those stupid cigarette boats that sound like
~ending rockets, And · unmuffied
·motorcycles. And leaf blowers. Damn
them all and ban them all.
. 3. Beach v611eyball is worthy of
Olympic status. Yes, they are going
to be competing in this event this
slJ!IImer in Atlanta. The fact that the
city is 2SO r'lllles from the nearest
beach is irrelevant. They .will dump
some sand on the ground and put up
a ne~ and four-person teams ofsurf~r
boys and girls with epidermises the
color
'of tOISt will put on their little
1
s'*'dex bathing sui!S, and they will

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The Dally Sen.tlnel-• Page3

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W.VA.

Via Aaocialod Pl8ss Or&amp;pl»csNot

. Pictur&amp; perfect weather
·predicted for the Fourth
..: ·By The Ass_oclated Prltss
•" . It will be good night for fireworks displays planned around the
. state, the National Weather Service
srud.
(
,
Skies wi ll ·--be clear tonight,
·· humidities will be low and tempera. '··· tures will be in the 60s most places.
-.. By Thulliday morning, the·mercury
will ha~e dipped into the mid-50s.
The weather will cooperate on the
~ Founh of July, too, forecasters said.

a

I

by Bob Hoeflich.

The impressive plane flyover In Bonnie Mathews keep a good supply
tribute to those killed in the recent ·of food going, while Edna tlunnel
bombing of the military complex in lind her family provided flowers to
Saudi Arabia had more of a "local help Dorothy keep her good , poJ ilive
outlook. The good care she required
touch" than we realized. •
The flyover WilS held on Sunday was provided by Linda Russell, Brenas a part of the memorial service for da Cunningham and Paul Harris Jr.,
those who died in the bombing of the and there were Jots of vi sitors to k~ep
complex , and flylng the lead plane up her spirits.
Dorothy really appreciates all of
was none other than Lt. Col. Mark
the
kindnesses.
Morris, son of Janet and Carl Morris
•
of Rutland.
Returned to her home in the
Mark is th"e commander of the
Racme
area following a couple of
59th Fighter Squadron to the 33rd
attacks
. Clara Krider has also
heart
Fighter Wing and is stationed at the
been
feeling
the Jove of family and
Elgin Air Force Base near Pensacofriends
.
.
la. Fla.. and had.been in Saudi AraHer
son
,
Buster
Harrison of
bia himself until this spring.
Zephyr
Hills,
Fla.,
came
to visit w1th
Mark"is married to the former Lisa
her
as
dtd
her
son-in-law
and daughThomas, daughter of Don and Carter.
Elmer
and
Delores
Leihgeber
of
olyn Thomas of Pomeroy and the
Tenn.
Peggy
Freeman,
Sevierville,
couple are parents of two sons, BJad
Clara's niece. who works at the
and Greg .
Incidentally, Brad graduated from Pomeroy Care and Rehabilitation
high school this spring and has an Air Center. . has hecn quite helpful in
Force scholarship. He'll be attending checking Clara out and of course.
Kent State University in the fall and Clara's husband, Marvin , is right on
already is enrolled in the ROTC pro- the scene to help and especially with
s;
gram there . On hand for Brad's gradittle Jove and attention goes a
uation
along
wit~ other family mem&gt;
Kenneth Howard Michael, 68, Pomeroy, died Tuesd~y. July 2, 1996 at his
long ay in these low moments that
bers
were
his
i
randparents
from
residence.
II go through at one time or•
Meigs County, Janet and Carl. and
Born Oct. 4, 1927 in Meigs County, son of the late R~ymond Michael and·
another.
..•
Eida Jane Hysell Michael Rupe, he retired as an equipment operator from Carolyn and Don. · ,
While we're at it, et me update
coal strip mining and attended the Hysell Run Holiness Church.
Tomorrow is July 4th when we
you on the other two sons of Janet
A U.S . Army veteran. he was a past commander o'f the Rutland Eli Dencelebrate the declaration of our free and Carl Morris.
nison Post 467 of the American Legion, and was an honorary member of the
Their son. Jim, retired ·from the dom . The weather people predict a
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department.
Air Force last July and is teaching at beautiful day and there are commuSurviving are his wife, Virginia B. Moore Michael; three sons and daughGeorge Washington High School in nny celebrations offering a variety of
ters, in-Jaw, Randy and Laura Michael, and Paul and Linda Mic,Jmel , all of Charleston, W.Va. He is in charge·of activities in Racine, Rutland and
Pomeroy, and Mark and Denise Michael of Middleport; two j:laughters and
Middleport. So enjoy your the activsons-in-Jaw, Sherry and Brian Robinson of Columbus and Tammy and Sam the Junior Air Force ROTC Program ities and your day and do keep smil there and will 1'1' bringing a color
Little of Rockport, Ind.; I I grandchfldren; three brothers. Hemtan Michael
ing.
of Pomeroy, Everett "Pete" Michael of Middleport, and Cecil Michael of -. guard from his Charleston organization to the July 4th celebration in Rut•
Olean, N.Y.; a sister, Phyllis Morris of Pomeroy; two stepsisters, Donna Fry
land. Third son of the Morrises; Jim 1
of Rutland, and .Dorothy Creech of Germantown; and several nieces and
is serving in the Air Force also an~
nephews.
is currently stationed at the McGuire
He was also preceded in death by his stepfather, Robert Rupe; a brother,
in New Jer~ey.
Clifford Michael; two sisters, Thelma Moore and Beatrice Lightfoot; and a Air Force Base
.
stepbrother, Raymond Rupe_.
· Antiquity's Dorothy Sayre is out
Services will be I I a.m. Friday in the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland . and about these days following a
with the Revs. David Bryan and Robert Manley officiating. Burial will fol- complete knee replacement on March ,
low in the Rutland Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2- 2 I at the. Grant Joirit Implant Center '
4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
in Columbus.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Holzer Hospice, Meigs
Dorothy has been shown a 'lot of
Chapter, I 15- J/2 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
kindness during her recovery and is
grateful for that. Terry Shain, Sabra
Ash, June Sayre, Mary Lance and

Kenneth H. Michael

Skies will be mostly sunny and
temperatures will climb into the mid70s to low 80s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 101 degrees in 191 I while
the record low was 50 in 1968. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04 p.m. and
sunrise Thursday at 6:08 a.m .
Weather fotecast: .
· Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows 50 to

55.

•

'.Unsafe fireworks use

__

.,. ' (Continued from ~age 1)
Swift of the Middleport Police
Department.
' aamage, Owens said.
"We've had ·only a few problems
-' . Non-exempt Class C fireworks,
with
the discharge of fireworks in the
·such as firecrackelli, bottle rockets,
1
village.
Our department strongly
. ~oman c·andles, skyrockets, fountains
that
residents enjoy the fireadvises
:.,and missiles, can be legally sold in
''Ohio, but only by a licensed whole- works by watching the village display
at Dave Diles Park, operated by
''-saler manufaciurer.
. Under Ohio's fireworks Jaw. indi- trained and experienced exhibitolli.
' vidual; can be charged with a first We don't want to have any unfortu· degree misdemeanor if forms are fal- nate fireworks-related accidents,
sified whc;n purchasing them, if they which is the main reason that the vilare discharged or if they are pos- lage has ~ublic display every Fourth
Kathryn Elaine Werner, 83, Lima, formerly of Bradbury, died Tuesday,
·
sessed for more than 48 or 72 hours of July,' satd Sw1ft.
.
First-time offender! are subject to July 2, 1996 in the Plus One Health Care Center. Lima.
without talcing them to the designatBorn
Sept.
26,
1912
in
Middleport;
daughter
of
the
late
Roland
and
Meda
a
S
I
,000
fine
and
six
months
imprised out-of-state address.
. . Purchasers must sign a form cer- onment. A second .violation ratchets Russell Gibbs, she was a member of the Bradbury Church of Christ, and
Chapter 172 Order of the Eastern Star.
·
' tifying thai the fireworks will be tak- up the crime to , a fourth-degree Evangeline
She
is
survived
by
two
daughtelli
and
sons-in-Jaw,
Dorothy
and Rolland
en out of state within 48 hours, and felony with a possible $2,500 fine
of
Lima.
and
Meda
Jane
and
Wayne
Stout
of
Westerville;
seve11,grand-·
Smith
must also specify their destination . and up to five years imprisonment.
Offenders can also face addition- children and 25 great-grandchildren ; brothers, Pearson Gibbs of New Lex.Out-of-state residents must do so ~~ mi"sdemeanor cttarges if there is ington, and Joseph Gibbs of Ashville; sisters, Clarice Krautter and Charlotte
:within 72 hours. ••
·
Elberfeld, both of Pomeroy; and nieces and nephews .
- "It is important to stress that no any property damage er injuries
Sltvices will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,
., 6ne C'ltn legally discharge these fire- which .result from the illegal dis' ·works in Ohio," said Capt. Bruce charge of fireworks , Swift said.
Bradbury
Church of Christ,
Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill
with
her son-in-Jaw.
Dr. E. officiating.
Wayne
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Friday.

«&gt;r

,.

Kathryn· E. Werner

-Local News h1 Brief:Car rolls over street to riverbank

feS

.

William L. Smith, 28. Reedsville,
was arrested Tuesday evening on a
domestic violence complaint signed
by. his wife. Peggy Smith. according
to a Meigs County Sheriff's DepartffiWl report.

THE '-!EADLINE BAS

Missing dog found

No injuries were .reported when a car rolled across West Main Street and
One of t~o , Rottweiler . dogs
over the bank toward the Ohio River near Big Bend Foodland Tuesday after- ., reported m1ssmg last month m the
' noon, according to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought.
Langsv1lle area was recovered Tues. · According to reports, Judy K. Cheadle, 44, Albany, parked her 1986 Chevy day at the Me1gs County Dog Poun~,
along the lower siae of the Foodland Jot adjacent to West Main . She turned accord1ng to a Me1gs Shenff s
the ignition switch off and thought she had placed the car in park. Cheadle Department report .
then removed the key and locked the car..
·
.
.,
David Shuler, State. Route 124,
The car kicked out of gear and the ignition switch malfunctioned, send- ·reported the dog~ m1ssmg June I 2,
ing the car coasting across West Main and over the bank toward tl)e nver. checked the dog pound Tuesday and
· 'The car came 10 a stop just short of the shoreline, cau~ing only very light found one of the dogs ~h1ch"lhe dog
damage 10 the driver's side door.
.
wardc·n had p1cked up m the Racme
· No citation was issued by police, Rought sa1d.
area.
Deputies are invesiigating the
incident.
Two bicycles which were recovered recently near Syracuse are bemg held
. ~.:
. at the Meigs County Sheri .
partment, accordmg to Shenff James M.
. .Soulsby.
•
·
.
.
.
Anyone who has lost a bicycle the area, or has tnformat1on on the bikes
The meeting between local and
can contact the Meigs CJ untyShen
Department at 992-337 I to identify federal Emergency Management
Agency officials will be Monday at
8 a.m. at the Meigs County Emerma · eg
·
Richara Poulins, Bradbury Roa , Middlepon , reported Sunday that dur- gency Medical Services off1ce in
ing the night someone had put fingernail polish, catsup and syru~ on h1s two Pomeroy, not 8 p.m. as reported in
cars, porch. sign and light post, accordsng to a Me1gs County Sh.enfl's Depart- .Monday's Daily Sentinel.
ment report .

Bicycles recovere d bY depu '

Deputl"es·. arrest
·
Reedsv.. ille ma,n •'

County Jail,
a hearing today
Sto~t~.~anjd~Ja~kfe~C~o~p~Je~y~.~m~i~n~is~te~r~o~f!th~e~~~H:c:w~a!
s =be~·:pending
· n~g:h:e~Jd:in:t:h:e:M:ei~g:s!~!~~~~~~~;~~
in county ~urt .

\__

EXTENDED FOR

-

Time corrected

.Mlddleport

rts vandalism ·

The Daily Sentinel
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•

l .
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I

POSTMASTER: ~nd :'l ddtets comrtiOns to
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White
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Ice Cream
Freezers
6 Qt. &amp; .4 Qt.

Hurry, Picture Deadline ts Friday, July 12
The Baby. Sentinel is a Special Section failed with · photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
· The Baby Senti~el will appear in, the Julr 1.9th issue of The Daily
Sentinal.
~
·~
Be sure your c.,ild, grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
form· below aiJd enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture pl~s a $6.00
charge for each photograph. (En~lose payment with picture).
1

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r-~---------------,
IPARENTS'NAME
I
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I
I CITY .STATE
I

Reel Wooel
Pudcet
· Hanel Crank

:CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp;AGE

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·piCKENS

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Submitted By - - - - - - - - _ _ ; ' - - 1

L)_._. ___ \--------~~--

HARDWARE

sENDTO:
The Daily Sentinel

MASON, W. VA.
773·5513'"

· P.O. i,\ox 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
BABY Sentinel

J

•

.. .

James Sherman Johnson, 73, of Marietta, formerly of Rutland, died Monday, July I, 1996 at his home.
BomMarch 27, 1923, in Pigeon Roost, Ky., son of the late A~raham Lincoln and Freelove Johnson Johnson, he was a coal miner and was later
employed at the Marietta Boat Plant in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was also a
welder for the Ohio Department of Transportation in Mari~tta.
He was a member of the Reno Christian Church; Harrisonvill~ L~ge 41 I
F &amp; AM ; the Soottish Rite Society, Valley of Cambridge; the Washington
County Scottish Rite Club; Aladdin Temple AAO~S and the Marietta
Shrine Club. He was an EMT with the Warren Volunteer Fire Department.
Surviving are his wife, Arlene Friend Johnson, whom he married Sept.
30, 1993; two son's and daughters-in-Jaw, Ernie Lee and Ruth Johnson Of
NewcasU_e, Va., and James D. and Connie Jop,nson of Belpre; {ive grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; three J_tepdaughters, Brenda Hernandez of Tampa, Fla., Beverly Vansemer of Venice, Fla., and Barbara Gray of
New Brounsfel, Texas; eight stepgrandchildren and four stepgreat-grandchildren; and ,several nieces and nephews; two -brothes:s, Roy Lee John son
of Rutla'tld, and Morgan Luther "Jack" Johnson of Jackhorn , Kr, and two
sisters, Lillie Ann Robinson of Rutland, and Zelia Ann Caudill of Jeremiah,
Ky.
He was preceded in death by his fillit wife, Daryl_Jacqueline Greer Jo~o•.
son, whom he married April 30, 1943; three brothers. Johnnie Belcher.
Lafayette "Fate" Johnson and Elisha Johnson; and a sister, Gracie Hall.
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the Rutland Church of Christ. with
Eugene Under)Nood, Brenton De Weese and the Rev. John Woodring officiating. Burial will follow in the Miles cemetery, Rutland. Friends may call
at the McClure-Schafer Funeral Home, Marietta, from 7 tonight until Fri day morning. and at the church one hour before services.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Rutland .Church of Christ,
New Lima Road, Rutland, Ohio 45775.

IND.

,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.._

swat a ball back and forth .
A SO-WHAT IDEA. If they cim
sled down synthetic ·chutes in Lill~ hammer, who cares if they roll i
·
man-made sand J?its m Atlanta?
think it is way past time, however,
that the Olympic authorities corisili· 1 sport. An,•
er pin ba11 as an offitc1a
Cosmic Bowling, with its tetegeni¢
1
strobe lights and phosphorescen
balls. And certainly wakcboardiqg. I
mean, there really is nothing in the
01 ymptcs
· for~ green -haired dude~
·th ·
·
WI nngs m every visible appendage;
you know?
4. We should cook the geese thar
bug us. In the small suburb of Clark-'
stown north of New York City hun-·
dreds of Canada geese were ~foul- :
ing the parks, and local officials '
rounded up 240 of them and sent'
them away to be cooked and ground
up and distributed to the homeless. In ·
' Michigan,"' state authorities won ·a ,
. court battle to catch 500 Canada :
geese in southeastern lakeside com•:
munities ami cook and give them 10 :
the poor
•
FINE IDEA Confounded geese 'j
should hmtt thesr presence in urban ,
areas, and on golf courses, too. (Is :
goose doo considered a removable ,
"loose impediment"? I'd like 1 ru1- :
ing on that.) And while we're 81 it, ~
let's cook up a few potS of pigeon, :
stew.
_ '
• J01epb Spear 11 1 IY'M'Iattid
writer for NeW~p~~per Eaterpdle
Auociadoa.
,

"·

James S. Johnson

IMansfield 178' l•

SF takes bad .Ideas Wl.th good
.

AccuWeather•. forecast for daytime conditions and

..

Immigration 'loophole costs.billions
By Jo~eph Perkins

·Thursday, July 4

;J ·

..

1·oeath.Notices I Beat of the Bend ...

OHIO Weather

&lt;

MICH.

"The jihad (holy war) that is tak1ing place today against the enemy of
' God, Saddam, the ruler of Iraq. is a
legitimate jihad on the part of Muslims and those assisting them." the
blind judge declared i.n his fatwa, or
decree. By killing Kuwaitis, the
judge claimed, Sad m... has wrongly transgress'·- a · committed
aggression
ainst ali invaded a
peaceful country .. T)l efore it is
obligatory to wage f ad against
him."
~ ·
·
Jack Ande
a Jan Moller
are writers for
1ted Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
,·

-~-"""!----~~----------....;

·!JY The AIIOCiated Prell

·

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday.,
July 3; 1996 ·
,.

ordmance.
In a nutshell, the ordinance -- which presumably took effect Monday -- ·
limits metered parking to two hours on d!)wntown str«;ts and parking along
the new nverfronl promenade to those who purchase special parking permits.
All-day metered parking is still· available on the side of the parlcing lot
facing the street, and all-day, park-anywhe.re type permits are no longer recognized. (Ves, we had those under a long-standing agreement with ttie village.)
But our problem isn't so much ·with the parking ordinance i~s&gt;elf... and
face it, a buck or two is a small price to pay for a parking infraction these
days,~ther, we disagree with the sloppy way it has been implemented.
A r disregarding the reconunendation of the Poll!eroy Merchants Association hich had lobbied for free parking in the parking lot, village council had s veral months in which to prepare for the new ordinanre, preparation which would logically include:
.
.
-- paihting diagonal parking spaces on the parking lot; \ _ .
-- installing signs along the promenade stating 'Permit Parking Only';
-- placing of 'AII-day Parlcing Permitted' wllere aj)propriate;
.
-- installing of '2-hour Parking Only' signs along downtown streets; and ...
-- repairing or replacing parking meters damaged in the January Ohio Ri ver flood .
' None of this was done by the Monday deadline even though council had
earlier1delayed implementation of the ocdinance by one month, from June
I to July I. allowing even inore time for these logical preparations.
Council had an opportUnity Monday night to further postpone the plan's •
implementation, but declined to do so.
·
·
With·many people requesting that the village remove the meters -- at least
from~e ~arking Jot-- we feel village council has seen fit to make the parkmg sttuatmn even more confusing to the people who work and do business
in the county seat.

·Letters to the editor

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Wednesday, July 3, 1996
~ag82

Senti.tiel

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Sports

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Wednesday, July 3, 1996

~e Daily Sef!lia~l"

~-

In American Legio

Gallipo ·

'Pomeroy •.Middleport, Ohio

l

'

asebtill,

.

tallies · la~s

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE

Cardinals slip past Reds 4-3 .
ST. LOUIS.( AP)- It took half
the season for Ron Gant to face his
former team. It was wonh the wait
for the SL Louis Cardinals.
Gant hit a go-ahead honfe run in
the eighth inning Tuesday night and
St. Louis ~eld on for a 4-3 victory
over the Cincinnati Reds :.
Gant spent last year with the
Reds, then carne to St. Louis as a free
agent this winter. The two teams are,
playing for the first time this year, so
this was the first opporfunity for
Gant to show the Reds what they're
mi · &gt;ing .
"It's a little different," Gant said.
"I was over there for one year, and
I enjoyed playing there. I still have
a lot of frien ds there.
"The bottom line is that I'm here
to nelp this team win the pennant: so .
I got to try imd keep hitting the ball
hard."
Gant almost hit it too hard off former CiiJIIlinals closer Lee Smith. His
line drive just cleared the left-field
wall to put St. Louis ahead 3-2.
" I wanted to watch it, but I wasiN sure if it was going out," Gam
said. "I had to run hard , because if

it would · have hit off the wall, I
wouldn 't have m,ade it to second
base."
Cardinals manager Tony La Russa wasn 't sure if Gant's drive would
leave the park either.
."In the short time I've seen him
hit, I know he has the ability to hit
that line drive with just the right spin
to have it go out," La Russa said.
"He's an unbelievably strong hitter." .•
Gant wanted tp make a big
impression with the Cardinals, but
mi ssed more than a month earlier
this season with a strained right hamstring. He has made up for lost time
with fiv e homers in his last nine
games and 12 on the year with 39
RBis.
. "I don't think about it at all,"
Gant said of his injury. "My job is
to help this team win a pennant .. In
order to do that, I' ve got to keep
doing what I'm doing."
·
After being held without a hit by
Roger Salkeld and Kevin Jarvis for
the first six innings, the Cardinals
scored twice off Smith in th~ seventh
to tie it 2-2. Pinch-hiller Willie
McGee's two-out, two-run triple to
the wall in right center was the big

Indians notch 3-2
win over Royals

hit. .
Gant led off the eighth by hitting
Smith's slider over the left-field
wall. The Cardinals added another
run off Jeff Shaw later in the inning.
" I've got not excuses," said
S mith~w o·pitchell against his former t m for the first time since he
left St. Louis in 1993. "I made a coupie of good pitches. I was throwing
it where I wanted."'
Ri ck Honeycutt (2-0), who got
the final out in the eighth, was the
winner. Dennis Eckersley finished
fur h1s 12th save, allowing a leadoff
homer In the ninth to pinch-hitter
Thomas Howard.
Eric Davis had two hits for the
Reds and drove in a run with a fifthinning single. Davis has hit safely in
12 of 15 gan.1es and is batting '.35.6
tn that span.\\
St. Louis staner Mike Morgan
allowed two runs and eight hits in six
innings.
Cincinnati· took a 1-0 lead in the
second . Jeff Branson singled ·but
Salkeld was struck by a pitch in the
nght hand wh1le attempttng to bunt.
Salkeld eventually did sacrifice and
Brel Boone hll an RBI smgle.
But Salkeld took himself out of
the game before the ·stan of the third.
X-rays taken of his middle and ring
finger were negative. · ·

SAFE OR OUT?- St. Louis seco.nd baseman
Luis Alicea (12) wahs for tile call from umpire
Randy Mareh filer the Cincinnati Reds' Reggie
~nders (In front of Marsh) arrives at second

CLEVELAND (AP) - A 50- "That's what you go up there for, to
minute rain delay didn't bother Julio hit.
Franco. It may have helped him hit
Till) Belcher (6-4) got the first
his game-winning single.
two tl~ts in the ninthbefore yielding
"All during the delay I tried to get singles io Ramirez and Sandy Alomy mind in focus, tried to relax and mar. That brought on Pichardo to
concentrate on getting a pitch I , face Franco, hobbled after straining
could drive, " he said after the Cleve- his right hamstring on June 23. He
land Indians' 3-2 victory Tuesda)'&lt; still came up as a pinch-hitter for'
night over the Kansas City Royals. Alvaro Espinoza.
" I was looking for a sinker and I
But while Pichardo was warming
think that's what I hit."
up, lightning and heavy rain forced
Franco, pinch-hitting with two the 50-minute delay.
outs in the bottom of the ninth, lined
" I thought we might need
a 2-0.pitch from Hipolito Pichardo to snorkels and fins to finish, but I was
right field to score Manny Ramitez confident with Julio up there, " Indifrom second 'with the game-winner. ans manager Mike Hargrove said.
"That's what 1 wan\ to do every
When play resumed, Pichardo
time I get to bat," Franco said.
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

the tilth Inning of Tuesday night's game
In St. Louis, where the Cardinals won 4-3.
Sanders was called safe on the steal play. (AP)

II

'j:Fj~IN'E FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

iet·coke ·D r

AL standings

\

Eastern Division

.w

Iwn

I. l£1.

li.ll

.550
.4:\9

4h
D'n

.12
Balumore .......... 44 JO
Toron10 . ..
... 36 46
New York ............ 49
8os10n .

.605

.... :\4

47

420

I~

.23

60

.217"

27

Ck1r011

c~ntnl

CLEVELAND
Cht cago
M1lwau k.ee . ....
Mtnnesota
Kam:~.s City .I

Division

. .'iO )2

.610

n1

J_llj

. 47

)

- ~ 19

481

10 ~

... Jl 48

422

l.'i 1h

Western Division
.. 49 )) .l98
.42 1s .m
42 "
506

TeAas
Seall le

C:~ hfo rru a

O:lkland

7~

...42 )9
19 42

.. 40

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6

7~

9\

Tuesday's scores

oca -Cola Classic

(o..bek J-6), 2:35 p.n\.
New York (Oart 8--6) at Aliladrlphia
(Mo!holland 6-6), 7:05p.m.
Atlanta {Glavine 8-S) at Montrtal
(Urbina 4-2). 1:35 p.m
Chicaao (Castillo 2- 10) at Pittsburgh
(Neagle 8-4), 7:3! p.m •
Los An&amp;eks (R. Martinez 6.2) nt San
Diego (Hamihon 9-4), 9:05p.m.
Colorado (Wright 0-0) at San FriUicisco (0 . Fernandez 4-8). IO:OS p.m

Thursday's games
Florida (Rapp 4- 10) at Philadelphia
(Schilling 2-J). I :0:1 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Ponugal 4-S) at Chicago (Bullinger J-6). 2:20p.m
S1. Loy'il (Andy Beneli 5-IJ) at Pllts·
bJ&amp;Igh-{OO~ns 0-1 ). J:O:'I p.m.
San Frnncisco (M . Uitu 4-6) a1 Sun
Diego (Tc~ksbury 6-5), 4:05p.m.
New York (Penon 1-J) at Montreal
(Fusero 8-5). 7 J 5 p.m.
Houl tOn (R~ynolds 9-5) at Atlnnta
(Smoltz 14-:l}. 7.40p.m
Colorado (Freernnn 6-4) at Los Angeles (Valdei 8-S). 10::\5 p.m.

Balnmorc R. TOf Onto 2
Mllwauk.et 2. Dttrott I (I I)
CLEVELAND 3. Kansas City 2
Chu.:ago 7, Mtnnesot3 4
N~w York 7, Bos10n ~ .

Transactions

Cahft.Hma 6. Texas~
OMlland II , Seatt le 6

Baseball

Today 's games
Boston (Wakefield ~-H) at New York
(GOl.ldcn 7-4), t ·O.'i p .m
Oaki&lt;Jnd (Chouinard 2-2) a1 Seaulc
( Wolcott 5-7) . .l ~.IIi p m

Kansas Ci ty (App1er 7-7) at' CLEVELAND IT::tvare;r. 2 - .~). 7·05 p m
Mtl wauk~ (D"Am,co 1-0) a1 Detroit
(87Will wms 1-.lli). 7 O.'i p.m
Minne sota (Radke= 4-10) a1 Ch1&lt;::1go
(AnduJar 0-0J. 7·05 p.m.
·
Ball1more (Knvda 2-.l ) a1 Toront o
(Guzman 6--6), 7 .l~ p m

Tuas (Pavht 10-2) m Cah!Of m:l (Fm·
ley 9-6UO·JS p m

Thursday's games
Mtlwaukee (Karl 8-.l) at New York
(Pe ue 12-4). I :OSp.m.
L h1 cngo (8aldwtn 7- 1) at CLEVE LAND (McDowe11 6-6), I .O.'i p.m
Boston (Stlt 2-5) :11 B:~lumort (M usstna 10-.'i), 4·£r.'i p.m.
Califorma {Grimsk:-y 4-3) at
( WOJ C i ec howsk i~ -~).

O:~ klan d

NL standings
·'
Easlun Ujvilion

n

Iwn

51
48

Allama

Monucal
flomJa
New Yuck .
rt'ilildtlph•a ...

A.mrrlcsn Luau.
BOSTON RED SOX : Pl:ar.:ed RHP
Nate Minr.:hry on the 15-day disabled list.
~troactive to .h.Jne 28. Placed OF Mike
Greenwell on the 60-day disabled list. Re~a l le d INF Tony Rodrisuez fro'V Pawtucket of tht International League.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Reca!!ed
RHP luis Andujar from Nashville of tile
Amen~.:nn Association . Optioned LHP
Alan Levine to Nnshvtlk.
CLEVE LAND INDIANS : Signed
RHP Kaipo Sptnser. .
DET ROIT TI GERS : Rc ~.:a lled LHP
C J Nitkowski from Tokdo of the lntcrnall o nal Lta8ue . Opt ioned RHP C lint
Sodowsky to Toledo. Placed RHP Gre~
Gohr on t~ I ~ - day disabled li51, retroactlvl! 10 June JO
KANSAS CITY ROYAL..'\ : N:tmt!d
Jim Lahimi o. director of publi city and
communil y relations . Promoted Sieve
Fink to director of media relations

m

li.ll

. ~85

J
12

L

622

ll
\4

.\ 9 4J .476
.l7 45 .4.51
J.4 47 . 420

Cent,.! DlvWon
Houston ..
. . 44 40 524
St. Louis .....
.42 40 512
CINCJNNA11 ... .H 40 43 1
Chic:aso ....
.19 ·&amp;.! 476
.17 4~ 4~1
Pim burah
' Wtlttm Oi"l.don
Los Angeles .... . .. 44 40 .524
San DitJO ...
.. 4.1 41 .512

Colot'lldo ...

..W 41

494

S:m Fr:mmco

.18

469

4.1

REDS : Placed LHP
Pr1e Schourek and I 8 Hal Morris on the
15-day 1hsabltd hst Placed INF Willie
Gr~en( on the I ~ - d ay disabled li s1.
rcuo;KIIve to Junt" 28 R~a Ued OF M1k.e
Kell y frum lndianapolii of the: American
Asso,·lalton . Pu r~.: h ase d the contta~t of
RHP Scou Servi..:c from lndiaMpalis. Ac·
ll vat~d OF Eric Anthony from !he 15-Wy
dtsJhled hs1
SA.N FRANCISCO GIANTS ~ Ploced
· LHP Allen W~son on the I ~-day di.sabltd
list Rs:~.:alled RHP Steve BourJeois from
Phoent.l of tht Pact ftc Coas1 League

Rd~a~ed

I

FootbaU

4
6

Nllllonei ·Football Ltl&amp;ut

Tuesday's sroi'es
Phl!adelpllio 3, New Yort 2
ll, Pi .......h.7
S1. Louts 4. CINCINNATI .1

auca,o

H~slon 4, Aorict13 ( 12)

,s.. Di&lt;Jo J

Los Ani&lt; lea 7

CINCINNATI (Smiley8·6) II Sl.
Louio (Osbonle 7_.). I :35 p.m.
Florida (A . Leilcr 9· 6) 11 Houtto• •

...,. . . . ..

{jf4J

. BiQK
Soft Drinks

SHELLED- Melg• starting pitcher Kevin Deemer
hl1
on the mound a short one In Tuesday's American Legion road game
agalnat Gallipolis. The hosts tagged him tor nine runs, of which six
came In before he traded places with canter fielder Donnie Phillips
In the third. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

i

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Game rosters filled

lndtans
•

NAILS RUNNER- Meigs catcher Cua Cleland leans down to tag
Gallipolis runner Jemie Gruber lor the out shortly after Gruber tried
to score on Ja1on Dalley's run-scoring alngle In the flrat Inning of
Tuesday's District 8 game on the University of Rio Grande campus.
Though this out play ended the flrtt Inning, Gaiiipolll had a&amp;-1 lead
and -ot on to notch an 18·5 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne) ·

FRAM]

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each,or
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Motorm ite
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Gauge f:.it
16170

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G

Gallipolia

BUFFALO B!LLS" Sogned FS En&lt;
Smedky
.
': INCJN NATI BENGALS: S1gn1!d
FS Gq Mfen ro athrec-yw con!rJCt .

209 Upper \iver Road

PriTSBURGH STF.ELERS Sogned

446-3~07

OT Justin Stntlczyk tCI a four-year con-

"""·SAN DJEQO CHARGERS. Sianed
DT Jua.ior Soli and C Brian StolttnbefJIO
....... -

Bendix Semi
Metallic

IXIIllnl&lt;ll.

Hockey

OPf N 7 DAYS AWl

BUFFALO SABRES: Re-~ped Jolon

Torrorella, coach of Rochester of the
AHL.IO I gne..ye. conlTKI.
PHOENIX COYOTES : Sirocd C

Pyroil

Oifl Roooio1. G llorty Wllb!vk and G
Doeillic R~. Ap-ced &amp;f tam1 with
RW Mib c - lad RW l im McKenzie.

Brake
Cleaner

..

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5uncll)', 9 •m • 5 pm

. r a k e Pado

-H-Leope

,

--&amp;

Basketball

J~i

4 '~

ASSORTED VARIETIES

Gallipolis wil

'I

B.ase~all .A ll-Star
By RONALD BLUM
·
along with three other players in the
NEWYORK(AP)-Ontheday - iop seven: Sosa (26), Henry
Rodriguez (25) and Andr~s Galarrathat Atlanta became the first team
ga (22).
.
ever to have four pitchers picked for
the All-Star game. there was just as
Cox will get a chance to add one
much talk about players who were of the outfielders. with San Diego's
overlooked.
Tony Gwynn sidelined for at last
National League home run leader
four weeks because of a minor
Sammy Sosa was bypassed. So was Achilles tendon tear. Gwynn, electAmerican League ERA leader Juan ed to start. was placed in a cast TuesGuzman and Mike Mussina, I0-5 for •day and was to be put on the 15-day
the Baltimore Orioles.
disabled list today.
•
"If we had 45 spots we would
St. Loui s shortstop Ozzie Smith.
have got everybody on that deserved
hitting .253 this season in just 91 atit," AL manager Mike Hargrove sUid
bats, was sel~cted for the 14th time
after selecting hi s pitchers and despite losing his staning job to
reserves Tuesday.
Royce Clayton . Smith, who missed
Others not selected for the AL the game with an injury last year
team were Red Sox outfielder Jose
after he was elected to stan,
Canseco,. tied for fourth with 24
announced last month he will retire
homers, and Milwaukee's Kevin
following the season.
Seitzer, third w1th a 353 average .
Philadelphia. the host team. has
' ' Those left off the NL team includ- just one player on the NL roster:
ell the Dodgers ' Htdeo Nomo. last reliever Ricky Bottalico.
year's starting pitcher, and pttchers
Baltimore outfielder . Brady
Kevin Ritz of Colorado and Shane Anderson. who leads the ma.Jors woth
: Reynolds of Houston, tied for second
29 home runs. was picked as an AL
in the NL with nine wins.
V"reserve and 1s likely to replace
NL manager Bobby Cox picked
staner Ken Gnffey Jr. The Seattle
: pitchers Greg Maddux , Tom
outfielder w1ll mtss the game for the
· Glavine John Smaltz and Mark second stra1ght year because of a
: Wohlers' from his Atlanta Braves.
(See ROSTERS on Page 6)
: Third baseman Chipper Jones also
., .' wasselected,andrlrstba&lt;emanFred
Win •••
·. McGriff will stan after winning in
(Contmued from Page 4)
fan voting. Atlanta·'s six players are threw two balls befo~ Franco lined
: the most of any team , one more than t~e hit past diving second baseman
: Cleveland and Seattle.
· ..
Joe Randa.
Smoltz ( 14-3), who probably wtll
"It WjiS tough for Hipolito to wait
for the NL. leads the maJOrs tn like that, and I thought about bnngand has a 2.98 ERA for the ing in Julio Valera after the r~in."
..nding World Senes. champ1ons. Royals manager Bob Boone smd:
Maddux is 8-6 with a 2.95 ERA and
Jim Poole (4-0) pitched one-third "
Glavine is 8-5 with a 2.62 ERA. of an inning for the victory. . .
Wohlers is fourth in the NL w1th 17 , Omar Vizquel's eighth-tnnmg
saves.
sacri fice fly gave the lndoans a 2- 1
Atlanta outfielder Ryan Klesko,
lead; but the Royals scored in · the
who has 22 homers, was bypassed
ninth against closer Jose Mesa

Shuler lined Manin' s 1-1 pitch off
the mound a~d into center f\eld to
get Johnson and Edwards hom' with
the las'f'\lns of the game.
v ·

Nalionalllaskrtball Assotialion

TORONTO RAPTORS·
V10ccru.o EJposito

San Francisco t Colonldo I
Monlfeal 5. Atlanta I

Today'1pma

NatMNttl Ltacw

14

I

Whole
watermelons

CINC INN~TI

1 6 '~

2&gt;

20-2:1-I.B. AVC. RED, RIPE

MILWAUKEE BREWERS Signed
RHP Paul Stewart

4:05p.m

Kii ns;u City (l..unon 2- 4) :11 MmiiCSUiii
I Rnbo:nson J-8). 6:05pm
To ron to (Ja nze n 4· .1) at D~troll
(N11kowsk1 0-0), 7:05pm
Se:mlc (Meacham 0-1) at Teus {Oh \ ·
er 1-1). 7 .l .~ p m

•

mercy-rule win over M_
ei.gs

Later in ·the inning, Humphreys
made u'p for his error in th~ fo~nh
with a single to left that got Da1ley
home.
Edwards' flare si~gle to center
sent Humphreys home bc;fore calEb

,o

Scoreboard
Baseball

Bunon were retired.
Sh;mer's error on Martin 's
In District 8 American Legio~. grounder helped Ault score . A
baseball, Gallipolis Posr 27's double steal during Deemer's at-bat
Legionnaires shook a 1-0 deficit all owed Hudnall to .score efter
with a five-run riot in the first Martin stole second.
inning that helped them tally a 18·5
With no fielder within I0 feet of
mercy-rule decision over Meigs the second base bag, Humphreys'
Tuesday night at the University of throw from the plate during
Rio Grande's Stanley L. Evans " Deemer's at-bat went ihto ce~ter
Field.
field. Martin scored on the error.
Tile
decision,
which
killed
the
But after all that, Meigs still trailed
1
......_,J Gallians' five-game losing streak,
9-4.
·. gave h ;t 27 its first win of theyear
· s kept Gallipolis from
on the. URG campus after seven sc
only once - in a fifth
straight defeats there.
inn
hat saw neither team score.
Meigs took the earlY. ad ~en
But the sixth saw Gallipolis bat
Kevin Deemer, who
ched on an around for the second-time in the
error by Gallipolis s nstop Heath contest en route to creating a sevenShaner, · scored
hen second run riot. That caused the nine-inning
baseman Moose Chu dropped Rick affair to run 6 112 innings after
Hoo~r's popup in • hallow right
Gallipolis retired Meigs 1-2-3 in the
field."llowever , Meigs stranded seventh.
Gary ~tanley and Hoover when
Between Shaner's two at-bats
Cass Cleland fouled out to pitcher (both outs) in that frame, Gallipolis
Jason D~iley and Donnie Phillips got the longest hit of the night from
bounced out to Dailey to end the Dailey, whose triple to right center
rally .
·
sent Gruber and Sullivan home.
In the Gallipolis first, Dailey led
Meigs (9-10)
off with a walk and tied the game
when Kevin Edwards, facing an 0-2 P!aver·pos,
ah r h hi
count with two out, got an RBI Ryan Manin-sslp ............ 4 I 3 2
single to left.
Kevin Deemer-plcf.. ....... 4 I .0 0
Cleanup hitter Joey Johnson Gary Stanley-3blss ....... .. 3 0 I 0
scored the Gallians' go-ahead run Rick Hoover-lb .............. 3 0 0 0
when on Mark Bums' grounder to Cass Cleland-c .......... ... ..4 0 0 0
shortstop, Ryan Martin thr~w the . Donnie Phillips-cf/p ...... .3 1 0 0
ball out of the reach of second Chad Bunon-rf.. ............. 2 0 0 0
baseman Chad Hudnall, which also · Matt Ault-lf.. .................. 2 I 2 0
helped Edwards get to third base.
Chad Hudnall -2~ ............ 3 I I 0
The_next three runs came in the Joe .Kirby-ph .... ............... l 0 0 0
1
X followmg manner:
Wes Wilson-ph .......... ..... ! 0 I 0
. .
• Edwards scored on a wild pitch Totals
30 S 8 2
~ . during Shaner's at-bat.
Pl!cbers
• Detm~er ' s walk to Morgan Deemer (L): 2 1/3 ip, 3K, 7BB. 4
Sullivan forced in Burns.
hits, 9 runs (8 ER)
• Da1ley's second-at bat of the Phillips: 3 ip, JK, 5BB,
frame made htm the lOth batter 10 Martin: 2/3 ip. 2BB. 2 hits, 3 runs
the inning. The appearance ended (all ER) ·
with a single to left that scored
-·-·~
Shaner. but the throw from left
Gallipolis Post 27 (5-11)
fielder' Matt Ault to Cleland at the Player-pus.
l\b 1 b hi
plate was in time to nail Jamie Jason Dailey-p ................ 3 3 2 3
Gruber and end the .inning.
E;rlc Humphreys-c/lf... ....4 2 3 2
Three walks in the third Moose clark-2b ............. 2~ no
Gruber, Morgan Sullivan and Dailey Joey Johnson-lb .........~2 2 0
were the recipients- Deemer' s Kevin Edwards-3b ........ .5 2 ·2 3
. . pitching stint. Phillips, the starting Mark Bums-rf ................4 I 0 0
center fielder who carne on in relief, Heath Shaner-ss .... ......... 5 I I
saw his walk to Eric Humphreys get Jamie Gruber-lf/c ........... 1 2 I
Grub'er home before Clark's single Morgan Sullivan-cf ,,...... 1 3 I I
to right center qrought in Sullivan Caleb Shuler-ph ............. 1 0 I 2
and Dailey .
Totals
29 18 12 13
Behind 9-1 after three innings,
fitcben
the guests' major rally started in the Dailey (W): 7 ip, 6K &amp; 2BB
fourth after Phillips and Chad

OVP Staff Writer

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Sa~rby.

S,lot pricot 11004 on ln·ttoct mercf!lndl,. only.
~

pricot m11y woty A.op to toeol competltlt&gt;n.
W• ,...,... the r1fht to Uml&lt; ......"""'•·
6olo

R.cl18tor
Ho-op-.,.

I'elf\6

�•

~

Page&amp;•

...

••

·.•

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

I

At Wimbledon,

Sampras,. Graf and McGrath advance
By STEVE WILSTEIN

If Sampras plays the way he did
against Pioline, the Frenchman he
beat for the 1993 U.S. Open title,
Krajicek will be lucky to take a set.
Sainpras made the haid sho!S
look easy, and the impossible sho!S
conceivable. On one point early in
the third set, Pioline hit a sharply
angled backhand' that. Sampras
chased down at full speed. Though
seemingly out of Sampras' reach, he
caught up to the ball, stretched for a·
backhand·and nearly crashed into the
obstacles in his path - the biggest
a cylindrical metill ball bin the size
of a large garbage can.
"I had only once place to go, and .
that was up, over the chair, and I
landed on the ball bin and kind of
tweaked my back. a little bit," Sarnpras said. "A little bit of a scary sit-·
uation there."
That was the only scare Sampras
has had this tournament as he "closes in on Bjorn Borg's Open-era
record of five . su-aight Wimbledon
titles. No other man has won four
Wimbledons in a row since before
World War I.
The thought of winning even one
Wimbledon had some players trembling.
''I just stopped shaking about five
minutes ago," a stunned McGrath
said after upsetting Mary Joe Fernandez 6-3, 6-1 to advance to the
semis against Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, who beat Judith Wiesner 6-4,6-

previous Grand Slam even!S. Her · Washington.
ranking has fluctuated from the 20s
Washington has neverlingered so
two years ago to the 60s last year and long at Wimbledon, going out in the
back to No. 27 ))OW. Anributing her first round the past two years. and
surge here this year to hard 'work
1992, and in the second round the
·with a new coach, McGrath didn't other tliree years he played here.
sound in awe of playing Sanchez
"Geez, I hate to see the same
Vicario, last year's runner-up .
guys win the toumame_n!S all the
"It's an honor just to be&gt; in the time." said Washington, who beat
semis . of Wimbledon," said Paullfaarhuis 6-3, 6-4, 6-2. "Geez,
McGrath, a fanner Stanfoi'd star I like to see, the under4ogs get in
from Michigan who has been living there and shake things up ~ liule bit,
in Switzerland for three years. "I and the not~so-well-~nowns gel in
don't want to say I'm honored to be there and shake things up. Unless
in the company ot Arantxa Sanchez that well-known perso'lf'is'me."
The most established, if not wellVicario because, unfortunately, I
have to beat her in a couple of days. known, player in the bollom half o(
But I'm just thrilled to be here and the draw is No. 13 Todd Martin, the
to be playing the kind of tennis I only seed in that section to reach the
am."
quapers.For that he'll have the honDate looked pretty calm after or of being cast as the villain in his
beating a listless and lazy Mary next match a81!inst Britain's best and
Pierce 2-6. 6-3, 6-1. as well she most populaf young Jllayer, Tim
should when faced with the prospect Henm~. ,
q•
.
of next playing Graf, a 6-3, 6-2 winMarlin, a vtclor over Thomas
ner against Jana Novoma. Graf has Johansson; 3-6, 6-J, 7-5. 6-2, toiled
beaten Novotna in 25 of their 28 in the hinterlands of Court 6 and hasmatches.
n't been on Centre Coun so far this
"I know that my service is not in year. Henman has been on Centre
good shape recen.lly, and relatively ·Court almost every day, 'ihe benefiI'm shorter than the other players, ciary of .erowds that desperately
and also I'm lacking in power," Date want him to become Britain's first
said, summing up the reasons she men's champion since 1936.
probably won 't beat Graf.
"It's a huge advantage for him ,"
Not everyone cared about being Martin said sarcastically of Henso realistic.
man's frequent visits to Centre
"I think I'm dreaming, and I hope Court. "If you ever saw the movie
nobody wakes me up," said No. 91- 'Hoosiers,' which is a story about
ranked Radulescu, a, Wimbledon high school basketball in Indiana, the
0.
McGrath, a first-round loser at newcomer who beat equally obscure court measures the same way as it
Wimbledon last year, had gone as far Neville Godwin 6-3, 6-0, 6-4 to set does out in the sticks."
as the founh round only once in 18 up a men's qu3!f!eliS t:neeting with
~"-"':)

WIMBLEDON; England (AP)
- The famous -ard the obscure are
mingling on the lawns of Wimbledon, champions seeking rare places
in history and ··strangers banging
through the black iron gates of .the
most exclusive club in. tenn~
· .
Pete Sampras hurdled a ch
nd
leaped atop a tall ball bin w 1:
reaching the quarterfinals Tuesday in
his bid for a fourth straight title. Steffi Graf needed no such acroba~cs as
she slipped effonlessly i'1o the
women's semifinals and closer to a
seventh Wimbledon championship
and 20th Grand Slam triumph.
Then there were the dreamers
who joined them, folks like Alexander Radulescu and MaliVai Wash. inglon, Meredith McGrath and
Kimiko Date.
'
In this anything-can-happen year,
when only three seeded men reached
· the quarters for the first time in the
Open era, most of the matches have
been as unpredictable as the weath-.
er.
No. 10 Michael Stich, the 1991
"Wimbledon champion and runner-up
at the French Open last . month.
became the latest men's seed to fall
when he was beaten by Richard Krajicek 6-4, 7-6 (7-5), 6-4, ·
Krajicek, a first-round loser here
the past two years, didn't sound all·
: that confident about going up nex.l
against Sampras, a 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 victor over Cedric Pioline.
"Most of the time you're happy
if you just get it back in play and put
pressure on the guy," Kraji£ek said.

According to prosecutors at Irvin's drug trial,

Bj!ck shocked~hen police
find cocaine
.

-S·SUP

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GLISB
COMBO PACK

.••GROUND
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DALLAS (AP) ~A n apparently
unsuspecting Angela Beck was
shocked when police pulled drugs
from her gym bag during a raid on
the Irving ·motel room where she,
Michael Irvin and two others were
found , prosecutors told a jury Tuesday.'
in the opening prosecution 'statement in the cocaine possession trial
of the Dallas Cowboys 'fl:cejyer,
Assistant District Attorney 'Mike
Gillell referred to two plastic bags
police pulled from a gym bag
belonging to Beck.
One bag contained rock cocaine.
the other contained cocaine powder,
he said.
Beck said during the bust the
drugs belonged to her, and she was
the only one arrested. A grand jury
later indicted Beck, Irvin and Jasmine Nabwangu. Irvin ·also is indicted bn a misdemeanor marijuana
charge.
According to the prosecutor.
Rachelle Smith, described as a close
friend of Beck's, will t&lt;lstify Beck
told her she had no knowledge of the

drugs in her bag.
"Beck said she almost had a heart
auack when it was pulled out,"
Gillen said. "'Michael Irvin as.1ured
her it would be OK and he couldn't
forget what she was doing."
Gillell made hts statement despite
two 'defense objections, both overruled by State District Judge Manny
Alvarez. Defense attorneys Ron
Goranson and Kevin Clancy object. ed to the statement as hearsay.
Gillen wove for the jurors an
account of the March 4 motel room
encounter involving Irving police
and Irvin and two topless dancers,
Beck and Nabwangu .
Police detected a strong smell of
burning IIJarijuana. Then, after assuring Irvin they knew who he was,
they asked where the drugs were. ·
- · "AJ that lime, Angela Beck;tlllpgs
her head and Michael Irvin s~. ,
'Tell them where it is,"' Gillett said.
Gillell told jurors that Irvin started reaching under a sofa on which he
was s~ing before officlrs told him
to stop.· The officers later lifted the
couch and found, directly under

where Irvin was sitting, a plate with
marijuana, bag of marijuana and a
bag of cocaine.
Gillen said police also found, on
an end table next to Irvin, a plate
with rock cocaine on it. Under a bed,
they found two. more bags of mariJUana.
Then officers found Beck's gym
bag, which also contained Cowboys' jewe.lry belonging to Irvin .
"In that bag, they found a vial or
two consistent with a holder for
cocaine," Gillen said.
Initially, only Beck was arrested.
Irvin , Nabwangu and Alfredo
Roberts, Irvin's business partner and
fanner teammate, went to the office
of an Irvin associate, who obtained
Beck's release the next day .•.and
brought her to another hotel, where
Smith met them. Gillen said.
Defense attorney. Royce West dismissed the prosecution account, saymg the defense would show a comedy of errors by Irvin police.
As for Smith, West told jurors: "I
suggest that she has a reason to lie."
That person, he said, is her fiance, '

a

fanner Dallas police officer Johnnie
Hernandez.
Hernandez was charged last week
with trying to hire a hit man to kill
Irvin .
"Take that into consideration
when you weigh her credibility,:'
West said. He also urged jurors to
question the" credibility of the
lifestyles and occupations of Beck
and Smith, who also is an exotic
dancer.
Prosecutors said Irvin's eyes were
bloodshot when police arrived. West,
a Democratic stale senator from
Dallas and a black man, suggested
such evidence is irrelevant. He
pointed out that alcohol was present
in the room and most African-American ·men have
eyes."
"I suggest to you the evidence
will show that most 'of the cocaine
was in Angela Beck's purse," West
said. "Think about it: If it was in
Angela Beck's purse, it's reasonable
to deduce Michael Irvin did not
know it was in her purse, despite
their previous relationship."

red

New NBA labor de~/ will give players $BOM more if ratified
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ NBA
players would receive more than $80
mil !ton dollars in a(lditional money ·
over six years if the revised agreement between the NBAand the players union is ratified by the players,
the Washington Post reponed Tuesday.
The $5 billion deal would give
players an extra $50 million for pensions and profits, $28 million for the
sale of the union's logo and a share
of telev ison profits, according to a
nine-page summary of the agreement

1

obtained by the Post.
Players will vote on the agreement by Monday. Meanwhile , there
is a moratorium until Tuesday on all
player signings and trades until the
collecli ve bargaining agreement is
ratified .
The contract seemed to have
been approved a year ago, but a
group of dissident players managed
to unseat union ch1'ef Simone Gourdine and the agreement was never
signed. The players asked for reviSIOns.

NBA commissioner David Stem
told the.Post he expected the revised
agreement to be ratified handily. He
also said the renegotiated deal was
:J.emains a fair deal for both parires."
The agreement also would give
players changes in salary cap rules
that would increase the potential for
free agent movement, the unions
financial independence aild recognition of the union's symbol on mer; handise and events such as the all
. ;tar !l_ame.

Players also INo~Jd receive 50
0ercent o(all profitlsnaring re.venuc
1bove $36 million in the league 's
television contracts with NBC and
TNT.
In exchange, the league 's draft
would remain two rounds during the
six-year agreement, and the NBA
could recover as much as $21 million of the $28 million it is paying
for the logo if the players' share of
licensing revenues reaches certain
levels.

fl()Sf~r~ ... __~(~C~on~ti~nu~e~d~tro~n~i~Pa~ge~5~)----------------------------------------~-----------·
wrist injury.
Cleve land pitchers Jose Mesa
and Charles Nagy. and catcher Sandy
Aiomarwere picked as AL reserves,
joining 1ndians teammates Albert
Belle and Kenny Lofton , who were
elected to start in the outfield.
Infielders Edgar· Martinez and
Alex Rodriguez, catc her Dan1Wilson
and outfielder Jay Buh,'ler were
pic~ed as reserves from the Mariners
and join the sidelined Griffey, the top
vote geuer in fan balloung.
Rodriguez, at 20 years, II months,
is the youngest player on both squads
and· the thtrd youngest ever behind
Dwight Gooden ( 19 years, seven
months in 1984) and Griffey (20
years, eight months in 1990).

Brown and AI Leiter of the Marlins,
Pedro Martinez of the Expos, Steve
Trachsel of the Cubs and Todd Worrell of the Dodgers.
Todd Hundley of the Mets and
Jason Kendall of the Pirates were
selected as backup catc hers.
Hou ston's Jeff Bagwell: Montrcal's Mark Grudziclanek and Colorado's Eric Young are among the
backup infielders Ellis Burks of the
Rotkies, Lance Johnson of the Mcts
Gary Sheffield of the Marlms
were chosen as backup outfielders.
The rest of the AL pitching staff
includes Andy Peuinc and John
Wettelapd of the New York&lt; Yankees,
Chuck Finley and Troy Percival of
the Angels, Robeno Hernandez of

ana

the Royals and Roger Pavlik of the
Rangers.
"I guess I've got to get my boat
and put it back in the garaJlc," said
Percival, who had plann~ on a vacation to Lake Havasu, which borders
Arizona and Nevada.
Backup infielders include Travis
Fryman of the Tigers, Chuck
Knoblauch of the Twins, Mark MeGwire of the Athletics and Mo Vaughn
of the Red Sox.
Joe Carter of the Blue Jay's and
Grtt Vaughn of the Brewers were
selected as backup outfielders.
Carter, who homered to end ToronI0\ _1 993 World Series victory over

fr--

Philadelphia, expects to be booe(j at ..
Veterans Stadium.
"If I was a belting man I would
definitely bet yes," Carter said. "I
don'tthink anyone will want to stand
me. "

All NalUI'II T·lite"'
With Chromium PlocoJlnate

IMiicjdfe,port\

_;_ ___.;:.; . ____ _

H:l;~t:~~~rs ;~~;~Sox, Jeff Montgomery of
as Minster girls' track coach
MINSTER. Ohio (AP) - Katie
Horstman, whose girls track te.ams at
Minster High School won eight' stale
titles, says coaching both trl!Ci and
cross country made life too hectic.
Horstman announced her retirement as tracK coach Monday.
She said she was ill during thi~
year's state track meet.
.
"I just dida'l enjoy '!'Y~If, so I
had the thought if I dtdn l enJOY
myself, it's time to get out," she satd.
She will continue to coach cross
country and teach physical educa-

j

"

tion.
Horstman began Minster 's track
program in 1972 and the cross country program in 1982. Besides four
slate track titles and one stale cross
country title, Horstman's track teams
were stale runners-up four times.
"Katie has done a fantastic job as
a track coach for us over the years,"
said Minstclr Superintendent Halver
Belcher. "She has done an excellent
job of motivaJing and teaching her
athletes. I hate to see her go."

..
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/.

. PREPARES TO SERVE- Meredith McGrath of Midland, Mich. pre- ·
pares to serve to fellow American Mary Jo Fernandez during quarterfinal action at Wimbledon Tuesday. McGrath won 6-3, 6-1 . (AP)

CROPPED

Divac OKs .Lakers'
trading !Jim to Hornets

SIRLOIN PAftiiS -

By BETH HARRIS

. trades expires, it is considered a done
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Until deal.
recently, Vlade Divac thought CharBy dumping Divac and the $8.5
lotte was a city he only wanted to million he was scheduled to earn the
visit once a year when the Lakers next two seasons, the Lakers would
played the Home\Sfree room under the salary cap to
Soon, Divac will be there all the pursue free agent center Shaquille
time as the NBA team's new center: O'Neal of Orlando.
After some initial resistance,
"I'm happy for them. I'm a big
in~luding a threatened retirement,
Laker fan," Divac said. "If they
Divac has agreed •to a trade that bring in Shaq, ~,hat's a big chance to
would send him from the Lakers to ll_uild a championship."
the Hornets for the righ!S to 17-ycal:
·Divae, 28, played five years in
old Kobe Bryant, Charlotte's fii~ YugosHivia's top league before the
round draft pick.
·
Lakers selected him with the 26th
" I'm not happy to leave Los pick in the 1989 NBA draft. Since
Angeles, but if I have~ Charlotte, joining the league, he has averaged
-I th.ink, is the best place for me." he 12.5 points, 8. 7 rebounds and 1.6
said Tuesday after practicing with blocks.
the Yugoslavian Olympic team.
Divac is counting on Hornets fans
A conversa'tion with his wife. to help ease the transition !rom Los
Ana, helped Divac realize he did.n't Angeles, where he's spent his entire
0'
want to quit the span he left home "IIseven-year
NBA career.
at age 12 to pursue.
."for me, what's the most impor"She told me, ' You can't do that. tant thing about Charlotte is that they
You 've. got to play, you're still have fans behind them and I like to
young,' and I think she's right," he play for fans. jus! like here in Los
said. "I'm-happy that she helped me Angeles," he said.
to make this decision .•"
Divac's longest previous trip to
Divac won't entirely be leaving Charloue was the wee~ he spent
behind Los Angeles, a city he dear- inside the Coliseum last summer
ly loves and where the Serbian filming the Whoopi Goldberg movie
native learned to speak English.
"Eddie," in which he played~i~:elf
The couple reached a compro- and in which is wife also a pear d.
mise that calls for Divac to live in
"It's a
i area. I lik it. It ·
Charlotte during the season, while quiet,'' h
Ana, an 'llSpiring actress, and their
two young children remain in the
family's Pacific Palisades home.
"I knew I'm not going to mo~
them from Los Angeles,'' Di\'2'
said . "She told me, 'It's going to be
tough for us, but the season is 7-1!
months. You're •not going to be
All Nalural T-LITE•
h9me anyway 3 1/2 months becaus~
1
·
of the road trips, so it'll go fast. " ' ·) if; with Chromium Picolinale
Although the trade cannot be · FRUTH PHARMACY
completed until July 9, when a
992-6491
moratorium
on
all
negotiations
and
•
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SUPERIO
KIIS

99 .....
PIG.

12 OZ. PKG.

MOUN7AINEEI.

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ILl. BOLL

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LOSE :: 10 LIS
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I.G.A. POP

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GAL.

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Head·

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Jumbo Peppers

ac Head 3
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Cucumbers

PACK

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Home Gro n
Tomatoes Now
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ADOLPH'S
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GROUND

.

By JAMIE ARON

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ILl.

12 OZ. PKG.

19
for S)

LOAF

0

4 89&lt;

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A Family OUJned and

DAlBY VALLEY

Operated SupemuJrket

AT THE CORNER OF GEN. HARTINGER
PKWY. AND·PWtl ST., MIDDUPOIT
THROUGH IS SENIOR ODZ~N DAY.
VAUGHWS IS THE ONLY STORE THAT
GIVES AS~ DISCOUNT TO OUR
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Wednesday, July 3, ,, 996

Page 8 • The Dally ·Sentinel ··

Pomeroy • M!ddleport, Ohio ( )

Have
,,

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.
romeroy • Mlddleport,~lo .

The Dally Sentinel • Page g·

' July3, 1~

•

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Safe and -F un ·Filled
.

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S&amp;Je
. Open Thursday, July 4th Regular Store Hours . .

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\Prices ·Effective

~

• 3 •. 4 • 9 • 8, 1998
· Ground Fresh Several limes Daily

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Lll.

-- Limit 6 lbs.

PLEASE DON'T DRINK &amp; DRIVE!
.I

MIDDLEPORT

RUTLAND

~ /~

~ RAHINE
Rutland Firemen's Park
Star Mill .Park
.
Theme: ''Olympic Spirit U.S.A."' · · .. Crafts and games,15icyde decorating
Games and crafi show
·
contest, KSS Spe~d . Stahle for horse.
9:30a.m. -Parade
·c
and rider groups
'
Entertainment
10 a .m. - Parade
1 p.m. - Gospel Sing
•
"'
Pro wrestling
II a.m.- Chicken barbecue and
2:-30p.m. -Symmes Creek Band
homemade ice cream
5:30p.m. -Tame as Can Be
Home Rtin herby
8:15 p.m. -Auction of entries in
2 p.m':-- Antique.tractor pull
cake decorating and pie
· baking contest. ·
Billy Lee Snow
Auction of Pro Player NFL
3 p.m.- Justin Diddl
Experience Hat and official
NFL·game ball autogr~hed
5 p.m. - Frog jumping ontest
by Green Bay Packers tight
7 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor ull
end Mike Bartrum.
8 p.m.- C.J. &amp; The· Country Gentlemen ..
10:30 p.m. - Fireworks
10 p.m. - Fireworks
a·

Da've Diles ~ark
Theme:
II
"Fab 50's on the Fourth"
6 p.m. - Parade
7 p.m. :- Trophies Awarded
Entertainment
'
'
17 :30 p .m. -Dazzling Dolls
8 p.m. - "Fabulous Fifties" themed
variety program featuring
selections from the
Broadway musical
"Grease"
.
9:30p.m. - Fireworks

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Ingels Furni~ure and Je~elry
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 992·2635

992·6611

The Shoe Place·and locker 219
992·5627

.

Downing·Childs·Mulleii·Musser
· Insurance • .

K&amp;C Jewelers
.· POMEROY, OHIO

992·2342

'Quality Print Shop

OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2556

985·3301

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2104

.

•

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·~

State Route 248

SYUCUSE

949·2210

•

985-3307 ·

--

Rose's Exca

•

· 992·2432(~ ·

949·2493

•ng

UCIIIE, OHIO
n

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6 _Pack 7•Up ·

c

RC Cola,
Diet Rite,
A&amp;W ·Root Beer,
or Kick

Limit 4

POMEROY. OHIO

King Hardware MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·5020

· Fr!Jih Pha·rmacy . ·
992·6491

~

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" .
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.

"YOUR IWVK FOR'UFE''

.

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Big B~ar
·Snacks

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Snacks; Tortilla Chips or Corn Chips ·
"" .
8 to 14 oz. Bags
.

Great On The Grill ·
AIIMeat .

J

·ilui.P·iiNE· · ·lliJYPai .

MIDDLEPORT;
OHIO
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Meat Franks

Big Bear·.
Sandwict1 -o r
· •Wiener Buns .

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ONE .FREE . 'GEt !10 FREE
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992·3915
"

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OHIO

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·(row's Family Restauran~t

Cheater
~

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Chester

915-31'61
------.
Williams &amp; Assodateslnsurance ·Birchfield Funeral Home

. 992·6533

..12 oz. Cans

985-3308

Rideno~r TV &amp;~ppliance

onal Balik ·
'

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CHESTER, OHIO

State Route 248

Fisher Funeral Home ,. Veterans Memorial H~~pjtal

992·5144

··~

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Baum Lumber Co.

Adolph's Pidry ,Valley

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3345

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2121

.

/ .

Ridenour Supply

Ewing Funeral Home

, ·POMEROY, OHI~

992·3785

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

/

742~2333

'

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RUIWID, OHIO

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Wednesday, July 3, 1996
~omeroy

Dally

• Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 3, 1996

·:Mobile clinic·brings
free immunizations·
... to Meigs children .

.

;

Have a memorable, not regrettablve, Fo.urth of July :
,

6

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By John C. Wolf, D.O.
vomiting and fever within eight to 48 "refrigerator cold" (below 45 and then cook the hot dishes imme- · the chef puts it in the picnic basket
degrees) until they yeJ consumed. d•ately before the meal. .
Asioclate Professor
hours. ·
'These bacteria ·will grow from an
of Family Medicine
Staphylo&lt;;occus aureus, another Trarisporting your picltic meal in sepFollowmg these cooking and food almost undetec~ble level at the time
.'.IOhlo University College
bacterial germ, is the second most arate insulated containers for hot and handling guidelines is very important of contamination to ·produce Staph
Qateopathlc Medicine
common cause of food-borne illness: cold items should be satisfactory for because of th~ ease with which bac- poisoning that will ruin your picnic
Question: In the summer we pic- representing about 15 percent of the meals that are to be consumed ·with- tenal contam1nat1on can start. For as the ha)n cools over the next 24
nic a lot -- including a large family total number ol cases reported. It is in four or five hours. For meals that instance, A cooked ham can be con- hours. Ahe&amp;Vier contamination at the
gathering on the ·4th of July. Last yeai different thiln Salmonella pOisoning are to be eaten later than this, it js . laminated "ith · Staphylococ,cus stan will o~~peed up the process. So,
on the 4th about half of us got sick in several ways. 'The illness ·begins safest to take canned or frozen food aureus, a very 'ommon bacterium, as insulate the ham so it is still ·:cookfrom food poisoning. We blamed the one to eight hours after eating the '

·""'_,.- of

ing hot" when you eat it, 'or cool it to
"refrigerator cold" immediately alter
it is cc:io~ed .
·
· Other bacteria, viruses, chemical;
and parasites can cause food-borne
illnesses. To lessen your risk of
these, .wash your fruits and veg~ta­
bles at home before yo\t.leave on
your picnic.
,

----------Com un·ty
1 cal e~ dar---------

mayonnaise in the potato salad. so we..._ .1\!'ntaminated food. and the vomiting
took it off the picnic menu ...Do you is more severe
have any additional suggestions for and the diarrhea is less intense than .
lJ&lt;
making our picnics less memorable in Salmonella poisoning.
-- but more enjoyable --this year?
Also, Staph food poisoning is the
Answer: I'm glad you are t)link· result of consuming a poison made
ing ahead. An episode of food- borne by the bacteria rather than as a direct
illness can tum a picnic into an result of an infection with bacteria
unpleasant event
itself. Your bad picnic exoerienre
More than 25 percent of the food- was pr.obably due to Staph food poiborne illnesses reported to the feder- sonillg, and I can tell you from peral government's Centers for Disease · sonal experience that this isn't a desirControl are caused by Salmonella. able way for turning a pleasant event
This bacterium can be present in into a memorable one.
dairy products, eggs, beef and poulThe best way to prevent these hactry. Once the tainted f!&gt;od is con- teria (rom attacking your food and
sumed, the bacterium reproduces your family is to keep all foods .
hot" (above 140 degrees) or
inside the body and causes diarrhea,

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Forked Run State Park featuring the
Back .Porch Swin)! Band. Take lawn
chairs.

The Community Calendar is pubCHESTER -- The Chester Garden
lished as a free service to non-profit Club will tour the Lula Tobin gardens
groups wishing to announce qYeeting ~n Gold Ridge at 7:30p.m. Wednesand special events. The calendar is day.
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. hems are pri'nted THURSDAY
as space R!!rmits and cannot~ guar- ·' RACINE-- Theiss family reunion
anteed to run a specific number of committee, Thursday, 10 a.m. at
Dave Kucsma residence to finalize
days.
plans for July 14 reunion .
WEDNESDAY
RIJTI.AND -.- Rutland Township FRIDAY
REEDSVILLt ·· The third annuTrustees, Wednesday, 6 p.m. budget .
hearing following by regular meet- al Pany at the Lake, Friday, 7 p.m. at
'
ing.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -· Disabled
American Veterans meeting. Mon day, 7 p.m. at.the New hall at Kings
Anns.

SATURDAY
RACINE ·- Gospel sing, Saturday, beginning at noon across from
POMEROY ·- Federal EmerRacine Locks and Dams. Proceeds to g_ency Management Agency meeting
go to the Hazel Community Church. . with local officials Monday, 8 a.nr. at
the Meigs County Emergency Mcd- .
t!ARRISONVILLE -- Har- ical Service building in Pomeroy. All
risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Satur- townships, villages and other poliliday, 7:30p.m. at the Masonic Tern· cal subdivisions affected in May 4
pie. Refreshments.
flood are urged to have a representative attend.

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POMEROY MERCHANTS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Ohio University Collelle of
Osteopathic Medicine Childhood
Irnmunizatidn Program (CHIP), a
. mobile health program, will provide
free immunizations for all area children from binh through middle
school on July 10 from 10 a.m. to
- 12:30 p.m. at Keebaugh's Shake
Shoppee in Tuppers Plains .
In addition to providing the
, Hepatitis B vaccine to all children
;born after -November 22, 1991, the
.Childhood immunization program
· along with the Ohio Department of
Health is now offering the Hepatitis
_ B vaccine -to all eligible II and 12
.year olds. In order to be eligible chi!- ·
: dren must qualify for the Vaccine for :
Children Program.
The child must fill into one of the
following three categories: be
enrolled in the Medicaid program, ,
does not have any health insurance,
.. or is an American Indian or Alaskan
Native. 'The Hepatitis B vaccine is a
:':"" three shoot series over a minimum of
six ~onths,
.
"
~
The clinic is provided by the ,
t Ohio University College of Osteo- 1
~ pathic Medicine Childhood lmmu-~
:. nization Program's community

,

FLEXSTEEL

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1j

Ceremonies held for Carleton early childhood programs

An awards aqd graduation ceremony was held recently for students
in the· early intervention and
preschool classes at · l;he;~~~on
School Early Childhood-Pro
at
Carleton School, Syracuse.
Students were recognized for
achievements in speech, physical
11\.0bile health unit and the
Department of Health in cooperation therapy, physical education, outwith the Meigs County Health,.. standing achievement, and ~ther speDepanment. Those going to the clin- cia! awards .
·
ic are to take along their child's pl'eEarly intervention class recognivious shot records. For more infor- tion included "thumbs up" awards to
mation about the immunization pro- . Andrew Burt, Miranda Dickens,
gram residents may call toll· free 1- · Kendra Haning, Annisha Kopec, ~en 800-844-64 or contact the Meigs nifer Payne, Ryan Payne, Mara PerCounty Health Depanment.
ry, Josh Pherigo, Kenzie Shuler and

0~

Tiffany Withro.w; "I can" awards were Sean Coppick, hard worker; Janessa Laudermilt, most irnproved'
Michael Ball, Bryan Burt. ¥~1iS&amp;a Melinda Miller, most helpful; girl; Aaron Moore, best friend to othDickens, Burnie Edman, Z4SJ!ary Gabrelle Johnson, best talker; Nick- ers/boy ; Shelby Powell, most cheer·
Fink, Brandon Hanning, Garrett Hap- laus Hubbard, hard worker; Dale ful (girl); Tracy Smith, most enth,..
. tonstall, Emily Kinnan, AJ. Kopec, Ellis; most improved; Casey Sargent, siastic; Scott Trussell, mo!ll"
· Dakota McCarthy, Rachel Payne, ~end ; Kimberly Deaver, most polite/courteous boy; Jacob Wilson,
Michael Perry, Paul Perry, Jr., Jason cheerful; Kelsey Shuler, best actress ; hard worker and PT Award; Amanda
Pherigo, Cameron Robinson, Keely J.W Porter, most athletic. Jessica Wolfe, best friend to otherslgirl; and
~;~ler, ~ubal Ta~ylor an(j James With- ·Simpkins also received an award for Bradley Donaldson, most improved
helping in the classroom.
boy .
Children in 1 e early intervention
Preschool students in Teresa
class receiving dip omas were Bryan Porter's class receiving awards were
Bun, Zachary Fink, Garrett Hapton· , Bradley Coppick, most anisticlcre., Ice cream consumption is
stall, Nicklaus Hubbard , Paul Perry ative ; Ruche!
Davis,&lt;,. most
Jr., and Cameron Robinson.
polite/couneous girl ; Holly Jeffers. highest in June ~nd July, with
Preschool studenti in Valerie most helpful ; Cody Laudermilt, nfost vanilla America's favorite flavor,
Hanstine's cl&lt;~Ss who received awards athletic; Michael Lee, most help[ul; followed by chocolate.

Congratulations Winners!.
Donald E. Wright
from ·Gallipolis, OH

r

ducing
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WON $10,000

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FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE

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,

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SPECIAL~SALE PRICES

CELEBRATION

•;

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Tues.-Sat.

Monday
DOWNTOWN
Nights tiFB:OO

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POME~OY

~

arrival
Jis announced

:

John and

1~ck 12 oz. cana assorted varieties

nel Harrison of Rut-

~ land announc the birth of their first

I

·f

WESLEY HARRISON

~ Harrison

:: child, a n· · esley Ryan Harrison.
~
Wes
was born at Holzer Med~ ical Center in c;!allipolis on June II.
~ He weighed seven pounds, eight
~ ounces and was 21 inches long .
~
Maternal grandparents are Danny
" and Janie Gillispie of New Haven,
~ W.Va.,' and paternal grandparents are
':. Roger and Diana Co~tes and Johnnie
1 K Harrison, all of Pomeroy.

•

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Kahn's

~

Jltitferson's·· iiJ

9:30-5:00

'

or Bunalze

~

-

'

1&amp; oz. pkg. Regulor, Jumbo, light

J
d
••

5::....
'

,.

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&lt;

eddltlonol

SLB. BAG
14.5-15.25 oz. COin • - •
pne, cut or French Slyle
GrHil Beono, Crum Slyle
or whole komel golden com

Van Camp's
Pork &amp; Beans

•

•

$499

Um~twowHh

(

Foodland
Sugar

49

Nf'.:IGIIDORIIOOD

FREE

J

G It

•
•

~2!c!'*s~

VJI:Il Plir GI!c.Si:'

, /1

with any purchase of '99 o~ more fr.om our store

212 East Main Street

(, ' • :11th Pur cnase

Pomeroy, Ohio

••••••••••••••••••••
•

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Bathing Suits
.

L-------r----:-----

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L--•--:--·
,----:----

lOTIONS &amp;.BOWS
100E. Mlln

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YOlf'I.J) FINIJ \'(.'RI'4, T\'H, HTEREOI'4, '·CAIIIERAH
WONIJERF(JI. IIA\"INOSI

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COI\IE IN ANIJ VISIT lll!l A.T l l " . w.· IJECOND lilT.
CALL 4T .OOII•PA.WN
'

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....,.......~

DOfiol"r FO•CET TO _.!tiC TIM , t:;.,PON FO•

~A YING~I

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John P. Card of Racine was
: sen ted a scholarship 'by the Peo•pJ..e's 1
; Bank and Trust to attend the unover;sity of Rio Grande.
: The so~t of Paul and Sharon Card
•of Racine, he is a graduate of South~ ern Local High School and plans to
;major io electronic technology and
icomputer repair.

$10. 00 IIH ANY J F.WF.LRV PRICED OVF.R $60. 00

·

ttt'

·om:a GOOD 11IIOIICII JOLY 13,

rotli'ON I!IY!T IF. PIP.!F.IITF.D AT Tift OP SAI.F. • ONF. CIMII'ON Ptll

111STOMF.I

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The "soft sell"
coupon.

s10 OFF

f

~~

This coupon entitles you to ·
$10 off the regular price
all Soft Spots

or

Friday and
Saturday only
Sandals N6t Included
"

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ChiJIII 1111111, R.
R.Ph.
Mon. 1lw SilL 8:00 a.m. to 8:00p.m.
1.0:00·a.m.lll4:00 p.m.

p~ .

1-BD0-48+.7962

E Mlln

PH.IIII-

Pa••ur. 011.
8

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SlOES.~
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POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

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Me liali Haynes, a Salisbury Ele...___ --'ary School student; was named
' the overall county winner in the Yes' teryear essay contest sponsored by
·the Meigs County Retired and Senior
' Volunteer Program.
' Other winners were, in order by
•school : Pomeroy Elementary, _!(ayte
•Davis and Missx Hemsley; Sal1sbury
Elementary. Meghan Haynes and
Lois Amqdio; Ghester Elementary.
.JiHian Cochran and· Brent Buckley;
'Harrisonvilre Elementary, Derrick
'Fackler and Jessica King; Tuppers
'Plains Elementary. Ashley Boyles
'and Le Ann Marcinko; Salem Center
·Elementary, Ashley Colwell and
· ,Austin Cross;
Portland/Letan Falls Elemen!aJ¥,
'rara Pickens and Lisa Deem; Syra- .
'cuse Elementary, Crystai'Cotrill and
.Lisa Deem; Rutland Elementliry,
Crystal Jac_ks and Mallory King;
Rejoicing Lofe, Dav1d Snodgrass and
Soilhua Eagle; Poniero~ Elementary,
Alicia Werry and Casste Braun.
• A reception will he held at a date
lo be announ.ced later in hono~f the
lvinners, thelf parents and teac~
l

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Ice Cream .112. gallon

Win ASOny

-·Ye

teryear essay
:wi ers posted

good only al
Foodland

..

l

1s oz./ bag

POtato Chips

---------------..1

; ~cholarship

.

! Herrs . ·

:t:.g
I
1 Homemade Brand

~·· $ ,
123PI&lt;&gt;Cill&gt;1211

[Card gets URG

1\~

llfl fll. CIIPII Yll CAl lET

OR

" Get 9ne
uv One

'

R» R.IENUIE!R

Sl 0. 00 OFF ANY ITI:II IN mE UF.CI'IION ICS DEPARTIIENT

.

Kraft Miracle Whip

Aunt Jane's
Hamburger Chips

JOHNP. CARD

'

~ ~-

32 oz. Jar Regular or Ught I

32 oz: jar

Siar·Kist
Chunk Ufit
(Tuna _

I

EVERYONE WE IIA.\'R A. I.A. ROE EIELECTION ' OF CIJ8~

G1tt w1t'1 P1m:I1&lt;1 Se

s V.iluah!P Coupon
Effecti ve 6 30 to 7 'l 96

;

. FOR TIU! lh.JNTER WB IIA.VB OVN&amp;

YO'lJiR NIE:IIUIIIIIIMHUR

Manuf;~c t wer

l

FOR CIIILIJREN WI': IIA.\'1!:, \"IDEO OA.l\111:&amp;

FREE

992-s1n,.

f

'

Umit 1 per customer per prescription
Swisher and Lohs~ Pharmacy
Coupon Expires 7/20/96

-exPiR'ES7i1ii961

Socks &amp; R'air Bows
Valued at ss.OO &amp; Up

1 . . ·

'

p to ss.oo off
Any Prescription .

AI Short Sets ·1
Vallecl&amp; '10.00

I

/

Quality Prescription
Servtee At ·
Competjtive Prices

1

$2
00
ff
I • ' .0 .. ---~----~
~
!
l$' 00 ,
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f
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0
L__!_.;;._____________________
__,!
7/13196'

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-hh of .July

r-------- .

!ss.OO off

••
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ol' /J.---..''

· A.T A.LRF.AitY BELOW RETAil. PRICF,:SI

•

ll a n a Safl' 8:. Fun
Filll'tl

Firecracker of i Sale
at
Buttons &amp; Bows.

.'

(

Seven Up, and 2 uter
Pepsi Cola Produds

•'

Fli)ID TRII:A.BURF.IJ OF IGOLD, DIA.I\IPNDI!I.
GBIIUI
.

Glf1 W1tl1 Purclli!SC

FREE

FREE

I

FREE

Your Choice - Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire or Emerald Earrings

••
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••
••

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Go for t~e ,go!.d 11t Foodland durin1 out 381h Anniversary Sale! Register now for great

.

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prizes! you conld wiD ID omcial Olympic: gift bag full ofathletic:dotbes and Reeboks. Or
you could watch the Olympics dosl11g ceremonies on a 27-lnc:b Zenith color TV.
.
In fact, ·one lucky winner will watch those _on a So11y Home Theate!' System, valued at
$3800, which Includes a 46-lnch big screen TV, recelver1 VCR and six speakers! Plus an 18·
lncb satellite d!b system! Don't miss the fun at Foodland's 38th Anniversary Sale, and go ,
for the gold)

EASTMAN'S ·

FOODLAND 38TH ANNIVERSARY ENTRY BLANK
I
I NAME:

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!ADDRESS:

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II PHONE NUMBER;

II

I CITY, STATE &amp; ZIP:

1

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• Sony 46" Big Screen TV
• Paradym Center Speaker
• Sony Stereo Receiver ·
· • Paradym Sub Woofer
• Sony VCR HI·FI:.
• Pandym Main Speaker
• Paradym Surround Speaker

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Page

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12 • The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

)

Wednesday, July

'·

Wednesday, July

3, 1996

.
.. .
Summer food pro11ram
Local High School. She plans to By ANN LANDERS
the
night
shift.
IINant
to
pass
along
a
thank
you
for
your fine suggestion
Carleton School has announced major in Elementary Education.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a resident
remedy
given
to
me
by
a
truck
driver.
when
one
of
my
assistants said, "It
the sponsorship o( a summer food
Ohio Dominican College is a four of Alaska. On every map I've Sj:en,
He
said
th~l- you will not fall doesn't always work. My son has
service program for children, under year, Catholic liberal arts institution our great state has been shrunk and
asleep while eating. His solution fallen asleep eating at the table more
the Ohio Department of Education. founded in 1911. Today, Ohio relocated down in the Gul( of Mexiwas to eat crackers when sleepy . I use than once -- with his head in the
"1995. l..ol Angitlol
Steve Beha, executive director of Dominican College is a coeduca- co. If that's not bad enolr)lh, many
nmn Syndlc:ate lnd
crackers Jind com chips and munch soup."
the Meigs County MRIDD Board, tional college serving· more than statistical maps do not even include
C&lt;nt&lt;nSynd&lt;a!o"
on them slowly. I've worked 32 years .
said that free meals will be made I, 700 students, offering certificates, Alaska and Hawaii as part of the
Send questions to Ann Landers,
on the night shift and must drive 14
available to all children 18 years of two-year associate and four;year nation.
AI bert a, Canada
.
Creaton Syndicate, S777 W. Cenmiles
to
my
home.
This
works
for
age and under.
Dear Edmonton: Reg sounds like
bachelor degrees in more than 30
I am astounded at the number of
me. -- Con~emed in Beaumont, Texas tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
The program is also available to majors .
people I have spoken with on the tele- a petulant spoiled brat. His attempt to
Dear Beau.: I was just about to Calif. 9004S
young adults ages 19 to 21 who have
phone who confirm my address as punish your wife for befriending his
a current Individualized Education Celebration planned
·'
Anchorage, Arkansas, thanks to the . ex is juvenile. Your wife should tell
Plan. The meals will be pro.vided
Wilkesville will be havin&amp;. its AK abbreviation. And that's not the that control freak to take a long walk
without regard to race, color, nation- ' annual 4th of July parade Thursday at worst of it. They apply the same for- on a short deck. If she thinks it would
, al origin, sex, age, or disability.
II a.m . using the theme "Fourth of mula to time wnes. Many callers on help, she should send this column to
Any person who believes he or July in the Country."
'/\'
the East Coast telephone at the both Reg and her parents.
Dear Ann Landers: Our commurepon iate-incaking news and
she has been discriminated against in
Registration will be from 9:30 to ungodly hour of 8 a.m. their time,
any USDA acti\'ity should write I0:45 in front of the American which is 4 a.m. where we are. Even nity just had another fatal auto acci-.J U
offer news ttps
immediately to the Secretary of Agri- Legion Auxiliary hall. Prizes of $25 with the incredible amount of day- dent because a driver fell asleep at the
culture, Washington, D.C. 20250.
.. 'i
each will be awarded for the best dec· light we are now experiencing, we do wheel coming home after working
Meals will be provided at Carleton orated en..try in the age categories of need some sleep up here.
1
School, Syracuse, Monday - Friday one to six, and the best decorated
Please, Ann, tell your readers that
II a.m.- 12:30 p.m. June 24-28, July entry for ages seven to 12; $30.00 for AK stands for Alaska, not Arkansas.
15-19, and August 5-9. For more the best decorated adult float , chi!· You may use my nam .C::~ C.J.
information, residents may call Car- dren's float, pleasure . horse, and Kukoski in Anchorage
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
leton Scnool at 992-6681.
working horse.
)l
Dear C.J .: Here 's your letter. I
The parade will line .up at Wilton hope it helps, but don't underestimate
Awarded scholarship
Elementary School and proceed the ignorance of some people.
11\1&gt; l'fl.!&gt;CIO'!I!Nq Wr'\&lt;; "
Jessica Karr has been offered an down High Street. The reviewing and •
I recently received a leiter from a
'
i""''f of M~ j;'MI&gt;Il4Eh'c.y'
academic scholarship at Ohio judges· stand will be located on Main woman who said she would like to
WHY PAY RENT WHEN YOU CAN OWN thiS !\ICe
MIDNt4~1'-F£EI) /N4f
Dominican College for the 1996- Street. All area festival queens, fire move to Alaska but was reluctant to
home in Middleport for less than $300 per month?
1997 school year.
~'{SIE'N\,
departments, parade lovers, and espe- sell her new Acura and travel by dog .
Big Price Reduction! 1st floor w~h LA, DR, Kit, BA,
According to Jim Sagona, vice cially children are invited to partici- sled .. She had heard the weather in
bath 2nd floor wHh 3 BR &amp; bath. Full useable
president for admissions and student pate. The Wilton Civic Association Juneau is so cold nobody has auto'
basement. 2 car garage, large comer lot $34,900.
services at Ohio Dominican, "Jessi- wtll be serving hot dogs, homemade mobiles because the gasoline freezes
Doesn't cost you anything to look. Make us an offer!
0
ca exemplifies the kind of student we pies, and drinks will be served in the in the tanks. And people accuse me
House
has been mostly remodeled- new kitchen.
0
like 10 have at Ohio Dominican Col- community shelter house . For addi- of making up . letters! I could never
house will qualify for FHA, VA or conventional loan.
lege , and this scholarship recognizes tional information residents may con- make up letters as good as the ones I
Let us help you with your llnancingl
•,
Jessica's potential for college success. tact Kathy Fitzpatrick at 669-5646.
get.
to move In! Call us todayl
•
Our smaller size and outstanding fac- Pioneer Days planned
Dear Aun Landers: My wife's
uhy make Ohio Dominican a wonThe West Virginia State Farm brother, "Reg," was divorced a year
derful place to study. We look for- Museum will · host it's annual "Pio- ago. He and his ex-wife, "Valerie,"
ward to having Jessica as a member neer Days" July 13 and 14, with gates had been married for five very diffiof our student body."
to open both days at 9 a.m. There is cult years, during which he abused
Jessica. the daughter of Roger and no admission charge.·
.,
her repeatedly. My wife and Valerie
Susie Karr, is a graduate oCEastem
had been only casual acquaintances '
as sisterS-in-law, but after the divoree,
they became very close. My wife was
able to give Valerie understanding
&lt;!!&gt;l'lf'
and support. You see, Reg abused my
wife in the same way when they were
'growing up together. Valerie said that
.•
when they were married, Reg always
Public Not~e
Real Eatate Genentl
discouraged her from being friendly
Eighteen Meigs County students Jones, Langsville; Adam Perry Lillie, with us.
AUCTION
were among those making the dean's Middleport; Theresa F. Manuel,
Recemly, my wife and I went on SHERIFF'S
For e1le 11 PUBLIC
Henry.E. Cleland Jr .. 992-:US9:
a week 's vacation with Valerie and . AUCTION lithe periling tot
Jist at the University of Rio Grande Racine.
Kenneth Michael Matson, Racme; her boyfriend. We did not think it was b..lde the Melg1 County
for s~ring quarter.
Students earned a 3.75 grade Matthew Wayne Michael, Racine; inappropriate since the divorce was Sherlfl'l Ofl!c• 11 10:00
Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357
e.m. on Seturday
point average (on a 4.00 scale) dur- Sherri Lynn Ramsburg, Middleport; grant~il a year ago. When we o:Ciock
,1
the 13th day of ·July ,,,_,
ing the quarter to receive the honor. Amy D. Rouse. Middleport; Court- returned. however, my wife's broth- the following motor vthlcte
Local students making the list ney Beth Roush, Racine; Steph~nie er and her mother and f&amp;tlier all but . w,htch h11 IIMI\ fvrto.Hecl to
the Bhertn'l Depilrtment In
were Deborah Ann Alkire, Pomeroy; Ann See, Pomeroy; Vicki Lynn disowned her.
Office ..................d &amp;ns9 ·
My wife is very .upset and has no 1DRUOCASE:
Lorrie Ann Barnes, Rutland; Lisa Smith, Langsville; · Thomas Jared
1871 1/2 Ton , Chevrolet
Renee Dorst, Albany; Letitia Anne Spencer, Pomeroy; .Richard K. Wal' one to turn to except me ; We want Cuetom Delux 10 pickup
Holsinger, Reedsville ; Kimberly lace. Racine: Yvette Sue Young, your opinion, Ann. Were we wrong to truck
befriend Valerie? -- Edmonton, Ill bed
Dawn Janey, LangsviUe; Mandy Jo Pomeroy.
I cylinder
'
4 1pMd lnln1mtnton
.,_.. alllrlllll
Uft kit
Rally Wh11l1 with 35x12.50
A 15 mud kina tlreo
four wheel drive wlth
lockout huba
"·
V.hlcle may be 111n by
contacting the Sheriff'•
oiftce
Terme: Soi!I"AS IS"
CASH IN HAND . ..
CANNOT BE SOLD
LESS. THAN $1,000.
Leve.l corner
R... rv.. ~· right
Syracuse with a 1 , 1/2 Story. Frame
1ccept or rsfu'-. eny/or
Home . 2-3 bedr()9ms, fireplace, bath,
btda.
utility, ma11y new reparis including roof;
vinyl siding. 2 car garage with attached
workshop. Very , ite home - Great
(7) 3, 5, 7; 3TC
Loca~on . Owner Relocating!! ASKING
Public
...'"'"'·"' May Consiiler Offer.
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All Yard Salea M1.11t Be Palcl In

JONES' TREE SERVICE

.367.()266 - 1-800-950-3359

SUMMER
TUTORING

$S.oo~

per hour
Mornlag Hours
M.8.B,

•

tl411mo.

Need Direction?
.Love
Business
Family Matters
Allow Your
Personal Psychic to
Assist You
1-900-988-8600
Ext.12n
$3.98 Per !tllnuta
MU8t be 1a yra.
Touch-Tone Required
Serv·u(&amp;19)645-0434

"'"-

SMAll
WANT ADS
00&lt; .
ABil

J

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is :coming
August 8, 1995_•.
Advertising De~dline Is
August 1~ 1995.
CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD.IN

I

•

Racine, Ohio
' · Complete Commercial &amp;.
Residential Service
'I.

949-3151
742·224.6

deck

'
;

I

.

•,

Locally owned &amp; Oflftated·~
Frae Estimates
Guaranteed results

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages ,

u!lltly

area, . attie space . .
inst,rt. IMMEDIATE

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

949-2512

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
CHEAPER !tAJES

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.
HYDUUUC REPAIR
$32.00/HI.

(614) 94W013 Phone
(814) 94.2018 FAX
614 594-2008 NIGHT

.
)
or 446~362~
L---------------w
r,._
~:,:~~::s-

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
AIC Condensers/Hose Assembly&amp;

$19 5°0

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
742·3212

.•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer
can today with your
window sizes for a free
,quote,! .

mo.

QUICK '
CGNSTRUaiON
Roofing, VInyl
Siding, Garages,
Porches, Sidewalks
and A.dd·ons.

Free Estlmstes
Phone

1-800-291·560~.

61~13or814467~

Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8"thru 36"
S&amp;:D- perf.- solid pipe
4'"&amp; 6" Fie• pipe
&amp; 6" Sch 3S P,ipe
t /2" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; l" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (tOO' roll's thru 1,000' roll'•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit ·
8" Grave less Leach pipe
pipe t" lhru 2" · F111in~s - l!egulators· Risers
Fullassonmcnl ~fP. V.C . &amp; Fie• fining• &amp; Wa1or fillings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water ~tora~c tanks.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Wetdlr){l Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servlcetl• Steel Selea &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AlumlnurnJStslntea • TOOl Dressing • O.mamental
. Steps -Stairs, Raillrigs, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

Guttarl

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too StMII"

Downlpouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES
949-2168

We will work Within your budget ·
Ph. n3-8173
FAX 77s-5811
108
Street
WV

HoWilrd L. 'Wrlteael

51)6/Dot TFN

tn71111 mo

2756.
Kmens and CBIIO Qtveaway, 814·

992·7505.

H&amp;H

y.,,.

Experience ,·

1-Bqo-sa!l-3943

POMEROY - 1 1/2 Story Frame home
with CSipet and njc6 hardwood flooring.
Drywall interior, paneled breezeway,
elec. H.P./C .A. Appliances, 1 car
garage. 3-4 bedrooms, basement, close
to town. Nice area, . Really Nice Hornell
Owner Wants Tci Sell!!

1FT8R10AtDUII33n3

· The Fermere Bank and
Stvlnge
~ompeny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reMrvel the
ilghl to bid et thle 11le, end
to withdraw the above
colleterel ~rlor lo o~le.
FurtiHtr, The F1rmere Bank
pnd Sevlna• · Ci:!lmpany
reMrvee the right to reliCt
1ny or all bide oubmllted.
FurtiHtr, the ebove
eolleteral wilt be 110ld In the
condition It 11 In, with no
upreu or Implied
Wtf'lnlle• glvtn.
.for further tnformellon,
contact Deolfll ·et 982-2136.

Nice Affordable Home - POMEROY- 3
bedrooms, gas heat , appliances,
Including washer and dryer. Approx. 1/2
acre with fenced yard. Full basement.
PRICE REDUCED TO $15,000

(7)

z. 3, 5; :rrc

Looking for a Pet?
Shop
the
CUISSIFIEDS

HELP WANTED!! WE
HAVE BUYERS!! WE
NEED U~TINGSI! _
CONTACT US IN
PERSON ORBY
P.HONE WE'LL TEI.!i.
YOU HOW TO GET .
YOUR HOME$0LDI!

Ct.MII1ed....yoar at
ho•e thopplllf ·Center.
F1nd put buyo on peta,
pet acce..orieo, and

eerricea.

'·
Cal for complele tlelllls
onpllclnl
adl tiucll for you.

DUMP TRUCK

. SER~OE .
Llmest~ • Gravel

Fri. July 5, Sat.
•
furniture, miscellaneous
items.
Ewing Basement 300 4th St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1r:1r1th~•s

Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio ·

July 4th Rib Dinner
JESS'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

Sponsored by AmeriCan legion &amp;
Auxiliary, Middleport, Oh
Ribs, Rolls, Cole Slaw,
Baked Beans
$4.00 a dinner $2.00 meat Only
Dessert and Pop eidra
Slilrtlng 3:00
All Welcome Join Us
MilrStreet Annex across from
Middlepo~ Post Office

892-6215

COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Headliners . Custom Seat
Covers &amp; Carpel -Convertible Tops ·
· Antique Cars ·
- Boat Seats Over 20 Years El&lt;perience
(6t4) 992-7587
41464 StarCher Rd.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, OH. 4f!7!19

•RoonJ Aelllltlona
•Ntw Glrllll"
•Eiectrlcll &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnl1rlor &amp; Exttrlor
Pllntlng
Aleo Concrete Wort&lt;
(FREE ESTII!IATES)
V.C. YOUNG- Ill

?

TUPSHOOT

FREE
Pick-up discarded
batttrln, appliances &amp;
many metals.

Ivory Weclaoltlay

614-992-4025

Racl•• G11 Club
. 1

5130 ,.••

Bim·Bpm ' """

tiVE PSYHICS

H&amp;H

,,.,

. ,.,m

Wa1tto Help

SAWMILL

Let them tell you
about the tuturelll
1-900 888--4100

Smith Capehart Post 140,
New Haven, WV
, Al,!nual Picnic
~y6
12noon
Dance folloWing fro.m 9-1
Members &amp; guests.

'
'-ISGWMI
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
DaMy &amp; Peggy BrickteS

EXt. 2469
lUll* min.

' 111111 bt ,. ,..
......, (811)445 8434

614-742·2193
.

Saturd8y, Jult 61h, 8129 SR 7N,
Chesh1ro , Oh. Ra1n or 1h1ne.
Come
and Me.
__;...::...::...:..:..:_

____

Three family garage sale, July
~. 4th, &amp; 5th, It d;le Weber rnidance, in Reedaville, clothir,g,
toy1, jewelry, antique chest, variety of itemt, Oam-?
Three iamlly, July 5. Roger

Siberian Husky &amp; Cocker Spaniel, Sponcor, Rt 33, clolhing. bed&lt;ing
males, to good home. 304-675- ;;;"';:oc;;.
. i:::tem;;;:::'·--::-:-----:---7495.
Pl. Pleasant
Yellow male cat, 3mo old, liter
&amp; VIcinity
lrlll1ecl. 304-875-6048.
2016 Jetlenon Ave . Julw 2:3. 4

Remodeling
Windows Kitchens
Siding
Decks
Roofs
Most
Add-ons
Anything

lOST : Green Quaker Parrot,
looka like over1ized parakeel, call

3 112 miles out Redman Ridge,

304-882·2221).

Heat Pump
Air Conditioning
Fui'IUICa
Rofrigeraton

We have the new FR12
Low Colt Replacement
for Automotive R12. •'

992-2735
7f11981 mo.

-All Kinds of Eorth Work

992-3838

PONDEROSI
PRIMtnVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On St. AI. 338 W. 8 miiH
from.Ravenowoocl
Bridge, 1 mile from
· Apple Grove, Ohio.
Elec:trlc hook-up, dump
IUIIlOnl, non-portlbll
water, large Iota,
hlklng, flahlng.
Rent by WMk or month.
304-31'2-5686 or
614·247-2120 .......

l-INDA'S
PAINTING
IIR.IOI•IIYIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take ••• pal• ovt of
p~l1tl ... lef" de It
ferJ"·

VIIYIWOWU
IIAVE IDIUICIS
614-915-4110

4131 mo PIS

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work
985·1198

111

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULinON
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992-2172

li;30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
... lllunntWI .111

elelldlill,.s

.... ..-s....
_,Ihlen
..fl &amp; ••••••

•

7

1

I

(
\

Tues·Wed. July 1·2·3.

3 Family. 1 112 miltl No11h, paat
Flatrock GroCery 9·? Anllquoo,

70

dolhoo. Drs. nick rec I ,.;..,,
•~Family llillor Sl. llaoon WV
.l.!lr 5th &amp; elh 9·4. Rain or ohi111.
Big e Familr July 5th &amp; 6th.

tools. girls 2T clothes. adult

Yard Sale

.Call
B. D. Construdion

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

8:00am to 1 Furnilure, baby items.

1 Mile Out 218 Frlday 715, 9 -7
Some Furnitura, Glassware,

Clolhmg. Ell:.

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION,. •

Cecil Birchfield residence. Mon-

LOST : Melt Sh&amp;lliea (Collie),
sable, Jim Hill &amp; tower 5 rnle. 304·

675·6867.

614·992·2979
111111mo. pd.

Tuos-Wod·Thur.

3 Famlly Big Sale: 5th, 6th, Tools,
Grill, Bedding, Clothes, 324 Kelley
Drive, Ott Rt. 7 Georges Creek
Road.

stereo, little bi1 of &amp;Yerything./Riin
o; 'shine. 1111 Viard St.
Ctlerry lane, Ma&amp;on WV behmd
~pec1al Eflects Beauty Shop. Juty
.1·2-3. 9· ? Loti of everything .
Fn, Sat, 715th, 61h, 8-4, 2917 Maple AYenue, Po1nf Pleaaanl, Sand
Hill Road . Furniture, Clothing,
Misc. Moying Sale.

3 Family Garage Sale; Furni!ure,
Home Interior, Christmas Around
The World, Figurtnes. Glassware, ~---':-=---------­
Bedapreads; Girls Clothes 10-12, Garage Slle-acron from Maun-

Ladlao Clo1hlo, Largo• Untformo, 101.-- Plo.nt f'ri..l.!lr 51tt.
Loto 01 Mil&lt;. 112 IIIIo OH RL 180
·
AI 588 Whlll Road, July Slh, 8 Julr 51~ Frldor, Wedgt 'IPII•
A.ll . .5 P.M. &amp; Julr 8th, 8 A.M. ·1 Franlllin IW.
'
:.: P.M:·:._ _ _ _ _ _ _
Public Sale
1
3 Familr Yard Sale: 113 Bastiani
and Auction
Drive. Julr 51h, 9·4, Linle Girls

so

Clothes, 0-2T (Velvet Dreues, Anent109fucnonears And Flea
Levi Coal, Carhart Bibs) High Marketo7· : Salvageable Mer Chair, Walker, Moviea, VCR, T.V. chandJS&amp; For Sale. 614 ·251!1 -

Carpet, Drapes. Glassware. Set 1270.
01 Wheat Dishes. Jewel•y. Ba•·
g.8Jni.Galorell
Ml AIIO AuCI10n Ever~ Friday
7pm. Everr Salurday 7pm. At 2·;13

· ~oving Sale: 5784 Slate Route 7 ·crossroad s~ . Gro ceries, new
Soulh, GallipoliS, Fr~daw. July 5th. merchandise. Ed Fraz~&amp;r 9~ .

And Sa1u1dar July 6th, B~•ns At

9:00 A .••t tFurmture. Box Spr 1ngs
&amp; Manru,i. Manu MISC. Items
"'
6J8196 9-? 92 Court SlreSt, Galf1-

Rick Pear5on Auct1on Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
aucuon
Str'111 Ca. licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304·

polls. Anltquos. Coilec 1ablos. .:.;77~3~
· 5.:.;:78::.5.:;0.:. .:30::.•.:·. ;':..:.73:.·54=47:..:.,......_
l::..rea='":.::'•.::•·::..Ju::.nlt::..·______ 90 Wanted to ·Buy
ALL Yard' Sales Must Bo Paid In
late Model Car a Or
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. Clean
Truc;k s. t 990 Models Or Nttwer.

the day btlore the ad 11 to run

Sunday edit+on · 2:00 p,m. Friday.
Nonday ilion . 10 :00 am. Sal·
urdly.

Fnday, 1 S, Salurdsy, 116 , D· "
Eac:h Oa , ,_ .. Milts From Hotze,

Toward •dwell On Counur Lane.

Household llama, Toys, Ladiea,

Chlldrona Clothing. ltemo From 4
HO&lt;loeholdl

Garage Sale : 3-4 Smithers Street,

Galllpolta, OhiO Julr 51h, 8th,
SOmolhing Fo• Evoryonel

Garage Sate: F11day, S111urday, S
A.M. ·4 P.M. 58 Pecan Stre&amp;l,
Spr1ng Vallay Ellates. Houeehotd
Goods. Chandeliers , Sweeper.
Bookt, Good Clothing, Ladiu
Small, Medium Mens Large. GOOd
Hot~e Show Blanken, Boots ,
Misc. hema.
GaraQe Sale: Jul~ 5th, 0· ? -3rd

House Behind UcOonaldl , loll
Of Misc. No Jur4l
Huge Moving Salt: Furniture,
F••·ozoo·o. Old CanntnQ Crocks,
&amp; Toots, Copper Ku
tit
Old Cabinet With
Flour S1her. Large Selection 01
Houaewares &amp; Knick -Knacks .
July 5th, 61h , t 1207 Slate Route
335, 3 Miles .North 01 M•nlord.

Sm1th Bu tc.k"\ Po nii ii C, 1900 East ·

ern Avenue. Galhpolts
Groc o walker and Greco sw1ng .
small l t!tlo Tyke toy s Mu t t be m

good cond111on a nd reasonably
priCed. Call 614·992-3725, tOam "Pm Ot 61" ·092-69S9 alter .. pm.

J &amp; D's Auto Par11. Buying sal vage vet,.cles. Selhno parll. 304-

773·5033.

Non -Work1ng Washo n. Dr~ers .
StoYos. Relr1gerarors. Freeze~&amp; .
AH Cond111oners. Color TV.'s ,
VCR' s. Al so Junk Cars. 614-256-

1238
Paytng Top Dollar For Junk Cars,
Tru cks , &amp; Runn 1ng Veh 1c les To
Dave. 614 -446-95 75
Top do lla r · anllque s. lu rnuure,
ch1na . clocks. go ld, 11lver,
co.ns, watche s... esta te a. Osby
Martin, 6 14-992-7441
~ l a ss,

Top Puces Pai d: Olcl U.S. Coins,
Sil'ller, Gold, Diamonds , All Old
Collectibles, Paperwe•ghts , Etc .
M. T S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Av&amp;fl.le, GaMipolls, 614·446·"2842.
Wanted To Buy Au to's &amp; T1uck s
Anw' Condttlon. 614"· 388 ·906? Or

6 14 ·446 ·*"'AT '

,

Oh10. Info: 304 ·67S- 1711
July 4!h . And 6th _ g .? 2.1 U1 tes
Out On 160 Past Holzet. Someth-

mg For Evervooo

July 6th. 7th. Q A.M. · ? 62 um·
marwood Otl'le 011 watson
Boys S1z11 8· 18 Women

oad.
Plus

Wanted To Buy Junk Auto s W11h
O r W1tho u t Moto rs Call l a~r y
l t'IOiy 61 4·388-9303

Wanledi Ol d WQOd t n Screen
Doors, Any Condt11on, S•ze 36 By
&amp;2 Call An~t1 me , 614 "4 6· 2501,
8 1 4 ~387-01112.

M•sceuaneous Yard Site : Orner
&amp; Coda&lt;, Ju~ 5th, 6th, 8
To?

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

01Third

-

Nonhup second nou st acrou
br i d~ in Norrnup Thurtdly 4th;
loya, Ftowera, Children Ctornu'o g,

11 0

lielp Wantld
I ·WANTEO..

MIIC

Rodney V1llage II , GaY1n Street,
July Slh Only, Ch1ldren s Clothes.
Toys , Jtep, Tr 1cy• 'a, Portabl e

0\llhwa-.

10 people who Attd tq lose ·
""'k• money, 10 try , _
patented weighl ·losa product.

woooht I

31)1. 773-150&amp;!

24hroldoy.

•

Saturday. 0·3, On o.w;n o.1,.. Off 135,000 IYR. INC9NE Po-1.
Cooo Mill ~ad. Cklthoo, Wo•ghl RMdi;?, Boollo. Tol me (I) 101).
· Bonc:h, School 0at11, Mol&lt;.
IIGII-07 I Ell A-2114 1'&lt;1r Deio1o.
AVON ~I All Areu I llllrlty
SpeoJ1, 3M4J'I.t48,

4 PoiOnliol lftdert

Pomeroy, .·
Middleport

Serlauoli ln-

leJIIIOd In lrMIII"$ Fw H0urt
Wnkly In P,rt· time Buohleu

.,.._.12311.

.

~VIcinity

Able A•on... llepreHnllti¥11
..eded. Eern mllney lor Chriit·
Jutr 5-8. Boo""n Rd. lnlaAI i1orM, ..
, blllo el - . 1 WOIIL loi00nwrst uniforms, basketS· Colt- H2·835e or 304-Mr·2145 t
men. Oom-!ipm.
'

Rop.

'

'

•

I
1

Fourth

SR 7. Crah~ large clolhel, mioc.

•

•

r,

Miaed Besgle &amp; Collie, 1trong &amp;
active, wJgood nose. 304 -675-

Stzos, lleno XL. Furmlt!rt. E .

' ,.

•

July 5·6, Earl Young residence On

Pound Bound: 4 male pupp1es.
p&amp;JI Beagle &amp; Lab. 304~7S.61 16.

Ale sh 1re ' s,

~.

60 Lost and Found

111811 .... pd.

HElP NEEDED
Please help us find a
.baby o r\child to adopt.
Call (614) 742-3705 ·
anytime.,

.,.,.

•

,

Male Border Collie Pup, 4 months

Orange kinens, 1 male, 1 female,
litter train!Jd, !roe del1very. 304773-5356 or 304-675-5122.

5. 6 .

Street, c..racuse. 9am-5pm.

For Quality Work

Public Notice

I.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Julw 4, 5. 6 , guna. too l s, nd1ng
mowers. 4x4 !ruck, gravely lractor
Wllh 1mptemen1s, 200 lb any 1l ,
usual clothing &amp; household m1sc
lurnlture, garden tractor we1ghts,
lo ld1ng cha1rs , cardeo ·hl e1eret s·
er, 6 m1l es from Aat:.ne, Bashan
July

1~.

992·2768 or
992·3274

misc.

July 3-4, &amp;am-3pm. CorneJ ol For·
est Run Rd . &amp; Miner1vllle Rd .
Something breveryone.

Kiuans, 8 weeks old , wormod,
ready to go. 304 -875 -3777 or

otd.304-1175·7911 .

Home
Remodeling
Roofing &amp;
Block Work

boy's clothes, adult

Hlrl~uin' a,

Ad , 614·!1&lt;9·2486.

30&lt;-675-37711.

TruckingLimestone
Bulldo7.ing and
Backhoe
Services
Houae Sites and
Utilities

,., · · Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Col'(lplete Remodeling
"!"'.-..::.
- Balhrooms - Kltch~ns - Siding

saddle, org111, gowns, dtah&lt;!s,

Rd.,

Free klt!ena, atl colors. 614 -949-

· Howard hcavatin

B&amp;BROOFING
t:;ONSTRU(;TJON

....
. PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE lo hereby given
ihel on Seturdey, July e,
1981, If tO:OO a.m., 1 public
.... will be held 11211 Well'
Second 8tr11t, Pomeroy,
Phlo, to eett lor cieh the
following eottll•ral:
· 11113 FORD RANGER
I'ICKUP

Garage sa le· July 5·6, Bradbury

home. 304-&amp;7!&gt;5257.

Baths

Tuppers Plelna, Ohio 45783

·'

'

111 Clr'll/1

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Pomeroy, Ohio

20 Pound Female Uixed, Dog,
Very loveable. Housebroken.

Cock·•·poo , mixed do~ . to good

rJ411mo.

t&amp;wPwncsuD
St. Rt. 7

Installed .

Garage 'sale. Jutw 5th, 9· ? , 127
L1ncoln Htll, Pomerow. Prall res1 ·
donee.

88

Free Eatinwtea

I

crune . stereo , eur c1s&amp;r (new),
stroller, play pen, gltder, weedeater. conecflbte welches

458-221&amp;.

Barn 12x14, Shower Door, 5 Ft.,
~~~ub,01 No~eapo nsible For Ac14
_,..,.,tf, " -~ 7 -oe ·
Beagle Dog, t514-4·H · 1&amp;09.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

REPLACEMENT
. WINDOWS

Giveaway

:..:~;:::'7.=::-;;::::;--;-;:;-~~:d~:'"'~hw::aaher,

7 42-2803

New Radiators • Re-Cores

Racine, Ohio 45n1

Eatate household sale, furniture,
kitchen item , TV, bedding , ale .,
July 5 &amp; 6 , 1096, 9am-4pm, 1.2
m1les !rom Reed sv1lle Ol) Ro ute
681 .

1 yr old, black &amp; wht!e , lemale
dog, 112 English Spftnger Spamel.
has had au shots &amp; been WOtmed.
Good walch ctog, I0\181 kids. 304·

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
- Mowing
(residential &amp; commerdaQ
- Weedeating
-Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
Call today for free
' estimate
·

Industrial • Automotive

28563 BASHAN RD.

614·985-3982

•

-21,2112/Hn

985-4473

•
·•

Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyhldlng
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks- Sidewalks

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

PRICE REouca(: RACINE - OWNER
WANTS
TO SELL QUICK!! Appro~ .
Great View of the Meigs County Fair
1.873
acres,
with a t.99t - 14' x 70'
Grounds!! l&gt;jice location, cozy home. 1
Mobile
Home.
2 bedrooms. 'bath, front
1/2 Story Frame with 3 bedrooms, bath,
porch.
deck,
ceiling
fans , appliances .
B.G. heat, unit air. CSipel/vinyl flooring,
,C/A,
B.G.
furnace
. TPC water.
satellite dish, small patio,. fenced yard. IMMEDIATE POSSEsSIONII
. Nice porch and .16' K ·20' garage. This
W~ $29,900
NOW $25,Soo
has it allll . Corne Check It Outll

with' 3 beclroo.ms, 1 112 baths, toyer,

0

\

$31,500

MIQP.LEPORT - Very Nice older two
.-ory France Home. carpet, , Interior
Piaaterldrywell, FAN.G. heal l-ll)'OOIIIS

TillS YEAR'S EDITION

D&amp;T
Pest Control

·~

·.

RACINE-Mocjular Home.28" K 60' with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, equipped kitchen,
fireplace, alec. F.A. &amp; C/A. Roomy 2 car
, - - - - --:---;---\1 garage; dull basement, paved road. Nice
neighborhood , Lowly Setting, 2 Acres of
level laying ground. OWNER WANTS
TOSEWI

FREE ESTIMATES

2.99/min 18+
U Phone Req.
Serv-u
. (619) 645-8434

RUTLAND · 7 Rooms - 4 bedrooms
appliances, attic space, nice level yard
and garden area on this 2.9 acres.
Wood burning fireplace . C.NH.P.,
hardwood-e41rpet flooring . 1 1/2 Story
Hliine with Ornate woosfwork. COME
CHECK IT DUTil

'.

61 4-949- 3308

1-900-98&amp;-8988
Ext. 7907

~ ---

LETART- large .level lot with 14' x 70'
Mobile Home witt) room adc;tition, patio,
appliances , 3 bedrooms, 2 bliths, alec
heat, CIA, "'1811 &amp; TPC available, sep~
an(! gorgeous River View. ASKING

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

match

r-,_-:--

992-2156

Room Additions • Roofing

(No StJnday Calls)

Vap Diuretic Frun Pharmacy.

&amp;14-448,.4711.

POWERWASH
SERVICE

Meet your

THE 1996.

Claslifiede

Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

ROWE

614·992·7643

AllveniWOOd Bridge.

1 Small Terr ier, 1yr old , Brownt

Top

Garages • Replacement Windows

Reduce; Burn OH Fat While 'fau

white. 3 Kitten• . 2 graytwhlle, 1
Fnday. 133 Bunernut. sewino maCha"""'gl\8. 30HI75-4850.

Gravel, Sand,

.'

Church yard aale &amp; bake l&amp;le,
Saturday, July 6, 11ar11ng 11 9am,
At. 338, Portland, 2 mles below

40

Limestone,

Aci'llance . Deadline : 1:00pm the
dlly b~lore the ad 11 to run, Sun·
day ed11.0n- 1-: 00pm Fr1day, Mon·
day editiOn !O:OOa.m. Sa!Urdly.

8434.

Sl..p, Toke Opal Tabllll And E·

HAU~ING

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New

614·949·2096
TODD BISSELL

'

S~ntinel .

WICKS

BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.

Call -

"·

. POMEROY - Home has 3 bedrooms·,
nice large living room' bath, utility roo.m.
kitChen ·and dil)ing room ~ 6.67 Acres of
ground, nice garden area . Close to
town. Owner really wants to SELL
THIS!! MAKE AN OFFER!!

Low Rates)

. - ... -

Area students named
to URG Deans List

m:,1;n:c

892-5535
r--..-

005
Personals
Outl!lono. Problemo? Lti APor·
chic R...al Tho An_r,. 1·800·
888·4800. E•t 9517. t3.88 Per
Min • 18 Yoato, Serv-U&amp;19-845-

(Lime Stone-

•New Homes
•Addlti•New Garages
•RemodellnO
•Siding
•Roofing
•Pelntlng ·
FREE ESTIMATES

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Free Estimates

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
C.... ~~~~~ding .. Atmodollng

·Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • l~ured

.•

PUBUC NOncE
Recine Vllleg• Council
will hold the public heerlng
on the 111117 Budget July
15th, 111M, 7:00 p.m. Star
Mill PariL The budget wlll ba
on view Ill the ennex from
/ 8:00 to 1:00 the oecond
thiOUgh lhf lllteenth.
ctttzeno ere Invited to ettend
the hearing.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

ANNOUNCEMENTS

;'

992•21 -.,,._ ·

'

Pomeroy,

Wfflf AWMr AD

T~e Sen~~."~ ~~~~st~~!!!s~~.

'

The Daily Sentinel• PaAe 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

GfJDIBREAD

Ann
Landers

I

,

3, 1996

Society scrapbook AK sta:i1ds for Alaska, not ArRans~s
.

i

.

7

r

�.......

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

•

•

T

Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pornero,• Middleport, Ohio

•

!

Wednesday, July 3,1996

Wednesday, July 3, 1996 "'

P'omeroy • Middleport, o.hfo

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page_15

'-~ ----~--~~------------~----~----~--~----~~~------~--~~----~~----~
.·
...
ALLEYOOp
BRIDOI:

~
~
$

..•
..

ALL
3
LOCATIONS:
MCCLURE'S RESTAURANT.
NOW HIRING; APPLY BET·
WEEN t::IO l 10::10 A.lot. FULL·
nME PREFERABLE.

·'

As per

ATT~WOMEN /MEN

Do

aona.ble ra!es, minor mecnamcal
reps.,, ott changes, ~~~ eu-742
2035 ask lor Kip, Rudand
•
Con's lawn Care Reatdemlal,
Ch_urches, &amp; Cemetaues, Rea·
sor\able Ratesl614·379-2847

Earn Ea·
tra Income FleXIble Hou111 $200 •
$500 Weekly Call 7 Days 407·
875-2022 Eal 0521! H25

Experienced Profeastol\al CleanIng, Homes Or Bustnesses Days
Or EventnQs Reasonable Rates,
814·367-7029

ATTN: WOMENIMEN. Earn eatra
rncome Flealble houral $200·
$500 waekly. C~ll 7 days (407)
875-2022 Ell 0598 H 25

General t.4amtenance, Patntmg,
Yard Work W•ndows Washed
Guners Cleaned l•ght Hauling,
Commer~cel, Rea•den118l , Steve
814-3811-0429

Babyalner Needed For Green
School Q1Sir1CL61H46·3545
Cable tM1n1 Satellite lnllallera
Earn $20 .. IHr Mull Have Own
Trucka, Tool• &amp; E•penenGe Runmng W1re1 Call Rob At 1·888·
98!&gt;-9222
Car111ted Healing And Cooling
Serv1ce Tech, Expa11anced Only,
Atleast 3 v.. ,., Contact Jim
Harmon, Yates Heabng 1 Cooing,
1-80().02S-3722.
Chrlolyo Peto, 211 North Socond Avonuo, Middleport, Oh.,
appl1cat1ona now ~1ng accepted
for clerks &amp; groomer&amp;, 81.f-992·
4514
Earn 1OOOs weekly stuffing envelopes 11 home Be your boas. Star!
now No e11per~ence Free supplies m!o. no obl•gallon Send
SASE to Prestige Un11 L. PO
Bo11 195609. W•nter Sprtngs Fl
32719
Ellperetncad OTR Dnvers Wanted, Pa1d Percentage, Paid Vacations, Bonus Program,. Box 2Q1,
Galhpol1' OH 45631 .
Full Trme, Husband &amp; Wrle For
' Managemem Position, C1rtle Motel &amp; Princess Video, Salary Plus
Apartment, Apply In Person, Circle Motel
HOME TYPIST, PC users needed $45,000 mcome potenual.
Call 1-1100·513-4343 Ext B-93138.
Love To Talk On The Phone?
Earn PIT $100 · $200 ,.. IWk·.
Conducttng Phone Surveys From
Your Home No Selhng Involved.
Call Jenn Toll Free AI HJ88-9859222
Manager for Automotive parts
srore ~ocated 1n Point Pleasant
area Parts counter e11per1ence a
must Po11tlon ~r.cludes e•catlent
beneftll after 90 days Please
send resume and aalary requirements to box CW-26 cto Po•nt
Pleaspnt Register 200 Mam St.
PI Pleasant WV 25550.
Now Ta~mg Apphcat1ons ForHatrdresser, Apply At Ha~r H•ghhglliS 453 S R 7 Norlh, Gallrpoh~

•

180 · Wanted To

Body work on cars &amp; truCks, rea·

yacancjn ""''"""' •
the Negotiated Ag!reerm!'" b
ween the lollTA
Education, the Meigs Local
School DistriCt 11 postrng tile lollowmg vacanc1es for 111 regular
teaching stalf Boys· Head Track
Coach and SeniOr Class AcN1sor

:'

All Natural Fat Loss Product
Loae Weight, Feel Belief, lncreaaed Energy $1 A Day 814·
440-12313

OHIO'o NOW OPEN
looking For Ftnan&lt;:llll Freedom?
We Are Racruiling Morivated
Pro-Acuve People W•rh Leadership Ouatlt111 H1gh level Posl·
11ons Available NOW I Jotn Us In
The Acttenture Of A L1fet1me Get
Pa1d To Have FUN In the Travel
Industry. It Vaur Senous About
Enpyln; Ulo To Irs Fullell, .M.IIia

IllLkllll

1·800-646·5734 Ext 0375.

Part-Timo Admi11lon
Coordinator
Respons1biht1et Include The Fol·
lowing
Referrals Coordtnaung Adm•a·
stons. Marketing Facility Pubhc
Relat•ons A Must E11penence
Helpful, Bu1 Not Requ•red If lntet·
&amp;sted Ple11se lnqu1re By July 5,
1996 At Holzer Semor Care Ceolet, 614-&lt;446·5001
Part -T1me Seamstress Expene,ced Necessary, Ser•oua lnqul·
r~es Only, Call For An Appo int·
ment, 61&lt;4-4&lt;46-3438
Postal Jobs. 3 Posn•ons .Available No Elper~ence Necessary
For lnformat•on Call 818· 786·
1570 Exl6()(}9

Georget Ponable Sawm~l. ct.on't
haul your klgs to lhe milljuat call
304-87S-1857
I would IIIla 10 clean your houte

or business, weekly or monthly
low rarea, very dependable.
Pleo10 call-:iol-875-7875
Light Hauling House Washrng
Home,
Bus1ness Wmdowa
Washed , Yard Maintenance Call
Aher 6 P.M 814 -446-8183

Reduced Prtee, country home 1n
town, beautiful 1 3/4 acres wllh
woods. mostly ialel, located rn vi~
la~f
Utddleport w1th a lovely
19 Sch 1r5 s
a1 E
u
pee•
ctinon mol&gt;le
. bern &amp; 1 haH, woth carpeu
throughout, some new,
plus mal"rf extra's added to home
Includes deck &amp; centtal au,
phone 614-902-7350 (No Sunday

Three bedroom home 1n country,
Whrtes Hill Rei, Rujand, one bern.
rn-ground pool, 614-992-5087

320

tor Sale
1970 Fleetwood 14X70 3 Bed·
rooms, , 1 11? Baths, 614 ·2.f5·
0704

197-0 Monterey, 12xao, two bed·
room, stove and refrigerator, new
carpet, underpmmng, must move,
$4900, 614·1192-50Cle or 814-902·
7498
1S~76

U•70 Freedom With 10•20
Vemco Add · Room, Very Good
Cond1tion, Elec:tric Heat, CA 'I!SU·
448-8034

LPN Will baby s1t 1n my home, nonsmokmg environment, available 1981 Happy HOu!le, Central A11, 3
days or evenmos call 614 -985· Bedrooms 1 112 Baths. Underp•n3362 anynme
·
mng, Front Porch, Awnmg Back
Porch. Deck. Very Good Condt ·
Nurse Asststance For Home
lton. Must Be Moved• 614-2&lt;45·
House Care References, 61.f· 0804
24!HI010
Proteal!uonal Tree Ser.t•ce, Stump 1990 Sunshrne 14a70. 2 Full
Removal, Fr1te Eallmatesl In- Baths, 2 large Bedrooms. Large
surance, B4dwell, Ohio 81.f-368· Covered Paho. AC, $21,000, 814441-1205
9848.'014-3137 7010
Sun Valley Nursery School 1991 Schult Mobile Home 3 BedCh1ldcare U-F 6am-5.30pm Ages rooms, 2 Baths, Kitchen, Otnmo
2-K, Youncj School Age Dunng L.R . Hutch, Heat Pump, AC.
Summer 3 Days per Week M1n1· Porch, 1/2 Acre, Htlltop Dnve,
Gailrpohs, $25,000 Cash Or
mum 61&lt;4 446-3657
$30,00&amp;, Owner Frnanced 9% lnt
Will take care ol elderly 1n our With $5,000 Down. 6~4-448-4455
home. l1censed CNA'S, 10
1996 l.fK60 Clayton 2 Bedrooms,
expeuance, long term or
term. quality care gtven. 304·882· &amp; 2 Bams. Glam BA·AC SkllhnQ I
Porch. 16 Ft Building, Owner F1
3048
nancmg Available lived In 6
MonThs 614·643·2069
FINANCIAL
1997 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 14x70
$1,215 down, S206Jmo. tree atr
210
Business
Cali 1-800-891-8777.
OpportunHy
1997 Double w•de, 3 bedroom, 2
NOTICE!
bath. S1,893 dOwn, $264/mo, free
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO BJr 1·800-69t-67l7
recommends that you do bus• ·
ness w•th people you know, and For Sale 1973 Jtfob•le Home On
NOT to send money trlrough rhe Rented lor In Bradenton, Flor~da .
0111 un111 you have •nvest•gated 24'1156' Wnh Flor•da Room, Car·
theoffer~g.
port, And Storage Butld1ng N1ce
Locat•on On A Corner Lot In
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD Adult Park Nearly New Heat
FURNACE Is The Most EffiCient Pump, Newly Pa•nted Elltenor And
And lowest Em11110ns Outdoor Roof Coatmg M'oatly Furn1shed
Wood Furnace On The Market lncludmg T \1, Washer, Dryer,
Cenrral Bo1ler Is Currently Look· O•sh Washer, And Baa1c Furn•·
tng For A Ouahty Dealer In Th1s ture In Good Condmon. Fully Car·
Immediate Area . For lnformatton petted In lrviop Areas. Ava•iable
On Becom1ng A Dealer Or For A Immediately Vtdeo Ava•labla Lo·
Free Brochure Call 1·800 ·246· catty For furthet lntormation Call
4881 Or 1-218-782 2575
Bob Or Vtc~•e Pow&amp;tl At 1!114·2&lt;455271

All real estate advertistrig'ln

thiS newspaper 1s SUb!liCtiD
the Fed.;.ral Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wtllch makes 1t illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitation or d•scrtmlnatkm
based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any Intention 10
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination •
This newspaper will not
knowllngiy accept
aovertlsements for real estate
wnich Is In v'olahon olthelaw
Our readers are hereby
tnformed that all dwellings
advertised tn thts newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opponunlty basis

-

i

...........

NMr htring Game Wardent. S.cunry, Waintenance. Park Rang.
ert, etc. No 111per1tnct ~tces ­
laiY· For appla110n and 1nfo call
1-800 -2Q8 -2470 , 1•1 WV135c.
8em-8ptl\ 7dlyL
WlllllFEICOHSERIIAriON
JOBS
HinngGimo .. 51·. curity, . . . . - - . . """ Rono.... 111e. No Eap '*-Y- Fat
opplic:llon end in» ... 1-too21111-2470, llll OH3Uic 8om4pm.
7dlyf.
'

3 8A house, bath, liVing room w 1
h e r - floors, ~tchetl &amp; dinrng
area ~lher. new roof. garage,
on Rt 2. Celt 904 -575-4138 oo
3l4-875-73211alter 8:30
GOV'T, FORECLOSED Homes
For Pennies On 11 Oellnquont
TIIJ, Repo·o, REO'o Your Aru
Toll Fr11 (II 800·1111-8778 Ell
tf.2114 For Cu"lnlllo*tga

One - m home In Pomeroy.

.WIU 1111 an lind

882-5858.

ntrlct, 814 -

Washer Whirlpool US Wrmger
Waaher $150 , Dryer Holpomt
$95, Fre~zer Chest Type $150,
Relngerator Fflg•datre Fros1 Free
$150 . 30 Inch Electnc Range
Hotpom1 $95 . Atr ConditiOner
6,000 BTU $75, G E Washer,
D&lt;yl&lt; Sol, $205 Eacll, G E Relngerator l•ke New Choice Of AI ·
mond Or Wh11e $350, Skaggs
Appliances, 76 Vine Street Galli~· 014·448·7398, 1-S00-499·

2 Bedroom, furnished, ac, washer
&amp; dryer, S250tmo + utilities No
pets ~eferences &amp; deposit 304875-4874
2 Bedrooms, furnished, 1 Queen
S•re, 1 Full Sed, 2 Baths, Clay
Chapel Road, 814-256-8408

SAVEll Repo Double Wrde 1·
(304)·736-7295

340

ijuslness and
• Buildings

Profes&amp;~onai!Busmeu building for
sublease. located at 50Q S. Third

Stroal Mrddleporl Ohio E....Uent'
lot phy11c1an olfica or real tstata
space. Ample llreet parking.
Avatlable Immediately co,tiCI
R L. Kunz, 814-593-3375colieet
Lots

&amp; Acreage

Beauuful homesite, Rl. 2 North,
some restrl&lt;ttonL 304-875-23135.
Bulldtng Lot, All Odlhln Avalable,
Pluo s - Rodney Area, .5,1100,
814·446-2801

Two and lhret bedroom mobile
homes, startrng at S240-S300,
sewer, water and trash r1cluded,
614-992-2187.

440

540

Apartments

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur.
nilhed and unfurmthed, secunry
deposn requned, no pets. 614 -·
992-221S
1 Bedroom''Apartment, 614-446-

0221 .
2 Bedroomt, 1· 112 BattiS, Off
Street Parking, Front Porch,· CA,
Gaa Heat, Refngerator, Stove,
814·4411·2583.
2b4rm. apt&amp; , total electnc, ap·
pl1ancea hlrntahed, laundry room
facllit•ea, clo11 to adlooltn town
Apphcations available at V1llage
Green Aptt l.f9 or call El1&lt;4·9923711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSdH
ESTATES, 52 Wtatwood Dnve
from S244 to $315. Walk to shop
I movlea. Call BU-&lt;448 -2568.
Equal Hou"'"CC OpporQinrty.

41 0

Houses tor Rent

2 Bedoocm ,unlur~&gt;shed, 507 112
2nd St New Haven Call alter
5pm 304-675-3469.
2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Trailer N:., In Galhpol11, 81 ...4-48~
8849 For lnlormaoon.
2 Bedroom, furn1shed, located In
C•ty limua ol Mtddleporl, nO lns•de pe11, references. liOO de·
potl\ $275mo 304-773-5185

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

50 hp, 17" width, Crahsmen Oiler,
used leu than 10 hrs., 1425,
814-992-3014.
Appliances, washer and dryer,
hvmg room furniture, complete
smgle beds. etc 200 Sou lh
Fourth, M~epon

Furntshed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up.
statrs, UniH1es Furntshed, Clean.
No Pels, Reference, Deposn Aequored, 814-446-1519.

Beaury Shop EQuipment For Sale
304-773-9123

Gractoua hvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
Riverside Apartmenrs m Middleport From $232·•355 Call 814·
992-50641 Equal Housing Oppor·
tuniln

Black queen size waterbed, m•rror
headboard wlpadded ratls &amp; 1
second manreu. $225. 814·9493403
Boots By Aedwmg, Chippewa,
Tony Lama Guarantied lowell
PriCes At Shoe care. Gall•po~t
Cobra Woods l, 3, 5, S 100,
Clubs, Bags &amp; Balla Call After
3:30 614-446-0417
Concrete &amp; Pfast1c Septtc Tanks,
300 Tbru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1-1100 537-9528

One bedroom apartment rn Mtd·
dleport, all uulrbes paid, $270/mo
plus J 100 deposit. Call 81 4.9g2.
7808, 8am-5prn.

Condom vend•no machtnes 8 total. S150ee 304-372-2216 alter
5.00pm

Twin R•vers Tower, now accephng
applications lor 1br. HUD subsidIZed apt for elderly and handicapped EOH 304-675-8879.

Oark Oak Bedroom Sullo, Full
Size Bed, Hutch, And Lrvoe Size
Dresser Wllh Shelved N1rror,
Manress And Box Spring Included, $400 080, 814-4411-1825

wen•ngs.

450

Furnished

Ctrcle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 6t4·
446-2501 or 814 -367-0612. Ellecrency Ro&lt;&gt;ms, Cable, A11, Phone.
MICrowave &amp; Relngerator

Del .:13, 120 MB HD, 4 MB Ram,
SVGA 14 Inch Color l.lonnor,
Dos 8 0 Intel, TILP9PPM $1 ,500,
080, Btol-3137-0283.

Blotk, bnck, sewer p1pes, Wind ows, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters,
R1o Grande, OH Call 614·245·
5121

560

Pets tor Sale

AKC Bo•er puppies, lawn!bnndle.
$250 304-875-57116.
AKC Lhasa Apso Pupprps, Now
Accepting peposus Will Be
, Ready July .fth, 111 Shots And
Wormed $175, F1rm, 614 ~3886958 Alter 5 P.M. lf14-386·S434
l!alore 5 P.M

BARNEY

29

BOLT
TH'FRONT

1973, Volkswagen Super Beetle, 1g92 Yamaha Banshee 350 •
good condr~on, ll ,800, 814 .gg2• Wheeler, Excellent Condrtron,
7574
'~
$2,:100, 814-370-2561

DOOR II

Men's and teens Calvin Klein and
Appllanctl f
Reconditioned Arrzona jeons Loll ol ;rrls loans
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Relr•· lor school. At The Thrift Shop,
gratort, DO Day Guaranteal 220 Eall Main Street, Pomeroy,
French City Maytog, 614-445- 814-992-3725.
7705
NIW Gas Furnaces, New Gatvan3 Bedroom House For Ron~ l!ath . - - - - - - - - - - - - ,zld Duct Work, Naw Hood Fons,
&amp; 112, 2 Car Garage, Roo Grande, llio Savrngo On Carpet &amp; Vrnyl In
No Pets lns•de, References &amp; Stock, 'Se.op Y.d &amp; Up. Mollohan 614·379-2720 AFTER 8 PM
D'I&gt;Osll Requrred, 81..,370-2720 Corpots. R7H. 814-448-7•4~.
Oak Desk Wnh Leather Chatr
AFYER8 PM.
B..-.1 new, n - 11een used, 30" SHill. Steroo Wuh 5 CO Chlngor
Looking lot 4-5 111c1room houll In Kenmare drop-rn electric ran9o, $200. Pelr Walnut Storoo Spook·
ors 100W 1100. Laptop ComputIOMI or country 10 ren~ 810. -2• on wltill, rotal $770, asking er With Printer 1300; 8U·441·
1550· 304-e75-3856.
5740 ... 814-902-,7834.
'
'1871 M·F 9-~ Alii Far t,lel.
Nice 2 bedroom. bltement. 01· Country Fumrllro. 304·875-e820.
PaCkard Ball IBM Computer,
rlge. nrce ylld, r~leroncos, de- Rt 2 N, Gmlles, Pt Pleasant, WV.
Prlntor, Scanner, 3x5 Olsc &amp; CD,
poalt, no PilL 304-e75-5182.
T...S.t H , SUn 11-5.
IM!h Mou11, 614-44HCMI3.
Nlol2 or 3 bedrcam houll;, AI- GOGO USEO 'APPLIANCES
manw, no pett., 14-112--5151.
Wuhtrl, dr)'lrl, rtf,.geratora, Parry's GroonhouM: End 01 SOO.. ._.,,
ranges. Skae8• AppltancH; 71 son FIDWit' Salll 1 Mile Well 01
- - Vine StrHI, Coli 814·448·7398, Aoclno,. 814-3~-4 - Wid ··~·~
dlled. ud, - · no filii. rtf· ,__.09-3409.
•
PUILJC NOTICI;
.
oronces, 1475, security dlpesi~ uNci Fumi!Ure 130 BuiiYilo Pike, 111 A111 Al.,..notlve To Your Lo1
8 4-1182-. 5:30pm.
Rolrl;erotoro. Waoher, Tobles, cal Cable Comcilony AvaMablt In
Ch•nnlls +
Unlurnlohld 2 ~&gt;~Groom houle, Ty-iters, Entertainment Cor&gt;- &amp; Out 01 To'wn.
nlcl l ct•n. no Inside pets, do- 1...,. Bodo, Couches, Choirs, 814- Disney. Juil a1G.OO Per Ill Cell
far llllilo. t-186-086-llm
poslt -ired, 8t+ti2-3CIIIO.
44-4782.

e

.

•o

.

•

PolariS Wavarunner t99.f 650cc
1988 Tempo GLS 4 Cylinder: 5 Woth Trarler And Cover, Call ~her •·
Speed, A1r, AMIFM Cusene. 28 8:30 P.l.l. 814-44H253 '
MPG, Excellent Condibon. Runs I:::::,:..::::.::;:;;;:.:;:::::;:;____
Graall $1,850, o~o. 614 -379 - 760
Auto Parts &amp;

4t,JJaala m-re

=.,a

51 Do

clatlc8l

~ .HowC

Elec1rlcll unh

33HI
parloda

DOWN
I Crulaat

2 Act like a
taachar
3 Qulta thO work
torce

4 Crtckel
poaltlona

_ 5 Robin William•
and Jerry

Pass
Pass

,39

69

Pass

Pass

Pass

4t

5•

Pass
' Paas

Pase
Pass

-"'-

Opening lead: • 4

f975 Lrncoln 46 .000 Actual
Miles, A- 1. White, Marroon lntenor, Prtce Reduced sa, goo. See
Tom Kessal 814 _.411- 7787

Polar~s ' 750 CC Waverunner,
Tra1ler, And Cover Absolutely
Lrke New, CARI.liCHAEL'S
FARM &amp; LAWN, 814-448-2412.

• 2

'

1

31~1rt

South

3•

tNT

In the trough
of a wave
By Phillip Alder
Arguably the strangest televisioa
show featuring bridge was fiiD)ed as
the Canberra sailed around the North
Sea. Four players - Bob Hamman
from the United States, Tony
Forrester from England, Christian
CE~BAITY CIPHER
Mari from France and Zia Mahmood
by ( ule Campos
from Pakistan - rotated ae partners
Celebrity Ciphtr cryptograms are C"Jittd from quolatlons bY tanlOIJI people, Pill and present ,
while the cameras ran. Deaplte the
Etch lilller nthe ClpMr 1tanc:11 for lnother TOdoly't clue W~ll Y
..
steady ptctures, perhaps the sea was
FKTGBH,
K
EKG
FUZ
UK J
UB..
rough because Mari made a surpris·
ing error on this deal.
NBBG
NDL
K
AVLLAB
EZHB
How should he have planned the
play in six hearts alter a spade lead
from West?
UDEKG _.
FZDAJ
UK I 8
NBBCI
T H 8 K L
Mari and Zia were ambiti9us in the
auction. Two clubs was strong, arttfi·
SZH
KAA
LVEB
PAKDJB
cial and forcing, with 'two diamonds ,
the negative response . Alier heart11?
J B NDx x w.
were agreed, South cue-bid In spades
and North cue-~id in diamonds. Then
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Life was a lot srmpler when what we nonored waS:
South lurched into Blackwood.
la1her and mother rather than all ma1or credl1 cards· - Robe~ Omen
South was still alive when West led
a spade. After taking tile first two
tricks with his spade honors, M,ari
111AT D&amp;IIT
ruffed a spade high in the dummy
PUIILII
tAMI
Now came a trump back to hand and
- - - - - - 141to4 lty ClAY I . "*AN
another spade ruff in the dummy .
Raarrange ietters of the
- However, East. Forrester, took tbe opfour terambled words beportunity t.o dls~rd his sing\et.on·club:
low to f9rm four words
. So, when decl'a rer exited from the
dummy with the diamond .l:ing,
Hamman won with the ace and gave
IVTRYE
2
his partner 11 club ruff: one down.
I
When one hand entty Is in the tnpnp
suit and the other is in a side suit. you
r
.
~
should use the side-suit entty first. II
GLIOC
WI\OCV~ nOO' PER!'lOt-.\ ~ 1-E Mari had played a club to hand at trick __ ____
four, he would have been -sale. After
w.tiOO!t..Y ocva:. W&gt;-Pcre
~
I 15 I I
taking his second spade ruff, he could
CEY~~TI~!
have drawn tru,mps and copceded only
People should never underthe last !ric~' to the diamond ace.

...

21!45.
Accessories
1988 Grand Am 2 Door, Burgand)', Atr AulD, Power Wtndows, Ex - 1 Set of rear axles &amp; hubs for
calient condltron, $3,500 OBO. Ouadratrack CJ Jeeps, 1 CJ
814-446-8231
.
hood. 304-876-1564.

.
.

s~tt~:nA-~t.~s· ••••

no

0

I

THE BORN LOSER
r

~

1-!EJ.L,Q\IE.f, WAAT DO '100 '!Him:

1 I

pI

I

I

I

rr?

Ot

r. I I' I I .·-

~E_B.,..M~U-1~1;,'

estimate the 1mpoi'tance~ of a
good example We must re r---r!-=-~-:-:--:~-,member that seetng 1s tnterlpretedas---------t
~8.-T-r--T,-('T,.,••-,,,::-.,,~-t
Co.;plere tloo _chucklo qvored
4. . by t.lling '" the m11S1ng wotds
you dewelop from tlep No. 3 below
6

NEG G I D

1

0

•

A PRINT NUMBERED Is
~LETTERS

BIG NATE

•

YOU'RE

THEfi.E'!&gt; JENN'(.
!&gt;HE LOOKS .50

RIGHT!

I'LL.
IT!

Home

UNSCRAMBLE fOR
ANSWER

C&gt;9

IS

I'LL.

DO IT!

-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondUJonal ltfeume guarantee
(ocal references lurnistle- Es
rabl11hed 1975 Call (614) 446·
0870 ·or 1·S00-2S7-0578 Ro;ers
WaiO&lt;proolrng.

PIANO

Mattress And Heater Only, Fna
Oue1n Size Walerbed L•ke New
$60, Alter 5 P.(fll14-448-8313

'

s

~~

27

ijj;j;i;?

4&amp; EIMrlllcl 41 lira. In llladrld

......

organa

21 Qalnod

21 llacUinal
986
Cage movie,
• J 10 8 7 6 4 2
G~.. 7
21 Shinlnt

Improvements

Sovlncs You'll 'lnd In tilt
. C/ossl(ltd Section.

Dorsal -J3irch -~e Ma age - SILENCE~
I have an uncle w o Is in his. rocker. looks o the
wlldow and sighs H1s wi says that the stgh 1s for
who like to suffer'" SILENCE.

ose

JULY 31

Appliance Parts And Serv1ce. All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Expeflence All Work Guaranteed,
French Ctty Maytag, 6t.f U6
7795

'r

C&amp;C General Home Uam·
tenence - Pa1ntmg, "unyl s•dmg.
carpentry, doors, w•ndows. baths,
mobile home repal!' and more. For
tree estimate call Che~ 614 -992
8323
DRYWALL
Hang, finish, repair
Ceilings textured, plltler repair.
Cal Tom 304·075-41118. 20 y•ra
.txpeni"'Ce.

Knchen Table 144 Cha1rs, E•cellent
Cond1t10n, $125, After 5 00 614 446--831:1

Au Cqndl!loners. Washer0 0r)'er.
Refrtgera1or. Freezer, Stove, M•·
crowave. Color TV , VCR , 614
256-1 236

• KJ 3

=

~

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
South
Weol North East
2•
Pass
2t
Paaa

t~D2 Honda XR 100. excellent
a&gt;r&gt;loiiOn, SIISO, 614-SAD-3026.

810

K•ng S1ze Sol1d Oak Waterbed
Wtlh Full S•ze Wall Unn Has
ltghts &amp; M•rrors A Match1ng TV
Unll /Ornser Included S4'50
080, 614-446·1625

:1 Pc Dark Oak Bedroom Su11e,
Full S.te Sofa Bed, Air Cond•bon·
ers, lazyboy Recliner, 61&lt;4·4&lt;413·
1610

•QB--18

&amp;E "l.JTI FUL.

2606

1 Only- 15 Piece $1,658. 3 Rooms
of new fumtlure, •ncludmg Cherty
Bedroom Polly 's New &amp; Used
Futntture 2t01 Jefferson Ave Pt
Pleasant WV

Eaal

9AKQ5
• Q
•AK

1070 Chevelle SS Non Or•ginal
455 En;ine, 2.000 , Firm; 1973 1992 Kawasaki 300 4/wd -4
Chevy Malibu 4 Door, Runs wl)ealer askrn; $3.200 good
..
, _ 304-773-5840
Good• $800 • 81 4-448-~70.

1

20 Of'-lng

9 9
t A 9 5

1ggo Polar~ a 3'50 &lt;4x.f 4 Wt..... .,.er,
H1 And low Range, Reverse
Good Condition, $2,800, 61&lt;4·.f46·
l-:-'8:::3::5:-:
. ::--:--:::::--:---::-

r::.,,r.

.. J 10 7
• K
•J1098532
Weott,
.. 10 6 4

.

SERVICES

Kiln dried lumber tor alit, 1~
random w1dth and lenglh, walnut
and sanafraa, $1 25 per bd tt
and .up l1m1ed quantity, 614-1!198-

Household
Goods

'

W.

12 YaR*II port
13 E1111 call .
14 Chlmlc:.aiiUfllx
15 llnlck toocll
11 cartaln hMIItl
,.

37
40 8olcl and

conlldonl

1tllara'-

• A Q 9 7

1988 F~rebird V-8, 5 Speed, New
Tires, 83,000 Milts. 14,200 080,
Super Nice! 1992 Oodge Shadow,
All, 85,000 Miles. S2.9DO 080
814-245-5592
•

1 Nolhlng
SUnconaclouo "

•52

evemngs.

r

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa•ed. New &amp; Reburll In SIOdt
Call Ron Evan~ 1·1100-537-9524,

MERCHANDISE

19&amp;ti 250. Po1a11s 4 Wheeler,
'62 Pontiac T-1000, runs good, $1, tOO Or Trade For Good 0111
good body, ale, low mrles, $1200, IBike-:--'6~t-4--446-·4_o_~----'-614·002·7683.
t9S8 KX -80 Kawasaki, good
'8&lt;6 Ford Tempo, &lt;4 do..or aulomat· cond, f18W pans $1500 304·882·
lc, left rear 111 t hghl damage, 2427
97,000 mrlos, $350 OBO, 614·
949·2311 days or 814·949-2844

1Q87 Winnebago leShara 82,000
Mrleo, Good Shipe, $12,500, 614 446-3292

Space tor Rent

large 2 Tra1ler lots For Rent,
814-3137-0632

r----~N;::ort:::-.:-b-,_-:o:::-7.-::D3:-::-06-:;-,

t9S4 Yahama 200 3-Wheeler,
new t~res, stdrter &amp; ballery, good
~nd 3).4-875-1584

18S8 Mozdl 323SE 4 door, 5
Auto Repair
speed, great gas 1~1age1 ntcel =a-.J.,-.,-.-n-•J11...,..Is-ol~o-n..,s?;..,D~o-n'~t"'b--uy
delncat••• 11100814-3~23llt
uoed, 101 youfsool&gt;uUL 111u puM ll
1G80 Bu fck LeSabre, e•cellent I'll f•x itt Most domestics, some
runnmg c nd•lton, V·B, PB, PS, 1mpor11. Call David for esumal!,
AKC Reg111ered Boston Terrier AC , pow w•ndows, $3800, 614· leave message, 81.f·9:92·3063.
Pupptes, Excellent Bloodline,
Campers &amp;
Shots &amp; Worl'led, Now Takmg g49-204s 6r -04!1-2302.
790
DepoSits You Chooae Your Own 1989 Olds
lion Crera Body
Motor Homes
Paymen~ Askrng $300 Each. Can Damage, Runs Good, 4 Ooor, AC,
814·448-8270.
PB, P!i, PW, $850, 814-446-1615, 1972 Scamper t81t. pull-behrnd
camptr, sleeps 6, lOtally sell conAKC Reglllerad Chihuahua pups, After Six81 ...446·12.f.4.
uny female, $300, males, 1250. 1991 Cadillac Seville .fdr, 74 •000 ta1ned Detachable awnmg, deParents 3&amp;41bt 8t4-98S-4288.
miles. exc cond $8,000 304-875- mand pump, shOWer, rango-top &amp;
oven, hJrnsce, and hoi water tank
AKC Registered Doberman Pup- 1118.
Must see to apprec•aUt. Call 614·
pres, 13 Weeks $250, Ready To 1991 Oldt Cutlass Calais 4cyl, 446·381 4.
Go, Wormed, 814·988-2070
5spd, sunroof, am-lm cassette. 1g 78 GMC T•ogo Moaor Home
runs &amp; looks great. 12.800. :104- Full Ball\ Roof &amp; Cash All, 45,000
Black &amp; Silver Glf'man Shepherd 875-294;
Pupptes, 6 Weeks Old, Wormed,
Mtles, large Refngerator &amp;
814-388-9318 Ane&lt; 5P.M.
1992 ~ntlac FrreblldV-8, 55,000 F'"zer$8,300614·4461
mtles. e•c COnd $7,300 304·675- 198.f N1ssan M1ra9e 70, OOmt,
1176
20mpg, duaJ rear wheels, 4cyl,
Sspd, ~tove, s1nk &amp; refrigerator
$2,800,304-67S-2949.
AKC Regtstered Boston Terrier
pu pp1es, one male, one female,
readwo to go, call 814~04G~ 2.fG5,
814·992-3752 or 614-9112-91105.

lonly Old Acrosome Consofe
P"no By Baldwin, $1100, 814-4484922 Aher 6 P.lol
•

3 Bedroom &amp; full basement, central 111 &amp; no pets $400mo I de·
pos•t 2&lt;416 B Monroe Ave Pt
Pleasant WV Call 304·1!S7S.17&lt;J
Relerenc:ea

~

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Galion
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses.
Jaekscn, Otuo, 1-lll0-537·9528

ELEMENTARY TEACHERS
Complete MacMillan "Science \.tnlt
For Pnmary ~rades, Books,
Games, Art Ideal, literature Extenders And Carrying Flits, Naw
Condioon, Paid $575, Prloe $200;

'

Sleeping rooms With cookmg
Alto tra•ler apace on nver. Al l
hook-upa Call afler 2 00 p m ,
304·773-5CS51 , MasonWV.

510

Sears room AC for casement
window, $125 3:14-773-5178 alter
6·00pm

,

Autos tor Sale

SeBrs Kenmore sew1ng machine '!9 Thundefbird SC, two door, 3 8
&amp; Sears Kenmore serger rna- lure, V-G, ehte model turbo, PS,
ch1ne wtcabmet &amp; acce11ones, PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats
brand new, best offer, Must sell and locka, '"Great Car, .. $5200
304-675-8728 rl no onswer. leave ne;. 814·992-7476 or 614·949·
message
28711.

And
Electr•c
scOorers
Wheelchair-s, New /Used, Van f
Car llfl Installed, Suurglldes, ltfl
Cl"la 1rs, Call For Brochure, 614·
448·7283.

Rooms

460

Aefngerators. Stoves, Washer!l
And Dry.ers. Ali Reconditioned
And Gauranleedl $100 And Up,
Will Delrver. 814-6811-8441

Two cherry end tables and cherry
co Ilea tabla, $1 SO; cherry telaphone stand, $40; RCA console
TV, $125; Kenmore electric
range, S200: 4 blade wnua co!Nng
fan, $15, Drn Davll Deluxe ....I&gt;
er, $30; 6 ,..9112-68311.

4· 12"' Compet111on Sunwo.ofers
less Than 4 Months Old, Perfect
Cond•bOn, 6t&lt;4...-46-8778

Furntshed 2 BedroCWl.Apartmlfll
Acrou From Park. ~. No Pets,
References, Oepaslf. S350tMo .
614·448-8235, 614-446-0577

Wedge Apartments 506 Burdette
St !bedroom No pets Furntshed
&amp; unfurnished 304 675· 2072

Queen S1ze Waterbed StOO;
Cha.nsaw 20"' $75, 305 4 Barret/
$150, 350 Turbo" Lon; Shah $75.
18· Ft Ut1l1ty Trailer $700, 614 ·
446-9575

71 0

1983 Honda Shadow 750 New
Battery, 21 K Mrles. $550, 6.14.
24t5-0038.

988

Efflciencr Apartment Acro11
From Umversiry Of R•o Grande,
All UtiUtles Pard, $2001Mo , + DeI&gt;OIIl B14-3118-9948

Ntce two bedroom apartment •n
~meroy, no pelS, 814-992-5858

Antiques

Set And Frame. Never Used S111i
In Ptasuc: Cost $800. Sell $250, ,ALFALFA HAY- Storage delivery
814·775-2380
ava•lable-Morgan's Farm At 35,
Piny. 304-037-201S.
Queen S•ze Waterbed W11h 6
Drawers, $225; Entertamment
TRANSPORTATION
Center $150, No Calls Atrer 10
P.M 514-446 2221

1993 Yamaha YZ80, North County Yamaha, expansion chamber,
Renthal handlebars, Dunlop ures,
2 Krng Size Waterbeds. St50 &amp;
runs good, looks good, $1250 or
$75 Spill Raol Fenco-~1113.00,
rllde, 614-843-5450
Raols $2.50 can 304-875-5788
1io77 Oldsmobile, 2 door, ale, lull
0 Boats &amp; Motors
2 Amgs, 14 Carat Yellow Gold, 1·
power, 73,700 mtles, dnve an1 · 75
114 Carat Cluster Reta1l Tag S895
Vnamaster exercise btke wl1arge where, veryf»Qod condll!on. 614for Sale
Sell $450 , 1· 1 112 Carat Retail
seat, Sears 2000 Lrlastyler alec· 949·3228
~~~::--:--::-:-~-.,~....,..Tag $499, Sell $250, Or Both
tnc treadm•ll, bolh good condnion,
14' Skeerer V-bouom fiberg lass
$800, 614-2511-llSSO
' Cl1.tt·G9N5083
1980 Pont1ac Trans ·Am A~· boat and trailer, has seats, new
::::-::::---:--------ltomauc, 2 Doors. Sunroof &lt;455, tra•ler lights and boat ltcense to
286 IBM Compatible computer, Wllrlpool Washer, Heavy Outy, 2 Good Shape,' Parts Car, $1 ,500 197,$395.614-742-1123.
color momtor -$250, ' IBM 88XT
Years Old $100 614-4&lt;11· 7168
304-875-4841 AflER 6 P.M
1----:-----:---:--computer, color monttor-$150
1993 21 Fl Maroda 4.3 LX,
\l!maha 12 S1nng G.nar $149.50, 1984 Ford Mustang RebuHt Motor less Prop, Complete Tops,
Call304-875-8063.
Benlly Flar Top Guitar $139.50, !Transmission. After 8, 514·&lt;446· dem Tratler W1th Brakes,
3 PC. EXERCISE EOUIPI.lENf
Alvaru Flat Top Guitar S159.50; 6689
Many hems To l•stl E•cellent
Profeaa•onal Ouahty In Good
All Wnh CasoJ 22 Revolver Like
Condrtron, 814-367-0659 Or 614·
New
$75,
Colt.fS
Pistol
Argentina
1987
Ford
Taurus
W1th
A1r,
Au·
Condlt•cn, (Wnh One 01 These
367 .1319
You Can Work Ou( In The Com- S225; Roland 0 · 20 Keyboard tomat•c TransmiSSion, Good Con-I,;;::-7:-::---:--::--::---::-S3GS; Ho(lda 1988 4 Door, CDid dibon, "Door, low Mileage, 614· 1994 M1rada 18 Ft. Open Bow
tort And Convemence Of Vour
Air, Very Nice, EVOtythlng Worka, 379-2720 AFYEI'I6 P.M.
With Sundeek 4 3 Liter V-8, lolerc
ljiome) One Weat Bend 5500
Muiii·Gym Rpwtng -Machlne $75;
$2,805; High loliles, ~ Prices, '7:-:-::--:-::"""'-.,..,.-----1 Cr~11er, Wllh Sko Accessones,
C.B. Radios, Craftsman Tools, 1087 Ford Titmpo 4dr, auto, runa 614.256-8 160
One Schw1nn S•gnature Exercy.,...----'---------,
cle, Coat New S250 For S150 ProiO Tooia, Shamana Fish Reels, greel UOO. 30H75-4498.
Cash; One Super Oelu11e PTS Cave's Swap Shop. Cheshire, OH.
~,~:-:-Ber::-e-n-a-.-two:. -door.,.,--.-v-"'-:M-:u-,-_1 1805 Strsml 28} Pro, XL, DC, 176
8
1 HP Evenrude Fully Loaded,
Turbo 1000 Exercycle, Cost New
Building
f)Orl auto. . ._ parn1 S2500, 6l4- Roady To Fish, Or Play 614-441·
S I,DOO For $375 Casn. Call Earl 550
Tope, 61&lt;4·&lt;44&amp;-0161
Supplies
949-2877
01191 Ahor 5 P.M.

tor Rent

Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
beauttlul 2ac lots, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr , 304·57&amp;-2338.
RENTALS

Model· 94 Wmchester 30 30,
niCe 304-8 75-1564

Buy or seii " R1venne Ant •ques,
112&lt;4 E Matn Street, on At 12&lt;4,
Pomeroy Hours M J W 10 00
am to 6 00 p m, SUnday 1 00 to
6 00 p.m. 614·992·2526

Room&amp; for rent · week or month
Sta.rtmg ar $t201mo Galha Hotel
814·4411·9580
•
25 Acres, Hannan Trace School
OISinct. Small Tobacco Allolment
Mrnerai Rrghts, 814-258-t811 .

Goods

530

Ntce Cle.an 2 Bedroom All Electnc, Furn11hed Kttchen, Clos&amp; To
Spring Valley, ~o Pets, $350/Mo ,
.. DO References,f14-&lt;448-6157

Pnce Buster 1998 3bedroom
$825 down, $1 59rmo. Free delivery &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Homes, Nnro WV 304-755-5885

' Sporting

Tratler for rent 1n Gallipolis area
614·448-8849

L•mttad Offer/1996 doublewlde .
Jbr. 2bath. $1799 down. 1275/
monrh Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes. N•tro
wv 304-755-5885
New Bank Repos Only 3 le~ Still
In warranty 304-755-7191 .

520

Tradat for rent $200/mo. you pay
ubh•es, no pels 304-675-2535.

New Haven 1 &amp; 2 Bedtoom furntthed apta Oepostt &amp; reference&amp; 30&lt;4-882-2588

REAL ESTATE

..

2 Bedroom Tralllt', 8 Mtles Route
218, $210/Mo + Otpolll, References, 614 -448 -8172, 814-258-

In The Renter Ttap? Own Vou're
own Home lor L•Uio as SSOO 00
1-(304)- 738-7295

350

POSTAL JOBS Start $12 88/hr.
plus benefits For ll.pphcanon and
eum •nlo. Call 1·800·299·2.f70
310 Homes tor Sale
Ext WV 127, 6am-9pm 7days
-S-a-ie_R_o_p_s_F:-o-r-:S_n_a_p_O,;,n_T:-o-c-ls-. 1 t 112 Story house. new root. new
A EOE 606
vmyl s1d1ng, new pa1n1 rnstde &amp;
'f!
~"&lt;e_re_ __;·__
·9_2_a-e_t2_8___ out 261&lt;1 L•ncoln Ave Call 1011
1
W'A,.TEO POI IIOn A.vatlable AI free, ask for Anna 1·800 715
A dommunuy Group Home For 3368
Persons W1th Learnmg ~•mna·
11ons In Galllpalts Hours 3 30 . 2 t /2 bedroom home wlbath, walk
11 30 PM, Thurs. 3 ·9 30 Plol., to town &amp; &amp;ehool, good con(htion,
Fn, 9 A.M ·7 PM , Sat, 9 AM -5 remodeling .n progress, new rugs
PM , Sun, 2 -Hour Weekly Stall to SUit buyer, 95% finance BVBII·
Meeting , Or At
l!herw1se able to qualified buyer Properry
Sche'duled HIQh SChr,fl Degree, located a1 131 Bunernut Pomer.
Valid Orrver's license ) nd Three ay, O ,
Years l tcerrsed Or~vmg E11pett
2 3 bedroom t'louse. 50x100 lot,
~ Requ 1red Salary S!i 00 IHr . locared
•n Syracuse. appl•ances
To Start Send Retume To PO
Box 604, Jackson , OH 45640 Included, call 6t&lt;1 992 5767 alter
4pm
ATTN Ceclita Oeadl.ne For 'Ap
phcants 715196 Equal Opportum· 3 BedroOm Bnck Home 1 112
ty E11"4)1oyer
'
Balhs, New Fron1 &amp; Back. Po1ch
New 30 Year Shmgles, New Soffief
We Are A Franch•se 01 Burger
&amp; Gullers, New CA, Well Insula!·
K•no Corporahons Currently Op- ed
S f.A.nutes F1om Gallipolis
peraung 21 Restauran1s In Oh10
Small V1nyl S•ded Our Butldmg ,
Well Virg1nta, &amp; Kentucky, Wttti $79,9006 14·4&lt;41 1417
Plans To E11pand In The lmmedta lt Future We Now 'Have 3 Bedroom House Wtth Oetac~d
OperNnqt For Rutaurant Manag. Garaoa Sets On 1 9 Acres Zoned
er: Alltstant Manager. Manage, Commerc tal Beau 11lul Setting
Tra•nHa We Olfer Competlltve Acrou From Jumbo In R•o
·wages Along Wnh A Bonus Grande. sg2.000 814·286·2554
Plan, A Comptere Beneltt Pac~ ­
•o• Including Med1ca1. Dental. 3 BA 2 bath ranch 2 car garage,
VacttJona. Short &amp; long Term Spr~ng Valle~ area . clote Holzer
DIUbllty. Lolo lnsuronce &amp; A New Hospital 6t4 -U6-70&lt;40
40 1K Program If You Are Wllh
One 01 Our Compe111ors &amp; Have 8 room house Rac•rll. carpeted.
Ltmlltd Growth Opponuntty, We a c . &lt;4 68 acres. garagu, oul·
Would ltkt lo Talk With You bulldtng, $75 000 neg 614·902·
Fat Or Send R,sume To 304 - 2924,814 -992-8971
520-0055 Or 9Jr;a1 Krng, P 0
Bo• 2407 Hunlln;ton. WV 25725. Conage. newly remodeled . wtout
bu1ldtng &amp; priv;cy lenct. 1 floor
Attlnllon: Donny-O'&amp;ien
plan, good for elderly or rental
Jellorson Ave , $35,000 304-875:
WLDlFEICONSERIIATION
7482.
JOBS

2 Bedroom Trarler Newly Decorated Trash &amp; Water Pa1d Near
~rter, 61 4-388-liOO

Furnished, private lot, porch,
yard , good clean cond111on, no
pets, $260 w•1h water, 30&lt;4·8822468 anyume

Mobile Homes

.;;old.:.;.;nd.;;no~horao,;;;.:.;;·:.:ec.14-.;,;;24:.:5-:.:508;:,;;.7c..__ 1qhde, lots ol new porll, $7000
Hay &amp; Grain
0110. 814-g92-37116
Queen Sire Oflhoped1c Manreaa 640

VI'RA FURNRURE
814-440-3158
Duality Housohold Furriture And
Aj&gt;planca Greot Deals On
Ca.sh And Carry I RE'fT-2-0WN
And layaway AISC AVSillllle
Free Delrvery Willlm 25 M~es.

Mo., S250 Deposit 614-3137-0832.

ACROSS

• =&lt;Gar.) .

Spould pony, brok•, tllactl, •rr 1·1
-:g:-:7:-:3,...,H-'arc.le-y-=D-av..,,":ds-o-n-::S-up-e-r-

2 Be~room Mobile Home, $250/

:ca-li~s)~~--~--------- l~8~=-'------·---------­
Rental Butlntst Opportunity or
Starter Horre-FuUy Remolded, Behtnd Nazarene Church. $27,000.
304-li7S-74ll2

PHILLIP
ALDER

Cabbage- you cut, 30• head,
John Hll Farm Letart Fell~ Ohio,
814-247-3042 ore14 247·2842
FARM SUPPUES
&amp; LIV E STO C K

Ron's TV Service, spectlilzlng In
Zenith alao servicing most other
brands. House calla, 1-800-787·
0015, wv :J!I4:§.'8-23U8

Roofi"G &amp; gutters complete homo
remodeling decks &amp; tiding, ~5
y11rs •-ience. B 1 9 Roofing
1nd Constructron. e1• -092-2:le4 ;
or 1-too--31143.

820

Plumbing

-\
BE1tNICE
BEDEOSOL

&amp;

Heating

-610 Farm

Equipment

Hey Boler 273 N.. Holland, 814-

Freemon's Heeling And Cooling.
Installation And Service. EM
'Cerified. Residendal, Commorclll.
614-258-1811, &lt;
•

840

:~

Electrical and
Refrigeration

FrH Esdmotes, t -1100·291-11008
W'i 0021145,.
•

8t4·~.

Al••dofttial or commar~ wiring.

new urvk::t or repa•ra. ...... u.
censed electricia n. Ridenoutt
Eloc)lic81, WV000308, 304-e7t1118.v

he~·

~A (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) When eaiab-

RSES CERTIFIEO DEAlER .

LAWRENCE ENnERPRISES
Heat Pumps, Air Condltlanlno. II
You Ocn' Call Us W. Bolh I.Qael

Matetvnaker
reveals whi&lt;:h signs
• are romantically perfect tor you . Mail
$2.75 1o Matchmaker. c/o !1111 newapa·
per, P.O Box 1758. Murray Hill Statron,
New Yolf&lt;, NY 10158.
"
LIO (July ZS,Aug. Z2) 11 you avoid mak·
1110 demands and behave. In a cooj)era•
live manner, you will gel the auppM ~~a
dole uand.ate today. Let nature take Its
"71:"'"-(Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do not
tale 1o aa1c adtilce today r•rdiflg something lltat hiS confused you. 11 will be ~t·
·· let to uk friends than 10 uk familY rnenf• .

'fl'UI'IdaY. July 4,
You can

1996

_..,'I great dell o1 knowledge

••-nce
.,...

he d A

In Ute year a a · n
..-array of adventures will broaden your

110111

llllhlng objecliVtl today, a negative alii·
tude could be your biggeSt liability. II you

II) Today
your mate's odeaa mrght
beUer than
yours. You should pay anentoon when he
01 she expresses a porn! ol vrew
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fib. 1G) How you
con81ruct your schedule will determine
your level Ol prodUciiVIIy IOday . if VOU
devote too 'much time to tun activit~ea.
you wrll not accompliah much.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mtlrc:h 20) In order to
preserve your peace ol mlild today, don'1
take yourself too seriously, especially
when playing garl\8&amp;. If you Q81 nervous,
you wll 1101 have lun.
AAU!S (Mtfch 21·Aprll 11) Everything
should
weU tor you todly you
uae your iinaginalion. Try to viaualize
vourielf crossrng the tlnllh line in lira!

.,J)UI

..
.' .

n

convince youi'HH thai you can achieve • ~""'•rgoal, unu wll.
.
TAURUS (Aprii:IO-MIIy 20) A lrtend hiS
,_
'~
.......
1 t 11
...... ........-SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You can ....,n eager o e you a......, -·-·~ov
handle moat allulllonlloday, However, he or 'ahe dl~overed which could be

~ and help ~u to aelect Y~! you may have diHiculty managing your
CHICD 1,._ 21 ..~u~y 2J) Hyou have rQOUrce~
' '9 ,1111 c:.autlon In r~gard to
with
money
.

= =• ,

v.lulble to you. This peraon mlgtd try to
gat In touch wlllt you todly.
.
GEMINI (Mey 21..June 20) ·A financial ,
IA(IITT lUI .(Nov.
21) .YOll -'
lhat dldn1 - ' ! 0011 well Jot,
_..,
· .... _.__. 10 ....., may .Ill be11J 1ri a allue1ion that blck- an IIIClCIIII could be·good tor you. U..
Tlil felling ntU11 11111 ... •
St
licking
r -me your own JUdgment whln dlcidltlll .......
Know wfltre to look tor romance and ·· flred recently. · op
you
8hotild do
·
·'
'~~you'll lind 11. The Aatro-Graph . l!l1d 1rV to do belttr next limO.
you
••
,r,

~

~·

:troiiillfflili~

I,

'· f,

••

..

'

I

.·

\

�.

~

.

..

1 •
•

0

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Wed1141Sday, July 3, 1996

.

~

',

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

'

HOURS
Monday thru Sunday .
· 8AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

24 PK 12 OZ.

$ 49

Accepts CPedlt Cards

&lt;

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICIS GOOD THRU JULY 6, 1996.

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTs ·

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS .

'

EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR

DOUBLE

2 LITER

(

.

COTTO NELLE
US!A C~OICE BONELESS B~ ..
$2 59 .· BATH ..
S1rlo1n Steak............. . .
TISSUE .
~

.

9·9(
,.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF La

i
'

Chuck Roast ••••••••~••••• ..

I

I

..

.

'

'fYSON BBQ RIB

$259 · .....__ _ _-1

.

••
14.5oz.
PaII1es••••••••••••••••••••••
.
.

...

·GROUND

$119

.

Chuck•••••••••••••••••••••••~~.-

. USDA CHOICE BONELESS

.

Rump Roast ••••·•••••i!·•••

THORN APPLE V.ALLEY SLICED

$ 99

·Bacon•••••••••••••••••~...... · 1 .

·

·

'

&amp; CHEESE .
7.25 oz.

$ 129

89(
Turkey .....................~... .
99(
LOUIS RICH GROUND

4 ROLLPKG

·

DEL MONTE
·KETCHUP

OSCAR MAYER

·u. Hot .Dogs ••••••••• ~•• ~~.... ..

280Z.

LAYS POTATO
· CHIPS

,•
I

...

.

..,

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.
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$249
WaI erm·eIons •••••••••••••
.BLUE BONNET
..
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s
9
(
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Quarters •••••••••••••••••••

90Z

20ib. avg.

LB.'4stlcks

-". - - - 1

•

320Z.

Singfes•••••••••••:.~•••••••.
HAGAN ASST.

.

.

Ice Cream •••••~:.9:~........

_ CRI!CO

.

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$199·

•
48oz.
()11 ••••••••••••••••••
,..........
.
VAN CAMPS ·
BOUNTY
. POR-K&amp; BEANS
TOWELS

s·'

UMIT 4 PLEASE

,.~4

'

l

c
ROLL

HAGAN

·

$ 1·79
·

· ·

Twin Pops •••::::•••••••••• 99c
MAXWELL
SE
. MASTER BLEND
COFFEE
~

oz.

s

49
'\\,

.

79&lt;·

EKRICH ASST.
LUNCH MEATS
80L

49 .

VIETTI
BARBEQUE

'

100Z.

(
UMIT 2 PLEASE

'

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