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...

,._4,.
Pomeroy • Middleport, .Ohio

Page 10·• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 9, 1996

'!

'E~~Ey-o~ ?_n~!.~~!~~~~~ ..~~~~~ht :{
· The ~l~v~~IWMI

and Leland and Ctystal .Payton. The
. This ts
ason for the back · covrr ts nostalgic for.b~by boomers
· yard cookout. Around Kentucky, and thetr parents: a p81nbng of a '50s
where I hve, most folks &amp;et the gnlls dad. with apron, gloves and white
out by early May, tf not sooner, but chef's cap, smiling toward a '50s
wtth_the u~usually cool, wet weath- mom, dressed like June Cleaver,
e~ this spnng, that wasn 't been pos- welcoming guests to her beautifully
stble.
.
.
appomted patto table.
My own httle gnU, a spartan and
"Patio Daddy-0" brought back
· old-fashioned affatr, cooks wtth char, memories of my family's first grill,
coal, not gas, and ts gerung rusty acquired sometime in the mid-' 50s. It
from the nuns. Any spell of hot was an elaborate stainless steel affair
weather :- unpleasant for other activ- with cut-out spaces for bowls of bartiles-:- ts perfect [or cooktng out.
becue sauce, stearrung ears of com
Thts year there s a new httle book and so fonh. It also came with the
fm ,the outdoor chef: "P~Uo D~d~; req~isite apron, gloves, chef's cap
0. 50s Rectpes wtth a 90s Twtst
(whtch my brother and I used for play

cooking).
';1
. Friends o.f my pare~ began an
mtcrgenerattonal "patiO pany"
around the time that they built a fancy brick barbecue in thefr suburban
back yard. The party continues and so
does the name, and three generations
of chtldren have been admonished to
beware the sizzling grill.
· ' ·
"Patio food of the '50s was like
Prozac for the tongue and tummy,"
the writers declare in their introduction. "The daddy-domintited. patio
gastro-bash was an exereise in gustatory savoir faire. in shbtt, a ritual
signifying the man's ability not only
to bring home the bacon, but to cook

-----Society scrapbook

GRADE A • "Select" means Is that a particular beef contains
less Internal let marbling than beef graded either choice or prime.
True, select has less saturated fat·- as well as less juiciness,
mouth appeal, etc.

OUT-OF-TOWN VISIT
Jean and Norman Wood and lona
. Brickles recently visited Sue, Steve,
. Jeffery. and Michael Bricldes of Germantown, Md.
While there they attended ·the
graduation of their grandson, Jeffery,
from Seneca Valley High School at
the DAR Constitution Hall in Wash·
ington, D.C. They also auended a
graduation cookout in his honor at the
Seneca Creek State Park.
The Woods, Jean, Norman and
Ronnie, also recently visited Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie, Cathy
and Donna of Columbus. going espe- ·
cially for the graduation of their
granddaughter and niece, Cathy, from

•

In 1980 the U.S. Depanment of
Agriculture renamed "good" beef
select. According to Connie Crun·
kleton of USDA's agricultural marketing se"ice, consumers had been
asking for leaner beef; the industry
could produce it, but consumers
were percei,ing " that good was
not quality beef when all it meant
was that it contained less mar·
bling."
Initially, an absence of fat
appeals to most consumers, says
Marlys Bielunski, test kitchen
director for the National Li'e Stock
and Meat Board based in Chicago.
"Most people think select beef
looks so nice and red and they
think it will gi'e them the taste
they waRt," says Bielunsld. But,
she adds, the flavor often comes up
shon:
At our back yard barbecue my
husband and I found our select
steaks weren't as toothsome as
choice rib-eyes. Bielunski says
you can't expect the select beef to
perform as well on the grill.
While the cooking times for
choice and select aren't different,
she says, the appearance after
cooking is different. "A mediumrare select will look well-done
even after y'ou cut into it."

Meat, poultry inspection
changes seen saving lives
By NANCI HELLMICH
USA TODAY
Sweeping changes in meat and
poul!ry safety rules announced by
PreSident Clinton on Saturday will
save lives. says a national food technolog ist and a Washington, D.Cbascd consumer group.
"In the long run, the rules h.-e the
potential of saving li'es and reducing
incidence of foodbome illness," said
Frank F. Busta, presiden.t of the Institute of Food Technologists and head
of the depanment of food science and
nutrition at the Uni-.rsity of Minnesota, St. Paul.
The Agriculture Depanment safe-

"Patio Daddy~ Burge~," "Fab~;:'
lous Fifties Fned Chtcken" an""
"Siab-0-Fun 'Bilrbequed Meat:!'•

Imay

Ohio Lottery

,.

NL shuts out
·AL in·All-Star
contest

Pick 3:
o-7-2
Pick 4:
2-6·7·2
Buckeye 5:
4-19-23-27-34

Sports on Page 4

Loaf."
_;J
: Let's (ace it?Most of these reci~

explain why so many _agloi'f

boomers find themselves eounbng fat;
.grams and calories. Back in the '50s ~

;people didn't care as much ab&lt;Jui:.
those things, and the meals filled chil-:;
ldren with red meat, sugar, Jell-0 ancJ:!:
1Kooi:.Aid. But~ then, as the authors !:
as.k: Why ts hfe worth hvmg? Cer-.":
tam things can get you through the t
rough times. The World .~cries ..,;
Chuck Berry records ... Twthght:
Zone"re-runs.:.anddessert...

. ,·:

•

"•
•

e

Independence High School. The cer- demonstrations.
A people's choice award will be
emony was held at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus.
· given but the quilts will not be
judged.
However, quilts will be for sale
QUU..TING SHOW
The Pleasants County Quilt Club, with a commission to go to the club.
· NQA Chapter 91 of St. Marys, West Those interested in displaying are
· Virginia will present a quilt show asked to send register thei~ quilts with
Sept. 13, 14 and 15.
Zepora's Quilt Shop, 116 Lafayette
Quilts from Ohio and West Vir- St .. St. Marys, W.Va. 26170.
ginia will be displayed, and residents
of the two states are invited to exhibSCHOLARSIDP RECIPIENT
it.
Bryan Colwell, a graduating
The show will have the usual cat- senior from Meigs Higll School, is
egories: piecing, applique, whole the recipient of a 1996 DeVry Insticloth, baby quilts, novelty quilts, tute half-tuition scholarship to DeVry
machine and hand made di,isions. Institute ofTechnology in Columbus.
There will a small venders' mall and
Colwell is the son of Frank and

Pamela Colwell.
The announcement was made :
recently by Dr. Galen Graham, pres- :
jident of DeVry/Columbus. The schol.' •
•arship, valued at up to $8,300, coy- ~
ers tuition payment
·~

.,

SENIOR DINNER
There will be a dinner at the-:
Senior Citizens Center, Thursda~ ..with serving from 5 to 6:15 p.m. : ,-:;
Cost for the dinner is $4 a person·.;:
Following the meal, Billy and Reg':
will entertain with old favorites ang ~:
country songs. A free will offeri~$~
will be taken for the musicians. The"l
·public is in,ited to attend.
' :::

..,

en tine

Vol. 47, NO. 52

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Sentinel News Staff
Something new, called Town and Country Expo '96, is being planned for
September at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
.
. . The Emphasis of Expo '96 is to show off the good things of the Bend area
· :- everything from agricultll!'e to antique tractors, from exotic animals to
live entenainment, from vintage cars to community clubs.
: · . The program will feature displays of local products and the talents of local
· craftsmen. It is geared to depicting a way of life which eombines the bene·
fits.of living in a rural area where then: is easy access to small and large towns,
according to its backers.
.
.
. The eve~t is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 21, from I0 a.m. to 8 p.m. and
Sunday, Sept. 22, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It is co-chaired by .Ken11y Buckley
and Hal Kilee.n, witb Karen Werry serving as secretary, and Addalou Lewis

as treasurer.
•
herbs and dried' flowers and a flea market.
Its goal is to promote Meigs County thrpugh a~knowledging the'family,
There will also be antique cars and motorcycles, new cars and trucks, exotachie-.ments of residents!and the contributions oftlubs, acti,ities and tal- ic animals and horses, contests for the largest pumpkin, the biggest car' of
ents of its citizenry. There is no admission 'charge.
com, and the tallest com stalk,' and a variety of comxnerc1al exhibits promoting
"We have a lot to be proud of if we only take the time and effon to see things a'ailable in Meigs C9unty.
what we have to offer," said Werry, in announcing Expo '96.
There will be no admission·charge. •
·
She said that e'eryone contacted belie,es this is a wonhwhile project and
Sponsors are needed and a spon sor board will be placed at the entrance.
have quickly joined in assisting to promote the region.
Anyone interested in contributing to the e'ent may contact Mary Powell at
It all staned wtth a gr~'!P of concerned citizens headed by the Big Bend .. 992-2622.
·
'
A~ttque Tractor and Equ,pment Club, and supponed by the Metgs County
Others se"ing on the planning committee area Addalou Lewis. Carolyn
Fatr Board and other .toterested area restd~nts.
.
· ftitchie, Jim Watson and Kenny Buckley of the Meigs County Fair Board;
. Planned actlVlttes tnclude an anbque tractor pull on Saturday, h'eenter· Dale Kautz, D. Brewer and Dallas Weber; the Antiqae Tractor Club; Roy
ta1~ment through both days at the htllstde stage, Sunday church servtces, a Holter, theRe,. William Middleswanh. Sharon Hawley, Eugene Underwood
qutlt show by Bunny Kuhl, a dog show by John _Krawsczyn, a craft show, and Brenda Merritt.

Rutland· Council approves
crackdown on unpaid bills

gets nod ·

Water/sewer
shutoffs began
over week,nd,
official notes

.in Sena.te

·,·WASHINGTON (AP) - With
. e)ectiOJJ·Year pressure building, most
Senate Republicans sided with
~mocrats in approving a 90-cent
iocrease in the hourly minimum
~agF for IQmillion American worker$.

Packagelf

Breast

seedless
Grapes

Boneless

Porlt &amp;oln

One-Get One
r:.q1u;u

or Lesser Vdlue

ty plan, which in,olves scientific testing of meat, updates a 90-year-old
system in which inspectors looked,
touched and smelled for bacteria-contaminated carcasses.
Under the new system, called
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control
Points, companies in every step of
meat and poultry production must
identify the points in their production
where contamination is most likely to
occur and then create plans for preventing it or removing or killing the
contaminants. A similar approach
was initiated last December for
seafood.

U.S.D.A SELECT
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN
~

f

,,

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsl~ola

WhOle

Boneless
Rlberes
PoUikl

· : ·The Clinton administration hailed
. "tUesday's 74-24 vote, and Senate
MajorityrLeader Trent Lou, R-Miss.,
CO!!Ceded Democrats had scored a
p:O,I(tical victory but only at the cost
of IYil!.~ ~~~ tl)o S.t;nate for 'more than
three mO!Khs.
.
:'",!illl6;•c!tJiiiiOn\&lt;alfliili1isfriiioO._tiu.
campaigned vigorously for the wage
increase an4 has ' chided· Bob Qole,
Presictentdinion's likely oppOnent in
November, for not speaking out in
behalf of it The minimum wage issue
bedeviied.Dole's final days as Senate'
majority , leader, with Democrats
blocking m~JVement of other · bills
because of GOP reluctance to take up
the minimum wage.
·. ·Dole's campaign, in a statement,
s~id he had made clear his S\lppott of
" ·i'f.liise .i.n the wage ·and said Clinton
had ignQred the issue in his first two
y.ears and was now "playing maxi·
ll}Uffi politics with miriimum wage."
· Twenty-se,en Republicans joined
all 47 Senate Democrats in approvingihe legislation. It would increase
sAVORING THE MOMENT- President Clinton and Labor' Secthe minimum wage in two steps from
retary
Robert Reich prepared to meet reporter• Tuesday at the
$4.25 per hour to $5.15 by nexl July
White House to dlacu11 the minimum wage. Ths Senate approved
and offer businesses $11 billion in tax
a 90-cent Increase in the minimum wage, raising the prospect of
breaks over eight years.
.
bigger paychecl!l for more than 10 million Americana.• (AP)
The tax breaks in the House ver•
sion tota1 $7 billion o-.r the same ed the~ increase and 138 opposed it.
. Moments before t~e (inal Senate
periqd and differences will have to be ·
"Yiljl'd have to say they (Democ, Yote, five Republicans joined
W!Jrked uut between the two chll!'l· rats) ha&amp;e been successful in grid- ·Democrats in defeating, 52-46, an
~rs before the entire package can be
lockint\lhe Senate and.'you have to amendment that would have exempt·
5ent to !he White House for President give tiMIIn credit for thai," Lou said . Cd newly hired w9rkers and small
Cllnton's signature.
ill an interview. " But in the proc'ess business employees from the wage
: The defection rate in the Senate they're missing a lo~ of very impor· increase. Clinton had threatened to
w.as even higher thail in the House in tant issues that need to be addressed veto any bill with the exemptions.
May, when 93 Republicans suppon- for the American people."

.

'

Meigs will be ' ~top
9n Hollister's . y
lour of southern Ohio

shutoffs currently being scheduled for
Prosecuting Attorney John Lcntes •
these customers.
has been consulted on the situation,
"We·shut off one of these delin- ·. and a letter will be drafted to the
quent customers o'er the weekend," property owner concerning the prop·
said Eskew.
.eny owner's responsibilny .
In routine financial review by
• heard a report from Dave Davis
council, the- following 'illage fund of the village maintenance .dcpanBy TOM HUNTER
balances were reported for the end of ment . Davis updated co uncil on
Sentinel News Staff
June b¥ Eskew: General Fund, blacklop work in the village.
Delinquent water/sewer customers $4,488.30; Civic Center, $1,873.21;
• approved a motion to pay 25 pcron th,e village system in RittlanA will Police, $1,767.34; Law Enforcement. cent of the total costs on placement
either pay up or be shut offbeginnipg $287.33; Street, $3,056.72; Higbway, of blacktop on the alleyway hctwccn
immediately, members of Rutland $3,903.82;.Water, $6,078.26; Sewer, Peoples Bank an}! the Rutland Fire
Village Council weed unanimously $4,283.46; Sewer Debt, $146.48; Department.
· discussion's on .the issue dur· Utility Deposit, $8,567.21; Replace• approved mmutes from the June
ru~!da~(s regul:lll' meeting at the menl Fund, $19,588.37.
25. meeting.
.,. ~.:,,1 ~--~••~;.ouncit~ .:. •
• approved purchase of an air,con. • approved the June mayor's repon ditiooer for·\he sewe• plant, with the
~cei,ed past
and shut off in the·amount of$2,750, with the vii- cost not to e~cccd $fJOO. It was notnoti_ces in· the village during recent lage retaining $2,070 after payment ed that a refrigerator has been donal·
weeks, according to Village of the state share of $680.
cd for the plant.
Clerkfl'reasurer Rosemary Snowden
• discussed pending construcljon
Present were counciI members
Eskew.
•
of new sidewalk in an area of side- Dick Petty. Danny Dav1s. Gladys
Money on these delinquent bills is walk damaged by a propeny owner Barker, Judy Denney, Marie Birch·
being recovered by the village, with along Main Street near Depdt Street. field and Vera Martin. Mayor Jn Ann
Eads and Eskew.

Patrol to deter~ine if Pomeroy
man's death linked to accident
. the report before making a ruling, Fla .. rolled over in a right curve. strikMcGlone said. He added that he ing Heilman 's car and another car drishould hear back from the· coroner ven by Robert S. Craw ford , 45, Ne lsonville.
within several days.
According to the patrol, Heilman
Blackburn . who was injured but
was taken by LifeFiight to the intennot
treated in the acciden t. was cited
sive care unit at Grant Medical Cenby
the
patrol for failure to yield.
ter, Columbus, after a tractor-trailer
McGlone said the check with the
Cecil C. Heilman, 37400 Hemlock struck his car on U.S . 33 near
coroner 's offi ce JS part of a fo llowup
Grove Road, died in a Canton nurs· Pomeroy.
ing home., The coron.er's office has
in,estigmion. and the patrol gener.alHeilman, ' Meigs County native ly has. up to a year to determine- if
asked the patrol:S Gallia-Meigs Post,
which investigated tho May I thn;e- and retired Diebold !ric. executive ,new information may be connected to
vehicle acc.ident irwolving Heilman, who al~o maintained a residence in a fatality -related accident ,
for a copy of its repon on the inci- Canton, was nonhbound when a
"As f~r as any additional charges
dent, said Lt. Wayne McGion~. the southbound rig owned by Highway arc concerned , the package of inforExpress, Fon Smith. Ark ., and dri,eri mation would •go the Meigs County
post's commander.
The coroner is expected to re,iew by Billy W. Blackburn, 38, Live Oak, pro&gt;ec utor' s office for further
review." he said .
.' The State Highway Patrol will
await a ruling from the Stark Coun·
ty coroflllr to determine if an 8.3-yearold Pomeroy man's death Tuesday
may have been linked to injuries he
suffered in a Mei~s County traffic
accident.

Suspect in fireworks
.fatalities may have
to pay own defense
I

The Racine United ME~thcxu:~t
Church Board
do endorse and encourage voters
of the

SUPE~

&gt;liE

Rulfles
POtato Cll/ps

10f OFF LABEL
li'EGULAIHCfNT ONLY

Clorox

Bleach

Local School District
to utilize their voting privilege.

Please vote "YES" on the bond issue
to be held
6th!!!
Paid ror by the
Soulhcm Local Buiklinc Committee
IGm PhilliJl', T... uwa

opmerlt prQfessionals. businespeoHall must prove
pie and local officials from Athens,
Hocking, Meigs. Monroe, Morgan,
Perry and Washington counties ha'e
·
Ull•t·'"
been invited to attend the breakfast
lt1l'' II
II
and forum , Hollister spokesperson
IRONTON (AP) - Defendants
Lito Ramirez said.
are required to reimburse the county
"It's a very Qptn discussion ... lhey
for legal fees if it turns· out they
will tell us whJI! their local concerns
Nancy Holllatar
weren't entitled to a public defender,
and issues arc and the lieutenant govand thai may happen in Todd Ha(l's
ernor gi,es advice, gathers infonna- munities.
case.
tion and takes it back )o Columbus to
The package was designed-to spur
Hall, 24, of Proctorville, is
.act upon, along with the concerns . investment in new machinery and charged with eight ~ounts of involfrom other partS of !he state, in her · · help businesses clean. up "brown- untary manslaughter in the fire at
next job bill," he Said.
field" sites for use for further eco- Ohip River Fireworks. Eight people
This economic development tour nomic development ·
policies died and, 12 were injured when Hall
will be Hollister's. IOth since becom• were also targeted at helping big allegedly set a fireworks display on
ing the state's second-in-command itt cities undertake ultlan core redevel- fire on July 3.
1994, but her first In southeast Ohio. ' opment and rural communities create
La~nce County f'flinmon P~
"She uses these trips not only to
industrial parks.
,
Judge W. ~hard Wahon said when
gather information ... but to gerfccdHgllister's ecoaomic development he learned of Hall's mental state and
back on Jobs Bill m to see what ts dutie$ also include advising Gov. unemployment, tie auignCd puhiic
worked and what hasn't and tighten George Voinovich on workforce defender Richard Wolfson to Hall so
thil)gs up to bec'!me more effi · t,"
development issues including· as not to jeopardize the case.
Ramirez said.
employment, training and Ohio's
·.flail had a ll)botomy followi~g a
Hollister· was .cllief arcbi
f School-to-Work initiative. In addi- '1987 skateboard ilccident.
Jobs Bill of, an ~onomic develoP- tion, she is in charge of restructuring . But unless Hail c:an prove he's
~on·projec:l.
ment package that specifically tar- Ohio's entire workforce develop- indigent. he will have to pay liis legal
~~om: and economic -&lt;level- }eted disttcsscd wban and rural.com•
mentsystem.
' fees himself., Walton said. Public

B,JAARON MAR$HALL
G!Jinnett' News Service
· COLUMBUS - Lt. Go'. Nancy
Hollister will be back on her home
turf next week as s~e caps a two-day
ectinomic de,elopment swing
~rQugh Southeast Ohio wilh a stop
in :Marietta.
' the Marietta nati'e and fonner
mayor has also planned a stop in
Mejgs County for Monday.
Holjister. will host several meet··
ings at Washington State Community College auditorium on Tuesday. At
· 9 a.m. she ,will host a breakfast reecplion. for participants of her econom-icilworkforce · development for,um.
That forum, which staits at Ill am .
anit'i~ Qptn to the public, wj!l focus
on; discussions of regional cconiimic/w'.orkfon:o development issues and
chil)enaes.
• Hollister's Meigs stop includes a
to~: of the Carleton School and
Moiis Industries at 9 a.m., and a vis: • iuo:downtown Pomeroy It 10 a:m.
: : .to·~)e~ Y,:Ork on.the villige's revi- .
'•

•

•

'I

fo O.nnett Co. Newapeper,

Promoting Meigs: expo slated for September

.vyage hike

(5-7-4.8. AVC.I
RIB HALF, OR LOlli HALF

35eenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July .10, 1996

.M
inimum
. '

~

Clear and chilly tonight,
lowe In the 40e •. Thursday,
sunny. Highs In the 80s.

•

•

a1

2 s.ctlon., 12 Pllgea

••

When selecting beef for the
grill, understand meanings
of 'select' and 'choice'
By ANNE BYRN
The Nashville Tennessean
John strode confidently to the
kitchen . A hea'y brown grocery
bag was cradled in his arms. He
rested the bag on the counter, dug
through the contents and carefully
pulled out two giant rib-eye steaks.
My husband, who subsists on .
pasta and 'eggies with me and the
little ones, had succumbed to
ancestral hunter-gatherer urges. He
was prepared to slap beef on the
grill, and he had purchased the
largest steaks he could find .
"They're select," he said,
beaming.
"Yum," 1 replied, sarcastically.
Indeed these tomato-red, thick ,
glistening steaks would appeal to
most any carnivore . But I knew ..
John had been duped by the sim·
pie word "Select," just as other
consumers are. He understood this
to mean the butcher had deemed
these steaks better than others in
the case.
But what "selec t" really means
is that this panicular beef contains
less internal fat marbling than beef
graded c1ther choice or prime.
True, select has less saturated fat
- as well as less juiciness, mouth
appeal , etc.

' Recipes in this book lnclu4o! .

'•

fRdfgency tO aVOid
bel·ng hl•t
bl.,

ne

.

·:: :

..

"""""

....,

'

--

•

$

--- - - -

g.

~ ·6

Sheriff's wife
pleads to 2
theft charges

ATHENS (AP) ......: The wife of
the Athens County shctiff has
pleaded guilty to two felony counts
defenders in Ohio can be reimbursed
of theft, bcr defense attorney said.
up to $40 per hour for out-of-court
Nancy Hicks. wife of Sheriff
time and $50 per hour for in-court
John
Hicks. also agreed on Tues time.
day
to
pay back $14.500 taken
County •Prohate Court records
from
a
special
deputies fund and an
show that Hall 's estate is estimated at
Athens
insurance
compan y.
$160,000. That includes the $33,000
Mrs. Hicks had been ind1c1cd on
he recei,es yearly as part of a liabil44 ~ounts of theft. forgery and mis·
ity seulemeat, $1,500 in personal
~ of a cred it card . Her trial in
propeny and a home he bought for
Athen s County Common Pleas
$125,000 in the Orange Gro'c subCourt had been scheduled to begin
division in 1994.
•
today.
Some media. accounts reponed
Defense attorney Bob Toy said
Hall's·Jawsuit netted his family $18
hi s client faces up to 3- 1/2 years in
million. But one of Hail's attorneys prison. Mrs. Hicks wiU return to
said those reports are misleading.
coun after a pre-sentencing invesNorman White represented Hall on
tigation. No return date was sel.
his suits against lhe skateboard manThe mpney was stolen during
ufacturer and West Virginia Uni,er1993-95 from the fund, which is
sity Hospital.
''
used to purchase equipment for the
"There is a world of difference county,'s special deputies, and the
· between a judgrrient and a settle- R.C. Whitmore anq Co. insurance
ment," White said. "Aju&lt;!sc can say agency, where she once was
I have been awarded SIS million in employed.
·
coun loday; but the setdement is what
Telephone messages se~Wn1
, I can get from the defendant. "
·
comment were left Tueiday"~
1
White said the $33,000 a year Athens County prosecuto-'s office
reported iri court records is "preuy . for Special Prosecut :i ~ky Cos$,
clo5e" to Hall's settlement.

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

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: :W:ed:n:•=•d=•~y~,J~u~~~1~0~,1~~~-~----------------------~----~P:o:~=:~·!~:dd::~~~~O=h=~~------------------~n.~·~oa:l~ly~~:::"'::''~':~!:!3
OHIO Weath er

·Local News in Brief:

.Thurslay, July 11
,.

MICH.

PomerOy. Oblo

Gannett Co; Newspaper

IToledo!B2" I

'
By BEN WATTENBERG'·
uct while GNP grows, exponential alarums is to let us aci now to head not continue destructive behavior
Richard Lamm, former governor population gro\vth while fertility off disaster.
' forever once they know such behav;
"But, ultimaiely, ~amm, Lam- ior is indeed destructive. So whe~
of Colorado, the newly-declared can- rates are declining almost everydidate for the Reform Party nomina- where .
'
mism, and all the ,little Lammniks Lamm tells us that we must get the
tton for the presidency, is a smart felwho will try to scare us about the budget under control, that Medicare
low and a strange piece of work. He
impending millenni~m'will not htlp must be trimmed or it will go broke,
suffers 'from an advanced case of
us as w~ go from here to there. lliat that we mUst bite the bullet on Social
PMMP, that is Periodic Millenarian
is so because of the iron rule of pub-- Security, it is a message we should
Maladroii Projectionitis. This is a
"Further, Lamm frets about · lic activity: Wrong premises yield · hear, and act upon, albeit more gently than Lamm proposes.
serious, even dangerous. disease explodmg bilingualism and an bad policy.
It will be easy for Lamm tQ deliv"A thousand years ago, as the mil among public-policy wonks, and 'Amencan Quebec' - when bilin· ·
er
such
an unpopular political meswannabe wonks. But strangei.r.:. gual education programs are being lennium approached in medieval
sage
because
he can't really belio"1l
Larnm 's conditio~ may be mome'iJ"' dismantled. He believes that more Europe, crowds were whipped into a
- tarily useful for Lamm, American health care has terided to make us loss frenzy by religtous zealot\ who pro- that he has a serious chance to win
politics and America.
healthy - despite the fact that adult claimed that when three adjacent the presidency. After all, in American
- Some years ago I wrote about life expectancy is going up at the zeros popped up on the calendar, the history only one "third-party" can_ Lamm just aftertwo of his books had fastest rate in our history.
world WIJUid end. It didn't In fact, didate actually won. Curiously, he too
been published. A sense of what
"To give Gov. Gloom his due, his life goes on, and a thousand ye~m lat- was running just four years after hts_
PMMP is can be gleaned from some catalog of horrors includes! few that er there are sllll zealots saymg the new party first surfaced as a national entity. That was Lincoln.
.
of my critical excerpts:
are worthy of attention. The official same thing."
(Ben
Wattenberg,
a
senior
fel·
"The approach of adjacent zeros Soc tal Security projections are probSo why can all this silliness be
on the calendar seems to have a dev- ably too optimistic, and benefits will good for Lamm, American politics low at the A~rican Enterprise
Institute, is the author of a new
astating and depressing effect on the have to be stretched ou't: And Lamm and America?
human mind .... Now we have three does say that not all of his dreadful
Mindless projections are mindless book, "Values Matter Most," and
zeros to face, and the apocalyptic mil- sce nari o~ are likely to occur. Indeed, precisely because human beings are is the host of the weekly public telelenarians are already out in force, the purpose of his harum-scarum a mlidfy rational species, and they do vision program, "Think Tank.") .•
slapping their tambourines.
"Consider the interesting case of . - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -- - - - ,
Richard Lamm, author of 'MegaTraumas: America at the Year 2000.'
It is a book that spells O\Jt Lamm 's
current concerns in the words of
ll)emos to a fictional president at the
coming turn of the century." (When
Lamm will still be presidenr if he
wins thts year.)
" Lamm 's... nickname is Gov.
Gloom, and he belteves we 81'£ runnmg out of energy, runnmg' 6ut or
food, running out of jobs, running out
of minerals. He says we have too
much crime, debt, health care, doc·
tors and lawyers. We have too many
dead-end jobs, illegitimate children,
people speaking Spanish, old people,
and mostly, too many immtgrants which is the topic of another new
book by La'!lm. 'The Immigration
Time Bomb.'
"Lamm's metaphors go beyond
bombs. Mankind, he says, 'is a can·
cer on the earth; or alternatively. 'a
locust on the land.' Lamm says that
the biggest problem we malignant
insects have is thai we won't face up
to .the grim facts. That is 11n odd
appr~h from a man who brpods
aiJ9ut an energy crisis during an energy glut, a food crisis during a food
glut, a mineral cnsJs when minenil
pri~es have fallen, rising unemployment ·when unemployment is dropI
pi~$· a shrin!cing, gros~ '!ii~Qnal prod· • ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . : . ._ _ _.__ _ _ __:.._ __
.:.:
...' - - - - - - - - -_-_.~
••-.-. - ' -,- ,.1J .:.._

!Mansfield le1•

LEHEW
. 'MARGARETController

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE1TERS OF OPINION frt weloome. They should be 'less than 300
. words long: All letters pre subJect to editing and must be signed with name,
, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published le\ten
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

GOP reformers find
changing primaries
a major undertaking
By 'WALTER R. f.t'EARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Seeking a course around primary pttfalls, Republican reformers are trying to bnng discipline to a presidential nomination system that evolved from Democratic decisions . They want a spaced, orderly
sequence of presidential pnmaries in the year, 2000_
But the process has defied reform designs for more than 20 years.
And what makes sense on paper never has been matched in practice.
The primaries multiplied because of Democratic rules, written to broaden participation in the selection of thai party's nominees atier the troubled,
divisive convention of 1968. Because primaries are created by state law. what
they did affected Republicans as well.
Thts time, the impact was entirely on them, as states crowded to the front
of the calendar, seeking candidate attention and influence on the· choice of
a GOP nominee to face President Clinton . The crush was such that few of
them got either.
Acknowledging the flawed sys~m. GOP leaders say it produced the right
choice of a nominee in Bob Dole, and that he would have won whatever the
system.
"This process chose the strongest candidate we could have," C_hairman
Haley Barbour said. "There's no question in my mind that you could have
tried five different processes and Bob Dole would still have won the nominarion."
But the early verdict- after a faltenng start. Dole clinched the GOP nomination on March 19 - meant states that voted later were rat_ifying what
already had been settled, anaas a result, voter turnout slumped.
Actually, Dol~'s early problems ·stemmed_in pru:t from the maneuvers that
led to the earlier primaries. Two of his primary losses were to.Steve Forbes
in states that voted early because allies of Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas had
tried to work the schedule to his advantage. Ironically, he dropped out before
either contest
Gramm forces also had sought a head start in Louisiana caucuses staged
before the traditional lo,wa opening. But Pat Buchanan ambushed Gramm
and won there, a boost that helped him run close behind Dole in Iowa and
then win a one-percentage-point upset in the New Hampshire primary.
To prevent that kind of maneuvering, the Republican task force said dates
for the pnmaries and caucuses in 2000 should be set by no later than July
1, 1999. The panel also proposed that the pany require that GOP primaries
and caucuses be held between the fint Monday in February and the _third Tuesday m June m the next campaign.
•·
Those are relatively simple steps. The Democrats ,already have a window
for delegate selection that lets the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire
primary lead off during February, with other states .required to wait until
March, or lose a share of their delegates. Iowa and N~w Hampshire have laws
to protect their leadoff status. moving their dates ahead should other states
try to match or precede them.
The Republican reform plan see~ to space the primaries by offering bonus
delegates as an incentive to states that vote later in the season. The reward
for waiting until March 15 would be a 10 percent increase in delegates; after
April 15 it would go to 15 percent, and after May 15, to 20 percent.
While the idea is to space out the primaries, there's nothing in that plan
to prevent all the biggest states, with the mosno gain in a percentage bonus
system and the votes to settle on a no!Jiinee, from waiting until the last month
of the season. Smaller states have tried to gain influence by voting early.
SoJin overhauled Republican system could wind up leading to a decisive.
big state crush at the end of the season. in place of the one at the beginning.
Other reformers have proposed mandatory spacing, with dates assigned
by drawing, by region, or on a rotating basis. But that could·only be done
by federal law. State primary laws are wri!ten by_the state legislatures.
Barbour said Republicans prefer the market approach of offering bonus
delegates rather than an attempt to r9gulate the process. " It remains to be
seen whether the incentive is enough to changQ behavior," he acknowledged.
(Walter R. M~rs, vice pnsldent.and columnist for The Associated
Press, has n:ported on Washington and national politics for more than
30 years.)
·

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 10, the 192nd day of 1996. There are 174 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Histocy:
On July 10, 1940, during World War .f/-. the 114-pay Battle of Britain
began as Nazi forces began attacking southern England by air. By [ate OCtober. Britatp managed to repel the Luftwaffe,, which suffered heavy losses.
On thts date:
_ _ • ,,.,
In 1832, President Andrew Jackson vetoed' legislation 'to re:charter· the
Second Bank of the United' States.
In 1850, Vice P'resident Millard fillmore assumed the prestdency, fol lowi ng the death of President Taylor.
In 1890. Wyoming became the 44th state.
,
In 1896, 100 years ago, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago nominated William Jennings Bryan for president on the fifth ballot (The
next day, the convention nominated Arthur Sewall for vice president)
In 1919. President Wilson personally delivered the Treaty of Versatlles
to the U.S. Senate, and urged its nlfification.
·
In 1925, the olftctat news agency of the Soviet Union, TASS. was cstalr
Iished.
.
_ •
~ 1943,'during World War II, U.S. and: British fotces invaded Si,cily,
Iri 1951, armistice talks aimed at ending the Koreilil conflict1began 'at·
Kaesong.
,,,
In 1962. the Telstar communications satellite was launched from Cape
Canaveral, Fla.
In 1973, the Bahamas became independent after three centuries of British
'
.
colonial rule. ,
In 1992. a federal'jud~ in Miami sentenced former Panamanian leader
Manuel Noriega, convictC4, of '!rug and racketeering charges, to 40 years in

_'
Ten years ago: The federal Reserve Board cut itS discount rate from 6.5

~~ -

to 6 percent, its lowest_level sin~ early 1978.
.
Five yem ago: Bons_N. YeiW~ t~ ~oath of of!ice as the fi~telect•
ed president of the Rllllllll..rcpublic:. nwaent Bush lifted econom11r~­
tions against South~ citing i~ ''profound transformation"4oward racial
equality. President Bush announced he wu appointing Alan Greenspan to
a second term as Fodel'al Reserve chairman.

,

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:-,,

IND.

&gt;

-

-~-- --

-ted

Sunny

Ice

Pt. Cloudy C~

Preu Grop/llcsNel

Record lows expected
~hroughout Ohio tonight
'By The Alaoclatecl Preas

' Those northerly temperatures
p,ould produce somewhat chilly con-p,iiions across Ohio tonight for this
,titnc; of year. Fo~asters said lows
!Would be in the 40s.
. the mercury will rebound
'' : ' But
'quick(~ on Thursday under sunny
\;ij4 produced by a high pressure
Jsls~m that will shift winds back to
t southerly direction. Highs will be
rosily in the 80s.
, The record-high temperature for
~his date at the ColumbUs weather
~tation was 103 degre~s in 1881
M!hile the record low was ~5 in 1963.
!sunset tonight will be at 9:02 p.m.

and sunrise Thursday at 6:13 a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Tonight ... Clear with near ~ord
cold in many locations. Lows 45 to

50.
Thursday .. .Sunny. Highs 75 to 80nonh and 80 to 85 south.
Extended forecast:
, Frida~...Fair. Lows in the 50s.
Htghs 80 to 85.
Saiurday... A chance ofshowers or
thunderstonns. Lows 55 to 60. Highs
in the 80s.
Sunday... A chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s.
Highs in the 80s.

ASHLAND (AP)- The killer of
Stlte Highway Patrol trooper was
scnt~nced to death today.
Judge Robert E. Henderson of
County Common Pleas
called Maxwell White Jr., 31,
Reynoldsburg, a "human time
waiting to explode."
White was convicted last month in
Jan. 19 shooting death of TroopJames Gross, 27, dunng a traffic

_,.

stop along lntentate 71 near Ashland.
The judge followed the jury's
recommendation in imposing the
death sentence. He could have
reduced the sentence to life in prison
with parole possible in 20 years or 30
years.
During the sentencing phase of his
trial, White apologized and admitted
shooting the officer after a night of
drinking. He denied he had intended
to kill Gross.

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By DEBORAH MATHIS _
mission, uhtruths ~r half-t~thnre possible; a dark gray or navy suit; h~We been solid a~d all aboll_l, com-. WASHINGTON - Suppose I ·_- reported, ofJcn by means of honest business cards; letterhead; and no mg from thpse who adore the Clin: :
told you· thal former FBI agent Gary mistake but also as the result of slop- , f~lony record. J\t least one degree tons, skeptics, and others who share
from a 'four-year college or universi- Aldrich's disdain_for the president
Aldri~ h made repeated advances py work.
,
toward the young womt;h who work
·Seldom, hdwever,.do ilake&lt;;l, !Dali-' ty boosts credibility.
and his wife, albeit less Virulently.
in the Clinton White House and was cious~ ain't-no2doubt-a)xmt-it lies get
Bring these qualifications to the
An ordinary map would be pun~~~ :.:
each time summarily spumed aild published by the legitimate' media, _table, immunize yourself against iibel -drunk, at l~st
· -· that has made him bitter and is the ' notwithstanding the popular' myth by targeting a public figure or celebriBut Aldrich is no ordinary man; :" ,
real reason he has torn into the Clin· · that the ink-stained have lowered ty. and, (ita!) voila' (end ita!), you 've He is a fellow on .a mission. whO
tons in his new book, "Unlimited th~m,elves to slough-hig~ the bean- got bargaining power.
needs to gnnd his a. to ~talk his cnc'' ·:·
Access"?
counters and ' will therefore write _ For sure, there is no want of spon- mtes and become the devil in his owri '
You 'd believe me, wouldn ' t you? abything in order to sell ncwspapen. sors who will, for political or mone- nightmare. Neither truth nor lie shall :· ·
I've got credentials, after alL
Perhaps if more news organizations tary _gain. help hring your story to stay him from tiis appointed coufi'C; . :..
frutuon . Nor. sadly, is there an the destination of which is, at mini Syndicated co lumnist. While offered profit-sharing ...
House correspondent. taxpayer, wife ,
As Aldrich and ma~y othen have absence of takers for the sour and m~m. harassme~t of the current
mother, churchgoer, homeowner, pet found , there arc ways around the unreliable books, ncwslcncrs and White House crc\w. In Ithat; he has
owner, card-carrying member of the restraints of professional journalism. "fact" sheets that spi ll over the already succeeded.'
AAA auto club. The whole bit ,
Ways to get your fiction told. your shelves, racks and 'fax trays these
And all because he was once in a
Truth is; I ~now np such thing. It's demons purged, your name koown, days. -.
position to' know whai may haye nevThe blows to Aldrich's credibili- er happened. ,
just a ruri!Pt - a new and legless and yolir pOckets lined.
- -•
-·"·
l)i on the assorted lurid claims he la~s
fiere 's all you need:
one, no ICSf - COI\Cii1Cte4 tO under.&lt;Deborah Maihls Is~ ~'ol~ ,·..·
score a p&lt;1int so tirqeless ypu would
I, A tale that presses the public's out against the White House regulars for Tri"ue Media Ser-viCes.)
·· ~
think it dbes not l&gt;!:ar reecatipg. yet ' hot buttons - weight loss, get-rich'
. - ----....l~-. . ~"".
evidently it does. To wit~ You &lt;(&amp;n't quick, the · birdNnd-bees thing, or ..l..-.-----~~---.;.
'~
, '• -~
belie~e everytl)ing you read. Not anyt~ing that takes down Bill and
One year ago: Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi w~ freed Jrom'her .:~ :
even when peniled b~ previously Hillary Clinton;
almost st~ -year-lon' house arrest .in Rangoon, Burma. L.awyeis for OJ..
respected G-man.
;
· 2. Proximity to the event, people. Sn_npson Qpened thetr defe~ at his murder trial in Los AngelCil. President
For s~, it is impassible to belicv.: or matter· you are writing about, Chnton embraced mandatory ratings for TV programs and1egislation to put •·
every jot and tittle in _the leaitimate although, in the case of the Clintons, pd}.ental-j:Ontrol chips in new sets.
_ .
· : ~- .
press, _w!Uch,is.to. say those publica- havinjl been under the same sky will TJlday's Birthdays: ~(: News correspondent David Brinkley is 76.
qons'tbat ~y· ideOql~ly de~ed clo·
•
·
mer boxer Jake UMQttais~5~FonnerNewYortcCity MayorDavidN. Dint.,• ' • .:
men an4 women to be OOJCCUve
'3, The trappings of iegibmacy, ins i\ ~- B'roadway composer_ Jerry Herman is 63. Tenni's player.Virltnta: :,:.
reporters-or fact
such as affiliation with an established Wade ts 51. Actor RQII Glass ts SI : Fo.lk singer Arlo Guthrie is 49. Rock· ·· -Even with that dedicated com- institution or organization; a title, if singer Nejl Tennant is 42. Banjo player Bela Fleck is 38.
..

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Adolph 'E. Saelens, 83. of 659 Broadway St. Middleport, died Tuesday,
July 9, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 22, 1912 at Victor, iowa, he was the son of the late Emil Sae·
lens and Leonie DeClerq Saelens,
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Loretta Saelens.
For 24 years. he was the owner and operator of Dairy Valley in Pomeroy.
He was a member of the Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy.
He is sumved by a son, Dennis (Carla) Saelens of Middlepon; a daugh·
ter, Lucille (Dean) Grassholz of Columbus; four grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren; three brothers, Marcel Saelens of Moline. Ill,, Leon Saolens of Naples, Fla., and Julius Saelens of Chillicothe; and two sisters, Alice
O'Brien of Moline, and Rachel (Louis) DeRycke of Victor, Iowa.
1 "" Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday in _the Sacred_H~ Cat~olic Church,
-with the Rev. Father Walter Hemz offictatmg. Bunal wtll be m the Sacred
Heart Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,l'r9m
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
,
.
Prayer services will be held tonight at 8 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be mad~ to the Meigs Branch of the
American Heart Association, in,care of Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Pomero~. Ohio.

Ada Kimes VanMeter, 87, of Middlepon, died TueSday, Jul~ 9, 1996 in
Holzer Medical Center.
A home-maker, she was born June 29, 1909 in Buchtel, daullhter of the
late Leslie and Esther Fruth Kimes. She was a member of the South Bethel
New Testament Church, and the Chester Council of the Oaullhten of America.
Surviving are a son and daughter, in-law, Donald and Lila VanMeter of
Chester; a daughter-in-Iaw;•Jiarbara VanMeter of Rutland; and four grandchildren and thr~ great-grandchildren.
.'She was also preceded in death by a son, Purl VanMeter.
Gravestde services will be 3 p.m. Thursday in the Chester Cemetery, under
direction of Ewing Funeral Home in Pomero~. No calling hours will be
observed.

. Joseph Spear

'Tell-all' author
courd be grinding his ax
.

Adolph E. Sael_
ens

!Judge agrees with jury;
h'ands death sentence
o state trooper's killer Ada Kimes VanMeter

can he do this knowing -he ran IO paFti_cipation in communities WOUI~ mtcrvicw, he said, "I believe thllt •• •
another country to escape the draft? be a tax break. Service agencies COl!)&lt;l homosexuality is a morar pervcr- ·
I know you will never print anything validate hours worked. _
.;;
sion," and he felt compclleil to tell'
I have s111d because you are too much
Joe: It sounds, reasonable, \lut homosexuals " it is·displeasing tq the
- - - - - - - - - " - - - • wouldn' t it invite fraud?' I can envi- Lord," but he wa~ only "loving tllo •
sion 8ilutie market in fiike certifica't~s ' sinner, b41 hating the si~ ... on.
of participation. And really, docsn;t it Robertson. I deduced that since lie' ' ,
dilute the spirit of voluntcerism when ran for president as a Republic-an and ·'
of a Democrat liberal to admit the you have to 1\c bribed 'to do ~ t?
. .said he had discussed this matter wilh&lt;:;_
truth.
Telephone call from an editor: ,You God and inferred that God ha&amp; • •JO.: One: Yes, Bill Clinton was a wrote--that beach volleyball teams promtsed him victory, that perhaps
draft dodger, but it seemed to have have four players each. They actual- Parson Pat was saying God pr~fcrs , been a popular activity among young ly hlive two.
Republicans. Maybe God was ju~i
men of his era. Perhaps you mis~ed
Joe: Son'Y. I obviously don 't know saying he preferred Pat
all thosc .storics about people with , my beach volleybalL ,
J.R ., Ottawa, IlL: You a5kcd for '~ . .
names like Gmgnch, Gramm,
· R.E.M., Ph.D.: Valdosta, &lt;;;a. : L comment, I give you a,'comincnt. I · ·
Buchanan, Weld and Limbaugh who defy you to suppon your claims thl(l think so little of your,:wtiliiiigs
missed the military experience with Pat Robertson says God is a Repub- wrote to my local newspaper and
student deferments and specious lican or that Jerry Falwell says God _ asked ho;y much they received from .
health pro!Jiems. Two, you ~re right hates homosexuals. Robef\Sop has you to print the things you )Vritc,.I _
about the budget. though wrong warned ~veryone that God docs not like Lindbau. Buchanon, Schlafly, about the -figure . It is soaring a,t the play fa~oritcs . Falwell may haw said and the Gov. of Ohio.
.. .
rate of $9,600 a second, but what's something like "God hates homoJoe:. What about Bob Doal an~ ·
$35 miijio~ a day, hci:e or there? sexuality," but if you asked him he Nutc Qrinch'!
.
·.
Third, Clinton had a fairly good · would say that "God hates the Jin but
(Jo5eph Spear is • columnlse for.: :
excuse for being oot of the country in loves the sinner."
',
• Ne~spaper En_ierprise~latloo.: . ·
1969. He was at Oxford on a Rhodes
Joe: What is this, nitpick Joe Readers may write to him In care
scholarship.
day? OK, on Falwell, you arc right. of Newspaper E~terprise Associa:.' _
K.B., Arlington, Mass.: The most though I think you are splittmg hairs. lion, 200 Madison Ave., N, .r York,' · .
·
,
,-, .
effcc tiv~ mcenttve to promote cit11.cn
On a recent' National Public Radto N.'V. 10016.)

•

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By JOSEPH SPEAR
....._ What's bugging the body politic?
Tile mailbag knows.
.
D.T.W., Memphis, Tenn.: I gather
that you resent the salaries that many
athletes make. Why don't yo•· ' am
and holler about the mil
that
Hollywood actors niake? 11lis is
America. The life span for SpOrts is
a very .shon one.
Joe: The average salary for throwmg a ball tl)rough a hoop is $2 million, and the average salary for hitting
a ball with a stick is SI .2 million. It
cost a -family of four nearly_$250 to
go to a Boston Celtic~ bask~tball
game last year. A family can see a
first-run movie. with popcorn and a
box of Junior Mints, for about $40.
Do what you p)ease. I ctioose not to '
assist egotisttcal, overpaid jocks with
their Ferrari payments. '
G.S .• Ottaw~.IIL: I am wrjting to
you about three _issues. One, we
have a president who is a draft
dodger. Two, this !!resident keeps
telling us he is reducing the deficit,
but it keeps going up at $10,000 per
second. Three, this president is quick
_to offer aid to foreign countries. How

I

W.VA.

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Mailbag ·reveal·s· what's aiting·the body politic

I•

•lcolumbus!84•

c. Heilman

Cecil Carl Heilman, 83, Pomeroy, and formerly of Canton, died Tuesday,
July 9, 1996 in Canton, following a traffic accident near Pomeroy on Ma~
I, 1996.
Born Oct 13. 1912 at Ball Run, Meigs County, son of the late Carl J..and
Clara Lightfoot Heilman, he was a 1929 graduate of Pomeroy High School
and attended Ohio State University.
He was employed for several yem at Davis Ice&amp;: Produce and the Stansbury Drug Co., Middleport. He and his family moved to Canton in 1941 ,
where he went to work in the Time Study Department at Diebold Inc., where
he was employed for 36 years. He held several positions with Diebold and
upon his ,retirement in December 1977, he was vice president of manufacturing and engineering.
.
He was a member of tile Hemlock Grove Christian Church in Meigs County, and the first Christian Church in Canton. He was a Cub Scout pack leader,
a 50-year member of Masonic Lodge 60, F &amp;: AM and the Scottish Rite Vallty of Canton, a Sundl!y School teacher, and a board member and elder emeritus of the First Christian C: .• rch of Canton.
,
He served as secretary, chainnan and member of the Canton Christian
Home Board of Trustees. Following his retirement, he raised limousin beef
cattle with his neighbor, Bob Graham, on his Meigs County farm.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia B. Smith Heilman, whom he married June
30. 1935; a son and daughter-in-law, Allen and Jean Heilman of Columbus;
two grandchildren; and a sister, Evelyn Midkiff of Richwood.
Services will be I p.m. friday in the chapel at the first Christian Church,
2600 Cleveland Ave., N.W., Canton, with Manley Pierce, Robert Walther and
Paul Weiner offictating.
An additional servioc will be I p.m. Tuesday, July 16, 1996 in the Hem·
lock Grove Christian Church, with the Rev. Kerry Re~ officiating. Burial
will be in the Smith Cemetery. Friends may call at the church on Tuesday
from II a.m. until the hour of the service.
Arrangements are by the Reed Funeral Home, 705 Raff Road, S.W., Can·
ton.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Canton Christian Home, 2550
Cleveland f'!,ve., N.W., Canton, Ohio 44709, or to the charity of choice.

PA.

Ben Wattenberg

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

Cecil

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11 f Court Stnet

Injury repbrted In 2-vehlcle wreck

AccuW~

The ;Daily-Sentinel

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ph E. Saelens

Adolph E. Saelens, 83, of 6:i9 Broadway Street, Middleport, Ohio, died
lfui,Sdlty, July 9, 1996 at the Holzer Medical Copter, Gallipolis.
For 24 years, he was the owner and operalor'of Dairy Valley in Pomeroy.
Born on August 22, 1912, at Victor, Iowa, he was the son of the (jtte Emil
fiaoeletls and Leonie DeClerq Saelens. Besides his parents, he was preceded
death b~ his wife, Loretta Saelens.
He was a member of the Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy.
He is survived by a son, Dennis (Carla) Saelens of Middlepon; a daughLucille (Dean) Grassholz of Columbus; four grandsons, Chris (Ruth)Wilt,
J'~riclt Wilt and Gregory Wilt, all of Columbus, and Michael (Valerie) Wilt
Grove City; two great-granddaughters, Brittany and Amber Wilt; and a
treat-J:nndson, Michael Wilt of Grove City.
surviving are three brothers, Marcel Saelens of Moline,lllinois, Leon
~;~~!-o~~rN~T,_~~. Florida, and Julius Saelens of Chillicothe; two sisters, Alice
ti
of
Illinois, and Rachel (Louis) DeRycke of Victor, Iowa;
several nieces and nephews.
PTayer services will be held Wednesday, July 10, 1996 at 8 p.m. at the
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. where calling hours will be observed
w~~~;~:r from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
I
services will be held at the Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy, at 10
on Thursday, I ·Iy II, 1996, with burial in Sacred Heart Cemetery. The
Father Walter leinz will officiate.
In lieu of flowers. donations may be made to the Meigs Branch of the
ILmterican 'Heart Association, c/o Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Pomeroy, Ohio,

The Daily Sentinel

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GM, Toyota order recalls
for over 400,000 vehicles
DETROIT (AP) - General
Motors will recall 292,860 cars
because their engines may not start
and in rare cases can even catch fire,
the carmaker said Tuesday.
In another recall, Toyota Motor
Corp. said Tuesday it would recall
257,000 Corolla and Sprinter cars
with faulty transmissions that were
sold in Asia.
The GM problem has resulted in
no accidents or injuries, spokesman
Kyle Johnson said. However, the ·
recall notice tells drivers not to start
the cars with the hood open.
Johnson said the engine problem
causes backfiring and could break the
intake manifold. It has also been
known to prevent the car from sianing and in rare cases can cause an
engine fire.
The recall includes certain 1996
Pontiac Bo~neville sedans, Oldsmobile Nine'. 1ight and Eighty-Eight

lu~ury cars, Buick Park Avenue,
LeSabre, Riviera and Regal models
and some 1997 LeSabre sedans that
have 3.8-liter engines.
The models were built before
May, prior to the problem being corrected at the assembly line, GM said.
The Wall Street Journal reported
the recall cost would be about $10
million, mainly in dealership labor.
Car owners will be notified by
mail to go to their dealers for free
repairs. Johnson said the work should
take less than an hour.
Toyota. Japan's largest aut.omaker, said its recall involved 12,000
Corollas exponed to Hong Kong,
Singapore, Brunei and Macao. The
recall is e~pected to cost about $40
million.
In the can being recalled, the driver is able to shift out of park with·
out stepping on the brake, possibly
causing the steering-wheel lock to
malfunction, Toyota said.

EMS units.answer 12 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded 12
calls for assistance Tuesday. including two transfer calls. Units responding included:
POMEROY
12:25 a.m.,. Mechanic Street,
Brenda DavidSon, Holzer Medical
Center;
1:52 a.m., Second Street, William ·
Kiluff, VMH:
I 0:09 p.m.. Union Avenue.
Nicholas Burke, VMH.
RUTLAND
4:31 a.m .. Main Street, Patricia
Clark, HMC;
' 7:52a.m.. motor vehicle accid~nt
at Mount Union and Carpenter Road,

Kim Fleming, O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital, Columbia Township VFD
asststed:
4:39 p.m., volunteer fire depanment and squad to Noble Summit
Road, controlled brush fire;
10:38 p.m., Salem Street, Betty
Rupe, treated at the scene.
SYRACUSE
8:42 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabili·
tation Center. John Ord, VMH:
12:25 p.m., volunteer fire depJll·
ment and squad. Water Street, electric pole fire. no injuries;
2:42 p.m., State Route 7, Maida
Mora, VMH.

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Eldridae. daughter, J~ekson; Mr. ud
· Mn. Dane!l Winkle. son, Vinton.
{Pablltlled with pet llllldoa)

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Modem Woodmen pknlc
The Burlingham Modem Woodmen will hold their annual picnic
Sunday, 12:30 p.m., at the U.S. 33
Northbound rest area near Darwm.
Chuck Williams, Lyle Sinclair and
Eva Robson will be honored by the
group for their community service.
Everyone is asked to bring a covered
dish for the event

. 11 ..

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Model tralu abow
The fifth annual Model Train
Show will be held July 22 through 28
at tJle Meigs County Public Library
in Pomeroy. Hours Monda~ through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Saturday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, 1-S p.m.
Featured will be operating la~outs ,
railroad memorabilia and videos of
the local area.

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Eastern grade cards
Eastern High School final grade
cards have been completed and are
available to be picked up at the
school, according to Eastern Local
Schools Superintendent Deryl Well.
They can be picked up at the aistrict
superintendent's office between the
hours of 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. weekdays.
Reunion planned
The annual Circle/Zirkle reunion
will be held July 27 at the Star Mill
Park, Racine, at noon. Table services
will be provided. An auction will be
held.

Hymn sln&amp;Kheduled
The Hillside Baptist C~urch will
be Sponsoring a hymn sing on July 26
at 7 p.m on the Pomeroy parking lot.
The sing is open to all gospel singers
and group. To participate, call 992Southern camp ahlrts
6768
or 992-5705. The public is
T-shins have arrived for all
invited
attend and asked to take lawn
campers who participated in the
chairs.
Southern High Basketball Camp, ·
according to Southern Athleuc Director Howie CaldwelL The shirts can be Reunion set
The farrar.o!lobo reunion will be
picked up at the high school between
held
July 28, at the sheherhouse at
the hours of 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., MonSternberger
Road, Jackson, noon.
day through Friday.

Coastal residents not
worried by hurricane
By ESTES THOMPSON
A11ocleted P,.,.. Wrltar

fury of a hurricane." said Joe Farmer.
a spokesman for the South Carolina
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N.C. Emergency Preparedness Divtsion
- As many coastal residents worried in Columbia, S.C.
AI Wrightsville Manna. worker
about Hurricane Bertha, lifeguard
Jeff Cauley had other thoughts on his Scott Toomer said a few boat owners
mind - high waves can mean great have called with concerns. " but people aren't cra7.ed yet. It's too early for
surfing.
"If it's not good ... I'll go ahead that."
and work," Cauley said of the surf,
Geoffrey Newton lived in Santo
as people frolicked in gentle waves or Cruz, Calif., when a huge earthquake
soaked up sun on the hot, white sand rocked that state in 1989. "At least
of Wrightsville Beach. "Jiut if it is, y_ou get ~ warning with this," NewI'll take it off."
ton, who now lives in Wilmington.
The "don't worry" approach pre· said while sunning on the beach.
But then again, not everyone was
vailed for some along the Southeast's
coast as Bertha hit the Bahamas, 60 even aware of the warning.
miles to 250 miles east of south Flori"I haven't heard a thmg about
da. But storm jitters sent others to Bertha," said Bruce Osborne of Richstores to buy batteries, tape, plywood mond, Va., who was spending a
and other supplies that may be need- week in an oceanfront cottage at
Emerald Isle. "Should we be coned if Bertha heads their way.
The National Weather Service cerned?"
issued a hurricane watch for parts.of
the East Coast south of Virginia
today, and a tropical storm warning
for Florida. The agency warned of
heavy surf for the southeast U.S.
coast over the next day or two as the
storm edged nearer to the Florida
shore.
There was about a 25 percent
chance that the hurricane would hit
the Southeast, forecasters said.
" Most people are going to sec
high waves, high surf along the
coast, and that's almost regardless of
whether it comes closer to the coast
or not," said Deputy National HurriCIIJ!e Director Jerry Jarrell.
But while forecasters and emergency officials kept watch, Bertha
wasn't disturbing some tourists.
" We have a lot of visitors who
don't understand the full wrath and

The Racine Gun Club,
Mi~e Lawson, President

Local School District

Please vote "YES" on the bond issue
to be held
6thlfl

..... .,.Sttn

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Meigs announcements

to utilize their voting privilege.

Dllcbaraes July 9 -

Danielle
Sidels, Doris Rudy, Geneva Sech,
Donna lhle, Lisa Caldwell, Janet
Jones.
Birtlu - Mr. ud Mn. Ttm

Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District customers in portions of Sutton
Township will be temporarily without water Thursday so workers can
install a new tee and valve.
Water will be off between 9 a.m. and I p.m. on Morning Star Road
from Pine Grove Road to Sue's Greenhouse, and Court Street

SOllltheJm

Hospital news
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Holzer Medical Center
Rootllall .................................12

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TP-c plans service outage

do endorse and encoumge voters
of the

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A Harrisonville-area woman was treated for injuries following a twovehicle wreck on Mount Union Road near the intersection of Carpentet
Road in Columbia Townahip around 7:40p.m.
Kim Fleming, 25, and Roben Dorn, 48, both of Mount Union Road,
met head-on on the roadway, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparunent repon,
Fleming was transported by the Rutland squad of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens,
where she was treated and releasetl, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
Dom was not injured.
Fleming's 1991 Geo Tracker sustained light-to-moderate damage, while
Dorn's 1987 Honda Accord sustained heavy and disabling damage, according to the repon.
.
No citations were issued.

Paid for by the
SoutiMnl Local Buiklin&amp; Coavnittee
JCim Pbillipl, TrCIIUIIt

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Wednesday, July 10, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

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In bBseblill's 'Midsummer Classic,'

National League stars win .6-0
By TOM WITHERS

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Meanwhile, the AL's pregame
PHILADELPHIA (AP) ---, ceremonies included Ripken getForget hilling a cutoff man or ling accidentally popped in the
moving over a runner, the nose by Hernandez. As the players
American League couldn't even finished having their picture taken
execute the team photo.
in center field, the Chicago rclievNo wonder Mike Piazza and his er momentarily lost his balance
National League teammates had so stepping down off a riser. He threw
little trouble in a 6-{) victory over his arms out to his sides to steady
the AL.
himself and caught Ripken flush
More than two hours before the on the bridge of the nose.
All-Star game's first pitch, the AL
Ripken, who couldn't remember
was already reeling. Word of trou- ever having to have his nose fixed,
ble came via a press box had it popped back in by a doctor,
announcement.
took batting practice and pro.. Attention, media. While the nounced himself fit to play.
American League photo was being
"The last thing you want to do
taken, Roberto Hernandez of the is go down in the history of AllChicago White Sox accidentally Star game competition as the only
elbowed Cal Ripken, breaking injury sustained during the team
Ripken's nose .... This is not a picture," Ripken said.
_
joke."
Ripken's streak of 2,239 conNo, it" wasn't. The game, how- sccutive games played will continever, became one.
ue. much to the relief of a shaken
Pi~za, playing in the ballpark Hernandez.
where he watched his boyhood
"I couldn't believe it,"
hero Mike Schmidt hit upper-deck Hernandez said. " I thought, ' not
homers on a regular basis, me, not him.' I'm just glad he got
launched one of his own into the to play."
seats as the NL f&gt;osted its first
However,' Ripken and the AL's
shutout since 1987.
powerful lineup, which was minus
Piazza, born and raised in near- an injured Frank Thomas, was
by Norristown , Pa., was asked if never able to get it going against
he had ever sat where his ball land- NL starter John Smeltz and eight
ed.
relievers.
"Thankfully, we had better
Even without using Greg
seats than that," he said. "My dad Maddux - nursing a sore big toe
had tickets here since the park :..... NL manager Bobby Cox's staff
opened. We sat behind third base." combined on a seven-hitter. The
It was there that he grew NL struck out Albert Belle three
attached to Schmidt. Befor.e the times, didn't yield a walk and got
game, Piazza caught a ceremonial · big defensive plays when needed.
first pitch thrown by the Hall of
"We pitched well tonight," Cox
Fame third baseman, who told the said. "We hit our spots all night
Dodgers catcher, "You're the long and we got a double play
IT'S GONE! -The Los Angeles Dodgers' Mike Piazza watch- best."
when we needed it. ... That was not
es his " - run in the second Inning of the All-Star Game
"He wrote that on the ball," a typical night for the American
T~ 1911 11 Yt1ar- Stadiwn, where the National League
Piazza said.
League hitters. Believe me, those
stars 6-0. CAP)
guys can bomb the ball out of anr

In the Hultbard llemorlsl LL Toumsment,

I

ballpark. We just made some
ellceptional pitches tonight."
Ken Caminiti, Lance Johnson
and Chipper Jones, replacement
players named after injuries sidelined other st,rs, each had big
games.
Caminiti homered in the si.oh
inning to put the NL ahead 4-0.
Johnson. who at 33 made his first
trip to an All-Star game, went 3for-4. And Jones, added when Matt
Williams had to pull out, singled
and scored a run.
It was also a night when Ozzie
Smith made his All-Star farewell .
The St. Louis shortstop received a
long standing ovation when he
came to the plate in the seventh
inning.
With F..raJ~k, ~ijnwtra' !&gt;..ver.aiO!J.'ll~....
"My Way" playing over the
address system, Smith's eyes filled
with tears as he first shook hands
with catcher Sandy Alomar, then
tipped his cap to players standing
to applaud him in the AL dugout.
He grounded out to second, but his
appearance was clearly the emotional high point of the game.
"It's a very touching time, a
very emotional time for me in my
life," Smith said. " Baseball has
been my life for a very long time."
By late Monday afternoon, AL
ACCEPTS STANDING OVA·
manager Mike Hargrove had TION The St. Louis
learned · he would be without Cardinals' Ozzle Smith accepts
Thomas, who has a nagging foot the standing ovation the
injury. Then Greg Vaughn reported Veterans Stadium crowd gives
that he couldn't go because of food him In the seventh Inning. This
poisoning.
was the la1t All-Star Game for
Something was amiss, and it $mlth, who announced hl1 .
wasn't even picture time yet.
retirement at seaaon's end.
On Monday, Hargrove, whose ~(A~P;..l'-r:--------­
Cieveland Indians lost the World. thing."
Series to Cox's Atlanta Braves in
His cha~ce gone in July, his
six games last year, said: "I want next shot, he hopes, will come in
to be able to say that once in my October.
life that I beat Bobby Cox at some-

das • · nogbt in tho Bill Hubbard
Memonal Lrllle League Tournament
al Syracuse 's Kin~ Field .
Green plated rwo runs in the fifth
rnning 10 claim the win when Caldwell singled, Reirmire singled and
bolh carne home on a Bush si ngle,
which pushed the score lo 4-1.
Earlier, Green had taken a 1-0
lead in :he first inning when Reirmin:
scored on an Ashworth single. Later. in !he third inning, Caldwell singled and Reitmire reached on a fielder's choice and came home when

the sixth inning when Baker
slammed a home run , ho'!Never,
Southwestern's rally ended there.
Brown picked up the Green win
with 17 strike outs in a one-hitter,
walking two and hitting just one.
Baker suffered the loss.

The Gallipolis Reds defeated
Point Pleasant Mead's Body Shop in
an exciting 12-11 battle.
Gallipolis took a ;3-0 lead in the
iirst •w.lten Bostrr singled, Warren
singled and Sibley hit a home run.

an error. Frazier reached on an error
that eventually allowed home ·the
winning run.
Warren picked up the win in relief
of Frazier. They combined for five
strike outs, gave up five hits and
walked nine. Despite a good effon.
Dalton and Sayre combined in the
loss, fanning II, walking ten and
giving up seven hits.
Rio Grande broke a 1-1 tie in the
third with three runs, then came back
and blew open the game 12-2 over
Chester. R.J . Finney posted the win

with seven strikeouts, four walks and
a three-hitter. Putman and Duffy
combined in the loss for Chester.
Chester hitters were Putman. White
and Will.
Doubles by Jones and Ryan
Matura broke the game open in the
Rio Grande fourth .inning. Jones hod
two doubles and a single. Finney a
single. Matura had a single.
Action will continue tonight. ·
Correction
In Tuesday's story on the Hubhard
Memorial Tournament, the pitchers
for the Syracuse-Pomeroy matchup

were incorrect in the official tournament box score sheet.
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse,
the tournament's defending champion, opened action Monday night
with an 18-1 victory over the
Pomeroy Yankees.
Connely and Allen pitched Syracuse to the victory, allowing only
four hits in five innings of m&lt;!Und
work. Ault took the loss for
Pomeroy.
Syracuse advances to face Mu.,on
VFW loday at K: 15 p.m. in second
round play.

'
situation, the league imposed a lockout Tuesday and lifted it a couple of
hours later.
Instead, the NBA and the Players
Association agreed to extend the
moratorium on trades, signings and
negotiations to 5 p.m. EDT Thurs-

Freedom 40 slated to start
Saturday at K-C Raceway
The sevenlh annual Freedom 40
fnr Super Sprrnt cars will be held
Salurday nighl a! K-C Raceway.
K-C is locmed 12 miles south of
Chilli cothe off U.S. 23 on Blain
Hrghway.
1l1C win ner will receive a $10,000
paycheck if he is running on a
McCreary MC2 DEl Tire.
Olherwrse the winner's payoff
wi ll he $9.000 in lhc 40-lap event
wh ich has fca lurcd pre\o· ious winners

such as Jack Hewrll. Kcvrn Huntley,
Charlie Fisher, Joey Allen and Raildy
Kinser.

Many of lhc nations top sprint car
drover\ wil l agarn he on hand for one
of lhc MrdwcSI's hrggcsl independcrllly sanctioned cvenls, paying a
101al purse in excess of $35,000.
Modificds wi ll join the Super

Sprints on the racing card. Many of
the All-Star regulars, traveling World
of Outlaws and the nation's top
independent drivers have already
expressed an interest in the event on
Ohio's fastest 3/S.mile clay oval.
Plenty of free parking and primitive overnight camping awaits the
fans, plus some additional seating
has been erected in turns one and two
jus! shy of the pit area.
The evenl is sponsored again by
Winston Racing and Frito-Lay,
which will have Chester Chee!ah on
hand to dislribute free snacks for the
kids.
Race (ars will also be on display
prior to the event.
Gates open at 4:30 and racing is
at8 p.m.

Southern physicals slated for July 20
Spurls physicals for the SoU!hern
Local School dislrict for the 1996-97
spons season will be offered atthe
office of Dr. Douglas D. Hunler in
Racine on Salurday. July 20.
The physicab will he done free of
..:hargc on this day only and will be
lor all spons and c~eerleadin g . The
physicals will be done according 10
!he following "hedule:
8-10 a.m.: gi rls in grades 7-9
1'0 a.m. -noon: boys in grades 7·
9
l

1-3 p.m.: girls in gri.des 10-12
3-S p.m.: boys in grades 10-12.
Alhletes should come dressed In
shons, !·shirts and tennis shoes and
bring a completed sports physical
card signed by a parent or legal
guardian.
The cards are available at
Only one player on a losing team
has btcn named the Super Bowl
MVP, Chuck Howley of Dallas in
1971

Hunter's office or through Southern
athletic director Howie CaldwelL
Queslions can be dire&lt;; ted to Hunter's
oflice at 949-2683.

day, thereby avoiding a showdown
that could have affected the
Olympics.
"We would not have been played
tomorrow night if a lockout was in
effect," Charles Barkley said of the
Olympic team's exhibition game
tonight against China.
"I don 'ttrust the owners as far as
I can throw them, and they got very
fortunate. It wouldn 't be fair for us
to play and make them money on
TNT if they had us locked out. And
that's what the argument was overTV money," Barkley said.
Barkley's teammates said no vote
had been taken and no decision on a
walkout had been made, but all
agreed that a lockout would have
forced them to consider what action
to take.
The bizarre sequence of events
began at 6 a.m. Tuesday after an all night work session in New York

Meigs physicals
set for Saturday
Physicals to any one interested in
playing sports at Meigs High S'hool
thi s fall will be given on Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The physicals for Meigs will be
heid from from 8 to II a.m. All athletes must have phyo;ical cards,
which can be picked up at Meigs
High School at the office.

aimed at pulling the collective bargaining agreement on- paper so it
(Ould be signed before the moratorium expired at noon.
The negotiations broke down
over one issue ....,. the dispersal of
$50 million in profit-sharing from
the league's television revenue. The
union refused to extend the moratorium, dared the owners to impose a

MHS to hold
football
Instructional
period July 18
The instructional period for
Meigs High School football will
begin on Thursday, July 18 at6 p.m.
at Meigs High School, according' to
varsity head coach Mike Chancey.
Any boy interested in playing
football this season for the Marauders arc urged to attend.

lpckout and then saw it happen.
Moments later, it wa.~ over.
" If the lockout began at noon, it
lasted eight minutes, because we settled the issue at 12:08 p.m.," union
attorney Jeffrey Kessler said.
Now, the deal is expected to he
signtil by 5 p.m. Thursday and a
nurry of a&lt;:tivity should commence.
A numl&gt;cr of trades arc rumored
to be on hold, including one which
would send Barkley to the Houston

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Video.Ear Inspection Camera

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Comes to Beltone Hearing,Aid ·Ceriter

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Where:. A. Jackson Bailes Office
224 Main. Street,. Pomeroy, OH
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Call Toll Free For Appt.

Day: Friday
Date: July 12, 1996
Time: 9:00-4:00

1•800~34~526$

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Rockets: And u free agent market
that includes Michael Jordan,
Shaquille O'Neal and Dennis Rodman may finally open for business.
"We've waited nine days, a couple more won't hurt," said Gary Payton, another of about 150 free agents
who remain forbidden from talking
with prospective employers.
Last summer, a lockout was
imposed, but ended three months later when the players voted to ratify a
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NBA imposes and lifts lockout inn time to extend trade period
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
The lockoul was on, !hen it was
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On a day of slunning developmenls in the NBA's unresolved labor

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Point Pleasant came back for a 5-3
tally when Richardson, Sayre and
Dalton walked. Schultz reached on
an error, Schoonover walked and B.
Smith tripled.
Gallipolis made it 5-4 in the second when Remy walked and scored
on a Warren fielder's choice.
In the second, Point made it 7-4
on an error and double to N. Dalton,
who later scored on passed ball.
Going into the siKth inning, Point
Pleasant lead 10-8, but the Reds
came alive when Warren led off with
a triple, Sibley, Hoover and Parson~
each walked and Oldaker reached on

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Gre&lt;-". lh&lt; Galhpoh5 Reds and Ashworth reached on an error.
Southwestern scored a lone run in
Rro Grande: " '""' dJe victors Tues-

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Pomeroy • ~lddleport, Ohio

10,1996

---Community calendar-The Community Calendar is of Syracuse Village Council, 7 p.m.
published as a rree service to non- Thursday night.
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
POMEROY -- Rock Springs
calendar is not designed to promote Grange, Thursday, 7:45 p.m. at the
sales or fund raisers of any type. hall .
·
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot IH! guaranteed tb run a
POMEROY -- Big Bend Sternspecific number or days.
wheel Association .will 'meel ThursWEDNESDAY
day, 7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall
POMEROY -- The Stoke Sur- in Pomeroy.
vivors Support Group will meet
Wednesday at I p.m. at the Meigs
TIJPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
County' Senior Center. For mnrc Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
infonnation call Karen Gibson, 446- 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
5601.
Refreshments at 6:30p.m.
THURSDAY
RACINE-- Southern Local Building Committee will meet Thursday, 7
p.m. at Star Mill Pa ·k m Racine .
PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township special mectin~. Thursday, 7
p.m. at township building.
SYRACUSE -- Regular meeting

FRIDAY
,
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows Fellowship Group, Friday at the Middleport Church of Christ, potluck dinner al noon.

LONG BOTTOM -- Hymn sing,
Faith Full Gospel Church, 7 p.m. Ftiday with the "Lighthouse Revivers."

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, past
masters' night, Saturday, 7. p.m. at
Temple. Work in Master Mason
degree.

Rockville. Md.

' ~·

Some 36 percent of white and 3S
percent of bl~~:k girls of normal

weight say they're attempting to lose
weight; another 10 perce nt of blacks
and 14 percent of whites who are
underweighl are dieting, too.
"We know that about I in 5 college girls has an eating disorder, and
·our findings show ani tudes about losing weight are instilled at a very
young age," Schreiber says.
This pre-teen obsessing over diets
isn '!leading to healthie~eating habits
or a thinner youth population, thdUgh. ·
A growing percentage of children,and
adolescents are overweight.
"Despite what you hear' about
diets, this may be crash dieting or
fads," Schreiber says. "They 're not

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llond~y

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John C. Wolf, D.O:
Associate Professor
,of Family Medicine

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Question: I like to swim in the United States. Unfortunately, conlake near my home, but my wife tracting other illnesses from water is •
thinks that it is unsafe. She thinks it not so rare. E.coli, Cyptosporidium, •
would he better to go to the city:S Giardia and otner "bugs" are fre- •
pool. Is there really any greater risk quently found in fresh water. These . •
in swimming in the lake? ,
infections cause nausea, vomiting and ·,
Answer: Swimming is a mildly · diarrhea, and in extreme cases can lie ,
risky activity. To put it into perspec- fatal.
~
tive , however, dry land injyries- such
Swimming pool water is treated to ;;
as slipping and breaking a bon~ or greatly diminish the risk of acquiring
being involved in an auto accident- an infection from the water. So in this •·
are more common than water related regard, a pool is better tan swimming ··'
injuries, including drowning.ln ·gen- in the. Ia~. Swimming pools ''~
eral, then, the benefits of swimming, have lifeguards. I don't know if your ~··
particularly in the hot summertime; lake does, but a having a lifegua'rd on ~· -,
greatly outweigh the risks.
duty reduces the risk of drowning.
•
We humans enjoy playing in
Swimming in lakes and .streams ;
water. It is cooling and refreshing on can have additional ,potential risks - ::
a hot summer day. Lakes. streams and particularly if you engage in foolish ··•
swimming pools all provide this behavior. Many swimmers have sus- ::;
essential quality. Lakes and streams tained head, neck and spinal cord
often have considerable variation in injures by diving into water Of "
the temperature and depth from place unknown depth. Of course. this can
10 place. This can be one ofthe inter- happen in a swimming pool, too, but -~
esting differences in the experience of it is more likely in an unsupervised ~·
swimming in one of these places swimming hole. It is also possible to ••
••
rather than a pool.
be run over by a boat while in a lake ,_
Obviously, it is po'!"ible to safely or stream, or be pulled under by ,,
swim in lakes, streams and swim- strong ~urrents .
F,
ming pools. There are some differences between l~ese, however. The
The risks of swimming can be ~
major risks associated with swim- greatly reduced by using good sense.
ming i'the open, untreated water of Don't swim alone, and don't dive into
lakes apd streams can he thought of unknown water. Be aware of the olh~ ...
as a water quality issue. Besides the er creatures in the water with you -- ..,
fish, turtles, leeches and other crea- and humans are far-and-away the
tures that pose a small risk to human most dangerous . And try to avoid gethealth, untreated water is home to ting the water in your mouth. Have an -.
many microscopic enemies of enjoyable and safe time swimming .,
humankind.
whether you choose to go to the lake
The small amounts of waier one or lo the swimming pool.
•.
.unintentionally consumes while
"Family Medicine" is a weekly ~
swimming may contain Vidrio' column. To submit questions, write
cholerae, an undesirable bacteria to John C. Wolr, D.O., Ohio Uniresponsible . for causing the illness
venity College or Osteopathic
cholera. Fortunately, this is quite ·Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens," ·:
uncommon in most water in the Ohio45701.

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Hayes, Ricf Herman~ Kathryn Hu~ ' ·~
bard, Kyla Hudlon, ·Jodi lrhtJoden •.. ,~
Terry Neece, Stephanie Ouo.
.·
Racine: Randy Ring, Jodi Cald- '
well, Rachacl H~:nsler, Heather Hill, ,.:
Melinda t'allerson, Renee Russell .
·,
Rutland: Heather Buckley, Arnie ,
Elliott.
.,
Langsville: Hollie Davis, Rebcc- ·•
ca Ockerman.
Cheshire: Cheri Thoma.,, Fredrick
ThomaJi.·
Syracuse: Heather Johnson.

THE DEADLINE BAS.BEEN

Limit 1
Pack

12 oz. ·cans

Area·students named to
Hocking.Dean's list
Several area students were among
the students named to the .Spring
quaner deans' list at Hocking College, Nelsonville. These students
each achieved at least a 3.3 quarterly grade point average and completed 12 or more·credit h9urs.
Students honored were:
Middleport: Dixie Arbuckle,
• Dreama Cremeans, Lenna Johnson,
April Pauerson, Ann Priddy, '!yler
Wolfe.
Pomeroy: Jeffrey Arnold, Traci
Crow, Maria Graham, Carmen

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SUNDAY
tr
PORTLAND -- The VanMeter
reunion will be held Sunday at \he
Portland Park. Those attending are to
take a covered dish and table service.
POMEROY-- Modem Woodmen
of American Camp 7230. community service recognition picnic/p&lt;illuck,
12:30 p.m. NorthbOund park on
Route 33 near Darwin. To recognize
Eva Robson, Charles Williams, and
Lyle Sinclair for outstanding service
to community.

eating low-fat. And now they' re sitting in front of computer screens as
w~ll as TV, instead of gelling exercise.
Parents often aren't good role
modeh, Kleinman says. And schools
could do more to teach healthy eating habits.
"But just lectures won't do it. it
would have to be taughi in a_very
compelling way."
-----------Dusly Rhodes, a pinch-hitter most
of the time, drove in '5Cven runs on
four hits
the Giants swept the
Cleveland Indians in the 1954 World
Series. ·

as

The Sentinel
News Hotline
.

992-2156

an
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ftr'u Friday For·Your Shopping Convaliiani:e · ·

rs

RACINE -- Denver Hill of Foster,
W.Va., guest speaker at the Red
Brush Church of Christ, Bashan
Road, Racine, Saturday, 7 p.m., and
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Diet mentality starts before girls are teens
By MARILYN ELIAS
USA TODAY
Grade school playgrounds apparently are packed with Demi Moore
wanna-bes : Forty percent of 9- and
10-year-old girls are trying to lose
weight, shows a federal survey out
Tuesday.
"They're just mirroring adult aUJ tudes," suggests Dr. Ronald KleinIJIIIJI, a pediatric nutrition expen at
Massachusetts General Hospital,
Boston.
"They see thin women everybody
considers gorgeous, and they make
tons of money. and girls want to be
lik~ that. "
The survey of 2,379 sirls. in
today's issue o( I'Niatrics, merits
COII'em because many children in a
.aormal ·weight range are !lying to
shed Jfounds, says senior author
George Sdlreiber of 1Wesllt Inc.,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 :

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...

·Family ·
Medicine

By JOHN JOHNSTPN

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Ohio University
College of Ostcopathitl Medicine

The Cincinnati Enquirer

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Introducing children to fishing requires
much needed tience, ·re ration · Is this the spring you introduce a son, daughter or
grandchild to fishing?
•
You'll need two items: patience for the adull; gear
for the child. They're linked. A youngsier without
appropriate equipment will soon become frustrated,
and the adult's patience will vanish like the, big one
that got away.
Four experts, each a lon~time fishennan, offer
tips on buying first-fishing gear for a grade-school
age child or younger:
. - Gordon Adams, a sales manager for Dick's
Clothing &amp; Sporting Goods in Cincinnati, Ohio.
-Bill Mowery, boathouse and campground man•
ager for the Hamilton County (Ohio) Park District.
- Brian Cunagin, a salesman for Relo Sporting
Goods, Fairfield, Ohio.
- Steven A. Griffin of Midland, Mich.,-euthor of
several fishing books, including "Fishing for Kids"
(NorthWord Press; $7.95), wriuen from a child's perspective with' the help of his 7-year-old dnught~r.
Elizabeth May Griffin.
Start with this assumption: Kids have shim allenlion spans. The more tugs on their line, the more likely they are to get hooked on fishing.
We' II let that dictate the type of gear we shop for. ·
Another bit of up-front advice: "I wouldn't suggest!Jrowing a bunch of money into something until
you sec if (children) like it," Cunagin says.
The good news: All the gear a child needs to get
started can be had for less than $25.
"It's beller to keep it simple," Griffin says. "The
first time they experience any frustration, they say
forget it."
It doesn't get any simpler than a bamboo cane
pole. Achild can dunk a wonn where he or she wants
it. "For years, I was plenty happy with that," Mowery says. It's perhaps best suited for a family that has
never fished, he adds,
1}-pically, cane p&lt;)les are sold in two- or threepiece sections that are quickly assembled into a 10to 14-foot pole. Large sporting goods stores may not
carry them, but they're often available in bait shops
for about $4 to $8; a line, sinker and bobber sometimes are included.
The next step up is a rod-and-reel combination.·
You can buy them separately, but beginners will find
the package deals a better buy; also, you' II know the
rod and reel are properly matched.
·Here's where the options can be a bit overwhelming. It helps to know there are four basic kinds of
reels: spin-casting, spinning, bait-casting and Oy.
For beginners, the experts recommend a pushbutton spin-casting reel. It's sometimes called a
closed-face reel because the spool is enclosed in a
plastic or metal case.
Casting is a cinch: "Pull it back, push the bultQn
(which releases the line) and throw it out; it's that
simple," Adams says. Another advantage: Tangled
line is kept to a minimum.
Some spin casting rod-and-reel combos are aimed
at children of kindergarten-age and younger. The
11ods are short- about 2 feet - and the plastic reels
are decorated with cartoon characters such, as
Snoopy and Mickey Mouse. They sell for about $11 .
In fact, you can gel a beuer quality 4-foot rod and
KID FISHING - When teaching children to fish start with
assumption: Kids
spin-casting reel suitable for children but without have short attention spans. The more tugs on their line, the more likely they are to
cartoon characters - for about the same price as get hoo~ed on fishing. Snoopy, or slightly more.
ing.
Spend a little more - $20 to $25 for a two-piece 5- to 6-foot rod and
Buying higher-quality rods and reels for children makes sense, Adams
spin-casting reel - and you'll have gear that kids might be able to use into
says, if the parents do a fair amount of fishing; then, even if the kids don't
their teens, Mowery says.
use them, moll' and dad can.
Every spin-cast reel h~ an adjustable drag-setting· device that controls
As for those other reels .·.-.
tension of the line on the spool. Typically they're spooled with 6- to 10Spinning reels have an open-faced spool; when cast, line slips off the
pound lest line, which means the line can lift that weight without break- open
end of the spool.

~ednesday, July 10, 1.996

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and

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Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12
The Baby Sentinel is 1l Special Section filled .with photographs 'of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
·.
··
The Qaby Sentine,l will appear in the July 19th issue of·The Daily
Sentinal.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is in~luded. Complete the
form below 8nd en~lose a snaj,shot or wallet size picture plus a 86.00
charge for each photograph. (Enclose payment with picture).

-Whit·e ·Rai·n .

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BAB~Sentlael .

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WedneSday,
July 10, 1996,
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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy:~o M'ddleport, Ohio

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Man evokes yawn from wife,' passiona~e pUrr iriQffi illicit nlclte$'
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Ann
Landers

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1995. Los Antca

n.ea S)'ftdic~ and Cteauts ~)'ldkate.

1

By ANN LANDER

•

Dear Ann Lande : I read, with
casual amusement, the exchanges in
your column between the sexually
overworked and · underworked
wives. Since there were not many
male responses, I ·would like to add
mine.
My wife and I have been married

.

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for 30 years. She is attractive aild hand on sexual excitement? This old When · your .,l..ife hegan to yawn,
desirable and was very sexy -- until joke rings true for many men: "How THAT was the timt; to t1x it. Adios,
we married. When she let ine know do you cure a nymphomaniac?" The Romeo.
she was no longer interested in "that .answer is "Marry her:" Meanwhile, . Dear Ann Landers: .You are so
stuff," i found it ·necessary to have I . will continue to experience the 'good at alerting. the publlc that I'd
ory needs attended to. So, I took incredible passion of·other women like to pasS ori a con lhft my frie~d
advantage of my · long leash and aitd enjoy my gift of sexuality, and -! fell for.
·
,
sought the company of other which has not waned although I will
We arc; t\VO middle-aged :women
women.
·
soon be 60. Now that I have told you who were walking downtown in
What I found was incredible. the whole story, do I have your per- Washington, D.C., after visiting a
Whil~ I could cr~ate del_irious plea- · mission?-- Young at Heart .
m11seuq~.' A distraught, .' nicely
sure m my Ilhctt female comp!lll:.
Dear Young at Heart: It 1s not up· · dt'es~ young woman approached
ions, I could evoke no ·more _than a .to me to grant or deny permission to , us. "I ho~ you will help me., " she
yawn from my wife. 0~. we ter- married men who- want to fool said. SIJ.e' was wearing some sort of
minated operations prematurely around.
identification tag on a chain around
because they were going nowhere.
A' great many couples find tollll .her neck. She told us she'd been in
Does marriage really put the dead ' fulfillment within their marriages. the department store and someone

Society
scrapbook

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. had stolen her wallet, inclu4ing all _tftat evening to see if she got ho~~,
her credit cards, money ana '1even OK. There was no such name or
my subway card." ·
&lt;
numher. The sympathetic operator ' 1
She had a large purse with com- reported that no one was listed with "~,.
partments, and I immediately visual- that name in the unlisted numbers or
ized someone reaching in ana at the sueet address she gave us.
removing her wallet. She continued,
This worn~ was a very good
."I'm a nurse. J desperately need a actress. I always thought helping
few dollars to get home." According .people in need was the charitable
to tier I.D. card, she lived in 'an thing to do. I won't be fooled like
upscale , suburban area. My friend that again. Neltt time, I'll say, '"Let's
asked her to write down her name, see the police report on the theft."...
address and ·phone number before Poorer and Less Trusting in D.C.
we gave her$10. She told us, "God
Dear Poorer in D.C. : That .con
bless you," and headed for the sub- ga!"e is being played in every large
way.
city in the United States.
We tried to telepll'one the woman
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me and my family
during the doth of
our l~vecl one, LM
Wood. He
wncltrful Huebllnd
;nd lt•ther and a
friend to 10 m•ny.
We w•nt to Th•nk
You All for the love
you've ahown. If It
In the flowere
fOU tent; the food
JOU prep•red; the
"oughtl •nd e~~rda
you eent; In the
prayers you prayed
the dormlons In
O~r church. In
~"ythlng you , h•ve
done, It wa gi'Mtly
•ppreclated •nd
m•de our lott eo
I:much ealer to bNr.
We alao want to
th.nk ·the Birchfield

w•• •

· Asst. Varieti.es

INSULAnON
137 BRYAN PLACE
..DDLEPORT, OH.
814-41112·2772 .
8:30 Ul.-3:30 P.M.

Downapouts
Gutter CINnlng
hinting
FREE ESnMATES

.. pi

Pepsi 24·PaCks ·

94&amp;-2188

-Mowing

For Quahty Work

(retldentlat

HOME INSPECTION

•Newttomea
•Addltlona
•NewQanagn

SERVICE

•RemodellftO

1215 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 ·
If you .,. buying or .a1ng a hOme, we ll&amp;lpiCt
lnelclt and out, fnlm ·baa amant to lillie. "For your
I*W of mJncl•

a commera.t)

Rtmodlllng
Wlndowl Kltchlnl

•Roofing

•Palntlna
FRUnTIMATU
. (114) 112-IAS
114 112-27U

Aildoont

Cal
B. D. Constlldltn
614·992·2979
JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

101111 II. .LL

.COIImumOII
•New Homes

·G•raoe•

· Call

•

Headllnlrl· Cullom Seat
c - &amp; c.rpet-

a Coinplirt

• Boat Seats.
Over 20 y_. Experience

•Complete
Remodeling

1-800-290-6303
Jimmy Wedge, Inspector

Stop

~ble~-

FREE EStiMATES

FRI., JULY I 2, 1996

"You'ni the

7:00P.M.
l..clciMd on At.

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commetclll &amp;
Residential Service

sa It the auction cent. In llaon,

949-3161

CretJtell"

Cindy

Truckload of new carpet,

Locatty owned

a operal8d

Free Eatlmatee

new LA. aune, new coffee

table &amp; end table 181.
Win be eeJIJng the following ltarm out or an eatata:
Craftsman scroll saw, Siara lluoraacenl lantern.
Craftsman cord reel, Sanyo Duatte electric vacuum,
St Croix llahlng machine, S..r11 10' weedeater, Iron
aldllell and more.

....
,...
.-YBUOIIKI

.........

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Sentinel.

186

Clasailieda
992-2156

01 mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERYICE

Howard [xcavatin
Trucklng-

·R-Addlllolla

Umtatone

o£llctrlcallo Plllllllllng

- Bulldo7.1ng end

-Aoollng

Backhoe

•Jna.rlar • Earlor
Painting
AJeo-cor.... ate wen

V.C. YOUNG IH
- 112-1215 '
flomeroy, Ottlo

J'NAME:'

-

I

IADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

-·Ice Cream

I

ICITY:
I

99

·'

Pall

Foodland
Mat&amp;
..

"

" -'

l-71foloi box

IPHONE NUMBER:·_ - - - - - - - -

Now O~n So!Jlh of
the Silver Bridge

,Plaza.
We Make Loans Fast

"

1-614-247·3901

'

~s
R

HARTWELL
HOUSE

Roofing, VInyl
Slding,Ga111gn,
Porchea, Sidewalks
•ndAdd-ona.
Phone

Open Monday
.nights until
7:00p.m.
Gifts • Folkart
•Antiques

814-985-3982

992-7696

11117.911 ..

--

'
Meet your

PAC~ERS

..

QUICK
CONSTRUaiON

FrH E•tltrMtH

HELP .WANTED
PICKERS and

64 oz. btl• .

..

match
1·90HIH9U
j
Ext.7907
I 2.H/rllall+
I

'

. ,

1t.•USDA

_;;•.:&lt;.J... -

.
'.

. 4

J

•
'·

•

-Insulated
Limited Time Offw
Call today wHh your
window alae for a lrtt
·quote!

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
1·800· 291·560~

Pomeroy, Ohio

JONES' TREE SERVICE
Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years EzperVnte • lmured

!

TUP SHOOT

1-900-888-41 00
ext. 6495

3.99 per min.

I

....... ...

EweryWed1ttthty

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
Mure, love,
success and your
healthIll

5al0

P.•·(

AtJ NOUN ct ME tJ fS

005

Peraonala

Rldu .. ; Burn OH Fal While Vou
~·_e~TakaFOpai11PhaoTableto And E• .,. ~"'tiC ru

'""fl'·

must be 18 yrs,
Single, aeeklng man 50 ·80 IO
Serv-U (819) 845-8434 opand lime and maybe lllo wllll .
L _ _ _ _ _ __. Send phone ••• piclu... to ; aa.
W.S clo Pl'Pielll111 ReQilllr 200

i
J

(619) 645 ltM '
-

1 ON 1
1-900-868-4100
Ext. 5489

.looP July 1·1 - Poolllvaly No
T"'""''olnt on 1he Spaoro Proporly

on

Long Hollow

Rei. Propar~y

io Poolld, V'Dieioro Will be Pro,.

culed . Signod Dwayne "Chip"

Spoor&amp;

40

Giveaway

Must be 18 yrs

1 Cllieo ca~ Dlmoo old, 8 Angoto
~- 5 _ , old, CNimr&gt;OP,
yollow, II'I'Y· To good homo only.
304175-41150.

Sent-U (118) 845-84:M

1 yt old, Dlac- I Whilo, lemalo

$3.99 per min.

.,.,,.,_-mod.

1010• !'fo
,_
dog, 112 E....lall Springor Sillritl
_____
__
.. 1111
Nld ..

Oaod weld\ dog, .451-2211 .

kida. 304·

2 ...,. 1111..,1, 301·182·3477

.......

Dlrt•a.nd
I .

PSYCHICS

30 Announcements

IIICIIII
LlmlletaM • Qlwvll,

5trH

LIVE I

1yr old lomele, pen Boegle part
·IUHU Hound. Can 1M ..., •1

SERVICE

T.T...IIII~

I

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung

LLIOU.OI
~MPTRUCK

I

,.

$19500 lnatallecl

- - - - - - - MljnSl Pl. PIMIInlWv 2WO.

No Purchase Nesuuy. Must Be 18 rrs. or older.

1

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

992-3838

Rertfteaaton
Wt have the ,_ FR12
Low COlt Rtpleclllltlll
for AutonlotlvefU2.

CHERIE BARR
446-0965

STATE:..,...
· _ _ _ ZIP_ _
.

Full line of Cistern. Septic .t Water ~toragc tanks. ·

FrH E•tlmate•

....,.._

· · Call

.

314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" • Fittinp ·Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Fie• fining• &amp; Water ftttinss

367-0286- 1-800-950-3359

992-2735

. . . . pullllofropened .....

Plastic Culvert- Dual walland-Resular 8" thru 36"
4" Sct:D- perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp;t 6" Flex pipe
4" ct: 6" Sch 35 pipe
In" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
1 In" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4"&amp; 1"200p.s.i.waterpipe(IOO'rotl'sthru I,OOO'roll'•)

Utllltlee

Air CondllloltJai

Tomato Pickers &amp;
Packers
Paul Hill Farm

I

1\lppera Ptaina, Ohio 41713
t114-9115-38t3oret4otltl7-6414

HouuSHtaand

Hatl'llaap

HELP WANTED

"

st. Rt. 7

Owner: Ronnie Jones

MEIGS
REFRIGERAnON

1:00
on July 21,
.. 1tllcl ollloe

I &amp; WPWliCS Alii IIPPLY

All K1 nd1 of forth Work

J

FOO DLA ND 38TH ANNIVER SA RY ENTR Y

1-800-88N943

S.rvlcea

711.911mo.

I

(614) 992·2364

614-MI-4110

enltttm ,:, ··Gift Certificates ·

Food land
5 Quart

• r. . E1q»ttence

Met......... ..

Public Notice

.
S'hopp1ng

Aealdenllal ~ Comme!Cial
R~r ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repalr11
· Guiten~ and Downspoul$
Complete Remodeling
Decks ~ 8alhrooms ~ !(lichens ~ Siding

Roofing ~

........ Let ..... It .

•NewO......

A Sony

RI:B ROOFING and
t;ONS'fRUt;TION

IIIIIIOioUIIIIOI
FREE EITIMAJES

Guaranteed r111ub

Reg., Free, With Bleach

39-44 oz. Pkg:

21583 BASHAH RD.
Racine, Ohio 41771
Mt-3013 PhOne
14..2011FAX

LINDA'S
PAIIITING

742·2246

'LotJe Alulay•,

._

r:!i§H~M

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work
91'5-4191

Pest Control

(FREE ESnMATIS)'

le,J'heeltre·Sy.s~em

INt-2512

L----..;lll:;,;lll::.;.::mo::;,-~:;:pd:.J. --- ==============~

D&amp;T

IUC!IOI
wv.

(814) 1192-7587
41484 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

985·4473

LARGE
CIBPft

Decks
Most
Anything

Slclng
Roofs

742-2803
or446-3622

•Siding

..

·Tide
,Uitra,-.2

J. E. DIDDLE, OWJIER

w'z•••s

Bllhs

- Weedeating
-Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn tao large
or tao email.
Call today lor free
estimate

c..-..............

WEDGE

Rn.: 773-5715 or Auction Center 773-5447
Tenna: Call or Check t!WI.D.
Not mponalblt for eooldtnll or lola of property.

s 99
·. '

614-992·7643

I Wlllllnn

.... Ga••
eStn Dim &amp;

AUCTION CONDUCT!D By

I

Archway Superpak Cookies $2.29

~

WIIIICoup,q

J&amp;L SIDINI &amp;

FREE ESTIMATES

ltult be 11 yrL

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

SMITH'S ·
COIISIIUCTIOII

40mp8talon for

or

Idaho Potatoes

·Sold by the piece only

RNI Eatate General

w••

Decaf not Included

HOWIIrd L Wrlttlel

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roollng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

742·3212

ue dally In our
ti.Yela, And He haa
bleeaed ua
lllth frlende and
!oved onea who
tl•ve ehown love

Coffee .

e.v-u (811)-445 1434

GutllrS

II 10 good •nd

•

114-742-2193

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Authorized AQA Dlltribulor
~ '· • Wtldlng -1111 • lncluatrill Gull• Machine ShOp
Servtcee • steel Selea &amp; Febricatlon • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum'Stalnlets • Tool Dreulng • Omamentlll
1
Ste.- -Stella, Aalllnge, Pallo F;umlture, Flreplal:e
Items, Planter hange,., Trellleee &amp; lola ol other atulllt
Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
"No Job Too t..rge 01 Too SIMII"
~~~- We will work wtlllln your builQet
·-----------..;.;;;;;.;.;;;;;,~ • Ph. 77H173
FAX 77Hitl1 _
108
. Street
WV
, '

Ur(lit One Wtth
Purchase

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
DaMy &amp; Peggy 13ricktes

•bout the futurelll
1·100 111&amp;4100
Ext. 2419
-permln. .

..,.,.,.

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AJC Condeneei'IIHose AIHmblys

Add~ional

Lat thlm fitll you

FreeEati!MWe

References

'

,,.,a61f

HIULIIG -

· : : c.cl of TMnks

34.5-39 oz. Can Asst. Varieties '

Family reunion

.....

THill

Mfh

'

iennifer Sue Michael, Syracus
and Jayne Varian. Mason, W.Va.
graduated June 27 from the Tri Coun-1
ty JVS, Nelsonville. They each com-:
· plcted 925 hours.of training.
:
Jennifercompleted hertrainiog !
a medical transciptionist andlwill 1
employed through Career Connec-'
ti ons, Athens and Kelly's Temporary
Services. Gallipolis.
,
Jayne completed training as .a.
veterinarian assistant and ' took her;
clinicals al the office of Dr. David
Krawsczyn . She is employed in
Athens.
The Sludcnts arc daughters of
Joan Varian. Mason. W.Va. and the
late Richard Vanan. They are the
granddaughlers of Edith Bowen,
Mason. W.Va. and the late Denver
Bowen and Dan and Clara Varian.

J9?6

SAWMILL

Experience •
~ : _.

"

WOLFE BIRTH

taiiaa: ·

WICIS

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

'l-

24 ct. Bundle Pack

FOODLAND

Kelley and, Tammy Grueser of.
P9meroy announce the birth of a son.!
Brandon Kelley Grueser, May 22,
Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed six pounds, II :
ounces. Maternal grandparents are
Pam Theiss, Syracuse and Tom
Theis~ of Racine. Paternal grandpar-·
ents are Don and Susie Grueser
Racine, and I,.ouise Heins
Pomeroy.

Jeff and Lora Wolfe, Chester,
announce the birth of their second
child , a daughter, Lindsay Nicole,
June 14 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasanl, W.Va.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
I 0 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe have
a daughter: Amanda Carol, four.
Maternal grandparents are Ivan and
Evelyn Wood of Chesler. Paternal
grandfather _is Morris Wolfe and his
wife, Joyce Manuel Wolfe of Gal,
lipolis. She is the granddaughter of
the late Carol Jane Wolfe. Greatgrandmother is Martha Wolfe of
Racine.
·I

lM PSYHICS

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

J

The family of Robert Grier
Clarke. Sr. and Garneite King Clarke•
met recently at the home of Dale and
Alice Humphrey. New Haven. W.Va.
for their seventh annual reunion.
The group gathered at the Broad
Run Cemetery. for burial of the ashes of Marie C. Roush. The ceremony was opened with recorded music
of "In the Garden." Rev George C.
Wierick gave a meditation on
"Rememberihg." -Marjorie Clarke.
' Walburn shared ' 1 Af1ie~ ~ninss"
dealins with tbe ~ s bfc. ~
lhe service·concha~ wa~ a rec~id­
.eel music of "Snowbirds.
·
' The ·lfOIIP tb'en returned 19-IIJ,c
Humphrey borne for a cookout· ~
carry-iD dia~. swimmins. and ptetore
. It !¥II announced dill ,the first
Mllrie C. Roush
of S~
had been _preientod to
Liev. ins, I
W~

:
•·
:
"

H&amp;H

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

•,

GRADUATIONS

614-949-3308
_
Cleaning
.Alum &amp; VInyl elding
• · Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks • Sidewalks ·

........,

Low .....)

(Lime . .

SERVIC~

EASTMAN'S

ACADEMIC AWARD
Am¥ D. Rouse, the daughter of
Chris Rouse, Middleport, and
Richard Rouse, Charlotte, N.C.; has
been named an All-American Collegiate Scholar by the United States
Achievement Academy, according to
USAA Executive Director Dr.
George Stevens.
Rouse, a student at the University of Rio Grande, was selected for the·
award based on her excellent academic standing and disciplines. The AllAmerican Collegiate Scholars must
cam no less tlian a 3:3 grade point
average . Only scholars selected by a
school official or other qualified
sponsor are accepted.
I
Rouse was nominated for this :
national award by Dean S. Brown,
dean of students at URG. Her name
will appear in the All-American Collegiate Yearbook, which is published
nationally.

GRUESER BIRTH

ROWE

~ ' POWERWASH

Clll•r. Ohio

21:15Lincoln lrle.
~-...

!i/lflll Old ll'l•d

lit-

PUPfiY, 10

good hamt, all white. 301-875-

. 7732.
All

Female

Part

German

:e.:..":'d PulfPIOI, Goocl With
" ...., . - Aller :s:ao
P.M.

Ktnena To O.Od Home, Liner
. TtalnH, Call Alief I P.M. 111·

••are

I

I.
f

�.
·..

..

...~

,.

I
: .• •

I

,t

ACA08S

PHILLIP

1 FIIHoldlr

ALDER

..,_

5 BIHII
• Dancer
• Ch111111M ·
12 Jet 13 -ZumwaH
14 Debt15 Diplomet'l •

loll: ball okwe, after 7:45 game

0.. lloclroom aparlmtnt in Middleport. al uliiillft paid, 121Wmo.
pluo S100 depolit. Cali 814-IIG2·
78011, 8am-5pm.

10, 814-1149-2168.

773-5217.
Lost· Cat Black &amp; Wh1te, 713116,

Babyaltttr Noodo&lt;f To Gat Child
On &amp; 0~ Tho Bu1. Green
Oiatric~ Pltaaa Call After 5
811-441-98111 .

Wed . V~e1nity . Fruth's !Woodland
Center·e. Name: SUnny Reward!

Clll DRIVER WANTED

814-388-9445.

days or evening• call

30-o-875-0900 or 304-875-5530.

U.S. firm dealrtl COL driv~ to
ouppo~ tl1eir e11Dr11 in and arouncf
the Faltbarn. Ohio aru . Can-

70

didate mull have Clau A COL
wll~ tan)l;er endorsement, good

LOST: Man'SIIlVBf 10 braCtltl WI'
name on it. Generous reward .

Yard

Sale

dr•v•ng record, and current DOT

card. Oualifio&lt;f cancfidattl 10 lor·

Gallipolis
Sr VIcinity

ward resum..ljob history to :

J.T.M INDUSTRIES, INC. P.O
BOX 209 NEW HAVEN, WV
3292 State Route 14t , 7/t 1th,1 25285 IITTN: 0. Cu10.
12th. 13th, Clothes. What Nota.•

Mise: Items, 9To?

Chrfalya Pall, 271 Nor1h S.oAdvance DEADLINE . 2:00p.m. ond Avenue, Middleport, Oh.,
the day before the ad 11 to run. applications now being accepted
S&lt;Jncfar edotion · 2:00 p.m. Friday. for clerks &amp; groomera, 8 t •·i92·
Monday edliiOn - 10:00 a.m. 581· 4514.
urday.
Church Yard Sate· Organ, Sewing
Table, Clothes, All Sizes, Nlc Nacs. Etc New Life Victory Cen·
ter, 3773 Georges Creek Road,

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Houra. 20K To $SOt&lt; /Yr. t-

1100-341-7188 X 1173.

1 M•le Out Gage
Road 011 Rt 141 , Fro. Sat. Bad·

Garage Sale·

614-992·31191 . Whilt you worlo or
lot your leisure time. Day, wening
and weekend hours available. I
offer reasonable ratH and 1\ave
Atfofonces.

Profesiional Tree Service, Slllmp
Remoul. Free Eatimattaf Insurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-3889648. 814-367-7010.

spreads &amp; Drapes, Knchen Cur·
tarns. 1 Porth Swing. Misc. Items.
71 t1th, 12th, 9·4, 150 Second
A~enue . Exerc1ser. Toy1, Mens
Su.ts, Boys Women, Girls Cloth ·
1ng, HousetiOid.

126-llocl hospotal in scenic West
portunity for motivated prolea·

2-K, Young Scl'lool Age During
Summar. 3 DayS per Week Mlnln-um 814--44-3557.

Give piano tesaona 10 all agea:
also teach chord•ng and !rantpoling. II mternled call 814-62&amp;0113.

210

Business
Opportunity

siDnal wnh strong leadership

J----7,::;;::;:::::-.:...--

Servicea. Mual be a Registered
Pharmacist. Send resume to: Bill

recommends that you do bulln111 with people ~ou know, and

Barker.

NOT to &amp;and money through tile

&amp;kills. Will be ruponaible lor all
oapecta of Hospital Pharmacy
Alii.

Exocullve Dire~tor

or Adm. Setvicaa, Pteasant Valley

Pomeroy,

Childc:are M-F 61ffl-5:30pm Ages

FINANCIAL

Vlrginll river community has op.

Hoapual. 2529. Valley Dr. Pt.

11193 Clayton 14x70, 3 bedroom,
1 bath, utility room, many exuas,
11aat pump, grill eond. Talut over
quirts only. 304·773·6139 or
304-87!&gt;$82.

_
&lt;NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

mail until you ha~e lnve11igeted

25\f9

Lilut ,_, 11191 11x80. all otaanc.
3 bedroom, 2 both, heat pump w/

ch•ldren c:lottnng, Atari. Rain can·

Limited Offer! 11197 doublewidt,
3br, 2bath, St7gg down, S279/
month. Free dell~ary &amp; Mtup,
Onl~

at Oakwood Hom11, Nitro

81 ...&lt;&amp;-9580.

New Ux80 Only make 2 pay.
mtnll &amp; mov.in, no payment at·
ter 4 yoflrl, lroe lll·UP l &lt;loliYery.
304-755-5885.

Sleeping rooms w1th cooking .
Alao trailer apace on river. A.ll
hook-ups Call after 2:00p.m.,

New Bank Atjlo'a. or1y 31ert. ~..
181-up l deliwry.304-75571Q1.
Now Bank o - 1. Only 31 otll Still
._,....
inwarranly.304-755-7191.

470

eels

July 12th· 14th, 9-Spm Fri./Sat, 1·
S &amp;ln . St 248/Nutmer N1na Rd.,
Long Bottom, Oh . typewrillr,
lreadmll, IO'fS, 101 bed. la'llt'I"HTTWII.

pluS SIZ9 c l ot~, boys to SIZI
glas!M'81e.
·

OTR Drivers WantPaid Vaca·
Program. Box 201.

45631

Pric::e Bueter. tQ87 3bedroom.

e-,

Mov1ng sa le· Mulberry Heights,

Fiddle .Le•lona tor 9 yr old boy

Call30+875-1671.

.

Pomor01'. near hospilal. Friday, 1· HOM,E TYPIST, PC usero need·
7pm, Sat, 9-3pm. Patio furniture, ed. 145,000 Income potential.
Home lntenor, weighl bench, Calf 1-B00-513-4343 Ext 11-11388.
weis;tts. clolhos
LSW 10 work part lime case man·
MDVIf1til tal• Tabby &amp; Jeff Homer agemenr in S.counry area. CaU t.
res•dence, Tuppers Plains, Fr1day 800·431·5773 for interview ap·
&amp; saruraar. Ju~ 12·13.
pointment
Thtee family · July 10-12, three Need someone to d.g out bunda·
miles north of Meigs Counry falf· tion, must be reasonable, 6U ·
grounds on Rockspflnga Rd 992-3090.
G~r r s srzes to 6X, boy'JJ, men·s &amp;
Pall·tlme church custodian PQII·
women'&amp;, rays. tools ariir"mOr'e.
uon . Send resume to : P.O. Box
YBrd! mov1ng sale · July 12-13, 228 Pt. Pleaaant WV 25550.
47432 SR 338, Rac1ne . Crafls,
table and chaus, parch furniture, Part·Time Logist1cl Clerk With
m•crowave, record player and Potential For Full-Time Employ.
ment General Compute!" Knowl·
speaken. 9am.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S. S•l ver And Gold Co1ns. Proolaets,
Otamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
R1ngs. Old Glassware, Ster11no.
Etc Acqu•s•t•on• Jewelry • M.T.S.
Com Shop, 151 Second Avenue,

Gall !&gt;&lt;&gt;lis, 614-446-2642.

POSTAL JOBS: Stert $12.68/hr,
P'UI benefits. For applicanon and

enm 1nfo, Call1 ·800-299-2470,
Exr WV127, 811m·9pm 7ctaya

Sale Repa ~or Snap On Tools.
Wo Aro EOE, 606·921H1128.
The Gallia -Meigs Community

Action -'gency

11 Curr1nt1y

Clean Latt Model Cera Or Soaking To Hire A RECORDS
Trucks, 1G90 Models Or Newer, CLER~ For Tho Woa1harizatlon
Smith Bu1ck Ponhac, 1900 East- Program. Outie1 Include TM Fol·
lowing: Maintaina Material lrwenern Averw.Je . Ganipoh&amp;
lory Control Recorda, Including
J &amp; o·a Auto Pam Bu~1ng ul · Too ls And Equipment, Jntake Of
vage veh1chiiS Selling parts 304· Weatherization Appttc:auona,
Uaintaina Program Client Files
773·5033.
-'nd Wealherlzatlon Recroda,
No ri Work1 ng Washers , Dryers, Types Correapondtnce, ComputStoves, Ret r1 gerators, Freezera, er Knowledge A Mull. A.Uenda
A1r Cond1t1oners, Color T. V.'t, Ueetingt And /Or Training AI
VCR'S, .Also Junk Cars, 814·258· Required. High Schooi ·Graduato
Or Equivolont Apply At Tho Gof.
1238

lia ·M01g1 CAA Control Office No

Pav•no Top Dollar For Junk Cara,

Later Than Tuesday, July 23,

Dave. 814-446·9575

1998, 4:00 P.M. For More fnfor·
mellOn Cal 814·3117·7341 Or 514992·8629 Tho Gallio -Moiga

Trucks . &amp; Runnmg Vth•cles To

Top dollar· antiquea, furniture, C-'A It An EQual OpportUnity
glass, chma, clocks, gold, silver,
Emplo)'or.

coins, watchll, estates Oaby
t.Aarun, 814-992·7441

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Home&amp;. Call . 614·446·0175

Villga PtZZ11 Inn Now Taking AI&gt;·
plk:alfonalor Cook l W.i.....
WILDLF~SERV,Q'ION

~­
JOBS
Wanted To Buy : Auto 'l &amp; Truck&amp;
Game Wlrdlna, SeAny Condition, 61-4 ·3bt 9062, Or -curity,Hiring
Mainllfw1c:e, Pari&lt; Rang614 .. 48-AioRT
.,.. t11c:. No E111&gt; - . - y. f1lr
wanted To Buy Junk Autos With appllcalon ancf lnlo cal 1.:eooOr Without Motors Call lerry 2119-24 70, 0111. OH31 8c 8orn-8pm.
uvely e 14·388·9303.

7doy~

Your Burger Kintil Is Getting Real

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Cloae, We Sell The Bell Buroera
In The Bualnou And Aro look·
lng For The Beat Employeaa To

Help Ua. Afllllr In Ptraon At R. .
raurant Slla, (Galltpotlt) From 8

110

Help Wanted
$-WANTED-$

are available on an equal
opponunlly -

edge Requored EMT CERTIFf.
CATION PREFERRED. Duties In-

clude Ordermg Stock &amp; Shipping
Supples, Adm•niatenng Un1form
A•ck Peatson Auction Company, Vouchers &amp; Employee 10 Badglull lime aucuoneer, complete e&amp;, &amp; Gtrllfll Office Duties Soncf
auct1on service
licensed Resume To SEOEMS Dillrtcl
•66,0h•o 6 West V~rg•ma, 304- 3240 S1ato Route 180, Gallipolis,
OH 45831, By 711Mle.
773-5785 Or 3()4. 773-5447

90

Thilnewspaperwflnot
knoWIIngy IOGOpl
adYertisementa for raat-le
wlich Is In Yfofallon ol file low.
Our reedera are heroOy
informed lhot 111-ngo
adYeflfHdln 1!111-

A.M. To 5 P.M. Daily Tuuday
Thru Friday.

170

Mlscellaneoua

10 people who need to lose
w.. gnt &amp; make maney, ID try new Atl Natural Fat loll Product.
aatenled we•ght ·IOII product. Lose Weight, Fatl Saner, In·
30(. 773- 5083 241YS/doy.
Cflated Energy 11 A Oay SU·

4&lt;G-12311.

180

Wanted 'R)

·

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes

tor Sale

25 Acres, Hannan Trace School
Diltrict. Small Toblicc:o Allotment,
Minerll Flight' 814-256-1t 11 .

Loll for rent· Now taking afiPIICI·
lions, Country lane Mobile Home
Park. GalllpOiil Ferry WV. 304·

875-5421
Scan1c V'aller,, Apple Grove.
beautiful 2ac 011, public water,
C~dt

_,Jr., 304·5711-2336.

RENTALS

410

Houua tor Rent

3•

Pass

Pus .

304-875-73211afttr 8:30.

GOV'T FORECLOSED Hom11
For Ptnnt.. On It Delinquent
Area .
Toll Free (1) 800-89&amp;-g778 Eu.

Tax. Repo's, REO's. Your

A1r Conditioners, Washer, Dryer,
Refngerator, Freezer, Stove, Utcrowave, Color T.V, VCR, 81_.·
258-1238
Appl 1ances.
Recond1t1on'd
Washers. Otyera, Ranges, Relrtgrators, 90 Day Guarenteel
French Cily Uaytag, B1-4· 448·

7795.
Big Sevrnoa On Carpot&amp; Vinyl In
Stock, $8.00 Yd l Up. Mollohan
Carpafl. R7N.81•·448·7444.

Country Furniture. 304-875-8820.
Rt 2 N. Bmiles, Pt Pleasant, WV.
Tuet·Se.tt-e, Sun 11·5.

560

Pets tor Sale

8 Week Old German Wire Halt
Puppi.., Oemt E•cellanl Grouu
Dog, Sire, Tr-11 Bklod, 8i 4·
258-1871.

7::-:-':7--:-----AKC Lh.. a Apso puppies, tat

H-2814 For Currlfl Uating~

OM bedroom homt in Pomeroy.
W111 aeU on land cantract. au.
IIG2·5868.
Reduced Pnce. country home 1n
town, btawtiful 1 314 acr11 wHh
WOOds. rnoady leYel, located 1n vii·
of Middleport with a lovely

Scnulra Spec:1al Ecfibon mo·
bile homo, both &amp; a heK wl1ll car-

penng throughout, some new.
plus many ektra's added 10 nome
includes deck &amp; central 11r,

phone 814-IIG2-7350 (No S&lt;Jnday
calli).

s
Home-Futly
· Bahind-Noz,reno
Chun:h.
S27,000.

Apartments

for Rent

1-814-388-1113&lt; before 5pm lionFri. 1-8 14-38fi.IIIIS8alltr.!ipm.
A~C Lhaaa Apao Puppies,
Rtadyl Sholl, Wormad, Priva1o

Mo., Plua Ulililita, Usually
Something Avollabltf SUn Valioy
Aparlnenta. Ot~2D57.

2 Bedroom, furnished apta da·
posit required, l)lrtial ulilihs 'paid.

304-e75-e512.

'futl.,

2bclrm.
lotat electric, ap ·
pi"!~H urnilhld. ltluncfry room
ractliU.., doll 10 tc~ in town.

1\pplicatlona aftlabit It: ViNige
~;~~~s. 140 or coil 814-IIG2·

304-675-7482.

Route 550, 814-551·2722.

•

1-fl00-olll9·34119

Puppieo. Excellent Bloodline.
Sholl &amp; Wormed, Now Taking
Kenmore Refrtgerarar, tide-by- Deposila You Chgo 11 Your own
WI ice mafoor, 22 cu h.
Payman~ Aaklng S300 Each, Col
304·875-3298.
814·448-821U.
Ulo&lt;f Fumiturt 130 Buf111111 1'1111. :C:-hrl:;:o=ly~o:;Pa;:.:tt--:ll::-o-re-,-:2:-71::-N:-:o-r1-::-h
Rafrlgaratore, Washer, Oinettn, Second AYanue, lllddliporl.
Bunk Bad&amp;, Entarlllfnment C111- Oh. auppflea &amp; animals, bathe&amp;, 1g88 Buick Skyhawk 4dr, auto,
taro, Iliac. 814-446-4782.
dlpa, a kanntf cart, 814&lt;182· I&lt;:JI, loaded, 47,000mi, $3,800
VrRA FURNfTUAE
4514.
· '
::--::-:--::---:---- 304-871H172.
61"'446-3168
Dog &amp; C.1 Grooming. roaaonabla
Oualitr Hou-FwriarreAncf pnc01, t5yra axptrtertco. Call for
Appilr\Cft. GroltDaoll On
I 304~7• •- 1
Caah Ancl Cwryf AENT·2-&lt;lWN
&amp;fill a.
v ~ .
And l.llyaMly Alto Miai:N.
German Shepl'lerd Pups , 8
F'"DtlhleryW'r1hin 25Miln.
Weeks Black l Tan Purebred No
Papers, Wormed $75, 814-386530
Antlquea
6546.

' 25.

., •• ..- . mirror

headboard wlpadded rJill &amp; 1
second manren, $225, 114-948·

/

I

•

r

Cal814-448-0231.

Jack Ruaaell tarritf puppia&amp;. 10
.... .,. - · ••

Alfred" Hitchcock ;laim~ that there . l..r4--.._......;.
is no terror in a bang, only in the a~~'
ticipation of it. True - though· an un- ·
expected bang can malle you jump, es- ' lar+--1fpecially in a theater. ·
.
.
At
the
bri!lge
table,
sometimes
fan,
'(OU MEA~ M'( MOM"!
ing to anticipate the fut11re will.cost
,
l
I •
your contract. The d~cll}'el" felt em.
barrassed after this deal. I):
' .
CELEBRITY ¢1PHER
East opened with a weak two-bl8,,
. . . by LUI• c..npO.,· ·. '·~· . 'sbo~ing some 5-10 high-card ·pointe. ·
c,o&lt;abrily Cipl&gt;or- ... -1,... ~ "Yllr!t9wo'- :Pil! ri _ .
E""'lit1eiio. ............... .,T Odotl_, r
and a decent six-card sui~· Over.South's
· w . v o ~ .u E~ s w .E
'·~w
takeout double. West r~Se4 pre:emil'· ',
' .
Uvelyh hen North made.a fe4PQDsive •
X·
ilWEM
\1' W L Y· W.· U ~' I ' W L D M V
double, showing enough points to act
COWYM
but with no suitable bid available.
Against four he,rts, West led th~
XBYDGO,
xuv w LAMXE SWE~ X
spade queen: six, 101 eigh_t West continued with the spade jack: seven, two, ··
UXJGEQT.
IDWSV . ' ..- T.SXVWFWO
heart two. Declarer played a diamond
.
'
to dummy's king and ran the heart
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Amerjca 18 a vaal conspiracy to make you happy."·queeJl,
which·won
the
!riel!What
now?
John Updike.
/
w~ LIKf
.
\
Not anticipating the' ~ger, South
·'
, contJnued by-finessing dummy's heart
ltfff,
T"IS
jack.
But·
after
winning
with
the
king,
· t« P~AYf,
West !on:ed dedarer'again in spades.
Down to one trump in each hand &lt;the
I
. three in ·the dummy and the ace in
NOT
l)alld), declare~ continued witho the
&lt;' G~lfV ,4t1Gf. .,, . :
ace .and ano~bW diamond. However,
'East won thjs trick and played a
COFt\Ft\JTTff'~ · ... ~ spade1 prppUltlilg Wes~s hl'llrt nine to ··
'
· J- •
' . th~aeulnflrlck.
• ,............
S"
10
Tl)e right play is for declarer to lead
dummy's heart three to his 10 at Irick
five. West wins with the king and plays
}lis .last spade. But now, after East
wins bill diamond Irick, if he returns a
splde, South can ruff II with dummy's
'*"jack. plays a club to hil halld,
draws West's last trump with the
:lieait ace and claims. the remalnllilr.

·'

.THE BORN LOSER

PI!, t&gt;S.-PW, S750, 614-446-1815,
Aftlf Six 814-446·1244.

.,

~ N'\'t.R. /foiJC.H

color~ $250/ee.:

tfl.'( w:t:J.: ~rot-01~

J

. MUj!

11\Qnpt1.

I' l~ .']' I': r I
·~~~~LEFORI · Ill , I 1: I ~ p l I

•

SERV ICES

8

WATERPROOF NO

1&amp;92 Chryaler New Yorker Ftflh
Avtnue, W1th Ma1k Croll Leath· Unconditional litatil'l"'rr puarantee.
er lntertor. Power Stall Wilh Local ralerancea furn11hld. Es·
Driver's Side Memory, Power lablolhed 1g75. Call 1814) '448·
Windawalloc:ka, All Tht E11r111l 0870 Or 1·1100-287·05711. Roftrl
Garage Mept, len Than 34,000 W.llfpraofng.

&amp;~!;',:.~PPM Sl ,SOO,
1-::----:------

Appilanca Porta Ancl Strviee: All
111G2 Pl&gt;ntlac firobird V·8, 55,000 Nama Brand\ Over 25 Years E•·
milot, axe. concf. $7,300. 30•-875- perianc• All Wor• GuaranfHd,

Scootera
And
Wheelchairs, New fUNd, Van 1
Car lilt Installed, Sta~rolidtl, Uft
Chaira, Cal For Brochure, .,_..

Electric

448-7283.
Equipment &amp; Elec1r1ca1 For A 3

Bay Car Waah Wim foam Bruth

&amp; Ont Yaccum Cleaner: I Ft.

Orakt Sa tall ill Dish With D·
Sc:amiW, &amp; Rtmoltl, 814·
388-8253.

B11Ment. 2 Car Detached Ga-

Rl!&gt;tirtd.
- '1-«lD-537-8528.
Rtbultln - Cal
RonE-

Eaullant

Condiuon,

1993 Olds Cudass Supr..-ne, red,
4dr, 1\110, V-e, abs, all power, ac,
radio/caa.. ne. S10.500 30&lt;-675-

•

.v1;

'

I

..

fraa eotima1t call Chat, eu-OQ2-.
8323.

-

DRYW~

Hong,lfnlah, .......

•

C, lttreD radiD can, dual air
bags, nice lolturaa, 45 mpg.

8,000 milia, S7.800. EC 304·682·

2787.

'

a A.pair,
lntetior Painting 1 Tr~m. Dec'•·

Drywoli, Hang, Taping

814·245-0810.

1005 Z-28 Camaro, loJded wi t·

tops, all leather interior, black. Ron's TV Service, apec:iahzina 1n
Zenith alao urvtcing molt other
$17,500 304-7'73-81!111.
brJndl HOUII calli, t .80Q : 7g7.
7311-711111.
1095 GEO Pr1zm, lour door, au· 11115, wv 304·5711·23118.
Gravely W11h Fin11hina Uowar tomat1c, 1•.800 ""let, '68 CMYy
Roofing &amp; oun•• comple18 home
Sickle Bar Brancf Now T•01 Ail..' ... ton flaiDid,111 4-7•2·2311&lt;.
remo eling decks I sid•ng, 35
ing J750. Kabota Tractor 4 WO
lliaail, 3 PT, Hifcto With 4 FL fin. Autc Loant. 0...... \ld ltrlngt fi. JNra •xPifil1nca, B.&amp; B Roofing
ithing Mower On Back. Alklng nanc1ng even II .,.ou have been and Con&amp;trUC!iqn, 814 ·IMI2·2311&lt;
13,000, Heavy Duty UU~IyTraYar rurnad down elsewhere. Upton
Aaking $300, 215 70 15 Tiroa Equ1pment UHd Cars. 304-451.
Plumbing&amp;
Alking $15 Placa, 81•-4&lt;1471111 1089.
Or 814-38fl.ll44g, .
SEIZED CARS From .175.
f;!ydraulic: Ho101, Modo To Ordtr. l'l&gt;rachll, Cldllflca, ChiYYI. Fr...,.n'a Heating Ancl Cooling.
IIMW'a, CotVIlla&amp;, Alao J-. 4 lnatallation And Service. EPA
Sida~a Equipment Co. 304·875WO'a, Your Aroa. Toll Fraa 1·
7421.
Cormoareiti.
aoo.ao5.g775 Ext A-2814 For Catlifitd.
814-256-1111 .
630
Current Llotinpl:
Livestock
840 Electrlellllld
120 ltucka tor sale
Refrigeration
1071 Chevy Dump Truck Chetttr
RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
Tancltrn ceo S.IOI. 12 Fr. ...,.,
LAWRENCE ENTE-ISES
Bad, Good ~pa With Roll Tarp
For j\lphlll. LOll- Parts, 814· HHl Pumps, Aif Conclflionfng If
You Don1 Cal Ua We Both LtM.t
256.-. Elloningl.
Frat Ealimalla, 1-1100-29HlON
1877 Chwy 112 Ton PICII·Up et4 448 uce. wv tlfla4S. · . ·
Lota or Now Parta, uso oao'
814-3117-o217,
'

.,,

..

___

HNtlnO

--liaf.

, . . Ford All1at&lt;. -....:
5,500 milia on robuHt.ongillt'
good floclr, St,ISO. :IOH7S:

,..
44HMI24.

l

C&amp;C General Home Mam
tenence - Pamting, v1nyl 11ding,
clf'pentry, doors, W1ndow1, baths,
mobil home repair and rrore. For

450 Coaa Dozer $7,500 Firm,
814-379-2568.

HOrae, Thorabrad Trailer, ., ,_..

.

7795.

111G3 Chryalor LeBaron GTC Low

1895 Gao-Metro, 3cyi, 5-spoed, Caltfnga taxturo&lt;f, piallO&lt; r•P.Ir.
3-0R f\11, while ..-gray inter.,, N CIH TOm 304-117$-4188. 20 .pora

Sldclet:wed Horlel, 3 AIJIUIIed
Marta, And il 1119 Yafloj 2

•

French City Maytag, 614 ·,.&lt;448 ·

117'0.

610 Farm Equipment

Mauay Ferguson tracror . eo
ford 4rmp •liCk. ulld P.,11. 304-

I

WEDNESDAY-

Allor e.

0868 or 304-675-4257

lnt 077 Cat, Bantam ExcevaiOt.

' nd

\

I'

Jostle ·Awash- Om9{Ja -.Fallow· SWAlJ;ow j,\
"Pride ·ha~· no taste, n6 colOr, and h"-:no· ~lar
size.· my very opiniofiatl!d husband mumble(!, ~so why
is 1t so hard to SWALLOW?"
" · ': :

You'll
In lhi
. .ClosSI(Itd Sect lOA ·

Sovlnas

111101, Like Naw, 814·258·1275,

Me-.

•soc, 350, 800 Backhoe., TO 25

I*

l

S10,909, 304·6 75-1782 loOYe

SVGA 14 Inch Color Monilor,

Is li
'

Milas,

Dozers, Loader,, John Detrt

m~:iiM8fREO I'

KfiAM.LITS ANSWIII$

Wurlirzer piano, axe:. cond. 1500.

Concrete &amp; Plaati' S.plic Tanks.

.

I

304-e75-8822

very lonlt, SSOO. 614-IIG2-7242.

'.

;·~._

t

.

Boo11 By Radwlng, Chippewa,

&amp; LIVE S TOCK

I

.. ..

Health Certificate &amp; Guaranteed
Excellenl Tempermtnl, 1250,

FARr,1 SUPPLIES

.C
'
.. uiw:a.t',

pe

CVNJJI&gt;\t'IOI-l, [ H~V€:
cONCWO€-t&gt; 'I'OU ~

Lab Puppiu, AKC Chocot11a 7
Wteka, 111 Sholl, Warmed

!

'l

CfkO\:JP••, ·,;,
M,. F~etl Lf •.. I
A

'··

two Sheflio miniatura Collies,
moltt, S12Siot.: 114-742-2050. .

Bundy Se'"f)hont Like New, Call
814-379-2113.

..

, '\

wf'f ttAPPY YOlJ GAMf, IUT
·· · TO
:ro
AI .A.·i
.

~-:---:-~-­
Groom Sloop -Pool Grooming. Faa- 1881 Old• Cutla11 Clara Body
1unng Hydra Bath. Don Sheett. Damaga, Runs Good, 4 Door. N:.,

3403.

JET
AERATION t.t01llRS

...

', 2 Aclot Arlclll

~,

USED ~PPLIANCES ready to go, call 814-Q4G-2•05,
W.shan, dryers, refrigeralora, 614·982-3752 Of 614·912-3965.
ranges . Skaggs Applianctl, 78
Vine Slreel, Call 814·448· 7398, AKC Regierartd Botton Terrier
GOOD

State Route 588, Capo Cod, 4
Badrooma, C•ntraf AIC, Full
Witll Workahop, 814·441 ·

.

1 Byttl

u:-- •

Owner, Alhen1 IMarlatta, State

AKC Reglatared Boston Terrier

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
1 ancf 2 badrllom - · f u r· Evans EnterpriHS, Jack1on, OH
nfahod lncf unfurnlahed, &amp;acuritr 1.:llf)O.S31-fl528.
depoalr raqulrad, no pets, 61_..
11112-2218.
Doll 433, 120 MB ltD, 4 MB Ram.
1 Bedroom , Super Nice, 1211,

lI

DOWN

o

lhall &amp; VliDrmed, 6wk1 Dkl. $115.

I)UPPlll, Dne mala, one female,

Two and ll'lrH bedroom mob11e Tony lama. Guaflnttad Low11t
hom11, 11ar11ng at $240·1300, Pricea At Shoo Cala,'Gaflipolia.
.....,, water and tralh 1ncludH
814-1192·2187.
• Coleman Powermata Qlntrator
4000, 110 and 220 outlets, used

440

l

Anticipating ·
the problem

garage, garden spac:e. Upper

oy, 814-IIG2·503!1

.

Pill! ,,

=

Tr1111er lor rant outllde of Pamer·

M· ~unlla

.2. .. ' '

Dbl.
Pass

no"""

3 BR houM, balh, liYinQ room w1
hardwood ttoora, kitchen 1 dinmg
area together, new roof, garage,
on Rt 2. Call 30,·175-4130 or

.en-

·

Opening lead: • Q : . ·

Goods

Bladl -

·IIPPnlua

34 GrMk le111r •

Dbl.
••

-·Ohio.

1987 Ford Taurus. 240 Homollte &amp;1HI82-7477.
relarane11, deposit &amp; no pell. cha•n 1aw, 3 Pt. Hitch, 14 inch :7"-::-:-:::-"-:---:-~
on. 7
Monthly Fl.. Program&amp; Art e,.
304-875-5162.
piowa. 3 Pt. HI tc: h• di ac. --8
5- panatvt &amp; Don't ~ill Ticka. For
2 BR. 1 Bath, Ltvol Lot Rramo3206.
Flail, Ticka, Filet, And 'HOI
dled. Fairland I Gellla County Nice 2 or 3 bacfroom houaa in PU2
Rrngs
11
CaraHellow
Gold,
1·
S~ll', Aak J 0 NORTH PRO·
mtray,
614-IIG2·5658.
Sc:hoola Call Oetaets· (81.,
1114 Carat Clullar Retail Tag: DUCE 814-4.11-11133 Allout HAP·
256·1095
Small t Bedroom House Unfur- S895 Sol: SISO: 1·112 C111tRe- PVJACKI&lt;ENNELDIP.
2-3 bedroom houM, 50x100 tot, mshed, No Pets, Near K·Mart, 1 1111Tag: $411G, Sel: S250, Or 8oth Puf1111' Palace Kannol&amp;, Boarcfinn,
located in Syracuse, appliances Window Air Condilionar, S325l 1«10, 814·25e-8850.
SIfd Serva Pu ppfto, Groomif1t,
•
•ncluded. call 81.t-992-5787 alter Mo. You Pay Gas &amp; Elactr.:, Call
Before
9
A.M
Or
Altar
g
P.M.
3 PC. EXERCISE EQUIPMENT: Bur. Sail &amp; Trldt, All Braeda.
4pm.
814-446-1822.
Profoaaionaf Quality In Good Parmonll Welcome, 814-318·
3 Bedroom Brick Home 1 112
Condition, (With Ono Of Theaa0429
~.::.·~------­
Batha, New Front ·&amp; Back Porch, 420 Mobile Homes
You Can Work Out In Tho Com·
ton And Convenience Of
Regiltlfed
Dashound, lemaft.
Now 30 Year ShingiOI, N""' Soffiat
lor Rent
Home) One Well Bond
St50, 814·1192-SIISII.
&amp; Guttel'l, New CA. Well Insulated 5 Minutes From Galhpoli&amp;. 2 Bedroom Tra•le1 On Ne•ghbor· Multr·Gym Rowing ~~.~:~~~:~.~:?!t~
Ragtsltrld Aottwll•rs 12 Wtlkl,
Small V•nyl Sided Out Building, hood Road, Water, Sewer Fur· One Schwinn Signalure
Ail Shots And Wormo~. Up To
$79,1100 814-441·1417.
nished. Rent Plus Deposit, 1!114· eft. Coat New $250 for
Cash: Ont Super Dalu 11
Da1t, Both Partnts On Prtrntlll,
446·9755.
Turbo 1000 E•trcycfl, Coat New 1250, 814·:J88.g220.
3 BR., 2 bolh rare!~. 2 "" Spring Valley area. cion Hotze; 2 Bedrcom lfllllf, Galtipclil Feny. 11.000 For S375 Cath, C.lf Earl
Hospotal. 814-&lt;46-79-&lt;q.
Rogflltro&lt;f WalmaraMr puppiaa.
304-875-7552
Topa, 81.-446.0181 .
304-1175-7740.
.
Charleston Arll -3 Bedroom, 3 btdraom mobile homo, 2 batha, • · 12• Competition Sunwoalau
lanced yard. full ... ....,..~ wood in Middleport, no pets, s 14.ggz. LHI Then 4 Monlhe Old, -~ 570
Musical
burning tire place. out bulld111QI. 6858.
Condition, 814-448-1771
Instruments
Tra•ler lor ren1 •n Gallipolis area
8 ,. ..46·6849.

G...... .

50 - d'OWW.

By Phillip Alder

2 Bedroom .unfurnilhed, 507 112 Buy or 1111. Rlvarlnt Anliquaa,
2nd St. Now Haven. Call alter 112' E. Main St,..t, on RL t2_.,
Sprn 304-875-3469.
.
Pomoror. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. ., 8:00 p.m., SUnday 1:08 10
2 Bedroom House. 2 Bedroom
Trailer N:., In GalllpoNs, S14·4_.tJ. 8:00 p.m. 814 ·g82·2528, Ruaa
....,. ·
8649 For nlormabon
Mlacellaneous
3 Bedroom hou• tor rent on Ha· 540
tr8l1 Heigl!~ 30+682-2797.
Merchandise
3 Bedrooms, With Relrlgeralor, 10 mobil ...,.. tlrto-._ good
cond. 304-t~2182.
SIDYt, S3lOIMo , 814-4411·9845.

80'a Call 304· 773·5407 after
10om

pronoun
25 Fencing call,

33 WorltMs' uan.

Avalla.,.e soon, nice 3 bedroom,

Rental Butineu Opporlun •ty or

Do

financing, 814·982·7104 aher
8pm

IUbmiiiM .

4&amp; Dow'l IOUI1CI
4&amp;Tix.tlme

se....._
..
57 Cltlbl!ll

31 AeviM
32 Pitcher

West North · East ,

STOIIAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon .
Ron EYina En11rproaaa,
1·80fl.53HI528.
White

Household

B

hentlclrY

42 Germlll!

53.-'fAngMi
114 Nlldlit CIM
t6 Of 1M jllwn

•· 27 AGirHa Wlkl

South

Uprlgh~

NiltO wv 31)4.755-5885.

I ~:::;;.::;:.:.:::;:..::.:.:::.:.:::::=:::;._~ 510
340 Business and

1• parool&amp;, ~om 1.210 11 .8 acrea.
soma owrlooktng Racine, p1rt1al

n

Want"' to Rent

41 Gtlfllcl, Ill ':

20 In I dlllk:ult
24 F..,lntn.

,

'·

311 Auto.·rioer .
At._.
40 lftW

52 ~~~~~

M
poaltlon
... &amp;WOld

• A 10 9 5 3 2

i

'I

1

Vulnerable: Neither •
"
Dealer: East r

MERCHANDISE

$825 down, S15tllmo. Frae dtfiv·
&amp; setup. Only at Oakwood

area.814·3flfl.llll711
An raaf eiiBte sdvertfslng In
1!111 ne....,.per Is lliljod 10
lho Federal Flir Housing Ao1
ol1968 -makes Illegal
to ac~verase "a~ praler8nc8,
llmffalfon or dfla'.mfr •lion
basad on race, color, rllfgfon,
sex familial 81Bilfl or nellonaf
orfgln, or ·~ onenlfon to
make·~ SUCh~"""'"'""·
fimilallon o r - . ·

304·773-5651. Maaon WV.

.: \

•AKQ

Ruoma lor renl · week or monlh.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Holll.

wv.304-755-5885.

t Acre lootera, wallf, uptic, ga.
rage, blacktop road, in Addison

Free t -800-467-5586 EXT
12170.

tomatic, new paint, nice car,

814-IIG2-8134.

a.

Toll

IU ·

12400. 814-11411-2877

'tntral a1r, 40x1 0 deck Included,

·

July 11 · 12, corner Success &amp; Easy Work! Excellent Pay I As·
248 TV's. atandl, tools, adull, Hmble Producll at Home. Call

'88 Ch.. y Baroua GT, V-6

=

31'Yllil rolt .
3e "-11'1 twtn
31 Elitllleme •

avllitblit
11 Picnic epolltr

El- 1 .

•Kt4
•B7
•74
•QJ' 3
•JI0972
•4.3
'·
~ Soutb
• 8
• A 10 6; 2'
t A 10 98

Location Family Pride Pork. Gallipofia Farry, priced on lnapac:ion.
304-875-2680.

UIICIIngs
Middleport
Pleasant. WV
AAIEOE
.
Commerc1al Buiidtr~n For Slle On
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
•
VIcinity
On\181 wanted· OTR Clan A COL FURNACE fa The Moll EHicitnt Route 7 Crown Ctty, 100 Ft. •60
wJHavUat, 18 Monlh Exp. Physi- And lowaal EmllliOnl Outdoor Fl. 2 Bslhl I KtiCtltn. 105,000.
7/10198 thru 7112198, 9am-8pm. cal &amp; Q(ug Screen, Lea\le Mes - Woad Furnace On The Uarket. 81 ,.·251- 1270.
36279 Rocksprings Rd .. PUmtray,
Cenlral Boiler Ia Currently look· ProfetttonaliBullnass butld•ng tar
OH 45769. Furniture, eppllances, sage. 1-800-742.0176.
earn 1000s -~·, stu~ing o~'
ing for A Ouolity Daafar In Thio sublaelt.
glassware and much rrore.
........ Immediate Ar... Far lnl«madan s
" Located et 509 S. Ttoird
at home. 8a your """· Sll~ On Bacoming A Deafer 01 For A
uaa~ ~kldfapor~ 011io. E•collenr
Atl Yard Sa loa Must Bo Paid 'In
No experience. Free sup· Free Brochure Call 1_800 _248 _ lor pt'rfliC:Ian office or teal estate
Advance. Oeadlme : 1:OOpm the
info, no obligllion . Send ..aa 1 Or 1-2 1a. 712..zs75.
apace. Ample street parking.
day before the ad is to run, SunE. to Prestige Unit l, P.O.
A~allable lmmedialely. Contact
day &amp; Monday edition - 1:OOpm
1Q56Qg, Winter Spnnga FL.
R.L Kunz, 614·593-3375 oolltct
Fr~day.
32719
350 Lots Acreage

a.

lhoollflring.

• Q J 4

Autos lor Sale

24x40 Double w1de Redman, 3
bedroom, 2 bath, 1'1111 pump,
porch, furnished or unturnllhad.

I

49 Ati1or ....,

11 SpanJah ~~eto

.865
Ealt

• Weal

710

....,

18 Bring up
17 Singing

OH0-98

• Q J s
• K 6 52

TRf\N SPORTATION

payments. $290/mo. Set'ioua in·

Need a babysitter? Call Tracy at

COOAOINlTOA OF
PHARMACY SERVICES

Galhf)OIIS. Frr. fl.2. Sot.. fl.2.

'

81&lt;4 ~ 985 ·

3362 anytime.

Sun Valley Nur11ry School.

All Yard Sales Mual Be Paid In

I

LPN wil ~. Ill in "'I home, nonsmoking eii.YlronmenL available

Not;th
M K f&amp;

1=

NIA; Crosswc,.rd Puzzle

BRIDOI'·

on 712198 at Pomeroy field. Will ·

I

Tb'8 DailY Sentinel• Page 11

"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

LOST Black &amp; white, ferMI&amp; cat,
71mot okl lf'l Mason. Reward. 304·

·.

.

Rttldential Or Com,...,cial Wirtng, New Strvlc. Or Aapoira, Lr-

COftlld Efaculcian. W.lah Eltc·
~ 814· 448·t850, GallipOIII,

i
.!

' Graph Matchmaker instanfly reveals CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..11n. 11, General
: -_ __.__........_ _ , which elgns are romantically perleet for conditions look very promising lor you
~ - MaH $2.75 to·Matchmaker. c/o litis today You will have a remarf&lt;abfe ability
\ '
nawopaP.r. P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill 10 remove any obalade in your way.
Station, New YOI1&lt;, NY 1015~1:
AOUAIUUS (Jen. 20-Fab. 11) Your
BERNICE
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22, It a close fnend employ,es might have 10 be managed
BEDEOSOL hla moved far away. but Ia constantly on with a firmer hand than usual today .
• . your mind loday,;try fo re-eslablish 4?011' Exercise your authority Wyou have to. but
..
'
A'
tac:1. Both Of you Qan benefit fnlm 1M can.. dtln1 overdo .K.
,, Vl~ (Aug. 23o:flepl.. 22, The poulbiW· PJSCES (feb. 21Uilal ;h 20) Y,our IOtJnd .
'•
riz....o.· ·
!Y 01 aCNiv;ng an .ll1pOftant obfKtlV8 ~ r ·~~~anclal J~ wfff enlbtuou to prof·
~~ .... , be good todly. You Wtl lleveto tyiOtivatt n today. Truat your insflnc:te and' do not
-all'~a..y
,..It, and yout gOal muat be elgnlf~ - 'take~ rilka.
· •
•
·
.• centfor1hfoorouoit
1\RIES (141rch' 21·Aprlf 11) You! I*"
," 7
. LIBRA (llapL IS-Oct ·23) M cfder·!IIIO- -W!M1M impressed by your behllrfor today
;,
~Y· ~uly 1 ' 199
l· ~iale whq
alway• r••dy lo· help you 1*8~ you will l'Y to do lh8 moat good
:tn the year ahead you might ~Je!:ome migl11 try to give you ~ you'd rlllher 10r ~ moat people.
'
&gt;l lilvolved 1n an 11\dNIIOf that transtorrns not haar. Listen anyway. btcluH you TAURUa (April ZO.. .y 20) Try to "'- SometNng OIJidlled Into some~~* Ill new · titay - the benefit ·eventually.
c:orialdenote and he_,ul 1odly H people
.. a~d niCIIflllY . Tlt ft could be a very 'SCORPIO jOct. 24-Nov. 22) You ~y need your aaotetance. but lilo be reelil·
' '*'illrig ~ VltlllQ. •
IICelve a bonuS for ~ you rendtr tic: 1 You wiN not have the lbilfly to help
; CAN~ (JuM 21..,wly at) Y9u will • today. Howevor, vdu will hive to wo'lk everyqne.
Mvealillght edQ!I' ~ tlftnl!l _,.,... ,_, Wyou ..WIJ)gal Iii benllltl.
QIIIINI (May 21·June ~0) In your
7jtlve litueflolll todiy. I&lt;Mp tlilt in the IAGflTAliiUS (NOW: ta-DIC:, ~) ~ inVc)IV8IIIInlt with fliendllod!Y· you wt11
_,'lllick Of your mi(ld II you- chill tgtld you' eytl open for opportunttiea In a be thil. conteet pereon H cor\'tpllc:atlont
..,eone elM. KrMM whirl to .lOOk for parqwolhfp llfllllllll*llloday. You may ariM. You muat be~~
''rom~ and you'U l!!'d rt. T_M IUirQ- •a~~trvajiloltW~pariiV8,..

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_ __ _-......._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......_._ _ _ _ _____m~_......___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~-- - ------

\

�.

.... .._

.,.... '

..
WedniNday, July 10;

Obi() Lottery .

....

' ,·

I

.PEPSI
PRODUO$

''

Kicker:

.8-7+7-4-.9

Pick 3:
8-5-7
Plck4:

Sports on Page 4 . · .

CUBE 24 PK 12 OZ.

s

· Super Lotto:
. 29-31-38-41-42-47

lndfans' 2nd
half of season
begins tonight

'

STORE HOURS ·
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·IO PM
·• 298 SECOND ST. ·
POMEROY, OH. .

'0-3-o-s

69

DOUBLE COUPO

EVERYDAY • SEE

1

.

516
Pork R1bs •••••••••••~~..... ,

120Z

.29
Italian Sausage••.••••••••. 2
·
s· .391
$ 49
T·Bone Steaks ••••••••••~· 4 Bacon •••••••••••••••~.~..... 1.
$ 59
Rump Roast ••••••••••~... 1
$- 99
Round Roast •••••••••••~~ 1
s·
9(
Franks ................~~••••
.$

PURN~LL'S FRESH BRA~WORSTL~R

USDA CHOICE BEEF

. ,

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

BAR S BRAND SliCED

.

.

·

s

·69

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Thursday, July. 11, 1996
.

: By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
. Sentinel Newt St8tf
: A budget for 1997 of nearly $1.3 million was approved at Wednesday
: night's meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.
.
. Anticipated expenditures for the 1997 year show a decrease of about
• $26,000. Council expects revenue of $1,391,142, with expenditures of
: S1,263,375. In 1996, anticipated revenue was $.1,245,037, with expenditures
: of $1 ,289~725.
· The 1997 budget reveals in the respective village funds anticipated rev: enue and expcriditures, listed respectively, as follows: General fund, $523.350,
: SS18.200; utility, $12,825, $8,550; flfC, $78,775, $75,925; police pension:
: $5,592, $S,92S; street, $185,000, $180,000; state highway, $10,400, $9,000;
: cemetery, $19,000, $16,000; recreation, . ~.....()()(). $3,000; safety, $2,900,

KRAFT
BUCKET BEEF
$ ,;·9 VELVETTA
,.""...bed Steak•••••••••••••• . ~~~
·SHEllS
PORK Bun s.TEAKS oR couNTRY STYLE
?
LB.

.•'•

..

''

enforceme~t.

:Juveniles
~ senten·ced
..~ for

break-·in

i

..

1

PEAK PINTO
·BEANS
"

4LB.

•

'

92 oz.

VIVA PAPER
TOWELS
·

Tomatoes.~••••••••~·~•••••• 6

(

$1 '69
·
Ind•1v1·d ua1s1·1ces.........
.,,..

BORDON AMERICAN

.

.

Cottage Cheese .::::·....
Pork NBeans•••••••••• 4

Franks

FESTIVAL

SJ
.
SJ
59
Peanut Buner•••••••••••••

JIF

FREEZER QUEEN

•
Entr185

18oz.

SUGAR

DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIX ·

UMIT1 PLEASE

•

I

'•

18·18.50Z

5'L8.

l'
.·
t .

·

STARKIST

28 Ol.

••••••••••••••

,.

TUNA
6.50Z:

2 .13 59C

~• • • • • • • •

TWO INJURED IN CRASH -lWo people -•InJured when I lmlll plane CI'IIIMchlonglkleiWIIh..._CountyroedncwltiMitofBei.,..Wednlldl". Theplanecllppldltl'lt.blfore
hltllng the ground. (AP)
'
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w,.-•

•

t

·

$:169
·:

'

F LGERS

. t. .(OfFEE
.;$;: :9'9

(

SJ49 .

.

Ice Cream •••••!'!::~••••

15.5 01.

79(,

·

$ 99

.--

,,

h
..: -&lt;:Air travelers
escane
Belnre
eras
,
,. , I' • , I '
:,
: . BELPRE
A sin~enear

KALKAN

MoundsVille, W.Va.
Anthony Pic:dinont, a 36-ycar!'
old flight 'ins«ructor froi'n Pittsbdrgh, was in aitieat condition at
Grant Medical Center in·Colum• The plane went down Wednes· bus, said a nuning•irpervisor wtio
: day afternoon on a WuhinJion·· ,would not give lie{ name. Hc'hlrrd
: County rottd. Stale HiJhwiy ~· a. broken ann ape! head injuries. ·
: Dispatcher nmolhy (louct1....,,
. The two-ICII plane bou~
Corey Stricklin, 16, ofTriadel·
: into a creek bed and tw:k onto the
phia. W.Va., w~ in stabte.condition
: ro.dalioutfivemilel ~of}lei- . ·• St., Joseph's Hospi~ 111 J,'ark·
· llN·
• ·
cisburg, w.va. He -lata' Uri: Ooucn Aid the plane· r.t Ilkferrecl to Wheelitll ilo,pital, but
. Cl! off from MMihall Coubty .Air·
His ~condition . was not being
(AP) -

:engine ·plane cruhed near . this
·Ohio River city. injuring a night
:instn~etor and his student

(AT',FOOD
s.soz.

..

390Z.

port

released, said a nurse who would
not give her name.
. It was not'clear who was flying
the plane, the patrol said. '· ·
A witness. said she heard the
engine quit minute&amp;J befote tbc,
'crash. ·
'
"I heanl the engine c'!.t oft' inc!
1 heard it try to start aga~n, but it
didn't," sa,jd Patsy Grimm. "I
bel\fd the loud screechitt~ sound

:just after·tJill.'~

,

, •. \
~lpre ia in IOiatlietil Ohio,·
aa:oss the river from Ptdersblq.·
W.Va.

.

1;;.-----~-~~~--------:--...,--~-...,...,~-~~~

LIMIT 2 Pt.EJ.Sf;

I'

hope it would be a two-man race ." ot docs.
Interviewed on the Don lmus
On Wcdpesday Lamm said he
radio program, Dole said he didn't wouldalmostwclcomcPcrotintothc
know what impact a P9rot race would race, reasoning it could boost inter·
have on his own campaign. " Well, est and ucit~ment.
nobody seems to :kt)ow. Some polls
. "I£ I coufd ~ fbe.,nomi"ation in
indicate he takes ri\ore (votes) froni ... thJS party ,IIC·~.creatod ,,, obviously
Clinton this rinie around."
that's !he ~· lbenado bco:ause you
Perot said he would make a sec· start off with' ·a certain David and
ond White House bid if he is nomi· Goliath quality," he said from San
nated by the Reform Party, which he Jose, .Calif., where he wa.~ camcreated. in the wake of his 1992 run. parg11tng.
•
Four years ago, Perot spent $60 mil·
This week, the Reform Pany is
lion of his own money and took 19 mailing a write-in survey 10 its 1.3
percent of lhc vote.
million members to determine who
Perot called Lamm "a fine man" will be listed on a nomination ballot
but said he is best qualiriCd ,to cany at the party's August convention.
his party's banner.
'People may write-in whomever
"If anybody should do this, 1 they wish, but only Perot's and
should do it I'Ql in a unique position Lamm 's names arc mentioned in the
to do it," Pcrot .said. "A lot ofpeo- informational material . ,
pie who would Wfllll 'to do it and
As Perot built the Reform Party,
!"iSht ev~n be betler doinJ itlftn' t he .epeatedly laid that the party and
IU posltton to dO it. wouldn't hivtl its principleure tilaer tlwr he is. .
the fRCdont to do It I ~ve thit lieo- · · "This is ·noi lboullllC" ho said
·dom."
•
· ·
·
again and .pin wtren'
if he
While' Perot is a billionaire wno would run.
c1111 spend u .miiCb of his own mOn· ·
On. Wednesday, he stopped short
ey u be wants to .on his own~ ohaytng that hewouldcampaipfor
paip; Lamin has modeS! penonlll the nomination. But Pr,rouaid he will
~ourccs and just $6,000 In his cam· ~SJI?nd to his suppor1en - much
pa1gn cofl'en.
.hke '" 1992 when he promised to run
Perot will have to rasht for the forpresidentifsupportcnputhimon
nomination, to be decided by party :the ballot in all SO states.
membenM~COifvenlion
"If the people want me to (run)
· .~!._cmR~~~ drew.J~ ·next moillb.
a •tlJrco.tcnn ~~ly,'the'be,!dfi·~,_lsalllha~·
~ """' ~ ·p~..........., ·JOvcntor and lirelj)DI Dc!nocrat, """" aor
,... rve ye~n. 1116 the
, ~~ D,olledn
, ,who saidl
would
' "I declhell'edwouldhiscllldiciKy 'IUetday, say- othi~ly reason '·!. do it il because I love
wi""Y.·...-~ wou. trun.
.IRI
run 10111111« whit Per· . 1 country.

By LAURA MECKLER
Alloclltld Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Challenged
for the leadership of his own party,
. Ross Perot said today he is best qual·
ified io be the Refonn Party's presi·
· dential nominee and will do "what·
ever it lakes" to win.
"The American people want me to
. do this. I worked night and ·day for
the last five years on this subject,"
Peror said just two days after fonner
Colorado Gov. Ricbard Lamm
·announced he would seek the party's
presidential nomination.
Asked why he had not formally
announced his candidacy, Perot said
today he already has. adding, "I will
· to do II· and whatevcr rt· ·-~conunue
.......s
... whatever it takes to leave a better
.country for my children and grandchildren. If anybody should do it. I
should .do it, an~ .l will do~~~~ I'm
· ID a umque positiOn to do It . L ' .
· ·Pe.rot, interviewed on AIIC~s
·"Good Morning America." al~ laid.
he wanted the Refonn Party's nom•·
· nation race "~ ~n ... and ~ don:t
wutto do anything that will Ult thts
thing in my fa~or. "
"We have to be resll?nsive to the
peopl~ who created this party, and
they have 8 strong desire for me to
participate," Perot said Wednesday
··on CNN:S "Lany King Live."
•

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Lamm an_
nouncem·ent .pu~h'~ .
Perot to declare his cand·ldacy

•

12 oz.

BORDON

1

Coastal dwellers flee
approaching Bertha

..

ROU

. .

of~

By ESTES THOMPSON ·
A11oclatecl Prell Writer
, NAGS HEAD. N.C.- Hurricane Bertha and its 100 mph winds swirled
offshore today dit a path toward the Carolinas, sending coastal residents
scrambling inland and turning bustling beaches into shosttowns.
, Evacuation orders were lifted in ..Fiorida early today. ·But down the lone
· hiahy.oay along North Carolina's Outer Banks between Nags Head and Cape
Hatteras, restaurants and stores were closed. Rental cOllages Wele empty 1111d
campgrounds d~rted. ·
.
.
Atanoamusementpark. a plaster gorilla stood watch over .the empty playliT&lt;!Und and boarded-up storefronu,. where men:hanu left sips like "Kiss
· MerBertha" or "Go Away ·B~rtha" to express· their feelings.
Kevin fllld Tet7Y Kumanga of Woodbridge, Va., loidecl ·betongings itlto
their slation wagon at Nags Head for the trip home.
"We're two for tWo. We've been to North Carolina twice, • Kumanga said.
"Feliuab us out last year, and now Bertha this year."
In South Carolina, Gov,. David Beasley urged residents of all barriet island
and beach fronts to "gather your family, pack a couple of bags and move
inlalld immediately."
Officials in Beaufon COunty went even further, making house-to-house
pleas for residents to leave.
1
"P.\lP.!1!,~1~¥JPIIIC .~llli?:Clo9d luc;lc•IO them,~· laid 70-}'CM-bld HcnSdiulte, who has lived on Harbor lslil\d in Beaufort County for a decade.
"I' ve been through hurricanes before, and it doesn't make sense to go anywhere before we know whc;re die stonn's going to hit." ·
· National Hurricane Centet foi'Cl:astcrs said today that Bertha, which car·
tier threatened .much of the Atlantic Seaboard, was taking aim at the Car·
olinas with 100 mph ~inds and an expected stonn sulje· of 8-to-10 feet.
"It is going to head into the Carolinas. People in the Carolinas need to
S8th and spent 96 of his office pay very close attention and do what emergency management officials arc
allowance. Bunning also .was the telling them to do," hurricane specialist Mu Mayfield said,
22nd biggest spender among all
Computer models predict Bertha will.probably .make landfall in North CarRepublicans, said NnJ spokesman olina, J\'rhaps by early Friday, with stonn;force winds )!eing felt as early as
Pete Scpp, Bunning did not return this afternoon. He emphasized hurricanes arc unpredictable, and South Cartelephone calls.
· olina residents shouldn 't let tl)eir guard down.
Each House member annually
Around 8 a.m.. the hurricane was 350 miles south of Wilmington, N.C.
receives air allowance to run his It was moving north-northwest at about 13 mph, with hurricane-force winds
office, with the amount varying from that stRtched out II 5 miles.
'
district to district to account for geoAfter hurricane Wl!fRings were posted Wednesday from Cape Canaveral,
gtaphicil differences in rent and Fla., to the Virginia line there was a chain reaction as the stonn.l;l'larched north.
travel cost$.
·Hurricane warnings were 'called off for Florida early today, blit remained in
effect from Brunswick, Ga., to the Virginia line.
·
Members are not allowed to
NASA wheeled the space shuttle Atlantis off its Cape Cwverallallnch
exceed their allowances, nor can pad to the shelt~r of a hangar. Officials at the Olympic yachting venue In
they cll'ry unspent mQney forward for Savannah, Ga., started moving boats inland, and the Navy Ol'ifered its ships
use in a future year. If they do not use in Norfolk, Va., out to sea to avoid being battered against the docks. Amtrak
all of their allowance in a given year, canceled or cut short southbound trains, and President Clinton cam:clod i
the unspent funds remain in the planned fli!!ht to Florida.
'
·
Treasury.

BAR BRAND JUMBO

.

con~t call~ n~t

The
only for removal
house, but removing
dump site at the rear, which has slid into a p~ny on Mulbeny Avenue,
along slabilizing the area, according to Kathy tfysell, clef'k..tRasurer.
.•
In ad~ition to a discussion about pOtholes and weeds in the village, thcR
weresome complaints about the cable company, reception and the channel
changes which has taken place.
,councilman George Wright talked about the need for e1tended hours at
the Meigs County Courthouse to accommodate working patrons. He said that
Sue Maison of t11e License Bureau plans to address the issue in a public let·
ter.
,
·
, Mayor Frank Vaughan presided at the meeting, aneniled by.Cierk-Trea·
sluer Hysell, and CCJI!ncil membeq Geri Walton, John Musser, Lany Wehnurg,
George Wright and Bill Young.

..

USDA ~HOICE BEEF BOTTOM

FRESH

·-

AGennlll Co. ....I Pill u

$2,000; permanent tax, $11,800, $10,000; law
$3,400, $2,SOO; ·
COPS FAST gran~ $18,500, $18,500; building fund, $6,200, $6,100; water:
$332,000, $300,000; sewer, Sl!O;OOO, $100,000; guaranty meter,lf21,000,
$8,000; cclliCtery endowment. $39,000, no expenditure; perpcuial care,
$7,400, no expenditure.·
.
The budget is a guide to revenue and e~penditures anticipated in 1997
with actual appropriations to be ma4e in Jahuary, it was noted.
,
During d)e meeting, a second reading was given to the amended payroll
ordinance, which provides for wage increases for part·time workers based
oil years of ~rvicc:.
.
Council voted to have Homecreek Enterprises remove a house on Laurel
Street, )llhich has teen condemned, at a cost of $6,200, half of which will
be paid by the village' and half by the Meigs County Health Department.

r

$139

en.tine

•Pomeroy Council ·approv,s $1.3 million budg

(

t

\

''
. ••

~47,N0.53

' ~ llectlone, 12 . . . .

UITER
'

.,

·a i·

7UP
PRODUCTS·

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Clear torllght, Iowa 1,.
the 501 •. Friday, moatly
aunny. Hight In the 801.

'L-_ .

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LI.MIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 13, 1996.

..
'

'

Po~eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

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.v

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