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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 24, 11K18

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Partly cloudy tonight,
low near 60. Friday, partly
cloudy, high near 80.

•

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 58
2 Secllona, 12 Pagea

35centa
A Gannett Co. Newaplper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 25, 1996

Funds released for bridge, highway design work

,.

tf

Dear Senior Customers,

d the
a· ·sear Stores have.o ere cusFor over 62 years: lg d friendliest serv~ce to our
.
chand1se an
finest quality mer
d e want to take

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel new staff
Funds totaling over $3 million
· dollars were released Wednesday by
· the State Controlling Board for
. oesign work on two major projects in
Meigs County .. replacement of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and construction of the connector highway
from Five Points to the Ravenswood
Bridge.
The Meigs County projects were
. two of 70 selected by ODOT for the
· $54.5 million in funding released by
the Controlling Board for various
road construction projects in the

tomer~e appreciate your .loyahl sup~~pr:ea:h:have helped
. t recogmze t e p

d

~~sb~~~o~~~n~~si~ess,over ~e ~~~~ :~i~:~~ t~:- spe~ial,ser-

i

This Thursday July 2 '
Big Bear along With one
've come to expect rom
.

state.
A total of $1 ,500,000 was designated for design work on the bridge
replacement, while $1 ,800,000 was
released for the highway project
design phase.
The local funding announcement
was made by State Rep. John Carey
(R-Wellston) who said that he was
glad to see the funds released because
it will "expedite the development
process."
"This reaff1rms our state's commitment to keeping our roadways
safe and efficient. Transportation is a
key element to the financial success
. of any community," said Carey, who

~~t~! ~~~efit: 5% off yo~r p~~c:::~~~ for making Big Bear

MARIETTA (AP)- Representa- growth of the "Other Ohio" movetives of communities in southeast ment, a coalition of newspaper and
Ohio say it makes sense to relocate civic leaders who believe Cleveland,
state government offices to areas they Columbus and Cincinnati receive a
disproportionate share of state tax
deal with the most.
, Examples in southeast Ohio's case dollars.
"Place these state people in locawould be offices that regulate the
coal, oil, gas and timber industries, tions to better serve the citizens of
speakers at a legislative committee Ohio," said Belpre Mayor Dick
Thomas. "Please remember there is
hearing said on Wednesday.
And they said the state jobs would more to this slate than Columbus,
help ease the region's chronically Cincinnati and Cleveland."
The state also could relocate
high unemployment rate ..
Eight members of the joint Ohio workers who process tax refunds and
Decentralization Committee met here unemployment and workers' comto hear what area leaders think about pensation claims, said Mike Lloyd,
moving more state offices and jobs an Ohio State University agriculture
outside Columbus. About 40 people ex!ension agent who works in Monattended the mid-day session at roe .and Washinj!to~,countics. ,· ~
W'ashingt011.State. Community Col,· • WJth'11je' unetnpiOymenl rate averaging 16 percent this year, Morgan
lege.
The legislative panel last month County needs help, said John Wilson,
launched an 18-month study of that county's economic development
decentralization of state offices. A bill director.
creating the committee was an out"On average, state government

Sincerely,

~~
Stephen V. Breech
President

'B'-ACK BOXES' FOUND· An official checkl one of the "black
boxea• 11 the other slta In freah water Inside an Ice chest on the
dock at the u. s. Coast Guard station In East Morelchea, N. Y.,
early Thursday momlng. The devices, pulled from the wreckage
of TWA Flight 800, will be sentto washington for lnapectlon. (AP)

Flight BOO's 'black boxes'
are found in 'g~od shape'

'

selecling a consuhant. She said !hat
selection is expected to be made
within 1he nexl four months. After a
contract is si gned with the consultant ,
then there will be a 24-monlh time
schedule on completing the environmental document, she added .
Pedigo. said that one role of the
consultant wi II be to recommend a
location. A meeting lo get input from
citizens on that is also planned, probably this fall, said the ODOT spokeswoman.
"On both projects, the environmental documents must be approved
before the de sign work money
released by the Controlling Board can

be used," Pedigo said.
On the bridge replacement. rightof-way purchases have been projected to start in fiscal year 200 I in
preparation for the construction projected for 2002 at a cost of $25 million.
The completion of the 16.3 miles
of roadway from Five Points to the
Ravenswood Bridge is expected to be
built in three additional phases with
the next phase to be the section from
the bridge towards Racine. It was
pointed out earlier this year by John
Dowler, deputy direetor for ODOT
District I 0 that "future contract sales
will hinge upon funding availability."

SEO leaders favor decentralization

It's our way of saymg
family
·
u in the past and
part of yhour been ~ur pleasure to serve. ygo you in the future.
It as
th privilege of servm .
we look forward to e .

'•;

pledged to continue to promote state issues have been resolved, the fundfunding for roadways as a way of ing is already available for the design
providing economic growth.
phase to move forward.
The funds are for design work, not
Pedigo said that plans are to have
construction, said Nancy Pedigo, the environmental documents for the
ODOTs District I 0 public in forma- Route 331Interstate 77 connector
tion officer.
completed within 12 months.
She stressed that at this time final
"This fall we plan to come to
decisions have not been made on the Meigs County for a meeting to update
locations of either the connector the public on the connector," she said.
, route from Five Points to the
The first phase, 2.25 miles from
Ravenswood Bridge, nor the Rock Springs to Five Points, will be
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. .
completed within the next few weeks.
However, she said, it is well to Cost of that section was $12.3 milhave the money released for the lion.
design work on both projects so that
As for the bridge, Pedigo said that
once location and environmental ODOT is still in the process of

--

By PAT MILTON
Associated Press Writer
· EAST MORICHES, N.Y.
Divers recovered TWA's Flight 800
data and cockpit voice recorders in
"good shape" early today, a major
break that could provide vital clues to
what caused the jumbo jet to explode.
The so-called black boxes, found
in the largest concentration of wreckage on the ocean floor under more
than I 00 feet of water, were taken to
Washington for analysis, said Robert
Francis, the vice chairman of the
National Transportation Safety
Board.
"To me, they looked pretty good
relative to the ones that I've seen, "
Francis said on the NBC "Today"
show. " Our experts ... who brought
the recorders in from the ship said
thai they were in good shape, that
there would be no danger of the data
having been damaged ."
He added however that problems
other than crash damage could have
reduced the amount of " good data"

'

ADDITIONAL SERVICES FOR OUR
SENIOR SHOPPERS
• Full Carry. Out Services
• Friendly Check Cashing Services (No Service Charge)

on the recorders.
Investigators will scrutinize the
information today as they try to
determine whether the explosion
shortly after takeoff was caused by a
bomb, missile or mechanical failure.
All 230 people aboard the Paris bound jetliner were killed July 17.
The boxes, which are are actually
orange, were transported in water and
plastic bags to prevent them from
drying too quickly, which could damage the data, NTSB invcstiga1ors
said.
The discovery came hours before
President Clinton was to meet wi1h
victims' families at an airport hotel .
Before he headed to New York , Clinlon flashed the thumbs-up sign and
mouthed the word "good" when
asked by reporters about the discovery of the black boxes.
.
The recorders, which are carried
in the tails of jetliners, were found in
tail section wreckage almost directly
underneath a Navy search and rescue
vessel, Francis said.

Baer .named new member
of Meigs extension staff

• Large Selection Of Low-Fat, Dietary And Nutritional Foods
• Free Coffee At Our Deli
• Shopping Assistance Available From Our Friendly Employees

· Becky BaeF of Pomeroy has been
named Meigs County family and
Consumer Sciences/Community
.Di:velopment Extension Agent to
work from the Meigs offices on
Mulberry ~~tights.
She fills the position created when
Cindy Oliveri resigned last spring.
· For the past 16 years, Baer has
taUght home economics at Meigs
High School. She received both her
bachelor and master's degrees from
Ohio University, Athens.
She is an active member of the
Enterprise United Methodist Ch~reh
and has been a 4--H and Future
Homemaker of AmeriQ advisor.
Becky enjoys crochetin8. sewing,
cOoking. playing the piano and spolt·
ing events. She lives on Crew Road
with her husband, Ed, and daughter
Cynthia CotterilL

•

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Wolfson said he was going to conIRONTON (AP) - The attorney
for a brain-injured man accused of tinue to fight for Hall's transfer.
"I just cannot fathom why the
setting a fatal fire said keeping Todd
Hall in a jail instead of a hospital is court would find that the jail was an
hard on Hall, who will then make appropriate placement when we · v~
things harder for his guards.
located a facility," he said WednesAttorney Richard Wolfson had day.
asked a Lawrence County Common
He said Hall's family was very
Pleas judge to allow Hall, 24, of disappointed with the ruling.
Proctorville, to be transferred from
Prosecutor J.B. Collier argued
the county jail to a hospital. Judge that it was too early to decide whether
Richard Walton denied the request on to transfer Hall because his compeWednesday.
tency had not been detenmined.
"The more fru strated he (Hall)
Collier said a grand jury meeting
becomes, the more difficult it Aug. 5 will consider a ninth involbecomes for the jailers," Wolfson untary manslaughter count against
said after the hearing. "He's (Hall) Hall, who was being held on
very much a person of the present, he $500,000 bond.
feels this is his entire existence. He
Hall interrupted the hearing sevdoesn't have the capability like you eral times and had to be removed
and I to say, 'This too shall pass."'
from the courtroom for about five
Hall is charged with eight counts minutes after he yelled at the proseof involuntary manslaughter in the cutor.
July 3 fire at Ohio Ri ver Fireworks
At one point, he asked the judge
in Scottown. A ninth person later died if he could go to the bathroom and he
from injuries suffered in the fire, but later started singing "The Star-SpanHall has not yet been charged in that gled Banner."
death.
Meanwhile, in nearby Huntington,
Duri ng Wednesday's hearing, W. Va., about 200 people attended the
Hall, who had a lobotomy after a first of four benefit concerts to help
1987 skateboarding accident, jumped the families of victims of a July 3 fire
from his chair and said he was told at a southern Ohio fireworks store.
to start 1hc fire by a friend .
The first concert Wednesday night
" I was told to do that, " he said .
at Coyote 's Wild Dawg Saloon in
Wolfson said Hall, who is said to · Huntington featured the country band
have the mind of a 12-year-old, 4 Runner. Concerts also were schedneeds to "be placed in a facility uled tonight, Friday and Saturday at
where he receives medical supervi- the saloon .
"The entertainment is good, but I
sion."
.. But Walton rejected the motions wanted to help those people," said
because he said il wasli't.proved that Robbie Blythe of Worthington, Ky.,
Hall was getting insufficien( care. who brought her daughter, Amy, and
Wallon also ordered Hall to undergo some friends along Wednesday night
" I think it 's great," said Suzanne
a competency evaluation.

jobs may pay a little bit more than
private industry jobs. By localizing
some state jobs into rural areas, I
think that would help in the effort to
decrease our unemployment," Wi Ison
said . •
The spread of computers, cellular
phones, fax machines and conference
calls has ended the need for allogovernment workers to be in one location , said Larry Merry, a representative of the Muskingum County Port
Authority.
The state could save taxpayer
money by renting cheap office space
in cities like Zanesville, where the
cost of living for state employee s
would be lower than in Columbus, he
added.
- " ·-·
"Buf staie Sen. B·ruce"1ohrirorr;1tt
Westerville, observdd that "history
has not borne out" the technology
argument in favor of decentralization.
"The reason that we' re here listening to people in Marietta is per-

sonal interaclion is more effective,
rather than setting up a teleconfercncc. Do you agree or disagree'/"
Johnson asked Merry.
" I agree," rep I ied Merry. " And
that's the reason I think it would
make very good sense for the Division of Oil and Gas to be in
Zanesville or a community where the
majority of the people who would be
using it could interact"
Thomas that Marietta, the Washington County seat, has some stale
jobs, but Belpre has none.
"Please do not proceed to relocate
slate facilities solely to county seats,"
Thomas said.
Two of the I 0 committee memb.ers were llbsenl· from rho·session.
They were state Rep. Mark Mallory,
D-Cincinnali, and state Sen . Jan
Michael Long, D-Circleville, who
sent a legislative aide.
The next committee meeting will
be Sept 12 in Fostoria.

IN JAIL · Todd Hall, charged with eight counts of Involuntary manslaughter lor starting a fire at the Ohio River Fireworks
In Scottown on July 3, was denied an attempt.to move out of the
Lawrence County jell to a nearby mental hospital by Judge
Richard Walton In Ironton Wednesday. (AP)
Maynard of Pikeville, Ky. " I don't
care one bit 10 spend my money for
a good cause."
Nine people died as a result of the
fire at Ohio River Fireworks in ScOItown, Ohio, about 15 miles north of
Huntin gton. Eleven people were
injured.
Chris Male, manager of the Wild

Dawg Saloon, said all bands arc
donating their time. He said the concerts were organi zed aft er " we
noticed that no one was stepping up
to help."
"This touche.! everyone. Everyone was feeling the pain. Everyone
was affected by it , bul no one was
doing anything about it," Male said.

Eastern board·discusses hirings; building project

BECKVBAER

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Education discussed several personnel
matters and the district building project during their regular meeting
Monday night at Eastern High
School.
The board employed former
Meigs High School guidance coun, selor John Redovian as High School
Opidance Counselor on a one year
contract The board also agreed to
employ Gregory McFann as elementary principal on a two year con\lj:t.

- · - - - - - - -- ·--

- -. -. --~--------__:.,

Supplemental contracts for the
1996-97 school year were approved
by the board for the following personnel: Arch Ro5e, Head Track
Coach; BelindJ Marcinko, Junior
High Cheerleiding advisor.
The purchase of computers, monitors, and printers for the
Business/Office Education classrooms were approved by the board.
The computen·wiiJ be installed prior to the 1996-97 school year.
The replacement of the aging
bleachers and foot boards at the
football stadiu rn was approved by the

J •

_______

__.__......_

board, as well as approval for the purchase of a new tractor and mower for
maintaining the school grounds.
The district building projecl was
di scussed by the board, with an
update of the Architect and Engi neer's proposals gi ven on the project.
Revised architectural drawings of the
joint school-public library project
were also reviewed by the board.
The $8.7S million building and
renovations project, which includes
complete renovations at Eastern High
School , and construction of a new K8 school building and branch of the

_____............__

Me igs County Publ ic Library is
expected to be compleled in i998.
To budget the new purchases, the
board approved amending appropriations to: a. add federal and state program; b. add technology budget; c.
increase general fund to purchase: 1)
computer for B.O.E. classes. (2)
football bleachers 3) tractor and
mower. .
In other rnatten, rho board:
• appt'ovccl NIIIICy Larkins to assist
the Treasurer's Office· with the fixed
asset in ve'llorv.
Cootiaucd oa (Nile 3

~-~--~-- --··~

..

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. - _,._

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I

�Commentary

.-

Thursday, July 25, 1996

'E.stab[is/ittf in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

~

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

MARGARET LEHEW

General Manager

Controller

t.ott,... to , . td/10&lt; "" wokome. TINy mu11 ,.,,., lhln 3DO -ao. All loll,. ' "
•ubj.ct to .Citing end mu•t be tlgn«&lt; and lnclut»
and,.,.,_,,.. numbw.

add,.,.

No untlgnld l«tere will be publlahed. Lefterll ahould h In good t.at•, Mkii'NIIng
lllllfll,

not p81Wotr•lltl...

=

PBS to put a
twist on traditional
pre-election debate

By Ben Wdenberg
The press is back. in the news
again, covering Itself in an addled
way as usual. Newsweek's ace
columnist Joe Klein has been caught
in a lie, and the very virginal press
corps -- shocked, stunned and saddened -- has set in motion a tidal
wave of summertime ~anctimony.
After exposure by the Washington
Post, Klein acknowledged that he
was "Anonymous," the author of the
best-selling political novel " Primary
Colors." He had been one of the early suspects, but had flatly and aggressively denied authorship.
The collective response from
Klein's colleagues has been: "Liar,
liar pants on fire." It is said lhal he
has lost his credibility, and that he has
given fuel to those who denounce the
· credibility of the press.
Ritually, it should be said that
Klein did a naughty thing. I would
like to think that I would not do what
he did-- in fact , I know I would not,
in some part because I know I could
not pull it off.

Clinton campaign adviser, said on
"Larry King Live" that "It's a gre~t
book, a IQt of it is true to life .... It s
only eerie tjlat it is so accurate, some
of it." Ani! George Srephanopoulos
apparently spoke in a not-for-d~recl­
quotation mode: "The president:s
didn't write the book. It was a lie con- aide is startled by how h1s character s
cerni ng a personal commercial mat- thoughts -- from wonderment at his
ter. Would the angry scorps (Klein's bos( skills to disgust with his panneat word for journalists in "Prima- dering -- mirror his own," reported
ry Colors") care to itemize any and Newsweek earlier this year. (Surely
all of their own personal or commer- you
believe
Newsweek.)
cial statements or representations Stephanopoulos also said it was "a
that have been untrue? Readers may great read."
test themselves.
So the press missed a major aspec t,
Nor did Klein lie as an author. of the news value of "Primary Col-1
"Primary Colors" was not only a ors." It was. in effect, deemed essenseamless and colorful narrative but it tially accurate by Clintonistas, a notwas truthful fiction. Fiction, lei it be unimportant thought regarding a
understood, is ofte.n even more lrue book that showed their leader, our
than the fac ts. And we know it was president, as both a stunningly talgenerally truthful because profes- ented and grievously flawed individ~
sional Clinton spinners validated ual.
Such misreportage is not unusual.
much of its essence, an idea almost
entirely ignored by the press in the It happens all the time among the sacfeeding-frenzy coverage of the book. timoniads and on far more important
Thus, Mandy Grunwald, a former stories than this one about a rather

But...
Klein did not lie as a reporter or
as a columnist. It was as the subject
of journalistic inquiry that he said he

Ben Wattenberg

By JOHN HANCHETTE
Gannett News Service

_,.

.
:
.
·
.
:

WASHINGTON - Have you ever watched a national political debate
on 1V and idly wondered what your local candidates thought about the same
issues? Well, now you might find out.
On Sunday, Sept. 29, PBS will offer an election-year twist with a unique
combination fonnat called "Debate Night: The Future Con.gress."
It will feature for the first time 75 regional cut-ins around the country,
segments in which local congressional candidates will go at it before, during, and after a live national debate between House and Senate leaders televised from colonial Williamsburg, site of the oldest representative legislature in the western hemisphere. The program will begin at 9 p.m. Eastern
Time.
The local broadcasts will cover about 20 Senate and 80 House races, and
some of them will be in creative settings. like the old-fashioned "soapbox"
front lawn rally with a voter registration table nearby, scheduled at WCNY
in Syracuse. Many stations are including high school students as local questioners, and several have mixed World Wide Web computer activities into
the broadcast.
Some have twinned with local radio affiliates or NPR stations to carry
the broadcasts. A few are cooperating with statewide newspapers. Some. will
air repeats of several of the debates on a stiuewide basis.
The creators are enthused.
"We think this one night will begin to change the way 1V ponrays the
political process," said Richard Carlson, president of the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, which is coming up with the evening's $1.3 million
cost.
The intertwined debates are pan of public broadcasting's "Democracy
Project," a year-old computerized education effort to draw Americans back
into the democratic process.
"The unprecedenled combination of local and national debates will make
broadcast history," said eKecutive director Ellen Hume. "This year the eleclion of Congress is as important as the election of the president. PBS wants
to give citizens a chance to evaluate their candidates."
Veteran newsman Jim Lehrer will moderate the Williamsburg discussion
among congressional leaders.
Participating PBS stations in or near Gannett cities include
Cmcinnati, WCET in Ohio and Huntington, WPBY in West Virginia.

:Today in history

•

By The A11oclated Press
Today is Thursday, July 25, the 207th day of 1996. There are 159 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
Fifty years ago, on July 25, 1946, the United States detonated an atomic bomb at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific in the first underwater test of the device.
On this date:
In 1593, France's King Henry IV converted from Proreslantism to Roman
Catholicism.
In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of the Anny, the first officer to hold the rank.
In 1868, Congress passed an act creating the Wyoming Territory.
In 1909, French aviator Louis Bleriot flew across the English Channel
in a monoplane, traveling from Calais to Dover in 37 minutes.
In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as premier of Italy by King Victor Emmanuel UI. and placed under arrest. (However. Mussolini was later
rescued by the Nazis, and re-asserted his authority.)
In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.
In 1956, 40 years ago, 51 people died when the Italian liner Andrea Doria
sank after colliding with the Swedish ship Stockholm off the New England
coast.
In 1963, the United States, the Soviet Union and Britain initialed a treaty
in Moscow prohibiting the teSiing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere,
in space or underwater.
In 1978, Louise Joy Brown, the first test-tube baby, was born in Oldham,
England: she'd been conceived through the technique of in-vitro fertilization .

r----------------------,

Berry•s World
?')\.\.. UV1

PULL UP!

..---Local briefs------Belpre area companv.
fined for EPA violations Girl injured in Pomeroy accident

OHIO Wea th er
Friday, July 26
AccuWeather' foRCaSt for

The Daily Sentinel A tidal· wave of summertime s·anctimony

.... .
·

MICH.

jnovel novel. Accordi;;gly, it seems
.surreal that a plagued profession
:would go jnto spasms about an item
that harmed no one.
Collectively, the press was the
transmittal agent of the falsehood that
Medicare would be "cut," which has
distoned the poliricalterrain. (I measure these things by a standard called
DEM -- Distilled Essence of Media
-- about which I have wriuen , and
which allows us lo loosely ca ll the
collecti on of journalists "!hey.")
They never explained that "s 1nking middle-class income" was mostly baloney and that "growing income
inequality" was more than just a mat~
ter of the rich getting richer and the
poor getting poorer. They perpetrated the falsehood that the 1992 GOP
Houston convention was an affair of
right-wing zealots. They bought the
idea of common heterosexual transmittal of AIDS, of systemic racist
arson against black churches, and that
the 1992 election was, and ought to
be, about the stupid economy. All
somewhat more indictable than who
wrote what book.
More recently, violating their own
axiom of "follow the money." the
press just about missed the biggest
story so far of this election cycle: the
brilliant, massive, beneath-the-radar
·political televis ion advertising campaign run by Team Clinton in local
markets-- starting 18 months before
the election, and unanswered by
Republicans. (Documented, finally,
with great skill by journalist Bob
Woodward in his book "The
Choice.")
The list could go on and on. The
press has big problems. For one: Do
these sons of structural inaccuracies
on issues of substance (not scandal)
mostly occur on matters that would
more clearly show up in a liberal
mindsct? And if so, how level is the
playing field when by 61 percent to
9 percent Washington journalists selfidentify as liberals over conservatives?
Journalists have more to worry
about than Joe Klein.
Ben Wattenberg; a senior fellow
at the Ameritan Enterprise Institute, is the author of a new book,
"Values Matter Most," and is the
host of the weekly public television
program, "Think Tank."

•l0o1umbusla1o

an "education president."
Education is an issue. along with
Clinton's education initiatives this Medicare, health care, and the enviyear include a $5 billion proposal to ronment, on which pol,ls show
repair decrepit school buildings, a $2 Democrats enjoying a huge advantage over Republicans.
Clinton seems to be concentrating
on it not only because he believes that
billion plan to connect schools lo the it's the best answer to the challenges
Internet, an $8 billion scholarship of the new economy. but because votprogram to enable high school grad- ers indicate they arc more worried
uates to go to college for at least two about their children's ability to mainyears, and an effort to train teachers tain a better standard of living than
in education technology .
their own.
In addition, Clinton has proposed
Polls indicate lhat in spite of
a tuition taK deduction for post-sec- widespread publicity about corporate
ondary tuitions and has passed major downsizing, surprisingly few voters
education bills such as Head Start think they arc in danger of losing
expansion and lhe Goals 2000 stan- their own jobs.
dards-and-testing law.
But when asked whether they
In a recent Minneapolis speech, expect their children to enjoy a highDole claimed that Clinton has based er standard of living than their own,
his education agenda on helping only 41 percent of voters said "yes"
" producers" like teachers unions in NBC/Wall Street Journal polls this
and bureaucrats, whereas Dole 's year, compared with 60 percent in
agenda will be aimed at empowering 1990.
"consumers," including students and
Moreover, Clinton's initiatives
parents.
seem designed to appeal to a huge
In Milwaukee, Detroit and Cleve- bloc of vote" -- up to one-quarter of
land, Dole will make the legitimate the total electorate -- which has
case that pri vale school vouchers, attended college, but not graduated.
charter schools, and other "choice" Polls indicate that this group -relca~c .''
vehicles can help inner-city children "some college," in shorthand -- leans
Dole is doing somerhing similar, even more than suburban youngsters. Republican.
though -- conccntraltng on education
Aides say that Dole will propose
Meantime. Clinton also is trying
proposals. In a series of Midwesl a series of school choice pilot plans, to shore up his standing on crime and
appearances, Dole is trying to occu- which sure ly will be opposed by drugs. areas in which Republicans
py territory where Clinton is weak b~ Clinton in deference to the National have a distinct lead. Crime rates have
emphasizing the value of parental Education Association , which strong- been falling, but experts agree that
choice in improving the schools. bur . ly backs him and other Democrats youth crime is exp loding , so Clinton
Clinton already has gone a long way despite an effort to appear more has come up with a series of initiain cementing a ·reputation for being bipartisan .
tives to crack gangs. control truancy,

Creators Syndicate

WASHINGTON -- The Clinton
presidency has spawned a jumble of
enle!1ainments, including the parlorgame exercise of trying to identify
Bill Clinton's real. true soul. Is the
man a subterranean liberal or a misunderstood New Democrat? ·
The administration whispered the
answer last week at a meeting in
Geneva. Switzerland. Timothy Wirth,
the undersecretary of slate for global affairs, committed the United
States to an agreemenL that probably
will require the US. economy to generate 10 percent less carbon dioxide
in 2010 than it did in 1990, even
though the nation's population will
have grown 25 pen:ent.
· Wirth said the deal ·set the stage
for the "the most complicated scientific, environmental, economic and
political challenge in history. "Think
of it as a Gringo Gulag: A future pres-

ident would have the invigorating the government would have to
duty of forcing hundreds of millions impose a tax of 60 cents per gallon
of Americans to accept changes that JUSt to hold carbon emissions at
will crimp their lives and cripple their 1990 levels and would have to slap a
futures --all because Bill Clinton cut 50-percent price hike on heating oil.
a deal that made environmentalists If the administration accepts the prohappy during the 1996 election sea- posal to reduce pollution 10 percent.
son.
the price hikes could double.
Consider some key features of the
Businesses either would have to
treaty. The United States, virtually pay gigantic fees or move to places
alone among major economic pow- that impose no such levies. That
ers, would accept binding limils on would be a no-brainer for manufacemissions from fossil fuels -- the turers: Heavy industries would head
source of 85 percent of our energy. for places such as India and China,
Our European competitors would which have large. low-wage labor
not suffer similar restraints. They pools and would not have to abide by
merely would have to achiev. such the anti-pollution pact. Ironically,
reductions as a continent. And devel- such a shift simply would shift jobs
oping economies, including Korea and pollution from one part of the
and China, wouldn't have to change plane! to another.
their behavior at all. The documenl
The govemmCDt has another
doesn't apply to the.w.
' option, of course. It could resist the
The agreement would raise the temptation to tax and create a
price of everything ·- instantly. A rationing system, instead. If you
.DRIIMcGra\1 Hill study estimates wanted to use energy, you'd have to

p~y for a permit. This would give the
government life-or-death power over
Stx~sevenths of the eco~omy --a sure
rcc1pe for mega-corruption. If we
can't run a food-sta111p program without extensive fraud , can you imagine·
what would happen with a system.
that would bring energy under Wash- :
ington's amh?
This agreement1quietly negotiated far away fr?m the tunnoil of presIdential pohucs, ensures recession
and oppression -- without the benefit of representation. Congress and
the White House haggled for a
decade over the provisions of the
Clean Air Act extension of 1992. This
ume around, lhe Clinton cadres
~voided unpleasantness by misleadIng key players on Capitol Hill.

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Reported dog bite probed

·Sandra K. ·Kemp

Middleport Police and other county officials are investigating an
apparent dog altack on a 6-year-old boy at a Middleport resid~nce
Wednesday afternoon.
Craig Capehart, 6, Middleport. was apparently attacked by a rottweiler at the Ben Harris residence on Cole Streei. according to a Mid·
dleport Police Department spokeswoman.
Officials have no idea why the dog went after the boy, neighbors
considered il a relatively tame dog, the spokeswoman added. Children
were playing at the ·residence at the time.
Capehart was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy by the Middleport squad of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service where he waa treated for bites and released, accord·
ing to a hospital spolceswoman.

Sandra Kay Kemp, 48, of Leon, W. Va., died Wednesday, July 24, 1996,
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Sept. 3, 1947, in Beckley, W.Va., she was a daughter of the late
William P. James and Iva Fern James.
She was a housewife and member of the Christ Episcopal Church.
Surviving are her husband, John Kemp; three sons, Richard L. Meadows of Lumberton, NC, Raymond "Rocky" Meadows of Huntington, W.Va..
Charles D. Kemp of Greenville, SC; four daughters. Darlene K. McKinney
of Baltimore, Md, Lorraine F. Defino of Fairfield, Va, Lisa M. Meadows
and Nancy J. Kemp, both of Leon; four brothers; two sisten; and eight grand.
children.
'
·so.
A memorial service will be held Friday, I :30 p.m. , at the Sunshine
Extended romast
Freewill Baptist Chun:h, Huntington, with the Rev. Carl' Lilly ofti¢iatin~. ·
Saturday and Sunday.. :Dry. Lows
There will be no calling hours. The Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home, Pomt
in the mid 50s to lower 60s and highs Pleasant, is in charge of arrangements.
in the mid 70s to lower 80s.
Monday...Dry. Lows in the 50s
and highs in the mid 70s to lower RO.

Today's weather ~orecast
Southeastern OhiO
Today... Mostly cloudy with a 30
percenl chance of showers and thunderstonns. High in the.lower 80s.
West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low near
60. West wind 5 to I0 mph.
Friday... Partly clou~y. High near

Reginald Howard Wills, 80, of Point Pleasant, W. Va., died Wednesday.
July 24, I996. at the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point
Pleasant.
·
BornApril22, 1916, in Vanwood, W.Va., he was a son of the late Howard
M. and Effie L. (Workman) Wills. He was also preceded in death by his wife,
Ruth Eliiabeth (Music) Wills.
He retired, after 26 y~s, from the Mason County School System, where
he was a school teacher. He was also a retired professional songwriter for
Queen Music Publishing Company and had been a professional vocal record·
ing arti~t and songwriter for Cool Records in New York. City. He had per. fonned as a professional acrobat with the Dixie Model Shows.
A U.S. Anny veteran of World War II, he was a member of the Kappa
Sigina Kappa ·Fraternity at Morris Harvey College (now University of
Charleston), Teachers of America, Songwriters Association and The Art
Guild.
.
Surviving are two sisters, Juanita D'Agne~ of Loraine; Jaqueline V. Tucker of Baltimore, Md., and a brother, Paul Wills of Port St. Lucie, Aa.
Services will be Saturday, I I a.m., at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
with Dr. James Wagner officiating. Entombment will be at the Tyler Mountain Memorial Gardens, Cross Lanes, W. Va..
Friends may call at the funeral home Friday,-6 to 9 p.m.
The family requests no flowers and that donations be made to the American Cancer Society, in care of Grace Somerville, Rt. I, Box 726. Point Pleasant, W. Va .. 25550.

mid~50s to low 60s.
By The Associated Press
The ·record-high temperature for
High pressure is building into
this da~ at the Columbus weather
Ohio just in time for the weekend.
That means mostly dear skies, dry station ; was I04 degrees in 1934
air and temperatures around 80 while the record low was 52 in I 911 .
·Sunset; tonight will be at 8:52 p.m.
degrees.
Showers and thunderstonns and su'!fise Friday at 6:25 a.m.
should move out of the state tonight, Ae~the nation
Skies were misty in much of the
the National Weather Service said.
A area of eastern.Ohio \Vas under Eas1 at daybreak today, while the
. a flood watch today becaU§!l of fore- desert Southwest was already sweltering and thunderstonns moved
. casts of heavy rain.
across
southeastern Texas and southLows tonight were to be in the
eastern Nell.&gt; Mexico.

-Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSows: steady to finn.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S . 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 40.00buying points ThursdaY,JIS p,rovilfed, ~2.00f$'0Q-,!i,SO Ibs. "~-~.SO, few
by the u.s. DepartlnCnt 1of'Agilcul- 47.oo.IIJI,.
· . · ·.
ture Market News:
·.
Boars: 36.00-37.00.
.
Es_timated receipts: 35,000. .
· Barrows and gilts: steady to linn;
Prices from The Producers Lrvedemand modemte on a moderate_
movement.
- slack ASsociation:
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 Ibs. 57.00Cattle: steady.
.. 59.00, few 59.50-60.00; plantS 58.50.
Slaughter steers: chotec 62.00. 60.50, few 60:75.
70.75; select 57._00-62.00._
U.S. 2-3, 230.260 Ibs. 50.00Slau~hter be1fers: chmce 60.00. 57.00.
68.50; select 55.00-60.00.

.Meigs announcements .

Meigs EMS.logs 10 calls
Units of the Meigs Cobnty Emer- Melissa Holley, VMH;
I I :02 ·a.m .• Locust Street, Jessica
gency ~edical Service reco!ded I 0
calls for assistance Wednesday Fisher to VMH helipad pending
including two transfer · calls. Units transfer to Children's Hospital via
MedAight helicopter ambulance.
responding included:
RACINE
COLUMBIA VFD
12:33 p.m., Si~th Stree~ !-lilton
3:31 p.m., state Route 689 and
Wolfe
Sr., VMH.
·County Road I, utility pole fire.. '
TUPPERS
PLAINS
MIDDLEPORT
6:28
a.m.,
volunteer fire departI: I 3 p.m., Cole Su-iet, Craig
ment
assisted
Coolville with rekinAllen, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
dled
tire;
POMEROY
•
.
5:33p.m., Callaway Ridge, Lester
4:30a.m., East Main Street, Mary ·
Hawk,
St. Joseph's Hospital.
Persons. VMH;
,,
. 10:32 a.m., Powell's Parkin)! Lot,

Divorces and dissolutions
Holbert Calaway, Coolville, July 23;
June M. Arnold, Langsville, and
Gerard Bernard Arnold, Pomeroy,
July I 8; Kimberly K. Slout and
George C. Stout, both of Albany, July
17; David Lee Camp, Mason, W.Va.,
and Vicky Jo Camp, Middleport.
Divorces asked -- William James
. .'
Mahaffey, Albany, from Coleen
The
Sentinel M.Jhaffey, Lancaster, July 17; Victo-~ .._""
n'!"
a L. Vancooney from Wilbur L.
, (USPUI3o91101
Vancooney, botlt of Racine.
Publiobe&lt;l ""'Y .,.....,.., Monday tl!rooah
Dissolution granted -- Ruth M.
Fridol, Ill c..n s... Pommoy, Oltlo. by t!&gt;e
Moore
and Bobbie R. Moore, July 8:
Ollkl \Iiiiey l'ltblllhtnJ Co~yiOID!IOit Co..
Pc""'"Y· Oltio 45769. Pit 992-21l6. Secot1d
Joseph E. Kuhn and Melinda L.
clu•.l*taF p,aid ai~Jon:leto)'. Obio.
Kuhn, July 8; Sherry A. Ridenour and
John L., Ridenour, July 8; Denver ·
M.,.llon The AooociiiiOd Pmo, and dto Ollio
--~
, I'·' Russell Persons and Mary (\;. Per.
~Sctl&lt;l-•-..t..... . sOils, July 8; -'~heri tyilil Chevalier
The Dilly Senditd, Ill Coon $1.. 'Pocnlroy,
and R*ck Lynn ~valier, July 22. .
Olrio 45769. ·
:
·•• ~ Divottes Sl'ln~ -- Julia Murphy
S~N IIATI8 -' ';
aftd Johri Edward Mlirphy, July 8;
Michael L. Bing and Diana L. Bing,
One Week. ...............................................$2.00
July II; Carol D. Parker and Thomas
~:.
~:::;:::::::::::~::s·i::: M. Parker, JulyliS; Steven P. Coffman and Denise L. Coffman, July I7.
SINGLII COPY PRICB

The following actions to end marriage have been filed this month in
·the office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer:
' Dissolutions asked -- Patricia
Lynn Calaway, Belpre, and Ernest

· Youtb football sign up
The Big Bend Youth Football
League will hold their annual sign up
Saturday, from 9:30a.m.- I p.m., in
front of Locker 219, N. Second
Avenue, Middleport. The league is
open to Meigs and Mason County
youths in grades.4-6. For more infor·
mation, call 992-3486.
No entertainment
There wjll be no entertainmenl at
Star Mill Park Saturday night.
Reunion set
The 60th annual Elisha Stover and
Lillie Mae Casto family reunion will
be held Aug. 4 at noon at the Cedat
Lakes Park Shelter 3, Ripley, W. Va.

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mnit In ldVM&lt;O diiOCI 10 Tlie Dolly Saoinel
;,, t....._ oix or 12 mondl bolla. Credit win be

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- none.
Wednesday di~haraes - Martha
Hypes, Langsville.
-'
·

Jivco atrricreoch-.
No oub~&lt;ripcioo by JUiJ pomliaed in .,..
..,_ home ........ """:"~ •••11•1&gt;11.
MAIL SUIICIIP.I'IONI

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I . Write Tony s-, Creamn Syn. :
tlieate, S7T1 West Century Blvd. .

7
00, Los Angeles, Calli. :

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13 - ........... - .... -------··---... Sl7.30.

215-------· ·--------~------··--.m.a

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Reunion set
The 60th annual Elisha Stover and
Lillie Mae Casto family reunion,
Aug. 4, noon, Cedar Lakes Park,
Shelter 3, Ripley, W.Va.

A Pomeroy man was cited as the result of a two-car accident at the
intersection of Mulberry Avenue and Second Street Thesday morning,
according to Pomeroy police chief Gemld Rought.
According to reports, the accident occurred at 10:30 a.m. Anthony L. Perry; 47. Pomeroy was stopped at the intersection in his 1995
Ford Truck, when he began to back up because he felt he ~as too far
out in the intersection.
Perry began to backup and struck a 1985 Chevy driven by Judith
A. Smith, 41, Racine . Perry advised police that he checked his mirrors and did not see a vehicle behind him just before the accident.
Heavy damage was recorded to the front end of Smith's vehicle.
No damage was reported to Perry's truck.
Perry was cited for improper backing.

Guest speaker slated
John Elswick, ·evangelist, will
speak at the Hobson Christi~n Fellowship Church in Middleport Sunday, 7:30p.m. Pastor Clyde Henderson invites all.
Sodalset
The Wilkesville Presbyterian
Church will have an jce cream social
Aug. 3 from 4 to 6 p.m. al the church
located on. High Street. Other food
will also be served.

Deer/vehicle collision reported
No ifliuries were reported followinaa deer/vehicle collision

on Bashan Road in Chester Townlhip earlier this morning.
Chris E. Hupp, 35, RaCine, was northbound when a deer
struck his 1988 Chevrolet pickup truck, causing light damage, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report .

Eastern board...

conunuedfrompage I

- approved the purchase of two purpose of hirin~ personnel, discusadditional portable radios for the dis- sion of the renewal of the emergency
trict transportation fleet radio system. operations levy, and any other need- approved the membership of the ed business.
Superintendent and the Board Treasurer 10 their respective professional
Ol(!anizations: BASA and OASBO.
- accepted the following bids for
~ransportation and heating supplies:
Malone
Warehouse
Tire, '
Tires!i'ubcs/Retreads: BP Oil, Gasoline/Diesel/Heating; Burlile Oil,
Qua rts/B u I k/Tr an s mis sion
Oil/Grease.
- approved Hannah Celeste Pratt,
James Paul Harmon, and Andrew
Vance as Open Enrollment students
for the 1996--97 school year.
- approved the Technology Plan,
as presented by the Technology Committee and Technology Coordinator.
- entered into an agreement with
Future Now, Inc. to supervise wiring
and installation of Schoolnct and
Schoolnet Plus computers .
- approved professional growth
request from Steve Jewell as per
Master Agreement.
- approved Lester Stewart a&lt; casual labor to be used on an as-needed
basis.
- approved payment for tutoring
services.
The board will meet in special session on Wednesday, August 7. 6 p.m.,
in the hi&amp;h school cafctoria, for the

ARNOLD SCHWAAZENEOOEA
' IN

FRI., SAT., SUN.
HELEN HUNT, BILL PAXTON

ERASER.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
EDDIE MURPHY IN

IN

TWISTER,.."
Hymn sing·planned
A hymn sing and picnic will be
held at the J:lysell Run Holiness

AND
ARNOLD
SCHWARZENEOGER IN

THE NUTTY
PROFESSOR ~·
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

ERASER•

Stocks

44&amp;oOt23

44&amp;-1088

Am £Ie Power .......................42'1.
Akzo ......................................64\
Aahlend 011 ...........................38'1.
ATitT .....................................51'.4
Bank One .............................. 33\
Bob Evan• ................. ~.......-".11~ .

Let .UI crelfe
• .11181f1Difai-

ao,..wem..: .........................M~

_Champion tnd .......................17'4

5
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JIIII for you!

1ng Shop ......................8\

ttoldlng ..........................21~
I Mogul .......................18l
Gennett .................................84'1.

GoodyearTitR ....................... ,43

K...,..rt ..................................... 10

Unda End.............:...............1f'lt
Umited 11\C ........... ~ ...............11\

Peoples Baneorp...................22
Ohio Valley Bank....................36

One Valley.............................34'1.

Rockwell ..............................50\
Prem Flnl ............................... 12'1t
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 150'1.
Shoney'a lnc...........................e'.4
Star Bank .........................- ..71'1.

-Holler Medlc:al Center
WendY lnt'l, ...........~·····-· ......17\
~ Jnly 24 _;_ 'Robert ': Wcirtlilngton Ind.....~-.....:..~18'1.
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Stock ~ tM 10:
~
Blrdll - Mr. and Mn. David j.
Lm.
QUOtes
bJ
Advnt
Bush, daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and
Of Galllpolll.
Mn. Donald Krine, son, Oak Hill.
(Publilbed with permlls!On)
.

Church, Saturday, 5 p.m. There will
be a covered dish picnic preceding
the sing.
Singers are welcome, those attending
arc to take lawn chairs.

Club to meet
Bargain days set
Rutland Garden Club will have its
Old fashioned bargain days will be
annual picnic at the home of Mrs. held at the Oils Center, Market Stree~
Stephen Jenkins. Monday at6 p.m. A Parkersburg, Aug. 9 from 10 a.m. to
tour of the garden will be held pre- 6 p.m. and Aug. 10 from 9 a.m. to 5
ceding the picnic.
p.m. The sale will feature booths set
up by area retailers, local non-profit
Blblesehoolaanouneed
agencies and crafters. Profits will go
The Fellowship Church of the to support non-profit services in the
NIIZIII'Cne, Reedsville,. will hold Bible Mid-Ohio Valley.
.
school, Aug. S-9, 6 to 8:30 p.m.

Daily

g:

Man cited in Pomeroy accident

Reginald H. Wills

·High pressure will
produce dry weekend

Clinton deal will raise price of everything in future By TONY SNOW

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track guns sold to juveniles. and help
local jurisdictions impose curfews.
Republicans have critici7.cd Clinton for downgrading the war on
drugs , but lhis year he appointed
retired Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey
as White House drug czar, reinvigorated the c7.ar's office, and instituted
a policy of evicting first-time drug
offenders from public housing.
Other Clinton policy initiatives
include endorsement of a constitutional amendment giving crime victims and their families standing in trial proceedings, a proposal to extend
the Family and Medical Leave Act
allowing parents lime off from work
for school visits atid other parental
duties, a pension portability act, and
national registries of sex offenders
and "dcadbcal dads ."
Clinton also has indicated he will
sign legislation barring recognition of
gay marriages, has pledged to balance
the federal budget, and is promising
to sign a GOP welfare refonn bill -all of which now makes 39 percent of
the electorate label Clinton as a
"moderate," compared with 37 'per;
cent who view him as "liberal,"
according to a CBS/New York Times
survey.
Republicans claim that Clinton's
promises arc empty, but they seem to
work· with the people, 60 percent of
whom believe that Clinton "cares"
about their needs, compared with 43
percent for Dole. Dole clearly needs
to lhink more about pol icy.
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor or Roll Call, tbe newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)
·

Morton Kondracke

I

I
I

A Pomeroy youth was treated and released at a Columbus area hospital after colliding with a stationary car while riding her bike on Locust
Street Tuesday morning, according to Pomeroy police chief Gerald
Rought.
According to reports, the atCidenl occUlTed at I I :02 a.m. Tam ilene
K. Pettit, 38, Pomeroy said she saw Jessica Pisber, 7, Pomeroy riding
a bike toward her vehicle on Locust Street. Pettit brought her 1990
Ford Bronco to a stop, but was struck head on by Fisher's bike after
Fisher was unable to come to a stop.
Fisher was tnnsported to Veterans Memorial H01pital by a Pomeroy
squad of the Meiss County Emergency Medical Service prior to being
uansported by MedPiight helicopter to Children's Hospital'in Columbus, where she was treated and .released around 3:30p.m., according
to a hospital spokesman.
Damage to Pettit'~ vehicle was light. No citations were issued in
the accident.

MARIETTA (AP) - A company sion of Surface Water.
that is trying to renew its wastewater
"This doesn't mean Elkem Metals
discharge pennit has been fined hasn't been in compliance all tbe
$121,933 by the Ohio Envitonmen· time," Wells said. "It means that
tal Protection Agency for exceeding since October 1991 , Elkem Metals
its discharge limits.
has had months when it wasn't in
Elkem Metals Co., which opemtes compliance."
an alloy plant between Marietta and
The EPA issued the fine on July
Belpre along the Ohio River, lias not I 2. Plant Manager Russ Craig indibeen in compliance since October cated that the company will comply
1991 , iaid Steve Wells, an environ- · with any EPA orders. The company
mental specialist for the EPA's Divi· has until Aug. 12 to pay its line.

.:;) ' . ,,&gt;,, ;;_v::.. t . ~

Clinton far ahead on policy front
By Morton Kondracke
President Clinton not only enjoys
a big lead over Bob Dole in opinion
polls, he's also far ahead on the policy front, unveiling new proposals at
the rate of two or three per week that
aides say eventually will amount to
a full second-tenn agenda.
Clinton's legislative proposals and
eKecutive actions position him as an
ideological centrist, but also are
designed to appeal to voters worried
that they and !heir children won't be
able to compete in the new high-tech
economy.
Playing catch-up, Dole has designated July as "policy month," culminating in the unveiling of his
growth-oriented tax cut plan. Clinton,
by contrast, has been unveiling policy proposals all year, including targeted taK cuts and education, workplace, and anti-crime initiatives.
Republicans on the House Budget
Committee are tracking the Clinton
proposals with the intention of crilicizing their cost, while at the same
time GOP leadership aides say that
Clinton is "rrivializing lhe presidency'' by u'nleashing a stream of initiatives "hoping to get a one-day press

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 25, 199&amp;

PageA2

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Thursday, July 25, 1996

·Sports

The Daily S,entiriel

•

·

NOTHING RUNS

UKEAOEERE•

Page4

crew.

The numbers: Wires and reliever Brad Willis, who came on in the
third, combined to strike out five andwalk four.
Warner and Miller combined to
strike out seven, walk four and give

up three hits. Miller (2-3) and Ken
Durst ( 1-1) had them.
Coolville's hitters were Brunty
(3-3), McCumber, Putnam (2-3),
Guess (2-4), Brent Bond, Eric Little
and Sears (all 1-2).

·llmiD&amp; ill&amp;ala

Coolvi11~ .................. 304-7=14-13-2

Village Pizza Inn ......... 102-1=4-3-2
WP-Wircs
LP- Warner

-·-·-

Rutland 3, HCM 1
ln the nightcap, three scoreless
innings went in the books with only
two runners- Rutland's Josh Napper and HCM's Derrick Grimes getting to thind in that stretch.
In the founh , HCM sent Andrew
Dennis to the hill to relieve staner
Kevin Thompson. Rutland needed
only two batters to get' the game's
first run.
Gabe Jenkins, who walked, saw
Josh Napper line Dennis' 2-1 pitch
into right field for a double that
allowed him to score.
Napper made it to third by beating catcher Nick Duncan's throw to
thind. Rutland ~as in position to
score more in that frame, especially
after Jonathan Sears went to second
uncontested during Brad Baylor's atbat. But Dennis struck out Baylor,
J.P. Varian and Josh Stanley in order
to contain the damage.
Home Care tied the game when

Thompson,'who singled and moved
to second on center fielder Gabe
Jenkins' error, scored on Duncan's
throwing error to third on a steal
attempt during Grimes' at-bat.
In the fifth, Rutland went ahead to
stay wheq J-,D. Jenkins' one-out single to right' scored Darrick Knapp.
J.D. !cnkins later scored on Napper's
· two-out single to right.
In the sixth, Rutland stranded two
runners without scoring. Then Home
Care's victory hopes were revived
when Duncan led off with a to the
right field comer. But Sears, who
was brought in to relieve Knapp in
the fifth, needed only four pitches to
get three outs and keep Duncan from
scoring.
The numbers: Knapp and Sears
combined to strike out four, issue no
walks and give up four hits, which
went to Duncan (2·3), Jeremy Turner and Thompson (both were 1-3).
Thompson, Dennis and Turner
combined to strike out seven and
walk five.
Rutland's hitters were Napper (23), Sears (1-2), J.D. Jenkins and
Knapp (both were 1-3).

IDDiD&amp; llllll

Rutland ....................000-120=3-5-2
Home Care .............. 000-100=1-4-2
WP - Knapp
LP-Dennis

-·-·-

By The Associated Press
Sometimes, it' seems the Atlanta
Braves could grab someone out of
the stands and still win .
With Steve Avery injured, the

~- Riverside

always been a staner and that's what
I like to do."
Wade (3-0) got into a basesloaded jam in the fir.t, then got Brian Jondan to hit into a run-scoring

Open results announced-

A total of 151 golfers took part in this year's Riverside Open, which was
held on July 6 and 7.
It was the tournament's 25th anniversary. The championship flight staned with 61 players, with the remaining 90 players divided into eight flights
for the 36 holes.
The players traveling the farthest to play in the tournament were AI
Poling of Baton Rouge, La. and Dave !son, who is in the United States Air
Force and stationed in Japan.
Championship ftlght
First: Steve Fox-Huntington, W.Va..................................... .... 73-69= 142
Second: David Jude-Huntington, W.Va ................................... 75-69=144
Third: Doug !son-Ashland ....................................................... 69-75=144
Founh: Bill Hess-Parkersburg, W.Va ....... :.............................. 72-72=144
Fifth: Ried Carroll-Barboursville, W.Va.................................. 7·2-73=145
Si~th: Mike Good-Charleston, W.Va ................. .. .................... 70-76= 146
Seventh: Harold Payne-Teays Valley ........................ .............. 74-72=146
Eighth: Brent Hanman-Athens: .................................... ............ 75-71=146
Niqth: Bob Ramsey-Ravenswood. W.Va ................................. H-74=147
lOth: Dave Lawerence-Nitro, W.Va ......................................... H-74=147
111/t: John Bentley-Pomeroy ................................................ 78-70:: 148
12¢: Scott Perry-Ironton .................................... ................... ...75-73~148
13th . Phol Mayes-M1lton, W.Va .... . ...................................... 75-73-148
14¢: Ron Spencer-Long Bottom .................................. .......... 73-75=148
15tjl: Tim Mount-Huntington, W.Va ...................................... 72-76=148
16t~: Mitch Roush-Mason, W.Va ............................................ 71-78=149
17t~: Todd Luster-Jackson .......... ....... ................................... 75-74=149
Eighth Right
First: Dor Ebers bach-St. Petersburg, Fla ........................ .......... 90-87=177
Secqnd: Terry Lowers-Parkersburg, W.Va ........................ 92-85=177
Third: Ron McCorkle-Jackson .................................................92-86= 178
Seventh Oight
First: Todd "Buck" Powell-Pomeroy ..................
. .... 78-85=163
Second: Danny Curry-Charleston ........................................... 85-78= 163
Thind: John Krawsczyn-Pomeroy ................................... .......... 88-78=166

Sixth flight
First: Jerry Saunders-Charleston .............. ..................... ........... 86-78=164
Second: Jeremy Blain-Pt. Pleasant ........................................... 85-82= 167
Thind: Davie Reed-Mason, W.Va ............. ,.............................. 86-82=168
Fourth: Sterling Sheids-Mason, W.Va ..................................... 85-85=170
Fifth Oight

First: Bill Zuspan-Mason, W.Va ..............................................76-73=149
Second: Tommy Jondan-Jackson
75-77= 152
Third: Tom Reynolds-Point Pleasant, W.Va ............................ 79-74=153
Founh: Mike Woods-Jackson .................................................. 79-83= 162
Fourth night
First: Stan Harris-Spencer .......... .............................................. 83-73=156
Second: Bill Roush-Henderson ................................................80-76=156
Third: H.D. Kennedy-Charleston, W.Va ........................... ....... 77-80=157
Fourth: Steve Sprout-Parkersburg, W.Va . ............................... 76-8.1=157
Third Right
First: Marshall Wooten-Pomeroy ............................................. 83-68= 151
Second: Clay Crow-Pomeroy ................................................... 76-77= 153
Third: JeffGoebei-Pomeroy .................................................... 76-8 1=157
Fourth: Bob Oliver-Mason, W.Va ............................................ 78-80=158
York lngels-Mason, W.Va .......... ..................................... 80-78=158
Second Right
"
First: Bill Adkins-Madison ............................................... ... ..... 72-77=149
Second: Ron !lachtei-Chester .............. ................................... 74-78=152
Third : Dave Bodkin-Point Pleasant, W.Va ...................... ........ 77-76=153
Fourth: Fo~terGrindstead-New Haven , W.Va ......................... 81-74=155
AI Poling-Baton Rouge La ................................................ 78-77=155
First flight
First: Tommy Damron-Jackson ............................... .... ........... 73-76=149
Second: Chris Kroger-Spencer, W.Va.. ................................ .:77•73=150
Third: Curry Haggerty-Millon. W.Va ..................................... 76-78=154
Fourth: Ray Karr-Chester ......................................................... 77-78=155

Scoreboard
TeliiiJ (Oliver 8·31 :n Chicaao (Alvarez
12-!J. 8 : 0~ p.m.
Botlon (Clemens 4-91 :n Minnesota
tRlldke l-1)). 8j)! p.!fl.
MilwiWkee (D'Amico .\·2) at California(D. Sprinaer0:-0), 10:05 p.m.
Detro1t (!aaer 2-1) ur S~ttle (Hitl.!h·
&lt;&lt;&gt;&lt;k 9-41. IO:Ol p.m.

Baseball
AL standings
Rastrrn Olwltlon

»:

lull

L ll:L

New York . ... .......60 J9
B~llimorr .... ····· · --- ~ 49
Boston .......... .... 4~ ~·

.606
.W

. 4~~

Toronm ........ ..... ..t.Ci

~

.446

. ... Jl

70

.;\07

Derroit ....

10

,."

.10

Crnlnl 01'¥1t£on

CLEVELAND . .. 61
O.ic&lt;~go

...
...S~
Milwaukee . . ..... -- ~
Min~sot11 ........ .. 48
Kansas City .. . ...46

•o

.604

~2
~6

.480
451

46
:'&gt;0

. ~44
··~

We!ltrm Dlwlllon
Te.u J ....
.. H 44 .564
Selllil&lt; ......
. .. .54 ·~ .54~
Oaklilnd ..
.......5:\ 49 .520

Colifomi• ............ &lt;111 lJ .,7l ·

6

l102'~'~

,

2

9

o;.,.,.

New York .t. TeuJ 1

Oakl:uld ..
~
lloltot~ 12. kansas City 2

Minnaota II. 8ahimore 4
a.EVEL.ANO 10. Toro1110 0
SeAttle 8, Milwaukee 1

Yctk(-0-1). 7:35p.m.:

.

:l5r-"'·

OaktU&lt;I (Teljl\ed« 0- ) 11 Toron1o

'

Allantn ...
.. .. .. 63
Monrrcal... ........... ~[1,
Florida .............. ..... 48
New York ............. 47
Philadelphia ........ ..... ,

Teuo (Win 8-8) 11 OllcaJo (Andujor
O-Il. 8:05p.m.
Bo•ton (Waktfield 7-9lat Minnetota
(Aldred'-7). 8:05p.m.
MilwOitbe (Vaa.Epnond 0.1 ) at Califemia (Orinoley .1-6~ 10~ p.m.
Detroit (Ura 6-8} a1 Seanlt (Wolcou
6- '0:0! P... .

n

1(-. 0ty ~ 8-1) II

.6.\0

46
l2

- ~ -\~

.480
~4 .4M
60 .406

!.ill

~ Fr.u~4.-i l­

47
"9
49

- ~ -\ ~
- ~24
.48~

54

.410
.41.,

~;\

AmtricM.l.etpt
BOSTON REO SOX : Recalled INF
Bill Selby rrom Pmwtuckcl or lhc lmcrM-

tional Lea,ue.

CHIC~GO WHITE SOX Releaoed

RHP Kirk McC.Ukill. Reullled RHP Luis
} Andujar rrom Nashvi lle or the Amm~AII
'- Auodation.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Aclivatcd
RHP Dennis Manincz from lhc I ~- duy
disabled list Dnignared INF Scott lctul

American Auoclalion.

16 ~,

22'-:

I

6

•'

SUMMER CLEARANCE

0

8

'•

Sum~er "H~ng Ten~'

I
10

An~• 0

Girls

Colorado 7. New York 6 (10)
7. Son l'nn&lt;Uco t

Chi"''•

Junior &amp;Missy

Tonlcbt's pmes

(~andioU:i 6-8) 111 FJoridol

(Hom..-...d 3-!), 7.05 p. ~

Phibdelplli• (R. SJJrioaer 2-11 " Pin•bur!h (Miceli 1·6), 7:l5 p.m.
Monneal (Urbin; 4-3) 11 Sl. Louu
(Motprt l-4~ 8~ p.m.
.
· Chica&amp;o (Trachlel 8-6) 11 CoiO!IIIo
(Bailey 1· 1), 9~ p.m
.

30%,OH

Nno York

CI.EVELAMl !Striodelli-IJ llllalli.,... (Munilll tt-7). 7:35 p.tn
Oakllnd (.Yoml ~)II T.....o tGuz·
mon 9-6). ! : 3~ p.m.

''

il• • •

Guaranteed Service

111:1

992·2825

•

....
\

Small Ent!lne Repair

992-3422
~'

-~'

-~-

·.

.

'

.

)W,'r:~.S'w!iMR: No .U~Pttsis
·litre.Sltirlr)g Maltilr, u tJsuat, ran w.u at

II~GIIpfl~y. ButR
~ Matlil'• fliJI Wlr\111 wllat llel:Onlklers
-

'·'' .

For the 1\rst time 81 .- . he was

14. ro11 ~~- (14J
Wha1...,..11appenot110 Mr. POCXIIl07

3. Dato Eamhonft (3)

11 ain't winning, but he's dot1g OK

Chinks everywhere In the armor
4. Ruaty Will- (1)
..11s1 one v1e101y 1111y o1 Won&lt;letiiOy

16. Aloky cro- (11)

2. Tony ~nto (1)

Friday: Rio Grande vs. Hubbard's Greenhouse at 6 p.m. ;
Coolville vs. Rutland at 7:30p.m.
Saturday's semirmals: Tonight's
winners at 6 p.m.; Friday's victor1 at
7:30p.m.

6. Emto trvon (5)

18. Dorriu Copo (unranltodl

o. Konny Schrodor (10)

H""9 around all day fe&lt; 10111

18. _ , lloyiiiiCI (llllllnltod)
E"""''&gt;&lt;&gt;dv WlniiiNI guy
~0. LaU SpOod (Unronltod)
E~ l'llllh tor Mr. Ntco Guy
21.Morvon Shophord (ZI)

-second, dropped like • -

22. W11ty Q o - Jr. (11)

Uke teammate T841l Labonte, he
was nothing speclat
11 . Jimmy .,._.. (11)
Craahed early, 1troked It home In
24111 J)lace
12. !!lobby L.Monto (12)
~~ leUt he can uy he qualftes waM

Aoolher victim of tranorrilllon lever

23. Dtcltlllddo (23)
Could he"' boon to1 Lontlome DowJ
24.1HI !tMoa (U~
Now ho ..... lhll ptoce of junk
25. wlnlaurton (U.....-)
lJks his bmlllor. t o o t h -

Reauna1 achedule
7th &amp; Plum St.
Parkersburg, Wl'
304-424-5337
Hen 1M

prof••,._, ..r

0110
Feb. 11
Feb. 18
Feb. 25

sn.

RICO

N

POlO"

Oey1ona Beach, Fla. Mast
Day1ona Beach, Fla. Eam,_dt

Wlnnor"
Jonett

Buach Clash
Jar.. n
Day1ona 500
Goodwrench 400 Rocldnghllm, N.C. T. Labonte Earnhardt
Rlchmcnd, Yo.
T. Lalxlnte Gordon
Mar. 3 Pontiac 400
Eamhardt
Hampton, 0..
Benson
Mar. 10 Purolator 500
W. Bur10n Gordon
Mar. 24 TranSouth 400 Oarlinglon, S.C.
Marlin
Bftn)t, Ttnn.
Gordon
Mat. 31 FOOd Clly 500
Aprtl14 Flm Union 400 N. Wllkllboro, N.C. T. Lalxlnta T. Labonte
Wolace
Marllnsvtlo, Va.
Craven
olpril21 Goody'• 500
Tllllaclego. Ala.
lrvon
Matlin
April28 Winston 500
T. Labonte Walace
May 5 Save Mart 300 Sonoma. CaWI.
May 18 Winston Select Concottl, N.C.
Gonion
M. Wa""'
Jarratt
May 26 Coca-Cola 500 Concottl, N.C.
Gonion
Dover, Dol.
Gonion
Gottlan
Juna2 Miller 500
Gonion
Gordon
.luna 16 UAW:OM 500 Long Pond, Po.
Brooklyn, M~h .
Hamilton
R. WaHace
Juna 23 Miler 400
Daytona BMctl, Fla Gonion
Martin
JulyS Pepsi 400
loudon, N.H.
Craven
ltvan
July 14 Slick 50 :100
Long Pond. Pa.
'Martin
WaJiace
July 21 Miller 500
(Marlin)
(Matlin)
ra1~.AIII.
July 28 DleHaod 500
lndlanapolll
(Gonion)
(Eemhaodt)
Aug . 3 Boid&lt;yard 400
(Martin)
Aug . 11 Boo at the Glen Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Manln)
(8 . Lalxlnlo) (B. Labonte)
Aug. 18 GM Good. 400 Brooklyn. Mth.
Bf'lstol, Tenn.
(Martin)
(T. Labonte)
Aug. 24 Goody's 500
Darlington, S.C.
(And18ttl)
(Gotdon)
Sept. 1 Soulheon 500
Richmond, Va.
(Earnhaodt) (Wallace)
Stpt. 7 Miller 400
Dover, Del.
(Mall)
(Gonion)
Sept. t 5 MBNA 500
MartlnsviMe, va.
(Gordon)
(Eamhoodt)
Sept. 22 Hanas 500
Sept. 211 Holly Fanns 400 N. WMkelboro. N.C. (Musgrave) (Martin)
(Mart;n)
(Rudd)
Oct. 6 UAW·GM 500
Concottl, N.C.
(W. Burton)
Rad&lt;lnghom. N.C.
(Str~klln)
Oct. 20 AC·Otlco 400
Phoenix
(EIIIOH)
(Rudd)
Oct. 27 Dura L'ulie 500
Hampton, Ga.
(0. Wa~lp) (Earnhaodl)
Nov. 10 NA.PA 500
• Names In parenthesea ndicatrl11195 pokt and race winners.

-

STIHJ:
.................
---~

See us for Your
Stih!Power Tools &amp;
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l)ft 0/o

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St. At. 248

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Chester 985-3308

1996 points atandl!!ls
TRUCK

MilCH

WIMSTOIICU~

I. DaviciGtttn. 2,33S.

1. llt't'f Labonll. 2,531

2. D11t Eatrilard.. 2.5111.
3. Jeff Goldon. 2.451 .
4. Dd Jamtl, 2,314.

•.. S-Iolaltn.2.204.
"""'· 2.201.
O
7. K. Sdndlr. 2.131.

2. RaMI LaJoie, 2,260.
3. Todd Boclne. 2,010.
4. Jlfr GIMI1, U20.
5. Curti1Malkhlm. 1,111.

a.
""' ..,__1,&amp;3!1.
7. Jaton Kllltr, 1,804.
e. Jtfl Putvtl, 1,722.

I. IMrly'NIISIOI, 2,113.

e. Tid Mu~• . 2.040.

9. LJrry P11f101'1, 1,717.
tO. Q\Idllttll, 1,714.

10. EIYM lrnn. 2,023.

I. Ron Homadly Jr., 1,7 84.

2. Jlck SQt-IQUt, 1,7!1.
3. Mllll SWnner, t,7XI.
4. OIVt Rezlf'ldll, 1,508.
5. JoeRuiWnln, 1,457.

a.
""""' ""'"'"'· 1,43&lt; .
7. Rk* C.NII. 1,401.
I . 8utc:tl Mitt, 1.:m.
9. Bryan Rtltnlr. 1,387.

1UW. ......... ,......,.OM_,.

Olftco: lt2-54'1t
1--742-3111

..'

____"""!',.
_.,_..........,

..................
Fox: l1wt2-fi11

--

-•••,
I'

•

'

•

•

c

•

T

Meet Benny Parsons, a
former Wtnaton Cup
driver who hat
It
big In a second career.
A winner of 21 Wlneton
Cupr8CIIIndthel973
aerial enamplonehlp,
Paraona atapped out ol
1111 cockpit and Into 1111
broaclcalt booth.
Llu Nacl Jarrett and

Buddy Baker, Paraon•
hila become aa well
known tor hla televlalon
and radio commentary aa
for hla exploHa aa a
driver.
Paraona won 13 of hla
21 eventa on auperopaedwaye, InclUding the
Daytona 500 tn t 975. He
elao won zo pole a, 1Q
apiece on auperapeedWIYI and ehort tracke.
Ironically, he won only
once from the pola.
In 526 Wlnaton Cup
atarta, Paraona
ac:cumulated cerearnlnga of $3.9 million.

TJIACK: "A Cadillac."

Parson•

' tn hie champlonahlp
people just as mUCh: ·
aeaaon, Paraona won only
•
WHERE
I GO ON
one r1ca bUt turned In 15
VACATION:
"I don't know
top-five ftnlahea and 20
that
I've
ever
been on a
top.1oa.
true vacation."

Here's more about

DO IF t
COULDN'T DRIVE A
WINSTON CUP CAR:

o WHAT I WOULD

Peraona:
• AGE: 55
• SPOUSE: Terri
• CHILDREN: Kevjn, 31,
and

'When t was getting
started. Fred Lorenzen.
Then t met Richard Pelty,
who Is a prelty awesome
person."

'97 Pontiac
Grand Prix GT
See It Today At..

SMI'B

where I could get a cap Wtth I
Earnhurdt's n:Hnt! on it . He i ~ my
sun's ravoritc driver and I'd luvc
to get a cap fur hi s hir1hday, Au~ .
I.

Buick-Pontiac

1900 Easlern Gallipolis

you've got 1 quea1ion or

Thlo

Week Your Turn, c/o

Box1538, G•otonto, N.C.

28053. Your 1\orn otso may
be reached by •matting

.murrlyOg•et-pzane.com.

• WHAT I'D UKE TO
CHANGE ABOUT
MYSELF: ' I'd like to be
skinnier."
o MY PERSONAL MOTTO
IS: "I've never thought

about ~ - I guess I don't
have one."

little dcaJs
to mc!l.\ you
up. Th! 88
team (Dale

Latx&gt;nll started In third
place but blew an engine
and wound up 371!1.
TH! TRUCK SERIES
WaHace wasn't the only
008 18Aiing I ICOf8 thil

-kand. Ron Hornaday
Jr. returned to the site ot
one of hls wortt days latt season.
Loulsvlle Motor Speedway, and
r8COIIIOCI his second win of the
season. Hornaday palled polasltter Mike BNss on !he t06th tap
ll1d went on kl win.

LONG POND, Pa. - Terry
l..Gbonte knows th:u a second
Wins10n Cup ctuunpioruhip is

Jnn-ell) is

fnr from n foregone conclusion.
Locked in a dromatic batdc
wilh Jeff Goodon, tht: defending

behind,

champion, and 5even-time
~hampion Dale Earnhardt,

either.
Sterling

Labonle understand! why

nt&lt;&gt;&lt;l

see him as the dlllk horse .
But l..:lbonte wnnls :mother

not too

T. Labonte

far

Marlin has
b&lt;."Cn running slrOOg, nnd he\ fifth, so
you cun'l .uy il's down lo thn:c
teams .
.. Your stnllcgy may change
be:cnusc or lhe point~. dcp.:nding
on lhc rm:e ~,;on~ition.s . H the ~ ·
car (Earnhardt) IS ~orng to ~:omc

in and jusl get&amp;"-'· nnd you're
beating him on the: race.lmck.
that'~ going to mean he'll ~:mnc
out beating you. You've got to
keep up with what they're doing,
but we'll preuy much run our
own roce.\ ."
Evc:n Earnhardt recogniz.efi
Labunte'5 (.'OU I~s.\ . Many
c~tpcc t Labonte to lo!ie I he title,
but nol because he ~an'l take the
pressure.
··1'm not worried about

rres~ urc ,'' said Labonte ''If I've
got rue! pn:!l'\Urt omd oil
1984 is a long time ago.
pre!!i~ure, lhal 's alll'•n worried
.. Whoever wins tht: ch::unpionabout. There's a big diiTcn:nce
ship will be the guy who has the
bel ween oow and t9S4. t already
le.1St amounl of problems," he
had th:u money spen1before t
said. "It's only going to take 3
~ 1 - Thl CIMCtfl (N.C.) Clln8i• ~ 'r l.lrWINIII,.... IJ'f"IC:*
' (100'1 :IIUfM • ,_ ,..._. WMI1 of Ju1J 22

title. Even in his own mind,

.I

,,

" ern af 1118 Wltlk

doing that."

I.

Super Lotto
&amp;All Lottery
Games
Five Points
Express
Drive-Thru
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Pomeroy, Ohio
at
Five Points

• Ruaty Wallace and Rollin
Pemberton are ltl&lt;e a couple

~

, ot mad &amp;cienUIIIs. They
tinker and linker, sameumes
too much. but when they hl1

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on tha rlghl combination,

!hoy can lay waste 10 wllal

had been an ·outstanding

race. Such was tile case
al Pocono, where

Wallace was awesome
tn the closing taps. A lol
ot the credit goes to
crew chlel Pemberton
and his Penske Racing
South crew.

, S{~(C

Labonte knows he faces struggle for title
couple or

4. Emtelrvan
5. Johnny Benaon Jr.
6. Stelling Matlin
7. Jeft Gordon
6. Lake Speed
9. Mari&lt;!Aartin
10. DoqtOe Cope

Dave ext. 104
Bob ext. 105

The Gaaton Gazelle, P.O.

business. Maybe )'d sblt be

Keith, 27

992-2155

Warren,

~

don't have any idea. I
was once in the taxicab

• RECORD: 526 atarts, 21
victories, 20 poles
• FAVORITE DRIVER:

'15

o comment, wrlta: NASCAR

'I

NASCAR This Week

""'·
THE BIG OUD: Bobby

~li r,S. l 'l lr ,~

Space For
Rent

sells ulhlcllt: apparel

tut. I enjoy a mund of golf,
but t enjoy just hanging
around the ga raga area
and talking to race-car

the pole In 1 Ford ,

THE BIQ SURPRISE:
Johnny Benaon Jr.
Hnllhed Mtrln a Pontiac,
hll 1111111&gt;1 strong

Lowe~~f

This

I've heard more driven say on
TV they hnve learned u lot by
talking with Dale and a lot hy
ll'ICing with hun . To wah;h Dale
Earnhardt dn vc is a thrill that
never changes. It' s always there.
week after week. A~ f11 r a.~
NASCAR never domg anything
to him. I've seen him sent to the
back for on occidl:nt and
penaltzed more than any dnvcr
on pit road . A lot of the others
should have bc:etl , but were nor.
pullt:d bock in ror u mi ssmg lug
nut wh1ch wasn't missmg. I
could go on and on.
He 's got :~ hig hc:m fnc hl·lp1ng
other dmcrs and strangcn who
need it.
Oulc Earnhard1 ~~The Man,
The Driver ami A Legend. I'm su
gl;ad it happened 1n my hfelimc
limbo. Lte Pl!ny's days arr
over. you'rr lust in time.
Lucy

Around the garage

It-.

~

1627 M II lin ch f\v('
Parkt•r•,l1urC1 1/1/V
..+858\r,1 1 ('( I J 1~1 '' 11.1

Donnellon,
Editor's responu: Ynu
!lhould he ahlc 1t1 find an
Ellrnhurdt ~.:ar at any sturl' lh~t

TICKET: 'I don't know. I'm
sure Hwas In the state ol
Ohio. When? I'm not sure."
• WHAT I DO TO RELAX:
"My job is not very stress·

his ckJtch. This time he was perfect,
Bspecialy in the latt

Wellace

P&lt;Hk8r sbutq

Dear Yuor Tu nl ,
P l ca.~c sc11d rm inrunna1io11 un

o FIRST SPEEDING

., ...... illlllll

3. 0810 Jarren

'

• WHAT I DRIVE OFF THE .

KEY TO THE RACE :
Nko
Ford hu the advantage right now.
Of tho lop t31klllhers, 10 drovti
Thunderlllttlo. And t.lark Mat11n looil

Wallace and hla crew
kepi odJusling tho ell
LrlUI thay got " tight, than
alate caution put him In
polltion 10 ial&lt;elhe leOd.
TOP10
1. Rusty Wallace
2. Rlcl&lt;y Rudd

.

Benny Parsons
m-

Auaty Wa»ace setted 8 score
SUf'lday at Pocono Raceway.
In June, Wallace tore out of the ·
pits late In the raca and burned out

going when a mil,...
might havo glvon the
riCI to Ricky Rudd.

n

Fonner driver Benny Peraons mav be even more popular is • Winston Cup

10. Mit.l .... 1,380.

The last time out

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

won it in 'M4. I Jon'! ha ve a
penny or thi s spent."
In hi.~ third .o;cason with
H c ndri~.:k Motursp: uts , LabtiOil'
is making hi .o; rirst cnnccrtc!.l run
1U the c.: hampinnship
"In

~;ach

ur the pa."'ltwu
sCasons. wc · ve dug a prcn y goud
hole for our.~ lvcs in thl: spring
that we just co uld not get nul ur
in term.~ of the points race,.. he
said. ''Thi s sca.o;on we've really
~:nncentrutcd on qualifYi ng better
and imprnving nur cunsi&lt;otcnc.:y.
C!!ifXd&lt;~ ll y in thc first half ohhc
sea..wn so we wuld 1nakc il tu
this pomt nnJ be in good
position to tn:tk.c u run at the
title."

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watPr analysis

f----------------~~-=~~~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~---r

!
THREE REGISTERED PIIAiiMACISTS

Third place aOld he drops a spot

No pole, a nonor!lly foom Fri&lt;lay on
17. Gooft Bodlno (17)
Maybe ono day ho'l doIOfTIIwhet e other than Pocono

1

20%

Jfle Plait for Work a11f Wt1ftr11

1"1• ••,..,_ _

(an . the most lhrilling. CXCIItng ,
intell igent driver out there IS
Dale Earnhnrdt.

15.M-Wo~(15)

Uke it or not, he'e baaack ...
7. Sll~lnt Martin (7)
And we're headed back to Talladega
8. Ricky RU&lt;ICI (I)
Cloae again, but no ctgar
9. Marl! Mor1tn (I)
The clol!011 he's come to winning

I

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,.

5. Dato Jonwtt (4)

double play and fanned Gary Gaet- run and moving the Rockies into first
ti.
place in the NL West.
Brad
Clontz
and
Greg
Colorado, which overcame a 4-1
McMichael each followed with two deficit, completed a three-game
perfect innings, with McMichael sweep. Walt Weiss took a leadoff
getting his second save.
walk in the lOth from Paul Byrd ( 1"This was a lift for the pitching 2), Andres Galarraga was intentionstaff: Wade filled in for Avery and ally walked with two outs and CastilMark Wohlers got a night off," la hit a-drive that nearly landed on
Braves manager Bobby Cox said.
the warning track.
Javier Lopez and· Ryan Klesko
Curtis .Lcskanic (7-3) pitched the
homered for the Br~ves, who com- lOth for the win.
pleted their second three-game
Marlins 3, Dodgers 0
sweep this season at Busch Stadium.
Kevin Brown (9-8 ) allowed six
Lopez was 4-for-4, including two hits in eight shutout innings and
singles and a double.
Gary Sheffield tied a club record
Cardinals starter Alan Benes ( 10- .with his 27th homer.
.
6), who had won three in a row; gave : Robb Ncn, who relieved after
up four runs and six hits in six Mike Piazza's leadoff single in the
innings.
1 ninth, struck out the side at Joe RobIn other games, Houston beat San bie Stadium for his 20th save, helpDiego 6-4 in 10 innings, Colorado ing the Marlins to their seventh win
beat New York 7-6 in 10 innings, in 10 games.
Florida beat Los Angeles 3-0, ChicaHideo Nomo (I 0-9) gave up three
go beat San Francisco 7-1 and Pitts- hits in seven innings, struck out five
burgh beat Montreal 5-4.
(See NL oo Paee 6)
Astros 6, Padres 4
Pinch-hitter Ray Montgomery
won the game at the Astrodome with Save
Everyday
his first major league home run, a
two-run drive in the lOth off Ron
MIDDLEPORT
Villone (0-1 ).
Houston tied the score in' the ninth
DEPARTMENT STORE
on Jeff Bagwell's two-out RBI double off Trevor Hoffman, who blew a
save for the sixth time in 28 chances.
Xavier Hernandez (3-4) pitched
the lOth for the victory.
San Diego's John Flaherty
Save a minimum ot 20%
off manufacturer's list
e~tended his hitting streak to 25, the
pnce everyday,
longest in the majors this year.
Rockies 7, Mets 6
• Vinny Castilla singled over ceol '•]li'
I
" , J•J • )
t I
·, 1:
ter fielder Carl Everett in the lOth at
Coor. Field, driving in the winning

See Us Today.,.

/l'tli•r I• ,.~

PrleesonNI-n
(;an A Tracks

Delli Your Tum ,
In reg;mls to Jim Starbock ·s
leuer. acc1dtnts happen in auto
racing week artcr week . I know
everyone can ' I be un Eamhurdr
fllll . but •f you are truly a r.tl:t' c:ar

Weekly rali&lt;lnga by thO NASCAR Thll W8ek Wflter Monte Dunon. La!t
- · · IIUlklng Is 01 parentheses.
13. JOhnny Bonoon Jr. (20)
1. Jell GoniOn (2)
Made the beat of a bad day
Slartlng 1o roafizo his polonltal

nothing special

Quarterfinals tonight
Here is what's on the quanerfinal
agenda.
Tonight: Point Pleasant Hardware vs. Mason Athletics at 6 p.m. ;
Little Hocking vs. Gallipolis Yankees at 7:30p.m ..

•

i\bsolute

JENKINS SCORES - As Home care Medical catcher Nick Duncan (right) watches the throw from second baeeman Adam Wataon
get by him, Rutland's Galle Jenkins gets up from the plate after acorlng on Josh Napper's double In the fourth Inning of Wednesday
night's K!fger Creek Little League Tournament second-round game.
Rutland, which never trailed, went on to win 3-1 and earn a spot In
Friday's quarterfinals against Coolville. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

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Transactions

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PinsburJh .1, MOMOII 4
Houston 6, San Oicao 4 ((OJ

(Fieoer~l- 7:3Jp.m.

Fr!U)"apma

37

Ctnlnl DhlskJn

Sr Loois .. .......... ~
Houston .. ....... .... ~
CINCINNATI .....48
Chicaao .......... .... "7
PimburJh"..... .. .... 4~

Ftoridll'.l. Lo1

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SQII Fr.n~~o:iko ...... ..43 51 ...)()

Wtdllelday'sSCGns

New York' (Wilson 4-S) al CINCINN~TI (Smiley 8-9), 7:ll p.m.
Monueal (fassero 9-7) :u Sl. Louit
(Oibome 9-.1), 8:0l p.m.
Los Anaelcs (AstDCio 4-7) Ill Housron

(frunun !-6). 9:M p.m.

NL standings

l~ i:

4 'r:

bur&amp;h CN&lt;qi&lt; 12·4), 7:31p.m.

461 SOUTH THIRD

IaxonI

A.-os and Rockies also win

BraveS' gave rookie Terrell Wade his . 4-1.
first major league start. Wade
"I've been looking forward to
allowed just one run and two hits in this day, and I was ready when I got
five innings Wednesday night and the chance," Wade said. "I want to
Atlanta beat the St. Louis Cardinals help the team any way I can, but I've

Starting at

You've Got OUHtlona, We've Got Answn.

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·In other NL action,

·araves beat Cardinals 4-1;

ttt\... COUlJ{p- ltad~elllaeK

992-2196

Service
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Parts
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 5
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MUFFLER SHOP

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668 Pinecrest Drive
Across from Ga!Ha Auto Sales on old Ate. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon. - Fri. &amp;-5; Sal. 8-3

Coolville ·and Rutland notch victories
Miller, who reached on an infield
single, tagged up on Ed Wroten's
sacrifice fly. Coolville center fielder
Darren Bond's throw to thind was
beyond" the reach of third baseman
Jason McCu111ber. Miller scored seconds later.
After a scoreless second, Putnam
came to the plate with one out. He hit
Warner's first pitch beyond the left
field fence in neatly the same area.
But Coolville wasn't finished scormg.
With two out, Matt Brunty, the
junior Lancers' No. 7 hitter, singled
to center to score McCumber. Later,
No. 9 hitter Brent Bond's single to
right scored Brunty and Clint Sears
to put Coolville ahead 7-1.
VPI scored two in the bottom of
the third (an error b,y McCumber
allowed Miller to score; later on, a
bases-loaded walk to Jeremy Hussell
sen t Wroten home and cut
Coolville's lead to 7-3).
But Coolville's seven-run riot in
the founh and VPI's failure to produce at least two runs in its half of
the founh result~ in a mercy-nlle
win for the east Athens County

II

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

In the Kyger Creek L.L. Tournament,

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
. In the conlclusion of secood' round play in. the Kyger Creek Lit. tie League Tournament Wednesday,
· night, Coolville defeated Point Pleas: ant Village Pizza Inn 14-4 before
· Rutland Furniture knocked off Point
: Pleasant Home Care Medical 3-1 at
: the Kyger Creek Employees Club
: field near Cheshire.
Notes: Wednesday night's deci. sions insured that each of the five.
: counties sending tean\s to this dia. mondfe.st - Athens, Gallia, Meigs
and Washington Counties in Ohio
and Mason County, W.Va. - was
represented by at least one team
goi ng into tonight's quanerfinal
round .
VPI's mercy-rule loss gave teams
w1th first-round byes a 2-5 record in
this tournament.
Coolville 14, VPI 4
. The opener was a four-inning
· affair that featured homers in back. to-back at-bats from Coolville
: cleanup hitter Jason Putnam.
In the first inning, Putnam, having watched teammates Zach Wires
: andJ.J. Guess get on with a walk and
· a single, respectively, launched the
· first offering by VPI staner Matt
· Warner at least I0 feet beyond the
· left field fence.
VPI trimmed Coolville's 3-0 lead
· in the bottom of the first. Chris

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

290 •• 2nd

992-3614
' II

I

:I
'I

II
'

' ..

r

i

.

�'1

.Page 6 • The Dilly Sentinel
(

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 25, 1996

· In the Olympics,

After surviving Injury to Burba's shoulder,

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -It was
the kind of game [}dve Burba, and
the Cincinnati Reds, would have lost
two months ago.
' These days, Burba and the Reds
are changed for the better. And
instead of a loss, they survived some
adversity to post a 3-1 victory over
the Philadelphia Phillies Wednesday
afternoon, giving them a sweep of
the four-game series.
Burba, who started the season (}.
8, overcame a line drive to his
pitching shoulder, some questionable
calls and a ·nap over a resin bag to
record his founh straight win and

TORONTO (AP)- So much for
Dennis Martinez's nervousness
about coming back from the disabled
list.
Returning Wednesday night after
his first DL stint in I0 years, the
Cleveland righthander pitched five
, innings of three-hit ball to lead the
Indians to a 10-0 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays.
"I was nervous. I didn't know
how to react," he said about his
return to action. "It was unusual for
me : I got bored during those days on
the disabled list so I joked around
with the guys. I don't experience this
too often."
But while on the DL, Martinez
didn't waste much time.
"He was running every day, and
I've never seen him run like that,"
teammate Omar Vizquel said. "I
wasn't surprised by what he did on
.the mound."
Martinez (9-5) strained the flexor tendon in his right elbow after
going three hitless innings against ·
the White Sox in Chicago on June 28 ·
and was put onto the DL for just the
fourth time in his career.
Wednesday night, Maninez
struck out two, walked two and
retired 15 of the 20 hiuers lie faced
for his first win since May 31.
"Yes, it has been a while," he
said. "Especially now, I'm not
young anymore, so it's a great feeling to win and I try to enjoy each

second on a ny ball caught by the
shortstop in shallow left field. The
replay indicated he was safe. And
they had a runner called out in the
eighth for running out of the base
path. That replay wasn't as clear, but
it was a borderline calL
Burba (6-9) also had distractions
that could have weakened his
resolve.
One was a running discussion he
had with the umpiring crew over
resin on his pants, a no-no according
to major league rules.
·
Umpire Jim Quick warned Burba
several times, but Burba kept brushing the resin bag to his leg . Burba

said he puts the resin there so he can
quickly dry his hands on hot, humid
days .
"It's just something I've always
done," he said. " It's a habit for me,
and when they told me not to do it,
well, I'm trying to concentrate on
pitching, not whether I'm picking up
the resin bag."
Finally, Quick told Burba that if
he did it again, he would throw him
out of the game. Burba knew force
of habit would have him pick up the
bag again, so he just had the ball boy
remove it from the mound.
Verbally harassed by the umpires,
Burba was physically assaulted by a

Gregg Jefferies liner in the founh .
The ball left a big bruise on the side
of his pitching arm, where it joins the
shoulder.
"I think it's going to take a couple of days to get the stiffness out,"
he said, adding. he expected to be
ready for his next scheduled stan
Tuesday.
The; shoulder immediately started
to get stiff but Burba stayed in the
game long enough to deliver the key
hit in the seventh.
With the bases loaded and two
outs in a scoreless game, Burba, who
was 4-for-41 (.098), singled home
the decisive runs off starter Mike
Williams (3-9).

Kenny Lofton broke out of an (}.
for-13 slump with a two-run single
in the fifth , keying Cleveland 's twoout rally off Many Janzen (4-6) .
Vizquel followed with a single

and Janzen walked both Jim Thome
and Albert Belle, forcing home
Lofton and bringing reliever Paul
Spoljaric into the game.
Spoljaric hit Jeromy Burnitz on

the elbow with his first pitch, forcing in Vizquel, and Giles hit another two-run single, giving the Indians
a 7-0 lead.
Janzen gave up seven runs on

four hits over 4 2/3 innings, walking
six and striking out one. He has lost
his last four decisions and six of his
last seven after starting the season
with three straight wins.

runs."

Indians manager Mike Hargrove ·
said those runs came at the right time
for Martinez, who didn 't figure to go
more than five innings in his first
start back.
"We're still building Dennis up,"
he said. " He needs to get stretched
out to get his pitch count up, but
physically he's at 100 percent"
Visquel seemed like he's lOOpercent, too, going 2-for-5 and hitting a
three·run homer to make it 10-0 in
the sixth - his second in as many
games and his career-high seventh
this season.
''I' m not a power hiuer," he said.
"But I'm hilling the ball consistently hard and when you do that a lot
of good things will happen ."
Carlos Baerga went 3·for-5 and
gave the Indians the lead with a twoout solo homer in the second, his
lOth.

SHS football
conditioning
to start Thursday
Southern High School football
conditioning will begin Thursday,
Aug . I at 7 p.m. at Southern High
School in Racine, continuing each
weeknight thereafter.
All boys wanting to play football
should auend. Anyone with questions can call head coach Dave Barr
at742.3149.

Sports medicine
class scheduled
A three-hour sports medicine
class will be held on Tuesday, Aug.
5 at 6 p.m. at Meigs High School
This clinic. for all coaches and
advisors, will be' presented by the
Holzer Clinic Spons Medicine
Department
The cost of the class will by S6.

NL games ...
(Continued from Page 4)

llt1d walked one. Former replacement
player Mike Busch, who drove in
three runs Tuesday night, went 3-for3 for the Dodgers.

Cubl 7, Giallts I
Frank Castillo (4-12) scauered
five hits in 8 1-3 innings and Tyler
Houston hit his first home run for
visiting Chicago.
Last-place San Francisco is 7·24
since June 21 and has not won a
series since July 1-3 over Colorado.
The Cubs scon:d four runs in the sec.
ond off William VanLandin~ham
(6-10), who lasted only five inntngs.

- --..,.-·---•'

'

"It's not a teaming experience,"
Jan zen said. "I want to go out there
and win and nobody understands
how frustrating this is. I've let the
team down."

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one."

The Indians rallied for six runs
with two out in the fifth and took a
7-0 lead but the inning was too long
for Martinez and his elbow stiffened
up while silting in the dugout
"It's a little sore but I expected
that, " he said. "Even though it got
stiff I'm glad the guys scored those

By PAUL NEWBERRY

sixth in his last seven decisions.
And the Reds, woo have recov·
ered from a slow stan to win 19 of
their last 30 games, took their eighth
straight over the ce llar-dwelling
Phillies, who have lost 10 of their
last II.
" It kind of had the feel of one of
those games earlier in the year when
everything went wrong that could
possibly go wrong," Reds manager
Ray Knight said. "But when things
went wrong, we battled back."
The Reds got more than enough
bad breaks to provide ample excuses had they lost.
They had a runner doubled off

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Ireland's Smith ,leads fight to chip away at U.S. medal. lead

Reds hand Phillies 3-1 loss to capture sweep of series
By JOHN F. BONFATTI

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 25, 1996

'

WAS $13,197

A1l.ANTA (AP) -A swimming
nobody just a few weeks ago,
Michelle Smith already has three
gold medals at the Olympics, A
swimming star since 1988, Janet
Evans would settle for· one more
gold.
Win or lose, Evans wraps up her
glorious career tonight in the 800meter freestyle, concluding an eightyear odyssey in which the world saw
her go from peppy teen-ager at
Seoul to grand dame of the pool in
Atlanta.
Evans, who failed to qualify for
ihe final in the 400 after Smith was
allowed to make a controversial late
entry, was the sixth-fastest qualifier
in the 800 Wednesday despite breaking a toe before the race.
This time, she won't have to worry about Smith, who didn't enter the
event. Instead, Evans' main challenger is her own teammate, Brooke
Bennett, who had the fastest qualifying time.
· "I think she's going to give it all
s~·s got and come back real
str~g." said Bennett, just 15 but
already Evans' heiress apparent as
America's top female distance swimmer. "Hopefully, the United States
will come out on top 1-2."
If Evans is the I, she would tie
Bonnie Blair's American record for
most Olympics wins by a woman.
Also today, the women's individual all-around finals begin with
Shannon Miller but without Kerri
Strug; tlie U.S. baseball and
women's soccer teams try to remain
unbeaten; Tom Dolan goes for another gold in swimming; and secondround tennis features Andre Agassi
and Monica Seles.
Smith has become a national hero
in her native Irela.nd - even though
she had to leave the country to train
because it doesn't have an Olympicsize pool. In Atlanta, she had barely
crawled from the water after her third ·
gold-medal swim, this one in the
200-meter individual relay WednesCiay, when she faced more questions
about her rapid improvement.
"I just have to laugh at it," she
· said of the rumors that she is using
banned substances. "Every time I'm
tested it's always negative, and I'm
tested again and again and again."
Though ranked no higher than

24th in any event, Smith already has
won three golds and will go for a
founh on Friday night when she
swims the 200 butterfly.
"You need to look very closely
into that rate of improvement," said
Richard Quick, the U.S . women's
swimming coach.
Smith's latest victory came on a
day when the other countries began
to peck away at America's domination in the pool. Denis Pankratov of
Russia set a world record in the I 00meter buUerfly, and Hungarians Norben Rozsa and Karoly Guttier finished 1-2 in the 200 breaststroke.
The only U.S. victory came in the
women's 400 medley relay.
The Dream Team rolled again on
the coun - rebounding from yet
another lackluster ftrst half to blow
away Lithuania I04-82 - and the
American baseball and softball
teams romped on the field .
Gymnast Vitaly Scherbo of
Belarus, whp won a record six golds
at Barcelona, had to settle for a
bronze U. the men 's all-around,
which was won by his bitter rival, Li
Xiaoshuang of China.
American gymnast Kerri Strug
won't be competing in the all-around
competition that begins today
because of two torn ligaments in her
left ankle . Replaced by Dominique
Moceanu, Strug hopes to return for
the individual events Sunday and
Monday.
If not, she will leave Atlanta with
memories of her final vault, already
replayed endlessly, that left her
writhing on the mat in agony but
secured the American's first team
victory in the women's all-around.
Yugoslavia's basketball team was ·
shaping up as the biggest challenge
to American superiority in men's
hoops. Tile Yugoslavs ran their
record to 3-0 with a 118-65 thrashing of South Korea before the Dream
Team whipped a Lithuanian team led
by Ponland Trail Blazers center
Arvydas Sabonis.
Lithuania stayed close for 23
minutes despite the absence of
Sarun.S Marciulionis, who sat out
with a swollen right knee. Charles
Barkley led the Dream Team with 16
points. Karl Malone cut his right
hand and is doubtful for Friday
night's game against China.
The U.S. baseball team, headin~

•

toward an eventual showdown with
defending ,gold inedalist Cuba, won
15-3 over Italy to run its Olympic
mark to 3-0. Cuba beal South Korea

14-11 and is the only other team
without a loss in the round-robin
tournament.
No one is giving the powerhouse

U.S. softball team much of a challenge. Lori Harrigan threw a two-hitter as the Americans beat Taiwan 40, their third shutout in four games.

Other U.S. medalists Wednesday
were cyclist Erin Hartwell (silver in
the 1-kilometer time trial) and Jim
Pedro (bronze in lightweight judo).

NFL levies five-game suspension on Irvin
By DENNE H. PREEMAN
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)- The other shoe dropped, and it wasn't nearly as bad as the Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys knew it could
have been.
The NFL handed Michael Irvin a
five-game suspension after the wide
receiver's no contest plea to cocaine
possession.
"We were surprised to a certain
degree because we h heard it
might be eig~t games, so guess five
just fell right into the slot," Cowboys
personnel director
Lacewell
said.
The Cowboys couldn 't win without Emmitt Smith. Now the question
is can they survive until October
without Irvin.
"Any time you lose a great football player, you're going to struggle,
but this team has a knack of over·coming adversity," Lacewell said.
· The five-game suspension will
cost Irvin more than 500,000 - he
makes $102.~7 a game- and force
the m·an who caught Ill passes last
year to sit out games against the
Chicago Bears, New York Giants,
Indianapolis Colts, Buffalo Bills and
Philadelphia Eagles.
Smith got into a contract fight
with owner Jerry Jones several years
ago and sat out two games which the
Cowboys lost. But they've never
been without Irvin for a prolonged
period.
"It's definitely going to hun,"
Smith said of Irvin's suspension,
which was announced Wednesday.
"But we'll find a way to hang on
until Mike gets back. We'll use it as
a rallying ,point. We're always battling some distraction."
Quarterback Troy Aikman said:
"Michael certainly will be missed .
He's one of the best in the league.
We'll just have to do the best we can
until he gets back."
Irvin can practice with the team
and even play in exhibition games,
but was not expected to repon to
training camp anytime soon.

Jones said he spoke with Irvin,
who was in Miami.
"He said, 'I want to meet this
heads up. I accept my respon~ibili ­
ty.l was wrong and I'm going to pay
the price.'
"He is clearly resolved to get this
behind him," Jones said. "He talked
about his future and what he needs
to do to get ready for his first game.
"He said he is ready to take his
medicine."
Irvin doesn't plan to appeal the
NFL's decision.
The suspension comes.eight days
after Irvin pleaded no contest to
felony cocaine possession charges
for which he was fined $10,000,
placed on probation for four years
and sentenced to 800 hours of community service.
"You serve as a high!~ visible
symbol of the Dallas Cowboys and
the NFL," commissioner Paul 'Illgliabue wrote to Irvin in a letter informing the Cowboys star of the suspension.
·
"As such, you are an unuaually
prominent example for good and .for
bad for young people. While that visibility affords you substantial ~ne­
fits, financial and otherwise, it significantly increases and magnifies
the negative and detrimental impact
of your misconduct on the league, its
teams its pta; and its fans.~ ·
"The discip ine for violations of
the substance abuse policy is
severe," Tagli ue said " ... Under
this collectively bargained program,
players are disciplined for their own
substance abuse or drug related misconduct. They·are not disciplined for
the misdeeds of others or because
critics may view the justice system
as lenient in drug cases or for other
e~traneous reasons."
Irvin wa~ given a chance to
appear before the commissioner but
declined, the NFL said.
Irvin was found March 4 in a
hotel room in Irving, Texas, near the
Cowboys' workout facilities when a
motel employee complained about

noise. Irvin and two women also in
the room were indicted April I on
drug possession charges.
Last Tuesday, Irvin interrupted
the trial to enter the no contest plea.

Irvin's absence will put pressure
on Kevin Williams and Deion
Sanders.
Williams, who started last year
for the first time, is the only experienced wide receiver on the team.

• Andenen Tilt Windows
• Stanley Doors
.
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 ln. On Center
• Armstrong solarian .Floor 'nle
• Marillate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2xl0 Floor Joint, 16ln. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets
COMFOIIT ASSURED.
• Delta Faucets
• MasterT-Iock VInyl Siding' With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

:GIAL

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours I:00- 5:00p.m.
· The.- Sat. or by appointment.

13402

NEW
I.

1996 OLD. CUTLASS
SUPREME 2 DR.

1996 CHEVY
CAVALIER

$17 995
1996 GMC SUBURBAN
Y2 TON, 4X4

$3

89

CHEVY
BE REnA

$13 167

.

1996 GEO TUCKER
. CONVERTIBLE
WAS $15,929

•1 995
NOW

WAS $14,395

$13 699

NOW .

WAS $31,948

NOW

1996CHEVY ~ TON
PICKUP

$21 869

1995
CUTLASS SUPREME

1995 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE

GUNDAM

$11 999

$14 995

$10,999

..,

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program Car

1995 LUMINA
APV

s13 995

1994 CADILLAC
DEVILLE
VS, Leather.

$21 995

CIEU

1995 OLDS
CIEU

s13 995

*9 999

ALL USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS MUST GO.
Taxes arid title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON ,.A,E

1992 CHEVVS·10
PICK,UP ....................... $6,995
1996 FORD RANGER XLT
EXTENDED CAB
4X4 .•.•..•.••.................. $18,995
1993 CHEVY S10
EXTENDED CAB

LX .•.••.•.•.••••.•...•...••••.•.$6,495
1993 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE ..:........ $13,995
1992CHEVY
, LUMINA .................... $4,995
1992 LUMINA
EUR0 ........................ $8,999
19930LDS
ACHIEVA ••.•...••...•..... $6,999
1994 BUICK REGAL.$13,995
1995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX ...•....•.$13,995
1993 CAMARO Z28
Red ••••••.•••.••••••.•••••• $13,995

•

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IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

PICKUP....................... $8,999
1992.CHEVV ASTRO

.EXT. VAN ...................~.$7,999

.'

SAVING MONEY WILL PUT ASMILE ON YOUR FACE, TOO!
'SIAL

I
.
oar tOttr ..ssuREo.

AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER

"I am amazed, my payments are $50.00
per month and my utility budget went
down over $60.00 p~r mont~. It not only
pays for itaelf, but even pays me to own it.
I recommend a Carrier to everyone."

WereThe Inside QuY$.
,.

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We A.re TRULY The Best Company For Your Job!.

THE HEAt·PUMP HEATS, COOLS AND SAVES
r

1996 CHEVROLET
AS.TRO VAN ..............$18,995
'

ALL PRICES INCUJDE
REBATES TO DEALER.
TAXES a FEI!S NOT
INCUJDED.

..

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5
~

-------------·--------·..---· - ·--------- - -

!

NOW

1996 GMC ~ TON
EXT. CAB PICKUP
WAS $22,640

$

AFTER
BUYING AHEAT PUMP

BEFORE
BUYING A'HEAT PUl\lP

..... J.

-

-I

IIIDDLEPOaT, OHIO 45160
1~800·516·2932-~.~

'

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�.

.

)

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

~~ Woman
~ada

! 99!1 , Los

Tii'KS
ILOn

S)'ftlbca~e

:

....

; ·

Md Crr-

Syndicue._

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Last week, I
was riding my bicycle pretty fast
when a pickup truck darted across
traffic in front of me. When I saw
: him, I immediately put on the
brakes. My bike stopped, but I didn't.
Things happened so fast, it's difficult to remember, but I recall fly ing over the handlebars and slam-

rning into the asphalt head fim, my
glasses smashing into my right eye
and my shoulder hitting the pave-.
ment. I don't remember my hip
being injured or how my left knee
hit the ground, but I know I was in
'·
pam.
When the emergency crew
arrived, one of the attendants said,
"You're darned lucky you had your
helmet on. Without it. you might
have been killed." His words didn' t
have much impact until the nurse at
the hospital showed me the helmet.
It was split in half. That would have
been my head.
The extent of my injuries included a, hairline fracture to my right
elbow, a black eye, skinned left knee
and sore right shoulder. I received

NO head injuries, not even a concussion, thanks to my helmet. My
experience has convinced two of my
friends to wear bicycle helmets
whenever they ride. I often hear people say they don't like wearing helmets because they're too hot or they
look nerdy. I tell these people,
"Would you rather be a little sweaty
and nerdy-looking, or cool and in
style lying in your coffin?"
I'm keeping the broken helmet in
my apartment for everyone to see. I
think of .it as my trophy to life. -Alive and Well in Austin, Texas
Dear Alive and Well : Your letter
could not have come at a beuer time.
According to a report from the
Coalition for Consumer Rights,
about 1.000 people die every year 1n

bicycle accidents, 62&gt; per.ent from
head injuries. The report said helmets reduce brain injuries by 88 percent.
People don 't pay a lot of attention
to statistics, but they do like gifts
and prizes. So, in Illinois, the Cook
County Department of Public Health
and the Forest Preserve District soon
will give riders wearing helmets
coupons for cellular phones, ice
cream, pizza and bike equipment.
Knowing human nature, I can assure
you the gifts will be a greater incentive than any "educational " campaign.
Dear Ann Landers: I have fallen
in love with a woman I have known
for six years . I have helped her out
financially (well over $20,000) s in~e

After 25,000 certificates, city
calligrapher keeps on scribing _
By LOUINN LOTA
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - He has studied with the chief
scribe to Queen Elizabeth II and invented a foil adhesive paint
that looks more brilliant than 24 karat gold.
Homer Edwards could probably be a millionaire, but after
25,000 certificates, Los Angeles' premiere calligrapher just
keeps on scri bing.
"People, they love this kind of thing ," the 67-year-old
Edwards said in a soft, gentle drawl reminiscent of his Nevada,
Mo., roots.
"They love to see lettering like this, so I have such a backJog ~ight now that I have to work Saturdays just to get them
out.
The quality of his work is so good that even computer-generated items are brought back to him with the plea: "Would you
please do thi s over?"
''I' ll tell you something. You can look at the stuff we pump
_""""'_ _ _""!""_ _ _ out with the computer. I have to
The quality of use it sometimes. I have to, but
his work is so there's such a difference," he
added flexing his large, flat
good that even thumbs.
computer-gener"The computer is really
ated items are stiff... he said, "It's the same
angle, the same pressure, no
brought back to variation in the letter forms , and
him with the plea: people are always telling me,
"Would
you 'Homer, they're not half as pretty as yours.' "
please do this
Two of Los Angeles' five
over?"
other city scribes were taught by
Edwards, who has been an
instructor at the University of
California. Los Angeles , California State University, Los Angeles, and Cal State San' Bernardino.
Edwards has worked for the city for more than 25 years. His
title - graphics designer II. When he staned with the city in
1970, he would work there by day and do paste-up and composition for the Los Angeles Times at night. That ftrst city job was
in the traffic data illustration department doing c~arts, graphs,
safety slogans and annual reports.
He showed his dedication to the city by staying even after he
got Patent No. 4994131 for his foil adhesive.
"It took two attorneys, six years and $20,000, but by 1980
we had the product," Edwards said. "Because I invented it,
there's a conflict-of-interest, so I use it for free for the city
stuff.''
The difference between using gold and Edwards Foil Graphics is the case of Edwards' invention. The colored foil is on a
SEASONED SCRIPT • After 25,000 certlflcate1;-loa-Angeles' premiere cal·
one-inch roll that's up to 25 feet long. An artist first puts down llgrapher, Homer Edwards, just keeps on scribing. "People, they love ltlls
a pink-colored adhesive. When it's nearly dry, Edwards' foil kind of ltllng," the 67-year-old Edwards seld.
strip is put on top of the sticky substance and when pressure is
applied. the foil paint transfers onto the surface.
cherubim climbing flowers and cherubim with harps .
He began taking calligraphy and illuminating classes in 1973 and studHis favorite city project was a Public Works reminder to cut down
ied for more than a decade . He studied under Queen Elizabeth's scribe, weeds to help curb the rodent population. "My favorite was one that said
Donald Jackson, from 1973-76. Edwards called Jackson a fantastic teacher ' Be Careful.' I drew a picture of a rat in the weeds with a water sprinkler
who encouraged him to form the Soctety for Calligraphy in 1974.
spraying water on him and he had a towel, scrubbing his back."
Jackson made the students design their own alphabet from scratches
When his mother turned 100 in October 1995, she received the perthey made on paper. Over the years, Edwards has refined his own alpha- functory certificate given by the city to all centenarians.
bet in the style of 15th-century Missal Capitals, the lettering used for
Edwards didn't make it.
prayer books.
,
"They made one for her downtown," he said. "Really and truthfully, I
Sometimes he ' ll des1gn something that never gets mass printed. So didn't have the time to do it.''
lucky Gloria A. Riley. at her retirement, got a beautiful cettificate with

I

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.. .

25, 1996

'·

I

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

MEAL DEAL

we met.
We have been very close a few
times, if you know what I mean, but
she can't seem to find time to go out
with me. She loves to talk to me on
the phone -- in fact, some days, she
calls me five or six times. One day
last week, I got I0 calls from her. It
really hurts that this woman I love
has plenty of time to talk but she
never wants to go anywhere with
me .

.

"Sally" is 43. Her kids are grown
and have lives of their own, but
somehow she can never find a
moment for me. From time to time,
she has asked me to help her finan cially, and I always come through
for her. What do you think of this? I
need an outside opinion. -- Max in

Utah
Dear Chump: I think you ought
get smart and stop playing
round Santa Claus. There are pterll\1../
of women who would appreciate the
company of a decent man like you .
Give Sally the name of a lending
officer at your bank, and tell her
goodbye.
Gem of the Day (Credit Sir Winston Churchill): A fanatic is one who
cannot change his mind and refuses
to change the subject.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30P.M.

...,...,••, Willlows

....

tU!dGtnps
-5101'11 Doors &amp;.W.ws

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

Let a Psychic
Answer your
Questions!

QUICK .
CONSTRUaiON
Rooftng, VInyl
Siding, Garages, .
Porchll, SideWalks
and Add-ona~

FrH E1tl1NtN

The Community Calendar is FRIDAY
RACINE -- Hymn sing featuring
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce Gabriel Quartet Friday, 7 p.m. at the
meeting and special events. The ·Fellowship Church in Racine . Pastor
calendar is not desiglled to promote :Charles Bush welcomes all.
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits 1 POMEROY -- Hillside Baptist
and cannot be guaranteed to run a Church, hymn sing, Frid"o/. 7 p.m. on
Pomeroy parking lot. Groups sc hed specific number of days.
uled to si ng are The Hood Famil y,
THURSDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS .. Tuppers The Humphreys, Marty Short and
Plains VFW, Post 9053, regular meet- Amber Johnson , The Clonch Famtly,
Sheila Arnold, Joshua Jones, Linda
ing, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Workman and more . Take lawn chair.
RACINE -- Southern Local Building Committee meeting Thursday, 7 SATURDAY
p.m. at the high school. All district
CARPENTER -- Gospel sing , 7
residents welcome.
p.m. Saturday, Carpenter Baptist
Church, State Route 143, Carpenter.
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Orange True Gospel Sounds of WheelersTownship Trustees will meet in spe- burg.
cial session Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at
the home of the clerk. Purpose of the SUNDAY
meeting is to purchase equipment.
CHESTER -- Chester High
School Class of 1931, annual picnic,
VINTON COUNTY -- John Sunday, 12:30 p.m. Teachers and
Elswick, evangelist, will be at the classmates welcome.
·Harkins Chapel Church, Vinton
County Road 5, 7:30 p.m. services
POMEROY -- Singer family
Thursday and Friday. Special singing. reunion, Sunday, Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy.

99

T1f0 MEDDJM PEPPERONI PIZZAS,
PI..US TWO ORDERS OF BREAOSTitKs,
PI..US 4 REGUlAR OR DIET £01AS

!
I

I

Phone
614-9~982

t~

'

'··. ·.·

.

Ohfo

a Plumbing

Psychic Tells you
• about your financial
future, love,
success and your

health !II
1-900 868-41 00
ext. 6495
· 3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.

•Interior &amp; ext.rtor

Painting
Also eoncr.te Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
ft2.Ctll
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

s-u (8111)oe45 8434

Serv-U (8t9) 845-8434

Mt-2112

Yard ~e

.;....
· -1 IOIIIJ

COiiSTRUCTION
BIG YARD-SALE .~New
Homes
July 25 &amp; 26tla •Girages
New&amp;Used
Clothing &amp;
Misc. lte~t~S.
Ritchie l Glasgo
Family, located It

GAUGE

oComplete
Remodeling
Stop • Compare

$3.99 per min.

y"

Must be 16
Serv·U (6t9) .845-8434

·985;4473

742·2935, Alkfor

~ree Blvd.,
Ohio

filM

110

61~~13or8t~7~

Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" SclD- perf.- solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Soh 3S pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
1 1n" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (I 00' roll's thru 1.000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas.pipe J"thru 2"- Fittings· Regulator1· Risen
Filii assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex littin'' &amp; Water littings
line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water Iterate tanks.

mo.

Help Wanted

LL.

Send Resume to: ·

TRUCIIIIG

Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box
#729-29
'

..

ANDERSON'S

-

Pomeroy Eagles Club

and Gueilt

IIPPraclaltd. .

.

.

992-7696

REFRIGERAnON
Heat Pump
Air Condldonlna
Furnaces ·
Retrtceraton
Wt htvelhe new FR12
Low Cost Rep'-"1
for A~tlve R12.
7/1/fa1

Howard bcovalin
TruckingUmestone
· Bulld07.Ittg and
Backhoe
Services
HouH Sites and
UUIItlea

.

The Fred Saynt Family: Vema, Barbarl, Loretta,
Beverly, Rhoncls, Fred, Frank and Erlo

For emergencies, customer service or billing
questions during office hours, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
please call:
•
•

--~ .__,,

Joint C_,.lltlon on
Accndllltlon of IItt"'Organlatlont
One lltnalletnot
11cte ln•d
OlldlrOOkTtn-.IL
to181
Tilt Joint Catnmllllon
will aolcnowltdgt aucll
raqutttl In wrlllng or by
ttlephont and will Inform
the organization of the
raqu11t for any lntwrvltw.
Tile orpnlzatiCin- wlll, In
turn, notify the lntwrvlewtt
of 1111 dtlt, tlmt, ,nd Jlltot
D11111mtllllllf.
tlpl'lll • • • •--• ·"" t1mt
Thla nolloe It potiM In
:of tiM!· ~- Jiifer,...lll acoonllnQI -.Jill ;..... Joint
111••ntld • tile tw• wltw Commlttlon'8ntlttl-11
wtn bt otref11t1J twllllllttd and may not bt NIIIOftd
for rtlavailot to lilt btfort tht aurvty Ia
aoortidltatlon proc111. C9ftlllltltd.
. Rl_qlll!l!ll f~ !1 • pllll: lo :(7) ill 1TC

or
'

lj

\.

,),&gt;.~

•

~-···

"\

20111.

-IUIOIIAIU

60 Lost and Found

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

Tammera
Construction Inc.
Room additions

Roofing

SMIIH'S ,
COIISDUChOII

PaJniiDg, Siding

.........

Cuelo!lt luldlng • lleliiG•••
•New Home•
•Addltlont
•NiwGarllll

10% oil all quallflng bld8

··-a~

·•ng

HOWMf L Wrh111l

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

•Roofklg

•Palnttna
fRIIISfiMATII

OutteN

(11411t2-tAI
114 8112·27U

DownapCM,tts
Gutter Cleaning

94&amp;-2188

1'-----------------.
aaa aoon1o ••
(No Sunda}· Calls)

COISfRUCftOI

~

Yard Sale

70

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnltV
4 llllao out Bulavlllt Plko
ClothOI. CD't, Cauotte&amp;, and

Pl•r•r Orange Co"nter Top,

r...- .
All Yard S.lat lluot Be Paid In
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the diJ belore tho ad It to run .
lkllldli ldiiOn • 2:110 p.m. Friday.
lditlon- 10:110 a.rn.·S.t·

IAOIIdlir
......
.

Frldly and

• 11o1&gt;

II· !'toyo, Clottounclllltc.

Glr~g~ Sole: Sai. lkln, Mon: Rain

or lhlna 1015 Ourtou S..promo,
Couch, Chelr, Lovo Stat 229

Skldmort Road

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy

Porlable

All Yard S1!01 lluol Be Pold In
Advance . Ooadllno: 1:OOpm tho
day bolore the ad Is to run, Sun day I Monday edillon- 1:OOpm
Friday.

BtniSIW Mill

July 25-2G, turn fnt road leh Plllt
WMPO lrom lliddlaport hill. 5th

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Dlnny &amp; Pt911Y 8lk:lcltt

,

$atu"ldl, at lntarllc·

or no end sa. e.- Hoou

houoe.

.114-742·2113

SILl
30%-40%0FF
Mint Blll'ld8,

PI•==~~~.

•

Krodel Park · acrGu from
Ill.

80

Public Sale
and AuctiOn

Ill Alto Auction . Every Frtdar
EWf)' S.IUtdly 7pm. Rt 2·33

Grocerlts, new

-1130.

..

?f?fff.,

ly . . .

.- • ,' . . . . . .
~"
,._.._

Bllhi'oolile - ICitclteni ...........
-··
31 y..,. E1lper#IIN:e

814 99.2·23&amp;4

Found- malo Lob mix pup, Happy
Hollow vic inity, found 7123/U,
614·742· 1110.

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

Cit~

and much morel
J•IJ 1'' 1" ' 10

Residential- Commercii!

ComplltiRemadalltf'-'DIIiii

Pune. found July In
Park. Call:a 1•~•a -eaa2

711111

Garage's, Deck's,

·~-R...,,..,.Itllllllu;._ .
~Rill .. fi,....'Gullt' ... Dilll~l'*

Found lillie Key Chain With
Chain

992-2768
992·3274

Remodeling

61 +992·7643

r.

100445-lJtO

1,-llllllilolehadolt

Plllntlng
FREI! EST1MATES

Spaniel, lyr old .

""~~~~r·parl IPIIZ &amp; Norwoa1an ElK
hound, to 100&lt;1 homa. !161·8 75-

CO.ERCIAL.and RESIDEt(nAL
.
FREE E$11MATES

...,._,.., - ! ! " " " "

·:C~t~Mi~JM wl\lthlr, lncl ....

.'.

......:.,..._........

mate-Cooker

:1044171-7405.

FRIIUTIMAr!S ,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

· "--~,__'

1410.

Molt Coc:lllr Sponitl, 2Yr• old, ,.

1111110Nl111101

SliWA 1'FII
Information lnl8nlltw mutl
bt mtdt In wrhlng and r--....,;-.;o;.._ _ _,!:=:=::;,;:::;:==~
ahould bt 11111 tn the Joint ·
• -- - - · ·Commlnlon no lltwr that
flvt working cltlyt btfort
tht aurvey. btglna. Tht
raquetl mutt alao lncllet~ll
~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
tht nalurt of tht •
Jnfonntllon to bt prOvkltd
Garages • Rtplaoeme~ Wlndowa
at lht lntwrvl..,. Such·
r~unte· · illould llli
RC)Om Addlt19rit-• RQOllng . ..
a_d,..,!!t'.!'~L-,..,Ian

· oondltlont under ll!llllcll
aoartdllltlon ahould bt
• • did tilt Oflllllltllon' Joint Commlnlon
· • atandardl dttl with
·,.,.
, llflllllzlillon•l
of
...U. and quality
-1111 !llftiY
·Of lilt anwlroumtnlln whloll
et~re Ia provlcltd. Anybtu.vtng t11t1 he or aile hal .
trtlntnt and valid
nforBtttlon about aucll
matttre may requaat 1
pu11t1o 1n1onn1111on lnii!VIew
. w 1111 · t 111 • .I oInt
.canmllllon'S , · fltld

'

of forth Work
-All Kinds
992-3838

Free kittens &amp; cats, 6U-742·

875-5720.

PIIIII_NG

~

-

Thank all of you end may Qocl Ble88 each of

PUBUC NOTICE
Tile Joint convnlaalon of
Aocredltl1lon of HtllthcaN
OrganiDtlona will conduct
an accrtdltatlon aurvay of
Vttwrana Mtmortlll Hotllltal
on Aug. 28, 27. 'l'ht
PUI'IIOH of 1111 aurvay will
bt to tVIIUIIt lilt
OIIJIMIIwllon't compliance
w1t11 ~nally tttalltlalltcl
.lol,n.t ". C,omm'lt!IIC~il
t1811@rdt. . Tilt IUI'Y.Y
r n . ' will bt uttd to

mo.

Female tiger killen to good home,

healthy and playlul, 614 -949 2991, Radne.

Korwnore dryer, noedo bek. 304·

1-800.470·2559

992·2735

pallbasi'WI'8.

Public Notice

~kltup

liAR UfiiiiCIS
614·9154110

MEIGS

Public Notice

4 Puppiea, Part Hu sky, Part Black
lab 11 Weeks Old, 614·44 1·
0725.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

Open Monday
nights until
7:00 p;in.' .
Gifts • 'Folkart'
•Antiques

A very speolal Thank You to Granctson1:
Glenn and Vancy Roush, MlchMI and Jafftry
Sharp, Lanny and Jo1hua Do•ttl!· for tiling

\

23)3

HARTWELL
HOUSE

.,

you.

Laely Who bought pool II NIW HI·
yatd
call 304-773-5-4e4,

5 Kluant to give away. 614·446-

VIrvlnla

Card of Thankl

Appearing Friday s ioo-12:00

30 Announcements

home1, litter trained, 814·Q82·
4057.

IE

9115-4422
Cheater, Ohio

'KentUcky and Oh1olll YDCA will
. pay up to $40.00 per day for
keeping a child in your home.
If you are
inter~st~d .1~ ·.
opemng your:' ..
home to a child,
Rlease call
1-800-331-9989.

The family of Freel Sayre would like to thenk
the many people who have htlptd us over tile
past Mv-1 monltls.
Holzer Ho1pltal, Rockeprlngs Rehab Center,
Buckeye Home H11lth, Stnlor .Citlzena and Dr.
Mlollael ZlreiU.
EWing FuMral Home and Rtv. Brian Harltn111
for 1111 kind and ·comforting words In our II~ of
IOITOW. And the meny prsyal'll of our frtands lnd
...tatlvas.
The people who brought food, lllftt cards and
flow,. or f!alptd In sny way. All w- gl'l8tly

ANNOUN CEME NT S

4 adorable kittens , to good

Dirt• Sand

Fo~i,ter ff.80t~ b!Q.ected ill-.t;~

All AMERICAN
SOUNDS D.J.

,4

bound. 304-773-5&gt;478.

PUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

BEI.P ~BANGE A
~HII.D'S :LD'E

•Appliances
•Daybeds
•Recliners
•Gun Cabinets
•Lawn Furniture •Glider Rockers

Ext. 2469
$3.99 per min.
MUll bt 18 yra•
Strv.U (618)-445 ..

8 Fomala 112 Chow, 112
Bllephard, llwk old (lUI&gt;tlleo, ""'Y
cuto, nood 1 hom. or pQljnd

Llmeatone • Gravel

Storewide Savings

1·90().868-41 00

,_...,..

FORD EXPt;RIENCE·PREFERRED.
FOFID ·CERTIFIED A PLUS.
GOOD r:lEJ4EFITS, HOLIDAY PAY~·

SALE

Let them tell you
about the future !II

I &amp;WPUSIICI AIID SUPPLY
TuPPers Plaint, Ohio 45713

EXPERIENCED MECHANICS

JULY CLEARANCE

Want to Help
YouIll

St. Rt. 7

Pomeroy, Ohio

MIDDUPOIT

Tilt-in
• Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes

LIVE PSYHICS

for a free .Qll01tel

Ext. 3124
$2.99 per min.
Must be t8 yrs.
Procall Co.
(802) 954-7420

Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.

FREE ESnMATES

AN-DERSON'S

H2·5627

••

MAUll lUliNG
II IUDr
IOWIII
1400945 uoo

Tune-ups,
011 Clllngt, Wax,

. ,.-,

219 I. SICOID AYI.

Replacement
Windows

-EASY

Body wollt, car tructc 6
truck painting, minor
IIIIChanlcal repair.

Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

7/d/4' mo. pd.

70

Umesto~,
Gravel,

OWner: Ronnie Jones
387-o286 - 1-800-950-3359

1-90()..868-4100
Ext. 5489

14~13 Pllone
....ao11FAX

FAX '77WM1

WICKS
HAULING

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 fean Experience • lrurued

PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

285113 BASHAM RD.
Racine, Ohio 45171

(Umt StonaLo•Ritas)

JONES' TREE SERVICE

LIVE I

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

We win work within your budget

Pll. '773-e113

Customers may continue to pay bills by mail or at
Home National Bank and at P~oples Bank.

'

•EIIctrlc8l
•Rooftng

"No Job Too '"-lfle or Too Small"

-For emergencies after office hours, please call

•

•NewQwagee

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Our Field Service and Operations Personnel will
continue to operate out of the District Office at 4th
and Main Street.

614-9,,.2166

•Rnom Additions

$Uipermln.
Must be 18 Y'L

Authorized AQA OilttiJUIOr
• Welding Supplies • lndultrlal o- ~ Maclllne Shop
Servlcea • Steel SaleS &amp; Flbflcatlon • Repair Welclng
• Aklmlnurn/Staln- • Tool DII8Sing · ·Ornamental
Stape -Stairs, RaUinga, Pallo Fumlture, Fireplace
Items, Planter hangers. Treliaee &amp; loll of Oilier stullll

-Community calendar-

YOUNG'S
CAIPENTIR SERVIa

1·900-868-4900
Ext. 7625

Nteul.r Raa&amp;

614-3~~ ~017
J

'

Pomeroy " Middleport,

STATE FAIR PARTICIPANTS - Meigs 4-H Club membel'll, Sari
Craig, Holly Milhoan, Matthew Peckham, Jessica Wheeler, and
Whitney Kerr, pictured left to right, qualified to participate In the
State Fair Junior Fair Horse Show In Columbus next week.

I

.......

· Thursday, J,.uly 25, 1

Five Meigs County 4-H members imum of two and maximum of four
will be representing Meigs County at classes. Classes included showmanthe 1996 Ohio State Fair Junior Fair ship. horsemanship/equitation, pleaHorse Show to be held Monday sure. gymkhana, reining, western
through Aug. I in Columbus.
.riding, trail and jumping.
The show to qualify for participaTo he eligible to participate in the
lion in the state show took place July show 4-H'ers had to meet a qualify6 at Henderson's Arena, Jackson. ing score or minimum time in at least
Jackson, Meigs, Pike, Ross, and two of their classes.
Scioto Counties took part in the show
Judges were Kay Tracey, Washwith 71 youth participating from the ington Court House and Chuck
five counties.
Schroeder, Delaware. Rosettes were
4-H members eligible to try out g1ven to all 4-H members and trofor the State Fair Junior Fair Horse phics to those who qualified.
Show showed their horses in a min-

. '?~·

I

..... -·

:

:Meigs 4-H members advance to Ohio State Fair

'$1

~

'

Thursday, July

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

.

. .,~

.. ..

·-·.··

is living testimony that bike helmets save lives

Ann
L:anders
·.

...

\,'

Gllll;;oll. Ollloaetl
114 4411 41l!t

1-eoHII 3M3

••
'

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.L........................_......________~--------------------.___.._-:------ ~ -~~-

..

�'

" Thursday, July 25, 1996

:;i ALLEY 00~
ar~~ ~;~~~~f£),~~~~(

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

F
.......

PHILLIP
ALDER

-

1Z'x85' Champion mobile home,
1Z'x4' ex panda In LR. romodeled
kilchon and bllh. $6500. 814·
992-11324.
1984 Actlva, 12x10. 2 bedr..,m.
remodeled bath. electric 11ove.
natural gas hoi w11er &amp; heal,
good condition, $5.000, 514-992-1
8134.
1972 Flamingo 12x85 3 Bed - ~
rooma , Very Good Condition. Roeonlly ~Bedroom &amp; Ful
Dooh CIA Deck On largo Ronled
lo~ M,UOO, 814-245-1518 Afttr 8
P.M. A"flrrlt Weokanclt.

1 and 2 bedroom aparll'T'Ienll, tur-

1 Bedroom apt, furnished, nice
neilttbOrhaod, pr'vate, no pets, ref
a depo~t30..87S.ZII51 .
1 Bedroom, SuP.•' Nice, $2661
Mo. , Plua Ulllillea, Uaually
Something Available! Sun Valley

Apanmenos, 814-448-2957.
1·8edroom apartment, acroas
from poal office in Pt. Pleasant
30•·875-2174 alter Spm. eu448·2200.

520

2 Bedroom apt, $375/mo, utilities

patG, $100 deposit 304· 8758198.
11l7e Fleetwood mobile' home,
14x80, want payoH of $5400 or
taka over paymen1a, 614·19231135.
'

Will Buy Childrena Ctoohing o-6T Witt Oo Doll\'llttlng In My Homo,
One Priot For All, 814·~814-0-48-28411.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE' S

11 0

FINANCIAL

UUDanoera$SU Ntod XIII
money, we need you, Southtork
Inn Showbor, 304-87S.51155.

AVON

13

1894 14x70 fleetwood 2 bedroom, 2 bllh, ElK, LR. all etec1ric,

Route 588 5285 par month StSO
11...:8_1._...:.ua..;.;:..:.
1:uo:.::._·_ __
1:.Depo.:.::..:.:.

~. appttancet, lkyltghll, gordon
tub, ma"f 11118L No """"'Y _,,

Aparvnenr S10Ye, Rolrtg.
, And Uolllttea Furnished
81(-448-2583.

1895 14170, 3 bedroom, 2 full
bllhl, vlnytlldng, lhlngted root,
oc. garbage dlspout, hou,.alze
QU11trl,
8Jc10 ·8x10
building,- perfect
condition.
Call
304-1175-3124.

Help Warittd

Able "von Reprnentativea Bullnaaaperaon, amoli aizo Conneeded. Earn money for Chrisl· lractor, National Manurac::lurer
mas bills at home/at work. 1-800.. award!~ loCI! DEALERSHIP lor
992·6356 or 304-882·2845; Ind. Ileal 11o dlnga. Big Pronr f'IIIBIWiat
on sales and construction. (303)
Rep.
759-3200, 01112300.
Accepung Applications through
July 291h lor registered lOng let'm CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
care nursing assistant training FURNACf II The Moll EHiclont
class. Marjorie EUion. AN. Class And Lowell EmiiiiOnl Outdoor
insttuctor. Point Pleasant Nursing Wood Furnace On Tho Markal.
&amp; Rehabilitarion CentM (Formerly Central Bolter Ia Currently LookCarehaven) State Route 1. Box ing For A OvaHoy Dtaltr In Thta WV. 304-755-5885.
326, Poinr Pteosano, WV 25550. tmmediaoe Artt. For tnlormalion Mobile Home loana Puro•-.. Or
On Becoming A Dtaltr Or For A
••
{304) 67S.3005.
Free Broohura Call 1-800·2•8· Rtllnanoo For Bill Conaotidalion
24 Hour Approval. 1·800·484Ambrosia Machine Inc. looking ol881 Or 1-2l8-782-2575.
for machinist, 5yrt experience. --~--~--------- · r.'~~~~~E~n~8~701~
- ~~~--LMI ~lo 1D l1e lulleal. rnalla a lor- . I ,
Cell 304 -875-1722. Monday-Frillno pledng Ida nallonwide, co~ - Now 14x60 Ontr mako 2 poyday 7:30-3:00.
814--3475.
manoa &amp; move-In, no peymant al"" 4
""" Oll•up &amp; deii\Wy.
Armed Guarda For Government
Contract $11 . 18 Per Hr. Plus
BenoliiL 216-522-7511, 814-469New Bank Rtpo'a, only 3 toft, 1rtt
5135.
HI-liP I - y . 304·755-71111.
AVON S8 -$15 /Hr, No Minimum
Order, 'No Door To Door, No lnvemory, 1·800· 736·0168, lndlsls/

-r

rep.

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hours. 20K To $50K /Yr. 1·
800-348-7188 X 11 ~\

Full Time Servtoe Tecnnlolan
Prefer Experienced Will Train
Right Peraon. Oulboard &amp; Inboard
Boll&amp; 614-387-7110~
HOME TYPIST, PC uae11 needed. •45,000 lnoomo pollntial.
CeN 1-800·513-4343 Ext. 8-9388
Immediate Opening looat bullnasa. Full-Time Salary Ptua Benelita. aome Colege Bac:ll Ground
and SetNng Experlenot Required
Send Resume' to PO Bo• 542
Kerr, Ohio •5843

All reel estate advertising In
1lja
is aubjiiCIIO
1118 FIOtrat Fatr Houllng Ac1
ol1968- makH 11 Illegal
to advtrlile •any preloronce,
llmllalion. or dtacrtmtnelion
based OflllJC8, color, 181iglon,
sex tamHiatatatus or nelional
origin, or any Intention to
make any aucn pr-eference,
limllolion or discrimlnalion. •

This newspaper will not
tmowtlngly accept
advertisements for raal estate
wl1lch Is In violation of 1118 law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed 11181 all dWeiHnga .
advtr11oed tn 1111! "-P9r
are available on an equal
opponunlty beals.

•••••••••.1

Immediate Opening a Available ·
For Cenifled Nurae Aides. Com·
peliti\1&amp; Waves, Ollferentat With
REAL ESTATE
Experle"ce. Sign On Bonus
Avlitabio, Equal Opporounioy Employer. Contact The Aaalttant Oi·
rec10r 01 Nuraing, PinKteat Care 31 0 Homes for Sale
Gerner, t 70 Pinecre11 Ori\le, Gal ·
1bedroom, $2,000 - .. $11l01mo.
Hpoia, O!'llo 45831 814-448-7112.
304-67!;-7482.
lmmedi,le Openings Available
For Certified Nufle Aldea. Com~Uve Wagea, Dlllerenoat Wiln
rperle"ce, Sign On Bonus
Avtllablt, Equal Opportunioy Employer. Contact The AIB iaoano Di2672 Third Street, Syraouae, 2
reciOr Of Nuralng. Pinecretl Care
lola 112 aore Ioiii, ~ BR, LR, FR,
Ctnter, 170 Pinecrest Oriva. GalDR, kilehon, Ullily, ntl!' bl111, new
tipoio, Olio 45831 . 814-448-7112.
plumbing, ove~ooklng Ohio River,
ltdy 10 ive-ln and oare llr eldlriy awotablo Seplembtr 11\ $-45,000,
gentlemen. light hausework, and 614-992·5008 or 614-992-7498.
cook one meal a day, 1n •• change for room and board. no 3 BR., 2 bello ranch. 2 o a r expensta to pay. Call 304 ·6 75- Spring Valley area, close Holler
Hospioal. 614-441l-7940.
3350.

New Benk Rtpoo. Only 3 tell Soilt
In warranoy. 304-755-7191.
Older Sc:hullZ home, owner occu pied, 2 bedroom, exce llem for

young or ratlred coujMe, priced on
lftapeclon. 304~75-5394.
Pri&lt;:e Buster. 1987 3badroom.
down, $1511/mo, Frtt dellvstlup. Only 11 Oakwood
Niro wv 304-755-5885.

340 Business and
Buildings
Crown City Vi llage: Triple, Commtroral Or Rtlidentiol. Corntr lot
On Route 7 With Income,
I54,UOO, 814-258-1428.

NHd aomeane to live-in &amp; care
tor etcleriy lady, p!'ektf mature pereon or couple, pay &amp; QmfH)tf neg.,
814-II98-~76S.

Needine A. Babysitter In Your
tlome In The Gallipolis Area Onty
Part· li!'Tie Days Call Between 8
P.M. &amp; 7 P.M. Only, 6U· 446·
1012.
Now accept1ng applications lor
the poaition of Dental Hygleniat.
AeiM aend resume to :
Oenoal Hygieniao, P.O. Box 380,
Mo..,, wv 15280.
Part · T•me Desk Clerk . Appt~ AI
tlohday Inn, Gallipolis. No Phone

COIIIP1811t.
~anted : Ma1ure WGmen To Live
rn Wl111 fldtrty Lady Ambula10rr
"YYilh Altllt. Stilly PIUI Room
And llolrd Wi111 Privlto Quarltra.
Nlct Homt In Gallipolis With
Pla11ant Surroundlnge. Houa•
kteplng And Cooking Required.
References And Background
Chock Requl,.d. Call 614 -4489827
500 And 800 P.ll.

a.-

Furnac::e, Cantril Air, Carpeted
Floors, Storm Windows, Doors,
Vinyl Siding, lol 881150, Prioed
Ao:$34,900, 814-,...-4579.

By Owner, Lower At 7 on River
side, 3 BR, LA, Kitchen/Dinning
Rll, 1 Baoh, Furance-U~Ioy RM 3
Closed-in Porohea. 2 Story
135.000 814-258-117110
3bedroom, balh, living room w/
hardwood ltoora, klll:hon &amp; dinng
area together. new roof. gareoe.
on At 2. 304·875· 4\3; or 30oo4·
675-7326 aile&lt; 6:30.
House· a1 2013 Wt. Vemon_30.t·

87S.:I075.
HO~Se

With 2 exlrl lOti, II 811
Ma1n St PI, Ptooun\ br ult Ill'
owner. $78 ,000. Shown br appontmenl 1ft atttr-n only. 304·
87S-1201.
Modt&lt;n 2-3 bedroom, largo kilctoen, palio por&lt;:h, new wlndowo. 112
acre lot. A-1 condition. 304-87$3030 or 304-1175-3431 .

Reduced Price, C~ountry home In

Soarter!Eidtrly/Renlll Hou11, 1

bedroom,
"""· Clrpll,lnd..........
ing.
wiring.- belMdlelltn.

6 loot IInce, OU1111dg. ......... ,..

Solid 0t11 Tallie ~ Ollllilt Ptld oloohoa dryer. lnoullltdtchtap
S1100 Aa•i llO .1SOO; .....1110 ulilbih. 304-e75-7412.
Drtaa Size 12 And Helld Pttce
AP!ne $375; s;ngar Str1llf OliO
Cell 814-~S.SOOI or 114·371·

•zos.

530

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Riverine Anrlquea,
1124 E. lloin StrHI, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 10
6:00 p.m. 814-902-2528, Run
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Caral diamond ring, peid
$3,000, will aett ,1,500. Serioua
call a only. 8U·448· 2887 after
Sjlm,

100 Year old roof atalt. 12x24.
30+ 7'73-51 n.
18Ft Froll Froo Atvacodo RofrlgeraiOr, Alto Available Mtll:h·
lngGot Range, 814-258-1291.
111811 Ntaun Putur; 4 Cyclindlr;
SSt&gt; $759.00. 2-12" lnoh Speaker. 300 Wall Amp With Btaubunoh CD Pteyor. •soo.oo . Celt
Aller 4:30-304-875-2352

-.om

lur'
&amp; rattroncNtoo 2 Bedroom Furnlahod
~pe•oment In Galllpolla. Laundry
Room, No Pola, $385/Mo., Plus
Otposi\ 814-448·21100.
Nice Clean 2 Bedroom All Etecoric, Furnished Kitohon, Ctoae To
Spring Valley, No PelS, $350/llo..
• D.D. Ralerencea, 814-,...-11157.
Nice rwo bedroom apartment .in
Pomeroy. no pets, 614-992-5858.
One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Pleuan~ 814-992-5858.
Ono bedroom apartment In Mid·
dlopor~ all udlitiH paid, 1270/mci.
ptuo 1100 depoeit Call 614·g92·
1'11011, 8am-Sjlm.
'
Twin RIYtra Tower, now accegtlng
opptioetiona tor lbr. HUO aubaid·
ized apt tor elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304-1175-118711.

450

Furnished
Rooms

1 112 Acrea, State Routt 180,
13,500 And 2 loll 100x300
M.ooo Each. 814·...S-G130. 8 ••·
388-9125.

Steeping rooma wloh cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. All
hook· ups. Call afler 2:00 p.m..
304-773-5851 , MaoonWV

1 Acre footer&amp;, water, septic, ga.
rage, blacklop road, in Addiaon

460 Space for Rent

area . 81~8Q78.

Commercial Space Approx. 800
Square Feet Located Corner Of
State Streel &amp; Third Avenue, Gallipolis. The Former License Bu·
reau Location. Cal 61 4·4..S-4839.(;&gt;

8pm.

Parcela on Rayburn Rd. Wettr,
paved road, reatonable restrlc·
Ilona. 304·875-5253. 1no alngtowldo inqoiroa pltaae)
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove
bea.utiful 2a.- lots, public water:
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-578·2338.

Trailer lot'tor rani, Sr. 7, Cholet,
IICiuded aeoting, depolil &amp; rottrtnc::ea, $150fmonlh, 814·1122001.
Traitor Lot in Centtnar)' 614·38811453

490

For Lease

Trailer site, river acetal, city wa·
ter &amp; aewage. Contact Dean

RENTALS

Smilh. 304·882-20n.

410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom Houte In Gallipolis,
Reference• &amp; Deposit, 614-3792400.

2 Bedroom, depoait. you pay utMiliea. 304-1175-2535.
2 8R with Basement Garage on
141, $350 plua [)eposio 614-44811568
2-3 8R Carpeted CiiJ Sohoot Diatric:1, LG Family RM Availabkt Au ·
gust ht $350 Month $150 Depoail304· 757·1013
Availabfe aoon, nice .3 Mdroom,
rafarances, deposil &amp; no pets.
304-1175-5182.

MERCHANDISE

51 0

Household
Goods

Appliances :
Aeconditioned
Wash8f'l, Dryers, Rangea, Refri·
gratora, DO Day Guaranteel
French Cit~ Uaytag, 614·•48·

7195.
Bedroom suit&amp;, good cond. 304·
875-1090.
Countr~ Furniture. 304-875·5820.
1 Rt
2 N, 6milea, Pt Pleatant, WV.

Tuaa-S.t 0;-8, Sun U -5.

Side By Side 3 Door CGN«-

Two or d]rH bedroom house on Waa 8210 Cut To •1tiS; Cold
baoutilutlot In Pomoroy, HUD IC· Spot Refrigerator Frost Fr"
cepted, $400Jmo. or Mil 01' teeM Whitt, 17 Cu. Ft. Cut To .150;
wtlh *lion 10 buy on oonvoct w1111 Hotpolnt Retriseretor, 2 Door
good rtferences , no pets , 514 - FroadrM 1150; G.E. Rtlrigeratm
Like New 1 Year Warranty 1350·
891-724-40
Hoopotni
Whirlpool Wuhor
30 lncl1 Ranga $85; Holpoinl Dry420 Mobile Homes
or US; Mayoag Wringer Wa..,.,
for Rent
1150; Svivanla Con- T.V. PI·
2 Bldroom Trailet, 8 Mi'as Rou• 2li,OOO BTU Win- Air Cond~
218, $220/Mo + Dtpoail, Rtlor- liontr; .11,000 BTU W I - Air
enoea, 514· «1-8172, 814-258 - Condllioner, llaytag Wllher Uu
New 1 Yetr Warrentr 1225·
8251 .
Skagga Appllanua, 78 Vine
2 Bedroom ·trailer, referen.ce &amp; s~ ~ GotupoHa. 814-441-7308,
depoli\ no poll, R11 Noroh lucu
Rd. Ofl rlgN. 30+875-1978
Ultd FumllllrO 130 Bulavill Pika,
llvlngroom Sulta, Btdo. Choall,
2 Dodroomo, Furnllhod, 1
lllro, 1 Full Bed, 2 Dolho, Clay Bunllltdl. ~ -lltat&lt;..
114-441-4112.
.
Chapol Aotd.81+2111 UOI

•n:

·--00.
..

au-

Air Compre- $711.50, Air Comprnaor 199.50,
22 PIIIOI
So39, Rtrntngron 870 Wlngma$219, Brownlllfl 8 M.M. HJpowtr
$375, Smkh Nicklt Plait ,.. Mag,
$259, Dave's Swap Shop 1120
Sl81e Routa 7 Chtllllrt 8t4-387·
7108

a.-

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Trtlltr For Rent Eno AIM, 114•

Boo11 Br Rtllwtng, Chlpptwa,
Tonr Lama, Guaranleed Lowtll
Prlool AI Shoe Call. Gtillpok
Cinclnna1i Reda lickall lor Au·
gua112111. Perking paulncluded.
304-882-3281.
Conore10 J Ptaoolc Sepdc Tanka.
300 Thou 2.000 Gallon• Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jsckaon, OH
1-1100-537-9528
Disney Area 5 Daya, 4 Hotel
Nighll, Uao Anytime. Valut 1320
Sell $100'1114-823-0490.
Dreiling table, baby bed, car
soa~ a1r0tlor, IWing, wolktr, high·
ohair. 304-1175-4548.

Electric;:
Scaotera
And
Whoelchlira, Now /Uaed, Van 1
Ctr l ilt fnotall~. StalrgHdtl, Ult
Chalra, Call For Brochure, 514 4411-7283.
Franklin Fireplace Wiil'l He11
Shoat, All Accealorln t300; 2
lilllo Ballery Cara $150 BQih,
814-448-3437.
Gordon Tlltor (Staromon) 5HP
1450; Now Weatarn Seddlo, Bridle, Btanktl $270; 1810 Honda
, _ 400) $100 ~ 814-3880194

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Ropairad, &amp; Rtbuilln Stock.
CeJ Ron Evtno. 1-aoo-!537-8528.
large Trtmpofint In good Condi lion8 .14-~

Lincoln ponable welder. Onan
powtred, $950; 50" putt behind
1o&lt; Jap tractor, $150; 814992-3081 .
Maacullnt llyil wood day bed
wilh mattr111 &amp; pop-out unit.
$200. VCR &amp; KlrbJ awotptr. 304875-5091 .
Myora Deep-We~ Pump, 220 V.
sso 614-258-11780
: Queen Size Ortho,adtc Mattr11s

Seo And Frame. Never Uud Still
In Pta111c Coat S600. Sell $250,
814-775-2310.

wot-

CIMol1 olzo
wilh 1 ooooncl ....,.., 1175;
ball\' c:rib, 130;814 949 3403
Relrigeratora, Stoves, Waahera
And Dryera, All Reconditioned
And Gouranteedt $100 And Up,
Wil ~- 01--1.
Sears 22h. chest frHzer. UOO.
304-67s-'1814.

Sears room air concllionef, 8,000
BTU, .10. Now Htvan, 304·882·
2204.
Stl ol drums, 3 cymbala, $550,
814·992·2758.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gatton
·Upriaht, Ron Evana Enrorprilfa,
Jac:llton. Otoio, 1-!53~-8528.
TrHIIt alylt - : - • • • bunka
beda: table and chalrt; etectric;:
090: .. 4-992-3815.
Warm Morning wood atOva w1

&amp; '"""' like - . $300 ....
" " " - 304-675-54311. '

550

Building
SUp)illet

Blocto. brick, aewtr ptpeo, wind·
ows, llnttlo. tiC. Claude Winttta
Rio Grandt, OH Call 814·245:
5121 .

560

Pete for Sale

2 Doby Cockadela , 1-alblno, 1·
~ 304-e?S-5!05.
:
AKC
mlnltiUrt Dobelmon
, . , _, · 1111'M ........

3111153.

taO.eu••"*

Two and rhrH bedroom mobile
homaa, atarrtng 11 $240 -S300,
•-r. Wlltf and tralh included,
814-8112·2187.
'

AKC Rtglatortd lillian gray.
hound, bluf and whl1t: AI&lt;C Shtahtopdog. Ui-coiO&lt;ed; 114or 114-742-2154.

f

•

c

Rooma for rent . week or month.
Soarting at $120/mo. Gallla Holt!.
814-448-9580.

5 Rooms, Bath, City, Forced Air

Woman-to llfY with oldtrly wom- town, beautiful t 314 ecres ~th
en__at her
home on weekends.
,.
_:J04-112-3772.
- . moody - · loc:altd In vi~
Its• ol Middltporl wioh a tovoty
oD88 Sohutra Sptctat Edllion mo170 MisCellaneous
bile home, belh l 1 toot\ wi1l1 w2 fh7 Wooden G1r1g1 Doors, peung throuonaul, 1ome ntw,
Ona Good Shape. One O.mogo, plus maf11' extra's added 10 home
1 Heevey Duoy Motel onio:o Deal&lt; includes deck &amp; centtal air.
phone 814-992-7350 {NC Sunday
814-441-7568
oat~).

llll3

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wollwood Drive
lrom 12,.. to •315. Wotk to ohop
&amp; movooa.
all 8U -H8-2588.
Equol Houllng ~tuntoy.

Cirole Mooel, Ga ttlpolla, OH 814·
448-2501 or 814 -3B7 -0812. Erteciency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
Microwave &amp; Refrigerator, Taxi
Service 112 Price For Matti
Gueat

r.

',

Bedroom Wioh Garage 1053

Golf oluba, King Cobnr, OYIIalzt,
3-pw, uaod 112 ttaaon,
304-875-5143 aller8pm.

Furnlthed Apartmtnl $215/Mo., 1
Bedroom, Utllllitl Ptld, 920
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 014·
~ Altr 1 P.M.
Furnl- Aparonon~ 1 - - . _
•295/Mo.; Ud1td01 Ptld, ~. 107 2 112 Ton CtA Unil, Exoelltnt
Condition, $250, 81~-11251.
Soc:ond Avtnut, Otntpolia, 114·
~ Aller 7P.M.
2 loll In Memory Gardona; 2 loll
Furriahed Eflldonoy Short Do111, in· Tropical Gulf Acres, Punt•
$185/Mo., Utilities Pillet, 807 Sec· Gordo, Fla., 814-D85-3545.
Ofld Goll1'poto'a 11• ••e-•••• AI
Big Selection 10'a, IZa, 14 Wi"·
'
' ~- • 3Living Room Suita, Ralrlg,. 1 P.M
erator Froat Free, Small TableUsed Mobile Homes, Kanauga
· ·
tow, AFTER I P.M. 514·379·
Mobile Hom.., Gollipollo, Ohio, Gradoua llvlllfl. 1 and 2
814-.u&amp;.9682.
eperomonoa 11 Village Manor and 2720.
Rlvtrot•· A 1 11 1· Mldd'l imlltd Olltrl 1997 doublewide,
- lptr men n
~ -188 OX Compular, 420 HD, 8 ·MB
3br, 2balh, $1799 down, 127"1 port From $232-1355 . Call 814- RAil, Supor VGA Monllor,
•
882 5084 E
I Ho I n.....
monon . Free delivery l aerup.
•
. quo
Ul "'I w~,..r- mouse and apeekeJ, call 814·
992·112113.
Only 11 Oakwood Hom01, Nillo tuniliel.

Spoerl, 304-675-1429.

8P.M.

facilities, close 10 school in town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apts. 149 or can 814-992 37-:':-'·_E_OH
_
_ _ _ _ _ __

1995 Slcytlne, 2 bectroom, 1 be111
wtgarden tub. akylighl, bey wind·
6w, island atove, lola of kitchen
cabinall, nloe, rellnanco tor peyoff. 304-li!IS-3573.
1998 16XIIO ConomodorOICioation,
3 Bedrooma, Front Kilc:Mn. Waa
128,gso_Prictd 10 Mil o1 .24,085.
IAounoaln Soata Homea-Pt Pteaa•rt~ WV 30•-675-1&lt;400.

I AU Areas I Shirley

Babysitter Needed In My Home
Non-Smoker Would Be Available
To Work Any Hours For More \Aformation C8K 614-441-1)602 Aher

2bdrm. apta., 10111 elec tric, BP·
pliancea furnished, laundry room

1981 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
$7 soo
'
' includea akinlng, porch,
awning, 2 ac, new water 'heater,
naw carpe~ new furnace. Must be
moved ouo of K &amp; K valier park.
304-675-3000.

payott or take ovor loan or
$21,800. 30+773-5302.

210

2 BR Apt Total Electric, Water
and Sewer Furniahed, Deposit
Required. 81 .. ,...·9755 .

CFA Regltlered female HlmtJayan kinena, ore blue, two aeal, 7
-old, 814-992-3887.

Sporting
Goods

.

'

,

Dog &amp; COt Grooming: reaaonable
prlcn, 15yrt uperience. CaW for
appii. ~7HI31 .

Groom Shop -1'91 Grooming. Feaourlng Hrdro Bath. Don Sheela.
CON614-441-0231 .

1986 Thunderbird, V-8, AIC,
80,000 milea, 1011 roar damage
very olean, $950, 814·949·2311
clay&amp;, 81H49-260-I eveninga.

88
XlT
Btpmvp
3583

tp87 Ford Taurus wagon, lour
door, power teats, aJC: , 94,000
miles, tMue with gray interior, nice
oar. minor Iron! damaga, $1250,
814 -949 -2311 daye, 814-949·
2844 ...,;ngs.
1988 Plymouth K Car, like new.
17.000 actual milea, au1omaUc
air. $6,000. 304-875-6132.

.89 Benahee 3 so, Nerl bora, FUC:
pip&amp;a, twill throtde, bore~. n~
tires, runt good. extra part~
$30000BO, 814 _247-3901.

a

1969 Buick LeSabre. excottont
running condition, V-fl, PB, PS,

AC, power window&amp;, $3800·, 814949-2045 01 814-94D-2302.
196g Ford Taurus Sho. maroon
w1gray leelher int, 76,000 mllto,
faste st ll· door made!

can.,

Pt1 Slyllng bJ Jolont- cuos, 949·231 1 doya, 614-949·284•
be111a, dlpa. hoi oil ueatmeniS and eves.
1teoh cleaning, 014·992-6244 .
1989 Olda Cutlau Ciera Body
Alk about our July opecialsl
Damlg&amp;, Good Motor, 4 Door,
Pup~ Ptlace Kennels, Boarding, AC,' PB, PS. PW, $750, 614-448·
Stud Service Puppies. Grooming, 1815, Aheo- Six514·..,..1244.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds. 1989 Pontiac 8000 LE, iluto, air,
Peymenta Welcome, 814 -388 - amlfm cassene, 21,800 actuel
0429.
ml~ $1,000, 014-992-7653
Rabbitl Pedigree Mini LOPI 8
1989' Toyooa MR2 Black with Red
Weoka Old
With Ptpero
tmerior, 5 Speed, AC, loaded,
Ot4-379-821:i
'
Good Condlllon 87,000 Milot
ThrM Jack RuoHII pupplta. two $150081._,....2510alltr 5pm
ftrNiea and one malt, 10 lba. luH 1990 Grand-Am $800. 304· 87S.
grawn,
614-742-2050.
5091 .

••o

.2!n'....

Musical
Instruments

Fonder Donman 50 Comblriation
Doaa &amp; lttd Amp, 514·441.0727
Aller 5 P.M.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Helf.runner beans, $10/buahel,
you plok. 304-1175-2579.

Now ~Mcklng tame blaeltberriea,
S81gal304-1182-27«.

590

ForSale
or Trade

114 Ton electric overhead holal
BudQOI 110 voila, $135. 10" Set~
ellilt dllh, 3 boxes may need rt·
peirtd, $350. 2 Ton hand winch,
loll of oablt on winoh, $135. 304·
57f-2187.

fARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm &amp;~ulpment

1990 Thunderbird , V·8, auto,
t oade~.

garage kopo, 10S,OOO
mliu $5,000. 304-1182·2030.
1992 4 Door Plymouth Sundanc;:e
Automatic, Air, Tilt, New Tires,
83,500 Miles, Sharp! 14,395 814·
379-2748.

1991 Dodge DyneSiy, Loa~ad
SS,aoo OBO 614 -258·1252 or
814-258-1618
1992 l!nootn Continanoat Loaded,
ExoallljOI Condolion, Muat Sell I
814-441.-0738.
1993 Gio Metro, 28,000 Miles,
A-1 Snape, $4,500; 1988 Ch.evy
ASiro Work Van, 12.500, 814387-nSii.

Sldtr's Equipment Co. 304 -675·
7421.
John Deere lnduSirial Mower
F725 54 lnoh Cui, less Than 80
!;loura. 17,300, 614-31111-9:109.

. Wh ite 21 Hone Oieael 4 WO
Ttacror 5 Fl Belly Motor, Low

117.5i!o..~- 773-1188.

Anlique Car Spoke Whoela .And
Frfe Soone Tiro Size •75500 19
lnch•M.ake Oiler, 814-446·7127.
AuiO loaOL Dtoitr will · - 11nanclng even It you have been
turned down elsewhere.' Upton
Equipment Uaed Cora. 304' 4581089.
.

Houn; John Deere 301
. 720 'Tl'Ucks lor Sale.
Fronrond loadtr &amp; Sickle Bar,
Low Houra, 814-448·3438. '
'91 ForG ~250 tooevy duiJ lllic:ll, 5
speed ~""·~on, peril only, all
630
Llvestolk
peril a9,allabte, 814·848-2311
days, 8t"JM-:21!44 ~
8 Year Old Throughbred 11
Handa 1,200 Pda., Been Trait Rid- 1U7911l~1-bed Ch.. y pick-up
den AIOl $1,000, 014-388·9192.
widl
• 81110, air, 11,000. 30+
875-3118!1.
Ona year old r:oi\ 1500. 614-9926313.
•
t984 Ford Rangtt, 4oyl, 41pd,
good oond . 11,500. 304-875·
ThrH cows wJheifer calves; one 2074.
2 year old bred he1ier; 814 -7421988 S-10, 4cyt, 4apd.' ,1,500
3033.
rwm. ~oiler 4pm. 304-89S-3«1 .
Will tlaul Fair Animals ; Sunday
July 281h K.W. Failure 814·245· 1988 QOdgt Dokolll414, $3,600,
gaao
With·~· ~78.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

130 Bales 01 Hay On Wegon
814-448-4344.

•

rr &lt;liT'S &lt;'~RROO ...

MOW~ THe: U&gt;MJIJ., .
rT C~ RREI.UOOO. •.

111 Honcla CR 12S, exoellenl COfl;
dilion, new pla.tic, runs grea ~

K 8 7

West
10 2

~ 01C£S ~"R:)£5 .. .

East
•
•

98764

manyextraa, $1600 080, 01..,:.

A K J 9
Q J 5

K 5 4 3

• 6 2

9

• J 5 4 3

z

South

•

• 6 5 4 3
• A 3
o A 'Q 10
• A Q 10 6

19110 Suzuki GS 1100, nona_,

new ,.int &amp; new etic::Mr. 304-87~
3022 or 304-1182·2010.
1981 CX•SOO Dt!u1o, 12,500mi:,
good oond.S900. 304-11112-22119. '

1988 jlMC Piok· Up long Bed,
V8, Auto, 79K, Excatttnt Condi·
lion $5895; 1980 $495 Flrtblrd
Cook ii"IDII 814-448.0103

AnaMrto- Puzzle

«

1 Ball'ela
5 Auoelan
12 Prleat
13 Waxed
14 liPottar
15 Tlea
16 Havlne clumpe
18 ... man- mouM?
19 Nautical rope
20 Tha11hlng 'a
22 Mouth perta
26 Pe111on
28 Forget· - • 28 Fith diMaM
32 Hlatua
34 Worltoro' attn.
35 Roman dozen
36 OppoaHe of
exit
37 Drink lor two?
38 Anclen1 GrHk
dlalec1
40 Above
42 Picnic pettt

47 Roman 52
49 Media m1111nata
- Murdocn
52 End ol 1 train

56 Bender
57 Walt

co-'ng

56 Pie portion

59 Rtlrloln (from
eating)
flO Montlilr
expenM

DOWN
1 Dutroyed (al.)

2 Enlighten .
3 Hanttl'a olettr

4 Dry
5 New Deal
program
6 Actor Mosttl
and

9 Call- - day
10 Alter
deduction a
11 Commercial•
12 Calif. time

nameaakea
7 Atlinproduclng tree
8 Dtvaallte

d~e=~

Call her
out
a •pm. 30+875-7304.
1984 Yllhama 200 3-Wheeter,
new tires, starler &amp; bl.nery, good

BARNEY

c:oncl ~'IS-1584.

West

North

Eaat

I NT

Pass

3NT

All pass

IT FfELS WHEN YOU TAKE

Simple
Com lily
Gral11ng twig
lndlcatfon
33 Cut
39 He who
htaltatea

Opening lead: • 9

41 Undulate

OFF YORE IIRDLE, MAW !!

1888 Hllrley Da\lidson Spor111er
1200, .cetlent QOndition, 6,000mi .
$7,~, 304-882:,3480.

43JapanettAmertcan
45 Waxy
eubatance ·
In cor11

Help partner out

1984 KX 125, Dirt Bike $2,000.
304-815-3483.

46ild
46

By Phillip Alder

amall
entity

1988 Hondo 70, • - · Good
1800. 114-388-11475. •

50 d map
' ibbr.
51 Golf peg

~

82 Honda CX 500. Wllh A V-.LowMIIL 514-258-1131

52 Numbel'a pro
53 Cltrtcat
veatment
54 Undergraduate

g4 Suzuki GS 500E, 400 mlloa,
excellenl condition. mu11 eell,
u,ooo, lrot helmer, 11 4·992·
5878.

PF.ANTJTS

Honda 300, 4X4, 4-whooltr. 304-

SPIKE!W~AT

WRITE TO MOM,

ARE 'IOU OOIN6
IN T~E
J.IOSPITAL?

WILL 'fOU'?TELL

87S-1588.
Honda Trail SO Needs Minimum
Repalra, $300, 814 ·446 ·1 743
Oaya: L1ny 814·U8-6861 Even·

~ER

TO COME
SEE ME ..

1 WILL!

dtgl.
55 Sea eagle

TELL 1-\ER
WI-I ERE

I'LL

WRITE
TO I-IER ..

CELEBRITY CIPHER

FRANCE IS

by Luis Campos
Ctleobnty Cipher cryptograms are crealed from q'ilol111llona by temws people. pall and pr..-nl

e..::n letter in the cipher atanda for another

ing~

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

'E

SDWPEHDS
YEHOPD
Y Z N P G Z

MD P P D

F H

E

SZKEW

"Music is no1 illusion. but revelation : - Pyolr llyich Tcha1kovsky.

£L£CTRIC '

l

'::!:~' S@\\~~-~£~s· WOlD
GAM I
lrlltoolloy CLAY I . POllAN - - - - - 0 four
Rearrange iellera of tho
oterombltd words bo-

COMPAN
fAY BILL.$'
. H~~f .

'•

. low

~

~IT EVa.! [

form f""r worda.

Ull PI

,,

I
I I ll I I
EWEHL

f£/&gt;W

1-WJTfo'OOk

350 Or •oo T.H.M Auromaooc
Tranamlasion, ·814-446 -7581
L01veMessage.

10

=lOCAT

THE BORN LOSER

...

.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

11 Fl. Truck Camper Seti-Con llined, Exoellanl Shope I 11 4-4~6-

r

;,·
1 1 1..
•
_

PAY PH

I 1-

•

_.•

_"Have you ever noticed ," my
frtend quizzed. " that there·s always something about our sue-

r~-~::-:~~~~--. cesses that disple ases some

~--1'!~~:--RirE'Ir.:-E:::,Ir--V-,Ir--11
Q-C~~:::.
_J.__

2583.

12FT Camper Trillilor 614-441 ·
1093

--.1..

1..

the chuck le quoled

bv ldl1ng in the miss1ng

,L__.J__.J.L.J

wor d s

. vou develop from slep N o. 3 below.

&amp; PRINT
NUMIIUED lEITERS
THESE SQUARES

1002 35' 5th Wheel, excellent
condilion, beautiful, ·loaded, will
- - lrede, 814-948-3150.

6

Pop.Up Coleman Camper
Exoolllleno Condioton, 81•·368 :8293::::-· ----:--:---Sliding camper lor 81t uuok, aide
anap lwnlng, atove, 1furnate,

IN

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lE TlfRI

I 0 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWIRS

a

Wiring · Moose - Plaid - Mother - ORDER

SERVICES

You'll Find In rite
.. CIGssl(led Section.

Sov1n11

Attalla Hay 40 Acres To Be Cui 1990 Ford F-250 truck, recgv- 810
Home
Around Joty 26th, Bailed Into ered ·thell, 132,000 mlloa. XLT
Improvements
Square Dolts, Some Round Boles lariat, 8' bed wnintr, 5 ap., exlll . ---~::::::::::::::-----....;
01 Attalla And Grau Hay Avail auoponalon &amp; rowing
BASEMENT

lblo How. 814-446-0103.
;~;~U~5~o~o~.8~~~·~·9~4~9=-2~3~11~,1 Unoonditionat
WATERPRooFING,
.
=e.-c:: a1111-::-:~la...:hl_r_...:lro;.;m...::,••:;_•·o-n-&amp;-u-p.-l
lilotima ~uaranoeo:
~(
Local refirencea furntthed. Ea·
Morgan Forma, Ro 35 . 30•·937- 1993 Cnevox Work Truck, rabl · •·• 1"75 C011 8
" ·
2018.
S1 ,500 . SSP, ir, AMIFM. Yool
{ U)
••e"
0870 Or 1-Bo0-287-0576.
Roger~
Boxes. Will sate tor pey' oil. el4· Wa•-'.
-· ... -~ ...
Straw, square baled in field. on 448-3889
•gona. 304-67S.1607.
1994 Chevy Truck. 30~ - 875- Appllanoe Ptllt And Servioe : Ail
6328.
Name Branda Over 25 Yeara Ex·
TRANSPORTATION
pefience ~It Work Guaranletd '
730 Vena &amp; 4-Woi
Frtnoh CIIJ May1aft 814 -448:
7195.
••
.
710 Autos for Sale
1g91 Dodge Van 4 Captal~
Chairs Cuaoomlzed lnlldt. Cut'78 Ford Maverick. light blue. tom Ptino &amp; WlnciOwa, Runt, C&amp;C General Home Maingood condit ion. mull aee. new looks Good. Good Goa Mllttge, .,"1!na!~n01ctry·, Painting~ vinyl siding,
doora, Wlndowa, blthll!
tiret, new complete exhaust. new Very Depondoblo,, $1,350 Nogod· ~
repair and more. F01
brakea, drum rotors complete,
atM.814-441·1757.
fre&lt;ttltimlllt oall Ctoo~ 81 4·992·
new seal covert and more. Ask·
tng only teSO, Pomeroy/ Chesoar 1984 Ptymqotn Voyqer, Vorr
arM, call 614-992-4156, you may ct... $18000110t14-24s.Gil20
CR HouH ConalructiOn. Homn,
,_meuago.
Rtrnodoling Vinyl Siding, Wind '
1918 Chevy Ful Size
'84 Ford Tempo , 4 door automat- Van Elceflent Condif.lon, Lew - . Dan Or Cr.ig 814·254-M48;
8,14-258-11019, wv 025ell0.
ic;:, left rear tail ltght demage, Mieege, 614--712&amp;
97,000 miles. $350 080, 8U·
DRYWALL
949-2311 days or 614 -949-2644 1887 Dodge Full Size Von 311;
'
Aulo, 97,000 MiH $2,000, 080 ~· linillo, .......
evening~
Ceihngt ttxlured, plllltr repair.
614-256-1233.
Cai Tom 30•·175·4188. 20 ynra
·ag Tnundtrbird
twO door, :18
(1
liore,
elioe model rurbo, PS. 1887 LE Tbyollllln, po. pb. au10. eJperience.
over-drive, dual air. dual auntOOI.
PB. AC, 5 opeed. po~tr 10111 ~~75-~.
.
Ron'a TV 'Sorvlca; LptolaliZinglft
and loch, "Graa1 C~r." 11200
Zenilh alto MMdno moa1 other
nag., 814-992-7478"' l14·8•a- ·1987 $-lg llltHr, -point, brenda. Houae calls, 1-100-7'872811.
•
.
sun rllol, ·•nttd SHARP! 0015, wv 30+578-2388.
.$5,200.
Strioua
calla
only.
304·
1873 Ptrmou111 Duller 318, Au·
Roofing &amp; gullora co~oe home
tomallc, 84,000 Original Mttn IS75-1845.
remodeling .decka I aiding, 35
~Clean, 12.500, 814-448- 1890 Dodgo Ram Van B-250, yeera exptftence, B I 8 Roofing
72,000 Mlloa, 14,000, 080 Can and Conatrvction, 81• ·H2-2354
1173 Volkswagen Baja w/4 new Do Seen At Golllpolia Daily Trib- or 1-@-889-31143.
~rtl, now paint job, aunrool, loll una, 825 Third Avora;e, Gallipolia
840 EleCtrical and
Ohio.
oi01111L .1.800. 30+578-2910.
Refrigeration
1877 lincoln Cont .. Exotlltnl ~ 8110 Ford F150 XLT Lotito, automatic. aulD. 4WD, Valtor - P
RSES CERTFEO DEAUER
Condilior\ 4 New Pttnr
Job.l1995; 11184 Audi 4000, F0&lt; (bumper &amp; gooaentck), UOOO,
LAWAENICE ENTERPRISES .
8
,..143-51
111.
Peril, Will Run For Good lloch.
He1t PumAa, Air Conditioning, H·
$500
'
Booll LOHIFull aize 1992 Chevr01t1 van with You OOfl'l CaH Ua
FrH Eadmatas. 1-800-29HJ098
1171 Lincoln .Collectors Setiel, 30,000 mlea, ow drwa, PW, PM, 8144488308, WV002945.
'
Only Made 5oo Very Good Con- plreer teal maktl queen alzt
bed,
color_
TV,
VCP,
tront
rttr
dlian,
4 448 3437.
Retidlnli,l l or com~rcill wir~ .
hntor and air, willie wtgray new I8MCe or repa.rs. Maallt' lt·
1810 illlnllac Trana -Am All· IUipiti, Hkt , _ lllllng .13,100 c.nl84 t4ecttlcian. Aidenoyr '
ofllt. . . It~ E!ectrl~t: WV000306, 304·575- "
tllmldc,' '2 Oooro, Sunooof 411, Ot , · . .
Qotd hilt.. Ports Cl;; .1 .500 1012 • •:GCiplft..
i11144'15-4141 Aniii8P.Iol.
1885 112 Toyo11 Tacoma 4l4, Roaldantiat Or Commorciat Wir1883 Ch..r Monlt Corio, bolgt wlookf trim, bog - ..••• Ing. New Strvlce Or Rtplira. 1.1355CID, boat ol evo;ylhlng, Raly r.nded Clb, 31 -1050 ....d. load- conaed Eltelriolan. Welah flee·
wllotla. 304-175-3022 or 304· ed. ""'"Mil, •18,UOO firno 304- trlc 114·448·8950, Galllpotta ·
. •
Ohkl
875-«)1 7.
112-2010.

Toda)l'l ch.Je · R tJQtJ~tl~ G

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Mu sic is 1he eye of the ear ." - Thomas DraKe.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

btrll.304~75-2184 .

PGD

J D D p .'

GDN

RNZGZV ,

Wanted To Buy : 10 Inch Stall
Convener For General MotOfS

790

vzw

WGD

WPZNSFY

wzv

DoJo -

760

XHDV

J FN

1003 Polaria Waverunner With
Trtiltr I Co-. $3,500, '614-4-418253 Aller 7 P.M.

Boat iOG4, 180 tlanWh!o Only .20 Hra. On Engine
. At Ntw): Thil New Boal
Ntw 1850. Campor Top
And Exoelionl T10iltr. Thia Boauoy
Hu Cloc:lled 58+ Mlltl Per Hour.
~ And Family Co~ld Be Having
Countttn Fun Hours. Loadod
Wilh ~oceaaorlea. Current Book
Vatu~ ta $12,800, Will Soli For
Much len. Call 614-448-2055
Aller 7:00 P.M. leava Mtlaage.

piece
21 German
23 Fixed
quantity
24 Beauty opol
25 Porch
27 Oil-exporting
28
29
30
31

,.

South

NOW l KNOW HOW &amp;DOD

DAOBURN
ITCHY OL'
Wl511

1987 Honda XR80, $700 obo,
814-llll2--

17 Living-room

aasn.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

'*'

1994 4 Door Ponolac .Grand A1l1
SE. l.W'Iriiaga one owner 1
manUfactcr warrenty Ptlct
111,400 614-448-7283 Day time
and614-4f8-41_27Evining
-~

lops, all leather intertor, black .

Hydraulic Hosea, Made To Of'der.

• K 10 2
• J g 87

Motorcycles

459-5248.

07-25-96

:10" Checkmalt Convnotr, open
bow, 11ereo, Mercrulaer motor,
1993 oids Cudosa Supremo, red . exc. condition-Inside &amp; out, very
4dr, OUIO, V-8, abo. all - r . ac,
boat. $4,700. 304 -882- •
radlotoesseut •. l8,900. 304-8750888 or304-11'15-4257.

1995 Pon~ao Trana sport $E
125 Cub Cadet, 50in. &lt;ul. $800. 3800, 11,000 mllea. all opoions,
very c;:te.-n. "fertilizer OYtt'IPfl.)' on
304-895-3078.
paint." 112,500, 814 -949 -2311
300 eaiton pllatlc farm cheml· daya, 61•·949-ll044 ......
oat tank, on sled with hose, $75,
1995 Z-28 Camaro, load&amp;d wit814·948-3403.
Drog Dltc &amp; Couple SJngte Plow,
814·379·272C AF1ER 8 P.M.

North
• Q 87

•wD· 114-446 -

all opliona, sunroof, crulae, anvtm

New locetlon• P1mpered Paw• $5,000 or oilers ""epltd, 814-

570

740

43 Compaaapt.
Type of cube

ACROSS

emprett

niahed. and unfurniahed, aecurity
depollt requ1red, no pets, 814 -

992·2218.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ITHURSDAY

One youngster to another: " I find word s ttl the d i ct io nary faster now that I know the words are in alphabeti cal ORDER!"

JULY 251

"•=

Convo;..,.

v-o,

sc.

mo.

we

a

•s.soo..,

,,M.

:'n.~-~~~:-------- ·

I

you in
year
lor your
II) A
Aalro-Graph pnadictions today by ma~ing 1t will be in a position 10 do something lor
$2 and SASE to Astro-Graph , c/o 1his you 1ha1 you cannot do lor yourseH today.
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill You may have helped this person previASTR0-0RAPH
Stallon. New Yor1&lt;, NY 10156. Make sure ousty
IIISCES (Fob. 20-M arch 20) You will
lo a1ale your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) This can be a e•cel In competitive Situations loday .
\
dar of completion and posl11ve luHittment Your confidence can be enhanced sub&gt;
regarding
an projeCt you've always mean1 stanlially ~ you convince youraelllhat you
BERNICE
to finiah. but have not had an opponuni1y have the abili1y 1o succeed.
BEDEOSOL yet.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll10) Your positive
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) Pry yoursell attitude witt be bo1h receptive and
away from the COUCh today and get out- assenive today. You can absorb good
side and move aroun&lt;l. Brief visits to ideas !rom olhers and disseminale them
nearby friends might be just wna1 lhe e"eclively.
doCtOr onlered.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Assiatance
8CORPIO (Oct. 2+flo¥. 22) Your flnan- you gtve to others mighl not result in
clal situation wHI remain favorable and immediate returns today, but someWhere
otable. Do not make any changes in down the line, you will be rewarded in a
Friday, July 26, 1996
.,... In which 1ling8 ant moving ahead very pleasant manner.
GEMINI (MeV 21-June 20) Find a stimuVou haW' learned from your experienceS arnoothl)r.
and this could enable you 10 bl1 a winner SAGITTAAIUB (Nov. 23-Deo. 21) Vou lating companion today and do some in 81'8111 in which you pr8YiOu8ly mtl With can Optlll&amp; with more lraedom and lnde- thing fun to escapa dull, mundane roudisappoln1mtn1. Play the game eoconllug pendeuce today than VO!' «*' 10morrow. tines. 'r'ou will need somebody perky and
It oornetlllng tpteial_requlw your perto your tnstinctl.
•
. CANCER (June 21.Julv 22) It you are
LEO (July 23·AUII- 22) In ordtr to IOMIIOUCtt.doR~IIWIYadvance your pertonll goala today, II CAPRICOIIN (Dec~ 22.Jen. 11) TCJdaY, . unproductive today, you mlghl feet guilty
might bl1 11ecUf'IY fOr you 10 lake a Qll- you can bl1 more e.fwctlve • you "-P a at the 111111 of the day. You can overoome
culaled lltk. Wyou~ I I W - low prolfle. Do not tty 10 Nn the lhow. your sluggishness H you engage In Indusquences, go fOr n1 Ott a (ump on 11e by Slay In IOUCh with events, but don111y to trious ectlvlty.

•

Up.,.t.

undelllandlng the

'""*- that govern oontrorlhlin.

l

. '

�,.

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Thursday, July 25, 1996

'

Little Hocking,
Point Pleasant
teams advance

4-H livestock champions posted
Grand and reserve champions in
pion; Alban Salser, honorable men· reserve champion; Meghan Avis,
H11rses
4-H livestock projects were
lion.
Michelle O'Nail, Billee Pooler,
Basic 4-H Horsemanship: Jessica
announced today by the Meigs Coun· Janey, grand champion; Kacy Ervin,
Raising Fancy Poultry: Alban Rebecca Scott, honorable mention.
· ty Extension Service.
reserve champion.
Salser, grand champion; Edward Dill,
. Winners in their respective proBasic 4-H Horse Science: Jessica reserve champion; Brent Butcher,
Sheep
. Jects were as follows:
Sheep Breeding · Beginner:
Wheeler, grand champion; Candace Jessica Justice, honorable mention.
Cattle
Bunting,
reserve
champion;
Turkeys: Alban Salser, grand Theresa Baker, grand champion; Ash·
Beef Breeding 1: Cheryl Jewell, Stephanie Story-Schwab, honorable champion.
ley Hager, reserve champion.
grand champion; Sarah Clifford
Sheep Breeding · Intermediate:
mention.
Ducks and Geese: Alban Salser,
reserve champion.
'
Horseless Horse: Cinda Bratton, grand champion; Carrie Wiggins, Patty N'ally, grand champion;
Beef Breeding II: Julie Brown grand champion; Beverly Burdette, reserve champion; Matthew Salser, Michelle O'Nail, reserve champion.
grand champion; Jeromee Calaway; reserve champion.
Sheep Breeding . Advanced:
honorable mention.
reserve champion.
Rebecca Scott, grand champion; Riki
Light Horse Selection: Whitney
Feeder Calf: Julie Brown, grand !)arr, grand champion; Candace
Barringer, reserve champion.
Rabbits
champion; Brent Buckley, reserve Bunting, reserve champion.
Rabbits 1: Courtney Kennedy;
champion; Chance Watson, Josh
Basic Horse Training: Jodie Ihle, grand champion; Billie Jo Welsh,
Swine
Hager, honorable mention.
grand champion, Lisa Stethem, reserve champion; Bethany Cooke,
Squeal Appeal: Elaine Putman,
Market Steer: B. J. Ervin, grand reserve champion.
John Cooke, Elizabeth Smith, Robby grand champion; Matthew King,
champton; Brandon Buckley, reserve
Learning To Jump: Susan Smith, honorable mention.
reserve champion; Jeremy Gillilan,
champion; Marcus Branon, Wesley Grassier, grand champion; Candace
Rabbits II and III : John Sheena Gilmore, Jessica Justice, honKarr, Joe Dillon, honorable mention. Bunting, reserve champion.
Krawsczyn, grand champion; Julie orable mention.
Dairy Market Feeder: Rachel
Horse
Nutrition:
Danielle Spaun, reserve champion; Sari Put·
Hamming It Up: Billie Jo Welsh,
Chapman, grand champion.
·
Grassier, grand champion; Sara man, honorable mention.
grand champion, Glenda K. Hunt,
Dairy Calves and Heifers: Alyssa Craig, reserve champion; Lisa StethAdvanced Rabbits: Michele reserve champion; Jennifer Goeglein,
Holter, grand champion; Kristie em, honorable mention.
Hupp, grand champion: Amy Smith, Lester Parker, II, Carrie Sheets, Hon·
Warner, reserve champion; Adam
Conditioning the Racehorse: reserve champion.
orable Sheets.
Chevalier, honorable mention.
Matthew Milhoan, honorable men·
Going Whole Hog: Leslie Parker,
Dairy Cows and Management: lion.
grand champion; Alyssa Hoffman,
Lambs
Rachel Chapman, grand champion;
Trail Riding: Holly Milhoan,
Market Lamb 1: Travanna Moore, reserve champion: Travis Lodwick,
Tricia Davis, reserve champion; grand champion; Lisa Stethem. grand champion; Sarah Yost, reserve Aric Patterson, honorable mention.
Chns Parker, honorable mention.
reserve champion.
Swine Production • Advanced:
champion; Ashley Rupe, Alan
Moore, Stephanie Wilson, honorable Chris Barringer, grand champion;
Goats
Poultry
mention.
Andrew Rollins, reserve champion.
Angora Goats: Patty Nally, grand
Poultry Production . Raising PulThe Normal Animal; John
Market Lamb II: Christiana
champion; Beverly Burdette, reserve lets: Sarah Houser, grand champion; Kennedy, grand champion; Cinda Krawsczyn, grand champion; Jessica
champion.
Melissa Houser, reserve champion; Bratton, reserve champion, Theresa Barringer, reserve champion;
Goats: Danielle Grueser, grand Matthew Salser, honorable mention. Baker, Derrick Bolin ; honorable Meghan Avis, Riki Barringer,
champion; Erin Bush, reserve cham·
Poultry Production • Raising meniion.
Michele Hupp, honorable mention.
pion; Ben Crane, Brian Hupp, Alban Broilers: Melissa Guess, grand cham·
Animal Disease: Kindell Brown,
Market Lamb III: Jamie Drake,
Salser, honorable mention.
pion; Matthew Kirk, reserve cham- grand champion; Kelly Dalton, ·grand champion; Tricia Davis,
reserve champion.

. Sports on Page 4 ·

•

.l

•
\ ~

Historical

Walkers will be promoting the
goal of increasing the incidence and
duration on breastfeeding worldwide.
Walkers are expected to raise over
$120,000 for breastfeeding outreach
programs, exceeding last year's figure
of S I08,000, as well as making communities aware of the importance of
breastfeeding for the children of the
. world.
La Leche League International is
a nonprofit organization that offers
breastfeeding education and encouragement through mother-to-mother
support groups, telephone counseling
and extensive interaction with physi·
ctans and health care providers. More
than 100,000 women in 60 countries
are assisted by La Leche League pro·
grams every month.
Those interested in participating in
the World Walk for Breastfeeding or
in sponsoring a walker may contact

SQGi~ty

The Meigs County Historical
Society is taking orders for a cover·
let commemorating Morgan's Raid
and the Battle of Buffington Island.
The 46-by-67-inch coverlet will
dcptct scenes a.~sociated with the July
18 and 19. !863 ratd and battle as it
took place in Meigs County.
Pictures used tn the design are of
the Langsville Mill and Dam where
Morgan first entered the county and
found the bridge burned, the first
bridge burned by local militia to
delay his forage. Near this site a
young Confederate so ldier was shot

LLLof Point Pleasant at 675-5 142 or sary of the signing of the Innocenti
675-4439.
Declaration on the Protection, ProTheme of the celebration is motion and Support of Breastfeeding
Breastfeeding: A Community which was adopted in 1990 by 32
Responsibility.
governments and 10 United Nations
World Breastfeeding Week ts part Agencies. The Innocenti Declaration
of an ongoing campaign to increase recognizes the importance of breast·
public awareness of the importance feeding to infant and maternal health,
ofbreastfeeding. La Leche League is as well as the social and economic
11 founding member of the World benefits it provides to the family and
Alliance foP Breastfeeding Action society.
(WABA) global alliance of health
La Leche League International is
care providers, non-governmental a nonprofit organization that provides
organizations and mother support breastfeeding informatton and
groups. lbis year's goals include edu· encouragement through mother-to·
eating all sectors of the community to mother support groups and interaccreate a supportive breastfeeding tion with parents, physicians,
environment. Families, schools, researchers, and health care
churches, employers, the media, gov- providers. The organization reaches
ernments, stores and eating places are over 100.000 women monthly in 60
all encouraged to remove barriers to countries.
breastfeeding.
Local LLL groups can be found in
Aug. I marks the sixth anniver- Pt. Pleasant and Gallipolis.

t

I

Springs is pictured . Historians report
that Morgan stopped here, probably
at the springs. While in this locality,
Confederate sol&lt;)iers shot and killed
Isaac Carleton.
The raiders continued on to
Chester, where they burned the
bridge and mill. A photograph of the
rebuilt Chester mill and bridge are
used.
At Portland, Morgan headquartered in the William Middleswart
home . This house, along with the
James Williamson house, used as ·a
field hospital during the battle, are

incorporated in the design . Finishing
out the portrayal is a gunboat, cannon, sword, gun, bugle, drum, both
Confederate and Union nags, and a
cavalry battle scene.
The coverlet will sell for SSO and ·
is being offered only in cranberry
with cream. Orders must be placed by
Sept. 15 . Due to the investment
required. there is no guarantee that
any extra coverlets will 'be ordered.
Proceeds from the coverlet will be
used to cover costs associated witli
the annual reenactment of the Battle
of Buffington Island.

Society
scrapbook
CHESTER COUNCIL
Remembrances of Ada VanMeter
were given at the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323. Daughters of
America, held rece ntly at the hall.
Plans were made to drape the
charter for her at the next meeting.
Members were asked to wear white.
· Erma Cleland thanked members for
attending the servtce for her at the
cemetery.
Goldie Fredenck. councilor
opened the meting in ritualtstic form:
Balloting was held for Whitney Ashley who will be taken into the order
at the state session. Thank you note
was read from Helen and George
Wolf for nowers on their 50th
anniversary. A practice for state ses·
sion will be held at the August meet·
mg.
CHOICE SUPPORT GROUP
CHOICE, a home school suppon
group. held its first meeting at Star
Mill Park in Racine recently with
plans being discussed for the upcoming school rear.
Next meeting was set for Aug. 6
at !0 a.m. at the Meigs County Public Library at which time John
Costanzo, elementary coordinator for
Meigs County, will be the speaker.
Refreshments will be served at that
meeting, and parents, relatives and
other interested individuals are invit·
ed to attend.
Plans were also made at the meet·
ing for a kick -off picnic on Sept. 3 at
10 a.m. at Star Mill Park.
.

Vol. 47, NO. 58
1 Section, 10 Pages

Filii ......, kpll tM

Sentinel Classifieds

1996 MERCURY

SABLE LS
4 Dr, V6, auto, air
AMIFM Cl18, tilt, ..,.., ••
PS, PB, PW, POL,
seat.

V6, auto, air cond,
PB, lilt, cruise, A ..I/FI•
call, SLT

1995 PONTIAC FIREBIRD FORMULA
350 V8, auto, air cond, AM/FM cass, tilt, crulscf.

199S FORD
WINDSTAR
V6, auto, · air cond
AM/FM c11s, tilt, cruise .·•
PS, PB, PW, PDL., more. .

1994 FORD
RANGER 4X4
V6, auto, air co
AM/FM caas, PS,
short bed, XLT.

r

TWO IN STOCK

LOW MILES

1993 CHEVY
ASTRO
V6, auto, air
V6, auto, air cond, AIIIJFJII
AM/FM Clll, tilt, crulseJ,c J CD, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
PS, PB, much more.
cruln.

EXTENDED LENGTH

to LEPC members, from left, Ohio Division of
Wildlife Officer Keith Wood, Meigs County
Sheriff's Deputy Ralph Trussell, EMS Director
Robert Byer and Syracuae Mayor George Con·
nolly.

DIVE TEAM DONATION ·The Meigs County
Underwater Rescue Teem received much·
needeclltema earlier this weak at a meeting of
the Melga County Local Emergency Planning
Committee. Diver Brent Zirkle shows the Items

Meigs County's water
rescue team ~well-suited•
By J.IM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The next time members of the
Meigs County Water Rescue Te.1m
have to dive into cold water, it will
he a mission for which they are wellsuited ... literally.
The team received new articles in
its arsenal this Tuesday in the form of
much-needed equipment including
_ -~~.lt su!~, s~ill)ly design.ed fo~ cold
...,atet..dtvmg . .,
,
.
The suits, called dry suits, differ
from the more customary wet suits in
that the diver does not make direcrcontact with cold water. This enables
divers to stay underwater longer in
frigid conditions .
One of the suits is cnvironmen·
tally sealed for usc where hazardous
materials may be present.
In addition, the team purchased
three masks with underwater com·
munications and a surface-to-diver
communicator.
The ability to communicate will
be an asset to the diving team ,
according to diver Brent Zirkle of
Pomeroy, one of the team's original
members.
Not only will the ability to com·
municate make for hettcr coordina·

tion underwater, being able to talk to
each other can make the missions
safer for the divers.
In addition, the masks can also be
used in confined space rescues, Zirkle
said. Adding that the masks arc sim·
ilar to those worn by rescuers in the
Oklahoma City bombing.
The underwater rescue team
received funds for the $5,000 pur·
chase from a V@f.ieJv of sources
il!~luding the Mason. W.Va., Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 9926, the
Meigs County Sheriffs Office and
Prosecuting Attorney's Office and
from · the Emergency Manag~ment
Agency/Local 'Emergem:y Planning
Commtttce from the county's share of
funds from the now defunct MidOhto Valley Planning Council,
according to Meigs County Emer·
gency Services Dtrector Robert Bycr.
Almost unique for thi s area. the
Meigs County Underwater Rescue
Team is on call to assist neighboring
counties that do not have divers or
only limited underwater resources.
To date . lhc team has recovered
the body of drowning victim from
Forked Run Lake and assisted in a
search in Jackson Cnunty for a per·

OUTDOOR GOSPEL SING - TIM! 11th annu·
al outdoor goapel sing will be held at the Carl
Gorby Farm, Saturday night at 7 p.m. Singers
will Include the Addlaon Choir pictured here,
the Narrow Way Slngere, end Joy Slngara.

Those attending are to take lawn chalra. A conceealon atand will be In operation. The farm Ia
loc:etecl two miles west of Langavllle on Route
325 off Rout8124.

Students named
to dean's list

RE-ROOFING SALE
Corrugated Asphah Roofing

Three area students received academic honors at Miami University,
Oxford, during the second semester
of the 1995-96 school year, accord·
ing to Krista! Humphrey, university
spokesman.

•Fast, easy Installation
oGoes directly over old roof
•Won't rust or corrode
•Reduces noise
•Provides added Insulation
•Lifetime limited warranty

Crystal Vaughan , Langsville, and
Mason Fisher; Syracuse, were named
to the Dean's List for achieving
above a 3.5 grade point average dur·
ing the semester.
Michael McKelvey, Syracuse, as
named to the President's List for
achieving a perfect 4.0 grade point
average during the semester.

Sale

SJJ ~!;,.
.,_cas
'!'-[)o.IC:. .Ir11U4UIOI
111. • a1eo, a '\ • 101\.

Vlfllr L..- l..,., Co.

.. .. ....

'llROWN
'GRAY

11~1

8q. A.l

'REO
'GREEN

'IN STOCK COLORS

... :!''-.....J

1990 TOYOTA
CELICA

V6, auto, air cond
2 Dr, auto, air cond,
AM/FM ceas, tilt, cr~~ae, ttl AM/FM Call, till, PS, PB, .
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
more, ST Model.
Hal
.

LOCAL TRADE

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - A leaner $1 55
million budget for the Appalachian
Regional Commission was approved
by the House Thursday - $15 mil ·
lion less than last year's spending levels of $170 million and President
Clinton's budget request for lise a I
i997.
Unlike last year's budget debate.
no lawmaker proposed to kill the
commiSSion.

Since its creation in 1965. the
ARC has spent about $6.5 billion in
impoverished areas in 12 states and
all of West Vi'llinia for roads. sewers.
education. health care. johs creation

en tine
'

35 cents
A Gennett Co. N-opeper

and small busine.&lt;S development.
The leg islation still must be
approved by the Senate before it is
sent to Prcstdent Chnton. The Senate
bill earmarks $165 million for the.
ARC.
"Clearly. there's. a lot of impor·
tant infrastructure. roads. sewe r and
water projects that arc uncompleted ...
said ARC spokesman Duane
DeBruyne. "Obviously. we prclcr the
Senate bill ...
In lisca l year 1996. which ends
Oct . I. area stales among the 13
receiving ARC fuQding arc West
Virginia ($21 million). Ohio ($ 11.7
million! and Kentucky ($20.3 mil·

By CAROLYN SKORNECK
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Congressional negotiators agreed to a four·
year te st of tax-exempt medical savings accounts, removing a major
obstaCle to a bill that would allow
workers to get new health insurance.
even if they ·have pre-existing illnesses.
Thursday's agreement by Sen.
Edward Kennedy, 0-Mass., and Rep.
Bill Archer. R-Texas. chairman of the
House Ways and Means Committee,
also freed another popular electionyear measure - a bill that would
raise the minimum wage .
The minimum wage bill had hccn
held up in the fight over medi t'al sav ings accounts. whtch an insured per·
son could usc 10 pay routine medical

expenses.
The House and Senate hoth have
passed dillcrin~ versions of the health
insurance bill . the mam thrust of
which provides that anyone who
changes or loses ajoh would he able
to get health insurance. even with a
pic-ex isting medical condition.
Arter the agreement was reac hed
Thursday, the Senate choose confer·
ces to work out a compromise health
insurance bill with House negotiators.
"The health insurance hill "will
allow American worker. the securi·
ty of knowing that they will not lose
their health coverage if they chan~c
their jobs." President Clinton said in
a statement. "Raising the minimum
wage fm millions of America's hard·
est workers is al~\' the right thing to
do."

hecausc we're going to move with
this health r.cfonn hill and there 's no
reason why it shouldn't· pa" holh
houses.",

Kennedy h:td hlnckcd pro~rcss on
the health insurance legislation.
whtch he had co-sponsored with
Sen. Nan cy Kassehaum . R-Kan .,
hecausc he ohjectcd to R~puhlican
aucmpts to mcludc mcd irul savings
accounts in the hill.
The minimum -wugc hill got

caught up in the dispute when the
assistant majority leader of the Sen·
ate. Don Ntckles. R·Okla . said he
would hhx:k Senate ncgotintors from

sitting down with House lawmaker;
on thi.t issue as long as Kennedy
blocked the health care wnfcrenec.

Dole urges tax breaks for small firms

At Hope 's Country Fresh Cookies
By JUDY KEEN
here. Dole noted that lounder Hope
USA TODAY
Spivak Flickc had three employees
KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. water, icc and swift water rescues as Republican prestdcntial candidate when she started the firm in 19X5.
well as on search and rescue mis- Bob Dole on Wednesday promised She now employs 60.
sions, Zirkle explained.
Dole said he 'd convene a White
tax breaks and castng or lcdcral reg·
Divers will demonstrate the ryt':" ulations for small businesses.
House conference "on how we can
equipment Tuesday,· 6:30 . p.m .. at
In campaign appearances at a make the drc~m of owning :1hus ine~s
Lon(ton Pool in Syracuse .
cookie factory here and at a wire the dream for more and more AmerThe team will demonstrate ha.,ic plant in McKees Rocks, both owned ican women." There arc 7.9 million
usage and benefits of the equipment. by women, DqiR sought to demon· female husinc ss owners in the nati,m ,
possibly showing a mock drowning, strate his coirl!l'iitment to helping Dole said.
Zirkle said.
At Ace Wire Spring &amp; Form Co.
small firm s create jobs.
The team was formed about two
Inc.
in McKees Rocks. Rep. Susan
He had broader goals, too. Dole
years ago by divers Zirkle. Scott and wants to avoid reacting to President Molinan. R-N.Y., made a surprise
Gcri Walton, and Dana Aldridge. Clinton and curtail controversies lhat appearance with Dole to decry the
Since then the team has expanded to dominate news coverage by focusing ge nder gap.
about l 0 members including Tommy on specific issues and proposals.
" It would take me days tn talk
Werry. Doy Nitz. Brent Shuler. Dnug
almut
what Bob Dole has done for
And Wednesday's appearance'S
Lavender. Eher Pickens Jr. and Chris were designed to illustrate his con· women:· said Molinari, who wtll
Weaver.
,
cern about women. with whom polls deliver the keynote address al ne&lt;t
Zirkle pointed out the team is show Clinton has a huge edge over month's GOP wnvcnlion.
more like a family of divers, rather Dole . .
"There is a gender go p (for
than a strict organization.
'"We're not a company of divers.
we're a family of divers," he satd.
'"A family that dives together stays
together."

Heat sickens
Olympics staff,
spectators

improvement or consuuction is rom-

ATLANTA (AP) The
South's punishing heal has
already made nearly 400 people
sick during the Olympics, but
most visitors are coping by
drinking lots of water and using
cooling aids, such as gel·filled
bandanas ·that slay ice-cold for
hours.

pletcd.
By the end of 1997, the ARC esti·
mates that 2.230 or about 74 percent
of the highway will he complete .
Jesse White. the federal co-chair·
man of the commission. has cstimat·
ed $4.5 billion is needed to complete
lhe highway hecause the remaining
roads must be constructed through
mountams.

The Centers for Disease Con·
trol and Prevention said Thurs·
day thai 372 spectators and
workers were treated for heal·
related illnesses between July 6
and July 23 - S4 of them dur·
ing the July 19 opening ceremony in a packed Olympic Stadium.
Nine fainted from the heat.

lion).
This year. the ARC spent $1 07
million for improving and building
the ARC highway - the commis·
sion' s largest budget item.
About 2, 177 miles nut of 3.025
miles authorilcd by Congress for

Archer said. "The American peo·
pic arc going to he th e win ners nnw

Republicans) thin shows up in poll
after poll. " she sa td "T he fact
remains thai some Rcpuhlicans anJ
some Democrats deserve to have a

gender gap. But not Boh Dole ...
Dole also met with Gov Totn
Ridge, considered a pos.,ibtlity . for
Dnle's · runnin~ mate.
The U.S. Cham her of Commncc
endorsed Dole's small hustnc"
"opp&lt;trtunity plan ...
Highlights:
- Elimin:tlc lcJcml small·husi·
ness rcgulatitm\ th.11 ; 1ft.' not co,tcllct.:tivc.
- Enact an csrutc-tax exemption
for family -ow ned small hu.,•ncsscs.
- Restore homc-o flit:c &lt;lcdut.:tion

in the t;u code.
-

Increase

hcalth -insurunrc

deduction forsclf-cmploycJ from
percent to IlK) percent.

~0

Former Meigs County
attorney seeks new trial
A fonncr Pomeroy attorney cnn- tlcm:c would li kely L:hangc the n.:sull

of gtving drugs w two girls in of a trial if granted.
In his mot ton, Mullen states he has
1993 has filed a mutton for a new tri·
discovered
the identtt y of the person
al. stating he has new evidence prov·
who
gave
the
drugs to om• of the
ing someone else cornrniucd the
girls.
L:fiTnC.
The mo110n also t..:ontains I 0 ani D. Michael Mullen, now a Mid· davits from nine different people.
dleport resident. was lound guilty of including Mullen hirnscll. ·Snmc of
eight charges of corrupting nnothcr the rcoph: dallll to lmvc seen anoth·
with drugs. and one count each ol er man actually gtve the drugs to the
aggravated menacing and c.:ontrihut- girl or to have 'cen lhc girl with the
ing tn the delinquency nf a minor.
man in a har dunng that time .
A Meigs County jury found that
Mullen was scn tcn~ed to prison
on March 12 and 13, IIJ93. Mullen li&gt;llowing the trial hut was rcleused
. gave drugs to twn Pnmcroy girls, on Aug. II. 1'195. Since his release.
aged 13 and II at the time .
he has hecn invcstigmmg the incl·
Mullen filed the motion last week dent, he wrote .
in the Mei gs County Court of Com·
He is servi ng as h1~ own counsel
mon Pleas, claiming the new cvi· and investigator.
VICICJ

Bomb may have blown Flight 800 out of sky
By PAT MILTON
Associated Preas Writer
EAST MORICHES. N.Y - A
mysterious split-second sound fol·
lowed by si lence: The final recorded
moment of TWA Flight 800 has
brought investigators closer to concluding that a homb hlew the jet lin·
cr out of the sky. a source told The
Associated Press.
"' li was considered a 20 percent
possibility that the explosion was
caused by mechanical failure. now
it's down to a 5 or 10 percent possi·
bility," a source close to the investi·
gation said.
. 1llc source. who spoke on condi·
lion of anonymity. added that "inves·
tigators are holding out for physical
evidence before they declare the
probe criminal."
· 111e remarks late Thursday came
hOurs after a preliminary study of the
so-called black boxes - the night
d3ta and cockpit voice recorders.

~~!:,Ohlo~~---...!~~~~:··:11~32:.:oqo~·::::!"':.:·~'

'

son that was later found murdered.
On Sept. 14, 1994, divers swam
onto the wreck of the sunken stern·
wheeler Jean Mary to help stanch the
escape of diesel fuel from the slricken boat.
The team can also assist on high

House approves leaner ARC budget

Investigators concluding

1990 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

•

Deal paVes way for
health insurance,
minimum wage bills

lo plac• •• ad, call
99 2·2156

1996 DODGE
DAKOTA 4X2

Clear tonight, low In
50s. Saturday, sunny,
high near 80.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 26, 1996

GRAND CHAMPION -Jodie lhle of Pom«oy took grand champion In her project of bale horse training. She 11 1 member of
the Pleeaure Rider• Club, and Is pictured here •• her project work
waa Judged by local horae breeder, Karen Griffith.

selling commemorative coverlet

and killed by a local restdent and
buried near the site of his death .
While no picture is used to portray
the killing of civilians Dr. Hudson
and Holliday Hysell by Confederate
soldiers near Bradbury, the accom·
panying narrative will include this
information.
The Meigs County Courthouse in
Pomeroy and the original courthouse
in Chester are pictured as they
appeared in 1863. Union troops were
in Pomeroy July 18 as Morgan passed
behind the town.
The Jenkinson cabtn at Rock

a1

t

Local La Leche League walk set for Aug. 17
Thousands of breastfeeding fam.
iltes, their supporters, and health
care providers arOU!Jd the world will
participate in the sixth annual La
Leche League International World
Walk for Breastfeeding, being held a
various locations from June 15 to
Sept. 15.
The Point Pleasant area walk will
be held Saturday, Aug. 17, at Krodel
Park with a potluck picnic to follow.
Registration begins at 10 a.m. at the
.gazebo at Krodel Park and walkers
will walk a symbolic one mile, join·
ing with women, children, and families around the world to demonstrate
the importance of breastfeeding.
World Breastfeeding Week, Aug.
I. 7, was proclaimed by the World
Alliance for Breastfeeding Action
(WABA) along with the World
Health Organization (WHO) and
UNICEF

Pick 3:
125
Pick 4:
4103
Buckeye 5:
10-21-25-31-36

Federal invesu~ators said they
detected in the voice recorder a
'" fraction -of-a-second sound,"" then
silence. II 1/2 minutes after the
Pans-bound Boemg 747 took off July
17.
Robert Francis, vice chairman of
the Nattonal Transportation Safety
Board. refused to speculate about
what the sound was, or what it
meant. He said both tapes would be
subjected to more detailed tests .
The data recorder's tape was con·
taininated by water, but Francis said
its information probably could be
recovered with time. The data tape
records speed, engine functions and
other details that might provide clues.
Francis told CNN this morning
that the abriipt power cutoff could be
"a wire being cut for some reason, a
loss of power. There are obviously a
number of ways you can lose connections between a source and some·
thing that is driven by electricity."

..

.-

-·~

__ ..... .._

.........

He added that while the recorders
were gelling investigators "closeno
bei ng able to determine what happened,". they may not turn up any·
thing conclusive.
Asked on ABC's "Good Morning
America" whether mechanical failure
was ruled out, he said, "absolutely
not. "
Divers retrieved the black boxes,
which are actually orange, from the
ocean noor early Thursday, the same
day President Clinton consoled griev·
ing relatives tn New York and
announced new safety measures for
airports.
The tighter security, which is
expected to add as much as 30 min ·
utes to boarding time, includes more
questioning of passengers in check·
in lines and more inspections of car·
ry-on baggage. Also, curbside bag·
gage check-in will be eliminated on
international night.;.
Investigators suspect the explo-

. sion on Fli ght XOO was caused hy a
homh. missile or mechanicallailure.
All 230 people ahoard were killed .
James Kallstrom. the FBI agent in
charge, said investigators were com·
paring the Oight data to that from
black boxes in crashes caused by
bombs, such as the explo~ ion .of Pan
Am I03 over Lockerbie, Scotland.
Vincent Cannistraro, the man who
headed the CIA investigation inlo the
Pan Am bombing, said descriptions
of the TWA tape resembled findings
from the 1988 disaster.
"I got goose bumps because il
reminded me so vividly of Pan Am
103." Cannistraro, fonner CIA chief
of counterterrorism operations, told
the AP.
He said that on the Lockerbic tape,
there was a normal conversation and
"then a crunching sound like the air·
plane breaking up. That was the
bomb."

I
CHECK RECORDER • Prlv1lte contrtctors eboercl the USS
Glllap check Ill MR-2 ret'mlll CCIIII! oiied Undet WIW rtCOIIIet thllt
Ia uNCI to verity TWA Flight 100 wreckage on the ocean floor lit
the craah alte off Flra lalend; New York. (AP)

..

I
I

I
•

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