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Wednesday, July 1?, 1991;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

All Registers Open 4 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday Thru Friday

Ohio Lottery

Cards sweep
Reds, hike
division lead

Pick 3:

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Super Lotto:
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Sports on Page 4

Kicker

245675

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a1 .
.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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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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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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Commentary

PageA2

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'.fhursday, July 18, 1996

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~

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

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

_...ome.

L•rttre to fhe editor.,.
Thq muat I» IN• IMrt 300 rrorrJ•. Alii..,.,,,,.
tulljocl to _ , __ ""'"be 1/g- -lncludo _ . , ona ret.ptoono number.
No unllgn«&lt;- "'" be pull/llh«&lt;. L - . lhould be In good ,.,,., llkl,..,lllfl
IIIUOI, nol ,;.twOMIIfloo.

Letters to the editor
More bang for the buck
Dear Editor,
As chairperson of the GalliaMeigs Head Start Policy Council and
member of the Ohio Head Start
Association, I am deeply concerned
about children's issues and would like
to address Mr. Weaver's recent letter.
If Mr. Weaver would have attend. ed more than one meeting of the
Southern Local Building Committee,
he would see first-hand as I have that
the words most often used by the
group are "getting the most bang for
the buck."
A~ far as cutting costs is concerned, try this on for size: so far the
building committee has gotten the
school board to accept a site saving
the district's taxpayers over $140,000
in Jand acquisition costs. The site,
already owned by the taKpaycrs,
requires little in the way of site preparation and utilities are available likesaving another quarter-million
at least (Have you priced a
treatment plant recently?) .
~cllloon, by locating the new
to the high school, they
of the routine main-

alttoOU!~h

the building comschool board HAVE
a "basic
structure" -it is imponant to note that

the State of Ohio says exactly what
constitutes such a structure since they
are paying for about half of it. Any
new building, yes even a "chuck
roast" one, would be "state-of-theart" compared to what our children go
to now.
Undoubtedly_ the school board
and building comminee knew from
the start that getting a new building
would be an uphill bailie, so making
a genuine effon to "get the most bang
for the buck" was a lop priority. On
the other hand, I'm sure we all want
a quality building that will last for
several generations as the existing
buildings have admirably done.
So, by your own reasoning Mr.
Weaver, the bui_lding commiuee and
school board have trimmed as much
fat as possible "almost guaranteeing
that it will be buill.': And you are
absolutely right, the bureaucrats did
kick in more money -- making it an
even better offer, don't you think?
Thank you for bringing this issue
out in the open, I now look forward
to joiqing you on August6 in voting
"yes" for the children of our district
and the bet~ent of the communi- ,
ties associal wolh Southern Local
Schools, as he voters in Eastern
Local have already done there.
Welcome aboar4 .
1\-Jary F,..,eman
'
I
Minersville

Shares opinion on drinking, driving
Dear Editor,
- why Qver 28,000 people have been
I am a member of the Country killed on U.S. highways in drunk driShamrocks 4-H Club and I a!Tj doing ving related accidents.
a project on Alcohol Deci ~lons . I
When some people drink, some do
would like to share my otjnion on it irresponsibly. How could anyone
drinking and driving.
live with themselves after knowing
I don't see anything wrong with they made someone else die or sufsomeone having a couple of drinks. fer because of their careless actions.
But, when they plan on driving
Christina Westfall
home, that's different. I think that's
Long Bottom.

Today in history
By The Associated Preas
Today is Thursday. July 18, the 200th day of 1996. There are 166 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
Sixty years ago, on July 18, 1936, the Spanish Civil War began as Gen.
Francisco Franco -led an uprising of army troops based in Spanish North
Africa.
·
On this date:
In A.D. 64, the Great Fire of Rome began.
In 1536, the authority of the pope was declared void in England.
In 1792, American naval hero John Paul Jones died in Paris at age 45.
In 1872, Brotam ontroduced the concept of voting by secret ballot.
In 1927, Ty Cobb hit safely for the 4,000th time in his career.
In 1932,lhe United States and Canada signed a treaty to develop the St.
Lawrence Seaway.
,
In 1944, Hideki Tojo was removed as Japanese premier and war minister because of setbacks suffered by his country in World War 11.
In 1947, President Truman signed the Presidential Succession Act.

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fare.
How can the question be
answered? By measuring what people think (via attitudinal survey

By Ben Wattenberg
Once again a welfare-reform bill
seems to be moving from the Republican Congress to President Clinton's
desk for signature qr veto. The last
time It gut there. Clinton vetoed. He
leaned in pan on a hokum study from
ho s own Department of Health and
Human Services. II purported to
show that reform would push a million children into poveny,
But the central question in the
debate is this: "Does welfare encourage illegitimacy"" After all , choldren
in the households of never-married
women are about eight times more
likely to grow up beneath the poverty line.
Clinton has said that out-of-wedlock binh is our most serious domeslie problem. He's right . About one out
of every three children in America is
born without a legal father. Only a
few decades ago the rate was one out
of 20. Illegitimacy is not only directly linked to poveny among children,
but to crime, poor education, unem·
ploymenl and second -generation wei-

Ben Wattenberg

public and 67 percent of welfare
recipients).
This is no conservative put-up job.
The guiding spirit of the Public
Agenda Foundation is the distinguished social scientist and sutvey
researcher Daniel Yankelovich.
"Moderate" or "moderate liberal"
would be his most appropriate appellation. And among the grant-givers
for the study was the John D. and
Catherine T. MacAnhur Foundation,
whose general position would seem
to be somewhere in the realm of
"very liberal," "extremely liberal "
and :·you've got to be kidding."
There is meat for liberals in the
study as well. Solid majorities of both
the public and welfare recipients
favor "child care while mothers on
welfare work or go to school" and
"requiring enrollment in job training
and education programs."
The public has spoken. But what
do social scientists say about the mat·
ter?
Surprise! Liberal social scientists
have said no, welfare does not
encourage illegitimacy. Conservative researchers have said yes, it docs
too.
So the National Academy of Sciences sponsored new research. An
imponant paper by Professor Mark
Rosenzweig, chairman of the Economics Department at the Universi·
ty of Pennsylvania, shows a clear correlation: Among young, poor women,
a IOpercenl rise in cash welfare ben·
efits yields a 12 percent rise in illc·
gitimate binhs. Rosenzweig says it
would work in reverse as well: A cut
in benefits would reduce illegitima.·
cy. Some other recent studies confirm
the general direction of R9senzweig's
study.
That academic argument goes on:.
But who knows best, the politicized
scholars or those who ended up
ensnared in the welfare trap? Asking
the question answers it. Clinton
should sign the bill and save the children. ·
.· Ben Wallenberg, a senior fellow at
;the American Enterprise Institute, is
"the author of a new book, "Values
Mauer Most," and is the host of the
weekly public television program,
"Think Tank."

it happens, the Public Agenda Foundation surveyed welfare recipients
earlier this year. The following statement was read to respondents: "Welfare encourages teen-agers to have
kids out of wedlock." Respondents
were asked if they thought the problem was I) "very serious," 2) "somewhat serious," 3) " not too serious,"
or 4) "not serious at all"
Almost two-thirds (64 percent) of
the welfare respondents said "very

research) or how they act (via statistically valid social-science studies).
As ol happens, there is recent material from both realms, each suggesting
a "yes" answer. (Yes, welfare
encourages illeg itimacy.)
serious"!
Now, there are times when it is silRemarkably, that was a somewhat
ly to ask the public about their opin- higher score than was recorded by the
ions. Questions · like "Will China general public (60 percent), blacks
become a democracy"" lead directly (59 percent) or whites (61 percent).
to another one: " How would they
Other tough statements in the poll
know?"
showed a similar pattern of high
What about our question: "Does "very serious" response by the pubwelfare encourage illegitimacy?" _lic, with even higher rates by welfare
Answers from the general public ,recipients. For example: "1be system
might well be put aside. How would undermines the work ethic and
they know? But suppose the same encourages people to be lazy" (57
question were asked of welfare recip- percent of the public and 62 percent
ient&lt;. If anyone would know about •of welfare recipients) and "People
the matter from firsthand experience. cheat and commit fraud to get welfare
these are the people who would. As benefits" (64 percent of the general

REFORM PARTY CANDIDATES...

L - - - - - - -- - -- - -- --------------------,..-----'

Thank you for not marryinQ---By lan Shoales
II may not be appropriate lor me
to ask this question. having been
respon sibl e for more failed relationships than Mickey Rooney an d Liz
Taylor combined, but who gave Congress the authority to declare what
marriage is or is nor&gt;
The question is pointless. I know.
The so-called Defense of Marriage
Act has passed. Congress has spoken . .
U ndcr order of the federal governmcnt. gay people arc now forbodden
, to love, honor and obey each other
until death do them part . Back to the
disco. kids. where that darned homoscx uall1fcstyle belongs .
Whether Congress acted within its
constitutional limits remains to be
seen. But that doesn't ma!ler. All that
mailers is thai Congress has once
more played footsie with virtue at
taxpaycrs' expense. Heterosexua l
voters. supposed ly, take to this pasturing like a duck tak~s to water. But
let me ask you legitimately married
citizens out there: Docs the Defense
of Marro age Act really make you feel
defended?
If so, do you think the fonificalion
between your marriage and the forces
of fornication out there is high
enough• Or should we pass some

more laws0 How about, "Toilet seat
must be lowered after use under
penalty of death "? That'd bring the
d1vorce rate down, I guarantee it.

/an Shoales
Not to sound too libertarian about
thi s, but why do conservatives rail
against the intrusion of big governmcnl into our lives and then waste
government money big-lime drafting
bonehead intrusive legislation°They
want to protect the " institution of
marriage," they say. What institution'
The one that's being tom down.
covenant by covenant, through
divorce , spousal abuse, murder,
"children having children," and plain
old money worries? What threat do
adult homosexuals pose to this "institution " ' If they want to pledge fideli ty to each other, who the hell arc we
to tell them they can't?
While we're on this hypocrisy
bandwagon, can we give Bob Dole a
break' He took heat for telling the
relentlessly perky Katie Couric that
C. Everell Koop may have been
"brainwashed" by " the liberal
media" when he questioned Dole's
claim that smoking was addictive.
Ever since then, a walking cigarene

called " Bull Man" has been dogging
Dole's campaign, and President Clinton (who has been known to puff a
stogie or two on the privacy of the
White House lawn) has been positioning himself as the anti-smoking
candidate.
I may be alone in this, but I don't
care. If people want to smoke, let
them . And if people want to stop
smoking, but can't, it's their problem,
not the government's. Dole never said
that smoking was good for you, did
he? (Who docs, for God's sake'/) He's
just not as adamant about the demon
weed as the relentlessly perky media
want him to be.
Is that what this election is about'!
Which candidate hales smoking
more? As an issue, isn't that kind of
pathetic'!
Oh, Dole took tobacco money. I
forgot. And the Democrats didn't? I
hate to break it to you, but all candidates take money. From anybody
who's got some. They take money
from oil companies, car companies.
trial lawyers, gun and civil rights
cnthusia&lt;ls, whiskey makers, bankers
and thieves. They even take money
from phone companies! Sure, it
would be nice if puppy dogs and kitty cats had slush funds, but they

o

don't.
One could say, in fact, that the
relationship between a politician and ·
a bag man greatly resembles adultery.
Supposedly married to the American
people (between elections anyway),
he shamelessly nins with anybody or
anything with deep pockets .• Not
only that, he' II jump through any
hoop they ask him! And what docs he ·
offer his poor suffering spouse'! A
defense of marriage'! That 's like
shooting the horse when the barn is
on fire.
No wonder the affections of the
electorate arc alienated. No wonder
voting seems like divorce. Politicians
have gollo slop catering to the silly
whims of the marketplace, and start
obeying the silly whims back home.
That means washing the dishes once
in a while, taking oullhc garbage ·is that too much to ask'! And don't
smoke those things in the house!
How many times do I have to tell
you?
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newslellcr, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck 's Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Jan Shoales is 11 syndl~ated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

U.S. must 'get over' Golden Age nostalgia
By Morton Kondracke
Americans have a chronic complaint: that the country is "senously
off on the wrong track." But, says a
fascinating new book. that's because
they harbor an unrealistic nostalgoa
for a post-war "Golden Age" that
can 'I possibly return.
Despite the fact that the United
States is the richest and most powerful country on earth, journalist
Michael Elliott writes, "Americans
whine " because "they have lost the
abili ty to accurately assess their present condition."
Writes Elliott in his book, "The
Day Be for&lt;! Yesterday," "They con stantly compare America to a world
we have lost -- to a Golden Age that
followed World War II. But that peri od of America's history was a massive freak. II is a false yardstick with
which to measure the scale of our
present doscontent."
"Our obsession with those years, ..
he writes, "is like the ultimately
hopeless task of trying to recapture a
dreamtime."
According to Elliott, instead of
dwelling on the end of tbe postwar
boom, "we have to get over it" and
~olve the problems of the present.
In "The Day Before Yesterday,"
Elliott argues that -· with significant

exceptions -- America is heading
back into ··normal" times like before
this century 's wars began in 1914.
He argues that America's natural

Morton Kondraclce
strengths, including its geography,
wealth , entrepreneurial spirit and
sense of community, ought to enable
us to overcome future challenges.
much as America after 1914 repeatedly summoned the strength to save
democracy.
In making this argument, Elliott
along the way has written a wonderfully learned book about this country
-- appreciative and channed by what
he sees in a way that only a foreign
correspondent can be.
Now editor of Newsweek's international editions, the British-born
Elliott formerly was Washington
bureau chief for the Economist, and
has spent time in places -- like the
Monongahela Valley in Pennsylvania
and Shannon County, S.D., the poorest county in America -- that U.S.
journalists at best only pass through.
His book is chock-full 'Of little
essays about American culture, some
only a paragraph long, that reveal
both depressing and hopeful facts
about the nation.

•

For instance, he notes a major dif- below 50 percent only in 1981 and
ference in the health patterns of U.S. the late 1980s. Last year, it averaged
social classes: "Those who never fin- 66 percent, and currently it's 64 perished high school arc more than twice cent.
as likely to be fat as those who have
Elliott docsn' t question that the
gone to college. In 1970, 35 percent post-war Golden Age was "golden,"
of high school dropouts smoked cig- with median family income more
arettes. as did 28 percent of college than doubling from $17,000 in 1947
graduates. By 1993, the number of to $35,000, adjusting for in nation, in
smokers in the first category was 37 1973. Then , between 1973 and the
percent, but among the college-edu- 1990s, family income rose by just I
cated smoking had become taboo; percent a year.
only 13.5 percent smoked cigaMoreover, while income growth ,
rettes."
wa• spread across the population in :
Concerned about possible ethnic the Golden Age, it's been skewed to ·
Balkanization in the country, Elliott the wealthy since the 1970s, with the :
finds some hope in intermarriage fig- poorest fifih of the population gain- :
ures, including the fact that one-third ing nothing since 1973, the next fifth ·
of Latinos and Asians now miuty out- gaining 3 percent, and the riches(
side their own group, about the rate fifth, 36 percent.
that Italian-Americans did in 1945 on i But he points out that the period ;
their way to 80· percent by the late between the 1960s and 1990s ·
1960s.
"wrecked the cohesion and self-con- :
His main argument, though, is that fidencc that has been so powerful in
America has been in a ~i-perma­ the Golden Age" -- thro11gh assassinent "funk" ever since the mid·l970s nations, the divisions surrounding thc
because the post-war boom in Vietnam War, urban riots, and a
incomes· and optimism came to its social and sexual revolution that balinevitable end.
looned rates of divorce and illegitiThe Winhlin polling organization macy.
has been aski111 voters since 1976
(Mortoa KODdracke 11. 9eaa· ·
whether they think the country is
;basically on the right or wrong track; tiYe edlter of Roll ~. tlae neww·
!he "wrong track" number dipped .JIIIJIU' of Capitol HW.)

!

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GREENLAND

Friday, July 19
AceuWeather0 forecast for
MICH.

Joseph F. Rice
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. - Joseph Franklin Rice, 50, of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,died Wednesday, July 17, 1996, at Pleasant Valley Hospital fol lowing a long illness.
. He was a 24 year employee of Old Town Farms and a 1966 graduate of
Point Pleasant Senior High School.
Bom May 19, 1946 in Cottageville, W.Va .. he was a son of Leona Mae
(DeVault) Rice of Cottageville, and the late Clarence E. Rice. Sr. He was
also preceded in death by a brother, Mark Rice.
In addition to his mother, he is also survived by his wife, Catherine M.
(Riffle) Rice ; a son, Bobby F. Rice of Point Plea.ant; two daughters and a
son-in-law, Cathy Jo and Robert W. Greene and Connie Rice. all of Point
' Pleasant; two sisters, Ruth Rice of Point Pleasant and Mary Margaret Rice
of Cottageville; and four brothers, Clarence "Ed" Rice, Jr .. James Rice and
Raymond Rice, all of Point Pleasant, and Donald Rice of Gall1polis.
Service will be held at II a.m. Saturday, July 20. at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with Re v. Herman H. Jordan officiatong. Burial will follow in the Baden Presbyterian Cemetery at Leon.
Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 6-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations would be greatly appreciated to Catheri ne
M. Rice, in care of Jean Sammons, Rt. 2 Box 639. Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
25550.

IND.

89"

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OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel The real welfafe experts speak
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Thursday, July 18, 1996
'

'Esta6fisfid in 1948

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

• IColumbus'lag• I

W.VA.

Edwin ·•e.L.' King
Edwin "E.L." King, 80, of Rt. I , Letart died 'Thursday. July 18, 1996, at
Holzer
Medical Center.
VIa Associated' Press GraptJJcsNet •
A coal miner for 23 years and construction worker for 20 years, he was
a member of the Broad Run Zion Lutheran Church and Carpenters Local
1159 of Point Pleasant. ·
Born June 9, 1916, in Graham Station he was a son of the late Quincy
Friday ...Continued humid with
Southeastern Ohio
Lee
and Estella May (Grimm) King. He was also preceded in death by sev Flash nood watch today and showers ;~nd thunderstorms likely.
en
brothers.
Ralph. Herben. Donley, John, Joseph, Cli fford and Garland King,
High
in
the
mid
80s.
Chance
of
rain
·tonight...
'
and
four
sisters,
Grace King, Garnet Clark. Susan Edwards and Oc1c Oldak ·
Today ... Hazy and humid with 60 petC~Ql.
'
·£xtended
forecast
showers and thunderstorms likely.
King; three sons and daugh·
Saturday and Sunday...Dry. Lows er. Surviving arc his wife, Ada
High in the mid 80s. West wind 5 to
ters
-in-faw,
Allen
L.
and
Kay
Louise
King
of
Middleport,
Lew G. and Kathy
15 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent. in the upper 50s to mid 60s and highs
King
of
Hanford,
Phillip
L.
and
Carla
King
of
Mason:
seve
n grandchildren
in
the
80s.
Tonight...Muggy with a chance of
and
one
great-grandchild.
)
Monday ...A chance of thundershowers and thunderstorms. Low in
service
will
be
held
Friday,
2
p.m.,
at
the
Broad
Run
CemeA
graveside
the lower 70s. West wind 5 tQ I 0 storms, Lows in the 60s and highs 85
tery with Rev. Rankin Roach officiating. There wi ll be no calling hours.
to 90.
·mph. Chance ofrain 50&lt;percent.
Arrangements are under the direction of the Foglesong Funeral Home.
Masoit.Ice

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Today's weather forecast

Lucill~ (~ewis)

Flash flood warnings
Harry W. Hendricks
issued for -parts of Ohi·o

Hany Wilson Hendricks. 73, Pomeroy, died this morning. Thursday, July
18, 1996, at H&amp;zer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
,
Born
Oct.
31,
1922
,
in
Meigs
County,
son
of
the
late
Arthur
W. and FloBy The Associated Preas
Heavy rains were expected to hit
: Ohio is getting its much-needed , the Ohio Valley today as a warm front ra Hysell Hendricks, he was a member of the Bradford Church of Christ in
.
rain - all at once.
hangs over the region. Areas of Ohio, Pomeroy and a World War II Army veteran.
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
Tressie
I.
Caldwell
Hendricks,
Pomeroy ; three
· More thunderstorms were forecast Indiana and Pennsylvania could get
sons
and
daughters-in-law,
Harry
Wilson
Hendrick
Jr.
of
Columbus,
Tony
for today and tonight, after pans of . up to 5 inches of rain and nash noodand
Janel
Hendricks
of
Delaware
and
Terry
and
Donna
Hendricks
of
Colum)he state got as much a 3 inches of ing could be a problem in low lying
bus; two grandchildren; three sisters and brothers-in-law. Anie and Jim Perrain in an hour overnight. Some areas.
,
minor nooding and scattered power
Later in the day, showers were ry of Waterford, Mary and Bob Bowen of Pomeroy, Onedra and Andrew Maroutages were reported.
expected to move into New York and tin of Zenia; a brother, Robert Hendricks of Vinton; several nieces and
nephews.
The heaviest rainfall early today West Virginia.
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Midwas in a swath from Greenville in
Thunderstorms may drench the
dlepon with Eugene Underwood officiating. Burial will follow in Beech
Darke County eastward through the Southeast and Gulf Coast as a system
Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends may C'all Friday. 7-9 p.m. at the funerColumbus area. The National Weath- moves into the region.
er Service's doppler radar estimated
Scattet.ed· showers·, and thunder- al home.
up to 3 inches of rain fell.
storms wete possible in eastern
~ A nash nood watch was in effect Texas, and light rain showers may fall
for most of the state today and across Oklahoma and Kansas
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Hospi tal ;
tonight.
.
In the ·Northwest, a low pressure
5:04 p.m.. Riverview Drive,
gency
Medical Service recorded five
, Friday, the weather looks to calm system may bring t~undentorms to
Randy
Martin , Veterans Memorial
calls
for
assistance
Wedne
sday
down a bit. But it will be hot and Idaho and Washington.
Hospital
including
two
transfer
calls.
Units
. _ . _Temperatures ~ere expected to
sticky with highs around 90.
SYRACUSE
· The record:high temperature for chmtrontothe 70s m the Great Lakes responding included:
II :5 1 a.m ., volunteer fire depanthis date at the Columbus weather region, tHe Nonhwest, and parts of RACINE
menl
and squad , Pine Grove Road,
8:50
a.m.,
Old
Portland
Road.
station was 99 degrees in 1887 while Southern California. New England
uti
lity
pole fire .
lhe record low was 53 in 1976. Sun- and the Midwest should see temper- Ethel Snedegar, Jackson General
set tonight will be at 8:58 p.m. and atures in . the 80s ..· Temperatures
sunrise Friday at 6:19a.m.
should reaeh the 90~ mthe Plams, the
A~ross the nation
mid-AtlaMic states, the South, and
- Wind swept across the Midwest pans . of California. Parts of the
before daybreak, while rain soaked Squthwest could see temperatures
the West and mist hung over the East. abo~e I00.
The South was warm with fair skies.

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

TWA Flight eoo arrived
from Athens, Greece and
was on the ground about
three hours belore taking

off for

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Pra~ris~--~]":::;;;!..."":"'7:-'T""!:':....._...,:.£

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229 perish.;:ntinuedfrom page 1
and all of a sudden burst into names.
a bog hall of llame ." Fchner said.
Standing at John Scott's Raw Bar
in Westhampton Beach, cook Jason
Fontana saw "a big fireball with
pieces coming off of it. You heard
two big explosions, like two big lirecrackers going off."
There were 212 passengers and 17
crew members on the llight. said
Mike Kelly, a TWA vice president.
The plane had arrived from Athens ,
Greece, and had been on the ground
about three hours bCforc its scheduled
8 p.m. takeoff for Paris. Some of the
passengers were from an earlier canceled noght IO Rome .
The Athens-to-New York ni ghl ·
had gone normally. lli ght engineer
Alben J. Mundo said today.
''I've nown on that plane quite a
bit. and it was very re liabl~ . There
was no indo cat ion that there was any ·
thing wrong, " Mundo said. He said
he heard about the crash when he got

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 42 ~
Akzo .................... .................. 55 '1,
Ashland 011 ............................. 37
AT&amp;T ..................................... 53:0
Bank One ..............................33'1.
Bob Evans ............................ 14'1.
Borg-Warner .........................3t'r.
Champion Ind ......................... 18
Charming Shop ..................... &amp;~.
City Holdlng .......................... 22),
Federal Mogul ....................... 16'1.
Gannet! ................................. 66'1•
Goodyear ................................44
K·mart ...................................11'1.
Lands End .............................20~
Limited Inc ............................ 18),
Ohio Vellay Bank.................. 34~.
One Valley .............................33'1,
Peoples Bancorp................. 21 '1.
Prem Flnl... ..................... -......13'h
Rockwell ..............................11'1.
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 15~.
Shoney' s .................................9'/o
Star Bank .............................. 68'1•
Wendy's ................................ 18'1.
Worthlngton ..........................
19'r.
.

to his home in Marblehead. Mass.
In Paris after the crash, the large
black arrival board at de Gaulle Airport listed Flight 800 as "cance led."
Kelly noted that the Federal Aviation Administration had been placed
on an increased level of security
because of the Olympics. which
begin Friday in Atlanta. but said there
had been no specific threats against
TWA .
The National Transponation Safety Board was investigating along with
the terrorism task force. which
includes offic ials from the New York
Police Department.
Asked about the possibility of a
bomb. FAA spokc"nan Eliot Brenner
said "we can' 1 discuss security
issues ... He said the agency had no
information on whether there was a
distress call

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admissions: Melvin Thornton,
Pomeroy
Dischar~es : None

Marriage licenses
The following coupl~s were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Judge Raben Buck:
Ralph Edward Rose Jr., 19. and
Beverly Rae Hess. 17. both .of
Racine; Lonnie Harold Dunn, 41, and
Linda Jean Clarke, 49, both of Letart,
W.Va.

_._ _

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

I

FRI., SAT., SUN.
HELEN HUNT, Bfll PAKTON

i

I.

IN

TWISTER,..,.
AND
WALT DISNEYS

THE HUNCHBACK OF
NOTRE DAME•

Meigs announcements
Revival scheduled
· The ·stiversville Word of Faith
~hurch will hold a seven day revival,
lleginning Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the
church on County Road 31. Wayne
bewcll will be the featured speaker
for the nightly services. The public is
invited to anend.

day. 7 p.m. at the club house.
Reunion Sfheduled
.
A reunjoQ of the descendants o{
Thomas G\lkey and Milda Jane Hud·
nail Gilke¥ ,will be held July 28. Dinner will' lie
ser~ed at noon . Those
•J .
attending are asked to take a covered
dish and lawn chairs.
-

Boil advisory issued
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District has issued a boil advisory for
Olive Township on SR-248 from
Sand Hill Cemetery Road to Mt.
Olive, Mt. Olive Road, Bigley Ridge
· Road, Sw~.fkoad. and Angelo Road.
League to ~
.
The Izaak Walton League will All consumers affected arc asked to
have it s annual family picnic Mon- boil drinking and cooking water for
three mi"nutes before being con·
'
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'
sumed: Announcement will be made
when the sample has passed the coliform bacteria test and the boil order
The l)aily Sentinel [ will be lifted at that time.
Publi•hed cv~y afternoon. Monday throuth
Frido], ! II Coun St. Pomeroy, O!lio, by the

Ohio VI!Jiey PublilhlnJ ~)'Kla:Anett Co.,
Polm'Oy. Ohio 45769. I'll. 992-lll6. ~ond

'c lan postqe paid al ,pomJOy, OlliO.

....._

Mcmbtrt 1llt Auociattd Preu. and
New-~...,.

t!'e Ohio

~STIR: Send itdcba1 correction~ co
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Coun S1 ., Pomeroy,
Ohio 4l769.

MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE ,..,
EVENING SHOW
STARTING FRIDAY
ARNOLD
SCHWARZENEGGEA IN

ERASER•
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-4)923

$pedal services slated
.
.
· 1 John E;lswick, evangeltst, woll
speak at Hobson Christian Fellowship Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Spectal
singing. Pastor Clyde Henderson
invites the public.

tUSPS 21J.MI

TONIGHT
TOM CRUISE
IN

Dinner slated
The Mt. Moriah Church of God on
Mile Hill-Road, Racine, will have a
chicken noodle dinner Saturday from
5-7 p.m. Menu includes homemade
chicken noodles, mashed potatoes
· (not instant), green beans, sliced
tomatoes, roll, desscn and drink. Take
out available. Cost $4.50, adults.
$3.50, children 12 and under.

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What mea~se waald pt
Ike to Fl• vow -,.at
sreaf fdcUclr•7

'

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~~­

...l:

-'.\

..'

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Let us ·-create
a memorial
Just for you!

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A-uxiliary meetin&amp;
The • Rutland Volunteer Fire ·
Depariment•Auxiliary will meet in
special session Thursday, 6 p.m. at
the fire house.
Lodae .ao lllftf

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM,
Chester, will hold a special meeting
Sa~urday, 7:30,p.m. at the lodg~ with
work in the FC degree. Refreshments. '

POMEROY
Near PoJIIIIOY· Malon Brldga
Co!D club.to meet
1182·2518
The OhKan Coin Club will meet
VINTON
.
Monday,. al the Middlepon Afls
County Dllplly Yard
CO!Incil bpildiag 118 p.m. An ~~-~J
155MIInSL
. will be held and refreshments~
A membenhip drive is underway.

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Sports

The Daily SentiJ!.~l

•

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Winston Cup slate and standings posted

=·
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Thursday, July 18, 1996

Cardinals hand Reds 6-4 loss to complete series swe~p
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cardinals aren 't following an outline,
they're just winging it.
"There's no script," said managTony LaRussa. "You shoot for the
oon , just try your best."
St. Louis has won six straight
·games since the All-Star break, making few mistakes and clobbering
opposing pitching. Wednesday's 6-4
victory completed a three-game
sweep of the Cincinnati Reds and

~

equaled the Cardinals' season high
streak.
"On defense we sometimes have
lapses," said Ozzie Smith. "But we
pitch, we hit, we run- we win."
LaRussa said it was just coincidental that the current streak came
again~! two of the second-echelon
clubs In the weak NL Central.
"It's just timing," LaRussa said.
"That's who we were playing when
we started playing better, when we
got in a groove."

Whatever the reason, the Cardinals have been overwhelming. Ouring the streak, they have hit 15
homers and scored 49 runs. Wednesday, John Mabry hit a three-run
homer and Brian Jordan hit a solo
homer.
"Good teams have somebody
step up every day, and that is what
we're becoming," Mabry said. " We
finished .the first half strong, and now
we're starting the second half
strong."
Indeed, the Cardinals have been
hot for two months. Since May 19,
they have gone from a season-low
nine games under .500 (17-26) to a
season-high 10 games over .500
(52-42).
Wednesday, t!Jey jumped on Mark
Portugal (6-6) for four runs in the
first, scoring on a sacrifice fly by Jordan and Mabry 's ninth homer.
"You never score enough runs,"
said Jordan, last week's NL player of

the week. "You've got to score express, and a few player$ talked just
when you can and don't look back. " to get our thoughts out,", said manPortugal then retired 14 consecu- ager Ray Knight, who declined to
tive batters, but even that didn't say what was discussed. "Ninety·
make the Cardinals look back. St. nine out of 100 of these meetings
Louis added an unearned run in the never amount to anything. I thought
seventh, and Jordan connected· off this meeting had more substance
Scott Service in the eighth for his than most."
13th homer.
Eric Davis, who leads the Reds in
Andy Benes (8-8) scattered eight homers ( 15) and RBis (51), said it
hits and allowed all four runs in eight will be up to the players to rebound
innings, including solo homers by from the sweep, which cost the
Lenny Harris and Barry Larkin . Reds three games in the standings
Dennis Eckersley finished for his against their division leader.
16th save.
"The only way we can tum this
"It's very frustmting," Larkin around is we all have to step up and
said of the sweep. "We know we get the job done," Davis said. "We
have a better team than we've been · still have enough time to rectify
showing. But you go through streal!:s this."
like that; it's not for lack of trying."
After the game, Knight learned
After the game, the Reds- who that Marge Schott had been banned
fell 7 112 games behind St. Louis- from her Riverfront Stadium office
held a closed-door meeting.
and luxury box by the National
"There were some things I had to League.

'"I know it devastates·her.l know
how important it is to her to go to the
ballpark," Knight said. "This base•bl!ll team is hugely important to her.
ft's the biggest part of her life."
Notes: Hal Morris was activated
and started at first base after going 2for-4 with a homer and 'a double in
a one-game rehab stint with TripleA Indianapolis. Morris broke his
·right elbow July 2 when he was hit
with a piece of a broken bat while
kneeling in the on-deck circle at St.
Louis. The Reds sent down Eduardo
Perez, who had homered twice in his
past three at-bats .... The Reds medical consultant, Dr. Scott Jolson, said
Wednesday~s surgery on Pete
Schourek's left elbow showed that
no extensive reconstruction was neeessary. Scar tissue was removed, and
Schourek cannot throw for three
months, but he should be ready for
spring training in 1997, Jolson said.

SMITH STEALS- The St Louis Cardinals' Ozzle Smith slide&amp; into
second base for the steal ahead of the tag by Cincinnati shortstop
Barry Larkin In the ninth Inning ot Wednesdata game In Cincinnati,
where the Cardinals won 6-4 to earn the sweep of the weekday
series. (AP)

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - If Marge
Schott wants to attend a Cincinnati
Reds game, she'll have to buy a ticket.
Reacting to Schott's vow that "I
do not intend to disappear." baseball
officials decided to banish Schott
from all non-public areas of Riverfront Stadium starting this week.

"There are several major issues
that need to be addressed," NL pres ident Len Coleman said Wednesday
at Wrigley Field, where he was
watching the Cubs play. "Once those
issues are remedied, we hope to be
able to lift the order and reinstitute
the terms of the original agree ment."
Schott, facing a suspension from

C~orado (Reynoso
(Valenzuela ~-7). 10:~

Baseball
Di~isktn

l!! L &amp;1.
H

.620

lill

44

. ~22

9

Bosron... ... ..... .42 50
Toron1n ....... ....... .42 S2
De1roi1 ................ 28 67

.4S7
.447
29l

15
16
JO'o

Iwn

New 'V01k ..... ... ~1
Bullimo~

. .... .. 4R

Central Di~slon
CLEVELAND ....... 56 J8 . ~%
Chicago ............ ...~4

40

. ~74

Milw""kee .......... ... 46 47
Minnnora ............. 44 49

.49l
.4B

I I~

~4

. 4~2

1~ \

Kansas City

..... 41

2
9:1

Watem Divbi'H'I
TeJ.it) ..
..55 l9 58:'i
Searlle ........ . ..... jO 42 54J

Oakland ..... .. . .47 48
California
.45 50

4

.495

8~

.474

10\

Wednesday's scores

NationallAaaue

CINCINNATI REDS: Activnted 18
H;d Marris from the IS·day di5abltd li~ .
Optionc:d OF Eduardo Perez to Jndi~n3po­
lu of the AmeriCnn Association .
PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Optiontd
RHP J;uon Chris!iansen to Ca)gary of the
Pac.i f1c Coast league . Rrcalled UIP
Chm Peters frum Ctllgruy
National Basketball AssodaUon

ORLANDO MAGIC: Re -signed F
Horace Grant to a five -year conlracl.
· DENVER NUGGETS : A8reed to
term£ w1th C Enin Johnson on a ~v..,nycm conlrllCI .

Derroit2 ( 10)

Kanw City J. CLEVELAND 2
B o~t o n

Baseball
American IAaKue
BOSTON RED SO X: Rec:ulled C
Scotl Halteberg hom Pawtuckcc of the (n..
ternat ional Uague. Optioned INF Tony
Rodrigt-~ez to Pawtu ~ ket .
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Sig nell
RHP George Kauffman and assigned him
Ia their Gulf Coast Uague rookie lc:am.

Basketball

Mumesolil4. Cllicngo .l
Mi lwauk~ ~-

p.m.

Transactions

AL standings
Ealllcrn

S-6) at San Die&amp;o

12, New YOfk II

Balrimore 11 , Toronla 10
Tt=.1.as 7, California .l

O;•kiDnd 7. Senrtle 6

Football

Tonight'5 games
Minnesara (Aguilera 2-4) ar CLEVE·
LAND (Og.ea 5-1). 7:05p.m
Ballimore (Wells ~- 'il at Boston (Sele

Nalklnal Football lta1J:ut
ATLANTA FA LCONS: Si~o:nrd OT

Friday, 19th
9 till?

Court St. Grill
·Co~e and Party

MEAL DEAL

Shan non Brown tp a thref.:feu cOntmct .
BUFfALO BILLS: Signed 0£-LB
Gabt Northern.

"ndre Johnson to a fow-year contmct, RB
Stephen Davis lo a three-year cantr:.ct.
and LB Jcn:my Amct' Ia a 1wo-ycar contmct. Named Rted Johnson coordinmor of

Dl J.C. Price, FB S.COit Greene, WR Don rtell Boker and Dl Kerry Hiclu. Released

scoutina.

CAROLINA PANTHERS : SiJned

S Bubba McDowell.

DALLAS COWBOYS: SiJned DE
finmnn to a four -yeat conlroct.
Si&amp;nedC Oay 1Shi~er .
DENVER BRONCOS: Re-siJIM!d C
Tom Nolen to a series of ooc-ycar con ·
tracts. Waived DE Ray J01eobJ .
HOUSTON OILERS : Silned OT Jon
Runyan.
Kn~ika

JACKSONVILLE

PROOF

baseball's executive council for her
remarks aboutAdolfHitlcr, AfricanAmericans, women and Asians,
agreed June 12 to gi'&lt;e up day-to-day
control of the team through the 1998
season.
Coleman was angered by a July
I 0 memo from Schott to Reds
employees that opened: "I have
(See SCHOTI on Page S)

Scoreboard

JAGUARS ,

Si&amp;ned WR Andre Rison
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Sisned TE
Jotlnny Milctlel l. Wai~cd TE Ronnie
Willitlml. SPat Jottnson. WR Shtlnnon·
M~ and CB Rodney Ray.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES , Sign&lt;d
G Lesler Holmes to a one-year contr;w:c.
Agreed 1 ~ tmn5 with TE J~&amp;~~on Dunn and
S Brian Hnwkins on three-ycnr comructs,
and LB Stc~e White on a two-yellt contract Releutd LB Muwell Fl!oony and
LB.Roben Roed .
PI1TSBUROH STEELERS: Agreed
to terms with OT Jamam Stephens on n
ra"e..yca~ contract.

ST. LOUIS RAMS ' Troded DE

Hockey
NolloMt Hoctey Ltaa,..

.

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: Sianed
C Kevin Miller. D Tunntns Gronnmn. D
ChristiM LaFium~n~: and C Patrick Pyn.
Re -signed 0 Steve Smilh. C &amp;tent Suttd',
C Jerf Shamz.. artd RW Jim Cummins.
HARTFORD WHALERS ' Sillll.'ll D
Sera~i FJ001o~ tutd D Mike Ruc:iniki .

NEW YORK RANGERS , Signed

RW Vladimir Vorl)bi~v aniJ C Mu~tim
Smclniliki.
OTIAWA SENATORS.: Asreed 10
1erms wilh (i Ron Tugnun .

PHII,ADELPHIA FLYERS' Siahcd
C Peter While.
ST. LOUIS BLUES : Named Jim
Robens anocialt coach arnJ Bob Berry

I
I
I
I

$1

I

!

99

TWO MEDmM PEPPERONI PIZZAS,
: PI..US TWO ORDERS OF BREADSTI«::KS,
I PI..US 4 REGUlAR OR DIET OOIAS

1
I

L

Pomeroy Location Only 992-2124

-----------------~
THE 1996

Robert Yoong to the Houston Oilen for n

199'7 conditional ctraft pick.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS'
Wai\'ed WR l...arnar Thomas.

WASHINGTON RWSKINS: Signed
RB Terry Allen ta a one-year controct. OL

Milwauk ~

(Kar18-5), ll:O:'I p.m.

Kanlins Ciry (Appier 7-7) ar Ch11:ago
lfernamicz 9-5), 8 05 p.m.
Oaklnnd (Wengert J. 7) at Tc~ns
tP"'Iik 12·21. RJl p.m
Sea1tl ~ (M~ :Jcham 0- 1) a1 California
{Boskie 10-J), IO:O.'i p.m.

Friday's games
(Rodriguez B. 7) m CU~VE­
LAND (Nagy 11 ·2), 1 :0~ p.m.
Dal1imore (Erickson ~ - 7) at Bosltln
~ - I J, 7 : 0~

p.m.

lJetron (Lira 6-R) al Toronto (Janun
4-41. 7J~ p m
~w York (Pettine 14-4) at Milwauk..-e
(Md&gt;ooald 1 0-J).ItO~ p.m.
Kan 5as City {Rasado 0-1) a1 Chica~o
IBaldwm li· I ). 1'1 :05 p.m.
Oakl and tJohns 6- 10) at Te aa5

~

&amp;1.

!LII

:'iO 4J
.. 4b 41'1

~ JK

9

l!!

~9

.14

6J4
4R9
46R
4.10

. 44 ~
40 :'iJ

19

Central Divbkln

SL Louis ......... 52 42 .S:'i.l

HouSlon ....... ... .. . 41,1
CINCINNATI
42
ChicaJO .............. 4J
Piusburtth .... . .. 41

47
47
50
52

.~ 10
472
U.2
.4-41

Wnttm Di~lston
Colorado ............. 49 44 l27
1m Anp~o . . . .. \0 46 \21
Sun Dieao ........... ~ 46 ~ 2 1
Sl:ln Francisco ....... 40 :'i .l 4.'\0

4
7\
11 '~
tO '·~

-'.,
'

9

WodDHday's stlll'ts

•

1996 NISSAN 4x2

~

•

~

MSRP ............... ~.... $11 ,668.95
Discount ............... $ 2,673.95

••
••
•

•

l4ontrc.. (P. Martioez 7-4) at N~w

Yoot&lt;CHinlodi.U~ 7'&lt;10p.rri.
CWct~•
HI "
Louis
(SialllotiMe ~~ ,1.11S p.m.
All•lr~ (Smohz J.S.4) a1 Houlton

ca.mo...-

s1.

• ~ 6-6), 1,(1! p.M.
.
U. A11fo1et ~ 9-11
\-'::ll~ 10:0! p.m.

.

.....

•'

.. .._
11

Sao F,...

~,
1'1111 ttoP· (WIIIIamt':l-71" Florida
(lisa .. ).SJI7,()! p.OL
CINCINNATI (BorOI 4-9) at Pilll·

...... tw..•&lt;~-7).7::Up.m.

~ (Conni« s-6) II (loti ...........
7:&lt;10 ,....

Oi&lt;tiO

,O).

fT•-

York

.

4&lt;1) 11 S&lt;. Louis
9-5~ I :M p.ll,
Arr,..o (WoUIII 0.0~ 01 llaunaa

(AIIo -

(Kl!"l-5~ 1:0$ p.a0.... 6- 7) II Sto
F1

I"!' 1':f,!: I « et

,....
f

,_, IG--0$

.

'

'

.

'

August 8, 1996.

Free ..•.. Health Screening Clinic
For Veterans
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.
Appointments are being scheduled in advance. To schedul~ an
appointment, veterans should call the medical center, toll-free at
1-800-827-8244, Extension 3451.

I

I'

General Electric

ELLIOTT APPLIANCES
Join us with
for a ,special celebration this
Friday- Saturday &amp; Monday

lo lxfra
for_,._.Paddlnf &amp; tailor

Berber
Sq. Yd. • In 8locll

s1s••

20 ydl - $309
30 y.dl $465
40 yd1 - $820
..... ..... ,.. &amp;
lui.....

•

i

FREE IN ·HOME '
MEASURING ,

~

(I

.,.,

C»

-

Textured Sc•lpture
Sq. Yd. •In Stock

*12

49

20 yds - $260
30 yds- $390
40 ycla • $520

ilclllllls: ..... ,.. &amp;
t

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Sq. Yd. • In Stock

51699
20 ydl - $340
30 ycla $510
40 yda • $880
O

ilclllllls: ..... ,.. &amp;
o;.rt lui. II

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• Uving Room- Den- Bedroom - Recrcllicn Room - Foyer- Dinina Roilm Bathroom Kltc:hen - Ubrary - Family room -Oflce - Nunury • Hallway - Great

Advertising Deadline Is

Room - B~~ement

I

CALL DAVE OR.' . BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
TillS YEAR'S EDITION
.. *
&gt;I

''

.\
~
'

...

I

Outdoor

6

August 1, 1996.

,992-2155

31. Joe Nemech.ek, I ,299.
32. John Andreui, I ,2 56.
33. Derrike Cope, 1,2 36.
34. Ward Burton, 1,195.
35 . Steve Grissom. I , 188.
(tie) Bill Elliott, 1,188.
37. Dick Tri ckle , I, 108.
38. Dave Marcis, 938.
39. Bobby Hillin Jr., 920.
40. Mike Wallace, 723.
41 . Elton Sawyer, 611 .
42. Todd Bodine, 410.
43. loy Allen, 356.
44. Mike Skinner. 299.
45. Jeff Purvis, 285 .
46. Greg Sacks , 20 I.
47. Chuck Bown, 16M.
48. Randy MacDonald, 158.
49. Gary Bradberry, 107.
50. Chad Little, 98.
51. Tom Kendall , 84.
52. Stacy Compton. 64.

DRYERS

Completely Installed

I

The Meig~ County Fair
. Tab .Is Coming
.

9. Rusty Wallace, I ,933.
10. Mark Martin, I ,874.
II . Bobby Hamilton, I ,871.
12. Ernie lrvan, I ,858.
13. Michael Waltrip, 1,831.
14. Jeff Burton, 1,828.
15. Ricky Craven, I ,807 .
16. Jimmy Spencer, 1,769 .
17. Bobby Labonte, I, 718.
18. Rick Mast, I ,681.
19. Wally Dallenbach Jr., I ,594.
20. Jeremy Mayfield, I ,557.
21. Kyle Petty, 1,552 .
22. Brett Bodine, I ,490.
23. Kenny Wallace, I ,468 .
24. Roben Pressley, 1,464.
25. Hut Stricklin, I ,451.
26. Geoff Bodine, I ,450.
27. Morgan Shepherd, 1,440.
28. Darrell Waltrip, I ,383.
29. Johnny Benson, I ,343.
30. Lake Speed, 1,321.

Carpets

!

~_,.__,.

...... (I.JeOerl-)). B~p. m

2. Dale Earnhardt, 2,398.
3. Jeff Gordon, 2,300.
4. Dale Jarrett, 2,204.
5. Sterling Marlin, 2,054.
6. Ricky Rudd, 2,033.
7.·Ken Schrader, 2,013.
8. Ted Musgrave, I ,934.

Ingels

I

Tod1y's eames

·~

Mid
Sammer
Carpet
Sale

~

Srprlc;e
sale

Color:tdo (Ritz 11 - ~1 .::.t San Oi~8o
(Saodm 1 -)~ HI~ p.m.
Phllacklptlia (Mimbs 1·4) a1 florida
(810W11 7-1), 7:0l p.m.
CINCINNATI (hrvi• J- ll at Pill •·

Driver standlnp
I. Terry Labonte, 2,416.

,6 o~1 s i\\'l
1

the team until then.
Baseball officials say Schott's
new lawyer, Joseph Duffy, wants her
to be tougher in negotiations. Coleman threatened Schott with fines and
suspensions unless she complies
with her agreement.
.
"I would hope those issues could
be resolved in a short time span,"
Coleman said Wednesday, without
going into details.
Schott was not at the Reds' games
Tuesday night or Wednesday afternoon. She did not return a telephone
message left at her home.
"I know it devastates her," Reds
manager Ray Knight said after
Wednesday's loss to St. louis.

*
·carpet Sale! ***
: ** Cl••rJ•

Driver Side Air Bag, 5-speed, Full Bench
Seat, 1400 lb. Payload, All Season Radials,
a Year 36,000 Bumper to Bumper, Plus 5
Year 60,000 Power Train Warranty.

...-:IaI

St. Louis 6, CINCINNATI.f
New York J. Ptliladclphia 2
P'itlsburah ~ Olicago. ppd . r.un
Colorado 4. San Fra..cisco J
Florida II . Houunn 2
San DieJo 5, Los Angeles 4

•

: decided to change my role concern; ing tlie day-to-day operation of the
l club until further notice."
~
"Contrary to what you may have
• been led to believe, I do not intend
·
: to disappear," she said.
:
Coleman, also angered that Schott
: attempted to stop interim chief exec: utive officer John Allen from attend: ing the Ail-Star game, sent SchoU a
! letter of his latest ruling and urged
; her to speed negotiations to pick a
• chief executive
officer who will run
.
• the team m her absence.
Under the agreement between
:
: Schou and baseball 's· executive
: council, Schott and Coleman had 60
; days to select a CEO and designat·
~ ed Allen, the team's controller, to run

•,

1.1 \

·~ ·.

McGmth with Mulford in third and
Zerckle fourth .
In the junior racing class, Marvin
Day held the first spot all the way
over David Banks, who made a great
run off the tail to finish second. Josh
Long was third and Michael Smith
fourth.
In the junior class, Josh Long has
a 1,475lead over Day's 1,219. Smith
is nex over Banks in fourth .
In the Stock Heavy's , Dale
Humphreyes took the early lead
with Randy Croston in second. Croston took the lead on lap two then
Humphreyes regained the lead on lap
nine. Jerry Spradling moved up to
second while Bob Robinette went by
Croston for third as Croston's fine
run was marred by mechanical difficulty. Fourth was Rick Smith.
In that division Jerry Spradling
leads I ,468 over Lloyd Akers 1,298
and Bob Robinette.
Jason Shain secured second place
in the point standings with a win in
the four-cycle Modified division. He
trails Dustin Lamar 302 to 301 in a
dose battle. Don Casto is next at
282.
In the -cycle feature, Claude Cor·
nelious look the lead and held on
with a great overall run over Mike
Hayman. Steve Milhoan ran a •teady
third over Mike Connolly. Cornelious is in first with 874 over Milhoan, Phillip La Comb ,and Steve
Miller.
Racing continues this week.

Sept. 22 - Hanes SOO, Martinsville, Va.
Sept. 29 - Tyson Holly Farms
400, North Wilkesboro, N.C.
Oct.6- UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20 -AC-Delco 400, Rockingham, N.C.
Oct. 27 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix
Nov. I0- NAPA 500, Hampton, .
Ga.

:Schott. ~&lt;;ontinued from Page 4)

••
•
•
•1

NL standings
Atluntn ...
Munln:ill .
New Yot"t ..
Aori® ..
Philadelphio

Tyler French, Dean McComas,
Claude Cornelious, Marvin Day and
Jason Shain were among the big
winners Sunday in the Meigs Competition Karting Association races at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds in
Rock Springs.
Each week the field grows as sev' en classes of karts take to the track
for wild racing action. Pit passes are
$7 and grandstand passes $5 with an
addition entry fee of $5 10 sign up for
racmg.
In this week's action for the Stock
.: i,.ights, Middleport's Marc French
; took the lead and hel it until the last
'· lap when Dean McComas thri lied
the crowd with a daring pass at the
checkered flag. French followed in
: second ahead of Paw Paw Smith and
~ Shane Bumgardner. Mark Stedman
' leads that division points race I ,3 14
; over French with I ,167. Glen Roush
; · is third with I ,058 and McComas
next at 958.
In the Rookie Division, Dennis
Adkins took an early lead but lost.to
; high flying Tyler French who took
: command on the third lap. Behind
: Adkins was Josh Hayman and Ethan
• Smith.
•
French leads the points with a
: ()215 standing over Adkins' I, 156.
; Smith is lhird and Cacy Faulk fourth.
•
In the Stock Mediums, Ron Zero ckle took an early lead until lap four
• when Larry McComas took over the
: top spot, followed by Cuk Mulford
• and Steve Durbin. McComas leads
• the points I ,509 to 1,056 ov er Chris.

••

Se::.nle (We lh 10-2) at Ca hforni ll
(Grimsley 4-6). 10: 0~ 11.m.

:rom

h

NEW YORK (AP) - The 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
racing schedule, with winners in
parentheses and driver point standmgs:
· Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona, Fla., (Dale Jarrett).
Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400,
Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
Mar. 3 - Pontiac Excitement
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
March I 0 - Purolator 500,
Hampton , Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
March 24- TranSouth Financial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
March 31 - Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
April 14 - First Union 400,
North Wilkesboro, N.C. (Terry
Labonte).
April 21 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va.
(Rusty Wallace).
April 28 - Winston Select 500,
Talladega, Ala. (Sterling Marlin).
May 5 - Save Mart Supermarkets 300, Sonoma, Calif (Rusty Wal- .
lace).
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. (Dale Jarrett).
June 2- Miller 500, Dover, Del.
(Jeff Gordon).
June 16 - UAW-GMTeamwork
500, long Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
June 23 - Miller 400, Brooklyn,
Mich. (Rusty Wallace).·
July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Sterling Mar!in).
July 14 - Slick 50 300, Loudon,
N.H. (Ernie lrvan).
July 21 - Miller 500, Long
Pond, Pa.
July 28 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
1
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept. I - Mountain Dew Southern 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 7 - Miller 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 15- MBNA 500, Dover,
Del.

!• r-----------------------------~~~~----~

(He lling J. J).!USp m.

Eut~rn Divldon

. French, McComas
and Cornelious stand
among MCKA victors

.

Mm~W:SOfa

(Moytr

I
I
I
1

VlltiCJ II pant&lt;lpallniJ tociiiCMII Ollly Nco good ony olio&lt;. PIICOI may VB'Y·
Customer payt sales tax whore IIIPiicable. Our drivers carry leu lhln $20.00.1
Dettvery areas limitld to .,... safe drmng Our dffvefl. are not penilbed tot !ale
deltveriell. •1093 Domino'• Pizza. Inc.

4-:'i), 7:05p .m
Detroi t (Nnkow ski 1- 1) 111 Toronto

(Hentgen9·b), ?::l'i p.m.
New York (Gooden 9-4) nr

BIG WINNER- Pointa Ieeder Claude Comellout grabbed the twocycle feature win 11 he pas- under flagman Dave Shain's check·
erad flag Sunday at the MCKA racea at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds. Cornelious hal been a con1lstent runner for the past wev'eral years and Ia putting tog1ther a great ae110n.

J

Baseball officials banish Schott
from private areas at Riverfront

The Dally Sentinel • Page G

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 18, 1996

I

t

I

'I

Turf
(4Colors)
Closeout Priced

912-7028
175 N. 2rid Ave•
Oh

'l
\·

Kanauga, Ohio

412 St. Rt. 7 North

"' .
•

t

�•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Thursday, July 18, 1996

Thursday, July 18, 1996.

Pdmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Progress seen on Racine Veterans ·Monument

In the Hubbard Memorial LL Tournament semifinals,

Beat of the Bend ...

Syracuse and Coolville win to earn. spot.s in title game
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correapondent
As the tournament trail unwinds,
the. competition gets tougher and
tougher, but the final four of Syracuse, Coolville, Point Pleasant Village Pizza and Point Pleasant Hardware each found their place Wednesday among the 20-team field of the
Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
League Tournament that began play
• last week.
Tonight's action will see Syracuse
and Coolville other in the championship game at 6:30p.m. Two Point
Pleasant teams- Village Pizza and
Point Hardware - will meet in the
consolation .

In the Wednesday night's semifinals, Syracuse defeated Point Hardware 6-1 after taking a 2-0 lead in the
first inning.
D. Hill doubled, Joey Cornell was
hit with a pitch. J.P. Harmon reached
via an error and Z. Glaze singled to
account for the early runs and a 2-0

lead. Harmon had waltzed through
the Point lineup in order, 1-2-3, to
begin the game and establish early
momentum for Syracuse.
The Point threatened in the second, but Harmon worked out of a
jam that left two runners stranded.
lDe second remained scoreless,
but after Harmon retired the side
again 1-2-3, Syracuse upped its lead
to 3-0 on a Cornell walk and Harmon
double.
In the fourth, Hardware threatened
again when Stephen Blazer singled
and Josh Davis singled but were left
stranded . Point again threatened in
the fifth as Ryan Peters walked, but
became a castaway on the basepaths.
Syracuse fortified its lead with
three fifth inning markers as Hill singled, Cornell singled , Harmon
reached on a fielder's choice and J.
Allen reached on an error to make
the score 6-0.
Point leadoff man Seth Hatfield
tripled to lead off Hardware's sixth.

He eventually scored on. a Ryan
Hodge single, a fly out and B.J.
Smith walk. Point threatened with
two more base runners, but Cornell
in relief of Harmon gunned down the
side to preserve the 6-1 win for Syracuse.
Harmon (six K's, three hits, I
walk) got the win, while Cornell (4
K's, two hits, I walk) p1cked up the
save. Davis and Hatfield combined
in the Joss. Hatfield fanned seven.
walked two and gave up three hits.
In Wednesday's second game,
Coolville defeated Point Pleasant
Village Pizza 12-6.
A J.J. Guess single and J. Putman
double· gave Coolville~ 1-0 lead in
the first.
/ '-,
Point came back't¢lake a 2: I lead
in the bottom half of the inning.
Eddie Wroten singled and Matt
Warner doubled, while a passed ball
and two walks brought home the second run.

McCumber
and Couples
share British
Open lead

Coolville appeared to break the
game wide open in the second when
they took a 7-2 lead. B. Willis singled, C. Sears walked, S. Bigley singled, J.J. Guess singled, McCumber
walked, J. Putman tripled and Brunty
walked.
Coolville went on to add live more
runs and then repelled Village Pizza
comeback. Village scored three times
with two outs in the fifth, as a
Reynolds single and two errors highlighted the inning.
Coolvi lle hung on to advance to
the finals with Syracuse as Wires
(three K, three walks, two hits),
McCumber (four K, no walks, two
hits) and Guess (four K, one walk,
one hit) combined in the victory.
Miller and Strehle combined in the
loss despite a good effort.

-·-·-

In Tuesday's preliminary action,
Village Pizza advanced to the semifinals with a hard-fought 1-0 win
over Harrisonville.

Matt Warner and Harrisonville's
Hall and Stanley hooked up in a fabulours pitching battle.
Harrisonville threatened in the
first on a B. Fackler walk and
McDaniel's reaching base on an
error. That came after Point's Chris
Miller had led off the game with a
single, but was left stranded for Village Pizza.
Jermey Hussell singled ·for Point
in the second, but was left stranded
as was Harrisonville's J. Green in the
bottom half of the inning. Both
clubs reached a stalemate until the
fourth when D. Dill swalked for Harrisonville.
In the fifth, Village Pizza's L.
Reynolds doubled and Tristen Higgonbottom walked, but were left
stranded. Harrisonville's D. Hall singled with one out in the Harrisonville
half of the inning, but he too was left
stranded as Warner struck out the
meat of the Harrisonville lineup.
Harrisonville threatened in the
sixth, when lead-off hitter J. Stanley

by Bob Hoeflich

singled, McDaniel was hit by a
pitch and D. Dill walked. Warner
wrote · a storybook finish as he
mowed down the rest of the side
with three straight strikeouts and the
bases left full .
Warner tripled and Josh Strehle
then rode the wave of momentum as
Warner came home with the winning
run .
In the second game, Coolville
broke a 1-1 tie when they scored five
times in the third inning in a 9-5 win
over New Haven. Spears reached on
an error, Bigley singled and Z. Wires
hlld a two-run triple. Guess and
McCumber singled before Putman
and Brunty reached on errors to
mak~ the score 6-1 Coolville.
New Haven tightened the game, 64, ·on walkes to Thompson , Young
and Roush, a Vanover fielder's
choice and an error on B. Roush's
misplayed ball. Putman (live K.
four walks, three hits) and Willis
(three K, two walks and four hits)
combined in the win.

lfs been a spell since we've
. about Carolyn Korn, formerly of
. Pomeroy, who underwent a heart
· transplant operation at Univ~rsity
- Hospital in Columbus a year and a
half ago.
Carolyn and her husband, George,
have been Jiving in the Carroll &amp;rea
near Lancaster, Ohio, since December where Carolyn can be close to
Columbus for medical observation
and treatment.
She is getting along real well and
just finished chemotherapy which is
administered to transplant patients
who frequently pick up a virus. Carolyn says for the ftrst time in five
: years she has been able to really "do"
.: tbings. She works in her flower bed,
operates a riding lawn mower and all
kinds of good stuff. She has so much
more energy and life quality since the
transplant.
By the way, Carolyn now has five
doctors who look after her and she is
currently on a brand new anti-rejection drug. The past two months have
been especially good for her as she
continues to progress. She and
George do make occasional visits
back to Pomeroy to visit relatives and
friends.

DON TATE

By JOHN NELSON
LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England
(AP) - Fred Couples and Mark
McCumber took advantage of some
American-like conditions on this
English-style links course and shared
the early lead in the first round of the
British Open today.
The leaderboard was brimming
with Americans, despite dire predictions by English bookmakers regarding U.S. chances over this hardbaked, 6,892-yard Royal Lytham
and St. Annes layout.
English weather just refused lO-

In the upcoming months, The
Daily Sentinel will be dealing with
Middleport in a special manner.
Next year marks the 200th year
since the first settlers came to the
community and The Sentinel will do
special historical pieces.
And how do you fit in' Well, if
~ou have photographs from way
pack, The Sentinel would like to borrow them to make reproductions to be
used in the upcoming recognition.
The newspaper personnel would
appreciate especially photos from the
booming days at Hobson since the
railroad did play such a major role in
the community for many, many years.
If you have photos of interest
would you please give Charlene
Hoeflich a call at 992-2155. And

308 E. MAIN ST. - POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·6614

1·800·837·1 094

CHEVROLET • OLDS • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC • GEO
13402

NEW

rain on America's chances.

"This was like a day in California today with the weather,"
McCumber said.
Couples and McCumber, playing
in the same group, each shot a 4under-par 67, one shot ahead of
favored Englishman Nick Faldo,
who won the Masters this year. Faldo finished with two birdies in the
I a&lt;~ four holes, considered the toughest stretch on this course.
Also among the leaders still on

1996 CHEVY

19

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$13 167

BERETTA

1996 BLAZER

2DOOR

$1 995
NOW
.

1996 GEO TRACKER

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$13 699
NOW

NEW

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1996 OLD.,CUTU$'5.

SUPREME 2 DR.

$17 995

1996 PONTIAC

GRAN PRIX COUPE
WAS$20,~~W

$18 677

1996 CADILLAC
WAS$3 ,~~W

1payable to the Racine Veterans
residing in Columbus . .
Memorial Fund, at Racine Home
"Such generosity exemplifies the National Bank, in care of Kelly
spirit of a caring community of past ;Eichinger, PO Box 68, Racine OH
and present residents," Cleek added.
45771.
Additional funds will be needed to
Individual veteran's ,names and
install the concrete platform for the
service years can be included as a
monument to sit on.
Cleek s&amp;id people interested in pan of the monument by submitting
a $100 donation for each veteran
donating to the Racine Veterans
made payable lo the Racine Veterans
Memorial can make donations
Memorial Fund.

I powered

ground communications
equipment.
Knight is a 1993 graduate of
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.

Richard A. White
Army Private Richard A. White,
son of Richard A. and Charlotte
White of Cheshire, has graduated
~rom basic combat training at Fort

The study is In ·an. issue or me
Journal of the Amencan Medtcal
· As · · d
ed
edi
' . soctaUon evot to sports m cme. Based on data from 25,341 men
and 7,080 women, each followed for
· ht years, 1he researc hers
about e•g
found :
.
- Men who were among the 20
percent least fit had a 52 percent
greater c~ance of dymg d~~ng the
study penod. Male smokers nsk was

~TON

PICKUP
WAS S18,1~~W

$

16, 39 5

1996 S SERIES

PICKUP

WAS$13,1~~W

$11 995

1996

I

•
I

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t
I

I

ages."
The ship is a five-day celebration
of God's Jove. Each day will be concluded with a festive Bible Ship
show-time program with family
members and friends being encouraged to join.
B.ible school will be held tylonday
through July 26, 6:30 to 9 p.m. The
church is located at 41872 Pomeroy
Pike,

n

$35 937

.=.. Hlah Hopes S.

Fasl Cllll $

99 ........................................23
00 .....................................662
0............................ ..... ... 6,359

1996

EXT. CAB PICKUP
WAS $22,640

NOW

~

414

$600,000 ..................................2
$60,000 ................................... 6
$10,000 ............................. 18
$5,000.' .... '......... '......... '... 76
$1,000 ............................ 316
$500 ........................... 1, 154
$100 ......................... 14,392
$75 ...........................31,205
$50 ........................... 72,825

3otaKind

$21 69

1 • •.,. Double .

Suggested Retail

SUBURBAN

$32 889

Daubl•

1~QQ0 ........................... 2

9t.CQUISifJIO'J{S
91 Mill Street

CUTLASS SUPREME

GraatB's

1996 OLDS

LLAC
ELDOUDO

$22,995

$13 995
Program Cor

CIERA

LIICk ollhelrtsll

$14 995
1994

1995 LUMINA

APV

$9,999

$13 995

1~.020

1996 RANGER 4X4
EXT. CAB ............ $18,695
1992 S10 PICKUP
Auto., alr..................... $6,995
1992 CHEVY
ASTRO VAN .......... $7,999
1995 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT ...... $15,995
1996CHEVY
ASTROVAN ........ $18,995
1994 S10 PICKUP
.
10,000 mlles ............... $9,499

DON ,.A,.E MOTORS, Inc.
L'

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1
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ALL USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS MUST GO~
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!
-·

--- -

~-

---- ..... ----

$5,000 ...... .:................. ;............7
$500 ..................................... 126
$200 ..................................... 248
$100 .....................................253
$40 ... .;...................... ...... ... 8,791

1;Loo .................................... 34
1W :................ ..... .... ........ 2,509
50 .................................... 1,674

CAPRICE

CIERA

1995 OLDS

m

5Card Cllll

................................. 159
..............................2,383

1995 CHEVROLET

$11 999

$1,776 .............................. 10
$776 ................................. 61
$76 ..... '... '........... '..... ' ..... 748
$40 .............................. 7,016

oo ................................. 11

Middleport

1992 OLDS
ACHIEVA •••••••••••• ;•••••••. $6,999
1994 MITSUBISHI
ECLIPSE ..................... $7,495
1986CHEVY
CAMARO Z28 ............. $3,995
1993CHEVY
CAMARO Z-28 .......... $13,995
1992 LUMINA

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5

····-Bucks

----------------·--~-'---

Quick Cllll

$1 ,500 ....................................24
$200 ..................................... 334
$100 .................................. 1,290
$50 .................................... 2,911

900 .......................................21
150 ...... :.............................. 231
100 ......·............................... 548
50 .................................... 4,459

'

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Collection. Dowlu.t
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'N.2nd

- - -- -·

. . . , Annl¥8rlalyl
$500 ..................................... 912
$100 ................................ 11,991
$50 ..................................45,722

,000 ...................................... 3
1,000 ....................... ............. 21
00 .......................................47
100 ..................................... 114
0....... .................. .............. 789
0....................................5,482

:'' '.
AU PRICES IICLUDE
REBATES TO DEAU!R.
TAXES l FEU N,9T
·,
INCLUDED. •

H.V BlrlldaJI

Wild Cash

EUR0 .....•........•........... $8,999

1993 FORD
MUSTANG................... $5,995
1995 BUICK
CENTURY ................. $10,999
1995 BUICK REGAL.... $11,.

lbankYOUI
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50 .................................... 9,875

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BODY PIERCING.
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~~

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Shoe Place

1

Spring Ring

BIMSIIDI

$20,000 ....................................4
$10,000 ....................................6
$5,000 .................................... 12
$100 ................................ 13,289
$50 .................................. 33,205

$1 ,000 ...................................... 6
$500 .................. ................. :..... 1
$150 ....................... ................ 24
$100 .....................................310
$60 ......................................... 84
$50 .......................................606

--Sizzler

11111111111 Doll. .

$5,000 ........................... '..........8
$2,500 .................................... 19
. $200 .......................................59
$1 00 ...... ''' .. ".'.": ... '. "' ... '' ..2,343
$50.'..................................8,694

$2,000 ...................................... 9
$1 ,000 ..................., ............... ,..7
$500 .......................................24
$250 .......................................20
$100,....................................403
$50 ....................................7,208

Mlddlaport

'

'

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Flrecrack• Cllll

5,uw ..................... ......... 6
2~,90 ............................ 13
2w ................. .......... 190
100 .................. ....... 7,548
50 ......................... 27,891

Fine Jewelry
1995 OLDS

•'•

...

The Ohio Valley Summer Theater
in Athens is currently doing Meredith Wilson's popular, ''The Music
Man" . The theater generally does
such a ~ood job on its productions.
It'll be interesting to see how the Wilson hit is staged at this level. The
musical is at the Elizabeth Baker Theater in Kantner Hall and will be running the next couple of weekends.
For tickets and information you can
call 593-4800 from noon to 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. It's one of
those shows guaranteed to help you
keep smiling.
·

.:::.=..

~TON

,

65 percent greater.
_
Other death risks studied includThe least fit women had a 110 d .
k , he d'
.
e vartous mar ers oor art tsease
percent greater nsk of death. Female such as high blood pressure and high
smokers had a 99 percent greater risk
h
k.
d
· ti
Death risk from all causes wa~ cho 1estcrlol1' smo tng an ex•s ns
41 -percent lower among moderately c rome t ness.
fit nonsmoking men than among
Three Olympic llhlclea lbano the .elow-tit nonsmoking men. Among
cord for most 101d mediJI WCMI: Lanonsmoking women, the moderately
rilla LlltylliDa, ,_.,. Nu.,.. ond
lit had a 35 percent lower all-cause
M8l'll Spllz each bave nine.
risk of death than low-fit women.

1~00 ........................... 12
1w ............................ 236
50 ........................... 3,623

1996

~Pomeroy,recentlyrepOned

Green
Knox, Radcliff. Kentucky.
. fo.r iiuty at Trident Refit Facility, Sil·
During the training, White verdale, Washington.
received instruction in drill and cerGreen's new assignment is an
emonies, weapons, map reading, tac- example of how Navy and Marine
tics, military justice, first aid, and Corps men and women are assigned
Army history and traditions.
10 ships, squadrons and shore commands around the world.
WOllam R. Green
The 1983 graduatcofMeigsHigh
Navy Petty Officer First Class School joined the Navy in March,
William R. Green , son of William E.
3.
198

Poor physical fitness is a major death threat

DEVILLE

9

Legion Post 602, across from Star
Mill Parle It will feature park benches and be landscaped by local garden
clubs.
"Many villagers feel this honor is
appropriate and long overdue," said
Carroll Cleek, monument project
chairman.
Most recently, the project received
a $5,000 donation from a former
Racine High School graduate now

------------Military news

The First Southern Baptist Church
invites children to set sail on the
Vacation Bible ship on Monday.
This year the church is taking a
"vacation" from regular vacation
Bible school, according to Pastor
Lamar O'Bryant. "Instead of going to
school, we're setting sail on the
Vacation Bible Ship. Our program
will
fun and memorable
activities for kids of all

WAS $15,929

the course were Americans Loren

Roherts and Brad Faxon, each at 4undcr. and Mark O'Meara and Tom
Lehman. each at 3-under.
" With no breeze and a short golf
course. I think the Americans will be
very strong this week, " Faldo said.
" I think there wi II be a lot of good
scores today even though it's tricky."
Royal Lytham and St. Annes was
ex pected to yield some low scores
unless or until the weather hegan to
play its usual part in British Open
golf. But. on opemng day. conditions
were sunny and relatively calm,
with more of the same expected for
the weekend .
McCumber was right. It was
more like a balmy spring day in California than a blustery summer day
on the English coast.
Couples. the 1992 Masters winncr, h~rdied the fourth, fifth and seventh holes en route to a 3-under 32
on the front nine. He birdied the lOth
to go 4-under. and birdied the par-S
lith out of a hunker to go S-under.
He gave that shot back with a bogey
on the 13th. and saved par on No. 18
with a 20- foot putt.
"I think 1t'll be interesting Saturday and Sunday, .. Couples said. "A
lot of people arc going to be logjammed around the lead."
Couples sa id the key was to stay
out of the hunkers.
"On a course like thi s. it 's safety
lirst ," he said.
j
McCumber 's round started less
auspiciously when he bogeyed No.
3, a 457-yard par-4 hole, but he then
birdied the next four holes to turn in
3-under as well . A birdi e on No. 17,
a 467-yard par-4. brought him to 4under.
Faldo, who won the Masters this
year, made the tum at even par. He
got to 1-under with a birdie at II ,
sank a 25-foot par saver on the 13th
hole, went to 2-under with a birdie
on 15, then polished off the round
with a 15-foot birdie putt on the 18th.
Padraig Harrington of Ireland
also finished at 68, and Hidemichi
Tanaka of Japan was at 4-under on
the back nine.
With later tee times were defend.
ing British· Open champion John
Daly, Ernie Els of South Africa,
Corey Pavin and Welshman Jan
Woosnam, winner of last week's
Scottish Open.
Jack Nicklaus also had a later tee
time, but it wasn 't certain that he
would start. Originally, he was
expected to make some announce·
ment by II a.m.loeal.time, but _when
that deadline came and went w1thout
further word, it seemed more likely
he would at least tee off in the first
round of his I39th consecutive major
tournament, a string d~ng to 1~2.
Nicklaus has had a had l*:t .
recently.

Supporters of a propOsed veterans
monument for the village of Racine
have the halfway point of the project
goal of $16,000.
Plans call for erecting a monument
to
honor veterans from Lebanon,
don't let the new')lhone system throw
Letart, Sutton and Chester townships
you. To continue the call you just
and surrounding areas. The 30-by-30press I and then I0 I to reach her.
foot monument with stone markers
honoring the veterans will be locatOops!
ed beside the Racine American
Somehow I grabbed the incorrect
last name for Dick and Trina Davis
and used the name of "Gibbs".
. I stand corrected. Dick and Trina
Davis' daughter, Amy, underwent a
Christopher L. Knight
kidney transplant a week ago TuesAir Force Airman First Class
day at Children's Hospital in Colum- Christopher L. Knight, son of Vincent
bus. Trina was the donor and all E. and Susan A. Knight of Pomeroy,
seems to be going well. Dick and has graduated from the ground radio
Trina Davis do want to thank all of communications apprentice course at
you for your kindnesses and your Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Misprayers. These things meant to a lot sissippi.
to them.
During the courses, Knight was
tramed to install and maintain high
The power 011tage earlier this
week affected different businesses in
different ways.
,
For some really, it was no big deal.
By DOUG LEVY
They could just close down until USA TODAY
·
·
· .
repairs were made . They might have
Bemg unfitts nearly as stgnt~cant
lost a little business into the bargain a nsk factor for death as smoking a
but that's to be expected in these · large study J·ust out indicates
'
·
emergencies. Think what a challenge
"Low fitness, which is caused
by
the outage was to employees at Vet- a sedentary way of life, is among-the
erans Memorial Hospital. Out there most powerful predictors of mortalithe doors can't be closed and in some ty," says study leader Steven Blair of
fashion the beat has got to go on. the Cooper Institute for Aerobics
Power at the hqspital wasn't restored Research, Dallas.
until after 4 p.m. which made for a
very long day of battling the inconveniences involved. However, the
staff handled it all very well .

Vacation Bible school to be held

CONVERTIBlE

WAS$14,395

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

•

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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 18, 1996.
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Cyber world ~reates whole new world of marital problems

'
..,'

Ann ·
Landers
1995, Los AIIJCics
lnd C«:-

I'

TaMe~ S)lll'k~~e
MOrt S,-ncticl~e.

l

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I would like
to respcnd to "Shocked in Texas,"
who lost her husband to a
cyberlover. I feel eminently qualified because I left my marriage of
20-plus years under the same circumstances.
Now, after time to reflect and
much counseling (that I refused in

the beginning). I realize that my able to communicate and empathize
marriage had other problems or I with a perfect stranger makes it
would not have been such an easy incredibly easy to believe that perwget. But I may have worked it out ·son is your "soul mate." Why waste
if the computer hadn't been so any more time with a flawed , realhandy.
life mate, who has not met all your
Keep telling your readers, Ann, needs, when you have this perfect
that this new "cyber" world is creat- lover who wants you right now?
It's sad that so many of us, in the
ing social issues that are brand-new
and catching a multitude of basical- midst of a raging mid-life crisis,
ly good people completely off- have thrown caution to the wind and
guard. The ability to communicate gone head · over heels for a "flawintimately without seeing one anoth- less" cyber soul mate. My only recer makes even those who would ommendation to "Shocked" is : Get
have thought themselves unlikely therapy. Your husband might come
candidates for infidelities extremely to his senses, and whether he does or
vulnerable.
not, a competent therapist will help
Everyone has problems, and to be you learn from the past and deal

with the future . -- Been There in
California
Dear Calif. : I warned my readers
several months ago that the cybersweetie contagion is destined to be a
major plague in the next millennium. It appears to have arrived earlier than expected.
There is no way to inoculate oneself against romantic fantasies . I can
say, however. when you find yourself checking airline schedules and
buying new underwear, make an
appointment with your minister,
friend , rabbi or guru and talk things
over. Your cyberspace dreamboat
could wind up being nothing more
than a leaky canoe.

Meigs French students travel to Europe
!
I

•'

_l

'.
I

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
ited the Conciergerie, the DeponaSentinel news stan
tion Memorial, the Sorbonne, and
"It was just wonderful to see the the Pantheon. That evening stuthings I have studied about. It was dents enjoyed an illumination
absolutely beautiful -- like the old Bateau Mouche ride along the
churches built years before Amer- Seine River.
ica was discovered, the really magThe next morning, the group
nificent ruins of Rome, the Globe arose early to visit the Louvre
Theatre where Shakespeare's Museum and climb the Eiffel Towworks were performed," said Lib- er, before dining on the Rue de
by King.
Rivoli . Afterwards , many visited
Alison Gerlach described the Sacre Coeur to have portraits painttrip as "making history a lot more ed, while others shopped at the
real", and giving her a different Fragonard Parfumerie and the
view of Europeans.
Galeries Lafayette department
"It's interesting to observe how store.
different people really are, and how
Thai night the group Ix?arded an
friendly they can be. I loved it. We overnight couchette trairi, which
did so many things."
· would took them into Italy and the
Both agreed it was a memorable town of Pi sa. From there they travjourney filled with history and eled by motor coach to Florence.
culture which will remain forever Italy, where they viewed Michelangelo's immonal "David" and the
in their hearts.
HAPPY TRAVELERS - The Meigs High School French claaa
King and Gerlach were talking Aorentine Gothic Cathedral in the
joined by five student&amp; from Point Pleaaant High School, teach•
about their recent I0-day tour of center of this Renaissance city. The
era, chaperones, and several parents have returned from tours
London, Paris and Rome as pan of group then went to the Franciscan
of London, Paris and Rome. Pictured here on the atepa of St.
Paul's Cathedral In London are left to right, front, Libby King, Bev
a group composed of 48 students, Gothic church known as Santa
Stewart, Whitney Haptonatall, Lauren Anderson, and Chrissy,
teachers and parents from Meigs Croce to view the tombs of
Williams; second row, Melissa Bays, Cynthia Cotterill, Anne
and Mason Counties.
Michelangelo and Gaiileo.
Brown, Stephanie Burton, Erin Krawaczyn, Jenny Ervin, Michelle
. Organized for Meigs High
Florence was expl::.red by
.
Miller, B. J. Smith, Megan Swearingen, and back row, Kara WalSchool French students by Jennie groups of students with counselors.
ters,
Tim Peavley, Paul Epperson, Justin Fields, Desiree Clemoni,
Dorsey, teacher, the group was Some visited the famed Uffizi
Josh
Witherell, Shirley Miller, Shaun Fife, Dorothy Leifheit, Alison
joined by several Point Pleasant Gallery, where the Renaissance
Dodger Vaughan, Zach Bias, . Brandy Snider, Nikki
Gerlach,
High School students, a few teachmasterpieces of Leonardo da VinBuchanan,
Carrie Miller, Erin Redman, and Adam Thomas.
ers and parents.
ci, Michelangelo, Raphael, and
They left Pittsburgh InternaBotticelli ar~ exhibited. Others
tional Airport on June 16, and
toured the ancient covered bridge,
arrived in London's Gatwick airPonte Vecchio and viewed the bust
port early the next morning.
of Benvenuto Cellini in the center
While in London, students vis- of the bridge. Almost all tasted
ited the Tower of London, Westauthentic Italian pizza before
minster Abbey, St. Paul's Catheboarding their motorcoach for
dral. and Buckingham Palace for
Rome.
In Rome the group visited the
the Changing of the Guard. They
Trevi Fountain and the ancient
lunched al London's Hard Rock
ruins of the Forum, Arch t&gt;f ConCafe and visited Shakespeare's
stantine. the Circus Maximus, and
New Globe Theatre and the British
Museum. The first evening was . the Colosseum, the Vatican, the
immortal Sistine Chapel of
spent in Picadilly Circus and
Michelangelo, and the ruins of old
Trafalgar Square, and on their lasl
Rome .
evening in London, students were
A tour of St. Peter's Basilica.
able lo view a London Theatre perthe largest cathedral in Christenformance of "Miss Saigon."
dom, revealed to the students the
On the fourth day, the travelers
genius of Michelangelo as an anist,
were taken across the English
sculpturer. and architect.
Channel from Dover to Calais via
Before leaving Rome for their
a Norwegian ferry. Crossing
flight home. the group traveled to
France by motor coach, they
OUT ON LONDON TOWN - Enjoying a snack at the Hard Rock
the catacombs where a knowlarrived in Paris for an evening meal
Cafe
in London during their recent visit there were these Meigs
ed-geable guide reflected on Chrisof French cuisine and a nightly tour
High students, from the left around the table, Anne Brown, All- ·
of Montmartre.
tian heritage and the use of the cat· son Gerlach, Shaun Fife, Libby King, and Dorothy LeHhelt.
acombs during the first century of
On the fifth day, students
Christianity.
·
enjoyed a day tour including visits
to Notre-Dame, the Eiffel Tower,
Youth making the trip were
rie Miller, Michelle Miller, Tim
the Arc de Triomphe, the Champs
Lauren Anderson, Melissa Bays,
nie and Steven Dorsey, Deb and
Peavley,
Erin
Redman,
B.J.
Smith,
Elysees, !'Ecole Militaire and the
Zach Bias. Anne Brown, Nikki
Mike Gerlach. and Celia McCoy.
Brandy Snider, Bev Stewart,
Opera House among other sites.
Buchanan, Stephanie Burton,
Other ~dulls accompanying the
Megan
Swearingen, Adam
That afternoon, most students travDesiree Clemons, Cynthia Cottergroup were Donna Adams. Judy
Thomas,
Dodger
Vaughan. Cara
eled to Versailles, to visit Louis
ill, Paul Epperson, Jenny Ervin,
Crooks, Linda Hayes, Bette HoffXIV's magnificent palace and garWalters, Chrissy William s, and
Justin F1elds, Shaun Fife, Alison
man, Shirley Miller, Diane RedJosh
Witherell .
dens. Some veteran travelers optman, Vicki Smith, Pam and Don
Gerlach, Tara Gerlach, Whitney
ed to explore the lie de Ia Cite and
Teacher/chaperones included
Vaughan, and Ruby Vaughan.
Haptonstall , Libby King, Erin
the Rive Gauche, where they visMary Bays, Denise Buchanan, JcnKrawsczyn , Dorothy Leilheil. Car-

-.;......_----Poets Corner-----Drinking and Driving
Some people think that
is against the law,
drinking and driving is alright.
You might think its fun
But your stupidity could kill
while you're having a ball;
your friends. family. and even take
Eventually, you will be caught,
your life ;
and boy are you going to be
If you arc going to drink and drifined and nailed to the wall;
ve
If you are stupid enough
have a designated driver.
to drink and drive,
so you know that there won't be
Your irresponsibilities
obituaries
will eventually take some innocent
and that you caused no sorrows,
lives;
Everybody has their right

to have their lives and tomorrows;
If you don't want to be
or cause a stati stic,

Then please don't drink and driv e
look at yourself and be realistic;
·Life is as precious
as a new born babe,
so let's be responsible so we can
look forward
to the following day ;
Life is as precious as can be,

so please learn and listen
and take this advice from me.
- Christina Westfall
Age 16, Long
, Bottom

give me away, which is what ~ :
should have done to begin with. Ho :
has treated me and my sister as if we.
were his own.
What do you think, Ann? I need
advice. -- Uncenain in Springfield,
Mass.
Dear Uncenain: I think you
should talk this over with your
mother and ask for her help with this
dilemma. She is much closer to the
situation than I am and will give you
the guidance you need. Meanwhile,
I'll keep my fingers crossed, dear.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suitt 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

Dear Ann Landers: My father
died 17 years ago. I am being married on his birthday. It's going to be
a very elegant affair. I asked my
father's twin brother to give me
away, but I am now sick about my
decision. "Uncle Chuck" is an alcoholic and very unreliable.
When my father died, my uncle
was very attentive, but I haven't
seen him since my college graduation in 1990. He lives two hours
away. I am now afrai(j he will show
up late or drunk and embarrass me at
the wedding. Since the affair is in
the evening, it gives him the whole
day to get drunk.
I want to ask my stepfather to

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
- Mowing
(residential &amp; commercial)
- Weedeatlng .
-Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance
No lawn too large
or too small.
Call today fOr free
estimate

742-2803
or 446-3622

Blennerhasset Sternwheel
cruise to benefit foodbank·
A benefit for Meals-on-Wheels
and the Southeastern Ohio Foodbank
which serves Meigs and Ga!lia Counties will be held on the Blennerhassett Sternwheeler Aug. 10.
It is spcnsored by Tri-County
Community Action Agency, Kerr
IJislributing, and The Athens News.
The Blennerhassett will depan
from Parkersburg W.Va. at Point
Park, at 6:45 pm and will return by
I0. The cost per person is S20,
which includes food and entenainment. Tickets may be purc~ased in
advance by calling Tri-County's main
office at 1-614-592-6601.
Local business owners have
donated items to be auctioned off or
given away as door prizes. Agency
spokesperson, Sallie Traxler said,
"last year we raised approximately

POMEROY -- Rock Spn s etter Heallh Club. Thurs(jay home o
Francis Goeglein, 60th anniversary
observance. Past and present members invited to attend.
1VPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
plains VFW Auxiliary, Thursday.
7:30p.m. at hall.
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Board of MRIDD Thursday. 7:30
p.m. at Carleton School.
RUTLAND -- Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department Auxiliuy special
meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. at the fire
house.

Roofing, Vinyl
Siding, Garages,
Porches, Sidewalks
andAdd-ons.
Free Estimates
Phone

Siding

Decks

Roofs
Add-Ona

Moat
Anything

Call
B. D. Construdion

614-985-3982

614·992·2979
ti1W1 mo. pd.

SMITH'S COIInRUCTIOI

c:uan llullcllng '

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

oRepltx...t Wladows
•lllild Garages
•Stonl Daors &amp;wlatlows
ollooar Atltllliotu
440

Grant allows state historical

S~fJ~~y_ !~hi~H~~-a~e:n

scope
During the next year, approx·imately I00,000 pages of documents
and records will be converted, including Nonhwcst Territory ordinances;
the Index to Ohio Death Records for
I90S through 1944; the Ohio Newspaper Index, which contains 66,000
entries of historical and modern
newspapers; and rosters of Ohio
troops who fought in the Civil War,
the Mexican-American War, and the
War of 1812.
"This project is an imponant step in our cffons to usc new technology
to in~rcase the availability and usc of
the valuable historical materials in the
society's collections," said George
Parkinson, chief of the OHS
Archives/Library Division.
Eventually, the records and historic documents will be available lo
every school classroom and public
library in lhc state when Ohio
SchoolNet, SchoolNct Plus, and
OPLIN fully implement their plans to
.elc~tronically connect all Ohio classrooms and public libraries.

!~1 ~! 992-1135
ti14J 992-270

•

·'

Want to Help
YouIll
Let them tell you
about the future Ill
1·900-868-41 00
Ext. 2469
$3.118 per min.
Mutt be 18 yr1.
Serv..U (618)-645 8434

"""'-

··~:

I

I

.

O;er 100 Rf'cin'rrs ,lflef Cil.Jf!&lt;,

614-992-3470

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Help Wanted

'

RN
MDS/Assessment · Nurse
needed, full~time position. Flexible
hours, day shift. Experience
required. Competitive wages and
benefits._Contact Shelia Brooks,
DON, at Pinecrest Care Center for
Interview. EOE. 614-446·7112.
Little things
llrt Worth A lot
in

' tht Cl11s~ifitd Section!

. Card of Thanks

I wish to
thank
everyone for
the cards,
gifts and
visits.
God Bless.
Marie Bissell
WhlteOffuH

-~'&gt;1 t-'f..

Summer "Hang Ten"
Girls 50°/o off ·
Juniors &amp; Missy 30% off
.....................................
. ..... _._ ..........
------------··- ·--

~-

I1

290 N. 2nd

992-3684

• 'Tilt-in
• Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quote!

MIDDLEPORT
PRESENTS

RUTLAND, OHIO

s:t'aingle, $5/coupte

1-100-837-8217
Sc i iJ ICC Hotl111c 7--\2-22 12

•

"BAD HABir'
$ilurday Night 1o-2

''

Now Every Wed. Night at

8 P.M. POQJ Tournament&amp;Euchere Tournament.

t

I

614·843·5385, c;otlect if

30 Announcements
$100· REWARD for whoever can

tell whom made a prank pha"tle

ca ll on June 15. at Somerville
Res1de nc e concern ing mining
ch11d at Stale Cup Soccer tourna-

ment 30H7S· 70&lt;0.

40

Giveaway

2 lunen s. li n er !rained , 6 14·98 2·

6!i24

Part

Ger man

614-441 -0940 After 3:30

BENN
LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIITIIIOI·IITIIIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

VERY IEASCHIIILE
IIIVE IEFEIIIICES

for you.
614-915·4110

992·2735
711196 1 mo .

JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Headliners - Custom Seat
Covers &amp; Carpet ·
-Convertible Tops ·
- Antique Cars · Boat Seats ·
Over 20 Years EKperience
(614) 992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45 769
6119/1 mo. pd.

Howard Excavatin
TruckingLimestone
Bulldo7.ing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

- 992-3838

All Kinds of Eorlh Work

shots and wormed, call 6 14· 742-

2233.

wf!ll the parts &amp;service to beck It up
Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; West VIrginia
T&lt;!ll Free 1-800-872-5967
446-9416

992-7696

Furnaces

Two •malt black pyppiae , female,

_Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

rake t•e 1111• out of
jlllatlllf. Let us do It

Refrigerators
We have the new FR12
Low Cost Replacement
for Automotive R12.

Small lemale dog . houaebroken.
vary gentle, woukl make 1 great
tor enyone , cell 1 14-742 -

Fnae Estimates
tWV010212

7:00p.m.
Gifts • Folkart
• Antiques

Heat Pump
Air Conditioning

Hoymrd L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

949-2168
!1/tMMTFN

2/t2JI2M"

FREE

Pick-up discarded
batteries, appllancn &amp;
many metals.

614·992-4025
Sam-a

Remodeling
&amp; Roofing
Siding &amp; Some
Block Work
Free Estimates

.992·2768
992·3274
7/U/1 mo. pd.

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE
614-949-3308

Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding

Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks - Sidewalks
EKperience References

H&amp;H

35 y..,. Experlenct

1-800-889-3943

Lost and Found

Found : small dog wnh red coll ar,
Soulh Th~rct . M•ddloport , l•gh l
brown -color ed wtth whit e feet

614 -99 2-5110.

'

lost : Gold Mother's R1ng Ga rnet
And Z•rcon Slones, Roward l U ary
V.lan1er. 614-388-8520.

lOST: Man's silver 10 bracelet w 1
name on l t. Generous reward .
30&lt;-675-6900 ., 304-67S-5530.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

18th , t9th , Chur ch Vard Sate
Oe bbte Ori "lle , 9 · 4 , Aa1n rSh1ne .
Infant$ IC h•ldre ns , &amp; l a rge Worn -

ens

Nc•ghborhood Ro ad , F n da ~ .

9·7, Salurdav g.? 1ns1de And Ou1
Furn iture , Toy s. C lo thes Cam c ers. Tractor
455 Jack son Pike Ac ro ss From
Highway Patrol, 10· ?r July t 7th ,
18th, 19th, Beddtng , Ch ild re n &amp;
Adults, U tsc. Odds tEnd s.
7119 Friday, 9·• . 3 Miles South Of
R to Gr8nde , 32 5 M o"llmg Sate •

One Day Only I
Al l Yard Sal es Mu st Be Paid In
Adva nce. DEADLINE . 2:00pm
111e day befor e tne ad •s to r un

Sunday edition - 2:00 p m F"day
Monday 8d 1t1on · 10·00 a .m Sat urday.

B•g Garage Sale : 1153 Gr aha m
School Road , Of! 141 , In Cen le·

narr 1Bth, 20th , 9 ·4, Rain /Shine.
Four Fam1ly Yard Sa le Sa lu rday
Only On Rou 1e 160 F~rs 1 House
Pa st Brown 5, Home lmono r, Avon
Doll s, CI111Cirens And M ul l Cloth·
lf'lg, LOIS Of Ntek Nacks
Fnday, SaiU!day, 10203 Sta te Ro·
ute 7 South . K•ds, Wo mens &amp;
Men s ClolhlnQ . FurMure, Toys ,

EIC.

SAWMILL

Fri day, S atu.rday. 468 Pl easa nt
Valley Road. To ols, Clolhes, Furnuure U 11C.

Porlable

Garage Sale : Thurs d ay, Fr1Ciay,
While Road, 011 160, C&amp;dar Wood

'-lstwMIU
32124 Hai.y Hollow Rd.
Middlepon. Olllo 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614·742·2193

FACtORY

SALI
30%·40% ~FF

lane.
July 18th, 191h, 20th , Jack so n

Pike BehiACI McCiures Restauranl
FO&lt; AI Agos.
Ju l y 18t h. 19th, 5339 Rodney
Cu r1 a1n s . Beospread s. l ame s.
01sh es. Qu een Bo u pr. no Mal tress. Clolh&amp;!.. Rouer Blades

71 t81h. 711!hh. 1 112 U 1les Out
ltncol n P1ke. Wome ns Clo thes,
Cookl8 Cans, Wmt.,- Coa11. Baby
Clothe s 0 -12 Month l Wal l!. er
F~ r Jack, Ptllows, Carpel Clea n:
er, ExeroH Equipment.

Mell i Oe,ora ll\le Frr eptace Cov·
er, Relr•gerator, Cha•nsaw, Elec t nc Dr op In Range , Tra nG Gas
Furn ace . Woodbur ner And Nu metous Items Corner Of t• 1 And
Pa lnot Road In Cad mui. Fr u:lay,
Saturday And Su nday ~- 5 .
Mov• ng . Salt : All Mow atrlo ld
Items, Feat Track II M•CfOW I Yt
Otl hea, Drapes, Mtac. Sctn 1C

. .

Ot-ive In Vin10n, Thure, Frt S.r

Residential- Commet'81al
Roofing ~ Rubber * Shlnglta •
Minor Repalrt ~ Gutter and Down1pouta
Complete Remodeling ~ Deckl
Blthrooma * Khchena * Siding

60

H&amp;H

BIB ROOftiG and
COISfRUCfiOI

614 992-2364

Good Home, 614 -446-3952.

ScottiSh Iem ar ro good hom e.

985-4422

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

Elderly Woman Has H imalayan
Plu s 2 Ki11ens Cali co Fre e To

6t4·992·3884.

Dirt • Sand

Open Monday
nights until

675-3652.

loel, 614·1192-3078.

Limestone • Gravel

HARTWELL
HOUSE

Double white porcelain ~ 1 tchen
sink , e•cellent condition . 304·

Homeless ca1. looks li ke MSocks",
Wh•te House cat, black w•th whue

TRUCKING

Chester, Ohio

B londe G erman Shpnera 1 112
Years Old Prefer Open Area. Call
Sieve Or Oan1elle 614-441 ·0942 .

Free puppies , mother German
Shephard, lather Collie . 304-6757163.

WAYNE'S PLACE

"We Service
Who~ We Sell"

anyt1me,
needed.

FemAle

(No Sunda) CaHs)

·-·

aclel Wanung to adopt baby. Call

Shopho ' d Pupp1ea, Good Whh

614·992·7643

----~

Middleport

'

Reg. Retail

~~

0 41NI'Isl

Repla(ement
Windows

Jlew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1/2 Off

The Place For Work and Western

Personals

Chnstian couple in need of a mir·

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

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

005

Tuppera Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culven - Dual wall and Regular 8" 1hru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie&lt; pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" C. PVC. pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; l" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduil
H" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings· Regulators- Risers
Full assonmenl of PVC. &amp; Flex fillings &amp; Water IIHings
Full line of CiSicrn. Septic &amp; Water &gt;~oragc tanks.

R.L. HOLLON

yo~ M~l'l'
fp.lloNt&gt;'1 WA~

(oo

Free Estimates

St. Rt. 7

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

WANTED

PUBUC NOTIC~
tht rlghi ~~ llld It thle Nit,
NOTICE 11 h.,.by glvan •nd to wnndrlw the lbov•
t~at on Slttlrrhly, July 20, oqll1ttr1l prior to el'le.
1-. It 10:00 .,m., a public l!ur!Mr, Th• F•rm•ra Bank
.... will be htklat211 Wtlt 1nd Savlilll• comp1ny
l•cond Sl!ett, Pomeroy, reaervet til• right to rtJoct
Ohio, to ...1-fot: o1eh '11M MY C!l' en bide eubmltttd,
following colllllnll:
f~tr. , tht
lbov•
teet Citation ·Boat cioll~l8f!ll •wlll be eold ln 'fllt
f'SJCA1:12...1I ~··.:,· 1\ ;' ·~.ndlll!lll It It In, wMh ·no
1181 M•roruiMf&gt; Motor · •xprtn · or Implied
OIIQ74212 A ' " .
WllfMIIII giVen.
11117 Boot n-tller'4410 a.
For furthtr Information,
1112 .Dodgf,·. Dynaety contact~reoltt92-21:il.
188XCMR3NDI01421
(7) 17, 11, 11; 3TC
fht Fermtre B•nk 1nd
l•vlng• . Company,
P,omotov. Ohio, ~·~•.rv•t

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

ANNOUNCEMENTS

I mo. pd.

HAULING

FOR SALE: Six tenths of an
acre with old house. Has
electric, gas; water, and septic.
Located at Welsh town Road,
'Pomeroy, Oh. Asking $2600.00.
Call 614-992·2136, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company,
ask tor Desiree.
110

Public Notice

r

367-0266 - 1-800·950·3359

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs
Serv-U (6 I 9) 645-8434

WICKS

Real Estate General

HELP £BANGE A.;:

'I

Owner: Ronnie Jones

1-900-868-41 00
Ext. 5489

(Lime StoneLowRalea)

LIVE PSYHICS

l '

"

.1'

&amp;
Paint Work
985·4198.,,_

20 Years Experience • lwured

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

7f~~

Carp~nter

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

Every Wednesday
5:30p.m.
Racine Gun Club
.,,.,..

1M

Foster Parents Needed in
Kentucky and Ohio!!! YDCA will
pay up to $4Q.OO per ~~Y for
keeping a child in your nome. :.
if you are
interested in
opening your
home to a child,
. please call
1-800-331-9989.
,,

JONES' TREE SERVICE

TRAP SHOOT

28563 BASHAN RD.
RIICine, OhiO 45n1
948-3013 Phone
149-2018FAX

614-992-3055

Public Notice

94~2512

1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

$20.00/HR.

All electric, for elderly and
disabled. FMHA subsidized, basic
rent $260 per month.
·'
EOH

Riverview Vacation Bible School awarded to 62 students hy class
recently concluded at the Reedsville ,teachers at the closing program June
United Methodist Church with a 128, which was followed by a campclosing program campfire and awards fire and sing-along on the chur~h
service.
grounds, according to Brian Reed.
The VBS program is co-spon- Dii'C4:tor.
sored annually by the Reedsville
Church of Christ, Eden United
Brethren Church and the Long Bottom and Reedsville United Methodist
Churches.
This year's theme was "Friendship
Adventures with Jesus: Camp Friendship" and incorporated lessons about
friendship from the Bihlc. To reinforce the theme, camp-style refreshments were served each evening, provided by the sponsoring churches. In
a gesture of ecumenical friendship, a
missions offering for the week will be
sent to aid black congregations in the
South whose churches have recently
been ravaged by fires.
Certificates of participation were

rn .....

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
future, love,
success and your
health II!

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

985-.4473

£HII.D'S LD'E .

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Serv·U (819)-045-8434

CHEAPER RAlES

•Complete
Remodeling
· Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Apartments
for Rent

Let a Psychic
Answer your
Questions!

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

STONEWOOD APARTMENTS NOW
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR •
APARTMENTS

Vacation Bible School concludes

•

.

.,.... ..

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

CONSTRUCIIQII

7

•Room Additions
•NewGar•a••
•Electrical • Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior • Exterior
Pllntlng
A110 Concr•t• Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

1·900·868-4900
Ext. 7625

PAlE Eat1MATES

ROIEIT IISSELL
•New Homes
•Garagea

Remodeling

•New Homes
•Adelltlona
•NewGir1g11
•RtmodeUnO
•Siding
•Roofing
•Pelntlng

We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5181
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

YOUNG'S
CARPENTtR SERVICE

Baths
RemOdeling
Windows Kitchens

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Small"

---Community calendar--THURSDAY
RACINE-- American Legion Post
602, business meeting at 6:30 p.m
with dinner to follow.

For Quahty Work

Authorized AQA Distributor
;
• Welding SuppiiH • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Staei Sa!&amp;s &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings. Patio Furniture. Flrepla~
' Items, Planter hange~. Trellises &amp; lots of other stuft!l

$6,000 for these vital programs, and
we had a great time doi11g it. The
Sternwheeler cruise is an oppcrtunity for the community to get together,
have a good time, and in the process
help those in need."
The Meals-On- Wheels program
delivers more than 300 hoi, nutritious
meals each weekday to the homebound elderly in Hocking. Athens
and Perry counties.
The Southeastern OhiOPoodbank
recovers wholesome, nutritious food
items from major food manufacturers
and channels it to charitable feeding
organizations in Southeastern Ohio.
Counties served by the foodbank arc ·
Hocking, Athens, Perry, Jackson .
Vinton. Washington, Morgan, Meigs
and Gallia.

ical Society has received $150,000 in
grants from the State Library of
Ohio and the Ohio Public Library
Information Network (OPLIN).
The grants will enable the society
to make historic documenl~ such as
the Ohio Constitution and public
records like the rosters of Ohio's Civil War military troops available for
viewing on the World Wide Web.
The ·state Library of Ohio has
awarded the society a federal Library
Services and Construction Act
(LSCA) grant of $1 00,000, and
OPLIN has provided an additional
$50,000 ror the project. The grants
will be matched by $75,000 wonh of
in-kind services from the society's
Archives/Library Division to create
the Ohio Vital Information . for
Libraries Center
The center will develop and evaluate methods for convening public
records and historical documents to
electronic formats for distribution
through OPLIN and the World Wide

QUICK
CONSTRUaiON

~~~...

Drapes By·Design
46 State Sn.t
Gallipolis, Ohio 45831
614 ... 41111

800-441-o3111

Pornttey,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Seloa Mu ll Bo Pa id In
Advance. Ooadllno: 1:OOpm tho
day before tht ad Is to run, Sun-

d ~y &amp; Mon c 1y t ditlon ... ~ :~pm

Fridor.

"

�•

Po~roy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BRIDQI:

ALDER

3368.
14x70·$4,000 OBO. 304 -895-

1994 14 x78 Fleetwood 2 bed room, 2 111111, ElK, LR. all-~~.
cJa, appliances, skylights, garden
orb, rrerry extrao. No money - . .
payoU or tall:e over loan of

121,600. 300-773-5302.
2 bf. home, 5 acres, on Sr 124.
Racine, 2 car garage wlapartment,
weH. electnc heat, othef bu11ding s,
call Home NatiOnal Bank, Rac•ne.

Oh, 814·g•g_2210.

Wanted to Buy

Absol ule Top Dollar : All US. Sti ver And Gold Coma , P1ooltets,
D•amonds, Ant1que Jewelr~, Gold - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Atngs, Old Glassware, Sterling,
Situations
Etc Acqui SIUOnl Jewelry · M.T.S.
Wantect
Co•n Sllop, 151 Second Avenue,

120

GallipoliS, 614-446-2842.

Sn1 profesaional prec11ion aearn-

Cl ean la te Model Car s Or streu , wanted to sew in home.
Tr ucl( s, 1990 Models Or Newer, 304·882-3772
Sm1 1h Bu•ci( Pont1ac, 1900 Eastern Avenue. GaU•polis

180

Wanted To Do

J &amp; D's ~uto Pans Buy1ng salvage vehi cles Sethng pans 304 · Any Odd Jobs, painring, carpen773- 5033
try, lawn care, eiC. 3J4-67S.7112

A. 1r Condtlloners. Color T. V·a,

Baby sltttng 1n m~ home, reasonable rates, flexible hours, have
references . close to school 304 ·

VCR's, Also Junk Cars . 614 -256-

67S-2764.

Non -WorktnQ Washer s, Dryers,
Stoves. Refr igerators, Free zers,

1238.

Body work on cars &amp; trucks, ree·

Top dollar- antiques , furniture,
glass, ch ina, clocks, gold, silver,
co•ns, watthes, estates Osby
Marun, 614·992·7441 .
Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes. CaW 614-&lt;446-01 75

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos W1tt1
O r WHhoul Motors Call larry
L~e~

614 -388-9303

Wanted - VIntage Barb•e dolls,
clothe! and acc~slOnes (1!~58 -

sonable ratet, minor mechanical
repatrs, oil changes, call614-7422935 ask lor Kip, Rutland.
Oon'a lawn Care. Residential,
Churches, &amp; Cemetarlea, Reasonat;e RatBsl614-379-2847.
General Matntenanc e, Pa1nting,
Yard Wor k Wtndows Washed
Guners Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commencal . Ae stdenua l. S1eve
614 -388-0429
Georges Portabl e Sawm •ll. don't
haul you1 log s 10 the mtll JUS! call

, 9n) Call 804-890-0819

304-675-1957
Wanted- yellow root· yellow root
tops- blood root Buy•ng: Jackson, lnter1or And Extenor Patnting , ExOh•o- 9am-11am at Holly Hill Mo- perienced, References, Reasonte l parktng· lot, 404 Clltlhcothe able Rates For Free Est1mates,
Srree1 ; McArthur, Ohio- t2.30pm·I:6_14...-44__:6_:
-26_:_3:.:7.;_A
...s.;_k...For:....:O:.:a..,ve...._ _

2·30pm at L a B Market on At 50,
112 mile weal of McArthur, Ollio Let us do your dir ty workl High
Riv&amp;f Gmseng I Fur lt"'C. P.O. Box Pressure clean1ng. Houses Trail ·
2347 (Rt 267) . Easlltverpool ,
Ohio •3920 Phone, 330 -385-

1632, FAX, 330-385-1642.

~MPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

SSSSDancero$$$$ Need •Ira
money, we need you, Southfork

Inn Si'&lt;lwbar, 304-675-5955

ca lL 1708)906 -2350Ext3670 .
8am-8pm..
AVON I All Araaa I Shitlay
Spears, 304-67S.142Q
Abl e Avon Representat ives
needed Earn monev tor Chnst mas bi ll s at homefat work 1-60099 2·63 56 01 304 ·882 -2645 , lnd

1 770 Jackson Ptke, B1dwell. OH
Ambrosia t.ta ch1n e Inc Lookmg
lo r mach•mst, Syrs 8)1pertence .
Ca ll 304 -6 75-1722 Monday Fr1

day 7 30-3-00
As per ArtiCle 9 lrans!ftrs &amp; ya.
~ Sec t•on B. f.Q.11ing.. of
the Negotia ted Agreement be tween the MLTA and the Board or
Edu cahO f1. the Metg s local
School Distric t tS po s!lng the lollowmg vacanc1es lor 11s regular
Jeach•ng stall · H•gh School Btology Teacher, Htgh Scllool Voca ·
11onat Home Econom1cs Teacher,
Htgh School S8H Teacher and

Pomer01 LD Teacher
Door No M1n1mum Order Bonu ses 1-aoo-827·4640 lndfSISIRep

lookmg For Thai Exrra Speeta l
Touch?
lei Us Deliver Your Personal
Messages Wllh Our Special
Toucht 614·446-6114.

Dozer operaror, backhoe operator, pa rt-rime . Send resume c/o
Oa •ly Senrinel, P.O Bo a 729-27,

Pome&lt;O¥, OhiO.
Full Ttme Servtce Tecnntc tan
Pre fer Eapenenced Wil l Tra •n
Righi Person Outboard &amp; InbOard
Boats eu-387-71[)2

Sun

Valley

Nurserr

School.

Ch1ldcare M-F 6am-5:30pm Aqeo
2-K, Young Scllool Age Duong
Summer 3 Day s per Week Mimmum614-4.tQi-3657.

21 0

Business
OpPortUnity

INOTICEf
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
1ecommend s tha t you do bust ·
ness WJth people you know, and
NOT to send money througll the
ma 11 unul vo u !lave mvesugated
the oMefl ng.
Bu smessperson , small s1ze Contractor, Nattonal Manufacturer
awardtng local DEALERSHIP tor
steel butldtng!!l. Big Profit ~tentJal
on sales and con structton. (303)
759-3200, ext 23:)()

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Mos1 Effrc1ent
And Lowest Emtss ions Outdoor
Wood Furnace On Tile Market
Central Boiler Is Current(y look·
1ng For A Oualtty Dealer In Thts
Immediate Area . For Information
On Bec:ommg A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1-800 -248 ·

"=

11atn&amp;3pm .. AI

j _ 101 .,.._,.

Spnng Valle1 area. close Holzer

HospiiOI 814-446-7940
5 Rooms , Barn, Cny, Forced A1r
Furnace , Cen tral Atr, Carpeled
Floors. Storm W1ndows . Doors.
V1n~l Stdtng. Lot 66.1150 , Prtced
At: S34,900, 614-446-4570.
StartertE iderlyJAental House. 1
bedloom, new root, carpel, plumbtng, w1nng, batMutchen. lndudes
6 foot fenco, out bldg. ran~elrefrigl
c lothes dryer. Insulated/cheap
uul biNs. 304-e75-7482.

...

614-965-3814.

RENTALS

41 o Houses lor Rent

-

2 Bedroom House Retrigerau!~
Stove Furn11t'led, S24Cl/Mo., $1:x~
Oepo~t.

610-448-3870.

2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom
Trailer AC, In Gallipolis, 614-«6-

8849 For lnformadort

Nice 2 -3 Baaooma On Chatham.

rooms, V8fy Good Condition. Re·
centty Remodeled Bedlbom &amp; Full
Ba lh CIA Deck On Large Rented
lol, $1,900, 614-245-1516 Afler 8

P.M. Anyume Weekends.
1972 Homene ,2160 3 Bedroom'

Uke New Through DuL Gas HeaL
614-446-0175 S6,450 Air, Under·
prnrnng.

3 bedroom, 2 baths.
, tncludes skirt1ng, porch,
awning, 2 ac, new water heater,
new carpel, new furnace. Uuat be
moved out ol K &amp; K trailer park

304-6 75-3000

Freezer, Stove, .,.,_
crowave , Color TV. , VCR , e 14- Block, bnck, sewer ptpGa, wtnd ·
ows, lintels, etc Claude W1n1ers,
256-1236.
Rio Grande, OH Call 6 14· 245·
Appl1ances .
Reconditioned 5121 .
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrlgraton, eo Cay Guarantee! 560
Pets for Sale

French City Maytag, e14·446·

7795.
Big Savi"!!l On Carpel &amp; Vinyl In
Stock, $6.00 Yd &amp; Up. llollohan

S200, 81-4-949-:1026

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Vine sueaL Call 614 -446· 7398,
1-800-499-3499.

AKC Regi stered ltaltan grey hound, blue and while, AKC She!land sheepdog, tri·Colored, 61 4992-8244 or 614-7-42-2654

Side By Slda 3 Door Co-IDnt
Was $250 Cut To $195: Cold

At&lt;C Wh1te &amp;sliver, sable , Ger ·
man Shephard pupptes, excellent

Washers, dryere, refrlgera1ors,
rangee . Skaggs Appliances, 76

Spot Ralngerator frost Free

Cond1t1oner. Maytag Washer L1ke
New 1 Year Warranty $225,
Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vine
1-80().499-3499.

Bunk Bodo, Entertainment Cente,.,Misc. 614-446-4782.

Roomate Wanted 1250/Mo., Utili·
ties l'llid, 614-448-41595.

V!RA FURNITURE

614-446·3156
OuaitrHouseholdFurritureAnd
Afll)iltlncOS. Great Deals On
Cash And Carryl RENT·2·0WN
And Layaway Aloo Available.
Ftoo Delivery Willlin 25 Mile11-

530

Antiques

Buy or tell . Riverine Antique&amp;,

posrt Requ ired . $180/Mo., 614·
446-7406
Trailer lor renr in Galhpolis area.

614·448-8849.
Trailer br rent outside of Pomer-

Two and lhree bedroom mobile
homes, atarMg ar $240 -$300,
sewer, water and trash mcluded,
61 4·992-2167

1124 E. Main Strea~ on At. t24,
Pomeroy. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to e:oo p.m.. Sunday 1:110 to
6:00 p.m. 814-992·2526 , Russ
MOOIO-

440

ol 1968 which makes n Illegal
to advertise "any prsferonce.
limitation or dlscrimlna11oo
besed on roca, color, religion,
sex: familial status or national
origin. or any Intention to
make any such preference,
llmtaUon or discrimination.•

knowllngly aCCOfll

OU r readers are hereby

informed that aU dwellings
advertised In this new&amp;llap&amp;t
opponunttr DaSI$.

Apartments
for Rent

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments, Firs .

Avenue, Gall1pollo, e14·446-6221 .
1 and 2 bedroom apanmems, furniShed and unfurniShed, security
deposit required , no pets , 614 -

992-2216.
1 Bedroom apt, furnishf d. n1ce
ne~ghborhood, private. no pets. ref
&amp; deposit 304-4175-2651

31 0

25 Cu . Kenmore Freezer, Table
Saw, Welder And Welding
Masks, G.E. Refrigerator, Dryer,

Electric: Range, 614-448-9961
3 Ton Heat Pump. Great Cond itiOn, 614-448· 1370

1996 16X80 Commodore!C1tat•on ,
3 Bedrooma. Front Kitchen Wa s

Pnc:aa AI Shoe Cale, GaiUpeho.
Cardloglldt IOta! exerc1ter, 10 sp.

1-800-537-9526.
Elec tuc
Scoote rs
And
Wheelcha.,s. New /Used , Van 1
Car l•ll Installed , Statrghdes, lilt
Cha~rs , Call For Brochure . 814 -

446-7263.

Mountam State Homes-Pt. PhilaS·

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repahed, New &amp; Reboil! In Stocll:.
CaU Ron Evans, 1-600-537-9528.

B1g Selecuon w ·s, 12's, 14 Wide
Used Mobile Homes, Kanauga
Mob1le Homes. Gallipolis, Ohio,

614-448-2583.
• Roomo, 2 Both a, 1300/Mo.,
S300 Oepo sir + Electric 180 Vin·
ton Avenue, 614-388-90BO.

l•m•ted 011er 1 1997 d oubl ew•de, &amp; movtes Call eu -448 -2581.
3br , 2bat h, St7 9Q d ow n . S2 791 ~qual HOU~"'I Opporlr"trmont h Free deliver y &amp; se tup.
On ly at Oakwood Home s, Nttro Fumiohod Aportmon~ 1 f!ocfraom,

WV 304-755-568S

12115/Mo., UUIIIiH l'llld, AC, 107

Moone Home loans. Purchase Or
Refinance For B1ll Consohdauon.

448-3644 Alter 7P.M.

Second Avenue, Gallipolis, eu-

24 Hour Approval. 1-800 -484 - GraciOus living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Monor and
1731 Ext 9706

RiYerttde Apartment&amp; in MldcU•

New 14x80 Only ma ke 2 pay .
men11 &amp; IT'IOYe-10, no payment alter 4 yea''· fr&amp;e ael-up &amp; detfvery.

00.-755-5865.

New Bank Repos. Only 3 lett S!tll
tnwarranty 304-755- 7191
Older Schultz home, owner occupied . 2 bedroom . u cellent fo r
young or re!lfed couple, priCed on

1nspec:t10n. 304-6 7f&gt;5394.

port From 1232·$355 _Call eu.
992-50114. Equal Hou11ng Opporturilies.
Middleport N 3td Ave, 1bedroom.
furnished apt. dtpotit &amp; ,eference

requir9d. 00.-882-25811.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartmenl,
614-448-0390.

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

New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom furnished apiL o.polir &amp; relerencu~2568-

N1c:e two bedroom apartmenl in

Pomeroy, no poll, 010-102·5856.

$625 down. $159/mo. Free tfehv· One bedroom apartment in Mid·
er~ &amp; setup. Only at Oakwood
dlepor~ all uUUtlea paid, l270/m0.
Homea, Nitro WV 300-755-5885.
plua 1100 dtpolit eaa 6t4.vtl2Rtnr Eno Area, 814- 7fllt!, 8am-Spm_

Homes for Sale

Maple twm bed With nice Si mspnng s,
mon s mattrtssl bo l
$100 ; Broyh11l Club Chaff , SSO ;
ktng liZ&amp; cranberrr qu•lled bed -

Wate~

175: llay·

sell, 614-992-5407
Monthly Flea Programs Are Ex pensive &amp; Don't Kil l T tcks . For
F leu, Ticks , Flies, And 'Hot

Spots', As k J 0 NORTH PRODUCE 614-448 -1933 About HAPpy JACK KENNEL DIP
New locetlon· Pampered Paws

Pit Styling by JO'Itnt- cuts,
baths. dips, hot 011 rreatments and
teetll cleantng, 614 -99 2 -6244
Ask about our Ju ly spec1als'

Small conce11ion trailer. set-up
for hot dogs, can sell •nyrhing.

304-4175-41175.
Smith &amp; Wesoon 44 llag 4" Barrot S250 : Ruger 10· 22, $135 -

1110,000 080. 614-lli2-58112.

Flat Tot&gt; Gulttr With C1oe 1139;
Vary Small Harmony Guitar $39:
Dava·a Swop Shop, S.R. 7.
Choohire, Tue' Wed, Fri. SaL t 5.

ptua many txtta'a ad&lt;I8Cl 10 IIOmt

Uatd t2116' dtek, IIOPI and
handrail, 1125; t5' ban boll,
$2100;11oj.IIIJ2-et54.

..

Of Daytona 500

E~rllon,

All Op·

nons, SOuthern Car, 1988 Nlssan
Cook Motors, 614·446.0103.

.1

Musical

1984 Chevy Caveller, Hit Daer,

__

______ ,

1988 Honda 7Q, 4 Wheeler Good .:

•r

94 Suzuki GS SOOE, 400 m1le!C!
e.x.:ellent condttton, mull sel ~

$3,000, free helmet , 614 -992••
5578.
.!

750

Bundy Sauphonel1ke New, Call

614-379-2863
Drum wlstand, sttck s &amp; case.

'l

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

170hp Mere. 19ft, opetl bow, n...:

West Rodney, Old Route 35. Will
Be Openrng Thursda,, Will Be
Open Daily 10 Till 8 Sweet Corn,
Tomatoes . Beans , Ere
Appradara Your Bu stness

Wou l d

1g9 1 4 . wmna , l91t. 304 -67~­

610

Farm Equipment

1972 Model 1530 John Deere
Tractor &amp; Di sc $4 ,800, 014-446 -

auto, am-lm caaaene.

1990 Dodge Sptrl! 4 Door, Au·

tomatrc, Good Condition, $2,800
OBO, 614·258· 1233. 614· 258·

...

614-662-7830.
1991 Ch~rolel Caprtce SlatlonWagon , loaded, Excellent Candiuon, tl3,451 Miles S7,800, 014·
1992 L1ncoln Contmental Loaded,
Excellent Contfilion, Must Sell!

tomat•c. loaded. 58 ,000 Milt&amp;.
$6,495080, 614-441 -1 1DS.
4 Door 1986 Chevrolet, Air, Runs
Good, Good Shape, 93,000 Mleo
$950, 814-38&amp;-6528.

95 Ford T-Brrd. V·8. loaded.
23.000 mtles, a sk1ng $U,300 ,

614·11&lt;9-2700.

42hp. \

A£Jto Loans. Deater will arrange ft..
nanctng even 1f you have been.
turned down tlsewhefe . Upton
Equtpment Used Cars . 304 ·458·

Cub Tractofl , 1 ha s

1069.

Hydraulic Holes, Made To Order.
Sider's Equtpl'Jlent Co 304-G75-

742t ,
MF 1 08~ Tractor Plua Miac. Corn
Equipr'Mnt,_ et4-882-7874.
Uood R-40 Diu:h Wrtch Tr-lltr,
01..-7842
While 2 1 Horse Oieatl 4 WO
Trac1or 5 Ft Belly Motor, low
Hours · John Deere 301 Wi th
Fron te nd loaoer &amp; S1ckte Ba r,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

720

'!tucks for Sale

'81 Ford F2SO, Califorma truck,
VISOrl . toolbo •. bed ra~ 1 and .,._

ing package, sharp, $2600, 810092-2469.

790

Campers

&amp;

':

-

27 Gramllltr

Pass
All pass

29 Southweatem
30 Entice

• J

31FI36 Feminine
lulllx

38LAII
watertight
42 Bau of a leaf
44 Yellow
pigment
46 tl;c. holiday
47 Dlllerent
oM l'wo-whtteler

~ElLO, MT~&amp;(:H!J£...

£J:Jl6 1lr.'C t-0 ~ I

~fl.I.-T~ '00--T F'Oit "?

YCXJ :.U&gt;T C:rOT H~ I

~

~

[ WN-ITE.D TO~~ [ wr

CfF OI:ITII.E. ~1(,1.\T FOOT I

1972 Star Crall pop-up camper,

When you learned to play bridge,
I'm sure you asked your teacher,
"Wben should I draw trumps?" As
witlt most questio~s about the game,
there is no simple answer. Each deal
must be taken on ita own merits.
How about today's rour·heart con·
tract? After West leads the spade jack.
do you draw trumps immediately, or is
there some other business that musl
be done first? Also, does it matter
which opponent has the c!iBmond king?
Normally you should have at least
six cards in a suit to rebid it. And
some pairs, after a two·over·one response, would rebid two spades with
that South hand to show its shape.
However, this pair plays that a twospade reverse would promise extra
values.
The first declarer saw a chance to
take a rurr in the short trump hand.
which is often the best play. However,
it wasn't right here. After South won
with dummy's spade ace, played a
spade to his king and ruffed a spade
low in the dummy, East overruffed
and switched to a club : one down .
Ruffing high wouldn't have helped ei·
ther, as it would have promoted a
trump trick for East,
The second South saw that he had
10 tricks without resorting to any
clever footwork. He won in hand with
the spade king, drew four rounds or
trumps, played a diamond to dummy's
ace and called for tbe diamond queen.
When East played low, South discard·
ed a club. Even if West had won with
the king, South would have had only
three losers: one diamond and two
clubs. And when the rufflng diamond
finesse worked, South maneuvered an
overtrick.

50 Verne hero
51 Shine

52 Auld Lang 55 Jazz player

Kid -

58 Depreaaed

57 Mao -

by Luis Campos
c.!ebrily Cipher C1')'pl~arns ar11 created !rom qUOiaiiOfll by la!T'OuS people paal and present
beh .._.. ... !h. c!pNr llanda lor ano!her roo.y·s c4Je t ~It w

0 C E I

1978 Wilderne ss Camper 25 Ft

UOCJL

c

-ps,

82513.

U DP

XCE

F L N

FLP L

A KH .

DJ
N C
ZKOtLS

•

a lower

East Stde in the11

••••
'::~:~:~' s~~il~-~£!/Js·
••••
141t114
CIAY I. 1'0UAII - - - - - - - --~,

0

Reorronge MIH•rs of
four ICrambled worda
low to form four words

p y PE P

I

·vou should keep your tde.
als low enough to encourage
you. · lhe professor told hts
class , "and high enough Ia

I I 1 1
5

NI GL I V

~_ ,~. ;.6_;,.,_:,. ;.1:. . .:;. 17. ;,.-, __JI • . ~~~P;;,~u.~~
..
1

.

•

•

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chuckfo quoled

bv f,fhng in the mtu1ng words
vov develop from slep No 3 below .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWIIS
Uproar · Shirk - Their · Accent · CHOPS t iCK
I"m always try;ng to lose wetght. gomg from one diet
to another A famous comtc made me laugh when he
told about a great new rice dtet you only use one CHOP·

24Ft Camper Wuh AC, Bath,

&amp;1 ~

~anop~. Perfect For The Fa~r, - ~

$3,400,614-379-2139

1

.C.t

"
35' Camper &amp; lot' Holiday Htlls, :~

Outbuilding, E•ce41ent Cond111onl ~ t
AIC, Sewer, Fishtng , Boat i ng .~
$4,50Q, 014-894-3101 .
..... :

STICK!

~,

__

SERVICES

___,
&gt;r

ITHURSDAY

~~----------------~
1
810
Home
WATERPROOFING
:: : :
Uncondlllonal lifetime guarantee.... ' •
local references l urni shed . Es -- •
tablished 1975 Call (614} 446-~ ~
0870 Or 1-800-287·0578. Rogers •· 1

.
All - 1
Er-,. •
-~;

Wal8rproofrng

Appliance Parts And Service .
Name Brande Over 25 Yeare
perienc:e All Work Guaranteed , ~
French Cny Maytag, 6 14· 446 · , ... 1
7795.
...~ .

:-1

. ..

C&amp;C Gene'-ar Home Matn - ,.... · ~
ttnente · Palnttng , v1nyl std1ng . . .
carl)8r'ltty, doors. w1ndow s. balhs. ~
mobile hOme repair and mora For ~l1
hee 1111mate till Chat, 61 4-992 - "' _J
1

8323.

act loolilhly.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22·Jan, 1tl) If you
11111 in110lved In a cre611ve project today ,
dO not limit your 1maginatr0n. You might
conce1ve an 1ngen10us idea.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) A close
BERNICE
lrlend may have some good suggestions
BEDEOSOL
lor you today Taka tMse ideas seriously ,
because they may Illustrate a way lo
Improve your wort&lt;.
PISCES (Feb, 20-llarch 20) Focus your
and effons on ways lhal wil call
attention lo what you dO and possibly lay
a 'foundation for a bonus or raise.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) Today you
might be on lhe verge ol aomething that
has impressive potential. An ;,naginaiiVe
Friday. July 19, 1996
endeavor could help you to eam a spot
on lhe team.
A projed you wor1uld on pnMously might
TAURUS {April 2Niey 20) A CIOI'II1rUCbe 1811Uf111C1ed in the year ahead. When hla or her l/lewa.
you llraf attempted it. you Jacked the SCORPIO {Oct. 24·Nov. 22) ln thia · liw change for wlich you've been hoping
experience and knowledge to bring " to unique lime you might be exposed to a might Hnally transpire today _ II may be
gtW~tter 8fTIY ol flllPOIII:Ollllea than UIUIII. brought about by unlamlllar forcel.
fruition.
CANCER (June 21..Juiy 22) You art in a To capitalize on thern. you muat remain QEIIINt {lily 21,junt 20) n aertoue mat·
tera are not handled ltlvolouely today,
'lllry lnletNIIIJO cyde and IIW poeMy ..,. IAGmARIUI
(Nov,
23:11ec,
21)
In
everything
should work out to your
ol receiving belli tangible and JnllflgiiJie
order
to
advance
your
peraonal
objec·
advantage.
Converaely,
tha 1111181 you
rewardt lOokS promioririg. Get. a jump on
IKe by undelvllndlng the lnlluent* 111al thea at t1t1t time, you might have to lake laltellglttly will auller.

ASTR0-0RAPH

DRYWALL
Hang, ltr'llsh, repe.Jr
Cetl in gs t&amp;ll tured, plaster repetr. ~

Call Tom 304-6 75-4 I Ill. 20 yoara •
_e~~--~~c_e_
. ____________ :
Ron'l TV 5efvtce , apecializing In '
Zetllth 1110 lfrYtcing most other

llflndl. Houaa calla, 1·800-797-

Refrigeration
RSES Cl:RTIFIEO DEALER

~NCEENTER~SES

Htat Pumps, Air Conditioning, If '" •
'lou Don't Call Ua Wo Both looet
FtH Eldntts, 1-1!00·211HI098, ' :"'
6t4-4411·e308, WV0021145.

""W

- t i l l or commercial wiring• . ::;.:"

u.

new MMce Of ,.PiirL ua1.., · r·~·1~
ctnstd electriclen. A ldenou r.,. A ; J
Eloc~lcl t, Wvooo30e, 304 .. 75- ; 'P~
1'711.

·' . ...

R'tkJentlal Or Cornrnerd t l Wir· ;,·.;

t871 Dodge 4x4 Good Engine &amp; lng. Ntw Senflca Or R•i&lt;a. Ll- • 111
Sirl regfoMred Hollltlna, 2 year- Trani.,
Nteda Rtlt Axlt 1500, ct naed Electrician . Wtfah Elec- ' '!

tri&lt; I U ·U C- 8150 , Gallt•oua

9"D·

~~~~li~~~~~~~~~~~OW~~em~y!ou~. ~ y~e~a~r~a~M~a~d.~Sendf:~.~~~~~~~~~~i:i;~

•

•

your Astro·Gtaph predicllons loday by
matllng $2 and SASE to Astra-Graph, c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 1758. Murray
Hill Station. New Yorlt, NY t0158. Make
sure to state your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Exc11lng things
could happen to you today if you treat l~e
as ~ n were a game ratMr than a battle
Enjoy who you are, where you are and
what you are
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Slgnilicant
transformations might be temporarily
acreenecJ Jrom your view today. However,
the end reautts wtll help to explain lhe
currenlsn114tion.
LIBRA (lept, 23-0c:t. 23) Your mate's
ideas or suggestions might be superior to
your own today. You should try to pay
attentto~ when your spouse expresus

-•IIV

(

\

~ .

•

•I

TSCCYJ

r---,,.....--,--,----..., ..
0 N E S 0 ./ ..~_..,'

•

•

i
I

1992 Ford Explorer, 4 Door,
8081 1 Mile' loaded, Mull Selll
614-3117.0269.

._.. 2 -milt· l1oj.44t ·1013.

HLO

NADN ' J

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Everybody oughlto have
life." - lrvinQ Berlin

_

. r

840 Eltl:t!'lcal and

730 V1ns a 4-WJ)s

DJ

WLZKJA

ondttton , 614 -388 --;.. ,

auto, runo good, e10-11112·

~

p

cv

HDXTL

ILVKPKPF

-.

1993 Po_P.;_.~ Cpleman Camper_
Excellev

Y K PI

FLPKEJ

HH6 Starcrah Seii-Contatned, 24
Ft Asktng $2.200, 614· 446 484 7

Sate Or Tra&lt;(e. 614-446 -4053

·tung

CELEBRITY CIPHER

fair condit1on $600 . 304 -88 2-

wv

, Livestock

~ ~-3731oftot 5pn.

THE BORN LOSER

Motor Homes

'91 Ford F250 heavy duly trucll:, 0015.
~578-2308.
right front t~o~spension damage, S
Roofi"!!
&amp;
QUIIOrO COmplete home
speed transmaa10n, 83,000 mllel,
oskm9 $3000, 614·149·2311 remo deling d.c:ka &amp; t lcHng, 35
years ••plrMtnct, B &amp; B. Roo ling
days or eu-949·2644 ...nrigo.
and Conatruc110n, 014 · 8Q2· 23e•
1175 314 ton Ford prck up, Y·l, or1~3143.

Low Hours. 614-448-3438.

llngl. 2 -

,

. ·.

____l_m~pro~ve~m~e~n~ts~_ r.
BASEMENT
·•
1992 Plymouth Acclaim V-6, Au-

8N Ford TraclorrWoods Bruth

For Salct: Slwmill. 304-458-155t .

760

·r
; :: :

614-441 ·0738

43,800 mrtes E&lt;e. cone!. $6,000.
F1rm 614-379-2987

O..g Diac &amp; Couple Single Plows,
614-379-2720 AFTER I P.M.

:

, .1

1561l.

1001 Cadillac 72,000 Miles, Good
Car, AC , Till, leather Interior,

~nhllla

22 Bar
23 Neuter
worker
25 UnHof
heredity
26 Flahlng ald1

E11t

1989 OldS CtHIISI Ctera Body
Damage, Runs Good, 4 Door, AC, 1985 Coactvnan, 35h, Stll wheel ,
PB. PS. PW, $750, 614-446·18t5, loaded w1accessones Aead~ to
roll, must see. $11,000 304 -773·, •
Aller Six 614-446-124-i.
5186.
••

720 Clark Bobcat. $5,500 . 304 895-3487 or 304-895-3859

630

61•-367-7379

.....,.

.

20 Space

pronoun
24 Bakery

AC, poW81 windowo, $9800, 614: 3235.

1994 Chevrol•t Cavaher . 2 dr.,
auto, a ~r , stereo ca ssette, anu lock brakes . POL , new ttru,

Hog. Rebuilt Engire, Now Alt&amp;ma·
tor, Banory, Runo Gttal $2.500,
LawnChltt Rid1ng Mower 1200,
614 446 -~t.ltasage.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

err;

Au - ~Lee=""=""':;;s;;saga;;::;;;.
_
· -----------' • 1'

614 -94Q-3403.

.

3569
--- --------1gg3 21 Ft. Maroda 4.3 Lll,_
MarcCruiaer, Open Bow, Sla t ~).

I

4&lt;11j-0924.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

PR06RAMS ...'J'OU SE:: THIN6S
'J'OU NEVER THOU61IT COULD...

l

c. 94,372 miles, b'ue with gra~ in- Wa nted To Bu~ 10 Inch Stal ~
tenor. m1nor front damage, t1350, Convener For General Motors. :( :614 -949·23 11 days or 614-949 - ·350 Or 400 TH.M Automatte- •
Transmission,
614 -446 -758,. 1
2644eventngs

1990 GEO Tracker, 4X4 LSI, fully
~ipped, 304-773-5700.

Roure 588 Produce Market 1 Mile

I LIKE TIIESE NATURE

r

... r
2311 days or 8U-Q49· 2e44 :-::-:;:---,.;_;_;_;_;_;:..;.,;.:,:___;!1.-·.: · •r
BY&amp;nings.
8 h. Brown alummum truck to~ · ~- 1
· :;; 1£·-'
w•th boat rack~ . $50. 30-4 -675 ·· ..."' 1
19o7 rord Tauru s wagon, lour 5729
"' 1
door, ~ PB. PW, power seolll,
'

$250 304-675-1295
Story Clark Ptano Good Condition.
Nee d To Sell . Ask•ng $ 1, 600 ,
614-44fi·..S.7.

PEANUTS

. r
20" Checkmate 170 hp, 1-0, ski•:· r
1986 Olds Cutlall Clera Needs tube &amp; jackets, garage kepr, eKc: :
Engrne Work Asking $600: 1975 COnti l4,fi)Q _ 304-682-2970.
· 1
Buick Regal Needs Transml11ion
·' 1
Work, Asking $250 , 814· 448· Gala)ly 20ft . open, alum1num s$'' 1
2826.
propa, 170hp, mboard, new seatli : 1

949·2045 or 614-949·2302.

1f Flnnlah flrat

By Pbllllp Alder

Loaded, $1,750, 614-446-7110.

1987 Ford Taurus With Air,

1 Actor Dailey

The age-old dilemma

,:

lent Condition, 614 -367-0659

1968 Thunderbird, V·B, PS, PB,
J?W. AIC. 80,918 mlteo. mlnorle~
rear damage, $1050, 814-Q4g.

40 Remainder

I Ryelungua
t MOtion picture
10 Ctllrvoyant
11 Jog

1885 Hondi Rebal 250 Very'l

custom covera, 1ra11ing covell.-

$3,400. 30&lt;-675-1256.

Instruments

Opening lead:

1964 BMW 318-1, ale, sunroot, 5 304·675-3284 Leeve measage. -speed , amlfm cassette, good 1983 Renller 1 9· Open Bow,
condition, S2500 080, 81 4 ·ii2· 140hp t~ercruiaer 110 W1Tra 1lar
7619
30ol-682-3381

1989 Buick LeSabre, excellenr
running con'd itton, V-8, PB, PS,

e....

Includes deck &amp; central air,

1983 Trans-Am 25th Ann1versary

heraldry
37- Knlevel

lndlar.a

BABY DOLL!!
BLOW RIAL
MAID II

tor bacll: rack , loading rampt., '

Condition, 1600. 614·38&amp;-6475

1963 Mazda RX7. sunroof. 5
speed. cru•se, am/lm cassaue,
good condttton, S2500 080, eu.
992-7619.

0429.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gollon
Uprigh~ Aon
6ntorpriMI,
Jocltlon, Ohio, 1·-537.e528. -

peti ng th roughdu r, some new,

448 -4736

tomauc Tran sm1 s~on. Good Con·
d1tton. 4 Door, Low Mileage, 614·
379-2720 AFTER e P.M.

30,..8115·34•1 - can

Gu itar With Case S1e8 ; Bently

1088 Sdoltt'a Special Edibo&lt;l mobile l'rorne, belli &amp; a hal( wolll c:or-

614 -446 · 4924 E-vemng s. 614 -

HERE YOU 60r

carb, $13,000 ; 1996 Hondo 300. r
4x4, onowplow, gun sc:abbard pall r

302 Molor, Loaded S500, Days: ~IMD ._~~~~2=zm=·..._

Puppy Palace Kennel s, Board•ng,
Stud Serv•ce Puppte s, Groom1ng,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade . All Br ee ds
Pa~ments Wel com e. 614 · 388 -

Refngerators , Stove s, Washers
And Dryer s. All Recond itioned
And Gauranteedl S100 And Up,
WiCI 0eMver 61 4-660-e« 1.
SNre 12' V bonom boat I motor ;
12,000 BTU Amana air conditioner ; body &amp; drive train pert&amp; br an
B• Tempo ; 83 Old Della &amp;e tor
partt; 87 To~ota motol home; 85
LTD al ation wagon, 814 -992·
3090.

- - - - ' - - ' - - - -...,;.'";
1983 Harlay DaYidaon FUiS, new •
rima and tires, new S&amp;S SI.Jper lj :
141100: 614·11112.:!947 before Bt&gt;m-

4 UIIHary
aclence
5 Grad. dev·
6 Block btril

39 Before

Weal Nortb
Pass 2e
Pass n

BARNEY

eu -38H356.

1963 Ford Crown Vtc1or1a 4

Door,

1 ·1t

1G82 Harley Davieon Sporster ....
25th Anniversaty Edtlion , S6,50cf, ~

&amp; c:overs. 304-675--3284.

Qe1 Ford Tractor live P.T.O. pow-

volver, 6" Banet $75: 40 Clltnnot
CB. But $4i: Alvarez Fill Top

'

Miniarure Schnaurer pups, must

$700 , 1986 Camlto, e14 ·446'
9575.

Uarlin 30 ·30 $195; 22 Uag. Re:

-~

malel S125/ea.: 814-742·2050

Queen Size·Onhopedic Manreas

tag Dryer $40 ; 18 Fl. Car Trailer

- :

1986 Honda CR-80 , runs good

1985 Olds. Cutlass 87K , Auto,

300 gallon pl111lc term cheml·
cal tank, on sled wutt hOse, $75,

Queen Sfze

$3000080,610-247-3901

3L~YI

34 liMdle CIIU
35 Grafted, In

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

pipes, twist throttle, bored, n8WI •
tires , runs good, extra part \, '

dem Trailer W11h Brakes, Alumi-,.
num Wheels, Much Morel Excel· r

New: Washer, Ory&amp;r, Srove I Relrlgerator. 614-448-7537.

Sat And Frome. NOYer Usad Stilt
In Ploatlc Coot $800. Sell $250,
6t4·nS.2360.

.

'89 Banshee 350. Nerf l!&amp;ta, FMF_~

1985 Ford T-Biro 89,000 U 11es
$2,000 614-446-7812.

Jack Russell temer pupp1es, 1a
lbS lull grown, all colors, $250/ea ,
two She l tie m•mature Colhes.

10 9 8 5
• ? 7 6 2
• K 9 2
•

s4

41 Set,_
43Welght
1 Sob
45 Office mec:hlne
oM Sllllng lhlp
4 Forat open
lfiiCI8
41 Royal men
I Art. lime
53 Roman 1 051
12 Debtor'a note 54 :n warlike
13 Of an ann bone
manner 14 ComperaUve
58 Query
IUIIIx
59 Get rid of
15 Alalng
60 Cal. abbr.
17 New (prel.)
61 Envlalon
18 Made ola herd 62 Actreaa
wood
Winona HI Oulln lhe open 63 Be In debt to
21 Soak (1111)
23 Give - - whirl
DOWN
24 Unaware
28 Period of calm 1 HI or bye
2 Sub 32 Fair grade
J3 Actor Monland

ACROSS

• 3

••'

Motorcycles

$700, 1·614-388-8303.

spread. new, $45:614-965-3595

Pioneer Stereo Syslem, 7 monlhs
otc!.lt ,500 300-675-7530.

740

Caii614-446-D231

675-1070.

• Q7

• 7
• ?

• K6 3 2

tess Prop, Full Canva s Package,
Moonng Cover, Sundeck , Ta.,....-'

Jack Ru~sell Terrter Pupptes, 2
males, 12wka old. S150ea 304 -

East

•Jl0984

Soutb

Groom Shop -Pet Groom1ng. Featuring H~dro Bath . Do n Sheets.

6012.

We1t

• AJ 84

:C

t.fany NIW Potts, $500 01!0, 610448 -1228After5P.M.
1984 Okll c da
~ It
u U. 4-u., a • auto,
radio, runs good, great wotk car,

11981

Four bedrooms, IWO balhs,..14a38
fa mi ly room , one car Qar•ee ,
l(lui pped kitchen , in Syracu se,
Rlduced Price, country nome In
town. beautiful 1 314 acr11 wnh
""""""' moody level. loctrted n VIllage or Middlepor t wittt a l o v e! ~

Full Blooded Dalmat•ons No Papere, &amp;Weeks Old S75 , 814-256-

Raduced Price, 610-446-41588

Heavy Duty Hayfork 3 Point Hnch,
New. S100. 814-441-1083.

erator, And Uttltl1e1 Furnished

$10 Each, 3 Dark Grey, 8 Weeks
Old. e14-446·4660

1i95 GMC 314 Ton 4.14 Auto, AJ 1
C, Bedllner, 614·245-9082 Aher 6 :

304-875-4641 AFTER 6 P.M.

pnces, 15yrs e•penence Call lor

appts SO&lt;t-675-8831

MMM ... MMM ...Mtae
.Dl.te.. ~M .. .MM

1994 GMC&gt;Salari Van XT 4.3 V&gt; 'r
e, Auto 100 PW, PL, AC , PM, :
loaded. Muot Sell, el0-38&amp;-9556.

Clean 11,600, 6t•·448-00118.

570

5)18 Ut1hty Tratler, And 6 112 11 16
Fl. Utthty Tra tler, Tandem Aale

Green Apts 149 or call 614 -992S2e ,950. PriCed to sell at S24,995. 3711 EOH
3 Room Apartmenl Stove. Relng-

1980 Pontiac Trans -Am Au ·
tomattc, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, $1 ,500

1989 Dodge Daytona 42,000

446 -1 755, 614 -881-4340 Even-

S25.000 OBO, 614-446 -4455.

July 20ih. Call 814 -949·3327

1979 Dale Earnhart Monle Carlo,
S1,695, One 01 A Ktndl 6.14 -441·
1t95.

m11es, 4cyl,

304-882-2486 anybme.

2bdrm. apls., total elec tric , appliances turntshed, laundry room
lacthtles , close to school m town
Apphcalton s avatlable at V1ll1ge

1973 Ptrmoutn Ouster 318 , Au·
romattc, 84,000 Ortgtnal Mtles,

388·9644.

2 Bedroom 'House. Larpe Yartf ,

ings.

2879

814-11&lt;9-3403

Concrete &amp; Plashc Septic Tanks .
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon s Ron
Evana Enterprises, Jackson, OH

1991 14a70 SChuiU 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths Po1ch. Heal Pump, AC.
112 Acre. 1 Mtle From Galhpo li s.

Dachshund pupp1es , three fe males, lirst shots, StSO, ready ro

•AQJl09

• 6 • 3

• Q 10 7

Rabbits· B1g And Lll tle Lopear .
Nerthertand Dwarf s. Mtn Rex.
Dutch , Everylhmg Must Gal 614 -

bile, 614 -892-6524.

Very Ntce, Good Locat1on, 730
Third Avenue, $300/Uo., 814 -

Tank &amp; 1'111 Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. Point Pleasant. 304 -6 75·
2063

• Q6 2

EEK&amp;MEEK

PB , AC , S speed , powe r &amp;eat&amp;
and loc ks , "Great Car ," $5200
neg , 614 -992· 7478 or 614 ·949-

300 pllon plastic farm cheml·
cal tank , on sled w1th hose, S75,

2 Bedroom apt, $3751nl0, utilities
pard, S1 00 depoSit 304·675 6196.

Pr1ce Buster. 1997 3bedroom .

REAL ESTATE

12,000 BTU Air Condi11oner, 2

1991 Mansion mobile home, rwo
bedroom. total electric, like new
cond1t1on, one person occup1ed ,
neve r smoked in, with v 1 n~l underpinning, 20' deck, 10x10 buildmg. lurniture avai lable, S13,000,

New Bank Repo's, on'Y 3 le tt, free
~ 1-up &amp; deli'l8fY. 304 · 755· 7191

Tills newspaper wiD not

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

yCIIUI old. 300-675-5844.

like neN, 1991 14x80, all etectnc.
3 bedroom. 2 bath. heat pump w f BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
central :w , .40110 deck mc:luded, BUDGET PRICES AT JACI(SON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
614-992 -6134
from $244 to $31 S. W.lk to ahop

All real estate advertising In
lilts newspaper Is subjec1 to
tile Federal Fair Housing Act

540

1Ogat tank ser up spectals. FISh

French Lop Bunn1es For Sale,

Used Furriture t30 Bulaville Pille,

Boo11 By Redwtng, Chippewa,
Tonr lama. Guaranteed lowear

Covertd Patio, AC , $21,000, 614·
4.1-1205.

""'""""'rrenL 304-675-74115.

1990 Dodge Ram Von
72,000 Miles. $4.000, OBD Can
Be Seen At: GaUipolis Dail~ Tub,.
une, 82S Th~td Avenue, Galli po li s ,
OhiO.
•

P.M.

07-18-96

• A 5

•AKJ43

= :_-,----- ·l Very Clean, $2,500, 614 -446 ·
:E::ach.=:::..:.61;_•..,-4;_4;_1·::0538
7823

304·8 75-8820.

Nortb

'89 Thunderbird SC. two door. 3.8 95 S· tO , toa&lt;led, S14,000, 61 t.,;
•
htre. V-6. ehte model turbo. PS. Q92.1i665.

Coun11~ Furniture.

N~e 2 or 3 bedroom houoe in f'o.
rneroy, no pets, 614-992-5656.

for . Rent

tNel'llngS.

Carpets. R7N. 614-446-7444.

Re lrlgerarort, Washer, Dineltes,

Mobile Home-s

949-2311 days or 814-949-2644

AKC

Street, Gallrpolrs, 614 -446-7398,

_:;__;'---"--;____:..:.::_:__:.:.:___ I

tc, lefr rear !ail light damage,

97 ,000 miles, $350 OBD. 614 -

$4,000. 304-675-2963.

Dog &amp; Cat Groommg. reasonable

304-4175-6162.

'84 Ford TempO, 4 door automal-

Birds Plus Cage S100 , 614·8685959

$375 Oepostl , 1 t.hle Cny ltmtts,
References. No Pets. 614 -448 ·
Available soon. mea 3 bedmom ,
references, deposit &amp; no pett.

Autos for Sale

1972 Olds Cutlass, two door, 350 .

Doberman Pups , S250

'""

B·25J.~

t2 F•nch B~tds Plus Cage $150; 8

or 814·949·2301 alter 4.30pm.

32!12

TRANSPORTATION

71 0

----------------~· ;
Ut87 Dodge Fu ll Siz8 Van 31f... :
Auto, 97,000 Mlln 12,000, DBCI,
6toj.256-t233.
•
4.

'89 Ponuac Formula, i 'xcellent
condition, very clean, loW milea, 1·
tcps. loaded. 61,..11112-5138.

Building
Supplies

Relr~gerator,

1 Bedroom . Super Ntce, $2661
Mo., Plus Ulililles, Usually
Somerllmg Avat lable l Sun Vall ey
Aparunems, 614-446-2957

1990 Sunshine 14J:70, 2 Full
Baths, 2 Large Bedrooms. Large

1sso

Whrte, 17 Cu Ft. Cut To $150:
CA, Large Vard, Deposit &amp; Utili Hotpolnt Refrigeralor, 2 Door,
tie~ 814·446·2515.
Frostfree $150; G.E. Refrigerator
like New 1 Year Warranty $350·
3 Bedroom &amp; full basement, cen- -Whirlpool Waoher 195; Hotpotni
tral air &amp; no pe11. $400mo. &amp; de30 Inch Range $95; HolpOint Dry·
posh. 2416 B Monroe Ave Pl.
er $95; Maytag Wtl"!!et Washer
Pleasant WV. Call 304-675-1743. $150: Svlvania Console T.V. $95;
References.
20 ,000 BTU Window Air Condi·
3 Becrroom House $375/Mo., Plus ttoner ; 11 ,000 BTU Wmdow Air

Small 1 Bedroom Mobil e Home In
Kanauga, Utilities Furntshed, De-

1964 Act1ve, 12x60, 2 bedroom,
remodeled bath, electuc stove,
natural gas hot water &amp; heat,

.,--,--G_ood_s_ _
..,_
Arr Conditioners, Washer, Dryer.

W11her
/Dryers,
Couches,
Chalra, Elec. Stovu &amp; Refrigerators. e14· 448 -4039, e14 · 446100•1Anytime.

mmlature
Doberman
N, 8miles, Pt Pleaaant, WV. AKC
Pinscher, female, rhree mos. old,
Tues-Sjot 9-6, Sun 11-5.

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Household

White, Both Work Great l They
Are Hooked Up So You Can See

Rt 2

614-38&amp;-9668.

Cant•. 387M~._ , _ e14·882-7350 !No Sunday
Pomeroy, on. 4578t. NO phollt
cah.ECIE

Wanted- 50 · 100 acru in Tuppers Plains, Chester or Racine
area, wi th or without buildings .
Have financing. No Sunda~ calla,

Three bedroom home tn country,
Whites Htll Rd., Rutland, one balh,
In-ground pool, 614-992-5067

610-446-9682.

ion, ro auiat _,derly woman, w1

lodiiiY·,..,

3 BR., 2 bath ranch. 2 c:ar garage,

ant WV ~-675- HOO.

Liw Nle 10 tne tulles~ make a for'"'" ptar:r1111 ads nationwide, eel
614-1168-3475

light IIGUit kteplng &amp; COOking,
3()&lt;1-773-5188 01304·773-5838.

btd altllltd

6302.

1977 Kirkwood Mobrle Home
14x70 AC $8,000, 614-368·6186.
614-388-81150

are available on an equal

Part· timt dietary aldM lot tOO

Real Estate
wanted

510

dence, 614-94Q-2220.

NEEDED: Live-in fomate compan-

•

auto-opener, In th-e 40's, in Mid·
dleport &amp; near schools, 81 &lt;4 -1192-

MERCHANDISE

Trailer For R.,., 614-44e-127St.

adveltlsements for real estate

S&lt;:hadult An lrrlttYitW-

3 bedroom, 1 slory, 1 112 balh,
central air &amp; heal, garage with

Them World $125, 614-441-1083.

rYf, 614-992-5039.

which Ia In vk)latklo of the law.

Ont Day IW..k Dental Hyglen
Polirion ,AveilatM Wilh Part-Time
Pottntlal In THift -Oriented Prtac!let. Mull Bt Wi lling To Work
Hard, Aancltr Quality Cart And
Enjoy Worklnt_ With The Public .
Pleaat Stnd Rtlumel To: Dll.
Smith &amp; JoratnNn. Sptlt1g Valley
Profeulo,.l Bldg.. lOS J..kaon
Pikt, Suitt tOt, 'GaKipolis, Ohio '
45631 Or CaU 014-olole·21D1 fo

3 Bedroom , 1 batll, red brtck
home, 10 bloel&lt;s to Marshall Un1·
versify. Please call 304-675·
0878 and leave message, asking
price. S!!Q,OOO

30ol-773-54l51, Mason WV.

1972 Flam1ngo 12x65 3 Bed-

ed . $45 ,000 Income porenlial

onv-s. e10-4&lt;111-7068.

360

Uoed R·40 Ditch Wrtch Trencher.
Call614-694-7842.
Wuher &amp; Dryer For Sale Both

Proless1onal Tree Service, Stump
Remova l, Fre e Es t1matesl In surance. B1dwell, Ollto. 614-3889648,614 367· 7010

Cal 1-600-513--4343 Ext B-11368.
Local Taxi Servico Need•ng Uen
Women For Ot t parchtll &amp;

Bowen Jr., 300-578-2338.

wagonL 00.-417S.1807.

Sleeping rooms with cook ing.
Al so trailer space on r iver. All
hook -ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,

Three place antique living room
IUtll; dlntng JOOm set. labkt and 6
chain, buffet, cabintl, antique
ltdtboard , Charla&amp; Nclam resi -

HOME TY-PIST. PC users need -

a

C~de

e14·992·5008 oi' 814-992- 749ft
3 Bedroom Ranch . Cen1ral AH
18)138 lnground Pod , Garage,
Large Fen ced Backyard , Con venient locat•on, 1f2 Mtle from
State Route 7 on Georges Creek
Road 614-4.S.3108

Slllrtlng at S120/mo. Gall Ia Hotel.
614-446·95111

good COndltrOn, $5,000, 614 -9928134.

1ng, Pa1nUng, Roofing, Free Esti-

Con slruCIIn Worke r s lndu st nal
Consuu ctton Iro n Worker s f
Welders tRtggers EOE Employer

ply In Peroon.

OR, klldoen,· utility, now 111111, new
plumbi"!!, IIYerioo~ng Ohio Rrver,
avarlable September 1st. S45,000,

Rooms to r rent - week or month.

mates, 614 -446 -0537 Ask For
Bruce.

6 PM

Dom ino's Pizza Of Gal hpohs Is
Now Accepting ApplicatiOns. Ap-

Scemc Valley, Apple Grove,
beaut1ful 2ac lots, pubhc water,

2 Bedroom s, In Cou ntry, Vinton
Area Stove, Rel flgerator, Trash,
Water Paid $275 Pl us OeposJt,

Batlyslller Need ed In My Homa
Non -Smoker Woul d Be Ava il able
To Work Any Hou1s For More ln lorma t•on Ca.ll 61• -4-4 1 0602 Alter

Please Send Resume To PD. Box
M. W.shi"!!IOM, PS 15301

pleasa)

0504

4881 Or 1-218-782-2575.

AVON - S8 -S15 1Hr No Door To

Parcel s on Ra~burn Rd . Water,
road, reasonable re s tr~c ­
{no smgle-

otpm_

2872 Tllird Street, Syracuse, 2
Iota 1f2 acrt total, 4 BR. LA, FR.

Straw. squate baled In field, on

21118.

L1ght Hauling House Wash ing
Home.
Bus tness
W10dows
Washed , Yard Mamtenance Call
AhersP:M 614 -446-8183.

FINANCIAL

&lt;541 14 EOE, MJFIH

Appro • 1 Acre lot. natur al ga s.
City warer avatlable, black -t op
road . $1 ,SOO or rrade. 304-5 76 -

420

Admn1slfat1Ve As$jstant

By July 24, 1996, To · FACTS,

273-9895 or 304-578-3199

State Route 588 , Cape Cod , 4
Bedrooms, Central AtC, Fu ll
Basement, 2 Ca r Detached Ga·
rage Wnh Worl,shop, 614 -441 -

Rep

Adm1nt stra t1ve Ass•s1a n1 Needed
For Busy Ofttce Mmtmum Of 2
Year s Secretanal And OHtce Elpcrtenc e Proftctent In Computers,
Accountt ng And Organt zattonal
Skil ls Knowleoge Of Lotus And
Windows A Must. Supervi sory
h penence A Plus. 5end Resume

2·3 bedroom houae, 50x100 lol,
located in Syracuse , appliances
included, cau 614·9i2-576 7 after

buJidtnos. near Eureka Oh1o 304-

ers, Porches .. Etc Also Pamllng
and Carpe tary 614-256 -6012 or
614·256-1502

Ofhce Cleamng, Wmdow Clean·

"ATTN Pomt Pleasant• Postal
Po SJ t1on s Permanem full ume tor
clerktso rters . Full BenefitS. For
e•am. application and salary Info

M1ne&lt;at Rght' 614-2!i6-1611
39 Acres , 5 room house, 2 out

3357.

90

25 Acraa , Hannan Trace School
D•slnc;;t, Small Tobacco Allotment,

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

vinyl t iding, new pain t ·
out. 2e14 l1ncotn Ave. Call toll
tree , u k tor Anna . 1· 800-715·

4.

JULY 181

i.
I

�...

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

'&lt;,

OFFICE IMPROVEMENTS -Improvements to the Meigs Coun-

'•

ty Recorder's Office were completed Saturday with the installa·

r'

tion of new counter tops, shown here by Recorder Emmog11ne
Hamilton. The long-term project Included the addition of new
office apace as well as painting, rewiring and new furniture.

!

Meigs County land
transfers posted
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, Anthony W. and Wendy R.
Deem to Ray A. and VictoriaS. Watson, Chester lots;
Deed, Sandra S. Peyton to Richard
A. Peyton, Salem parcels;
Deed. Dennis R. and Diana K.
Carman to John W. and Wendy J.
Ohlinger, Scipio, 1.3 acres;
Deed, Debra S. Applegate toLarry L. and Shirley Brown, Columbia
parcels;
Deed, Marvin L. and Marjorie J.
Kcebaugh to James and Debra Powell , Olive, 9.515 acres;
Deed, Brian Mullen to Adam C.
Martin. Middleport parcels;
Deed, Constance R. Siemer, Phyllis R. and Gerald F. Crandall to Aoyd
and Elberta Cleland, Rutland, five
oc res;
Deed. Melissa G. and Randall T.
Roush to Henry Jr. and Kathy Cleland, Sutton parcels;
Deed, Audrey M. Gloyd to Ellen
Victoria and Larry Barrett, Salem
lmcel;
Deed, Michael T. and Nancy E.
Gard to Stephen W. and Angela M.
Watson, Orange;
Deed, William F. and Mary E. Fralcy. Thomas N. and Linda Taylor,
Theresa A. and Richard H. Jester to
Southern Ohto Coal Company,
Salem , 7 acres;
Deed, Dorothy Taylorto SOCCO, Salem, 7 acres;
Deed, Jessie and Richard Grueser,
Robert, Mary, Charles and Aorence
Barrett to SOCCO, Salem, 7 acres;
Deed, Je.rry W. , Stephen H.. Brend~ K. an~ JJm~y M. Taylor to SOCCO,DSalem,
d M 7 acres,
ee , argaret and Harold Covrclt, . Ada and Wtlham F. Canada,
Mane Rtcketts to SOCCO. Salem, 7
acres:

Right of way, Harley E. and
Kathryn Johnson to Herald Gas and
Oi l Company, Salisbury, 75 acres;
Deed, Paul D. and Patricia L.
White to Charles L. Meeks, Bedford
tracts;
Deed, Donald D. and Julia A.
~ mnbs 10 Robert and Shelly Combs,
Chester parcels ;
Deed, Marilyn A. and James F.
Wisec up to Edna M. Curry, Pomeroy
parcel:
Deed, Br01y Enterprises Incorporated to Rufus W. and Beulah M.
Cline, Orange parcels;
Deed, Broty Enterpri ses Incorporated to Dale and Shirley M. Rock-

hold, Orange parcel;
Deed, Rawk Enterprises Incorporated to R.H. and J.E. Matz, H.S. and
P.R. Ebersbach, Lebanon, IP8 .50
acres;
Deed, Margo A. and Wayne T.
Cleland to same, Sutton parcels;
Deed, Lyle and Sharon Baker to
Thomas E. and Maggie L. Harton,
Sutton;
Deed , Dortha and Grover Jr.
Salser, Beth A., Barry A. and Chong
Theiss, Barbara A. Rupe to Sally J.
Savage, Sutton;
Deed, Henry E. and Eileen Bahr to
Roger Lee and Mary Bahr, Chester,
10.330 acres;
Deed, Henry Eo and Eileen Bahr to
Richard F. Jr. and An neue Kaye Fick,
Chester;
Deed, Meigs County Public
Library to Jeffrey L. Thornton;
Deed, Warren D. and Judy Hart to
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis trict, Rutland;
Right of way, Aaron Douglas
Owens and Alan Dale Luikart to
LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Daniel w. Sr. and
Judith C. McDonald to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Richard and
Dorothy Hagerty to LCCD, Salem;
Deed, John J. Kemmer to Beneficial Mongage Company, Rutland,
1.130 acres;
Deed, Harold Ted and Randi
Ganoe Cuckler Gillette to Paul D.
and Patricia Lou Cuckler Wh't
Bedford parcels·
I e,
Deed, John Jr and Ooris Fife,
Jessie M. and Clarence E. Might,
Louise and Virgil Frye, Leroy and
Janice Fife, Shirley and Joseph W
Scragg to SOCCO, Salem;
.
R.tg ht o f way, .,..erry an d san dy
Napper to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Jeffrey and Debra J
Tillis to LCCD, Rutland ;
·
Right of way, Ronald and Barbara
S. Black to LCCD, Rutland;
Deed, John Elmer and Kathryn
Filzpatrick to same, Salem, 64 112
acres~

Deed, Gertrude E. Neigler to Jack
L. Sr. and Jeannette K. Duffy, Sutton;
Deed , J. Frederick and June A.
Stanley to Mont , Robert and Steven
Vance, Scipio;
Right of way, Kelly and Melissa
J. Chapman to LCCD, Rutland;
Deed, Richard P. and Daisy Carter
to same;
Deed, Wayne A. and Beckey J.
Carder to Kenneth B. and Betty L.
Young, Orange.

l

es."

The investigation into the alleged
tax-dodgiiiJ scheme also uncovered
evidence that "groups" of city workers- up to 700- in .other qencies
were similarly evlldmg taxes. he

costs;

Stacy A. Duncan, Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs; Anthony W.
McGrath, Rutland, seal belt, $15 plus
costs;- Greg S. Tribe, Albany, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Grant D. Circle,
Racine, seat bell, $25 plus costs; CarrieS . Caldwell, Albany, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Karla J. Kuhn, Gallipolis,
speed, $30 plus costs; Jason P.
Minton, Point Pleasant, W.Va., speed,
$30 plus costs; Richard S. Bearhs,
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
assured clear distance, $20 plus costs;
Kimberly L. Bilbrey. Warren, Mich.,

WEST PALM BEACH, Aa. (AP)
- Brown &amp; Williamson Tobacco
Corp. executives were advised to
"restrict the flow of research information " and check such documents
with company lawyers, an internal
memo shows.
Lawyers for the state of Florida
said the company memo seems to
support claims by tobacco whistleblower Jeffrey Wigand, a former
chief researcher for Brown &amp;
Williamson who said the company
misled the public about the dangers
of nicotine.
The two-page memo, which the
company fought to keep private, was
included in a legal motion filed by the
state Wednesday in its lawsuit against
Brown &amp; Williamson and several
other tobacco companies. Florida
hopes to recover Medicaid expenses
spent on smokers.
The memo came after a meeting
of company officials in New York
City in January 1990 to discuss ways
to keep sc ientists from writing memos that would hurt the company, Motley said.

Brown &amp; Williamson maintains
that the document should not have
been made public through the state
court filing.
The two-page document, called
" the January 17th, 1990 Agenda,"
proposes "restricting the current flow
of research-related documents" with
several suggestions quoted in the
slate's motion:
- "Educating scientists in each
research centre about document writing/document creation."
- " Regular lawyer review and
audits of scientific documents" produced in each company.
"'The legal motion said the document confirms efforts by the tobacco .
company lo ship "deadwood" documents out of the country - and out
of the hands of plaintiff's anorneys.
Brown &amp; Williamson officials in
Louisville, Ky., said Wednesday that
they had not seen the motion and
could not immediately comment.
Aorida's lawsuit to recover more
than $1 billion in the costs of treating siek .smokers on Medicaid also
names R.J. Reynolds, Phillip Morris,
the American Tobacco Co.

said. declining to name the agencies.
Prosecutors arc conducting' an
undercover investigation to determine whether some employees may
have collaborated on the scheme,
Giuliani told The New York Times.
The mayor would not say whether,
or how, the groups may be linked.
From now on, he said, the tax
records of all ci ty employees will be
scrutinized much more carefully.
When the officers appeared in
court late Wednesday, Detective Barton Adams, 34, an alleged ringleader, told Magistrate Judge Douglas
Eaton:. "I was brought here against
my wtll . I don't understand what's
going on."
· Another detective, Jose Lugo,
said: "I have been brought here by
the use of coercion and threats. ...
This court has no jurisdiction and I
request to be released."
The alleged tax evasion began in
1992, when two of the accused Adams and Officer Frank Sambula.
34 - began peddling tax-dodging
"packages" to fellow officers,
authorities said. They allegedly
charged $900 to $2,000 per officer.
During off-duty meetings, officers
learned how to eliminate their federal and stllle paycheck deductions by
claiming 98 or 99 dependents.

''You're going to
thank me for it.''

on Xodak

Colorwatch Quality.

I'•

..... _

...

-

..

....

"' • • •., r•

'

• ,. • • •' ·-•..

'

••• J

·~· .......

.

' '.

..

I .

Gallipolis
edges Meigs
Legion team

Rachael D. Hawley, Long Bottom, Sellers, Portland, domesttc VIolence,
assault, SI00 suspended plus cost, I0 one year probation, 30 days jail susdays jail suspended, two years pro- pended, costs.
bation; William L. Smith, Reedsville,
Forfeiting bonds were: Charles B.
domestic violence, $150 plus costs, Watt, Summerfield, Aa., speed, $100;
90 days jail suspended to three days, Nels G. Pickens, Racine, disorderly
two years probation, restraining order conduct, $75; A. Todd Zom, Athens,
issued; William T. Lavender, Mid- speed, $1 00; Mark M. Littler,
dleport, assured clear distance, $25 McLean, Va., taking wild turkey dur..plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus c o . ing closed season; improper trapping,
Debra K. Norris, Middleport, two no valid non-resident hunting license;
counts passing bad checks, $25 plus no turkey permit, S680; Alex W.
costs on •ch, restitution;
Brown, Pomeroy, speed, $100; LauVictor Coates, Long Bottom, ra L. Morrison, Athens, seat belt, $55;
speed, $80 plus costs; Donnie J. Debra K. Wingrove, Vincent, speed,
Kasler, Albany, disorderly conduct, $100; Frealln F. Peck, Vinton, seat
$50 plus costs, one year probation, belt, $55 ;
restraining order issued; Thomas · William N. Boring, Pomeroy,
Feloure, Syracuse, disorderly con- msecure load, $80; Scott E. Lester,
duct, $50 plus costs; Charles Bartels, Dexter, speed and seat belt, $155;
Pomeroy, receiving stolen property, Michael Lucarelli, Boca Raton, Aa.,
$50 plus costs, three days jail sus- speed, $100; Jerry R. Bibbee,
pended, one year probation, restitu- Coolville, speed, $100; Donald A.
tion; Tammy M. Bishop, Dexter, May, Pomeroy, speed, $100; Danielle
DUI, $850 plus costs, 10 days iail N. Dugan, South Shore, Ky., speed,
suspended to three days, 90-day OL
$100; Mark R,ussell, Pomeroy, disorsuspension, one year probation, jail
derly conduct, $80; Mike Morris,
Racine, trespassing, $200; Ray Eblin,
and $450 suspended upon completion
of remedial driver's school; Cheryl V.
Pomeroy, littering, S150.

1994 FORD CROWN

VICTORIA
VB, auto, air cond,
AM/FM call, PS, PB,
PW, POL, pwr eaat, tilt,
crutae.

•

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 54

EASTMORICHES,N.Y. (AP) Also today, the search for eviFrorn the sea off Long Island carne dence beneath the water's surface
bodies, twisted metal and excruciat- was to begin. Divers with sonar
ing bits of lives interrupted- a poet- equipment will try to locate the
ry book, a wedding invitation, pho- plane's flight data recorders, which
tographs floating in the brine.
are equipped to emit a sonic beacon
From around the world came sym- after exposure to salt water, Pataki
pathy and suspicion, and demands for said.
quick answeQ to what caused a
A joint terrorism task force of the
TWA jumbo jet to explode just after FBI and New York Police Departtakeoff.
ment was investigating, but officials
, As 400 rescuers reluctantly aban- insisted that implied nothing about
doned already long odds of finding the crash's cause.
"We're not ready to say what this
survivors in a jumbled mass of metal, fuel and seawater at the edge of is at this point," said James Kallthe land, talk kept returning Thursday strom, assistant FBI director in New
to one word: terrorism.
York. The task force will work along"There's very ample reason why side the National Transportation
the FBI is treating this as a potential Safely Board, which routinely invescrime scene," Gov. George Pataki ligates airplane accidents .
There was some speculation that
told.a shoreline news conference near
the crash site. He didn' t elaborate.
a surface-to-air missile, perhaps fired
Paris-bound TWA Flight 800 from a boat off the coast of Long
exploded in a fireball Wednesday Island, could have brought the plane
night about 14,000 feet above the down. Some officials sought to disAtlantic. All 212 passengers and 18 pel thai possibility.
crew members aboard the Boeing
"There's no American official
747 were killed in the nation's second with half a brain who ought to be
deadliest air disaster.
speculating on anything of that
The Coast Guard continued to nature," said White House
search for bodies early today; at least spokesman Mike McCurry. "There's
125 had already been recovered.
no concrete information that would
Suffolk County Medical Examin- lead any of us in the United States
er Charles Wetli said .some victims government to draw that kind of conshowed evidence of drowning, which eluSion."
means they cpuld have been alive
Asked about reports thai radar
when they hit the water. The same detecled a blip merging with the jet
victims were probably unconscious, shortly before the explosion, someor near death from the blast, he satd. - thing that could indicate a missile hit,
Most victims died instantly from a federal law enforcement official
the' "massive blunt force" of the said ' that radar records were being
explosion, Wetli said. "Death literal- reviewed. "But there stili could be
ly occurred in a heartbeat."
other explanations ,for the blip; it's

TWO IN STOCK

1994 LINCOLN MARK VIII
V8, auto, air cond, AM/FM ca11, CD, PS, PB, PW, POL, "''·'''"'
crulae, etc.
..

4 Dr, 4 cyl, a11to, air
cond, AMIFM Clll, tilt,
crulae, PS, PB, PW, POL.

V6, auto, air cond,
AM/FM cass, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PW, POL.

Fireworks·blaze
suspect will pay
his own defense

Feds scramble
for reason TWA
airliner crashed

VB, auto, air cond, A•IIFM 111!1
caas, PS, PB, PW, t'LJIL,ILV
pwr aeat, tilt,
Black

1992 BUICK
CENTURY

35centa

AGennett Co. Newopaper

2 Sectlona, 12 P•ga

1995 FORD
MUSTANG GT

1992 HONDA
ACCORD LX

Pick 3:
5·6·2
Pick 4:
7·1·5·0
Buckeye 5:
8-9-20-29-32

Sports on Page 5

•

A MOTHER'S GRIEF- VIvian Chrlltophier, mother of Naw York
Interior designer Jed Johnson, who was believed klllad on TWA
Flight 800, grieved the lose of her son In her suburban Sacramento, Calif., home Thursday. At right are her grandson, Jason
Davis, and daughter, Nancy Vogt. (AP)
not necessarily an object," the official chunks of the ?47's wall. A 30-foot
section bf wing also was salvaged,
said.
President Clinton warned of a rush the NTSB said.
Trauma centers were set up at
to judgment. "I'm determined that
we will find out what happened," he Paris' Charles de Gaulle Airport,
said, "but I want to urge all the Amer- where the plane would have arrived,
ican people not to jump to unwar- and at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci
ranted conclusions about the Airpo[l, the planned final destination
of some passengers.
tragedy."
The crash turned East Moriches,
an eastern Long Island fishing !own,
The Red Cross counseled passeniilto a jungle of emergency vehicles gers' families at New York's Kennedy
and TV trailers. Its Coast Guard sta- Airpon and rescuers at the crash site.
tion became a makeshift morgue, and
"They have to know they' re not
staging area for rescue and salvage expected to get o~erthis right away,"
efforts.
said Christine Wood, a Red Cross
The Coast Guard Cutter Juniper worker.
spent Thursday trolling waters slick
Coming on the eve of the
with burned oil. Unlike its compall- Olympics, the crash cast a pall on athions, it found no bodies, onl,y.p~~ .letes, organizers and tourists in
of the plane and pasSengers' per5on- Atlanta, where security measures
al effects, which were pulled aboard. · were already tightened in advance of
Among them: a waterlogged copy of the Games, which begin tonight.
the Norton Anthology of Modem
Appleton, Wis., high school
Poetry, a captain's cap, a photo of a teacher Irene Renee , who had fumed
btide and groom.
while she waited in Chicago on
The true evidence of destruction . Wednesday afternoon because her
sat. on the Juniper's decks; the jet's plane to New York was delayed,
twtsted tad, a plane smk and hurned mtssed connections to the ill-faled
scats, broken bits of paneling and flight.

LOW ¥1LES
I

1994 MERCURY

VILLAGER
V6, auto, air cond,
AM/FM call, PS, Pl;l,
PW, POL, pwr stat, tilt,
cruise, mora.

IRONTON (AP) - A lawyer who represented a brain-damaged man
accused of starting a fireworks store fire that killed nine people said a jailhous~ fight with deputies shows hi s client belongs in a medical setting.
Rtchard Wolfson on Thursday filed a motion in Lawrence County Common Place Court asking that Todd Hall be removed from jail and be hospitalized.
"Obviously, placement in the jail is not working out." Wolfson said.
Hall, 24, of Proctorville, is charged with eight counts of involuntary
manslaughter for allegedly starling the fire at Ohio River Fireworks in the
southern Ohio viUageofScottown on July 3. !lleven people also were injured.
The mnth vtcum dted Wednesday. Prosecutor J.B. Collier said a grand jury
meetmg Aug. 5 will consider a ninth count against Hall , who was being held
on $500,000 bond.
Hall struggled with deputies Wednesday as they tried to restrict him to
an individual cell. Sheriff Roy Smith said.
. "He began acting a little irrational - throwing cups against the wall and
that kind of thing - getting a little violent. We figured it was hetter for him
to be locked down in a smaller space so he wouldn't hurt himself or others"
Smith said.
.
.
'
Hall struck Deputy Keith Murdoc k in the face, spit in the face of Deputy
John Chapman and tried to kick both officers, Smith said. Neither deputy ,.
required medical attention.
Meanwhile, Common Pleas Judge W. Richard Walton said Todd Hall is
not indigent and must pay for any bills for his defense. He also dismissed
Wolfson, Hall's court-appointed altorncy.
Walton issued the order Wednesday after reviewing an affidavit that determines indigency.
The affidavit, filed by Hall 's father, James, showed that the defendant has
a monthly income of $3,000, a $124,000 house and $30.000 in the bank.
The monthly income is part of a settlement from a lawsuit over brain
injuries he suffered in a skateboarding acci~ent nine yCllrs ago. He underwent a lobotomy after the accident.
"It's clear he has ample assets and income to he able to pay for his own
attorney," Collier said. "It shouldn ' 1 be an expense of the peopiUMf Lawrence
County to pay for Mr. Hall's auorncy."
·
Walton said court-appointed attorneys can he reimbursed up to $40 per
hour for out-of-court lime and $50 per hour for in-court work.
Wolfson said he wants to continue handling the case. He said he speaks
with James Hall daily and considers himse lf to be the attorney for Hall 's son
though there is no formal representatioll.._agrcemcnl.
James Hall could not be reached foi"'ebmmenl. There was no telephone
listing for him in Proctorville.
Collier said he did not expect additional charges to be filed against Hall
in the jail struggle.

•

Slip repair
completion
is delayed

1993 FORD
AEROSTAR

DEDICATED - Su"ounded by 181'1lor state and district Highway Patrol officers, Col. War·
ren H. Davies, the petrol superintendent, fourth from left, snipped the ribbon at the dedication
or the petrol:• new Gallla-Melgs Post near Gallipolis Thursday.

V6, auto, air cond, AM/FM
cue, tilt, crulee, PS, PB,
Mora.

Patrol stresses comm
y
role as new post dedi ated

LOW MILES

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP Nawa Editor
GALLIPOLIS - Stressing that
the Gallia-Meigs Post exists as much for the community as the
State Highway Patrol, patrol o(!icials dedicated the new post Qll
Jackson Pike in a Thursday cere:-mony.
Col. Warren H. Davies, the
patrol superintendent, said the
5,800 square foot building is
designed for more effective ser-

12 Exp. Roll $1.99
15 Exp. Disc $2.99
24 Exp. Roll $3.99
36 Exp. Roll $5.99 ·

Feast your eyes

.... _

Ohio Lottery

Memo shows tobacco
firm tried to restrict
research information

FILM DEVELOPING

NYC mayor says workers
may have dodged taxes
NEW YORK (AP) -As many as
700 municipal employees may be
avo iding taxes, the mayor said after
the arrest of 15 police officers who
claimed they didn't have to pay taxes because New York is not part of
the United States.
Some of the officers arrested
Wednesday had sent letters to the IRS
declaring themselves outside the sovereignty of the United States, and
therefore not subject to tax codes.
U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White said.
Since 1992, the officers have
avoided paying roughly $450,000 on
S 1.6 million in income, authorities
said. They were charged with taX evasion, failure•to file and conspiracy to
defraud the government
While it might sound like militia
rhetoric, the officers were driven by
dollars, not ideology, authorities said.
"This is pure out-and-out cheating," Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said.
"If they were ideologically concemed. theY would have quit their
jobs, rather than trying to cheat the
United States and tbe state out of tax-

speed, $30 plus costs;
Michelle R. Gills, Dayton, speed,
$30 pius costs; Kevin Hughes,
Athens, speed, $30 plus costs; John
J. Vondermeulen. Ft. Thomas, Ky.,
speed, $30 plus costs; James P.
Counts. Middleport, seat bel~. $15
plus costs; William R. Adams, Long
Bottom, seat belt, S15 plus costs;
Jason P. Dietsch, Columbus, assured
clear distance, $20 plus costs; Bruce
A. Wehiung, Cincinnati, speed, $30
plus costs; Danil'l J. Clark, Hebron,
seal belt, $25 plus costs; Amy J.
Brumfield, Gallipolis, speed, $30
plus costs;
Richard Warner, Pomeroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Keith A. Beach,
Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus costs;
Adam Boyles, Tuscon, Ariz., littering, $500 suspended to $100 plus
costs; Michael M. Barrett, Pomeroy,
domestic violence, 30 days jail sus.pended to f1ve days, one year probation , costs, restraining order issued;
Timothy Smith, Racine, domestic
violence, costs, 30 days jail suspended to time served, two years probation:
Victor Coates, Long Boltom, drivmg under the influence, $850 plus
costs, I0 days jail suspended to three
days, one year probation, 90-day
operator's license suspension, jail
and $450 suspended upon completion
of remedial driver's school; Steven
James, Pomeroy, DUI, $850 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended to three
days, one year probation, 90-day OL
suspension, jai! and $450 suspended
upon completion of remedial driver's
school; driving under financial
responsibility action suspension,
$150 plus costs, two years probation,
30 days jail suspended to 10, vehicle
forfeited;
Tommy Lane Jr., Middleport,
domestic violence, costs, 30 days jail
suspended to time served, two years
probation; Scott Nelson, Vinton, possession of ginseng out of season,
$300 suspended to $150 plus costs,
one year probation, forfeiture of ginseng; Tony Loscar, Racine, possession of ginseng out of season, $300
suspended to .SIOO plus costs, one
year probation, forfeiture of ginseng;

_

Thursday, July 18, 1996

Meigs County Court cases resolved
The following cases were resolved
last week in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Paul N. Chapman,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $20 plus
costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Anthony P. Frederick, West Liberty,
speed, $30 plus costs; Christine
Schultz, Shade, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; K. Bracken Mcfann, Athens,
speed, $30 plus costs; Kenneth R.
Gam ball II, New Plymouth, $20 plus
costs; Travis E. Grate, Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs; George E.
Grambo, Circleville, seal bell, $25
plus costs; Gary A. Saunders, Gallipolis, seat bell, $15 plus costs;
Helen Kimble, Zanesvile, speed, $30
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Jean Kosanvick, Charleston,
W.Va., seat bell, $25 plus costs;
Robert C. Coe, Athens, seal bell, $20
plus costs; Christopher Shawn
Young, New Haven, W.Va., speed.
$65; Jason A. Rupe, Langsville, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Misty Dawn
Lune, Rutland. seat bell, $25 plus
costs; Robert G. Roush, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs ; Wendy M.
Willhoite, Rutland, failure to yield,
$20 plus costs;
Ronnie Johnson, Racine, theft,
$100 plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to three days, two years probation, 40 hours·community service,
restitution; Charles C. Oldaker, Hartford, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Alan R. Durst, Pomeroy, seat bell,
$25 plus costs; Shawn Dazley,
Racine, speed, $30 plus costs; Henry W. Rider, Pomeroy, left of center,
$20 plus costs; Michael Dellavalle,
Staten Island, N.Y., seat bell, $25 plus

_.

Ot!er good on 1 set of standard

VICe.

size 3• prinls made hom your
35mm disc, 110 or 126oolor

print film (C-&lt;41 proc:eaa only).
I

But it also allows space for area
organizations to explore safety
issues, he added.
'1bis post is state of the art in
· design and is very unique in things
that affect our service, but it also
provides a conference room for the
community to use," Davies said.
'"The patrol is always here for the
community, because our support
comes from the community."
The G-M Post had occupied
rooms in the Gallia County Ohio
Department .of Transportation
garage for nearly 40 years when
the state decided the growth in staff
and services made a new buildins

critical. Ground was broken on the
$1.4 million project in June 1995
and troopers moved into the new
facility at the end of May.
While the G-M Post was the last
patrol base to be housed in an
OOOT garage, the new building is
also the last to carry its particular
design, Davies said.
Designs for posts periodically
change and the next one set for
construction, at Elyria, will have a
new look, he added.
"I feel very fortunate to have
had the opportunity to be in on thC
construction of this post ," said Lt.
Dan Gibson, who was G-M's commander when work on the new
building began.
"This is the only time in my
career where I've been a part of
something like this, so today I feel
a lot of pride in seeing the final
project," he added.
Gibson, who was promoted to a
state District 9 staff posilion at
Jackson in January, was one of
three former post commanders in
attendance for the dedicalion. The
othen were lA. Roben J. Woodford
snd .etired Lt G.D. "Din" Hen-

-

•

derson.
During the ceremony, recogni tion was also extended to Patricia
McCreedy, the wife of Pierce D.
McCreedy, one ofthe first troopers
assigned to Gallipolis when the
first patrol post for the GalliaMeigs area opened at Second
Avenue on Nov. 16, 1941.
During World W91 II, the Gallipolis post was closed and for
three years McCreedy, who later
became commander, was the sole
trooper in !he area, working from
his home.
Following the ceremony, senior
patrol officers joined Davies for the
ribbon-culling.
Lt. Wayne McGlone, who sue·
ceeded Gibson as commander, also
underlined Davies' point in the
making the post accessible to the
public. The conference
has
already been used as the site of
major training seminar for area
police and sheriff's departments.

room

"We're not only here to serve
the community and promote highway safety- it'stheir building as
well as ours," he said.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel New• Staff
Completion of the slip-damaged
section of State Route 7 near Tuppers
Plains has been delayed further
because of recent rainy weather,
according to Ohio Department of
Transportation officials.
"The contractor has worked every
minute that he possibly could," said
Larry Burnett, ODOT District 10
construction supervisor on the' project.
Burnett is speaking of Shelly &amp;
Sands Construction, the Zanesvillebased contractor who is completing
work on the $860,732 emergency slip
repair project.
The 500 foot section of SR 7 was
damaged by a landslide in early February and clo~ed imme~iately, with
construction officials originally
expecting to have reconstruction of
the highway completed by July 15.
According to Burnett, the project
has fallen five to six weeks behind
schedule due to rainy weather during
the spring and summer.
"We lost both shifts on Monday,
Thursday and Friday due to rain this
week. We've had 23 rain days since
the project began in April, not counting those days this week," Burnett
said.

SR 7 OPENING DELAYED - Stele highway officials have
delayed the reopening of this closed aeclion of State Route 7 near
Tuppers Plains untU the third week of August. The section has
been closed since February, when a slip took nearly a 50G-foot
sectio'! of highway down an embankment.
Another factor in the project's . Officials expect work on the prodelay had to dO with the amount of Ject to be completed by the last week
of August , according to Nancy Pedidirt thai had lo he removed .
go, ODOT District 10 public infor .
The contractor had to remove mation officer.
22,000 cubic meters of additional din
The project includes complete
than h~d been planned originaUy. The excavation and reconstruction in the
slip is now totally stabilized. and slip area, and permanent upgrade' to
depcndmg on weather. work should the local detour. Orange Township
begin moving more quickly:
Ru . 294 (Old Seven), Pedigo said .

House approves welfare overhaul plan
WASHINGTON (APJ - Congress, with the mixed blessings of the
White House, is moving to end six
decades of guart111teed federal aid for
the poor and require welfare recipients to go to work.
·
The House, one step ahead of the
Sentite, voted 256-170 Thursday to
approve a welfare ov~rbaul plan that
would combine .current fedeial wei·
fare programs into a single block
grant to states, put time limits on benefits and deny assistanu to legal
aliens. Republicans Wei it would save
nearly $60 billion over six yqn,
The Senate, wltich lllrted.wark on
its own venion Thursday, ~ more
votes
two
. today, knockina down
'

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

·---~--'''

amendments that would have somewhat liberalized the Republican bill's
provisions. The Senate plans to complete its bill early next week.
Republican leaders hoped to have
a final bill on the president's desk
before Congress leaves for its August
recess.
"This is the beginning of the end
to the lengthy debate about the current welfare system," said Senate
Finance Committee Chairman
William Roth, R-Del .
""'ident Clinton, who took office
promising radical reform of the wei·
fare sysltm, has vetoed 1wo previous
GOP bills; saying they wm too harsh

.•

on the poor or were attached to nther unacceptable legislation.
This time, Clinton has been more
positive aboutthc legislation, but the
administration did not rule out another veto, saying it is still unhappy
~bout provisions that bar aid to legal
trnmtgrants and could limit food
stamp benefits for some, "It still is
way short of what we need in order
to be satisfied," White House
spokesman Mike McCurry said.
" In recent weeks he 's made an
awful lot of noisc,about his .enewed
commitment to ;welfare refonn," said
House Majority Leader PickArn~y.
. R-Texas. "We will get him the bill 1
believe by the first week in Auaust\'

•

•

•

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