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": .
.,••

....
Page 10 • The Dally Sentl~l

Tuesday, J·u ly 16, 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.•.'

'

Woman educates. others to cycle of spQusal abuse 11
.

Within three months, Bill. began
throwing things at me during arguments. Then, he began binge drink·
ing on weekends. He had temper
tantrums, and his language was dis1995, Lo1 At~,eles
lima Syndical&amp; lnd Ctegusting.
I became really frightened
aaon S)'ndica1t.
when he put his fist through doors
and into walls. I lost track of how
many of my possessions he
By ANN LANDERS
destroyed
when he was angry. There
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 32·
were
times
when I actually feared
year-old woman who has endured a
for
my
life.
lot, and now, I want to share my
So guess what? I married him
experience with your readers .
anyway.
Big mistake. Ann, please
Maybe ,it will help them.
tell
your
readers not to believe an
My first serious boyfriend intra·
abuser
who
·says, " I will never do it
duced me to drugs and alcohol when
again."
He
or
she WILL do it again.
I was 16. I broke away from him
I
guarantee
it.
when I was 21 and moved in with
Here is what I recommend: If you
"Bill," an attorney.
manage to live through a violent

Ann
Landers

(

scene. pick up your keys and tell business college, and I will soon be
him you are going to get some carry- ·enjoying life again. •• A Winner at'·
out for dinner. Go to your car, drive Last in Stockton, Calif.
away and NEVER return. File
Dear Winner: Thanks on behalf
immediately for divorce.
of all the people you helped today. If
It's been over a year s ine~ our you can do it, so can they ··and your
papers were final, and I still have to triumph will give them hope and
take Bill to court every time l want courage. Bravo!
to collect the alimony the judge
Dear Ann Landers: I am 70 years
ordered him to pay. He ruined my old, active and independent both
credit, and last week, he roughed me financially and physically. I've read
up in the parking lot of his office many letters in your column about
when I went to get the check he has adult children who still live at home
owed me since February. I have "taking advantage of their parents."
· nightmares about him hurting me There's another side to that story.
again.
My son, "Howard," who is sin·
If my letter helps only one person gle and 37, moved back home when
get away from a similar situation, my husband died five years ago. I
my suffering will not have been in · have a big h011se and wanted to
vain. Last week, I graduated from remain in it. Howard makes a mod·

Wolfe to
exhibit
quilts

est salary and coul~ . not afford the
comforts he has heii.
We lead entire~ . separate lives.
He is very gregarious and has both
female and male friends. I do not do
his laundry, cook his meals or provide him with any!l!.!ng other than
shelter. He :keeps up' the lawn and
does all the repair work. He also
takes care df my do~ when I go out
of town . Actually; .Howard does
more to help me than the other way
around.
'

I have all the privacy I need , and
so does he. It works out well for
both of us. I feel more secure, and
Howand is saving money. You keep
publishing letters about how terrible
it is to have adult children move

''
back home, which might make simicj
people wary of dbing it. ~lease . 1~!
your readers lqlow Jhllt m many
instances, it can be a big plus !Qr
both parties. •• St. Pete, Fla.
'

COMFORT ASSURED.

AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER

At least 35 people have been
killed when the rear lift~ates popped
open on Chrysler m1i11vans dunng
crashes and they were ejected,
according to a government database
of consumer reports.
Sheridan was a product planner
who from 199~ through 1994 coor·
dinated a safety leadership team
made up of engineers and other
employees.
Chrysler had sought to keep Sheri·
dan 's deposition under court seal in
a Palestine, Texas, f'awsuit but the
seal was lifted at the close of business
Friday.
"The Sheridan deposition confirms that Chrysler knew its liftgate
latches were dangerous, were weak·
er than the comnetition - but
Chrysler did nothing about it and
exposed millions of consumers to the
risk of ejection," said E. Todd Tracy,
a Dallas lawyer representing nine
people in Texas and Oklahoma suing

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Kimes
of Racine are grandparents.
SORORITY MEETING
A visit to Our House in Gallipolis
was included on a day's outing of
members of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
recently.
In tlie group which had luncheon

~

. Chrysler officials long have saiCS
there was nothing wrong with t~
minivans. Negative publicity aboi£1
the latches , they said, prompted t~
company to conduct a "service cam•
paign" to ensure public confidence In
the latches. ·
:;:
,
Court documents in the lawsu(t
show other companies with minivalll!
were using a so-called dual-stage
latch, a latch with a primary and sec~
ondary)atch, while Chrysler had a
single latch.
.~·
~

~

at the Stowaway following a tour of
Our House were Carolyn Gruescr,
Martha McPhail, Jane Walton, Jean
Powell, Carol McCullough, Carol
Adams, Velma Rue, Ann Rupe, Flori··
da chapter member Mar2arct Stcwll!l~
RevaVaughan, Jean Werry, .and a for~
mer member, June VanVranken of
.Virginia.
.

By RICHARD BENEDETTO
USA TODAY
FAJARDO, Puerto Rico- Pres·
ident Clinton told the nation 's governors Tuesday that if Congress fails
to pass a welfare reform bill he can
sign this year he will use an executive order to require welfare recipi·
ents in all 50 states to work within
two years.
Some 28 states have work require·
ments and time limits on benefits, but
Clinton would use the order to
expand it nationwide.
"I far prefer a bill passed by Con·
gress and I know you do too. So lets
agree one way or another we' II make
work and responsibility the law of the
· land," the president said in a televised
speech to the National Governors
Association, which wound up four
days of meetings here on Tuesday.
Congress is shaping a welfare
reform bill in hopes of putting one on
the president's desk before the scs·
sion ends in early Au,gusl. But Clin·
ton said he wants Congress to
"improve" the bill along the lines of
.a bipartisan measure put fo~ward by
several Republican and Democratic
members of the House and Senate.
But Republican governors say
they have some problems with that
bill in that it still leaves too much
power in the hands of the federal gov·

starts rise
WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing
starts rose U percent in J unc as
builders rushed to meet consumer
demand despite the highest mortgage ,
rates in more than a year. Single-family construction hit a two-year high .
Activity was mixed. with starts
increasing in the South and West and
declining in the Nonheast and Mid·

-~ent with regard to welfare pro·

g;./,;; design and rules.

"That's not the bill we want," said
Iowa GOP Gov. Terry Branstad.
But Clinton, sounding an opti·
mistic note, said agreement is within
reach .
"We must no let this opportunity
slip form our grasp, as it has too
many times before," he said.
Clinton was preceded by Repub·
lican presidential candidate Bob
Dole, who, also speaki ng via 1V,
questioned whether Clinton was sin·
cere about welfare reform. He criticized the president for already veto·
ing two welfare reform bills and
reneging on a promise to approve
within 30 days requests by slates to
engage in experimental programs to
improve their own welfare systems.
"Thirty-day approval has proven
to be an empty pledge," Dole said,
noting it still takes an average 210
days for the wai vers to be granted.
The-back-to-back speeches by the
1996 presidential rivals abruptly end·
ed the biparti san spirit that up to that
point had marked the governors'
meetings. And Republican governors, who had been saying the Dole
campaign needed some spark, leapt
to his defense in the verbal battle with
Clinton.

west .

The Commerce Department said
today construct ton of new homes and
apartments totaled 1.48 million at a
seasonally adJusted annual rate. up
from a revised 1.46 million in May.
The May total initially was estimat·
ed at 1.43 million.
Analysts had expected construe·
tion to edge up lo just a 1.45 million
rate in June .
Starts have bounced up and down
in recent months as huildcrs atlempt·
cd to gauge the market in the face of
rising financing costs. They had risen
5 percent in April. In a 1.51 million

WASHINGTON (AP) - New
uncertainty about the health risks of
indoor radon exposure has been
raised by a study that found no
increased incidence of lung cancer in
Finnish houses where the coforless,
orderless gas is present.
Americans have spent about $400
million testing forthe radioactive gas
and renovating homes with high lev'cis. But experts said Tuesday the
Finnish study a·nd others with simi·
lar results now suggest the minimum
'residential level of the gas that pos·
.cs a significant cancer risk is not
known .
The new study, published today,
analyzed residential exposure to
radon among I ,055 lung cancer
patients in Finland and compared that
with lhc radon exposure of 1.544
people without . lung cancer.
Researchers al the Finnish Centre for
Radiation and Nuclear Safety con·
eluded that "radon exposure does not

appear to be an important cause of
lung cancer."
- Tlu: study appears in the Journal
of the National Cancer Institute.
John D. Boice Jr., ·a former
National Cancer Institute chief of
radiation epidemiology, praised the
study and said. "It raises concerns
about the validity of risk for the low
doses experienced in the home ."
But he also said, "There is no
question· that radon causes lung can·
cer. The uncertainty is whal is the level of risk from low dose expos~_!('
Radon is a gas that forms from the
decay of uranium and radium in soil
and rocks. When inhaled, the gas can
leave in the lungs radioisotopes that
emit low levels of radial ion. Over
time, this can damage the lungs and
cause cancer. What is uncenain is the
level that poses a significanl nsk.
The Environmental Protection
Agency first issued warnings about
radon in the 1980s

Fire claims ninth victim
after he sustained a head injury durHUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) The death toll from a fire that ing a 1987 skateboarding accident,
destroyed an Ohio fireworks store was being held in the Lawrence
County Jail .
rose to nine Tuesday.
He is c'fiarged with eight counts of
Ka1hlene G. Wilks. 71, of Procinvoluntary
manslaughter m tbc tire .
lorville, died at Cabell Huntington
It
was
unclear
·if Hall would be
Hospital from injuries she rece ived
charged
in
the
latest
death. County
after someone set tire to fireworks
Prosecutor
J.
B.
Collier
was out of the
inside the Ohio River Fireworks
office
and
co
uld
not
immediately
be
store in Scottown. ~bout IS miles
reached
10
comment
Tuesday.
north of Huntington , on July 3.
No one else was charged . Collier
Two other victims from the fire.
has
said three people who accompa·
which injured 12 people as shoppers
nicd
Hall to the store that day took
st3iii'pcdcd toward the store 's two
polygraph
tests that showed
exits to escape the fire, remained in
"absolutely
no
evide nce of decep·
the hospital. Both were in good con·
tion
."
dition Tuesday.
A county grand jury will considTodd Hall. 24, of Proctorville, has
.er
the
case Aug . 5.
been charged with setting the fire.
Hall, who underwent a lobotomy

WereThe Inside Guys.

Logan Daily News files action
against Hocking County sherriff
LOGAN (AP)- The Logan Daily News has taken legal action
against the Hocking County Sheriff's
ffice, claiming that the office does
t regularly release all of its crime
re rts.
t newspaper filed a mandamus
Friday with the Ohio Supreme Court,
asking that it compel Sheriff James
Jones to release the documents.
Editor Dwight Crum said The
Daily News "tried unsuccessfully to
resolve the issue without legal action.
"It's unfortunate that we have to
take this step," Crum said. "But the
fact of the matter remains these
reports are clearly a matter of publit
record. Jim Jones may be county

(~
.
~

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
'
1.·.800·516·2932
,

.

"•'

sheriff. but thai doesn 't mean he's
above complying with the law."
Each report is numbered, and the
newspaper uses the numbers to track
missing or incomplete reports. Some
of the reports the newspaper had not
seen had been filed for several weeks,
Crum said.
Jones said Tuesday that "it's not
the way that they ' re saying," ·but
deferred further comment until conferring with county Prosecutor
Charles Gerken, who represents the
sheriff's office in legal matters.
Harry Franken, a Supreme Court
spokesman, said he did not know
when the matter will go befone the
justices .. •

•

•

rate .

-#t1'

&lt;

DelnOI~Stlrat~tfila"1~n

d&lt;l&lt;

..,._.,.,

Integrating computer
_t!'Chnology Into today'a claairooms will be glv·
en·by teams of Melga High School students at
the ,.lgs County.Falr next month. Todd Gard·
ner, Meigs Local· School Dlstrict'atechnologv
coo~I~ator, began training saaalons Tuesday

for the students who will be working In the
booth. The goal will be to enlighten fairgoers
on ac!lool technology programs to be offefed
In Melga Local Schools this fall. (Photo by
Charlene Hoeflich)

No link found between
indoor rsdon,·ltmg cancer· :~~1i!!er~~h.!d!,.QIYI.:... . . .. .. . . ".

'

•

,..------Something new---- Housing

Fight drags on

•
319 S. 2ND AVE~:
992·4485

35 conta
AGennett co. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 17, 1996

·over welfare reform

'
Chrysler over the minivan latch. •
Chrysler spokeswoman Loti
McTavish said Monday that Chryslet
would try to protect competitively
sensitive business informatioj:&amp;
including statements that "create~?
inaccurate and unwarranted portra,..
al ofthe company's position on safe~
ty matters."
~

scrapbook

Partly cloudy tonight,
muggy, low near 70.
Thursday, hazy, humid,
high in upper 80s.

.

Vol. 47, NO. 52
2 Sectlona, 12 Pagea

THE HEAT PUMP HEATS, COOLS AND SAVES
.

Buckeye 5:

ent1ne

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Ce,.
lucy Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles;
Calif. 90045
,

The Best Company For your Job!

We l}.re

8035

•

SAVING MONRY WILL PUT ASMILE ON YOUR FACE, TOO!
;;®IAL

Pick 4:

race

12-18-24-26~27

AFTER
BUYING A HEAT PUMP

"I am amazed, my payments are $50.00
per month and my utility budget went
down over $60.00 per month. It not only
pays for itself, ·but even pays me to own it.
I recomme"JJ· a Carrier to everyone."

686

·-·

---+
' -Society

BEFORE
BUYING A.HEAT PUMP

_ground in
Sports on Page 4

&gt;I

BIRTH ANNOUJCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Harold "Buddy"
Rose, Jr. of Langsville announce the
birth of a daughter, Cassidy Lore) ,
June 30 at the Holzer Mediq1l Cen·
ter.
The infant weighed seven pounds
and two ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Rose
also have a son, Shane Lee.

Pick 3:

Dear &gt;St. Pete: You~ve written :a
letter that is sure to be helpful to~ a
great many readers. Be aware, howl
ever, that your situation is the exce~
tion rather than the rule. RemtmbCr,
too, that more people w~;j.te to com:
plain about family meln~s than to
compliment them.

.

Alice Wolfe of Racine is one of
13 quilters exhibiting quilted items
at the Third Annual Homestead Inv1·
tational Quilt Exhibit through July
31 at Bob Evans Farm, Rio Grande.
Wolfe has been quilting for
almost 20 years. She has made 20
quilts, I0 wall hangings and "too
many pillows to count" and has
exhibited at the Athens Dairy Bam,
Middleport Arts Council and Meigs
County Senior Center Show.
.
Visitors will see over 120 quilts
and other quilted items.
On Saturday and Sunday, July 27
and 28, an appraisal service by a cer·
tified appraiser of the American
Quilter's Society will be offered for
quilt owners wishing to know the
fair market and insurance value of
their quilts. The fee for this service
is $25 per quilt and appointments
are recommended, but .not required. ·
Admission to the Homestead
Invitational Quilt Exhibit, open from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, is $1 per per·
son. Other farm activities include
QUILTS ON DISPLAY - Alice Wolfe displays one of the qulhs
camping·, canoeing, horseback rid·
she will show In s qulh exhibit being held through July 31 at Bob
ing, wagon tours, a small animal
Evans Farm In Rio Grande.
barnyand and more.
The I, 100-acre Bob Evans Farm
is located in southeastern Ohio State Route 588. The Farm is open through Labor Day and weekends in
about a mile off State Route 35, on daily from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. September.

Reds lose ..
division

Former Chrysler Employee: Latch on
•
recalled Chrysler minivan 'flimsy'
•
By CATHERINE O'BRIEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Three
years before Chrysler Corp. recalled
millions of minivans to strengthen the
vehicles' rear liftgate latches, com·
pany engineers had agreed they
should be stronger, a fired Chrysler
official testified in a lawsuit.
·
The former employee, Paul V
Sheridan, said Chrysler engineers
considered the liftgate latches on the
minivans to be flimsy in comparison
with other minivans. By early 1992,
"we unanimously agreed that we
needed to improve our liftgate latch,"
Sheridan testified in the lawsuit in a
Texas court.
But it was not until spring 1995
that Chrysler asked more than 4 mil·
lion owners of 1984-1995 Chrysler
Town &amp; Country, Dodge Caravan
and Plymouth Voyager minivans to
bring them in for free installation of
a stronger liftgate latch.

Ohio Lottery

.

.

According to the f;edcral Hon1e
Loan Mongagc Corp .. 30-ycar, lixcd·
rate mongagcs averaged X.32 perccnl
in June, up from !!.09 percent in Muy
and matching the average in April
1995.
Rates had dropped to 7.03 percent
last January and the subsequent run·
up has added apprcciuhly to the cost
of buying a home.
The monthly payment on a
$100,000 mortgage with a 7 percent
interest rate is $665.

·s ettl·ement of .'Meigs,'· Morgari's· ' R~ald
will be commemorated this weekend
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The settlement of Meigs County
and the infamous Civil War march by
Morgan's Raiders will be commemorated during lhe first Chester-Shade
Days celebration this weekend, with
a full slale of entertainment and presentations scheduled as part of the
activities in the historic Meigs Coun·
ty village of Chesler.
-The event is being organized by
the Chester Village Historical Association, ·which is active in ongoing
restorati on efforts of the Chester
Courthouse.
A portion of the proceeds from
this weekend's activities will benefit
the restoration ·project, according to
Pal Holter. coordinator for the ccle·
bration.
The old courthouse, which over·
looks the village from a high grassy
knoll given to the county by Chester
settler Levi Stedman in the early
1820s. is the oldesl standing court·
house in Ohio and is listed on the
National Register of Historical
Places.
Restoration efforts will tran sfomi
the courthouse into a working muse·
urn . which will showcase historical
artifacts pertaining to the legal system
and provide a facility for educational and theater presentations. according to Holter.

Chester-Shade Days activities w~l
kick off Friday at 5 p.m., with special
displays and exhibits at the Chester
Fire Depanment, and the placement
of a pioneer site and Indian village on
the Chester Village Commons.
A pic baking contest will take
place at 6 p.m .. with pic entries to be
accepted until 6' 15 p.m.. when judg·
ing begins. The entry fcc will be two
fruit pies, with one entry per person.
Cash prizes of $15. $10, and $5 will
be awarded. with all entries eligible
for a $20 drawing. Pic judging will
take place at 7:45 p.m .. with a pic
auction to be held immediately fol·
lowing the JUdgmg.
Other friday activities scheduled
include :
• Howard Parker speaking on
"Shade Valley Ancestry," main stage.
6:30p.m.
• The French Ctty Barbershop
Quartcl. main stage. 7 p.m.
• Old-fashi&lt;\ned squa re dance with
the Happy Hollow Boys. fire house.
8:30p.m
• Closing L:crcmonics. lighting of
the flares hy members of the Chester
fire Dcpanmcnl. 10 p.m.
Saturday event s begin at 9:30
a.m . with flag-ra1sing ceremonies at
the counhousc and fire depanmcnt by
members of the American Legion and
Boy Smut Troop 235.
Rc-enacunents be~io at 9:45a.m.,

with the &lt;UTi val of Indians into the vii· brigade aclion will commence a1
lage. followed hy the arrival of set· '2 :30 p.111 .. with a walcr huckct race
tier Chesler Shade and ·hi s muzlle· bctwccn the Chester Fire Dcparlmcnt
loaders. and Meigs County's first and other tire dcpanmcnls scheduled
commJS!-&gt;IOncrs, Levi
Stedman, for the same It me at the village comWilliam Alexander and Elijah Run - mons .
ncr.

Entertainme nt anJ activities fnr

Speakers will introduce the groups
as they arrive 1n the village. with rc cnacturs giving detailed accounts on

the early settleme nt of Chester,
according to Holier.
A full slate of games and contests
will take place on the commons at
IOA5 a.rn .. with prizes to bc award·
cd later during lhe day.
At II &lt;45 a.m ., rncmbcrs of the
Easlcm Hi gh School Band will pre·
senl a lnhute to the Revolutionary
War. wilh music in front of the main
stage. An Introduction of local offi.
cials and cand idat es and music will
follnw on the main stage at noon .

A parade featuring pets and decorated hike' will he gin al I p.m., wilh
categories to he judged and priles to
he awarded .
Cannon calls will take pl;occ at
I :30 and 2 p.m.. with the respcclivc
arrivals of Morgan's Raiders. and fed·
cral troops and m11i1ia . Both groups
will ride into the village commons,
and retire 10 the area ncar the Shade
River btidge and lhe former CheSler
Roller Mill.
Bridge and mill fire fighting

Saturday include:
• the Big Bend Cloggc". main
stage. 3 p.m.
• Richard Coleman speak mg on
"H istory of the Shade River." main
stage, 3:45 p.m.
•

&lt;.~ntiquc tra~tnr di!&lt;.pl;.•y ~

and u

cruise -In for vi mage and classic cars.
vi llage commons. 5 p m
•

award s ('t.ccrcmoni c:-.

anU

Longahargcr Basket drawing. main
stage. 6 p.m.
• twilight canoe rides ii·om Chesler
to Camp Kiashuta, 6:30 p rn .-dark .
• dance with Pnmelimc Mohtle
D.J., fire house. 7-9:30 p.m.
• lighting of the llarcs hy Chesler
Fire Dcpanmcm . 9:30p.m.
Tour.-. of the old courthou \c wtll he
condUI.:tcd throu ghout the weekend

event. according to Holler.
"We hope to make Chcslcr-Shadc
Days an annual c vent. A gmup of
dedicated people have bccn working
for the preservation and restoration of

the Chester Counhousc, and hopefully lhis will he a great addition
toward our cffons and the comm uni ty. " said Holler.

Officials say

Funds available for Shadle Bridge replacement project
place for the bridge replacement pro·
By MINDY KEARNS
ject.
.OVP News Editor
Their concerns arose after rumors
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . Yes, there is state money set aside for cireula1cd that funds for the. Mason
the Shadle Bndge replqcement pro- County bndge had been given to Put·
ject, about 100 people were told in a nam County for the construction of a
public infoflllj!tion meeting Monday. bridge in Buffalo that would link U.S.
Those attending the meeting, host· 35 and Stale Route 62. following
cd by the West Virginia Division' of announcement of a new Toyota plant.
Also, U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd
Highways and the city of Point Pleas·
ant, asked if funds were already in announced recently that he was try ·

tng to garner federal monies to huild
the bridge.
Dave Clevenger. highway engi neer with the Wc sl Virginia Dcpanmcnt of Transportation, said money
is in the state bridge replacement fund
for the project, but the stale is trying
to get money from the federal '97
bndge discretionary money since SR
2 has been designated a part of the
federal highwa,.....,stcm.

Phase ~ of the Shadle Bridge
replacement , which would Include
lhc main .structure , will "'"I approx Imately $34 million. A total of $ .~0
million has been requested frnm fed eral (unds.
Lowell Johnson of U.S. Rep. Bob
Wise's office told the crowd that only
$60 million is allotted in discrc·
tionary money for the entire U.S. and
Continued on page J

Meigs County has increase in deer-car wrecks
Although the Ohio Departmeat of
Public Safety repons the total number of deer-vehicle collisions down
by 3.2 percent between 1994 and
1995, Meigs County motorists are
just as likely to end up busting Barn·
bi.
For 1995, a total of 24,811 deer·
vehicle collisions wen; reponed to
OOPS, a decline of 825 from the

record-high of 25,636 co ll isions
reported in I994.
In Meigs County, however, 153
deer-vehicle collisions were reported
in 1995, 17 more than reported in
1994, or a 12.5 percent increase. In
the 19 southeastern Ohio counties
comprising wildlife district four,
which includes Meigs County, the
total number of deer-vehicle acci·

"Although there was an overall
. dents was up 4.4 percent.
But statewide. tbc Ohio Insurance . statewide drop in reported decr-vehi·
· Institute, the Ohio Division of · cle collisions, motorisL&lt; should not be
· Wildlife and public· safety officials lulled into a false sense of security,"
· attribute the decline in deer·vehicle warned Daniel J. Kelso. 011 presi· collisi ons 10 heightened public dent.
''There are pockeL&lt;of the state that
awarencs!' of the growth in Ohio's
deer population and tbc risk of such . have·actually seen ail increase in acciaccidents , and takinw necessary pn:· dents. And in some instances colli·
cautions.
Continued on paae 3

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Commentary

Wednesday, July 17, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 17, 1996

Today's weather forecast

OHIO Weather
Thunday, July 18
AccuWealher• forecast

The Daily Sentinel U.N. runs. phantom decoloniza~ion effort
'Esta6fis/id in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

i.lftM to IN «11t01 .,. welcome. They mu1t tM ' ' " thtn 300 word1. All lettert are
IUbf«t 10 «&lt;lrtn' .nd muat be 11gn«1 1na /nctut»IKidru• and teltpnone number.
r4o un•lgn«&lt; ,.,.,. will be publlm.d. Lettera should be In good '''''· addrealng

,,..,.,, not ,.,..onllltln.

Letters to the editor
Concealed weapon spells disaster

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Dear Editor
'- aiLJunds ol reasons
With the stress of life today you '\.....&lt;' !'I(\ an unstable ume m soc1ety
would thmk only people w11h low today when 50 percent of marnages
1ntelllgence would want law m Oh10 turn our almost JmmedJalely, where
to make 11 eaSJcr for people unwltunchecked emotions and tempers ar~
ungly to become k1ller of lheJr fam- allowed to go past the breakmg
pomt, where people of all ages feel
1hes, fnend, or anyone.
Th1s 1s what your Oh10 State Sen- they have the right to do anythmg
ator, Jan M1chael Long, that you they wanllo do, al anyone's expense,
elected, is doing by allempung to even shoot you if they do not gellhen
push a law through m Oh1o that any- way on demand, he wants to put a
one w1th few excepuons can carry a h1dden gun m their hand . One lhmg
concealed weapon
we know he IS not a rellgwus person
We sec every day m the newspa- God would not advocate carrymg a
pers or on TV that when people find gun to shoot somebody.
themselves m confrontallonal SJiuaPeople like h1m say we need 10
twns that mvolves feelings of loss of carry h1dden gun lo protect ourselves
power or control. frmuon or dis1llu- from the bad people In life there are
sJonment, a concealed weapon spells emotionally charged 11mcs thai anydisaster. More gun available mean one can become the bad people. Havmore ch1ldren and their fnends w1ll mg a concealed weapon then cou ld be
be k1lled by play mg w11h them Here drsastrous
and across thi s country children and I
Neil J. Mangan
people of all ages are bemg killed
Brookville
w11h guns every hour of every day for

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
UNITED NATIONS-- A' planned
U N junket to a group of Pac1fic
1slands reveals whaiAmencan cntics
believe IS the unchanged nature of a
free-spendmg insmuuon that refuses
to lighten 11s bell m more austere
umes
Last May, U S Ambass ador
Madeleme Albnght wrote a leuer to
chief U N finanml .officer Joseph
Connl,)r compla1mng that 11 was a
"fnvolous expend11ure" of$150,000
to send U.N offic1als 10 a scmJOar JO
Papua New Gumca when the meetJOg could be held m New York City
"At a 11me when the Umted
NatiOns 1s f1scally strapped , and m
the m1ds1 of scaling back 1ts operalions, to allow such a fnvolous and
unneeded expenditure would undermme the reform efforts bemg made,
and damage Jhe •mage of the Un11ed
Natwns that we all are working so
hard 10 1mprove," Albnght wrote .
The U N bureaucracy was
unmoved One undersecretary had

was founded dec~des ago
It was well -mtended In fact, the
b1ggest boost m U N membership
began With the mass1ve decolomzaIJon push starling 1n 1960 S~nce thai
11me, more than 80 former coloma[
territones have JOined the UN . as
Independent states
The counc1l has also been good for
the trustterntones the U.N. was supposed to admuusler ll1e Independent
money had already been appropnat- nauon of Papua New Gumea was
ed from the current budget
once an Austra!Jan protec torate
Th1s damn-the-cntJCs, full -spend - Rwanda and Burundi were adm mJS·
JOg -ahead mmdsel m1ght be Jess tered by Belg1um Somalia was for
galling to Amencan taxpayers 1f the merly d1v1dcd between Italy and
money was put 10 good usc But the Great Bntam Cameroon, Togo,
Pac1f1c sem1har 1s bemg hel d by the Western Samoa, N1gcna and TanzaSpec1al Political and DecolonJzat•on ma were all once truslecs h1ps but are
Commiuee -- a true tnbute lo the now sovere •gn states And the lisl
staymg power of use less agcnc1es at goes on
the U.N
By 1975, a Pac1fic 1sland groupThe comm ittee 1s overseen by the mg m Micronesia was the onl y U N
UN Trusteesh•p Counc1l , wh1ch has lrusltemtory left on earth , and 11 was
had its ow n splcnd1d Damsh-deco- admm1stercd by the Unncd Slates In
rated chamber at the U N , and was the years that followed. th1s so le trusl
set up IO adnnmslcr the II trust ter- temtory was enough 10 JUStify an
ritones thai existed when the council annual U N hudget of $1 million per
expressed some reservatiOns about
the semJOar, a U N. spokesperson
said, but he was told the commmee
could go ahead as planned smce the

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

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some policy makers. In reality a
bUJidmg more commensurate wuh
the local archJieclurc of the area
would be less expcns1vc and more
sur table to the lolks who have to pay
for 11
·
Incidentally, barking back at the
Columbus bureaucrats d1d promote a
few more bucks, or d1d you nollce 0
And except for one s;&gt;eaker who was
very _force ful m expressmg 1hc1r
mmd sci on 1h1s maner, all else was
the same warmed over cliche we
have listened to from day one Whippmg the old dead horse won't make
11 get up and go
If the mceung prev1ously referred
to IS any md1cauon of the mterest m
promote 1h1s proJect, you can forget
11 Reducmg the amount of the $$$$
for the bu1ld1ng w1ll alm ost guarantee 11 bcmg bu1il
It 1sn't too late to get a realistiC
effort on the agenda, and I would certamly urge that steps be taken to
msure tha11h1s noaller be sculcd to the
sausfacuon of the m3Jorny of the tax
payers 1n 1h1s dJ slnct It can be done
hy Simply tnmmmg the fat
We ca nn ot have a T-BONE
STEAK bulidmg on a chuck roast
budget A bas1c SCHOOL BUILDlNG type structure w1ll do JUSt fine.
so Jet's gel 11 done
R. Weaver
Racine

Chester Shade Days
Dear Ed1tur,
A comm1Uce of mtcrcstcd cJtllcns
have heen workmg for fund s to
rcslorc and preserve the Che ster
Courthouse wh1ch resea rch has
revealed to he the oldcs1 standmg
courthouse m Oh1o.
When the commlltcc was no11fied
hy the Oh•o Board of Regents the
grant for $46,000.00 would be
released m July. they deudcd lo have
a cclcbraiJon where- more people
could become mvolved
I he name Chester Shade was

We arc not honnnng any person of
any name The comm•Uce thought
that smce 11 would encompass most
of Mcrgs County, the festJval could
be called Chester - Shade Days
We have a umque umc line celcbrauon planned for Saturday, July 20,
preceded by a p1e bakmg contest , the
French C11y Barbershop group and a
square dance w1th the Happy Hollow
Band on Fnday cvemng. The Chester
F1rc Depanmcnl and the Auxiliary
arc workmg w11h us and all events
will be held there and on the com-

IIICntw ncJ m an antcrv1cw wit h

mons

locorgc Gemhcm1er and further
Jnvcsllgauon led to a long forgoucn
hook whJCh was copynghtcd 1n 1966
m P1edmonl. Cal by Waller Roy
Hoffman The book stated thai
Chester Shade had been m 1h1s area
on a scoutmg-hunlmg lnp pnor 1810,
when he returned to Plltsburgh. Durmg the umB he spent here he erected
a s1gn, Camp Chester Shade.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today IS Wednesday, July 17, the I99th day of 1996 There are 167 days
left m the year.
Today's H1ghhght m H1story .
On July 17, 1945, PreSident Truman, Sov1e1leader Josef Stalin and Bntish
Pnme Minister Winston S Churchill began meeung at Potsdam m the final
Allied summn of World War II.
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In 1821 . Spain ceded Flonda to the United States.
'
In I89R, dunng the Spanish-American War. Spam surrendered to the United States at Sanliago, Cuba.

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And II wouldn I maHer wh1ch
Republican stood agamst Bill Cl mton
-- whether II was Dole or, say, Cohn
Powell or even the second com111g ol
Abraham Lmcoln -- the outcome
would be the same And that 's why
Dole d1dn 'I bother 10 make an
appearance
m Charlotte IIi" week
fact 1s that. on a range of Jssues, the
Yes
,
Dole
may slightly worsen 1m
ma)onty of blacks actually agree w11h
chances
of
wmmng
the preSidency hy
Republicans For mstancc, while
1
gnonng
the
NAACP
and the black
blacks qullc naturallv endorse the
vole
,
but
the
bJggcstlosers
1n the conconcept of equal opp~rtumty (as do
lmumg
cnmlly
between
blacks
and
practJcally all Amencans). most
the
Republ1can
Party
"
the
bi,Jck
oppose rac ~al quotas Most blacks
oppose school husmg Most oppose electorate .
That's because the hl,~ek vole "
abortwn on demand Most favor
completely
take n lor gr.1n tcd by the
school prayer And most favor Iough
pany
of
Clmton.
while 11" wnnc n off
crimmal sc nlcnc1 ng
by
the
party
ol
Do
le I hat renders the
Th1s d1cho1omy JS nol lost on
black
vote
all
but
mconscquentml
on
Republi can NatiOnal Com m111ec
the
nat
wna
l
level
cha1rman Haley Barbour, who n01ed
On the other hand, II the 30 per·
several years back, "If you list I 0
cent
of blacks who share the Repub1ssues and (provJdc) the Dcmocrauc
lican
s v1cws on Issues l1kc taxes
answer and the Republican answer,
dclense.
abor11on. mmc, cduca110n
(but) you don 't men11on pariJcs, a
family
value
s, elL: were to vote
th1rd or more of Afncan -Amcncan
Republican
,
then
hlacks would hold
voters w1ll choose the Republican
conSiderably
more
sway m both parVJCW. ''
lies
Black
voters
y,ould
tonn a truYet. when black vo lcf' go Ill the
ly
Jnlluenlial
sw
1ng
hlot
1n na110nal
polls m Novcmher. at leasI nmc of I0
clct:tlons
will castthc~r halluts lor Democrats
0 1 l:oursc. there an.: ~orne hlacks
That's be..:ausc mos t blacks do no1
vote Jssues as much as they vote par- who will never vole Republican
ty So even though Bob Dole has a They castlhCJr llrst ballot for FOR or
good track record on c•vll -nghts and maybe . LBJ, and they have been
cqual-opportunlly Jss ues , he can blindl y vot•?g Democrat ever smcc
expect only a p1ttancc of the black Then there arc the black voters who
vole-- s1mply because he happens to arc dyed-Jn -lhe ·"'uol hherals Unless
be a Republi can ·
cans rould agree . an mtrcasmg number of blacks wou ld vote for Republican cand idates
But that s1mply " not true The

•I Columbus!91 • I

Carrel Cox

Showers

FAJARDO, Puerto R1co - Polltrcal etJqucllc dictates that contenders
for the v1ce preSJdentJal nommaiiCln
pretend , at least outwardly, thai
they 're nolthc least bit mtcrcsted m
the JOb.
After all. the No. 2 post JS st1ll
bas1cally what Nelson Rockefeller
c~ll cd "standby cqu1pment. "
By remaming outwardly calm, no
one can accuse those not p1cked of
trying and failing to get a job that has
been the object of much ndicule.
So 11 was amusmg 10 watch the
semantic acrobattcs of three Republican governors- Michigan 's John
Engler, Oh1o's George Voinov1ch
and Wisconsm 's Tommy Thompson
- all rece1ving senous consideration
as runpmg mates for Bob Dole.
The trio, among 31 governors
attending the 88th annual meeting of
the National Governors' Association, were dogged by reporters in
search of a story that w~uld jusufy

spendmg four days on th" seas1de
Canbbean resort
Two other governors sa1d to be on
the Dole li st, New Jersey's Chmt1c
Whllman and Pcnnsy lvanm's Tom
R1dge, d1d not auend So v.,mov•ch,
Engler and n10mpson bobbed and
weaved around reporter; · qucsuons
Vomov1ch. who turns 60 Monday.
1s a former Cleveland mayor re-elected as Ohw governor m 1994 with 72
percent of the vote. Many say he 's
h1gh on the Dole hst because he can
help the underdog Republican carry
a key battleground slate w11h 21elec toral votes
Yet. to hear Vomov1ch tell 11, the
v1ce pres1den cy couldn't be further
from h1s mmd
"I'm gomg 10 let Bob Dole dec1de
what he's lookmj! for, " Yo10ovich
1said. "That'sa personal decasion each
individual who IS looking for a running mate has to make, and I'm not
going to set down h1s criteria."
What if the slot were offered?
" I would_give 11 serious co ns1der-

atHm. · YomovKh rcpl1cd

COLUMBUS (AP) - Hay bahng
slowed 10 a crawl even though Oh10
fanners had about 6 9 days su1table
for field work last week, the Oh10
Agricultural Statistics Service sa1d.
The service said Monday that
baling $lowdown was due to poor
crop growth, caused by the hot and
dry weather.
The dry weather, wh1ch began m
late June, has caused 1ops01l mOisture
to detenorate at a steady rate. The
season's first reports of very short
1ops01l moisture were 1ssued two
weeks ago. About one-quaner mch of

Cloudy

1opso1l was dry this week, the OASS
sa1d.
Cool mght-time temperatures and
occas10nal spotty showers kept the
declines from being much worse, the
serv1ce sa1d
The 1996 wmter wheat harvest
moved into high gear w1th 37 percent
of the harvest completed, about 15
percent behmd normal. The strawberry harvest is aboul 99 percent
done
Last week's weather was SUitable
for other farm actiVJIIes such as
spraymg, cultJvatmg, applymg nllrogen and harvesung sweet corn.

r----Local briefs--.
Two-vehicle accident probed
No citallons were issued following a two-vehicle accident at the
JUnction of state Route 7 and Sumner Road near Chester Monday
around 4·30 p m
Bradley Allen Maslon, 19, Mmeral Wells, WVa., was northbound
on stale Route 7 passmg another northbound vehicle when Nancy L
Ze1gler, 31, Pomeroy, pulled from Sumner Road mto the path of h1s
1990 Chevrolet p1ckup truck resulting m a collision, accord10g 10 a
Me1gs County Sheriffs Department report
Although no CJtatJons were issued, the investigating deputy attnbuted the accJdenlto improper passing on the part of Maston and failure to y1eld on Zeigler's part.
Zeigler was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Tuppers Pla10s squad of lhe Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce
where she was treated for minor InJUries. No other injuries were reported .
Damage to Maston's truck and Zeigler's 1986 Ford Escort was liSted as moderate

Cremeans representative to visit ·
A representatiVe of US Rep. Frank Cremeans (R-Gallipolis) w1ll
be at the followmg locauons in Me1gs County Monday . Middleport
Council chambers, 10 to II am , Mergs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
II 30 a.m. to 12 noon , and at Rutland Village clerk's office, I to 2
pm.

But lcavmg as1dc the htclong
Democrats and knee-Jerk liberals.
anywhere hetwccn a 1h1rd to halt ol
black voters arc sulllc•cntly supportIVe ol lhc GOP agenda that they
ought Jo be rclepiiVC lo Republican
ca ndidates like Dole That Republica ns generally rcccJvc roughly 10
percent of black ballots m a given
elect ion suggests a '" race gap" of as
much as 40 percent among black voters
Mfume and the NAACP membership seem to thmk lhal Dole should
he down on bcndcd knee hescechmg
blacks for thc1r votes But what
political suuor wants to pul h1msclf
m thai posJ!Jon ~nowmg he w1ll be
turned away unrcqullcd "'
A rapprochement het ween hlacks
and the party ol Lmcoln rcquncs g1ve
and take on hoth s1dcs. The Rcpubll ·
cans ought to make a good -lmlh
effort to reach out lo blacks And
blacks ough1 to be fa1r to Rcpuhll ca ns. offenng them the same opportumty lo wm black votes that Jhey
g1ve the Democrats
1
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Meigs.;:ntinued from page-t
s1ons of thi s nature go unreported, ;o
the actual numbers arc likely higher
than what's been reported," Kelso
added
Accordmg lo ODPS stud1es, more
than half of deer-veh1de accidents in
Ohw between 1989 and 1994
occurred m the last three months of
the year, w11h November bemg the
peak month .
"Autumn is the breedmg season
for w.tuteta1J deer, a ume when both
adult males and females are more
mob1le and susceptible to crossmg
roadways," sa1d D1v1sion ofW1Idhfe
Ch1ef M1chael Budzik.
The bad news, tf you are mvolved
in a deer-veh1cle collisiOn, expect
some damage. A vehicle w1ll almost
always experience some level of
damage as a result of such collisJons.

l

The Daily Sentinel
, IVSPS Zl)-960)
Pubhthed every lftemoon. Monday thtouJh
Frida,, Ill Coun S1 • Pomeroy. Ohio. by 11Je
Otuo Yltlley Pubhahina eon..nyJOannert Co •
Pomeroy, Ohoo .,769, Pit 092-21~. Second
ch1s5 poataae P'lfd m ~. Ohto

'T~. '

great conlldcncc Boh
Dole will make a good dccis1on" he
sa1d
But ol h1msclf. he sa1d ''I'm not
cxpectmg II . I haven.' I been expectmg
II He hasn ' t asked We haven'l had
any dJScusswns abou1 11 "
Thompson, 54. a nauonallcadcr m :
welfare reform and chamnan of the .
National Governors AssocJatJon for ·
the past year, won a 1h1rd term as :
WJSconsm governor m 1994.
"I would hope that George would :
gciJt I'm confident he's gomg to. " ;
he sa1d " I don 'llhmk (Dole's) going •
lo choose me, but1t 's rricc to he con- ;
s1dercd ··

Bu1 lhcn. as 1f lo show he s not
lo Dole, Ymnov1ch slammed
the GOP cand1da1c and PreSide nt
Clinton for spurntng mvllat1ons tu
appear at the go.fcrnors' mccung
They" II speak v1a satclllle hookup on
Tuesday mstead
Ru1 he sa1d Dole has ycllo answer
the fundamental qucstJOilS "Why am
I runnmg. and what am I gomg to do
1f I am president'!''
" It he docs that, he w1ll be elected." VoJnov•ch sa1d "If he doesn't,
he will lose ·
Engler, 47, served 20 years 1n the
M1ch1gan Leg1slaturc before be1ng
elected governor m 1990 W•dcly
Meanwhile. th1s carefully choreocredited WJ!h reforms to cut proper
ty taxes and downs1ze government. graphed dance was being watched
he , too, eaSJJy was re-elected m With amusement by Dcmocrauc governors here. Colorado Gov. Roy
1994
L1ke Vomvmch, he can boost Romer, dean of the Democrats, says
Dole m a key bauleground stale. that while there are good GOP sovM1ch1gan has 18 electoral votes. But ernors on Dole's list, he doesn 'I neche gets evas1ve when asked about essarily buy Thompson 's assertion a
governor must be p1cked.
JOmmg the ticket
play~ng

Sunny Pr. Cloudy

Hot, dry weather contributes
to Ohio's slow crop growth

er wm over these hlack voters.

I

Ice

Via .Usoaated Press GraphH:SNet

the Republicans endorsed a plallorm
that calls lor even more wcUarc
spcndmg, even sharper dclcnsc cuts,
govcrnmenl takeover of the healthcare system, dccnmmallzatwn of
drugs, aboruon on demand and
homosex ual mamagcs, they w1ll nev-

Joseph Perkins

Word has been rece1ved locally of the death of -former area resident
Josephme L Corrigan, 84, Columbus, who died Thursday July II, 1996 at
the Village of Wester~ille Nursmg Home, Westerville.
She was a former resident of Middleport, and a graduate of M1ddlcport
H1gh School She was a member of St. Anthony Catholic Church, Columbus, and was retired from the offices of the Ohio Department of Educauon .
She 1s survived by a brother, Lawrence CurtiS of Flonda, two SJslers.
Frances Mcintosh, Dayton, and Mary Andrews, Hilliard; and several meces
and nephews
She was preceded 10 death by her husband, Joseph Comgan, and a sister, Nora McCrefY
Funeral serv1ces were held Saturday, July 13, at St. Anthony Catholic
Church, Columbus, wuh Fr. Homer Blubaugh officJaung Bunal followed
10 Resurrection Cemetery, Columbus.

'

The dance of vice presidential hopefuls

By RICHARD BENEDETIO
Our ong •n al dates con nl cted With USA TODAY

lfuffington Island Reenactment. so
was set forward a week Thai's the
reason the publlcJiy has been late
Please come and take part '" a lot
of fun for all ages. and celebrate WJ!h
us
Pat Holter,
project coordinator,
Chester Village Historical Assn.,
Pomeroy

•
IToledo I 90" I

year Of course. U N officrals had to
go on two-week JUnkets 1n the PacJf•c each year 10 w11ness the colon1al
snuauon firsthand . •
Palau, the last sli ver of the
M•croneSia trust terntory, ach1eved
Independence m 1994 But does that
mean e1ther the Trusteeship Council
or the Decolomzatwn Commlllcc 1s
gone'' No. money still nows thCJr
' way. desp11e Amencan ca lls for thw
dem1se
In part. one U.N offJcJal
cxplamed to our a~soc 1a1e Dale Van
Ana. the council can only be changed
by changmg the U.N charter "And
monkeymg wnh that for any reason
m1ght bnng the whole thmg down
like a house of cards at th1s fragile
moment 1n our h1 story," the offic1al
sa1d.
Also, many Th1rd World leaders
love to usc the dccolomzaiJon 1dea as
a bully pulp11 for vcnlmg thelf frus.
trat•on w11h the Umtcd States and
other Western countncs After all, the
defimtwn of "colony" by vanous
"dccolomzatJOn" commlltccs and
groups al the U N has always been
a h11 wallJCd For mstance. an offic1al
I'IH5 U N film, "The Great Awakcnmg." wh1ch demcd the ev1ls of
colomallsm, lcaturcd a world map
w11h colomcs marked m red, mcludmg Ala;ka 1
For many years. the Umtcd States
has been denounced m General
Assembly speeches for nol rcleasmg
another "coluny" -- Puerto R1co -which co nSJslcnl!y voles m the
, maJonly to rctam lis status (as a tcrntory. not a colony) wllh the Unllcd
Slates
Yet even though there arc vJrlual ly no colomes left -- hy any dcllm llon -- the U.N sllil wastes money on
Papua New Gumea JUnkets and arguIng the status of place s like G1brahar.
Guam, PncaJrn Island and the U S
and Bnush V1rgm Islands
But Junkets aren't 1he only way
that money IS bemg wasJed at the
U N For example, the agency 1s st1ll
fundmg pub!JcJty eflorts assoc.ated
w11h the Intcrnatwnal Decade for the
EradJca110n ol Colomallsm -- wh1ch
began m 1'190
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Why Dole won't court the b-lack vote
By Joseph Perkins
So the leaders and membership ot
the NAACP arc angry because they
were "d1ssed" by Bob Dole Tough
Why should the Republican presIdential nommce waste h1s ume
speakmg at Ihe c•v•l -nghts organJzaIJOn 's yearly convcniJon when, no
maner what he says or docs. more
than 90 percent of lis black membership Will vote for h1s Dcmocrauc
opponent?
NAACP pres1dcn1 KwciSJ Mfumc
thmks that Dole should have made a
perlunctory appearance at h1s group's
Charlone conven110n even though the
Republican would have rece1ved anythmg but a fa1r hcanng .
· Part of the reason Afncan-AmerJcans. HJSpamcs and Jews are bmdmg their assoc~at•on and alleg1ancc
w11h the DemocratiC Party IS because
Republican candidates contmuc their
tradllwn ol not rcachmg out," Mfumc
SaJd
But nc11her H1span1cs nor Jews arc
nearly as sla v1shly devoted lo the
Democrats as blacks And that's why
Dole and h1 s fellow Republicans figure 1hat11"s a waste of t1me and mon ey to try to reach out to the black
c lcctoratc when black voters arc
unwilling to meet the cand1dalc and
the party halfway
Of course, Mfumc and h1 s fellow
black leaders beg to d1ffcr They
argue tha11f the Republicans offered
an agenda w1th wh1ch black Amen-

Josephine L. Corrigan

MICH.

1

A waste of taxpayers' money?
To the Ed1tor
and the Ia&lt; payers of the Southern
D1stnct, of course
Having anended the gathenng of
the bu1ldmg commJUec on I I July, I
see the nccessuy to f1eld a few comments that may or may not be of
essence to promote the effort to sec
a new school bu1ldmg m this d1stnct.
Havmg talked w11h some of the
clccloratc m the area, from numerous walks of life, 11 has become obv10us
that !Ius tax mcrease w1ll fa~l at the
polls agam The percentage of those
contacted who favor the tax 1s about
1hc same as Dole's support for the
. general clecuon
I d1d turn up one undec1ded, and
two pro votes. However, too many
tolks arc concerned about the excess
1111hc d~&lt;~gn of Ihe bUJidmg, w11h the
conscnsus hemg thai bu1ldmgs do not
educate people. people educate peo. pic. A pala11al cd1f1cc may g1vc some
: lolks a h1 gh. but common folks see
it as a waste of then tax money
It was assumed that w11h the
rcJcc!Jon of the first ancmpt, there
wuuld he an dfort lo reduce the cost
of the prOJCCI hy gomg wllh a less
clahorale structure But the" state of
the an" memallly •s embedded too
deeply lo he dislodged A basJC
structure WJih all the necessary
amcmllcs JUst ISn't good enough for

The Dally Sentinel '• Page :.

Page /.

Mftllber· Tbe A1110C1tfed Preu, and the Ohio
New&amp;poper AISOCIIllon

The good news though, according
to Kelso, is that insurance companies,
for the most part, do not -factor m
such comprehensive losses when
makmg future premiUm considerations

"Most likely, a deer-vehicle collision alone w1ll not affect an auto
rnsurance premium," added Kelso.
011 offered the followmg pomters
-- Dnvc with extreme caution.
especially in areas with deer-crosSing
Signs posted, and use seat belts Drive at or below the speed limn in posted areas.
•• Most acc1den1s occur October
through December and 1n May Keep
a close watch for deer espec1ally at
dawn and dusk The most acc1den1
prone hours are between 5 p.m and
m1dmght and 5-7 p.m
-- When you sec one deer cross the
road, look for a second or third one
to follow.
-- If you spot deer on the side of
the road, slow down and honk your
hom.
Finally, if 11 looks as 1f you're
going 10 hit a deer, then hu 11.
Accordmg to 011 and ODW. 11 JS
natural to want to swerve 10 av01d 11,
~ut the results can be even worse than •
actually hlttmg the deer.

POINT PLEASANT - Carrel Cox, 74, of Pomt Pleasan, W. Va., d1ed Tuesday, July 16, 1996, at h1s home.
He ret1red as a heavy eqmpment mspector at the combmed support maintenance shop and also as a first sergeant w1th the 3664th Maintenance Company, West V~rgm1a Army Nauonal Guard . He served m the U.S. Army m
the European Theater from Oct. 7, 1942 untrl h1s honorable discharge on
Nov. 22, 1945, dunng World War II. He was a 1942 graduate ofPomt Pleasani H1gh School, member of the Oh- Kan Wanderers Club, American Leglfm
Mason County Post 23, and 50 year member of He1ghts Umted Methodist
Church, where he had held vanous offices and member of the choir.
Born Apnl22, 1922, 111 Pomt Pleasant, he was a son of the late J. V. (Jesse
Vernon) Cox and Mary Margaret (Coleman) Cox. He was also preceded m
death by three brothers, Orville, Charles and Paul Cox, and an infant sister,
Os1e Cox.
,
SufVIvmg are h1s w1fe, Lena Mae (Wolfe) Cox, son and daughter-m-law,
Brarry and Debbie Cox ot Spnngfield, Va; daughter and son-m-law, Demse
and Rex Carter of Westerville; five grandchildren, twm brother, Clarence
Cf&gt;x of Cross Lanes, W. Va.,; and sister, Edna Wood of Chester.
SefVJces Will be Friday, II a.m , at the Heights United MethodiSt Church
with the Rev. Ben Stevens officJaung. Bunal will be m Kirkland Memonal Gardens, wrth military graveside rites .
Fnends may call at the Cmw-Husscll Funeral Home Thursday, 6to 9 p.m ,
and at the church one hour pnor to the serv1ce.
Donations may be made in Cox's memory to ellher the He1gh1s U M.
Church Bmld10g Fund, 2106 North Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV 25550,
or the Amencan Cancer Society, Rt I, Box 726, Pomt Pleasant, W Va.
25550

James M. Montgomery
James M Montgomery. 58, 266 Jason Road, Crown City, d1ed Monday,
July 15, 1996 at h1s res1dence, followmg an extended illness.
Born May 4, 1938 m Guy an Township, Gallia County, he was the son of
the late Mervm Earl Montgomery, and Doris Barry Montgomery of Crown
Cny
Her served as Gallla County shenff from 1977 unul 1989 and was later
a safety enforcement officer with the Public Utrllties CommissiOn of Ohio
He was previOusly employed for several years with the Gallipolis firm of
Carter &amp; Evans General Contractors
SurviVIng m addition to h1s inother are h1s w1fe, Norena K. Wooten Montgomery, whom he married Apnl 5, 1959 at Yellowtown , two daughters, Jam1c
(Dan) Eplin and He1d1 Brumfield, both of Galhpolis; two sons, Randy D.
Clary (Melinda) Montgomery of North Myrtle Beach, S.C , and Jason (Canta) Montgomery of GallipoliS, and 10 grandchildren.
He was also preceded m death by two brothers, Glen Montgomery and
Stanley Everett Montgomery.
SefVJces will be I p m Friday m the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Galhpolis. wllh the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating Burial will be m the Oh10 Valley Memory Gardens. Fnends may call at the chapel from 2·9 p.m. TIIUrsday.

Grace H. Sheets
Grace Hazlell Sheets, 75, Bidwell, died Tuesday July 16. 1996 at HoJz.
er Med1cal Center
Born Feb 12, 1921, m the Eureka Commumty of Gallla County, daughter of the late James and Pearl Houck-Hazlen, she was a former employee
of Columbus State Hospnal and she auended Ell1.abeth Chapel Church.
SurviVIng arc her husband , Albert Russell Sheets, whom she marned July
30, 1940, m Galli a County, two daughters, Eleanor South and Rosella Mor~Json of Columbus, four grandchildren; two great-grandchildren, two SISters. Nina Dorton of Galllpohs and Peggy Fisher of Lillie Hockmg, two brothers, Y1ckers Hazlel! of Portsmouth and Russell Hazleu of Lancaster.
In addmon to her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, Robert
Hazleu and a sJster, Sarah Hazlett.
Services are II a.m Fnday at the W1lhs Funeral Home, with Rev. Alfred
Holley offJcJatJng Bunal w11l be at the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens
Frtends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 2-4 and 6-8 p m

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................... 42
Akzo ...................................... 55~
Aehland 011 ........................... 36~
AT&amp;T ..................................... 56'1.
Bank One .............................. 33~
Bob Evan• ............................ 14~
Borg-Warner ......................... 36\
Champion Ind ......................... 18
Charming Shop ...................... 6'1.
City Holding .......................... 22),
Fedar411 Mogul ...................... 16'1.
Gannan ......................... ......65
Goodyear ........................ ,..... 43'1.
K-mart ................................... 10'1.
Lands End ............................. 1~.
Limited Inc ............................ 18'1.
Ohio Valley Bank .................. 33',\
One Valley ............................. 33'!.
Paoplas Bancorp ................. 21'1.
Pram Fln1... ..............................13 ,
Rockwell .............................. 5D'.Io ,
Royal Dutch1Sheii .............. 15D'.Io
Shoney' • .............. ---.. ----- ......... 9'1.
Star Bank .............................. 67'1.
Wendy's ................................ 18~
Worthlngton .......................... 19't.

I The 1998 Wlntor Olympl&lt; Gamn
I woll be held in Na1ano, Japan Sah
I Lake Cuy lw been named u lhe sue

Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Mostly sunny and hot.
High near 90. West wind 5 to I0 mph.
Thnight. .. Panly cloudy and muggy with a chance of showers or thunderstorms Low near 70. Light southwest wind Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday .. Hazy and hum1d With
scauered showers and thunderstorms
H1gh in the upper 80s. Chance of ram

Unus of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Semcc recorded e1ght
calls for asSistance Tuesday mcluding
three calls for ·asSistance Un11s
respondmg mcluded .
POMEROY
5:23 p.m , stale Route 7. Kenneth
Dav1s, treated althc scene
RACINE
8.56 p m., stale Route 338, Demse
Smllh, Veterans Memonal Hosp11al

FundS ..

---------------------

11 1s doubtful that West V~rgmm on the natiOnal leve l. wh1 .: h w1ll Jake
longer ·
would rece1ve half of thai
He d1d say. hoY. ever Ihal dJrt will
He sa1d. however, that both W1se
and Byrd have both wnlten l~llcrs of be mov1ng on Ph.tsc I somcume m
support. Clevenger reiterated that
November
even 1f federal funding 1s nol avmlPomt Plcasanl Mayor Russell Holablc, state money JS m place to hu1ld
land asked Cle venger 11 all nghl-of the replacement.
ways had heen acqu~red Irom the nec Clevenger sa1d the bndgc w1JI be essary bu smcss owners. and he
completed m two phases Phase I
responded lhal 90 to 9S percent had
w1ll mclude lhe north approaches been obtained R•ghl-ol -way acqUI (Point Pleasant s1dc), rctammg walls, sition rc4u1rcs 13 rc ~ 1dcn ~.; cs and
utility relocation, new access road f1vc busmcss rclocauons
from F1rst10 Second streets, and any
Clevenger smd dunng Phase I ol
necessary buildmg dcmolllwn
the proJCCI , motomls Will usc lhc
Clevenger said he anUc1patcs Jhat eXJSimg hndgc The north Side oil he
plans w1ll be completed m October new hndge Wllllhcn he hulit. whllh
for the frrst phase, With construclwn
Will be made mlo a two-way structure
to begm m November Estimated cost unt1l the south s1de IS cunslructcd·
for Phase I 1s $1 2 m1lhon
Traflic llow w1ll he aboUI what 11 IS
Phase 2 of the proJect Will mclude now durmg cunstrw.:t10n. Clevenger
the mam structure and remainmg concluded
work, w1th plans anticipated to be
The hndgc Will he approxunatcly
completed m December, and co n100 kcl upstre am Irom the ex isting
struction to bcgm m Spnng 1997
bndgc A connect ion IS made to the
Clevenger sa1d comple11on of the Sliver Mcmonal Bndge mlerchan gc
enure proJect has been set for Sep- to the south Ill Henderson and 10 SR
tember 1998.
2 10 the north 10 I'OJntl'lcasanl all he
The cngmccr smd the replacement Vmnd and Th~rd StrcctJnlcrscc iJon
proJCCI was started m 1991 and the
Kennedy Avenue would he cui oil
DOT would have liked for the bndgc from Vmnd Strccl ,md reqUire a new
to he under construction by now
connccuon to SR 2 lor access, w!Hch
He sa1d the ongmal dcs1gn con- Will tic mto Jones Street Smcc the
sultant on the proJect flied bankrupt- new bndgc w1ll end at Y1and ,mel
cy and when a new consultant was Tlmd streets, a road w1ll also he hUll!
h~red, deSign work was delayed three
from Second to Fmt Strccr
to four months.
The new bndgc Will have a 66Clevdngcr said the Shadle Bndgc foot clear Width (lour 12-foot Jones
JS in poor cond1t1on and 1s bcmg wllh four-fool shoulders on each
mspeclcd every SIX months Jnslcad of s1dc and a 10-foot medwn) Included
the normal two years He saJd the last
m Ihe proJect Will he the removal ol
mspcclwn was complc1cd m May.
the cxJstmg bndge
With the stale vowmg to do all necessary maintenance on 11 throughout
the rcplaccmcnl proJect. Clevenger
did note, however, that the hndgc ha.•
had no load restrictions.
Mason County Econom1c Dcvclopmcnl Authonly D1rec1or John Musgrave asked 1f work could start before
b1ds were awarded on the Pomt
Pleasant s1de.
Clevenger smd thai 1s why the
phase work was JOJ!Jalcd , so the first
phase, wh1ch w1ll be completed total ly w1th state money, can beg1n bet ore
the second phase plans have to be
sent to Washington . Clevenger sa1d
smce SR 2 IS part of the federal h1gh- 1
way system, plans must be approved

or lhe Winler Games 1n 2002

INTRODUCING

STARZI

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Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotea provided by Adv..t
of Galllpolla.

I
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on 11tne.m or 12 montll bub Cred11 will be
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No tubscriJMion by maJI ptmUIIed in .-eu
where ltome c.-ner'aemct II lnilable,

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r.tAILSIJBSCRIPTtONS
, _ r.ttlp c.....,

13\Voeb
26Wccks . ..

SlWeeb .

$2130

Ull2
SilK~

Rllto Oollidt Mtlp CooniJ
. . . ... ..... .
. . S29.:U
26Weeb .... . ... . .
~68
, 2 _ .. . ......
. . .$111972 '
'I

13 Wetb. .

RUTLAND
2:58 a.m., Me1gs Mmc 2, D.av1d
Neutzllng, Pleasant Valley Hosp11ai
SYRACUSE
'
II 33 a m.. state Route 124, Fern
lll'orns, VMH
·
TUPPERS PLAINS
I 14 p m . Coolvd lc Road . Charles
Blake, Camden-Clark Memonu l Hns·
pllal

c.ontinued from page 1

By or--·

DoUiy

40 percent.
. E~tended forecast
Friday... A chance of thunderstonns. Lows around 70 H1ghs 85 to
around 90
Saturday... A chance of thunderstorms Lows m the 60s w11h h1ghs m
the m1d to upper 80s
Sunday ..Dry. Lows in the 60s
w1th h1ghs m the low to m1d 80s.

Meigs EMS logs eight calls:

POSTMASTER: Send addreu correcuon• 10
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St, Pomeroy,
Ohio.,769

t

,_

Pt. Pleasant 675-3398

Surrounding Areas 1·800·766·0553

..
•
•

�.\

••

Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Qaily Sent4!~l

.

Cardinals notch ,5-4 victory over Reds _

''-\

'j.·l'

(,..,.... :;J;t
'

WAS rr IN TIME?- After retiring the St. Louis Cardinals' Tom Pagnozzi (kneeling at right) at second base in the fifth inning of Tuesday night 's game in Cincinnati, Cincinnati second baseman Bret
Boone (left), teammate Barry Larkin and Pagnozzi look to first to see
if Boone's throw made it to first in time to retire Gary Gaetti. It didn't. (AP)

Love criticizes Americans
who skip British Open .
By STEPHEN WADE
LYTI-IAM ST ANNES. England
lAP) - There arc munllcss reasons
why more Ameri cans don't play in
lh,· Brilish Open. hul Davis Love
says he·, yel In hear a really good
one .
~all

" If yo u' re going to

...

yourself

a world-d,ISs playe r. you can '1 skip
thi s one." said Love. who will he in
hi s lOth Brilish Open when play
hl'~in s Thursday.
"You know lo l1ave so few Arncri-.· an.s l.:O illC over to try and qualify is

•

crnh;Jrras..;i ng ," Love added. "The
guys that do nnn~ - they recognize

whal it means . .. !think worldwide,
W IIJnin ~ thi s tourn ;uncnt would
malo.c you more recognized around

1hc world than prohahly any other."
" II' I coul&lt;.l only win one major,

tim would he tile one."
The .1~ - ye ar- old Arneril'an doesn't h;1vl'" victory in any of the four
lll;IJill's ami will he h"mdcd until he
play~r

a.s thl' " hcsl

d lll'.s

never to

h ,l \' l' Wl ln ll0l' .''

He mi ssed a pull on the final hole
rtllhL' year\ U.S. Open to linish tied
hH sL:L· onJ with Tom Lchmun, a
. . tmJ.. L' hchinJ wmncr Steve Jones .

" II ;~lkctcd me a while ''"d I
though t ahout It all the time. hut you
~~~ un ," Love saiU. ··That's why
(hL· rc 's four ol'thcm +.1 year ... I'm not
· gning to gi vL' up after letting one get
;m·ay.

He h~d ileen dose heforc. He lied
!'or fo urth in lhc '95 U.S. Open and
was second in tile '95 Masters. Bul
he's never done well in Britain . ~
241h-place lie his hesl seven years
ago.

" I would say I enjoy lhis one
more than lhc other ones," Love
said. "I know the Masters in Georgia m springlirnc Is prelly cxciling.
hut if there's one toummnent during
the year lhal I look forward to the
mosl. if's prohahly Ihis one."
Americans make up 44 of the
!56-player licld al Royally than and
Sl. Annes GolfCiuh. hut il prohahly
should he a much larger percentage
larg~

given the

numhcr

Amcri~.:an

playm on lhc PGA Tour.
Love said he and fellow American Brad Faxon agreed there should
he pcna!lics l'nr Amerkans who
don't try to qualily. Excmpl players
who don 't come shouldn 't play in the
Ryder Cup. he added .
"Air !ravel is easier and easier."
Love said . "G uys go tu Hawaii and
thai's a longer trip liJC guys &lt;&gt;n Ihe
cast coast.
"I can huy the expense thing !'or
a younger guy. II' they have logo and
qualify and don't make il , (they)
mi ss two toUrnaments. anti gUys can

go hy you on lhc money li sts. But
!here 's n&lt;&gt; reason k; a guy who's
exempt regularly tm our tour not to
~.:omc over and try."

Scoreboard
Tuesday's scores

AL standings
lliull

~n\ '·~~
H .i h&lt;rth•~&lt;·

n:
.,,.,,

q

!~

00

L 1'&lt;1.

!ill

lh

I'll

ll~{\
~

"' r "' II•
" '" " r .,."'

J . .. .. ll1 ••

11 ......11
[ ),·(l o• ll

!&lt;)/(

Ct·ntrul Ohi.~iun
l I I \ I I AN I I

.

on ~

17

.~X I

""'-' ,,", ,,,
"'

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Ill'

4:N

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"- ·•\'- ·"

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In

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\\ t•slrrn l)i, i.~iun
5.1 l•J .11;1'1 1
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.t l 541.1

1,-, ,,,
s,-,,uk
I l.i~l . l!ld
l '.lli l&lt; •r 111 ,1

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-- ~

I'HI • t&gt;ur ~ h

,II

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S;trr h .lll•'" ''" ill h ·r n.ln,k•J ~ . 10 1 .11
l \•lt•1,11h• I Wn}: hl ll·lll. I 0~ I'm
tf ,,u,h•nl K,·\rw ld ' 11· -lil .11 l'lund.t
t.\ [.,·r l,·r 'I·S I. 7 · 0~ I' 111
.S :m I&gt;••·}:•' (Hanull••n ltl--'1 :u 1.'" ,\11·
~de~ l \'.Lid,·, I 0·.' t. 10 ~~ I' Ill

Thursda)"s J:ilntt"s
l'o ol"'"dt• 1K rl t I 1· '1 ,II ,,Ill lh q:.•1

l' INC·INN ,,

~

\Ill" · "'~····~ ~~ l l,.·llo•t l -

J.:OIOil'S

I 'ln.·'!-=' ' 1 1.•1'·"" •/ . \1 .tt 1\lm n ,-,, , ~,~
• 1&lt; .-b,·" "'" 1.•1\ I l'ipm
]),., ,,.,, tl ll••.•r.·• 4 ·1•1 .11 o\ 1J h.,:m~ 1• 1•

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N,.,, ' .. ,~ t(ipod,·u '1· -l l,L t

7 l ~ pIll

-Ill (I 1H

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t l• :•• h "· I 7 · M . ~ ~ll pu 1

l'lur~h

II \.II \N tll!l 1\,m,,,, l'111..!

i l n•rdo•ll ~ .l l

Y~tll. l)llUI.'\ 1'1 · 01. I

l'htl .hk i]'IH .I tt..11t11!- , 1 · ~1 . 11 J.'l..rt.l.l
illrt•I&lt;I1 7·S l70-lil'' "

N,., \ ,. ,~ " · ll ,"'"n 'i
I ,,, ,, lh• 1&gt; ll .dt" u""'ll
t 'Ju. · ' ~ " II r-. l llllll''•'l,l ~

Tnda(!l

s, 1 •• u, , , ,,111h n ~· ur' J.:q ,,,
l'INt.'IN Nr\TI d 1 1lfl ll )!.;1lh · .~ l. I~ 1,-li jl IU
l'hrl.t&lt;ldjllll;l(l\lu lh••ll.lllll l· h l ;rl Nr\\

rS ; m,kr ~ I 1). .~ 0~ I' 111

Tuesday's Sf.:or~s

I &lt;'1 .1' I&gt; ( '. tltlo •lfll.l

Tnday's ~ames

I

,,s·

·HN
-1 7•1

(l , i~I .I H.II ~ S,,mJ.· ~

t

All;mr.l .\ Mnnlfl':Ll ~
l'ur shur!!lt IO. l'lu,·a)!'' ~
S.1n ll1q:n 10. J.,, Au):d•·• I
I·J,,n,J,, 1.
Sr l.uu1• -li CINCINN 1\TI ~
N,.,, Ynrl.. h. l'hil.hl,•lph• .• 1
('.,J,.r.,,l,. -li. S.tn Fr:w, ''"' 1

"''"''"tl !

1-:a~IITn llil i~nn

R u~ lllll

.

n O .lf \1\

.\ - 1\ .II Prll ~ ·

!l .••·h..·1 ~ . I J. 7 1 ~ p m

~ h'IUrt". tl t~1. .nrn ,., 1· ~1 ar N,·" y ,.. l..
(H.lnu•, h ~ · Ill. 7 ~ll p 111
('t u ,, 1 ~" 1HrrllmJ.!•'r l . :o ,,, .S1 1.11111'
i.S h• llkln ~ r.· •1-iol ~ l)~ I' 111
,\ll.mr., {.Sit"'h t l .~ · ~l . trlf, ~ • • l • • n t t\tk
s. ~I . S U ~ I' 11 1
.
1.'" All).'•'"'·' I Nnm" •I.SI . 11 S.m l·r:tn,. , ~,· ,, iE' I l'~

1·111.

IU ·U.~

In other NL action,

six innings and knew he was slrug·
gling. Lankford's catch preserved hi s
w1n .

"A lot of my pitches weren'l
working." Osborne said. " That's
when il's ni ce 10 have defensive
plays like !hat That hroke their
back s."
Reliever JeiTShaw (2-4) failed to
hold lhe Reds' 3-2 lead, giving up
two runs in lhe sevcmh and Ganl 's
horner. Dennis Eckersley slart 1hc
ninlh for St. Louis and, afler giving
up Eric Amhony's pinch-hi! home r.
gol lhree ou1s for his 15lh save.
Notes: A sconng change
announced Tuesday gave lhc €ardi nals two more earned runs in !heir H3 win Monday night The offici al
scorer reconsidered his earlier ruling.
lak ing an error away from shonstop
Barry larkin and awarding a hil to
Mike Gallego in lhc Cardinals ' lworun lhird .... Reds firs! baseman Hal
Morris began a lwo-day rehabilita tion of his broken right elhow at
Triple-A IndianapoliS, going 2-l'or-4
with a homer and double again ' !
New Orleans.

•

behind 2-0 in lhe fim al Shea Stadium. Clark ( 10-6) held lhc Phillics lo
one run over lhe ncxl seven innings,
and John Franco finished for his 20th
save.

1' 111

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.Nationwide Ins. (PPWV) '

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C Ant-:dtl En~·;1rn:s..:i•m lwm C'alj!:IT) nT

7125 (Thurs.), 7:30PM

Gallipolis Yankees
7120 (Sat.), II :JOAM

7122 (Mon.), 7:30PM

Fruth Pharmacy (PPWV)

Kyger Creek No. 2
Rio Grande
7120 (Sal.), IPM

single to Mike Lansing.
Pirates I 0, Cubs 5
Jeff Kmg hi I a lhrcc-run home run
and Mark Johnson had a two-run
homer to help visiling Pinshurgh
slOp a four-game losing slrcak.
King gave the Pirales a .1-0 lead

•

Mason VFW No. 2

Cun ScHilling (3-4 ). who had
won seven conscculivc decisions
againsl New ·York, pilchcd hrs lirst in the lirst against Jaime Navarro (7 cornplelc game since June 7, 1995 9) inning wilh his 22nd homer. htll
bul dropped lo 8-2 againsllhc Mels. Chicago's Sammy Sos~1 countcr~d
Bernard Gilkey drove in lhrcc. with anmher lhrcc -run homer in the
runs for New York.
hotlom half. his lca~uc- lcadin~ .10th:
Braves 3, Expos 2
Denny Neagle (11 -4) won hi s
In !heir lasl home game before a third COnSCl'Utivc start .
18-day road lrip lhal makes room for
Padres 10, Dodgers I
lhe Olympics in Atlanla-Fullon
Boh Tcwkshury (K-5) allowed
Counly Siadium, lhe Braves won on one run and five hits in si"X inning s.
Chipper Jones' run-scoring single in and visiling San Diego capitalized 011
Ihe nimh off Tim Scon (3-5) .
· four errors - two hy pitcher Ramon
Atlanla cxlendcd ils winning Martinez - to score four unearned
slrcak lo live and look a nine-game runs .
lead over the second-place Expos in
Marlincz (7-4). who committed'
lhc NL Easl. Monlreal has losl nine only three errors in 30 starts last seaof II.
son and none in his previous 12 out Mark Wohlers ( 1-1) waslcd a 2-1 ings lhis year. was charged with eight
lead in lhe ninlh, allowing an RBI runs and ~even hits m five innings,
hut just four runs were earned. ·

7123 (Tue.), 6PM

• •
Winner: thampion

Southwestern

LGser: runner-up
7126 (Fri.), 6PM

Gallipolis Reds
7120 (Sal.), 2:30PM
7123 (Tue.), 7:30PM

Chester

Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
Vinton

7/27 (Sat.), 7:30PM

7120 (Sat), 4PM
7124 (Wed .), 6PM
Village Pizza Inn

Coolville

Home Care Medical (PPWV)

7126 (Fri .) 7:30PM

7121 (Sun.), IPM
Middleport Indians

Kyger Creek No. I

THE 1996

.
'

7124 (Wed.), 7:30PM

.

7121 (Sun.). 2:30PM

Winner·third

-

-

Rutland
1::: . ·:·:·.:·...:::.""'··~·: ·&lt;&lt;=:~~=·".::&gt;:;':

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7128 (Sun.). 3PM
Loser-fourth

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guardian .

The cards arc aYailat&gt;lc at
Hunter's office or thwugh Southern
athletic director Howie Caldwell.
Quc!'otions can he t.lircctcd tn Hunter's
ollke m 941J-26X3.

It's .CatlJling
'

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...
• !.

•

.(

August 8, 1996.
.~

/,(

Advertising Deadline.Is
.... , August l, 1996.
CALL DAVE OR BOB TO 'PLACE YOUR AD IN
TIDS YEAR'S EDITION

'"

'.
"

.,

...
1• 11

,.
.., ,
·-.
' ''·

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ne

..

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball WrHar
: A&lt;!d Greg Vaughn and lhe Mii,Yaukee Brewers 10 growing lisl of
• leams of going on run rampages lhis
s~ason.
·
. Vaughn, leading the majors w\lh
8ll RBis, hila grand slam and drove
in five runs as 1he Brewers overwhelmed the Delroil Tigers 20-7
tuesday nigh! a1 Counly Siadium.
The Brewers became lhc fiflh
learn lo score 20 runs, joining Minnesota (who also did il againsl
Detroil), Monlrcai. Texas and lhc
Chicago While Sox. Not since 1950,
when il also happened live times,
have so many clubs r~achcd lhe 20mark.
Vaughn has hil 28 home runs,lhe
most for the Brewers since he hi I 30
in f993. Slowed by shoulder problems, he 101alcd 36 homers and 114
RBis in 1hc lasl two years.
"When you play hurt, il's a situalion where you just can'l do i1.lf I
could walk. I was going 10 try and
play," he-said.
"There probably was a lime when
I should have sal down and given my
hody a rcsl. Bul I lried 10 play
through it. I probahly shouldn't have
somelimes. hul who's IOsay'/ llhtnk
I learned a 101 from !hat"
Jose Valenlin, John Jaha and Mall
Mieske also homered in the Brewers' highesl-scoring game since lhey
sci a 1eam record wilh 22 runs on
Aug. 28. 1992, against Tor~nlo . .
Milwau~ee had 18 hilS, Wllh
Valentin gelling four and Jaha lhree.
Cecil Fielder, Chad Curtis a~d
Melvin Nieves homered for Detroit.
The game was tied at 2 before
Vaughn's second career s_lal'_l high-_
lighted a seven-run fourth mmng. He
added an RBI single during a four-.
run sixth, and Milwaukee made ir
17-2 in the sevenlh.
"It's fruslrating. Guys go out and
give 110 percent, bul it's
to
show il when you' re ~7·65, losmg
pitcher Brian Williams ·said.
"Regardless of thai, I don_'t ~ink
anyone's going to stop playmg.
In other games. New York

.?a'd

tonight. I hope we can keep il up ."
' Albert Belle was 2-for-3 wilh four
runs scored, and hit his'3Jst horne
run in the first inning to tie him wilh
Balli more's Brady Anderson and
Oakland's Mark McGwire for lhe
major-league lead. Hi s 1wo RB.[s
moved him inlo a lie for 1hird in lhe
AL wilh Frank Thomas uf Chicago
al 85.
"Belle hilthe ball well every lime
up lonighl," Indians manager Mike
Hargrove said. " He is- using lhc
whole field and nol trying to make
loo much happen on every swing ."
Since slumping before lhe break
and during lhe All-Star game , Belle
is 10-for-20 wilh lwo double s, four
homers and II RBis .
Manny Ramirez doubled in his
first two at-bals and added an RBI
single in his lhird plmc appearance.
He ended the game 3-for-5' and

ex lended his hitting streak to 15
games.
"He's been swinging !he bat well
in lhe las I 10 days," Hargrove said
of Ramirez. "If he gets into good
counls, he is an excellenl hiller."
Eddie Murray conlinued his
assaul! on lhe record book. He drove
in four runs 10 push his career lola!
10 1,863 and moved past Mel Oll into
eighlh place on lhe career RB!s list.
His double in lhe ninth inning gave
him 541 10 tie for 14th wilh Rogers
Hornsby on lhe career lisl.
Mark Carreon, who was acquired
July 9 in a lrade wilh lhe San Francisco Gianls. finished 2-for-5. He is
now 12-for-24 wilh lhe Indians with
four doubles, a horne run and four
RBis.
Kansas Ci ly oulfieider Tom
Goodwrn was 2-for-4, driving in
lhree ol lhe Royals' four runs.

means peace and has been all over
the Trail of Tears.
Ihe world should make ils way lo lhe
The relay began in Franklin lhis
Cherokee homelands ."
morning and arrives early Thursday
Earlier Tuesday. lhe Iorch was
in Slone Mounlain. jusl easl of
·
&lt;arried
down an IM-inch-wide slrelch
-ALI&lt;~_nl&lt;:_
It
will
enler
the
Atlanta
city
Kyger Creek Little
of red carpel into downtown Dallon
lirnil~ursday night
League Tournament
SchedYied stops today mdudcd - lhc hcan of America's carpel
induslry.
Newnan, Faycueville, Jonesboro and
Hall of Champions
Carl Bouckaert, chief execulivc
McDonough.
officer uf carpclniakcr Beaulieu of
Leaders from lhrce Cherokee
rar
Champion
America. lillhe c11y's Olympic cal1959 ........... .. ....... Doc's Fine Foods lrihes praised the relay as a symhol
dron before a crowd of 3,000 al a
1960 ............... Sommerville Motors of peace when the run slopped in
..... ............... ...... (Poinl Plcasanl) New Echola, lhc former capilal of downwwn park.
1~61 .................... Pomeroy Redlcgs
the Cherokee Nalion.
1962 .... .................. Pomeroy Pirales
Torchbearer Jim Carver wanlcd to
About 15,000 Cherokee who
1963 ...................... Gallipolis Tigers li ved in north Georgia and parts of lOp off his relay unifonn wilh a hal
1964 .................. Gallipolis Red Sox Alabama, Tennessee and Norlh Car- emblazoned wilh "Team Jesus. Go
1965.. .............. Middlepon Yankees olina were forced !'rom their homes for Ihe Gold, " bul Olympic organiz1966 ............... Middlepprl Senators !58 years ago hy federal ~nd slale ers ordered him 10 lake il off or hil
1967 .People' s Bank-Poinl Pleasanl 1roops. Their 800-rnilc 1rck In a new lhc road .
1968 ............... McAnhur Merchanls reservalion in Oklahoma is now
"They were very forceful abnul
1'969 .................... Frulh's Phannacy
known
as
I
he
Trail
of
Tears.
me
n01 heing able lo wear the hal,"
....................... (Poinl Pleasant)
"As
many
of
you
know,
lire
is
sa
id
Carver. who carried 1hc Iorch in
1970 ........................ Cily Ice &amp; Fuel
sacred
to
lhe
Cherokee."
said
Joyce
Hiawassee
on Monday. He run in
.. ................. ... ... (Poinl Plcasanl)
Dugan,
principal
chief
oflhe
Eastern
place
of
his
wife, who died of can1971 .............. ...... New Haven Cubs
Band
of
lhe
Cherokee
Indians.
"It
cer
lhrcc
days
al'ier learning she was
1972 ................. Daniel Boone Hole!
seems
only
filling
1ha1
a
name
!hat
lo
carry
the
Olympic
name .
.......................... (Ripley, W.Va.)
1973 ........................ Green Scna10rs
1974 ........................ City Ice &amp; Fuel McCullough gets hole-in-one
1975 ........ .. .Johnson's Supennarkel
Sieve McCullough did something fonhc 16-ycar-old Meigs junior-to1976 ................... Middleporl Brav'cs
.
every
golfer dreams aboul Sunday he since las! Oc!oher.
1977 ...................Pomeroy Yankees
He
hi
I
a
cighl
iron
on
I
he
160 yard
when
he
recorded
a
hole-in-one
al
1978-85 .................... no 10urnamen1
par
1hrcc.
number
four
hole
at lhc
the
Riverside
Golf
Course
in
Mason
.
1986 .... .... ...... Tuppers Plaiqs Tigers
Mason course for lhc ace .
1987 .... Mason Co. Bar Association W.Va.
1988 .............. Middlcpon Cardinals
The hole-in-one was lhe second
1989 ............ Hubbard's Greeohousc
.................... ...... ......... (Syracuse)
ACS linkfest set for July 25
1990 ........... Hannan Trace Wildeals
The American Cancer Soeicly memhcrs und $50 for non-mcmhers
I 991 .................................. Coolville
will
sponsor a golf 1ournamem a11hc and include a noun lunch, go! ling
199.2 ...... .... .... Middleport Cardinals
Mei)ls Counly Golf Course on and dinner. .
1993 ....... .................. .....Bi.dwell #I
'
,
Don Talc Mt;l&lt;Jrs will sponsor u
1994 ......:·........... Gallipolis Yankees Thui'Sdily, July 25. · '
Teams will he selcc!Cd from a new car aw&lt;~rd lor a hole-in-one on
1995 .................... Frulh's Pharmacy
.......................... (Poinl Plcasanl) hlind drawing. Enlry Ices arc. __$42
for hole IX.
__,., ·-

slopped Boston 'l-5, Toronlo lopped
Bahimorc -6-0, Chicago downed
Minnesota 11 -2, Texas defealed California 6-2 and Oakland heal Seallle
12-5 .
Yankees 9, Red Sox 5 ·
Darryl Strawberry doubled home
the go-ahead run in !he fiflh inning
al Fenway Park and New York
slopped Boslon's six-game winning
slreak.
Jimmy Key (7 -6) beat Roger
Clemens (4-9) for lhe second lime
lhis monlh . Bul unlike their meeting
July I al Yankee Sladium, which
New York won 2-0. lhis wa' no
pilchcr's duel .
Key gave up four runs in five
innings. Clemens allowed six runs in
six-plus innings.
Ran1ers 6, Angels 2
Jim Abbon. · gelling another
chance 10 slarl because of an injury
to Mark Langston, losl again for California.
Abboll ( 1-12) remained winless
since May 2, giving up five runs in
seven innings.
Darren Oliver (8-3) pilched seven s1rong innings and helped ou1 a
Texas r01ation !hal had a 6.67 ERA
in ils previous 15 games.
' Blue Jays 6, Orioles 0
Juan Guzman pilched the second
shuloul of his career. holding Bahirnorc 10 live singles al Camden
Yards.
Guzman (9-6) walked none and
lowered his ERA 10 2.99 in his firsl
shutout since 1993. Toronlo sen !'the
Orioles lo !heir sixth loss in seven
games.
The Blue Jays hit eight doubles,
one short of lht team record. Seven
of them came againsl Mike Mussina (11-7).
'
Manny Alexander, at shortslop·
for the Orioles while Cal Rlpken is
at lhird base, had a Iough night in the
field . -He was charged with an error
for failing to cover second base on a
steal aucmpl, and also dropped the
ball while trying to tum a doUble
play. ·.
Ripken went ()..for-4 and is hitless
in eight at-b~~ si~ rnDVing to his

•

eL!ftt~lmtt W11rt'11nelu

e Til" Guaranued LowetJt Prlct11J

on mO!It part.&amp;

well match any locally ldvertl~d price

e W" Turn Drum•

r··~ L~v·

11nd RDtDNI

Brewers hammer Tigers 20-7;
Yankees and Rangers also win

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming

, ..

Olympic Torch draws closer to Atlanta

6PM

New Haven Reds

.

Season

. .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Cleveland Indians were able to
· put their bats on the ball all nigh!.
The result was 17 hits and II{) strikeouls.
The Indians pounded out 17 hits
as seven players collected 1wo or
more in a 10-4 vic1ory over the
Kansas Cily Royals on Tuesday
night None of Cleveland's hillers
struck out. the firsl time that has happened !his year.
The beneficiary of lhe hilling
surge was righl-hander Jack
McDowell, who-improved to 8-6 for
1he season and 5-0 wilh a 2.01 ERA
in seven career starts al Kauffman
Sladium. He pilched seven innings
and raised his lifelime record againsl
lhe Royals 10 9-4.
"It's nice 10 see everyone in'lhe
· game balding hard," McDowell said.
"We swung lhe bats preuy well

FRANKLIN, Ga. (AP) - The
Olympic Torch headed loward rnelro
Allanla today after slopping along

In other AL action,

...

·:

(Sat.).

7122 (Mon.), 6PM

Quality Furniture Plus

bring a complcled sp&lt;&gt;rts physical
card signed by a p:~rcnt &lt;&gt;r legal

MASON, W.VA.
-' 713·5583

7127

7120 (Sat.), lOAM

shorts. 1-shirts and tennis shn\!s and

HARDWARE

7121 (Sun.), 5:30PM

Indians hand Royal.s 10-4 loss

Mead's Body Shop

1-3 p.m.: girls in grades 10-12
3·5 p.m.: boys in !.!"Ides I0-12.
Alhlcl~s should come dressed in

PICKENS

7123 (Thurs.), 6PM

Mason A's·VFW No. I

Sports physicals for the Southern
Local Schobl dislriet for lhc 1996-97
sports season will he offered allhc
office of Dr. Douglas D. Hunlcr in
Racine on Saturday. July 20 .
1l1e physil'als will he done free of
charge on this day only and will be
for all sports and chcerleudins . The
physicals will he done according to,.
the lollowing schedule:
11-10 a.m.: girls in grades 7-Y
10 a.m. -noon: hoys in grades 7-

Stop and see
what we have
in stock
• Vlctorco Strainer
• Foley Food MHis
• Mirro Food Presc.
Cold·pack (CI!Ifters
• Pressure Cookers
• Co0ker Giskits

' f

7119 (Fri.), 7:30PM

I ,,,,,nlo• t H.tll"lll S· ll i ,11 R:tllmll•r,•
l' l l \I I \Nil t H,·r•hl•&lt;' r '1 -.~1 til
" ·'" '·'' l ·,,, i lld,hr • 7 . ~1 .~ 0 ~ I'm

7121 (Sun.), 4PM

Pomeroy Yankees

Transactions

t o\kr . ~. · r Lot7 1~1'111

place Kyger Creelc No. I and fourth-place Bidwell)
and two olher teams thai made the final eighl (Point
Pleasant Hardware and Rio Grande).
For the first time since the 1991 season, there
will be a lcam from ou!Side the Gallia-Meigs-Mason County area.
Coolville will return for the first lime since winning lhe 199llille.
Note: The home run derby contesl will be held
on Sunday, July 28 at 3 p.m.

7119 (Fri.), 6PM

Rockies and Braves stand among victors
By Thl! Associated Press
runs- four earned -in six innings.
Marvin Freeman only wamcd 1he
In olhcr games, Florida heal
same lhing his fellow Rockies pilch- Houston 3-2, New York heal
ers go1.
Philadelphia 6-~. Allanta beat Mon'' I was asking !hem lhc whole treal 3-2, Piusburgh beat Chicago 10game. 'Whcre 's lhe sevcn-spollhat 5 and San Diego routed los 'Angeyou've been giving everybody les 10- 1.
else'''" he said of his bench.
Marlins 3, Astros i
Eric Young and Andres Galarra-.
Quilvio Veras drew a basesga homered Tuesday nigh! as Col- loaded walk from Todd Jones (6-2)
orado heal San Francisco 5-3 and with two ouls in 1he nimh al Joe Robextended its wlnning Slrcak 10 seven. hie Stadium . Florida scored lhe winBut il was lhc first lime in 12 ning run wilhout gelling a hil in the
horne games 1ha( 1hc Rockies failed nimh.
to sco re al leas! seven runs. They
The Marlins, who sci a learn
share lhe major league record with record wilh 24 hils Monday nigh!,
lhe 1938 New York Yankees.
load~d lhe bases when Greg Col" It was enough to win," Freeman
brunn walked wilh one oul, Charles
said.
Johnson walked wilh lwo ouls and
San Francisco is slreaking lhe pinch-hiuer Andre Dawson was hil
olher way. The Giants ljavc losl 19 by a pilch.
of 23 and al 40-52 arc lhc only NL
Yorkis Perez 13-3) pilched lhe
· West team under .500.
nimh for the victory.
"The whole damn year has beeQ
Mets 6, Phillies 3
like thi s," Giants manager Dusty
Mark Clark (I 0-6) won his sixlh
Baker . said. "They aren't doing slraighl. sellling down afler falling
enough In heal us. We are doing
enough to gel bcal."
Freeman (7-5) improved 10 4-1 in
h1s career agains11he Gianls. giving
up three runs and six hils in six
innings. Bruce Ruflin gollhrcc outs
for his 141h save.
Mark leiter (4-9) allowed five

::;---.,.

Green

Southern physicals
slated for Saturday

'

Baseball

hil his 151h horne run in the eighlh
- the Cardinals' 131h horner in five
games, during which lhcy'vc scored
43 runs. I
The Reds 10ok an early lead on
Eric Owens' huslle and a horne run
by Eduardo Perez.
Owens led off lhc first wilh an
infield hil. sliding hea - sl 10 bcal
Donovan Osborne to the ba . On !he
nexl pilch, Owens broke for second
as Osborne lhrew 10 f1rs1. and was
safe when Gaeni's relay went wildly into lefl field.
Owens conli_nued 10 lhird on 1he
bad lhrow. and scored when Ganl's
throw home bounced past Pagnozzi ,
who was charged wilh an error.
Perez hil his second home run in
the second for a 2-0 lead.
The Cardinals made it 2-all in 1he
liflh. Royce Clay10n singled and
scored on Lankford's triple . Pagnozzi 's force play grounder drove in
Lankford.
The Reds regained the lead in lhe
fiflh when Joe Oliver walked. was
sacriticed 10 second and scored on
Brei Boone's infield sin~lc .
Osborne (9-5) allowed six hils in

I

The 30th installment of this lournament the
largest of its kind in southeastern Ohio will begin
Friday at the Kyger Creek Employees' Club field,
located between Addison and Cheshire on Ohio
S.R. 7, across from Ohio Valley Eleclric Company's
Kyger Creek plant.
Thi~ diamond fest retained 17' learns that panicipa!ed m the 1995 tournament, including 1he final
four clubs (defending champion Frulh'~ Phannacy,
runner-up Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse, third-

Aided by Lankford's defensive play,
manager Tony LaRussa looki ng for
superlatives.
"Thai may be Ihe besl play oflhe
year by a ccnler fielder," La Ru ss a
said. "I'll mark !hal in rny personal
references over a career. Thai 's one
lo remember."
Wilh the Reds leading 3-2 in lhe
sixlh. Howard hit a 1wo-ou1. basesloaded line drive !hat Lankford lost
after a sp lit second .
"I knew when he hil il , il was
trouble. II was in lhe lighls lhe whole
nigh!," Lankford said. "I saw il off
the bal and I JUS I ran unlill was able
to pick il oul of lhc lights. I reached
oul for il allhe lasl minule and made
Ihe calch."
LaRussa liked lhc way Lankford
kepi his head in lhe game and made
!he calch afler hilling inlo an inning ending double play in lhe lop of lhc
mnmg .
"Thai was really a spark for our
club," La. Russa said .
Following lhc catch, Ganl singled
to stan a two-run rally !hal gave lhe
Cardinals a 4-3 lead on RBI singles
by Pagnozzi and Gary Gaclli. Ganl

-

1996 Kyger Creek Little League Tournament

Wednesday, July 17, 1996

By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Reds
manager Ray Knighl could have
saved his brealh and jus! recycled his·
Ray Lankford qumcs .
"II was 100 much Ray Lankford. "
Knighl said afler lhe SL Louis ce nlcrflelder beal lhe Reds wilh two
horne runs Monday nighl.
Lankford was as devaslaling defensively - in lhe Cardinals' 5-4
win Tuesday nighl.
"The whole ballgame was Lankford's catch," Knrghl said Tuesday.
afler Lankford look whallookcd like
a sure three- run double from Thomas
Howard .
" He's basically heal us singlehandedly the las! two night s. I don 't
lhink !here's a cenler fielder in !he
league who can move as well !merally as he can. and !hal's including
'Marquis Grissom ."
Ron Ganl homered and Torn Pagnozzi drove in 1wo runs as lhe Cardinals won !heir fiflh slraighl game .
Bul it was lhc full-bore running catch
in the righl-ccnlcrfleld gap by Lankford - who has not made an error
1his season - that had St Louis

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

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Robin Venlura hillwo home runs
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�r-----------------------~----------~----~---------------- -- -- -- - - -- ·

... , . .
Wednesday, ~uly 17, 199&amp;"

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

In District 8 American Legion action, ~-

In American Legion baseball, .

MeigS loses twice ~-

Gallipolis defeats
Chillicothe 12-2
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff W}lter
In Ameritan Legion ba seba ll
Tuesday, Galltpolis Post 27 used a
four-run first inning and Ja son
Dai ley's four-hit pitching to tally a
'even -i nning , I 0-2 victory over
Ch illi cot he Post 757 at Mary Lou
Patton Field in Chillicothe.
Gal lipo li s sen t eight men to the
plate in the opening frame. Of the
four th a t scored. thre e - Eric
Humphreys (his RBI double sent
Dailey home with the first run).
Caleb Shuler (he walked and scored
on Moose Clark's line-dnve single
to left) and Joey Johnson (his narc
si ngle to short center fteld allowed
Humphreys to score : Johnson scored
on a wild pitch during Heath
Shaner's at-bat) - did so with two
outs.
How effective were Dailey and.
the Gallipolis defense agai nst the
First Capital crew? Before the hosts
got their fir st run in the s ixth ,
Gall ipolis stranded three runners in
the first five frame s. Of those three.
only No . 9 hitter Aaron Morgan got
as far as third base. He did that in
the third .
In the fifth. Gallipolis started
another rally after getting two outs
aga inst 11.
Cleanup hitter D Brunton. who
struck out and grounded out in hi s
first two at -bats, singled and scored
on Shuler ' s flare single near the
right field line . Shuler scored when
Clark 's over-the-mound hopper was
muffed hy second base man Nick

and give up eight hits.
Stanley was the loser for Meigs, •.
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs dropped a pair of games to striking out seven, walking five and';'·
· Glouster Post 414 in District 8 scatteri ng six hits. ·
In the nightcap, Meigs jurnpc ~'
American Legion baseball "action
Sunday afternoon by identical 5-4 out to It 4-0 lead after five, but '
Glouster scored three in the sixth and.··
scores.
In the first conte st, Glouster two in the seventh to get the win .
Meigs jumped out on top 1-0 in
scored three runs in the first and a
single run in the fourth to take a 4- the second. Donnie Phillips doubfed
and Matt Ault and Josh Merckle had0 lead.
1
back-to-back
si~gles .
Meigs
Meigs (9-17 overall &amp; 5-8 in Dit·
trict 8) scored a run in the hottom of increased the lead to 2-0 in the fourth
inning when Kevin Deemer doubled
the fourth inning to close to within
4-1 . Scott George doubled and before Phillips and Auh si ngled .
Meigs went on top 4-0 in the fifth ·
scored on bac~-to-back wild pitches.
Meigs added a pair of runs in the
inning on four straight singles by .
seventh inning when Chad Burton Ryan Martin, Scott George. Wes
Wilson and Andy Wamsley.
· ·
reached on a Glouster error and
scored when Wes Wil son tripled .
Justin McCiintotk the fourth of
Wilson then scored on a si ngle by the Glouster pitchers picked up the
Josh Merckle to make it a 4-3 con- win. Josh Merckle picked up the loss
test.
in relief of Matt Ault .
Glouster added a run in the ninth
Phillips led Meigs ~ith a double
to give them a 5-3 lead . Meigs and a single. Martin and George
scored a single run in the hottom of added two singles each. Deemer had
the ninth to end the scoring. Andy a double. Wes Wilson, Andy WarnsWamsley si ngled , and Burton Icy. Ault and Merckle eac h had a sin reached on an error and a groundout gle.
. produced the run.
Steve Snyder and Mike Drake led
' Wamsley led Mctgs with two sin- Glouster with two singles each .
gles. Wilson added hi s triple, while
Meigs will host Athens Imlay and
George had a double. Ryan Martin, host Gallipolis Thursday.
Gary Stanley, Cass Cleland and !.nn.in&amp; totals-first &amp;rum
Mcrckle added singles.
Glouster...... . 300- 100-00 I =5-6-2
Sam Sechkar led the winners Meigs
....... 000-100-20 I=4-H-4
with a pair of singles. J.R. Springer WP- Winner. LP - Stanley
had a solo home run .
!.nn.in&amp; totals-second l:l!Jm
Jorge Winner picked up the win Gloustcr............... 000-003-2=5-9- 1
going the first seven innings. Jason Meigs ................. .0 I0- 120-0=4 - 11 -2
Snyder picked up the save. The two WP- McClintock . LP - Mcrckle _
combined to strike out six, walk two

Haubeil. 4
With two out in the six th,
Brunton , one of ihe two left-handel!
hitters in th e Post 27 lin e up , ·
grounded Braun Lowry's 2-2 pitch
into right field to get Dailey horne
with the guests' seve nth run .
Chillicothe got into the two-out
rally business in the bottom of th e
six th when cleanup hitter Todd
Sexton,
who
reached
on
Humphreys' erro r in left center
fi eld . scored on Lowry's single to
right.
Gallipolis got its last three run s
in the seventh when Sullivan's twoout sing le to center se nt Clark horne.
Dailey, the next batter, hit a fly-ball
single to ce nter that allowed Shaner
and Sullivan to score.
SHULER SCORES - Gallipolis Post 27's Caleb Shuler (9) causChi II icot he scored the game's
es
a mini-dust storm around the plate as he scores in front of Chillfinal run in the bottom of the
catcher Aaron Morgan in the first inning of Tuesday's Amer!cothe
seve nth , when pinch -hitter Ja son
tcan
Legion
contest in Chillicothe, where Gallipolis won 10-2. Shuler
Sanders, who si ngled to right as the
No. 8 hitter, scored after Morgans scored on Moose Clark's single to left field. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)
singl ed pa st Shaner and Brunton
into left fi eld .
Caleb Shuler-rf ............... 2 2 I 0 James Grandcy-1 b . ........ 3 0 0 0
Joey Johnson- lb ............. ) I I 0 Justin Brown-ss ....... .. ... .4 0 0 0
Gallipolis will be the guest of
Moose Clark-2b ......... .... 3 I I I Todd Sexton-3b ........ .... .3 I 0 0
Meig s Th\Jrsday at Meigs High
Heath Shaner-3b ...... ....... 2 I 0 0 Braun Lowry-p ..
J 0 I I
School.
Morgan Sullivan -c f. .. .... .4 I I I Scott Cracc-cf... .
..... J () 0 0
!.nn.in&amp; 1l!ll!h
Totals
29 10 8 7 Matt Dalrymple-rf. .. . ..... 1 I 0 0
Gallipolis ........ 400 021 3 =10-8-2
Chris Martin-If. ...... ...... .2 0 0 0
Pjtchine
Chillicothe ....... 000 001 I= 2-4-2
Aaron Morgan-c ... ......... 2 0 0 I
Oatley (W) : 7 ip. 6K &amp; 6BB
Jason
Sanders-ph ..... ..... . I 0 I 0
--Gallipolis Post 27 (9-14)
Totals
25 2 4 2
Chillicothe
Post
757
Player-pas.
i!.l! r b hi
Pitchine
~IDn[-1!2~·
i!.l! r !!hi
Jason Dailey -p ............. ... 2 2 I I
Nick Hauheil-2b ............. 3 0 I 0 Lowry (L): 7 ip, 6K &amp; BBB
Jamie Gruber-c ............. 5 0 0 0
Eric Humphreys-If . ..4 I I I
D Brunton-ss ......... ... .4 I 2 I

• •

Oiler sign George;
Shuler to -stay put
By The Associated Press
The Houston Oilers signed their
fourth Heisrnan Trophy winner and
the Buffalo Bills signed their forst
future pi7.Za man .
Running back Eddie George. the
I'I'JS winner of the award as college
football's outstanding player. agreed
to a fivc Mycar co ntract with Houston
on Tuesday. By joining the Oilers,
George follows in the footsteps of
past Heisman wmners Billy Cannon,
Earl Campbell and Mike Rozier.
Terms of the deal were not disdosed.
·· 1 feel elated. I'm glad it's over.
I'm glad I didn"t rntss any practice
time," sa1d George. who is scheduled
to join the Oilers on Friday in San
Antonio for the first day of training

camp.
"I' m very exc ited. I can now
move on to the next phase of my
life ."
The for mer Ohto State star,
selected 14th in the Apnl draft. has
hecn working out four times a day
since the team's voluntary miniL:arnp.

·· 1 want to he prepared and do the
hest JOh I can do." said George. who
rushed for I.984 yards and scored 24
touchdowns last season.
In Buffalo, wide receiver Eric
Moulds. drafted tn the first round.
signed a live -year contract with the
Bill' worth $5 million .
Moulds , who is working out an
agreement with Piaa Hut to shoot a
regional commercial , was criticized
last season for having a large pic
del ivcrcd to a Mississippi State prac ti~:c . ·
Bills veteran running hack Thurman Thomas made light of the situation hy having three pinas deliv ered to Moulds during a minicamp
workout.

""We just want ed to tum a poSittvc
intu a negative ... Moulds said nf the
nunmcn.: ial. " Some people arc· still

gelling on me . ca lling me the piaa
guy and stuff. hut not ton much any more . Before ... whew."
Packers
Coac h Mike Holmgren doesn"t
want to rush quartcrhack Breit Favre

int o shape nne month after last seasons MVP was released fnun the
Menninger Cltnic. where he underwent treatment for ilddi~.:tion to the
painkiller Vicodin .
" There were stx weeks out of ht s
life there that normally he 'd be
throwing and doing some foothall
'tuff."" Holmgren said. "You run the
risk of him overthrowing right now
and trying to make up all that time ."
Favre married his girlfriend.
Deanna Tynes of Hattiesburg , Miss .,
in an unpubliciLed ceremony Sun day. Favre and Tynes have been
together for 10 years and have a
daughter, Brittany Nicole, 7. They
were married in a private ceremony
in Green Bay, agent James Cook
said.
Sainls
Defensive end Wayne Martin
expects to end his career in New
Orleans after his contract was
extended for five years.
Martin came into camp on the
final year of a fllur-year deal signed
in 1993. His new five-year &lt;:ontract
is worth an estimated S 17.4 million.
"I'm very happy that I can finish

•

my career with the New Orleans
Saints, the people I started out with. "
Martin said. "They' re the people that
gave me a chance when I was coming out of school, and a lot of other
clubs proba bly wouldn 't have taken
that chance on me."
New Orleans also signed veteran
wide receiver Haywood Jcffircs,
Houston's leading receiver last sea-

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW,

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Patriots
Defensive lineman Bruce Walker
was stabbed in hiS chest over the
weekend when he and a friend were
throwing a stca~ knife at each other
in a grocery store parking lot.
Police said Walker sustained the
wound when he missed a ca tch . He
was treated at Southwood Community Hospital in )'lorfolk and required
severa l stitches. police said .
"You have nothing better to do''
No. I have nothing to say," Walker
told The Su11 Chm11icle of Attleboro
(Mass. I on Tuesday.
Bears
Chicago defensive back Donnell
Woolford was fined $1,000 and sentenced to 200 hours of community
sc rvi~.:c for his conviction on a &lt;.:harge
of driving while under the innucnce
of alcohol.
Woolford also was ordered by
Lake Coun ty Associate Judge E.
Thomas Lang not to consume alcohol for a yea r.
"" If the Bears win the Super Bowl
and he sips on champagne in the
locker room . he can go to jail." prosecu tor Charles Smith said .
Panthers
Free agent Darion Conner, who
started every game at outside linehacker during Caroli na's inaugural
season, has re-signed with the team.

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Terms were not annoum:cd .

Co nner ftnishcd second on the
Panthers last year with seve n sacks
Redskins
Don't expec t Washington general manager Charley Casserly to trade
either multimillion dollar quarterhack Heath Shuler or Gus Frerotte.
hi s lowe r-paid understudy.
"Once we made a decision to
keep hoth of them . that was a decision for the year." Casserly said.
Frcrottc , who has had his ups and
downs as a starter, had been rumored
to he on the trading block since the
Redskins finished 6-10 last season.
The higgcst reason Shuler isn"t
going anywhere IS that, under the
NFL sa lary cap. Washington would
sti ll have to count about $4 million
of Shuler's $ 19.25 million salary
against its spending limil.

Meigs Chamber
golf tourney
set for August 1
The Meigs County Chamber ol
Commerce will hold a golf outing on
Thursday. Aug. I at the Meigs County Golf Course.
The format will be a bring your
own 'earn four-person scramble.
Each team must have a total handicap of 45 or more with only one
player with a handicap of 12 or less.
The entry fee is $50 per person or
$200 per team with food. drinks and
prizes. The tournament will begin at
I p.m. with a shotgun start.

~
The Other White Meat·

~­

••

~ [f):jff{jf

•

~~
Pound

Ann
Landers
1 99~ .

Time~

' ..

Lu~

Allj!dC~

Syndu:atc ami Cr\· ·

a1nr~ Sy~t.hc~ t e

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers : This may not be
the most interesting co lumn you
have ever read, but it cou ld be the
most important . I urge you to read it.
Dear Ann Landers: If your loved
one were hav ing a stroke, would you
know the symptoms and how to
help"' Please save thousands of lives

today by informing your readers
about stroke and stroke treatment.
Stroke is the thtrd leading cause
Dl.!Jeath and THE leading cause of
disability among adults in the United States. Five hundred thousand
Americans will have a stroke this
year. Of those, 150,000 will die , and
many others will be left wi th severe
disabilities. often unable to talk or
usc one side of the body.
Stroke is a brain attack .. blood is
prevented from reachi ng an area of
the brain, &lt;:ausi ng that area to die. A
brain attack can strike suddenly, but
many attacks are preceded hy a

I. Sudden blurred or decreased
vision . especiall y in one eye.
2. Numbness. weakness or paralysis of the face . arm or leg. especially on one side of the body.
:l. Sudden dtffieulty in speak ing
or understanding language .
4. Sudden severe headache. dizzi -

treatment.

ness or mental confusion .

Sadly, most people ignore the
warning signs of stroke. waiti ng and
hoping that the symptoms will go

5. Sudden loss of balance or an
unexplained fall.

FOOD LAND

Vance
awarded
scholarship
Christina Vance, a recent graduate
of Athens High School, has been
selected as the recipient of the Dave
Diles Scholarship for 1996. She has
been accepted tn the Honors Tutorial College of Ohio University's
School of Journalism and will begin
her studies in the fall term .
Vance is the daughter of Lowell
and Margaret Vance, who reside in
The Plains.
"We established this scholarship
nearly 20 years ago," said John T.
Wolfe, chainnan of the Diles scholarship committee and president of the
Racine Horne National Bank, and it
is a rare opportunity for us to provide
assistance to such deserving young
people. I cannot think of any recipient we have honored who is more
deserving than Christina Vance." .
The sc holarship was established
by Diles, a Meigs County native who
spent many years as an ABC Television sports broadcaster and who has
written seve n books. It was originally funded by proceeds from a celebrity golf tournament.
The Diles scholarship award is
merely another in a long line of
accomplishments by the 18-year-old .
Vance . She is a member of the
National Honor Society, the Spanish
Honor Society, won the Appalachian
Ohio Peace Prize. represented Athens
High School at the Martin Essex
School for the Gifted program and
served as features editor, copy editor
and editor of the Athens High School
newspaper.
Christina said she hopes one day
to work for a newspaper or do free .
lance writing or magazines.
"My ultimate goal is to support
myself with creative writing," she
said. "I also have an interest in the
history and culture of Ireland and
hope to work there or in some other
place abroad in the future ."
She ranked tifth in a graduating
class of 214 at Athens High, with a
grad poi nt average of 4.866.
Fred W. Crow II , a member of the
scholarship committee and judge of
the Court of Common Pleas in Meigs
County, commented: "She not only
has treme ndous achievements and
c redent ials but she has already
demonstrated an outstanding work
hie and an interest in helping oths. And the reports we re&lt;:eived from
r counselors at Athens High School
were absolutely glowing. And I'd be
remiss if I didn't mention how proud
we arc of her Meigs County background. ,;nee her father was born in
Danville and graduated from Rutland
High Sc hool."
·
Another committee member, Larry Powell. said liigh school officials
(particularly guidance counselors) in
Meigs, Gallia, Mason and Athens
counties should be reminded that pri mary considerati on for the Diles
scholarship is gran ted to students
from the local area and is designed
for students enrolled in the scha:ol of
journalism or college of communication at Ohio University.

atte nti on:

For more information . your read-

Joneses to mark
50th anniversary

.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Jones,
42440 Jones Road, Shade, will
observe their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday with a private din~_er
party at the Oakroom in Athens.
Mr. and Mrs . Jones were mar.ried
in. Elmira, N.Y. July 20, 1946. They
are the parents of four children,
Jackie Roush of Greensboro, N.C.;
Caro1yn Korn of Carroll; Bo~ Jones
and Jim Jones, both of Shade.

crs can write to : What You Should
Know Anout Stroke Preventi ,)n.
AHCPR Puhlications Clearinghouse . P.O. Box X547. Silver Spring.
Md . 20Y07. orcall l ·X,lXl-:l5X -n&lt;J5
Thank you. Ann . -- Mary Keane.
R.N.. stroke program coordinator,
Trinity Luthe ran Hospital . Kansas
City. Mu .
Dear Ann Landers: A year or so
ago. my wife . Karen. read your col umn ahout the man who qui t srnok ·
ing by si lentl y telling himself, " My
last cigarette wi ll be on such-andsuch a date." Karen asked me to try
it and I thou~ht . "Why not"'" I chose

Win A Sony
Home Theatre
System!

EASTMAN'S

CHRISTINA VANCE

away. Please tell your readers if they
observe any of these syrnpturns. they
should seck trnmcdiatc medical

warning episode. commonly called a
"mi ni -stroke" or TIA (transient
ischemic attack) . These warning
episodes often last on ly seconds or
minutes and can precede a major,
hfe - thrcatc nin~ stroke by hours.
days or even months.
If immediate medical attention is
sought. a physician can prescribe
medicine and a treatment program
that can help reduce the uhances of
having a s tr~ ke. The key is prompt

April I, our I Mth wedding anniversary.
In your column. the man looked
forward to his quitting date and
hcgan to smoke less and less. l' wa.&gt;
the oppos ite . I looked forward to the
date . but smoked twice as much . I
just told myself the last one would
he on April I.
When the day came, I had my last
cigarette before midnight . and when
I awakened on April 2, I had
1
absolutely no dc ~ irc lu snw kc. and I
have had none si nce . I _qutck ly
noticed how much easier it was to
breathe . .. G.P.. Grand Rapids.
Mich.

ENTRY BLANK
NAME:
ADDRESS:--------------CITY: - - - - STATE - - - - - PHONE

ZIP----

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Recognizing the symptoms of a stroke and how to help

By DAVE HARRIS

On the NFL training camp scene,
•

Wednesday, July 17,1996

9.4·14 Oz Be.:
Or 4 Cheese Deluxe
Macaron• &amp; Cheese. Broccoli Rotim &amp; Cheese.

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2 $3
BIG BEND

BUY ONE, CET ONE

FREE .

l-------------------------------~

·
•

•

•

�. .

8 e The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy e Middleport,

Last Confederate soldier's
widow hoping to get pension

Ohio

Wednesday, July

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

By DEBRA DAVIS
The Montgomery (Ale.) Advertlaer
ELBA, Ala. - Alberta Martin
wams whal she ·s emit led to.
She is believed to be the only
living widow of a Confederate soldier. and under Alabama law she is
entitled w colle(l a widow 's pension that the Legislature stopped
funding almost a decade ago.
State officials probably thought
all war widows are dead , says one
historian . But Manin , 89, is alive
and well . She lives here with her
67-year-old son. William Oren
Manin, and leads an active life.
She didn't know she was eligible for the pension u.ntil she met an
Enterprise, Ala., dentist with an
imerest in Civtl War history. He
discovered the pension while
researching Man in's family tree .
Martm married William Jasper
Martin on Dec. I 0, 1927. at the
Covington County Courthouse in
Andalusia , Ala . She was a 21-yearold widow with an infant son.
William Jasper Martin was an 81 year-old widower.
She sought security and freedom from having to live with fam ily members after the death of her
first husband. Howard Farrow. in a
car accident . Her firstborn son,
Harold Farrow. lives in Linle
Rock, Ark .
The Martin courtship consisted

,.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JULY 20 , 1996

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
·metling and spedal events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific numbrr of days.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ·· Al t heimers Relat ed Disorder Support Group, I to 3
p.m.. Wednesday. Metgs Multipur-

llllhl

Roofing, VInyl

Siding
Roofs

Siding, Garaget,
Porchea, Sldewalka
and Add-ona.
Free Ettl,.tet

7 UP, DR. . .
PEPPER, CRUSH, :

ized pill box. Alzheimer's alert system, and an ERS medical alert.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
&amp;14-9112-2m
8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

THURSDAY
RACINE -- American Legion Post
602, business meeting at 6:30 p.m
with dinner to follow.
POMEROY ·· Rock Springs Better Health Club, Thursday home of
Francis Gocglein, 60th anniversary
observance. Past and present mem bers inv1ted to auend.
TUPPERS PLAINS ·· Tuppers
plains VFW Auxiliary. Thursday.

~

.~

.... AlkllioiiS

614-985-3982

614·992·2979

101111 BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garagea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop • Compare

111M

CAMPBELL CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75

oz.

2/$1

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commercial &amp;
Residential Service

949-3151
742·2246
Locally owned &amp;operated

Free Estimates
Guaranteed resufts

2/$ t,.

.

3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.
SeN·U~19)84~

COUPON GOOD
FOR 5 TRIPLE
COUPONS

Replacement
Windows
•lilt-in
• Double Hung
• Insulated ·
Limited lime Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quote!

1·900-868-41 00
Ext. 5489

1-900-868-490~

Ext. 7625
$3.99 per min.
tllust be 18 yrs.
.
Serv·U (619)--645-8434 :
'"~

Want to Help
Youlll

Musl be 18 yrs
SeN·U (619) 845·8434

Let them tell you
St. At. 7

4" S&amp;D ·perf.· solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
I 1!2;'thru 4" Seh 40 pipe

Gravel,

Sand,

Don'lgtl stoog by high prices! · Top Soli, Fill Dirt
Shop tht dossif~ seclion.
614-992-3470
'
440 Apartments
lor Rent

TRUCKING

30%·40% OFF

July 16, 1996 to

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Llmeltone • Ql'lftl
Dirt. Sind

985-4422
CheNr,Ohlo

HARTWELL
HOUSE

• Antiques

992-7696

'MEIGS
REFRIGERAnON
Refri~Jenton

We have tho new FR12
Low Coat Replacement
for Automotive R12.

992-2735
7/1tte 1 mo.

Trucking·
Umestone
· Bulldozing and
Beckhoe
Service•
Houu su.. and
Utilltloa

992-3838
All Kinds of Eorlh Work

46 State Street

BEN
the,.,.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
with
&amp;..rvlce to IHtclr It up
Serving S.E. O_hlo &amp; Wnt VIrginia
Toll Frw 1-lJCI0.872--5887
448-9418

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Me ... pal• ... of
,.11111... let •• llo It
fill',...
VIIY IUSOIAill
UVIIIRUICIS
614·tiHIIO
JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Headliners - Custom Seat
Covers • Carpet .
-Convertible Tope •

cars ·

• Antique
• Boat Seats .
Over 20 Years Experience
(81~) 992·7587
41484 Starcller Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45789
8/lt/1 mo. pd.

Howard hcavalin

Drapes By Design

IW\'010212

FREE ESTIMATES

Gifts • Folkart

??????

FrwEatlmatea

614-992-3055

- Daniel Buckley. son of Bryce and
Pam Buckley, recently celebrated his
~~~e . birthday with a party at his

SALE

Pleated Shades
and much morel

lmiiOI·EmiiOI

Sixth birthday
celebrated

FAmRY

Verticals,

7:00p.m.

DANIEL BUCKLEY

Strv·U (819~5-8434

ReL. HOLLON

EOH

used in your lcuer. insulin dependenl.
describes you and individuals in this
situation.
The individual s with the most
common form of diabetes make sufficient amounts of insulin, but their
body's cells can't usc it properly. The
body responds by raising the glucose
l.evel in the blood to try and make it
more availalilc to the cells, and this
causes the high sugar that establishes the diagnosis of diabetes. This
prevalent form of diabetes is most
common later in life, and a diet high
in sweets and/or obesity can contribute to it.

Ext. 2469
$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yra.

Mini Blinds,

Open Monday
nights until

$260 per month.

4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe

1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe

'
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll 's)
314" U.L. appro•ed Conduit
8" Graveless Leoch pipe
Gas pipe l"thru 2" - Fillings- Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Fie• fittings &amp; Wotcr linings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.

HAULING
Limestone,

Tuppe111 Plalna, Ohio 45783

about the future!! I
1·900..868-41 00

814-985-3813 or 614-687--6484
Pla&amp;tic Culvert· Dual wall ~nd Regular 8" thru 36"

Noward L Wrltesol
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Guttera

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Gutter elo.-tlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
5118114 TFtt

- - -----

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
~ew Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • RoOfing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

• Diabetes is a complicated illness
Regardless ofthe cause, treatment
tllat affects every pan of the body. for diabetes involves eating a diet that
A Power Ranger theme was car·
FREE ESTIMATES
~ easiest change for doctors to is very low in sugar. Individuals with
llleliSure is the increase in blood sug-· the second fonn of diabetes , often ried out in the cake and other deco614-992·7643
ai- that is the single most characteris- referred to as "adult onset," "type II," rations. Games were played with .
(No Sunda~· Calls)
tk feature or this disease. Despite this or "non· insulin dependent diabetes" prizes going 10 Tyler Keams and Kyle
o;verabundance blood sugar · or "glu- - may achieve adequate· control of Edwards. Those attending were his ...__ _ _ _.;.._ _ _..;....,.....:;..._..,:111~~~::•::•:::~••
parents, sister, Andrea; grandparents, '
cose" in doctor jargon • the body's their disease by diet alone. However,
cells have difficulty using it to fuel medication to help the cells use lhe · John and Glenna Riebel and Darlene
Buckley ; great-grandmother, Henritl)eir metabolic activities.
naturally produced insulin more effi·
' Those with high blood sugar lev- ciently or to increase the level of , etta Bailey, John Riebel , Jr., Tyler,
els are labeled with the diagnosis insulin produced by the pancreas are Chelsi, Pat and Kim Keams, Kyle
Edwards, Morgan Werry, Justin and
"(liabctes," but this condition can often prescribed.
Residential- Commercial
come aboul from two very different
1bc medicine, Prccose, delays the Jamie Gibbs, Shane Milhoan,
Christopher
Laudennilt,
Robyn
AoollngRubber- Shingles- Minor Repairs
eiuses. Some individuals have inad· absorption of sugar frbm the digesGutters and Downspouts
equate levels of insulin, the hormone tive uact. This minimizes the amount Hawk, Cassie Hauber, Adam and
Completa Remodeling
n¢cessary forcells to use this glucose of sugar thai is available from the Becky Geyer.
Other sending gifts were John BaiDeckl BatllroorM Kltchent c:,.,,,....
effectively, because the insulin pro- food you eat and can be helpful for
- -"'
diacina cells of the pancreas become individUils wilh either type of dia· ley, great-grandfather, Lindsey Grate,
• Y-. ,.,.,.,_
damaged. These individuals require betes. It 'won't cause low blood sug- Megan Broderick, Kevin, Diana,
(614) H2·2384
1400 8S.3M3
in_sulin shots to replace the insulin · ar as modicines that increase the pro- Michelle, Miranda and Benjamin
Buckley.
their bodies can't make. The: term you duclion of insulin can.

{:ONSTftlJ(:TJON

.-

Let a Psychic
Answer your :
Questions! :

LIVE PSYHICS

$3.99 per min.

r----------------.....,
BAD ROOFING and

GOOD WfD 7/17,
THUR 7/18, FRI
7/19, SAT 7/20,

192·5535

FIH Estlmst••

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
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qs .

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4 PK

•NewHomta
•Addltlone
•New Garegea
•Rernoct.llnQ
•Siding
•Roollng
•Painting

Owner: Ronnie Jones

j,ery Wecl•esclay

Hat Pump
Air Condltlonlna
Furnaces

. Question: I'm an insulin depenaent diabetic. My doctor reccn.!IY
s'tartcd me on a new medicine called
Prccose. It has reduced the amount of
ipsulin I need. but I'm concerned
about it causing low blood sugar. Is
~recose a safe medicine''
: Answer: Precosc is the brand
qame of a new drug with the generit name aearbosc. It helps a diabetic
individual control blood sugar by
delaying the absorption of sugar
tlom the digestive tract. But before I
suy more about il, I want to review
.Orne background information on
&lt;{iabetes for you and my other read-

c..-lulldlng. Aoillodolk'll

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean E1perience e lmured

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Racine, Ohio 45n1
1M8-3013 Phone
IM.2018 FAIC

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

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1-900-868-4100

SMITI'S
CONSTRUCTION

JONES' TREE SERVICE

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rent

LUCKY LEAF
·cHERRY OR
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Psychic Tells you
about your financial
Mure,love,
success and your
healthlll

714/'i8 1 mo. pd. ,

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

$549 '"0'

4#

IM8-2512

disabled. FMHA subsidized, basic

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND COFFEE

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SUGAR

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ACCEPTING APPUCATIONS FOR
APARTMENTS

LIMIT 4

KRAFT
MAC NCHEESE
oz.

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Painting
Al.o Conc111te Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C . .YOUNG Ill
992..215
Pomeroy, Ohio

UCINE IYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACIINE SlOP, INC.

985..4473

(

SUNDAY
REEDSVIf:LE -- Hayman- Biram
family reunion. Sunday, 12:30 p.m.
dinner at Forked Run State Park.

YOUNG'S
WPEtmR SERVIa

J. E. 'IMOOLE, OWNER

FREE ESTIMATES

'
••

(

21

pel.

D&amp;T
Pest Control

280Z.

Mar arine •••• !~~~~~3

IIMl.

match
1·900-988·8988
Ext. 7907
2.99/mln 18+
T.T. PhoM Req;
Serv·u
(619) 645-8434.

•

Public Notice
the rlghi to bid et thle .....
and to wlthdrlw the 1bove
collateral prior to 11te.
Further, The Fermere lank
and S•vlnge Comp•ny
re1erv11 the right to relect
1ny qr ell bide aullnllltetl.
Further, the above
colletenll Will be Hid In the
~CA1221181J I
condition II le In, with no
: 1111 Mer~rul .. r Motor upre..
or Implied
• 0051742121
werrantlet giVen.
Far further Information,
: 1817 Boll Trailer 4410 I
, 1112 Dodge Dyn . .ty contact Deii1HIIIt2·2138.
I 183XCNR3ND801421
(7) 17, 11, 11; 3TC
Tho Fermer• llank end
: Sevlnge · Com
; Pomeroy, Ohio, reaerv.ia

DfL.MONTE
SQUEEZE
KETCHUP
BLUE BONNET

Ailythlng

Meet your

Public Notice
.
PUBUC NOTICE
• , NOTICE II hereby given
. : thlt on Saturdly, July 20,
. 111111, et 10:00 a.m., • public
· ule wtll be helcl et 211 Wee!
. Second Street, Pomeroy,
. Ohio, to ·alii lor Cllh the
following colilteral:
: 1111
Citation Boat

s

Appointments are being scheduled in advance. 1b schedule an
appointment, veterans should call the medical center, toll-free at
1-800-827-8244, Extension 3451.

•

I

15 oz.

SATURDAY
RACINE . . Gorden Jensen.
singer/songwriter. appearance. 7 p.m.
Saturday at the Racine Pentecostal
Assembly, State Route 124.

The Huntington VA Medical Center is offering a free health
screening and risk assessment clinic for ALL area veterans. The
clinic, located at the Mason County Action Group, 101 2nd Street in
Point Pleasant, will include a limited physical examination, basic
blood.and lab tests, and prostate cancer screening.

eReplac._t Wildows
.... Gnges
•Sionl Doers &amp;wiltlows

,

MUSSELMAN
APPLE SAUCE

7:30p.m. at hall .
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Board of MR!DD Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at Carleton School.

Acfd.ons

Phone

"No Job Too Large or Too Smell" '

2lts.

s

Decks
Most

Call
B. D. Construdlon

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • MIIChlne Shop
Servioee • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • TOOl Dressing • Ornamental
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Steps -Stairs, RaUings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
I
Hems, Planter hangers. Trenlsas &amp; lois ol Oilier etutlll

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

19

Remodeling
Wlndowft Kitchens

1/77/MI

WHITNEY PINK:
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For Veterans

'

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Ph. 773-9173
FAX 77NII1
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Street
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I

For Quality Work

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24 pack cube

(

pose Senior Ccnlcr. Darren Torrence

of VRI Security of Cincinnati will
speak and demonstrate a computer-

PRODUCTS

21iter

Community calendar---

•

'

PEPSI

MUG ROOTBEER ·

the front yard. and they never
kissed until they married. Martin
says.
The couple set up house in rural
Covington County. They had a son,
William, about a year after they
were married. Martin says that
when she and William Jasper MarWAR WIDOW -Alberta Martin is believed to be the only living
tin married, he received a state widow of a Confederate soldier, and under Alabama law she is
pension of about $50 a month for entitled to collect a widow's pension that the Legislature
his service as a Confederate sol- stopped funding almost a decade ago.
dier. But the checks stopped coming after his death in I "?32 because
don't get it," Martin says of the
she married his grandson, Charlie Chancey says.
the
Alabama
Civil War pension. "But if I'm due
Officials
with
Martin, a few months after William
it , I want to get it. •·
Human
Resources
Department
of
Jasper died.
are
reviewing
the
application
but
"That was a lot of money back
Marlin has been honored by
then." Martin says of her late hus- haven't ruled on it yei . Adams
local
, state and national veterans
band's pension. "It would be like
as the only known livassociations
$450 a month now. When he died.
"It's
not
that
I'm
going
tng
widow
of
a Confederate solI remarried not long after that, so I
to
starve
if
I
don't
get
dier.
Later
this
month, she and her
didn 't thmk anything about the
son
William
will
travel to Richit,"
Alberta
Martin
says
rcnswn agam
mond.
Va
..
with
Chancey
for the
Then she met Dr. Kenneth of the Civil War pension.
I
OOth
anniversary
of
Sons
of
ConChancey. a dentist who is a mem- "But if I'm due it, I want
federate
Veterans.
It
will
be
Marher of the Sons of Confederate Vetto
get
it."
tin
's
tirst
ride
on
an
airplane.
erans. While researching information about Martin. he discovered
She's gonen used to reporters
that she is &gt;till cligihle to receive ·
and photographers asking questhe pension. He says she became - ·
eligible when her third husband says. He says he will sponsor legis- tions about her late husband, but
died in 1983.
lation to fund the pension so Mar- she says William Jasper Martin
Chanccy says the Legislature tin will get what she 's entitled to didn 't like to talk about his war
stopped funding the pension about once the · Department of Human experiences.
a decade ago, probably because Resources makes a determination
"'He was good to me and was a
state officials assumed all the wid- about her claim.
ows were dead . He nnd state Sen.
Martin's main income now con- good provider," she says. "That 's
Dwight Adams . R-Enterprise. have sists of a widow's pension she mostly what you looked for in a
led a camp.aign to get the pension receives because Charlie Martin husband back then . It's odd that
reinstated . Martin would be enti- was a World War II veteran. "It's after aH~hcse years. he's still helptied to ahout $150 a month, not that I' m going to starve if I ang me .

•

-

1?, 1996

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

of conversations over the fence in

..

- ..

. -.. . ..

. . . -·

"

•

•
Page

.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
814-446-4199
800-441.0399
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

FREE
Plck·up discarded
baHerles, eppllancea &amp;
many metala.

Personals

Christian couple In need ol a mir
ac:lel Wanling to adopt baby. CA ll

anylime,

614 · 843 · 538~,

collect t!

neede&lt;l.

614-992-4025

REDUCE : Bum oil fatla :u Take

8am-8pm

OPAltable1s and E· Vap Oturo11c,

availabfe Fruin Pnarmaq

30 Announcements

H&amp;H
Re111odellng
&amp; Roofing
Siding &amp; Some
Block Work
Free Eallmatos

$100·REWARO lor wnoever can
1811 whom made a prank phon e
call on June 15, at Som er ville
Residence concern1ng mtSSIOQ
child at Slate Cup Soccer 1ourna ·
ment. 304-675-7040.

40

Giveaway

2 kmens. hile r Ha1ned . 6 14·992 ·

6524.
5 Klltens &amp; mother ca l . 304 ·882 ·

992-2768
992-3274

2914 .
9 mto otd Ca li co ca l , go od w1
Child re n, Swk old . g rayi Wh11 e1
black . Anoora 1 B&amp;aole dog 9mo
old 304·6 75·4650.

7ft211 mo.

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE
614-949-3308
Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks • Sidewalks
Experience References

Bent• Tvpe Doo Nee&lt;l Ot A Good
Home. 614 ·•46· 7899
Beaul•tul Klflons to o•ve away, 8·9
weeks old , have bee n wormed
30"675-3777
Blonde Germa n Shpherd 1 112'
Years Old P rater Open Area, Call
Sieve 0t Danietle 614 -441-0942
Double wh1 1e porce1a1n ktlc hen

smk . e• cellent cond•uo n 304 ·
675·3652.
Elderly Woman Has H1 ma l a ~an
Plus 2 K111ens Cal1co Fr ee To

Good Home. 61 ... 46 ·3952
Scolh th Iemar 10 go od home
814-992·3884

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

..

•

Sma ll ltmale dog , hou sebroken, :
very oen11e, wo uld make a grea r •
pet lor anyone. call 6 14 ·H 2 · :

22:13.

Portable

Two

BtnlsawMIII

2233

small black pupp1es. fema le ;
shot s and wormed . call 6U - 742 : •

32124 Happy Hollow Ad .
Middleport, Ohio 45 760
Daooy &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742·2193
TrN

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
·Mowing
(resldentlal a commercial)
· Weedeating
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Mainlenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
cag today for free
estimate

742-2803
or 446-3622

Carpenter &amp;
Pal•t Work
915·41-91

60

Lost and Found

Found sma ll do g w• lh rod collar,
South Th.r d , t.A•ddle p on . l1 ght
brown · coto red w1th Wh1 1e teet •

614·992·51 10

..

loti: Gold Mothe r's Rmg Garnet :
And Z•rcon SIOrwtl, Reward l Mary •
V la niGf, 15 I 4·388-8520
•
LOST: Man't t iiYef' 10 bfacelel wt ..
nam e on 11 Gene r ou s re ward . :

304-875-egoo

70

or 304·875-5500.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

18 th, 19 1h , Chu r ch Yard Sal e ·
De bbie Or• ve, 9 · • . Ratn tShma,
lnlan1s /Ch•ldrtns , &amp; large Wom

om Ctottong.
333 Notghbol hDOd Ro ad. Fnday

8· 7. Saturday 9-? lnSide And Ou1
Fu rnllure. Toy s , C lol hes Ca mp.

ert. Ttaetot

455 Jack son P ike Acro n From ...
Highway Pa tr ol , 10- ? July 17th,
18th, tGih, Sodding, CM dren &amp;
Adulls, M&lt;sc.
lEnds

·'Jdd•

,.

�Wedneaday, July 17, 1996

The Dally Sentinel e Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOI

PHILLIP
ALDER
540
ya,.
f!lWina. of

All Yard Sales Mus1 Be Pa1cl In

As per ArtiCI&amp; 9, Jransform &amp;

Advance DEADLINE 2 00 p m
1ne day before the ad IS to run
SuMay edition 2 00 p m Frtday
Monday ed1h0n 10 00 am Sat
urday

IOI.!lliiU. Sec lion B,

the Negotiated Agreement bet

ween the !ALTA and !he Board or

Babysmer Needed In My Home
Non Smoker Would Be A~a• l able
To Work Any Hour!l For More In·
formauon Call 614 -441 0602 Alter

6PM

Jul y 18th , 19th, 20th, Jackson
P1ke Beh1nd McCiures Restaurant
For All Ages

Construcun Workers Industrial
Construcuon Iron Workers 1
Welders IRtggers EOE Employer
Please 5end Resume To PO Box
M washtngton PS 15301

J uly 18th, 19th, 6339 ~odney
Curta1 n5 Bedspreads Lamps,
D shes Queen Boxspnng Mat
tress Clothes Roller Blades

Dommo s Ptzza 0! Galltpohs Is
Now Accepttng Apphcattons Ap

7118th 7119th 1 112 Mtles Out
lmcoln P1~e Wom ens Clothes
Coo~1e Cans W•nter Coats Baby
Clothes 0 12 Months Wa l ker
Floor Jack P1II0Ns Carpet Clean
er Exerctse Equ1pmenL

Dozer operator, backhoe opera
tor part ttme Send resume c/o
Da1iy Senttnel PO Box 729 27
Pomeroy Ohto
HOME TYPIST PC users need
ed $45 000 •ncome potential

Pan ltme dtetary atdes for 100
bed sktlled 1ac1 h ~ Apply between
&amp; 3pm at Rcx:kspnngs Rehab

36759 Rocksprongs Road,
Pomeroy Oh 45769 No phone

calls EOE
Postal Joos 3 Po s• r•ons Ava il
able No E~rpenence Necessary
For InformatiOn Call 1 818 764
9016ExL1126

Recepttontst Ftie Clerk 4 Days A
Week Send Resume To PO Box
1 112 Miles our Jer1cho Rd on 33 Gallipolis OH 45631
r1gh t look for stgn 1n drtveway
July 17th &amp; 18th
291 1 Mea dowbrook Or Frtday &amp;
Sa turday July 19th &amp; 20th 9 ?

Wanted Part- Ttme Optometnc
Ass tstant Expenence And Office
Tratnmg Preferred Send Resume

Yard Sale end of SandhtU Rd le
tart Fnday &amp; Saturday 8 00 ?

To CLA 389 Clo Gathpotts DaHy

so

Public Sale
and Auction

R c ~ Pearso n Auct1on Company
lu 1 11me auc t1o neer complete
aucl!on
serv1ce
L1cen se d
11 66 On1o &amp; w es1 V rg1n1a 304
773 51850r304 773 54 47

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All US S1l
ver And Gold Co1ns Proofsets
01amonds ~n!lque Jewelry Gold
Rmg s Old Glas swa re Sterl1 ng
E1c AcQuiSitions Jewelry M T S
Co1n Shop 151 Second Avenue
GaU1pohs 614 446 2842

Tnbune, 825 Thtrd Avenue, Galli·
poliS OH 45631

WtLOLIFE!CONSERVATtON
JOBS
Now Hirtng Game Wardens Se
curt~ ~at n tenance, Parlt Rang
ers etc No E~rp necessary For
appltcabon and tnfo call 1 soo-

Wa nted To Buy Autos &amp; Tr~Jcks
Any Con&lt;11t10n 614 388 9062 Or
614 446 PART
Wa nled To Buy Junk Autos Wtlh
Or W1thout Moto rs Call Larry
l •ely 6 14 388 9303
Wan ted v1ntage Barb1e dolls
cl ol hes and accesson es ( 1958

19721 Call 804 890 0619
Wanted yellow root yetlow root
tops blood root Buy1ng Jackson
Ohm 9am 11am a1 Holly Hil l Mo
10 1 pa rk 1ng lot 404 Ch il l cot he
Stree t McArthur Oh1o 12 30pm
2 30prn a1 L &amp; B Market on Rt 50
112 mde west ol McArthur Oh10
R1vcr G1nscng &amp; Fvr Inc PO Box
2347 (Rt 267) East lrverpool
Oh1 0 43920 Phone 330 385

1832 FAX 330 385-1842
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 0

Help Wanted

,35 000 IYR IN CO ~E Potenll81
Readmg Books Ton Free ( 1) 800
898 9778 EJCI R 28 1-4 For OelaiiS

Any Odd Jobs pa1n11ng carpentry lawn care etc 304 675-7112
Babysitting m my home reason
able ra tes lle1 tble hours have
references, close to school 304

675-2784

General Mamtenance Pa1nt1ng,
Yard Work W1ndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned Ltght Hauhng
Commer1cal, Res denltal Steve
614 388 0429

let us do your dtrty work• Htgh
Pressure clean•no Houses Tra11
ers Porches Etc Also Patnttng
and Carpetary 614 · 256· 6012 or

614 256 1502

ltghl Hau 11ng House Wash1ng
Home
Busmess
Wtndows
Washed Yard Matnfenance Call

After 6 PM 614-446 8183

lookmo For That Extra Spectal
Touch?
let Us Deliver Your Personal
Messages Wl\h Our Spec1al
Touch1614 446 6114
0!11ce Clean1ng Wtndow Clean
1ng Pa1nhng Roohng, Free Esb
mates 614 446 0537 Ask For
Bruce
ProfesSional Tree Serv•ce, St\lmp
Removal, Free Estimates! In
surance, Btdwell, Ohio 81•·388-

9846 614·367-7010
Sun Valley Nursery School
Chlldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Age~r~
2 K Young School Age Ounng
Summer 3 Days per Week t.tlnt·

rrum 614-4~·3657

FINANCIAL

INOTICEI
OHIO VAUEV PUBLISHING CO

AVON 1 All Ar eas 1 Shtrley
Spears 304-67&amp;-1429

recommends that you do bus•
ness WLth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
matl unttl you have tnvesttgated
the offering

Business

OpponunHy

Bus1nessperaon, small stze Con
!factor, National Manufacturer
award1n9 local DEALERSHIP for
steel bu1ldmgs 81g Profit Potenhal
on sales ancr conslructton (303)
759 3200, ext 23X1

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD

pertentt ProficNint In Computers,
AccountinG And Organtzattonal
Sktlls Knowledge 01 Lotus And
1ndowt A Mu11 Superv 11ory
Exp&amp;f'tence A Pfus Send Resume
By July 24, 1998, To FACTS

FURNACE It The Most Efftctent
And lowest Emtutons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market
Central Botlet Ia Currently look·
tng For A Ouah1y Dealer In Thtl
lmmedtate Area For lnformatton

1 no Jackson Pill" Bidwell OH
45614 EQI:, lj/FIH
Ambrosio
Machine
looking
for machin111.
Syra Inc
txP.r,enc•
Call 304·875-1 722 Monday·fll·

~y730~~

256·1095
2 br home 5 acres on Sr 12.4,
Rac1ne 2 car garage wlapartment,
well , electnc heat, 01her butldtngs,
call Home Na nonal Bank Ractne
Oh 614 949 2210
2 3 bedroom house 50X100 lot
located tn Syracuse appliances
tncluded, call 614·992-5767 atrer

4pm
2872 Thtrd Street Syracuse 2
lots 112 acre total, 4 BR LR FA
DR ktlchen, u!lll!y, new bath new
plumbtng overiooktng Ohto R1ver
avatlabfe September 1st $45 000

61 4·992·5006 or 614 992 7496

6302

14 parcels, from 1 2 to 11 6 acres
some overlooktng Rac 1ne partial
hnancmg, 614 992 7104 alter
Gpm
25 Acres Hannan Trace School
Dtstnct, Smail Tobacco Allotment
Mmeral R1ghts 614 256· 161 1

21116
Parcels on Rayburn Ad Water
paved road reasonable restr c
nons 304-675 5253 (no smgle
Wtde 1nqu1res please)
Scen1c Valley Apple. Grove
beau t1lul 2ac lots publiC warer

ClydeBowenJr. 304 576 2336

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted SO 100 acres tn Tup
pers Platns Chester or Racme
area , w1th or Without bu•ldmgs
Have fmanctng No Sunday calls
814 985 3814

RENTALS

S Rooms Bath City Forced A1r
Fu rnace Central Au Carpeted
Floors Storm W1ndows Doors
Vmyl S1dmg lol 66xt50 Prtced
At $34 900 614 446·4579

2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom

References
Ava ilable soon ntce 3 bedroom
references depostt &amp; no pets
Ntce 2

or

3 bedroom house tn

mefD'/, no pets 614 992 5858

420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2 Bedroom, furntshed, ac, washer
&amp; dryer, $250/n'IO, plus utthttel, no
pets, references &amp; deposit 30rt·

875 4874
2 Bedrooms In Mercervi lle Area,
614 250-1686
Tra1ler for rent tn Gallipolis area

814 4411-8849

Starter! EiderlytRental HouSe 1
bedroom new roar carpet plu m!&gt;
tng wmng bathlk ttchen Includes
6 toot fence out Oldg rangelrelr~gi
clothes dryer lnsulated rcheap
ultl btlis 304 675 7482

Trader tor rent outs1de of Pomer6U 992· 5039

Dryer,

1979 Dale Earnhart Monte Carlo
$1,695, One Of A Kmdl 614 441
1195

Refngeratort Freezer, Stove, MIcrowave, Color TV, VCR, 814-

2561238

Appltances
Reco nditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrigrators, go Day Guarantee!
French Ct t y Maytag 61o4-446·

7795

B1g Savtngs On Carpet &amp; Vmyf In
Stock, $6 00 Yd &amp; Up Mollohan
Carpets R7N 614-446-7444
Country Furniture 304 675 6820
Rt 2 N, 6mtles. Pt Pleasant, WV
Tues-Sat9-G, Sun 11 5

USED

APPLIANCES

Wash ers, dryers retriger4ltora,
ranges Skagga Appltances, 70
Vme Street, Call 614 .446· 7398,

1 600 499·3499

Srde By Stde 3 Door Coppertone

Was $250 Cui To $195, Cold
Spo1 Refngerator Frost Free

Whole, 17 Cu Ft Cut To $150,

614 992 2107

440

560

12 Ftnch B~tda Plus Cage St50, a
Btrds Plus Cage $100, 614·886

5959

AKC Doberman Pups, $250
Each, 014-441-()538

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

AKC

1972 Flamingo 12X65 3 Bed

hound, blue and whole AKC She
992·8244 01614·742 2654

cently Remodeled Bedroom &amp; Full
Bath CI A Deck On Large Rented
lot S6 900 614 245 t516 Aher S
PM Anynme Weekends

\ Bedroom , Super N1ce $2661
Mo
Plus Utthl1es Usua lly
Somethmg Ava•lablel Sun Valloy
Apartments eu &lt;446 2957

1977 Kirkwood Mobile Home
14k70 AC $8,000, 614 388 8186

2 Rooms &amp; Bath $185/ Mo In
eludes All Utllll.tea. 614 448 2477

e14 388 88!i0

----'----'-----·1 2bdrm
19QO Sunshtne Ux70, 2 Full
Baths 2 large Bedrooms, large
CovtHed Pallo, N:., $21 ,000, 614
441·1205

apts , ' tota l electnc ap·
phances turn1shed, laundry room
fac tltlt", close to school '" town
A~phcauona ava1lable a1 V1llage
Green Apt• 149 or call 614 992

3711 EOH

Bakery For

1083 Mazda RX7, sunro of, 5
speed, crutse, omlfm casseue,
good condition S2500 OBO, 6 t 4-

992 7619

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1984 Chevy Cave her Htt Deer,

Many New Part~ $500 OBO 614
446-1228 After 5 ~M

"

AKC While &amp;Stiver sable , Ger
man Shephard pUpptes excellent

males. lust shots, S 150, ready to

Dog &amp; Cal Groommg~ reasonable
pttces, 1 Syra expenence Call for

New 1 Year Warranty S225
Skaggs Appliances, 76 VIne
Galh pohs, 614 446 7398,

Full Blooded Dalma11ons No Pa

Refrrgerators, Washer, Olnetres,
Bunk Beds, Entertatnmenl Cen·
ters Mtsc 614 4•6-.4782

VrAA FURNITURE
614·«63158
Quality Household Fur,..lne And
Appliances Great OteJa On
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Aloo Avallal&gt;lo
FrH Oei""'Y Wolhln 25 Milos

520

Sporting
Goods

SealS l 1lestyle Treadmt ll 3yra
old hk&amp; new 8 0 mpn, auto tnc~ne.
cushton deck, 1 25 horae power

DC, $275 3l4-875-1l12

530

Antiques

Jack Russell Teruer Pupp1oa, 2
males, 12wks old S150ea 304

075-1070
Jack Ruas&amp;i t terner pupptes 1 0

lbo lull grown, all colors $250/ea
two Sheltle mtntature Coll tea
malt~

S1251ea ,614-742 2050 .

Mlntature Schnauzer pups, must

1011, e1• 992-5407

Merchandise
12 000 BTU Atr Condiltoner, 2
years old 304-875-SSU

Spoto', Aak J 0 NORTH PRO
OUCE 614-446·1933 About HAP
P:Y JAC~ KENNEL OtP

"""Str~tce Pupptel, Groomtng,
S1ud

Buy, "Sell &amp; Trade , All Breeds
Palftnla Welcome e 14 388

I ~o.t~~·;;-iii;j",t,;t:'Jr;i.;L,;p.;,:
1Big And Lntle lopear
Nerthtrland Dwarfs Utn Rex

Dutch, Everythong Must Gol &amp;t4
3118-0tlol•

RegiStered Ronwetlers t 2 Weeks
All Shots And Wormed Up To
Date, Both Parents On Prem1se1,

3 Ton Heat Pump, Grtot

uon, 614-•46· 1370

pupp1es

Musical

&amp; case

Plano Good COnditiOn,
To Sell , Ask ong $1 BOO,
014-446·&lt;847

OJr

'1-'

...

11\€. OCX, Df&gt;.'6 OF SIJINIIE.f!.. N!:f.
~.m~ u~ I

i

,.

1

FARM SUPPLIE S
1\ L IVFSTOC K

catt Ron Evans. t-537·9521
Lincoln

,.-..

OW! nw;

15 THE
FffTH BLISTER I'"£
GoaT THIS AFTERNOON'

I

:-=-:---::-----~·

24 Ft Camper Woth AC Bath 1 ' '

Canopy Perlect For The Fa11..

'

$3 400 614 379 2139

1
~S Camper &amp; lot Hohday Hills
Outbutldtng Excellent Cond1110~.... :
AIC Sewer Ftsh.ng Boallng u
S4 500 614 894 3101
.~

PB PS, PW $750, 614 '46 1615
After Stl614 446 12o44

~ '

1990 Dodge Sptrll 4 Door Au

..-o- 1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnl~

C1pher cryptograms are crealed from QUOIII10ns by famous people pasl and pr...,..l
Eacn fell er 1n 111e Cipher slands for •nether TOI1ays crw l equars S

'OCOFXREAX •

EI&lt;ISB

B E

SLCO

0 L Z B

Z MA 0

MT

B S0 M F

U EN 0 F

MFCMTI

UMDO

L

ROFUMT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The btggest dosease today Is not leprosy or
tuberculOSIS, but 1ather the feeltng ofbemg unwanted " - Mother Teresa

7-17

Wf\Y I~ IT l-lf\ENE.VE.I2:. 1'\lUE.'s

""'

~Till~ w~ ~~D
f.IEIZE., I NJ.I/'-' 6 (£!' W£ IVJI£ or

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

0

Reorranga letters of
four scrambl.:l word•
low to term fo1.1r words

PORRUA

KH R I S

IIIt

r-_R__E_H__I-::-T-,l:~,'

l"m always trytng
wetght, gotng from one dtet
5
another A famous comiC made
•
•
_ •
me laugh when he told about a
. - - - - : - - - - - - - , great new nee d tet you only
CAT EN C
fuseone-- --· -··· 1
~-,,,;.7-;,lr:'..;_.;.l
Compte•• ohe chuckle quoood
.-J.-..I.L-..J..
-.1--..1-L-...J
by l1ll1ng 1n rhe m•ss•ng WOtds
1
you de.elop from step No 3 bllow

I1

I

r

• ..

I

:....:;.,-=.,rt::"'"-1 G

II

A PRINT NUM8FRED
~ LETTERS
,

IT 5 THAT C.AT
S.KE.LEiON 1: 01.)(. UP I
r TOLl&gt; YOU I WAS
OOING TO C.ET 501'1E
SOf{T" OF CP..T \o/HAMI1Y
I"UT ON ME 1

"\

.~

. . UNSCRAMBLE FORI
U ANSWER .
.

IIl IIIIII

SCRAM·~ETS ANSWERS

Fusron · LJaunt - R1gor · Sorrow - WORN OUT

The Trrcuurt You
the
Sovln&amp;s You'll Find In tltt
Clossl(led Scct101t.

After walktng through the anttque mall my fnend
asked, "Have you ever not1ced that uncomfortable chatrs
become anbques, whtle the comfortable ones get WORN

OUT?"

tomatoe, Good Condoton $2800 (:-~--------~.:;;
oaa. 614 256 •233 6,. 256 810
Home
1569
'
Improvements
~
1990 GEO Tracker 4x.4 LSI lu ny

equopped 304 773 5709

(--~j~~~c;:-~

(

Uncondntonal hfeume guarante~
local references lurntshed Es .. '

614441 0738

tabtiShed 1975 Call (614) 446 ' ' '

1992 Plymoulh Acclatm V &amp;, Au

0870 Or 1-800 287 0576 Rooer's :'l :
Wat81'prooflf'lg
... , •

tomauc, loaded 56 000 Mtles

- - : : - - - : : - - - - - - - -"'
· :,

1$l94 PontLIC Grand PrtJ~ Au
tomallc
Atrbaga,
Anh -lock

Appltance Parts And Servtce Att - ,.
Name Brands Over 25 Years fx ·" 1~ l
pertence All Work Guarantee~•·
French C11y Uaytag 6 14 449 wlilllll

S6 495 OBO 614·441 tt95

1995 Ponuac

Bonnev1lle SE

tomatlc Tempera1ure Conlrol, Au
tomat•c Noon Root, ~1-4-367

•

!

C&amp;C Gtneral Home Mam '
tenence Pamung, vtnyl s1d1ng "'
carpentry doors, wtndows, bathg ;·~ :
mobile home repa~r and more F~
lree estuna1e call Chet 61-4 99~

DRYWALL

_,_-1.

Hang fmrsh repa1r
Ce1lrngs textured plaster repa 1r
Call Tom 304 67S 4186 20 years
Ron s TV Serv1ce, spectahz1ng 1.C.
Zenith also servtctng most olt\etbranda House calls, 1 800 79ft

0015 wv "JO&lt; 576·23911

SEIZED CARS From $!75

Roollng &amp; guners complete home
remodeling decks &amp; Sldtng 35
years e•penence, B &amp; B Roo~ng
and Construcuon 61• 992-236-r-

W0'1, Your Area Toll Free 1
800·8D8·G778 Ekt A·2814 For or 1 fl00.889 3D&lt;3.
Cur..., lllartgL
840 Electrical and
720 Ttucks for Sale
Refrigeration

992 24119

91 Ford F2SO heavy dlJty truck
right front suspen110n damage, 5
apeed transmtsSton, 83,000 mtles,

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, A11 CondtUontng If
1
You Don 1 Call Us We Borh Lose•
Free E anmares , t 800 29 t 0098 "r

61&lt;
4&lt;6-6308,
wv 002945
___
.;;:.:::......;..:=..:::--

CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan 111 A pa~
reveals which Stgns nershtp arrangement mtght not work oul
are romantically perfect for you Malt too well loday Avo1d Sltuauons 1n whoch
$2 75 to Matchmaker. elo tho&amp; newspa· you must rely h•avily on an ally
per, P 0 Box 1758, Murray Holl Stallon, AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb 19) You are a
New Vorl!. NY 10156
cooperative person who usually t11es to
BERNICE
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) tl you are too cnt· BSSISt others However today you moght
BEDE OSOL ocal of others loday, you moghl take back off 1f you leel as of someone os
something out of context and 1111elnterpret tmposmg on you
an onnocent comment.
PISCES (Feb; 20·Morch 20) Tryong to
.._----~.- VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt 22) Relax and · .niake others over '" yotlr own &lt;mage
enjoy yourself with Jrtends 1otla~, but i:ould becotne an exercose 1n futility
don't attempt to mix buslnesa wllhl pfea· Instead ol frustratono yourself. accept oth·
sure Your pals mlgltt feel manlpulatlel
ers as they are
LIBRA (S.pl 23-0ct. 23) You will be ARIES (...,ch 21-Aprll 111) You w~l not
very eompetotove todiy "This will WOlle well have much pattence wtth famoly members
f()( xou n you don t get emo1101111 about today If you see everyone watkong
Thuisday, July !8, 1996
wonn1ng or behav&amp; in an unattractive around the house with angry looks, you
In the year ahead, you can choose from a manner
mtght be the cavse
substantial array ol opportunities Each SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) Try to let TAURUS (AprQ 20-May 20) Bossing oth·
one woll be sogndocant, so do not take · sleepong dogs he Dr9d0ong up an ol~. .,. around might be a natural mpulse lor
volatile 1ssue coul~ evol&lt;e a bitter rtac· you today However, n you want aSSOCI·
anything fOI granted
ares to do your bidding, make sure to set
CANCER (June 2f.July 22) You must tiOI1 from your Usteners
be selecfove ragardong your aSSOC18ti011s SAGITTARIUS (Nov.·:l3-0ec. 21) It wiU ., appropnate example
today ..ll you aren't, you m1ght have to • not be w1se to ompose your op1mon on GEMINI (May 21-.IUnl 20) EstabliBit t1te
SOlve problems r()( others metead o1 hav· someone else today espj!CIIIIy 1n regard method of paymant In advance today H
ong fun Know where to look for romance to buSiness He ()(aha ~ blame you H you plan an event Vllth lrlenda Splitting
t1te bill could lead to problems
and you' ll lind ot The Astro·Graph t1te deal doesn't worlc

ASTRb·ORAPH

1069

Porsches , Cadtilac•. Chevys
BMW's, Corvanea, Also Jeeps, 4

•

7795
.•
::-:--::----------~" I

1D94 Chevrolet Cavahar 2 dr , 6323
auto, a1r, stereo cassette, anti
lock br1ke1 POl, new ttres,
43,800 rllllea he cond $6,000,
flmt 61-4-379 2967

ROBOTMAN

"

1992 Lincoln COntinental Loaded,
Excel lent Condttton , Must Selll

'81 Ford F250 Cahlornta truck,
vtsors toolbox bed ra~s and tow
.ng package sharp $2600, 81f

7421

8293

1989 O !ds Cutl ass C1era Body
Damage Runs Good, 4 Door AC

Auto loans Dealer will arrange It
Route 588 Prodi.Jce Markel 1 .,tile nanc.ng even 11 you have been
West Rodney, Old Route 35 W1ll turned down eltewnere Upton
Be Qpantng Tllursctay Will Be .Equtpment Used C•ra 30• rt58
Tomatoes, Beans Etc Would
Appr.dlte "bur &amp;..Illness

If the opponenl s gtve you an easy
run tn your contract, at least you can
be happy woth your plus score But 1t
IS more sattslymg to get home agamst
the most awkward defense
On thos deal from the Cavendtsh
lnvtlattonal Patrs. most declarers
were happy w1th thetr performance ,
but a couple dtdn t do &gt;O well
,
Sttltng East. I would advance w1th
four no-tromp Thos 1sn 'I Blackwood because no swt has been agreed II shows
two places to play and tS trying to find the
besl fit That would lead to five clubs,
which goes one down II t~tnk I would
have also btd four no trump tf South
opened four spades and West doubled 1
Maybe I'm mfluenced by knowmg
that four spades tS makable. because
at several tables four spades was the
fmal contract, somettmes doubled
West leads a top dtamortd. and then
swotches accurately to a trump How
should South contmue'/
One South gave up wtthout foght
He won m hand and played a club, but
West went m wtth lhe 10 and played a
second trump Th1s held South to nme
tncks seven spades: the heart ace
and one;:lub ruff
John 'Schermer, from Seattle, who fin·
t&gt;hed second wtth Netl Chambers or
Schenectady. N Y showed the nghl lme
After wmnmg tnck two, he led the heart
queen kmg, ace There followed a
hear1 ruff tn hand, a club extl to West
and a second tromp Wmmng \hat tn the
dummy, Schermer rulfed another heart
m hand, bring1ng down West's Jack
Wtth a sltght smtle, Schermer cla1med
an overtrtck, rufling a club tn the dummy and d1scardmg h1s remammg mi·
nor-suit losers on d!UI1my's two hear1

BIG NATE

-=~~-------------..
1993 Pop Up Coleman Camper •
Excellent Condtt ton 614 388

1989 Bu1ck LeSabre excellenl
rllnntng condi tion, V 6, PB, PS
AC, power wtndows $3800 614
949 2045 or 614 949 2302

Electnc
Scooten
And
Wheelchatrs New f Used, Van 1
Car l•lt lnftalled, Statrglldest llh
Chaira, Call For Brochure, e14 4

9peri Doily 10 Toll e Swett Corn,

K

I

se ooq 304·675 te32

oinglng group
10 caeh drawer
12 Political

East
All pass

I

1988 Plymouth K car hke new
17 000 aclual mtles, au1omat1c &amp;

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Nor1h
Ia

1987 Ford la~Jrus W lh Atr Au
tomat1c TransmiSSIOn Good Con
dillOn 4 Door low M1leage 614

1 800-537·9528.

JET

.

four
B1
c 9.4 372 m1les blue with gray rn
tenor, mtnor front damage S1350
614 949 2311 days or 614 949
2644 everungs

7060

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired &amp; RebUU In s-.

o,,.., ... ,~ T,..~&gt;'&gt;~r.~

PS ,PB PW power sealS

Leather Seou, PW, POL, Au

446·7283.

COffff

PAY'S WOfl~!
..

1987 Ford Taurus wagon

Brai)9a, SE , PW, POL, St&lt; 386

Loke New, Call

Evans Enterprise•, Jackton, OH

CORP

TO!»..'(, K£WPIE., a..D (,!Ri.

0588

Concrete &amp; Pl'ttoc Seplc T111ka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallant Ron

Ttf~

ANl&gt;
A"IPfiiiT ALLY PVT
IN A FU£.£.

m:JI"IU~E:F:. ~N

379 2720 AFTER 6 PM

Monthly Flea Programs Are Ex
pen11v1 &amp; Don't Ktll Ttcks For
F leas, Ttc;ka, Files, And Ho t

Pv•-' Palace Kennels, Boardong

Miscellaneous

MISSfP

J((~AIC

,.

door

5 Strang glue
6 skin '•r•r
7 Term o
endearment
8 Get rid af
9 Swedlah

a

CeJt 8t&lt;·44e.0231

8 00 P m 81 4·992·252&amp;, R•aa

540

MEGA

'

"'HE BORN LOSER

pera, 8Woeko Old $75, 614 256

Buy or sell Riverine Antlqutl,
1124 E Main Street. on R1 124,
Pomeroy Hours Lt TW 10 00
am 10 8 00 p.m, Sllnday 1•00 to

chairs buffet, cabtnet, antl-ue
Sideboard, Charlet Ltcla•n rtsl·
dence, 814·949·2220
....

.•

'

appts 304-875-8831

New location· Pampered Pawa
Pet Styling by Jolene cuts
balhl, elips hot 011 treatments and
Ieeth cleantng 614 992 6244
Alk lbovt our..U~ specoats•

Three ptecf anuque ltvlng room
suue dtnlng room Sttt. labte and 1

,,

TAL.IC AIOIJT INl&gt;VST((IAL.
AG.CIPfiiiT f ...~

go July 20th Call 814-949-3327
Of 814-949·2301 altor • 30plft

S150, Svlvama Console TV $95,
20 000 BTU Wtndow Atr Condi
!loner 11,000 BTU Wtndow An
Condtt1oner, Maytag Washer Uke

1 Bedrcom apt, (urntshed, n1ce
NMghborhood, pnvale, no pets, ref

&amp; depo~t 30Hl75-2651

304-875-4641 AFTER e PM •

Doberman

tland sheepdog, tri·CO iored 614

'

rooms Very GoOd Condo!lon Re

1980 Ponuac Trans Am Au
tomauc, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455
Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, $1,500

AKC Reo •stered ltaltan grey

1:~~~~:~~~;;:~
Great
Opportuntty
Former

m1n1ature

1 and 2 bedrOOm apar'"*n11, furntShld and unfurntshod te:Cllf)ty
deposn requtred, np pttll 814

992 2218

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

TillS ISN'T 601N6
WORK., I MISS
1.. 8EiN6 ANNOI(ED!

•

~=-~~.~';~hree mos old,

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartmenls, Fust
Avenue:.. GiU1pobs, 814 ·rt..a 8221

bedroom home •n cquntry
Whites HID Rd Rutland1 or'le balh
1n ground pool 614·992 5067

:

Route 550,614-551 2722

rage Wtth Worksnop 614 -441

0504

750

4 Spack

Is there a remote
chance?

ELSE II

AKC Lhasa Apso Pu pptes,
Ready! Shots, Wo rmed, Puvate
Owner, Alhens /Manetta State

On Becomong A Dealer Or For A
Fret Brochure Call 1·800·248·
4681 o; 1 ·21~782-257!.

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

Pets for Sale

:.....,.------..,--·.1$250, 814·388 9220

Apartments
for Rent

NOTHIN'

., '

I

1 Gerr or
Ho1chtr
2 RllgrtUICI
3 Box for elms

By Philltp Alder

2 Door, ,_...,.,_ 3l4-875-7495
Frostlree St50 G E Refngerator
Loke New 1 Year Warranty $350, Oachohund pupp1ea. three le
Hotpo1nt Refngerator,

1· - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes, starting at $240 $300
sewer, water and trash 1ncluded

8EAN8A"61!

..

l ••cett en1

Moore owner

calls)

State Route 588, Cape Cod 4
Bedrooms, Centoal AIC Ful l
Basement, 2 Car, Detached Ga

A~r Conditioners, Washer,

Po

Roomatt Wanted $25011Ao U!oh·
toes Paid, 6!4-446-8595

YOU LEFT YOUR

GS SOOE .400 m1lds• •
cond t tton must sQ11, ~
free he lmet 614 992

Household
Goods

Groom Shop -Pet Groommg Fea
turing Hydro Bath Don Sheets

3l4-875-5162

Reduced Pnce country home tn
town beautiful 1 3/4 acres w11h
woods moslly level located 1n vtl·
lage ol M1ddlepor1 w1th a lovely
1988 Schuirs Spec1al Edition mo
bile home, balh &amp; a hall wtth car
pettng throughout some new,
plus many extra's added 10 home
tncludes deck &amp; centra l atr,
phone 614·992 7350 (No Sunday

51 0

Used furn11ure 130 BuiBVt tle Pike,

a

I'U JUST 1 AKE MY

BEANBAG
AN'-·

West
Obi

Openmg lead: •

I SHORE
DIDN'T LEAVE

MERCHANDISE

Ntet 2 ·3 Bedrooms On Chatltam,
CA. large Yard, Oeposot &amp; Ut!lo
toes. 814·446-251,5

GOV T FORECLOSED Homes

992 5858

$850 304 576 2236

1 800 499 3499

tr~l alr
no pets $400mo &amp; de·
posit 2416 B Monroe Ave Pt

SNUFFY II

!

1986 Honda CR 80, runs good

por\ 614·992 31D4

8849 For lnlormatoon

Pleasant WV Call 304-675 f743

Toll Free (1) 800·696·9778 E•t

Tratler space tor rent tn Mtdd le·

6012

3 Bedroom &amp; lull basement, cen-

50 LON6LOL' PAL II

'

''

er $95, Uaytag Wringer Waaha r

Four bedrooms, IWo baths 14X36
famllr room one car garage
equtpped k•tchen, tn Syracuse
$90 000 OBO 614 992 5882
Fo r Penn1es On $1 Oeimquent
Tall' Repo s REO s You1 Area

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

1983 Harley Oavtdson FlHS new~
r1ms and tnes new S&amp;S Super E ~
carb S13 000 1906 Honda 3~
4~4 ~owplow, gun scabbard
1
lor back rack, load.ng ramps, •
$4800 614 992 3947 before 8Pflj , :

Wh trl pool Washer $95, Hotpolnr

Houses for Rent

3a

BARNEY

I19"82'"H.~~~ ·

30 Inch Range $95 Hotpomt Dry-

410

South

GMC 314 Ton 4k4 Auto
I
614 245-9082 All". ~

J&gt;i4

DOWN

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South

6 Aulo 100 PW, PL AC PM,'
Loaded, Must Sell, 614-388 9556 ;

TRANSPORTATION

25 Demure
26 I think, therefore-211 Npt late
:n l)lgnlty
33 Martne laopoda
35 Slur over
35 Pollack flah
37 Building parcel
38 AuthorDine""
39 Dlaplaylel

• 10 2
• 5 4 3

1994 GMC saran Van XT 4 3'V,

Straw. square baled tn held on
wagons. 304-675-1807

GOOD

look1ng for Mobt le Home Lot to
Rent 01Jt of C1ty l1m1ts of Galhpo
l1s Area 614 446-3J21

•Q

994 Astra Converston Van Wttt\
CO All Power Excellent Condit10n,1
Best Offer, 614 •4&amp;-C350
•

Hay &amp; Grain

Autos for Sale

South
IAKQ9753

Be Seen At Gallipolis Daily Tnb,
une, 825 Thtrd Avenue, Galhpoh9
Ohto
'

r

Trat!er AC , In Gaihpohs, 614 446

3 BR 2 bath ranch 2 car garage
Spr1 ng Valley area close Holzer
Hospital 614 446 7940

640

• 9 8 5 2
• Q8 3
IKQ962

Dodge Ram Van B 250t

ln!l304-882·3731 aherSpm

•3593

• J

72 000 Motes, $4 000, OBO Can;

Stx reg•stered Holstems, 2 year
lings, 2 bred Hetfers, 2 cows m1lk

710

3 Bedroom Ranch Cen..rral Atr

central a1r &amp; heat garage W1th
auto opener 1n the 40 s 1n M1d
dloport &amp; near schools 614 992

I

Two 1 bedroom apartments fur·
ntshed uttlntes Included :.l4s675-

East

1991 GMC Suburban -4x4, heavy :
314 ton, V-8, auto, &amp;If, stereo, runs•
&amp; dnves excellent htgh miles.:
$8,500080, 614·9i2.... 1T1
, r

Livestock

42 Jekyll'•
oppollte
1 Swapped
45 Am.teur
1 Warm
48 Poorly Ill
11 Frence'a place 49 Tennla ployer
12 Proecrlbe
- Goolagong
51 Relll - agent
14 Clergyman
15 Incompetent
53 Peraonal
18 Actre11 Luplno
nerradve
17 Yule
54 Strainer•
1 tl Markdown
55 Slav
20 Polaon
56. Show• ocorn
22Sec....,iel

error

1967 Dodge Full Stze Van 31,8..
Auto, 97,000 Mtles $2,000 OStl
61-4·256 1233
'

8358

•zed apt for elderly and handl·

caPfOd EOH 3l4-875-6670

630

01 t7 9&amp;

1..---------...:.

A1dlng Horses For Sale 614 388

Business and
Buildings

I· ~'~'~~ne~ar~E~u~retk~a~O~h=o~30:4

2 BA 1 Bath level lot Aremodled Fa~rland t Ga ll1a County
Schools Call De1a 1ls
(614)

3090

apphcauons for 1bl HUO IIJbsiO.

1'::--:--...:.,_______

Veara Secretarial And Olhce Ex

w

New Bonk Repos Oriy 3 leh Stoll
in wam~nty 30._ 755 7191

leetwood
2 bed
1994 214x76
room
bath F
ElK,
lR all eiectnc,
or 304 576-3199
eta, appliances skyl ghts oaroen r
tub many extras. No money down, Approx 1 Acre lol, natural gas
payofl or take over loan of ctty vuter avatlable, black 1op
$21 800 304 773 5302
road $1 500 or trade 304 5 76

One bedroom home 1n Pomeroy
WtiJ sell on'tand contract 614

tntenor And Extenor Patn!lng, Ex
penenced References Reason
able Rates For Free Estimates,
614 446 2637 Ask For Dave

Tw1n R1vers Tower, now accepttno

39 Acres, 5 ro&lt;lm house, 2 out

304 675 1957

call (708)906 2350Ext 3670
l!am epm

Admlmstratt ve Ass1s1ant Needed
For Busy Office Mt mmum Of 2

3357

H 2814 For Current lts!lngs

210

Admrustratrve AsSistant

1 112 Story house ndw roof, new

304 895

12.000 BTU Amana au condtaondteport, all uulmes paid, $270/mo .,, body &amp; drove traon porta lor an

~~~~!::_

350 lots &amp; Acreage '

Homes for Sale

Georges Portable Sawmtll, don 1
haul your logs to the mill just ca ll

All N Po1nt Pleasan!' Poual
Po s111ons Permanem ''"" hme for
cler k/ SOrlers Full Benef111 For
eka m appl1ca11on and salary tnfo

Able Avo n • Represenratlvea
needed Earn money for ChriSt
mas bills at home/at WClrk 1 800
992 6356 or 30o4 882 26o45 lnd
Rep

advernsed m this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

1h:70 $4,000 OBO

Stars 1Z v bonom boat &amp; motor,

ProtesSLonal!Bustness but1dtng for
sublease Located at 500 S Th~rd
Street, Uiddleport, OhiO Excellent
for phySICian off1ce or real estate
space Ample street park1ng
Avatlable 1mmed1ately Contact
A l Kunz,614 593 3375collect

Informed that all dwellings

3368

1n

Tractor 5 Ft Belly Moler low
Hours John Deere 301 Wuh
Fron tend Loader &amp; SICkle Bar
~ow Hours 61.4 446 3438

!llus $100 depoSit Call8t4 992· 84 Tempe, 83 Old Delta 88 for Goats B1g Nanny s $30, Young
7806, 8am-5Qm
parts. 87 Toyota motor home 85 Nanny's Weatheos $35, 6f4 256
LTD atauon wagon, 81 4·992· 6504

340

advertisements lor real estate
whtch Is in vtoiatloo or the taw
Our readers are hereby

v1nyl Sldtng new patnt 1ns tde &amp;
out 2614 Ltncoln Ave Call Joll
free ask lor Anna 1 800 715

And Gavrameedl S1 oo And Up
Woll DeliYW 814-eeH441

Pr1ce Buster 1997 3bedroom
$825 down St59tmo Free deilv
ery &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Hanes. Nitro WV 304 755 5885

knowllngly accept

31 0

rwo bedroom apartment
Pomeroy, no pet!, 614·992·5858
Ntce

Refngeracora, Stovea, Washers
And Dryers, All Rtcondlltoned

______..,_
Whote 21 Horse Doesel 4 wo 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

New 14x80 Only make 2 pay
ments &amp; move .n, no payment af
ter 4 years, free set up &amp; delrvery

Older Schul12 home, owner occu
p1ed 2 bedroom, excellent for
young or rehred couple priCed on
InspectiOn 3:&gt;4-675-5394

sex familial status or national
origin, or any 1nten11on to
make any such preference,
llmltallon or dlscr1mlnatton ~

3 bedroom 1 story 1 112 ba th

Wanted To Do

Dons lawn Care Res1dent tal,
Churches, &amp; Cemetarte&amp;, Reasonable Ratesl614 379 2847

Wanteo To Buy Used Mob 1le
tlomes Call 614 446 0175

1

based on race, color. rellgkln,

180

J &amp; 0 11. Auto Pans Buy ng sal
vago veh cles Selhng parts 304
773 5033

Top dollar ant1ques turn1ture
gla~S ch na clocks gold silve r
co1ns walches eslates Osby
Man1n 514 992 7441

to advertise •any preference
limitation or discnminatlon

299 2470 ekt OH316c 8am 9pm
7 days

Bodr work on cars &amp; trucks rea
sonable rates m1nor mechantcal
repa~rs 011 changes call 614 742
2935 ask lor K1p Rutland

1238

ol 1968 which makes It Illegal

18x36 lnground Pod Garage
lar ge Fenced Backyard Con
ventent local on t /2 M1te from
State Route 7 on Georges Creek
Road614 446 3108

Clean late t-Aode l Cars Or
lr LJc il.s 1g9o Mod els Or Newer
Sm1th Butck Pontiac 1900 East
ern Avenue Ga!l1pohs

Non Worlong Washers Dryers
Stove s Re fr1gerators Freezers
A•r Conditi one rs Co tor TV s
vc n s Also Junl\ Cars 614 256

this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

New Haven 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur
ntshecl apts Depos11 &amp; relerenc
es 304 882 2566

W11ch Trencher,

One bedroom apartmenttn Mtd

New Bank Repo a, only 3 left, free
SEtl·up &amp; dehvery 304 755-7191

All real estate advertising In

Aooortrnorll I tllg Dryer $40, 18Ft Car Tra11er
61_4_4.:.4.::6-.::0.:::190:.::.
_
_
_
_..:__ $700 1186 Camara, 81&lt;·446 Used A 40 Onch
.:.
614-e94 7642
19575
Modern 1 Bed room

1731 Ext 9706

304 755-5885

This newspaper wtil not

can 1 800 513 4343 E•t B 9368

Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

wv 3l4-755-5885

Mobtle Home loans Purchase Or
Ref1nance For B111 Consoltdation
24 Hour Approval 1 800 484

ply In Person

Metal Decorat1ve F1replace Cov ·
er Refngerator Chatnsaw, Elec - local Taxt Servtce Needtng Men
triC Drop in Range Trane Gas &amp; Women For Otspatchers &amp;
Furnace Woodburner And Nu- Onvers 614 446 7088
morous Items Corner 01141 And
Pa trtol Road In Cadmus Frtday One Day t Week Dental Hyg1en
Saturday And Sunday 9 5
Posttton Avatlabie Wtth Part Ttme
Potential In Team Ortented Prac
Mov 1ng Sale All Househo ld ttce Mu st Be Wllhng To Work
ll ems Fast Track II Mtcrowave Hard Render Quality Care And
D•shes Drapes Mtsc Sce n tc fnjoy Work1ng W1th The Publ c
Dnve In Vtnton Thun Fr Sat Please Send Resumes To Drs
614 245 0455
Sm1th &amp; Jorgensen Sprtng Valley
Profess anal Bldg , 995 Jackson
Thu rs Fn Jackso n Ptke AI Rod
ney Children S1ze infant To tO 12 P1ke, Sune 101 Gall tpohs, Ohto
4563 1 OrCall6t44462191 To
Adult Mtsc
Schedule An lmervtew

Pt.

REAL ESTATE

AVON S8 S 15 tHr No Door To
Door, No U.n1mum Order Bonus·
as 1 1100 627 4640 tndiStSIAep

Garage Sa le Thursday Fnday,
Wh1te Road Off 160, Cedar Wood
La111e

rr~day

Onlv at Oakwood Homes Nuro

Pomera; LO Teacher

Fnday Sa1urday 468 Pleasant
Valley Road Tools Clotl'1es Fur
Mure M1sc

i

month Free del1very &amp; setup

reach•ng staff H•gh School B•olo
gy Teacher H1gl'l School Voca
t•opal Home Econom•cs Teacher,
H•gh School SBH Teacher and

Four Family Yard Sale Saturday
Only On Route 160 first House
Past Browns Home lntenor Avon
Dolls Childrens And Adu lt Cloth·
mg Lots Of NICk Nacks

All Ya rd Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm tho
day before the ad IS to run Sun
diiy &amp; Monday 0d1110n 1 OOpm

Lomoltd Ollerl 1997 doublew1de
3br, 2bath. S1 799 down S2791

low1ng vacanc ies lor liS regular

B1g Garage Sale 1153 Graham
School Road 011 141 In Cente
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Wednesday, July 1?, 1991;

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.Yol. 47, NO. 53
2 Sectlona, 12 "-vea

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 1.8. 1996

OVEC
appeals
pulp millpermit

·Bomb may have been
.cause; flight headed to
·Paris; 16 students aboard
By RICK HAMPSON
used infrared night vision goggles to
·Associated Press Writer
help spot bodies.
NEW YORK - Rescuers pulled
Fresh crews were brought in at
burned bodies from the waters off daybreak to relieve those !hat had
·I..ong Island early today as an FBI ter- been working through the night, said
rorism team investigated what caused Coast Guard Petty Officer Phyllis
a TWA jumbo jet to explode over the Kay in Boston.
Atlantic shortly after takeoff, apparBy . 7 a.m. today, rescuers had
'ently killing all229 people aboard.
pulled ·at least 70 bodies from the
"It's too early to tell if it's a water, some of them burned beyond
bomb," FBI spokesman Jim Mar- recognition.
golin said.
With a water temperature of 65
A law enforcement official said he degrees and an air temperature of 73,
was told by !he FBI that based on officials estimated that survival
been created by Becky Anderson or The FabFESTWE FLAGS· Within 1 month Pomaroy
ric Shop, left, who dlaplaya them here fCif
eyewitness accounlS from Air Nation- . would not be possible much beyond
vlaltora will be greeted by an array of colorful
Susan Clark, Pomeroy Merchants Alloclatlon
al Guard pilots, investigators "are noon today.
ftaga along the parking lot'a grend promenade.
.president.
Flags to go on the 13 period lamp poles have
leaning more towards the possibility
One of the first private boats at the
that it was a bomb that caused the crash site came upon a fTl&amp;Cabre
plane to explode" Wednesday night. sight: a yellow TWA life jacket float·
"A fireball fell from the sky," said ing on the water.
the official, who spoke on condition
"It was inflated and it was buck·
of anonymity. "What would have led," said Jimmy Vaccaro, who
caused that? ... We know there was hooked the empty jacket into !he
nothing on board, other than fuel, that boat. "These things don't light and
could have caused that huge an innate by themselves- you have to
explosion."
pull on it or blow through the tube."
He added: "They are still invcstiThe Coast Guard said none of the
•
gauneattotherpossibitities."
bodies re~overed wore life pre- n~JAC
Flighl"800, a Boeins· 74-l-bouint•· 'SCI'Vers;·soggestJngtllllt tl'il'fiPl!m1Sil-....,-..- ._,for Paris' Charles de Gaulle Airport indeed came without warning. There BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
from Kennedy Airport, exploded was no immediate word on whether Sentinel newa staff
about 8:45 p.m. Wednesday and the plane had made a distress call.
Progress of !he downtown reviplunged into the ocean off Fire .:
Among those booked on the flight talization project and special proIsland, a narrow strip of land !hat runs was a·group of students ff9m a Penn· grums including an art show and band
parallel to Long Island. It fell in 120- sylvania high school French club.
concert were discussed at Wednes·
foot-deep water about 40 miles east
The boom and fireball shattered a day's meeting of the Pomeroy Merof New York.
calm summer night.
chants Association.
. . Wreckage and fuel on the water
Vic Fehner, who was fishing, said
Displayed at the meeting were col·
burned for hours as helicopters hov· "it started off like a little ball, like a orful flags which will line the prom·
red. A C-130 transport plane circled, nare."
enade creating a festive look along
rapping parachute nares to illumi·
"It came down for a few seconds the riverfront. The 13 three-color
)late the scene. Overnight, rescuers
Continued on pqe 3
striped flags will be mounted on one
side and a coordinating solid color
.I
nag on the opposite side of the period lamp poles.
SIGNS IN PLACE - Welcome algns to hlatoric Pomeroy
susanctark.president. notedthat
the poles and brackets have arnved been placed at entrances to the village.
.
and the installation should. begin
the Pomeroy Police Dcpanment and very soon. She also reported that the
By TOM HUNTER
Meigs County Sheriffs Dcpanment "Welcome to Historic Pomeroy" be he d on Aug. 24 .. The art show to antique art theme in window displays.
Sentinel News $tiff
A 19-year-old Mason County man also responded to the scene, where signs are now in place to entrances of indude paintings, photography. wood An old-fashioned lemonade stand
is being held in police custody fol· Albright was found in !he parking lot, the village. Clark also noted that and stone sculptures, basketry, will be set up by Bobbie Karr.
Promotions including a sidewalk
lowing an assault which seriously later detained and taken into custody. through the mulched flower beds engraving, carving and other art
sale
on Aug . 3 and holiday activities
Ferguson was treated for serious along the parking lot five concrete forms will be held in the mini-parks
injured a· man along the Pomeroy
were
discussed. Again this year mer·
head and neck injuries, culS and abra- walkways will be constructed to on Court Street beginning at 4 p.m.
riverfront early Thursday morning.
chants
will he encouraged to outline
Becky Anderson is chairman of the
John Albright, West Columbia, is sions and transported to Veterans replace the brick palhways.
their
buildings
with white lights.
Memorial Hospital. He was later
Jim Anderson reported that the an show and those who plan 10 exhibe~pected to be charged with one
Clark
reponed
that Hank Cleland
count of felonious assault .resulting transported by Health Net helicopter revitalization project is moving right it arc asked to contact her.
is
heading
up
a committee to
The concert by the Bend· Area
from an altercation with Terry Fer- to Cabell Huntington Hospital, Hunt- along and that the deadline for work
approach
Pomeroy
Village Council
guson, 38, West Columbia. according ington, W.Va., where he was listed in completion is Aug. 31. He talking Community Band under the direction
about
the
new
downtown
parking
to Meigs County Prosecuting Attor- good condition late this morning in about the painting of buildings, of of Toney Dingess will be held on
regulations.
She
urged
the
merchants
the hospital's intensive care unit, plans for more awnings, and noted Court at 6 p.m.
ney John Lentes.
Ways to attruct shoppers into ~heir get involved in a movement to free
Ferguson was found badly beaten a&lt;cording to hospital spokesman the enthusiasm of Lt. Gov. Nancy
Hollister who did a walk through of stores were discussed and it was the parking lot from both meters and
on the Ohio River shore near the Bunny Smith.
the downtown area on her visit to decided that businesses will be permit parking as a way of getting
Pomeroy levee by crews of the Meigs
Albright made an initial appear- Meigs County Monday.
encouraged to extend their hours past more shoppers inlo the village.
County Emergency Medical Services
Aug. 21 was set as the date for the
Plans were discussed for an art the concert time . It was also sug·
around 12:30 a.m., who responded to ance in Meigs County Court early
next
meeting.
a call of a man down at the Pomeroy this morning, and was scheduled to show and commul\ity band conccnto lCstcd that the merchants carry out an
Municipal Parking Lot, according to appear for his preliminary hearing on
pomeroy police chief Gerald Rought. the charges at II a.m .. according to
Law enforcement officials from Lentcs.

Merchants
discuss
renewal

t...

•
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West C0 IUmb18 man 1n

a 12 ~ack 7•Up
RC Cola, Diet Rite,
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Your Choice

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Box.

By The Alaocleted Pr••
A man convicted of killing a .
police sergeant in Indiana was executed by injection early today, hours
after a man who claimed police bad~ered him into pleading guilty to
killing his male lover was executed
in Virginia."
To the end, Tommie Smilh maintained he did not fire the shots that
killed Indianapolis police Sgt. Jack
Ohrberg.
· Ohrberg had gone to Smith's
house in 1980 to serve an arrest warraht for another man. That man, Ore: gory Resnover, was executed in 1994
· fbr his role in Ohrberg's killing.
· Smith, 42, who had burglary and
robbery convictions in the 1970s, said
tic· shot at the officer, mistakenly
b,elieving thai OhrbetJ was Ill inlnlder.' He denied police accounts tlw he .
shill the wounded offiCer as he lay on
tfJe porch.

In Virginia, Joseph John Savino nt
was executed by injection late
Wednesday night after calmly stating,
· T m sorry for what happened to
Tommy McWaters."
Savino, 37, pleaded guilty to blud·
geoning Thos McWaters to death at
their Bedford County home in 1988.
Later, he claimed police had badgered him into confessing even
though he repeatedly asked for a
lawyer, and that he was high on
cocaine at the time of the slaying.
Savino moved in with McWaters
in 1988 when he was paroled to Virginia after serving six years in a New
York prison for robbery. Savino had
known McWaters, 64, for seven years
and worked for his construction company.
Savino said in 111 interview !his ·
week lhllt McWaters supported him
and gave him money but also hounded him for sex.

·-

WELCOME
TO
HIS TO
DDW.l f

_

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP) lWo environmental groups say they
have filed an appeal against the air
pollution permit issued for • proposed Mason Couoty pulp mill
beside the Ohio River.
.
The Ohio Valley Environmental
Coalition in Huntington 811d the.
Buckeye Forest Council in Athen-.
Ohio. said Wednesday !hey filed the
appeal with the state Offic:c ot Air
Quality.
"We hope it tics it up forever and
an eternity," OVEC project coordinator Janet Foot told the Huntington
Herald-Dispatch. "We're asking for it
to be rescinded, and if not rescinded,
modified."
, The West Virginia Division of
Environmental Protection's Office of
Air Quality issued the air permit on
June 17 to Apple Grove Pulp
Paper Company, which
a pulp and paper mill
upriver of downtown Hunti•
The permit docs . not
protect public hea.lth- and
ronment, the groups
noted that the Parsons
Inc. mill would emil
gen sulfide and other
"The bottom line ·
is not good
Valley or for the forests. The
sions from the mill represent an
· unacceptable risk to human and ceo· logical health." said Matt Peters of
·the Buckeye Forest Council.
The air permit was the last of three
: the pulp mill needed from the state.
. The air permit allows fewer poilu·
tants than allowed in the draft permit
' the state Division of Environmental
· Protection proposed last year. The
· draft permit would have allowed the
mill to emit 42,418.3 lons of pollutants per year. The permit issued last
month reduced that by 2,223 .4 tons.
or five percent.
OVEC had at least 17 objections
to the air permit. Among them :
· The risk assessment done by the
Office of Air·Quality did not consid·
cr non-cancer risks. Possible health
risks include harm to people's
jmmunc systems and reproductive
systems, along with developmental
problems and hchavi0111l disorders,
OVEC says.
-The pulp mill should landfill its
sludge rather than incinerate it,
OVEC says.
·The permit should include emissions of all air pollulllnL~ fmm the deinking areas of the mili,OVEC says.
A call to the state agency seeking
comment was not answered Wednesday evening. Parsons&amp;. Whittcn••re.
based in Rye Brook, N.Y.. dues not
comment on the mill.
The Ohio Valley group earlier
filed an appeal of the mill's water pol·
lution penilit. A hearing is scheduled
Aug. 8 in Charleston.

Republicans signal willingness to negotiate IRS cuts

WASHINGTON (AP) - House by exacerbating our federal budget
Republicans arc signaling their will- deficit problem." said Rep. Stcny
ingness to negotiate over deep cuts in Hoyer, D-Md.
Internal Revenue Service spending
The bill, providing $11 billion,
the Clinton administration warns also finances other parts of the Treacould delay tax refunds and redu&lt;e sury Department and the White
revenue collection .
House and gives the Postal Service
"My intentions are to fully fund with a subsidy for delivering non.the IRS at a level that will ensure not profit organizations' mail at a reduced
only a successful 1997 filing season charge .
It 's one of 13 annual spending
but also an efficient and modernized
bills
moving through Congress and,
IRS in the future ," said Rep. Jim
Lightfoot, R-lowa, chairman of the before enactment, would have to be
Appropriations Treasury subcommit- reconciled wilh a Senate version that
tee .
has yet to be written.
-- .
On Wednesday, !he House, by a
lWenty Republicans sided with
slender 215-207 margin, approved Democrats in .opposing the bill, ·
legislation !hat would cut the IRS including Reps. Tom Davis, R-Va.,
budget by II percent to $6.6 bi Ilion . and . Constance Morella, R-Md.,
in fiscal 1997.
whose distmts include large numbers
The Clinton administration and of federal employees.
Democrats warned the bill, which
Lightfoot said the dramatic cuts in
would eliminate roughly 2,000 IRS the IRS budget were motivated by
jobs, would cripple electronic filing, lawmaken' unhappiness over slow
reault in a longer wait for refunds and progress in ll)odemizing the agency's
hurt taxpayer scrvic.:s such as tele- 1960s-era computer sySlcm.
phone help lines.
' The .bill halves the administra"This bill would ... endanger the . lion's request· for computer system
IRS's ability to collect taxes ... there- . funds to $425 million, orden the IRS

•
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r.-~--------~~

'

l
Custody after ·nc·ldent

Smith maintains his
innocence to the end

.....

AO.nnettCo. Nw• r r•r

229 perish
in jet crash

..

Muggy, . ch•nce of
ahowera tonight, low In
70a. Friday, humid, show·
era, high In mid 801•

to tum over development of the system 10 private contractors and gives
the Defense De~artment rcsponsibil·
ity for writing the contracts.
Lightfoot said he was willing to
negotiate with the Treasury Department over who writes the contracts
but would insist that il not be the IRS.
The spending bill, approved after
debate stretching over two days,
includes a freshmen-sponsored
amendment denying a pay raise in
1997 to members of Congress, judges
and senior Clinton administration
officials, including Vice President AI
Gore and Cubinct members.
It would withhold a roughly
$3,000 increase lo rank-and-file
members of Congress, frcc~ing their
salary at S133,600 for the fiflh consecutive year. Othq federal workers
wollld receive a 2.3 percent raise.
The House defeated, 268-1 SO,
another amendment from freshmen
cutting the bill 's spending by 1.9 per-·
cent across the board. It was aimed 11
avoiding a lemJl:OilUY increase in the
deficit in 1997.
Lightfoot. in fending off the pro-

, vision, advised the freshmen, led by
Rep. G1l Gutknecht, R·Minn., to
"get a life" and "quit this self nagcllati on."
Meanwhile, after heated debate,
lawmakers rejected, 238- 184, a mea·
sure that would have restored abor·
tion as a procedure covered by fed·
cral employees' health insurance.
"People do not want their taxpayer dollars being used to kill
unborn babies," said Rep. Chris
Smith, R-NJ .
The ban on insurance coverage of
abonions, except in the case of rape
or incest or to save the mother's life,
had been in effect during !he 1980s.
President Clinton ended it but Republicans reinstated it after they too1t
control of Congress last year.
Much of the savings squeezed
from !he IRS would be funneled into
law enforcement. It provides $24 million for investigation of church fires,
$93 million for the Customs Service
to fight drug smusglill8 along the
border with Mexico and irr the
Caribbean, and $42 million for qent
training

•

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