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•

Page 10 • The Dally ~nel

---

TuHday, July 3Q~ 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...

•.

~

·Meigs 4-H members selected as State Fair·parti.c.tpants ··:
Following a week of judging, the
of 4-H club memben; who
qilalified to participate in competitiCln at the Ohio State Fair have been
·announced. In their respecti.ve categories, the panicipants are:
Sewing Projects
. Cluisty Drake, Sewing for Others; Becky Taylor, Fun with Clothes;
Tiffany Hensley, Time Out for
Clothing I; Kristina Kennedy, Time
Out for Clothing ll; Billee Pooler,
Time Out for Clothing ill; Amy
Smith, Dressing for the Job; Bridget
Vaughan, Clothes for High School
and Beyond; Ashley Boyles, Topping Your Outfit; Kelley Grueser,
Dress Up Daywear; Nancy Pickens,
Sportswear for Spectators; Cynthia
Cotterill, Dress Up Daywear; Jessica
Justice, Clothes for Middle School;
Whitney Ashley, Active Sportswear;
Rachael Morris, Joyful Jumper;
~ames

Pamela Neece, Sportswear for Spectators; Jamie Drake, Clothes for
High School and College. Alternates: Christina Miller, Topping
Your Outfit; Heather Well, Dress Up
Daywear; Jessica Arnott, Joyful
Jumper; Christy Drake, Sportswear
for Spectators.
Foods
Jamie Drake, Food and Fitness
for Fun ; Ashley Boyles, Quick
Meals; Dorothy Leifheit, Meals for
Easy Living; Joseph McCall, Meals
Outdoors; Michael Leifheit, Extraordinary Eggs; Riki Barringer,
Quick Breads; Tara Rose, Yeast
Breads; Jessica Boyles, Adventures
with Food; Carrie Wiggins, Mini
Meal Magic; Carrie Crow, Quick
Breads; Christina Westfall Quick
Breads; Cynthia Cotterill, Yeast
Breads; Theresa Baker; Foods,
Friends and Fun; Billee Pooler, All

American Foods; Josh Hager, Extraordinary Eggs. Alternates: Alison
Hays, Meals Outdoors; Barbara
Smith, All American Foods; Amy
Smith, Around the World with
Foods; Jenifer Chadwell, Mini Meal
Magic.
Home furnishings, skills and creative arts
Cheryl Jewell and Allison Hays,
Furniture and Woodwork Recycling~
Tricia Davis, Designing Interiors;
Tabitha Swearingen, Your First
Home Away from Home; Joseph
McCall, Mastering the Microwave;
Billie Jo Welsh and Becky Taylor,
Marvels of Microwave; Rachel
Chapman. Billee Pooler, and Rachel
Morris, Beginning Laundry; Counney Nitz. Caring for Your Bicycle;
Debra Staats, Stars of the Creative
Ans; Tricia Davis. Stars of the Creative Arts.

Church
hosts
Nutrition
.Day Camp

DISPLAYING CERTIFICATES -There youngater enrolled In the
Camp for Kids at Racine display their certificates for finlahlng tha
program. They are left to right, front, R. J: Harmon, Jaaon Pierce,
Stephanie Michael, and Jeaalca Lyona; and back, Jennifer Wolfe,
Casale Cleland, Rosie C~aller, Je11lca Hill, Jenny Lareen and

Nicotine pa1ches now sold over the counter
By ANITA MANNING
USA TODAY
Staning last Thursday, nicotine patches
join nicotine gum on drugstore shelves,
available without a prescription to smokers
who wanl 10 quit.
The Food and Drug Administration
granted pennission for ovcr-the·countcr
markeling of the N1cotrol Transdermal System by McNeil Consumer Products Co.
earlier this month. It delivers 15 milligrams
of nicotme per day through the skin. A
smoker take&lt; in an average of I milligram
of nicotine per cigarette.
'
FDA's approval is "a positive step for
Nicotine fv::reases the amooot of the
i
the great majority of American smokers
,..,.. ,.,,snlitter dopamine produced by ;
tQday who are ready to quit, " says Dr.
t h e s h o l o f f l o - -. .
Michael Fiore of the Uni')"rsity of WisconDo9ltnino increases or_....,.
sin's Center for Tobacco Research and
noiVo l~lsos between twain cells.
lnlervention.
N 1 70
Tho b!~n responds sinillllly lo cocaine, i
car y percenl of smokers surveyed
mo&lt;Jihno and ar!'llhetaminos.
in 1993 and 1994 said !hey want to quit,
...
according to an analysis by the Centers for 's,
;;--.,-ce-:,,.,::--,·,-.,-. - - == ·""''''""''''''"""" f- - - ----- - - --:c::::-·. Disease Control and Prevention. The repon
Sli)'S while an estimated 48 million American adults
spend less than $30 a week for a six-week smoking cesSI'JIOke, about 33.2 million wish.they could ·quit.
sation program, which includes an audiotape. That's
The Depanment of Health and Human Services "equal to (the price of) about a pack-and-a-half to two
advises using the patch or gum to " lessen 1he urge to packs per day," he says. "In the long haul, if you can
smoke" as one method of quitting .
successfully give up smoking in the six-week course of
Ron Schmid of McNeil says pat~h users can expect to .therapy. it saves you lot of money over lime.".

Questions and answers on the ni_cotine patch
By ANITA MANNING
tages. You can self-dose i,t the way
USA TO.DAY
.
. .
you self-dose c1garettes. Also, some
The mcotme patch. hke mco1me people have a skin reaction to the
gum. 1s available now Without a pre· patch, and some have tried it and
sonptto~ : But can the patch or any found It not helpful. If that 's the
oilier ntCOII~e replacement therapy case, try the gum. Both have been
really belp d1e- h~d smokers qun?
shown to be effective.
Dr. M1chael F10re of the Center Q: What about n1cotme nasal spray?
.for Tobacco Research and Interven· A: The FDA recently approved a
lion .at the lfm~ersuy of W1sconsm spray. bu1 It won 't he on the marke1
Med1cal School, the Food and Drug until later thiS summer. by prescnpAdmmtstrauon; a~d the Agency for tton only..
Heal!h Care Pohcy and Research Q: How " the patch used ?
prov1de some answers. . ·
A: Anew patch 1s applied every day
Q: How does the patch differ from for SIX weeks. It delivers a steady
nicotine gum?
fl ow of nicotine for 16 hours.
A: P.or most people.- the patch is just Because the nicofine supply is
c:~ier to usc than the gum. You put It steady. manufacturers say it prevents
oo in the morning and forget about the craving for nicotine ~sociated
it. Tbe gum needs to be chewed cor- with quitting smoking. Nicotrol
reetly and used throughout the day. ,users should stop using the patch if
li doesn't taste great, but most peo- they have skin irritation that doesn't
pic: get used to it.
.
go away or if they experience irregQ: Is there any ldvantage to usmJl ular heanbeat, palpitations, nausea.
the gum?
vomiting, dizziness or weakness.
A1, Yes. the gum docs have advan· Q: Do these aids really work?

'

.

with Children, Bethany Cooke, man, Safe Usc of Gulls; ~
Teens Learn About Children; Jessica Neutzling, ~ellery; Josh Hqc'
Barringer, Genealogy;
Sarah Adventures with Your Came~
Houser, Safety in Everyday Living; Christa Ci~leJ~ Exploring Photogttf
John Cooke, Safety in Everyday phy.
·•
·
·1
Living; Michele Hupp, Keeping Fit;
Kelly Osborne, Adventures wi!'
Bethany Cooke, Tobacco and You; Adjustable
Cameras;
Johl
Bethany Cooke, Alcohol Decisions; Krawsczyn, The Normal A~~
Barbara Smith, Leadership Skills Kendall Brown, Animal Di
You Never Outgrow II; Kristen John Cunis, Rockets; James McKa~
Brown, One-On-One; Josh Hager, Rockets; Thomas McKay, Buildin
Speak Out.
Bigger Things; Jeremy Johnso
Nicole McDaniel, Fishing for the Building Bigger Things;'Btent Buc
Beginner; Matthew King, Fishing ley, Wonderful World of Wood; Je
for the Intermediate; Counney Nitz, sica Justice, Working with Wood a
Let's Explore the' Outdoors I; Kris- Tools; Roger Chadwell, Workin
ten Brown, Let's Explore the Out- with Wood and Tools; Joseph Ru
doors I; Ann Kauff, Let's Explore Grooming and Handling; Sara Ervi
the Outdoors II; Kindell Brown, Dog Obedience; Sara Clifford, Do~
Ex)lloring Out Forests; Jason Wyant, 0bedience; Amber Perkins. D ·
Exploring Ohio Ponds; Lindsay Obedience; John Krawsczyn, D
Bolin, Ohio Birds; Rachel Chap- Obedience. ·

Pick 3:
415
Pick 4:
5837
Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

Keith and Emma Ashley and
daughter, Emily, of Rock Springs,
attended the recent reintennent of
Margaret Blennerhassett and her
son, Herman Jr., on Blennerhassett
Island near Parkersburg, W.Va. Mr.
Ashley represented Ewings Chapter
Sons of the American Re:volution at
the ceremonies.
Tbe Blennerhas5etts were famous
for the "Burr Conspiracy" in the
early 1800s with U.S. Vice President
Aaron Burr. Mrs. Blennerhassett and
her son were buried in a borrowed

crypt a block from Wall Street in
New York City.
It too~ three years to deal with
the bureaucraCy necessary to obtain
the permis~ion necessary to disinter
the bodies and bring them back to
the island where Mrs. Blennerhassett had said she wished to be
buried, Ashley said.
Harmon Blennerhassett rests in
an unmarked grave on the Island of
Guernsey in Great Britain. The exact
site of his grave in unknown so that
it is impossible to bring him back to

A: They're not going to automatically transfonn a smoker into a nonsmoker. but if a person is motivated
and committed to quitting, they may
blunt some of the physical withdrawal symptoms and allow a smoker to break the psychological habit.
For many smokers, it's the irritation,
the difficulty concentrating. the dis·
turbed sleep and physical craving
for a cigarette that do them in. It's
those symptoms that the patch or
gum can case. About 20 percent 10
25 percent of smokers who use the
patch succeed in quitting.

Q: What would happen if someone
smoked while using the patch?
A: Tbe label warns against combi~~;
ing the patch with nicotine gum,
snuff. chewing tobacco or any other
nicotine product.' The danger is an
overdose of nicotine, which could
cause dizziness, upset stomach,
headaches and other symptoms.

Tbe Wahama High School class of · It was announced that Jim Prof19SS rccendy held its seventh annu- fitt is co-president of the WHS
al picnic tit Kyger Cneek Oubhouse. Alumni Association. Jim then gave
Sylvia Sayre offered grace prior a brief history on Wahama High and
to the group enjoying a covered dish how it was named. He: showed the
potluck lunch.
group their class picture that had
Peggy Edwards conducted the buns in the high school for many
business meeting after welcominll yean.
everyone. Carol Roush read the secPeggy Edwards read a poem entinctary's repon and Sylvia Saync ded"IKnowSomethingGoodAbout
gave the treasuner's repon. It was You." Carol Proffitt suggested thata
announced that a $200 scholarship game committee be formed to lead
was awarded to Ryan Keller by the activities for the 1997 picnic. Carol
class of SS. The group decided to hold will head the committee.
their 1997 picnic at the Kyger Cneek
Those aUCrtdinK were Sylvia and
Clubhouse.
Dwight Sayre, Carol Workman,
Bunk Williams and Carol Roush Geraldine and Charles Roush, Susie
won the door prizes. Gifts were Hall, Peggy Edwards, Jack and Mary
awarded to Carol and Jim Proffitt and Ann Winebrenner, David and Carol
Carol and David Roush for being Roush, Emma Jean and Bunk
l9SS graduates who married I9SS Williams, Etta Richanlson, Carol and
graduates and are still married. Jim Proffitt, Heber and Lola Miller,
Emma Jean Williams won the door Calvin and Marilyn McDaniel, Dale
prize for ttaveling the longest dis- and Marjorie Walburn and Shirley
lance. Shirley Thcker won a gift for Thcker.
haviog the most children.

the island.
More than 200 people attend
the ceremonies which were led li
Dr. Ray Swick, historian of We
Virginia State Parks and a mem
of the Ewings Chapter SAR.
The religious ceremonies w
led by two Epis.c0palian priests wh
had to obtain special dispensati
from their hierarchy to perfonn I
ritual used in the mid-1800s. Loc
organizations and businesses ·pai
for the disintennent, the transpon ·
lion back to the island, the vau~
and the caskets.
·:

•

.fl Tale of
1\vo Families

•

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 12
2....,.,18P8gee

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 31, 1996

luxury. Money Is no object to
them.

carry-on bag.
The cost of the tour is $329 based
on double occupancy if34 people pay
a $100 deposit by TUesday, July 30.
Tbe deposit will be refunded if the
trip is canceled. Tbe tour could run
with 2.S people, but the cost would
raise $20 to $30 per penon. For more
information, contact Kathy Rollins at
67~-5688.

,-----------.
Wann, loving host famllilt

~~
~

:

~FBI searches
:IIY MITCHELL LANDSBERG

One day either family may
need our help...and each will
racelve the same thorough
service. .

CREMEENS
FUNEUL HOME
949·3210

UCINE

•.••

Mobbed by rcponers as he
returned home from FBI questioning,
he emphatically denied setting the
bomb. ·'I'm innocent. I didn't do it,"
he insisted before going into the
apanment.
.Tubbs said news media· and residents were bein&amp; m.QY.ed away from
.ll),e immediate area. ShtlQ.lY. •fter,
wllrd, 12 more agents arrived in Fill
vans and star,ted escorting neighbors
away, one dressed in ber bathrobe.
"We emphasize that neither the
issuance of a search warrant nor the
execution of it constitutes evidence of
guilt," Thbbs said. "A search warrant
is an order of p.e coun to search a
panicular locauon to detennine if rei·
evant evidence is present."
He added !,hat "many potential
suspects" have ·been investigated and
cleared in the past few days.
Tuesday morning, Jewell, a beefy
33-year-old with a checkered ·law
enforcement career, was appearing on
NBC's "Today'' show to recount his
heroic deeds.

: ; ATI..ANTA -FBI agents today
. $earched the apartment of an
:Olympics security suard who, first
: praised a5 a hero in the Centennial
· Olympic Park bombing, bas now
~~
. ""'
91,,9!.~ tl!eJ!r!f"C ~~~ of their
n.-.gauon.
·
: ' FBI '._eni'Don lQhnson and 1olir
pthen arrived at Richard Jewell's
~artment at9 a.m. Johnson knocked
on the door, identified himself, and
all five went in. Tbey did not show a-·
search warrant at the door.
· FBI Special Agenr in Charge
David Thbbs confirmed later the
sroup had a search warrant. He
stressed, however, that the investigalion was continuing.
: "Mr. Jewell has not been placed
~nder arrest and he has not been
charged with any crime," Tubbs said.
· Jewell, a security guard credited
~ith savins lives before Saturday's
(?ombing by spotting the bomb in a
knapsack, emerged Tuesday as the
prime target of the FBI's investiga·
(ion into the bombing.
....!:E~!

Grate

of
Rlllaad

** *

Dietitian: someone who
lives off the fat of the land.

***

Income tax time is
millions of citizens test thAI,.,
powers of deduction.

***

The good old daYf are whatf;
you get when you combine
rich Tmaglnatlon with a """" tt;

memory.

Speelallzlng In
.Family Praetlce

' UNLOADS WRECKAGE • An FBI agant ovaraeea tht unload·: lng of wraclcaga from TWA Flight 100 at the Shlnnacook Coa1t
.::Guard Station In Hampton Baya, N. Y., TuHday. CraWl contln·' uacl -rchlng for vlctlm1 , wrackaga, and clues today d81pita
~: windy condition a. (AP)

: Future of economy uncertain
: WASHINGTON (AP)-A ~eofreporu rlilled to provide
~ a cldblttlve picture of the - Y !i\leeday, leavin&amp; llllllyst. ancer: ta1n about the cllrectloa of short-term laterest rates•.
·
Rb[JJI mOJ1Kqe rates began to curb new home ules Ia June,
, but CODIUDier confidence jumped Ia July to a slx·ycar hJP,aua·
: gestlaa spendlaa- two-thlrdJ ol"e natloa 's emiiOIIIk activity

: - woald coatlaue.
, Alld while employmeat COlli.were rlliDI moderately Ia Juae,
• abortqtl olllldlled labor coatlaue to develop that could drive pay·
roiiBII!I beaeflt coell up nn faster tllld fon:c bulla 11111 to boost

ANNOUNCING NEW OmCE HOURS

!

prices.
.U e raalt, die ocldl are oaly lllcbdY bcUcr thaD 50-50 that Fed·
, enl R~ policy mallen wiD boolt iaterell rates sllabdy at tWr
: Aq. 20 •ntina to_,. allower - Y tllld JUbclued 1afta.
.: t1oa, 18it1 . - i l l David J - ol Aubrey G. Lustoo II: Co., a
• New Yort 10ft.,._t IKUritJes dealer.
: lei • • ol tlae uacenalaty, die llaaadallll8l'lletl•bowed Dede
ehnM dtariDI die day bat rallied al die ead Mlipl ol.aowltta
' neal iocthk1 lielpetl.roree other reporu boWina oat hope for
: . . . . . ltdlatloa.
'
I

9:00 a.m. • S:OO p.m.
11:00 a.m. • 7:00p.m.
9:00 a.m • 3:00 p.m.

For an appointment phone 949-2883

i·

Rutlaatl Funitvre
lt.11Usll

ers decided to commit $30.000 in
Community Development Block
Grant county fonnula funds for the
project last October, after initial
meetings with residents of the area
and TPC Water officials.
.
Assuming that 100 customers are
on the new system, initial annual bills
for Bedford area residents could
range from $24.08 pei month, based
on a 20 year loan repayment schedule, to $32.66 per month based on a
I0 year loan repayment schedule for
the project, according to Poole.
Based on the I00 customer figure,
tap ,prices could range from $102.96
per tap per year on a 20 year loan
repayment schedule to $20S.93 per
year on a I0 year repayment schedule, according to Poole.
Continued on pa1e 3

edition of the Atlanta Journal-Con. stitution: "FBI suspects 'hero' guard
may have planted bomb."
A federal law enforcement official, speaking in Washington on condition of anonymity, said that Jewell
. hid emerged as the "leading candidate" in the FBI's investigation.
One WOIIOtl! . &lt;lie4 and . Ill . were
injuted in the blast early Saturday,
which indirectly contributed to the
hean-attai:k death of a Turkish cameraman rushing to the scene.
Jewell's lawyer, Watson Bryant,
asserted the guard's innocence: "I
can tell you that I spoke with agent
Don Johnson of the FBI. who said
that Richard Jewell was not a suspect,
was not a subject, was not a target."
DeKalb County police briefly
· spoke with Jewell at his door twice
late Tuesday night. It was not clear
why they went to the door or what
was said.
Shonly after 8 a.m., three women
left his apartment, carrying a large
duffel bag and a couple of plastic
shopping bags. They declined to
answer questions or identify them-

selves.
Jewell works for a Bloomington,
Calif., security company, Anthony
Davis &amp; Associates, which was hired
by AT&amp;T to provide guards for its
pavilion at Centennial Olympic Park.
'The park in downtown Atlanta has
etnerged as the heart of the Syml)ler
Olympics. attractins 1ens of thou·
sands of people daily. ' It reopened
Tuesday morning for the first time
since the explosion and was instant·
ly jammed.
ThrOugh the day, a makeshift
memorial grew near the bomb site,
where visitors placed flowers and
flags.
"It's just good to be here, and this
really touches me," Sabrina
Churchill, an Atlanta investment
manager, said after laying a bouquet
of flowers on the ground. She
brushed back tears.
"I just felt like this was my park
- it was in my back yard - and it
just hun so bad that this happened."
Jewell has been credited with
spotting an unattended olive-drab
Continued on page 3

APARTMENT SEARCHED • Olympics security guard Richard
Jewell arrived at hl1 Atlanta apartment Tuesday evening, hours
bafcire the FBI ...rchad it early thla morning. Jewell, 33, the
"hero" aecurlty guard who flrat reported finding the knap11ck
bomb that exploded ln·tha Olympic Park 11 now a euspact. (AP)

•

Investigators continue search for clues to crash

By
Dave

Student Excllange
Non-profit tall exempt

P.O. Box 458
Fifth &amp; Pearl St.-.bee_..ta
Recine, Ohio 45771

grant monies and 20 percent loan
monies:
• a $500,000 grant from the Ohio
Depanment of Development under
the Community Development Block
Grant Water and Sewer competitive
program.
• a $100,000 grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commission.
-a $100,000 grant from State Capital Improvements Program (also
known as Issue II), combined with a
$100.000 loan to the Tuppers
Plains7Chester Water District.
The water district has also agreed
to use $20,000 of their own funds,
and plans to submit an application to
Farmers Home Administration for
$66,000 in additional grant monies
and $99,000 in low interest loans.
Tbe Meigs County Commission-

USS Grapple arrives

·
·
Atnerk:ln lnttrcunu...
aducltlon foundation

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Nearly 40 .Hemlock Grove area
residents met with the Meigs County Board of Commissioners and Tuppers Plains/Chester Water District
officials Tuesday night to discuss a
proposed $1 million water extension
project in the Bedford Township
area.
Construction on the extension
project, which will serve I00 customers upon completion, coulil be
started as early 'as spring 1997, if
grant applications are approved for
the project, according to Don Poole,
TPC Water general manager.
County and TPC Water officials
are pursuing the following grant programs for the extension project,
which will he funded by 80 percent

suspect's apartment

http;//laaww.comfailllhtml
end E-mail AJSinfoOacil.com.

M.D., INC.

Thursday
Friday

•·
•.

Townahlp, aa Malga County Commlaelonera
Fred Hoffman end Janet Howard lleten on.
Nearly 40 re11dente of the Hemlock Grove area
attended Tunday'l meeting at the Hemlock
Chrlatlen Chu~h. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

IOUght for high IChool foreign
h-ltUdanta rrivl 1
exc.-•..,
a
ng n
Auguat. Call AISE at
1-1110-SIBUNG, or Internet at

DOUGLAS D. HUNTER,

Mon., lUes., and Wed.

WATER EXTENSION DISCUSSED • Don
Poola, general manager of the Tuppe11
Plalna/Chelter Water District, an1wera a qual·
tlon during a public hearing on a propolad $1
million water e1Ctan1lon project In Bedford

.

Another family Iivas on a
close budget. Like most
families they have to place a
limit on what they spend.

A G.onnetl Co. Newap.~per

.Construction on Bedford
project could start as
early as spring of 1997

: AP National Writer

One family has always lived In

Residents plan Atlantic City trip
to watch Safford compete for title
Local residents have made
arrangements through AAA f{ff a
three-day trip to Atlantic City, NJ to
watch Point Pleasant's Kari Safford,
Miss West Virginia, compete for the
title of Miss America 1996.
Tbe tour coach bus will leave
Point Pleasant at 9 p.m. Thursday,
September 12, and arrive in Adantic
City at8 a.m. Friday, September 13.
That evening, participants will ttavel IQ the Miss Amenca Parade at 7
p.m. On Satwday, September 14, a
morning trip will be made to Cape
May, NJ. That evening, participants
will attend the nationally televised
Miss America pageant. Tbe bus will
return to Point Pleasant at8 p.m. Sunday, September IS.
During the trip, those attending
will spend two nisJ!ts at the ·Best
Wesrcm Hotel on the Boardwalk in
Adantic City. A continental breakfast
is included. Also included is baggage
·
suitcase and one

••

Partly cloudy tonight,
low In 60a. Thursday, part· ·
ly cloudy, high In 801.

9-11-~2-28-35

Gilri1ore graduates from college i'

WHS class of '55 holds picnic

For the Racine camp, Hal Kneen,
county extension agent, agriculture,
JOined Haggeny to talk to the children about fruits and vegetables
grown locally, while observing the
children cutting up vegetables for
lunch. Kneen was the children's
lunch guest that day.
•
At both camps the children made
soft pretzels to serve to their guests
PREPARING VEGETABLES- The Importance of 11 healthy diet
during the closing ceremony. Cer- - _was stresHd In the Camps for Kldl held by the Expanded Food
tificates of achievement were preanct Nutrition Education Program at Riverview School recently.
sen ted to each child. They were also
Shown hera preparing fresh vegetable• at lhe camp are left from
given packets of information 10 take
the front, Jennifer ChadWell, Morgan Weber, Mariana Staata, 4-H
home and share with other family
junior leader, and Brian Critaa; end right aida, from the front, Erin
ll)embers.
Weber, Sharon Smith, 1tandlng, EFNI;P educator, Bryan Minear,
Chris Barringer, 4-H junior leader.

I

·~

Ashleys attend Blennerhassett ceremonie

At the Riverview camp David
"Chip" Haggerty, Meigs County
Extension Agent, 4-H. did an exercise on self-esteem with the children
and invited those who were not in 4H to join one of the 4-H clubs in
their area.

~

MIKelmaTabitha Swearingen, Josh Hager,
Ashley Hager, Billie Jo Welsh,
Demonstrations; Amanda Miller,
Carrie Crow, Jessica Barringer, Jeffrey Circle, Creative Writing; Science Fun with Electricity; Mike
Lawson, Working with Electricity; ·
Michael Lamben, Fun with Electronics; John Krawsczyn, Learning
About Computers; Amber Fonney,
Building with Basic; Jennifer Lamben, Datamania; John Krawsczyn,
Radio Controlled Cars and Trucks;
Michael Lawson, Radio Controlled
Cars and Trucks; Marcus Bratton,
Shield Metal Arc Welding.
John Cooke, Rope; Joseph Dillon, Safe Operation of Agriculture
Equipment; Ashley Hager, Living
and Learning with Children; Amber
Fonney, More Living and Learning

Reds edge
Astros 5-4 in
10th Inning

Shannon Lyn Gilmore, daughter .dents in American Universities and
Gilmore graduated with a bachd
of former Pomeroy residents Joe and Colleges. "
lor of science degree with a major~
·
Linda Gilmore of Walworth, Wise.,
She .also received academic biology and medical technology
:
graduated recently from Lakeland achievement awards as well as an a minor in chemistry. She plans t .
College.
award for volunteer service during return to Lakeland this fall to comj...
Gilmore was honored at a Lake- here college years.
plete graduate classes in mcdicttf:
land College Convocation Banquet
While at Lakeland, Gilmore also technology. After serving an intemf
for having completed the college served as president of the Lakeland ship in that field she plans to atte · '
honors pro~am and completin~ her Chapter of Habitat for Humanity and medical school.
semor theSIS. She was also nommat- played lead roles in college producShe is the granddaughter of El
ed by faculty and honored for being tion of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roor· and Gilmore of Middlepon and Gardn
named in "Who's Who Among Stu- "Playboy of the Western World."
and Pat Wehrung of Pomeroy.

Camps for kids presented by the
OSU Expanded Food and Nutrition
Education Program in Meigs County
were recently hosted by the United
Methodist Church of Racine and'lhe
Riverview Elementary School of
Reedsville.
Emphasis of the camps was on
teaching children the imponance of
healthy diet through games, videos
and hands-on learning. The children
learned safety in the kitchen, proper
measuring techniques, table manners. food safety and the imponance
of fruits and vegetables in the diet.

~

.

Ohio Lottery
,

LA

742-2211

I

..
•

By PAT MILTON
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
EAST MORICHES, N.Y.
Investigators hope a newly arrived
Navy ship with remote cameras and
crack divers can retrieve airplane
wreckage to help crack the 2-wcekold case oflWA Aight 800. ·
The USS Grapple, one of the
Navy's top two search-and-salvage
vessels, was to begin searching the
waters off Long Jslapd today, said
James Kallstrom, head of the FBI
investigation.
Investigators hoped the ship can
find wreckage to confinn their theory: A bomb in the front cargo hold
blew the Boeing 747's nose off July
17, killing a11230 people aboard.
' The New York Times reponed
today that some investigators said the

plane's front landing gear, which was
found over the weekend, showed
damage from a powerful blast inside
the aircraft - indicating the jet may
have been brought down by a bomb.
An unidentified federal investiga·
tor told the newspaper that the
hydraulic mechanism that retracts the
landing gear was found to have
"serious concussive damage," and
that, " by the way it had been
smashed, bomb experts·thought it had
been very close to the source of the
explosion."
But senior law enforcement officials also told the Times that the find·
ing did not prove the explosion was
the result of a criminal act.
Two sources who spoke· to The
Associated Press on condition of
anonymity also cast doubt on the

Times repon.
It is ··unlikely " the landing gear
provided proof of a bombing, said a
source from the National Transponation Safety Board. And another
source close to the investigation said
those who had studied the piece of
wreckage did not believe it brought
them closer to a conclusion.
Divers working on the )()().fool deep floor of the continental shelf
recovered I0 more bodies Tuesday.
for a total of 171 . They also brought
up more wreckage and spotted components of a third engine.
For a week, Kallstrom said each
day that investigators had "moved
the ball up the field" towurd learning
what made the JUmbo jet explode_
But he dropped his football analogy
on Tuesday.

Supreme Court OKs on-the-spot suspensions
COLUMBUS (AP} - A 1993 Ohio highways, " Chief Justice
law allowins police 10\automatically Thomas Moyer wrote in the unanisuspend the licenses of suspected mous opinion.
Five of the cases originated in
drunken drivers is constitutional, the
Auglaize
County Common Pleas
Ohio Supreme Coon ruled Tuesday.
Coun.
Tbe
other was from Mahoning
The ruling wrapped up six cases
County.
·
involving motorists who argued that
Tbe
coun
ruled that the suspenthe administtative license suspension
sions
are
not
punishment
for drunklaw violated their rights against douen
driving,
but
rather
civil
actions
ble jeopardy- being punished twice
aimed
at
discouraging
motorists
from
for the same offense.
refusing
to
take
the
blood-alcohol
Tbe law lets police immediately
suspend the licenses of suspected tests. An agreement to submit to the
drunken driven who fail blood-alco- tests is an implied condition to get·
.· ting a license- which is a privileJle,
hol tests or refuse to take them.
Tbe LeJislature enacted the law not a righL the coon added.
The law allows administrative
"to combat the devastating problenu
license
suspensions of one to ·five
associated with drunk drivin11 on

years, depending on how many times
the driver has refused to take a test in
the pasl f1ve years.
By contrast. a driver who fails the
test faces a 90-day suspension the
first time. The maximum suspension
for a driver who fails the test is three
years.
Motorists who lose their licenses
under an administrative suspension
may eventually get them back for a
$250 reinstatement fee . But they
also face additional penalties later including a longer license suspension
- if convicted of drunken drivina.
That means another $2.50 reinstatement fee for a total of $500.
In two separate cases. the coun

...

(

••

"Even on the (investigating) team,:
some people think one thing, some :
think another." Kallstrom said. ·
••There's a lot of different opinion•."
Tbe Grapple arrived Tuesday in an
area that produced the front landing
gear. and some first-c lass scats. An
investigative source has lold the AP '
that sear&lt;hcrs suspecl a bomb in the
forward cargo scct1 on blew the
plane's nose off, and that wreckage in
this debris area might yield a crucial
clue.
If such evidence is located , and
involves a large p1cce of wrecka ge,
the Grapple can ro1sc loads of up to
13.000 pounds and keep d1vcrs m the
water at the same time.
The Grapple is the sister ship of
the USS Grasp, which lhc Navy
brought in earlier lo help with the
search.

r

threw out ponions of the law pro· ·
hibiting courts from end1n g the ·
admini strative su spen sions and
allowing autnorities to sci1.c vehicles .
when the drunken driver is not the :
owner.
" I wish they would have thrown .
out the whole thing," said Manin ·
Delahunty Ill, a Youngstown lawyer :
whose client, Roben Gustafson Jr., :
filed the first challenge of the law.
Delahunty said recent rulings by
the U.S. Supreme Coun changed the
definition of what is considered a
punishment, and probably led to the
Ohio coun's decision.
He said no decision has been
made on whether to appeal the case
to the U.S. Suprem~ Coun.

•

"•

&lt;·

�.,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'UtaDBslid in 1948
. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

.2.

A Gannett Co. N'ewspaper
ROBERT l. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

,_.,.,. to tiN «&lt;ltot.,. wtrkom.. TMy mu•t be leu thlln 300 worde. All lett.,. .,..
aubj«t to tdH#ng .nd rnuar be tlf'Nd MKIIncludrlllddrH• MKI ,.,_,hone numWr.
No unolgn«&lt; _ , rrlll ""
Lollenl llhoul&lt;f win flOOd rooro, oddr..•lng

IPIIII, nof pertonallfl...

publf•-·

PageA2

Officials weigh damage

Wedneeday, July 31.,-1996

from overnight flooding

Governors who become president show mixed results
By RICHARD BENEDETIO
USA TODAY
With six governors or fornner governors on Republican Bob Dole 's
shon list of potential running mates.
it begs the question:
What kind of pre sidents do funnel
gove rnors make?
· Clearly, with President Clinton ·a
12-year governor of Arkansas. voters
will be rendenng judgment in
Nove mber. At the same time. they
will be wcighmg the experience of
Dole and his vice presidential choice.
If il turns out 10 be M1chigan's
John Engler. Oh1o's George
Voinovich, Illinois· Jim Edgar, Pennsylvania's Tom R1dge. WISconsm ·s
Tommy Thompson or S&lt;•ulh Carolina'• ex-governor Carroll Campbell,

the gubernatonal question becomes Cleveland of New York, William
ev;:n more relevant
McKinley of Ohio, Theodore and
After all,lhe phrase "only a heart- Franklin ~oosevelt of New York,
beat away from lbe presidency" has Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey.
sharper meaning because Dole is 73. Calvin Coo'iidge of Massachusetts
Of our 42 presidenlS, 16 have been and Reagan.
governors. including three of the last
Some former governors had diffifour - Cli nton. Ronald Reagan of culty adjusting to the Whnc Huu 'c
California and Jimmy Carter of Geor- after the Stale Holfse. including
gia Eight more governors have been Carter. Andrew Johnson of Tenvice pres idents. The last two: Nelson nessee and John Tyler of Virgm1a.
Rockefeller of New York and Spiro
Democrat Mario Cuomo of New
Agnew of Maryland.
York . a former governor who flined
But the report card on governors with running for pres.idenl in 1988
who became president is mixed. and 1992, says !!Overnors have the
Some truly have been great; others potential to be good presidents
have had their problems
because they develop execuuve skills
Among those wtdely regarded as a president needs - running a govsucccsslul: Thomas Jefferson and ernment bureaucracy, providing leadJames Monroe of Virginia, Grover ·ership and working with an often-

Election letter deadline
Leners to the editor concerning Tuesday's special election in the South
ern LU(a! SchoqiDistnct must be submined to The Da1ly Sentinel by , i&lt;lle
of business 1.5 p.m.) Thursday to be considered for publication.
All letters shoul(} consist of 300 words or less. and must be signed (no
milials please) with an address and phone number for verification purposes. Street addresses and phone numbers will not be published.

A Dally Sentinel endorsement

~

\

Vote 'yes' on school
construction issue,
then demand accountability

''
I

I

. Voters in the Southern Local School District will decide Tuesday in a special election on a proposed building issue --a proposition we feel deserves
careful consideration from the voters in that district.
Al issue is a planned district-wide elementary sehoollo replace the exislmg kmdergarten, elementary schools and junior high, most of wh1ch w•re
constructed over a half century ago.
In addition. the measure will fund an addition lo the existing high school,
mcluding science and computer labs, and a new hbrary and media center. ,
The state has offered to pay about half the cost, representing ilS largest
commitment to the district since the building assistance program began in
1985. The local contribution now amounts to 5.42 mills over a 23-year period, down from the 6.1 mills proposed earlier this year and the 6.2 mills suggested in 1985.
Like many. we feel the new school would make the district more amactivc from an economic development viewpoint, appealing to both businesses
and future homeowners al1ke. The Southern Local School District is already
By Joseph Perkins
highly regarded in southeastern Ohio due to its decem quality of instrucA few months ago. Lee Brown
tion .
was m San Diego boasting about the
Along these lines, the issue has been endorsed by both Racine and Syrawonderful campaign the Clinton
cuse village councils, and the Sunon.·Letan and Lebanon township boards
administration
was waging in the War
uf trustees . In addition, many area businesses are supporting the new conon Drugs. I asked the nation 's drug
struction.
c1.ar a point-hlank ques tion · Was
It IS also important to note that a similar project will soon Qc underway
1n the Eastern Local School District with help from the state building assis- there any truth lo publi shed rumors
that security clearances had been held
tance program.
The Southern Local Board of Education has faced many questions con- up lor a number of Wh1le House staff
ce rning the proposed building, satisfactorily answering many of them includ- members be~ause they were drug

I
~-

From AP, Stiff Reports

hostile legislature 10 get things done .
Senators and congressmen, he
says, are limited in those skills:
"There is a world of differcnrc
between making a speech and producing a hudgcl. a world of dilfercnce between taking the hi1h grnund
to look good and gelling in there and
making the necessary compromises
to produce resullS ."
But governors generally lack foreign policy expericnre. lt didn' t hull
Franklin Roosevelt and Reagan . But
Caner had problems overseas. and
Clinton only recently seemed to find
his footing .
Cuomo says gubernatorial skills
became more important in the 20th
century as the federal government
grew dramatically in size and scope.
He rates Reagan and the two
Roosevclts among governors who
have made good presidenlS. But he
says Caner fell short because "Gcor. gia is not New York or California ..
Cuomo recommends !hal Uole not
select a governor for a running mate
because it will spotlight his age .
" You shouldn't be remindmg people
that you need a vice president who "
capable of laking over."
Furthermore. he says, governors
generally don 't make good vtcc presidents because as fanner chief executives they find the No. 2 job too confining and have a tendency to "get m
the way." Rockefeller groused that
the JOb was "standby equipment."
In 1992. the Bush campaign tried
to degrade Clinton's experience by
calling him "the failed governor of a
small state." But Cuomo says Clinton's skills developed as governor
helped h1m cut the deficit . keep the
GOP Congress at bay and compile n
solid economic record to run on.
"Clinton is the best example of
what a governor can do as president."
he says.
Come November, we' II se~ ifvolers agree.

IND•

•I

mg where the building would be located and how kids of different ages and

grade levels will be separated.
·
We commend the current board for actively involving the commumty m
this process-- something we feel residents should demand continued should
the issue pass.
.
On the other hand, we don't necessarily agree with some of the arguments
by buildmg proponents foretelling consolidation. or the community's ruin
if the measure shoold fail. Such scare tactics arc not productive in the long
run. leading only to resentment and distrust -- a problem !hal has plagued
the board of education for some time.
We acknowledge that some residents in the district plainly think they can not afford to spend a penny more '" taxes, and we respect their feelin gs .
After careful consideration 1l1c Daily Sentinel feels the new construction would he of considerable benefit to both the district's children and community as a whole for generations to come-- enough to justify both the cost
and a "yes'' vote on Tuesday.
But afterwards, the same voters must hold the board of education accountable for controlling constructiOn and operating costs hy not allowing ex pen """· needless luxuries -- on behalf of those mentioned earlier who simply
can't afford excessive frill s.

Today in history
_,

By The Associated Press
Tuday'is Wednesday. July 31st. the 213th day of 1996.llterc arc 15 ) days
lllfl in the year.
Today 'sH1ghligh11nH 1stqry :
On July 31. 1948. President Truman helped dedicate New York Interna tional AI!JX!rl (later John F. Kenned y International Airport) atldlnvild f 1cld.
On t~is date.
In 1556. St. lgna11u ' of Loyola. f&lt;&gt;undcr nf the Socicl&gt; 11f Jt ' "'
the
Jesu1t order of Cathol~&lt; pncst&gt; and brothers - died 1n Rome .
In 1777. the MarquiS de Lafayenc , a 19-year-old French nobleman . was
made a major ~c neral in the American Continental Army.

Berry's World

abusers?

Not to his knowledge . Brown
assured me .
Well. that just goes to show how
far out of the loop the fornner drug
czar was during hiS three-year tenure.
There he was, working at the While
House with at least 40 druggies
(according to the Secret Se~ vice) and
he was none the wiser. Who knows'
Brown very well rna) have had a
hard-core drug abuser on hiS staff.
helping him to shape the nation' s
drug policy.
This may seem absurd . but in the
Clinton While House it is hardly
beyond the realm ol po&gt;Sib1lity.
Indeed. one olthe known drugg1cs on
the While Hou se staff was Cra1g Livingstone. director of tke ofhcc of personnel sccurll y He " the Cl int on
appointee respons1hlc for rummaging
through the confldcnllal FB I fil es ol
at lea'' 800 Bush aJ nuni strall on ofr, .
nak

Sllotwrl T·SIOIIIIS Rain

Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Oblo
Aash flood watch today ...
Today... Mostly cloudy with a 30
· percent chance of showers and thunders! nly in the afternoon likely. High
near 80. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
.Tonight.. Partly cloudy. Low near
'60. Calm wind.

.Southern Ohio hit by
·flash floods overnight

~:.0 IMill~.
bv NEA. Inc:
"The Reform Perry loves me The RefOITfl Psrty loves me The RefOITfl Psrty loves me.
SURPRISE!"

drug abuse" within a year of joining
' the White House staff. the president 's
damage -control team issued a statement that none of the ·druggies were
on the president's senior staff.
That includes 24 assistants lo the
president, 30 deputy asSistants and 75
soec1al assistants . But there are a lot
of people on the While House junior
staff who wield considerable authority, as Livingstone himself demon strated. And it hardly is a comfort to
know that some of these junior staff
members were regular users of
cocame. crack or hallucinogenic
drugs.
In pre viou s admini stratiOns.
Republican and DemocratiC alike . a
person who had used these kmd of
hard drugs a maner of mere months
before constderation for the Wh1le
House staff would have been conSidered too much of a sec urity risk to
pass the FBI's background check. But
'" the Clinton Wh1te House. 11
appears. even O.J. Simpson could be
l'icarcd for a staff position.
The White House thmb 11 ·, OK
thai 40 drug abusers ar&lt;• nn the slalf

because. according to press secretary five times a month . For the next 18
Mike McCurry, il has insllluled a months. they would be tested three
"tough" drug-testing program. "The times a month. And for the next six
president IS very clear," said McCur- months, they would he tested tw1ce a
ry. "He has an absolute zero-toler- month .
ance standard for drug usc at the
This may seem draconian to the
White House."
Clintonites, but it hardly is unreaUnder this supposedly tough pro- sonahle to impose such a condition
gram, new employees must submit to on people with a recent history of
drug tests and all employees arc sub- hard-core drug use, who arc serving
ject to random testing, which happens at the highest level of government.
to 12 percent of the White House stall
If they found this C&lt;mdition too
each year. As to the 40 known drug severe. they could serve the adminabusers, they arc required to under- istration at the Dcrartmcnts of Labor
go random testing twice a year.
or Housing and Urban Development
This drug-testing · program may or Health and Human Services or
seem tough to McCurry and his fel- some other federal agency. But they
low While House staff members. hut would he unlit to serve at the White
it's about as soft as. any drug-lestmg House .
program out there . No occasional
President Clinton has mouthed a
drug user really is going to be quak- lot of platitudes about the dclelcriou'
ing in his or her boots ahout a random effects of illegal drug usc . Yet he has
test that they have an 88 percent appointed at least 40 serial dope
chance of avoiding each year. And smokers. crack ahuscrs . cocaine
not even hard-core drug 'users arc snnncrs and hallucinogen users 10
likely to be detected by random drug sensitive positinns and suhjectcd
them lO the most lenient drug testing
tests conducted only twice a year.
·
If the White House wa&lt; really seri- possihlc .
Given the way Clinton has dealt,
ous about monitoring the 40 druggics
on its siaff. it would have msl itutcd with these druggics on his own White
a testing program similar lo the one House starT, it is lillie wonder that his'
that California has for rehabilitating admini,l13linn has all -but-ahandoncd'
the natinn's War on Drugs.
drug offenders.
Joseph Perkins is a tolumnist
For the first si• months that the
druggies were on the While House lor The San Diego Union· Tribune.
staff. they would be randomlv tested

What to do when the Dow goes down
By Dian Vujovich
When the Dow takes it s b1g buws,
as it has recently. some mutual fund
investors arc 4uKk to ca ll their fund
fam1hc.-. or bru kcr~ lo ask l or coun -

sel. Others JUSt stay the course. In the
end. however, the hesl guide for those
worried about "what to do now" i!i
often to follow then gut .
If the recent market downturn has
you conce rned about your mutual
lund investments. you're not alone
Many brokerage firms and mutual
fund fnn11lte s have seen nn 1ncrcasc

d

Joseph Perkins ,

m the number of telephone calls Irom
fund shareholders
"We've had increased phone calls.
hut not seen any r&lt;'al nrt1 cdcmpl1ons
yet." said Andrea Thabit. marketing
programs coordmatnr for the Pioneer
Funds 1n Bmton
Stock funds did take some big hits
between Friday. July 12. and Tuesday, July 16. Some fund s that experienced the b1ggest percentage drops
in their net asset values (NAV} dur·
ing that time period, according to
Lipper Analytical Service&lt;. were
Dreyfus Premium Strategic Growth
Fund (dow n 9.83 percent}. Van guard 's Capital Opportunity Fund
(down 9.31 percrnl} , Twenlir th Ccn·
tury GiiTrusl ldnwn 9 16 percent)
and Navellier 's Aggress1ve Growth
Fund (down 8 2~ percent).
.
Even though !he numbers that w1ll
renee! the redemptions of mutual
fund shares during,the month o~ July
for the whole fund mdustry aren tout
yet. any b1g swmgs m the marketlyp-

lao' I

'

Up in smoke: Clinton's drug policy
The funny thmg ts thai. in the
"ake of the dtsclosure by the Secret
Service that 40 Clinton appointees
had engaged in "recent or ongoing

Authorities and emergency personnel were back in the southern section of Gallia County this morning '
assessing damage caused by up to 4
inches of rain that fell in the area
overnight.
The rains swamped some areas
still recovering from the severe Hooding that struck the south end June 2223, officials said.
Emergency Management Agency
Director
Terry Hemby said she has
Columbus
been in contact with trustees in
Guyan, Ohio and Harrison townships
and trustees are evaluating damage.
"We've had repom that there
were stalled vehicles in the area,"
Hemby said.
Both the sheriff's department and
'W. VA.' ' '
EMS were dispatched to Stale Route
218 near Mercerville this morning,
reportedly to assist a stranded
motorist who had attempted to cross
high water.
The Ohio Department of Transportation's Galli a County garage
ICII
Sunny Pl. Cloudy CloiJdy.
reported that 218 and SR 775 were
closed in sections this morning due to
high water. SR 141 near Waterloo
was also under water early today, but
Thursday ... Partly cloudy. High in runoff from !he rainfall was receding.
lhe lower 80s.
County Engineer Joseph Leach
Extended forecast
said damage to the county road sysFriday... Dry. Lows 55 to 60 and tem was reponed by his staff in
highs 75 to 80.
Guyan, Harrison, Ohio and Walnut
Saturday and sunday... Dry. Lows townships. Some roads, especially in
55 to 60 and highs around 80.

..'

~ra ll y

cause investor' In 1hmk lwtc c
:.t.hout Hu.:it investment strateg ic ' Ir
the market's pcrfornnancc tlas you on
edge. here arc sdmc i nvc~1or sur\tval

Scenario 4: A buying oppununily
1hc Pinn&lt;·er Funds:
Scenario I : Reacting to market This invcstnr sees the cmsh as an·
fears. After the crash, the investor oprorlunily und invests another ·
decides to withdraw the remainder of SIO.()()(lonOct. I9,19K7 . AsofJunr·
their princ1pal -- $7,9~~-- and invest ~0. 1996. their total investment ·
it in SIX -month CDs averaging a li would have grown ln $69,967.
-- h '&lt; OK lo sell your fund shares
percent annual return . As of June 30,
-.uggcst ions·
1996, this invcstment.matcgy would under any market conditions. There
-- No matlcr what anybody says. have grown in value tnlolal $13.154. arc always plenty of reasons to sell
Scenario 2: Staying the course. your fund shares -- when you need
nuhody knows fer ' urc what the
shon-term performanre of your fund' The investor looking h&gt;r lon1·1crm the money, when you·want to lock in ·
will be . Those wonderful mutual growth decides to leave their account your profits, or when you can 'l sleep :
Iund pclformancc numbers we read intact. As of June 30. 1996, their al night and your gut is telling you tn :
.
"bout and &gt;cc advertised arc all ~I 0,(}(}(} would have grown l&lt;l gel out
Dian
Vujovkh
is
the
author
of
·
\30,995.
based on past history and '"n' ta•
Scenario 3: Looking for bargains. "Straight Talk About Mutual :
conseq uences.
investor decides that stock prices Funds" and "Stnltht T.ak About :
This
How your fund will perform over
the ne• l da). week, munlh, year ur arc at bargain levels after the Black Investing for Your Retirement," ·
ftvc years can't be accurately pre- Monday trash and starts a S I00 a both or which are published by :
dicted. What history has shown us is month investmcnl plaa. The val~~&lt;: of McGnw Hill. Send questions lo :
;
that over the long haul, stock pnces, their rorlfolio would have been her in care ol this newspaper.
$52,096.
•I
as measured by the Dow Jones IndusIna! Average, have gone up. And after
every major market l' OITC4.. li on, prices
Five years ago: President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
ovcrumc have not only returned to signed
the Strategic Arm ~ Reduction Treaty in Moscow. Seven people were
· but have exceeded -- the level that
killed
when
an Amtrak passenger train derailed near Camden, S.C. Seven
the Dow was at before 11crashed .
Be careful whom you take your people were killed when a bus carrying Girl Scouts crashed in Palm Springs.
1n vc•tmen t advise from . The bulk of Calif.
One year ago: In the second-largest takeover in U.S. corporate history,
loday ·s registered securities reprethe
Wah Disney Company agreed to acquire Capital Cities-ABC Inc. in a
sentative ~ havr ncvr r seen .. or lived
billion deal.
S
19
through a bear market
Today's Binhdays: Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman is
-- Different mvcstmcnl strategies
84.
Sponscaster Curt Gowdy is 77. Actor Don Murray is 67. Actress France
produce different resullS . Here arc
, four hypothctiral examples of how Nuyen is 57. Actress Susan Aannery is S3, Actress Geraldine Chaplin is S2. · :
· S 10.000 invested in the S&amp;P 500 on MassachusctlS Gov. William Weld is 51 . Singer Gary Lewis is SO. Rock .' :
the Friday before !he last big market singer Bob Welch (formerly of Fleetwood Mac) is SO. Thnnis player Evonne . •
crash -- Black Monday. Oct. 19, 1987 Goolagong Cawley is 45. Rock singer·musH:illl Daniel Ash (Love and Rock- :
-- would have grown in value through ets) is 39. Rock musician Bill Berry (R.E.M.) is 38. Actor Wesley Snipes is : l
34. Actor Dean Cain is 30. Actor Robert Telfer is 19.
•'
hmr 10 1996 according to data from

' By Tht Associattd Press
Some low-lying areas of southern
·Ohio were under water this morning
from flash Hooding after heavy thun'derstonns moved through the area
overnight.
Rainfall amounts late Tuesday
and early today measured 1-3 inches
in Lawrence and Scioto counties, the
National Weather Service said.
The Lawrence County sheriff's
office said a few homes were evacuated in the Pedro area, where more
than 4 inches of rain was recorded.
There were no injuries and !he waters
were starting to recede. Southern Gallia County was also hard-hit
overnighl.
A nood watch was in effect for
most of southeast Ohio today with
more rain in the forecast.
The weather service said allshow·ers will end by tonigbt with skies
becoming clear in the south $lid partly cloudy north. Overnight lows will
be 55-60.
More showers·and thunderstormswere predicted for northern Ohio on
Thursday. H1ghs statew1de w1ll ge 7580.
Conditions. should become dry
across the ent1re stale by the weekend.
.
The record-htgh temperature for
this. dale al the Columbus weather
stauon was 96 degrees m 1954 wh1le

Meigs announcements
Ice cream IIOCial
An ice cream social will be held
Saturday at the Caimel United
Methodist Church building. Serving
will begin at 5 p.m. Besides ice cream
there will be sandwiches, desserlS and
beverages.
Car wuh planned

The Dream Catchers 4-H club will

hold a car wash SaturdaY. at Vaughan's IGA in Middlepon from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m.
PERSIPERI meetlq ~et
The PERSIPERI will have a noon
luncheon Thursday. Reservations are
requested to be made at the Senior
Citizens Center, 992-2161 by 9 a.m.
Thursday.

Construction of..~onllnued from page I
"If all these applications are
approved. we can go forward with the
projeCt After this hearing tonight, the
· application for the Ohio Department
of Development grant will be sub-

Dian Vujovich

- - - - - - - - - -,!1

the record low was 47 in 1967. Sunset tonight will be at 8:47 p.m. and
sunrise Thursday at 6:30 a.m.
Across the nation
Clouds and mist hovered over !he
Northeast before daybreak, while
skies were fair over the West and
parts of the Midwest
A slow moving cold front across
the Great Lakes and Southeast could
bring heavy rains to West Virginia,
North Carolina, and Virginia today,
with accumulations of up to four
inches in some places.
Thunderstonns may also develop
from Louisiana to New York. Some
of these storms could be severe, especially across the mid-Atlantic region
and into southern sections of the
Northeast.
Across the Midwest, a stationary
front extending northward into the
Dakotas will bring a chance of severe
weather to the Dakotas and· western
Kansas and Oklahoma. More severe
weather and tornadoes might pound
eastern Colorado.
High pressure from Canada
should allow unseasonably cool air to
settle across Minnesota, Illinois, and
Missouri. A few light showers might
fall across Michigan and Indiana laler today.
In the Great Basin, widely scattered thunderstorms ~ould develop
later in the afternoon, mainly in the
Rockies.

The Daily Sentinel
, (USPS ltJ.M)

Publiabed ...., oftomooo. Monday ilvouah
Fri&lt;loy, Ill C4on Sl., ,......,, Ohio, by die
Ohio~, Publllllina eo..,..yKlonne&lt;l Co..
........,,, Oliio 4l769, I'll. 992-21l6. Second
, .... poollll poid. Pomeroy. Olilo.
The Mtocilled Pial one! die Ohio

Nu I I

Auoc:lllioa.

I'OS'I'MA.IDR; Send .sdRu ~001 IO
The Dilly -net. Ill Coon St., Pomeroy.

Ohio45769.

milled," said Meigs County Commission president Fred Hoffman.
The application deadline for the
S 100,000 Appalachian Regional
Commission grant is September 3,
.Hoffman added.
Hoffman and fellow commissioners Janet Howard and Robert Hanenbach, all present at the meeting,
urged area residents to contact state ·
and federal ofticials 10 help with
grant approvals for project funding.
"We need the full support of each
and every one of the area residents,
in urging state and federal officials to
support the applications. That means
writing letters to local Jtale and federallesislators and telling them how
·important this water project is to this
area," said Howard.

Icon of Hollywood's
golden age dies at 92
By ROBERT MONROE
Attocllltld Prell Writer
NEW YORK - Ciaudelle Colbert, whose trademark bangs arid
radiant smile graced such beloved
1930s films as "Midnight," "Qeopatra" and the classic "ll Happened
One Night," died Tuesday. She was
92.
Colbert, died in Barbados, where
she had an oceanfront home, said
Peter Griffith, director of Lyndhurst
Funeral Home in Bridgetown, Barbados. She also kept an apartment in
Claudette Colbert
New York City.
The actress appeared in more than
60 films, including "I Met Him in Sept 13,' 1903. Three years later her
Paris,.. ..Midnight," .. Tovarich," father brought the family to New
"The Smiling Lieutenant," "The York City. Her passport listed her
Palm Beach Story," "Since You year of birth as 1905, a mistake she
Went Away" and "Three Came did not bother to correct until she was
15.
Home."
She was christened Lily ChauHer lilti'ng, velvet voice was heard
in three-hankie weepers, melodramas choin. But after she graduated from
and epics but her forte was comedy, high school, she got a bit part on
such as "ll Happened One Night" Broadway and two years later her
which co-starred Clark Gable and new name - Claudette Colbert was directed by Frank Capra. She was up in lights.
Colbert made one silent film in
shared in its then-unprecedented
1927 - "For the Love of Mike"
sweep at the Oscars.
"It made audiences happy in a directed by Capra - then debuted in
way that only a few films in each era talkies opposite Edward G. Robinson
do," film critic Pauline Kael once in the 1929 "A Hole in the Wall."
At her height, she appeared in a~
wrote. "In the mid-' 30s, the Colbert
many
as five pictures a year opposite
and Gable of this film became Americans' idealized view of themselves leading men such as Gary Cooper,
-breezy, likeable, sexy, gallant, and John Wayne, Henry Fonda and
maybe just a linle harebrained.lt was Spencer Tracy. Her directors includthe 'Annie Hail' of its day- before ed Ernst Lubilsch, George Cukor,
John Ford and Cecil B. DeMille.
the invention of anxiety."
It was "II Happened One Night,"
"I love to play comedy and I can
made
in 1934, that secured her cinesay immodestly !hall' m a very good
matic
niche, though neither she nor
comedienne," Colben said in a 1981
Gable
had wanted to be in it She
Time interview. "But I was always
played
an heiress who falls in love
fighting that image, too. I just never
with
a
cynical
reporter (Gable) purhad the luck to play bitches."
suing
her
on
a
bus ride from Miami
She carne close. In 1950 she
'lo
New
York.
.
signed to play Margo Channing, the
The
film
won
!he
Academy
Award
aging Broadway star in "All About
Eve." Then she injured her back and for best picture and garnered indispent most of !he next year in trac- vidual Oscars for Colbert, Gable,
tion . The juicy part went to Bene Capra and screenwriter Robert
Riskin, a sweep unmatched until
Davis.
Colbert was born in Paris on "One Aew Over the Cuckoo's Nest "
in 1975.

Meigs·EMS logs 8-caUs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency MediCal Service recorded cighl
calls for assistance Tuesday including
three transfer calls. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
I :54 p.m., Bradbury Road, Chris
Self, Veterans Memorial· Hospital :
3:52 p.m., South Fourth Street,
B_euy Ohlinger, Holzer Medical Cen8: 12 p.m., Mount Olive Road,
Elizabeth Barto, VMH.
RUTLAND
6:5 I p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to stale Route 124,
motor-vehicle aa:ident, Miranda

E 2:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i:;S:5
IINGU COP\' PRICK
Dilly ......................................... .... 3l Oenu

·----___
.....
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511, I cribDn 1101 deliriiiiO PlY .. cmia' ml)'
...,.,to- - 1 0 Tile Dilly Selllloel
oe
olr or t 1 - lloliL Cleilll wiD bo

1-.

, .........

No 1 • rlpd,.· by ... l p.n.iiiOIIio ...,
MAIL~

t3 - ................................ ......$11.30

216 --···-----··--· ··"'"''"'_...$53.12
__
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Jl---·-----.
. ..........Slll5.l6

n _ ________..___ ..___.....mJS

216 _

______, ............. ......$56.61

n-------................ . . stou1 ~~

Gallia County Junior Fair
WEDNESDAY, JULY 31
6 p.m. Markel Hog Show - Show Arena
7 p.m. Activity Building Awards - Main Stage
7 p.m. James House - Main Stage
7:30p.m.. Motocross- Pullins Track
9 p.m. James House -Main Stage

THURSDAY, AUG. 1
9 a.m. Steer Show - Show Arena •
12:30 p.m. Kiwanis Kids Day activities- Main Stqe
I p.m. Steer/Feeder Calf Showmanship - Show Arena
3 p.m. ~Calf/Dairy Feeder Sbow - Show Arena

L.----------------------_.

briefs-

.;.;. . .,

Man cited in wreck
A Tuppers Plains man was cited following a one-car accident on
slate Route 7 at the junction of East Shade Road near Eastern Hig_h
School Tuesday around 6:26 p.m.
Roy L. Reed Jr., 19, was southbound on state Route 7 when he lost
control of the 1987 Pontiac he was drivmg on the rain -slick pavement ,
according to a report from the Meigs (:ounly Sheriffs Depanmcnl . The
car went off the right side of the road and struck a guardrail. &lt;u,tain ing heavy and disabling damage .
Although no injuries were reponed, the Tuppers Pl ams an d CheSle r
volunteer fire departments and Tuppers Plain s emerge ncy sq uad
responded to the scene.
Reed was cited for failure to control.

None injured in accident
• No injuries were reported after a one-vehicle accident on slate Route
124 at Harrisonville Tuesday around 6:50 p.m.
Robert F. Dickens, 19, Rutland, was westbound dri vmg a 1983'
Chevrolet Blazer when he lost control of the vehicle in a curve crossed
by railroad tracks, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hi ghway Patrol. The vehicle went off the left side of the roaJ and struck
an embankment before overturning, the report stated.
The vehicle sustained heavy damage and Dickens wa s CltcJ for fa! lure to control. The Rutland Volunteer l'ire Department mlll c1nc•gcncy
squad responded to the scene.

Pomeroy accidents investigated

.•.

•••

No injuries were reported in two separate traffic acc idcn" tn vc s ~ •
ligated by the Pomeroy Police Department Tuesday. accordin g 10 vii•
lage police chief Gerald Rought.'
One driver was cited in a 10:44 a.m. accidenl on Second St r&lt;cl, .
near the Mulberry Avenue intersection, Rought stated.
According to reports, Debi Marshall. 32, Racine was traveling ""',·
on Second Street when she stopped ncar the Mulberry Avenue ""''"
section and proceeded to back into a parking spol.
Marshall apparently failed to see a 1991 Mercury. driven by Kay .~
M. Rowe, 49, Racine, that was turning onto Second Ave nue !'rom Mul . •
berry when she backed into the vehicle.
•
Damage to Marshall's 1992 Chevy and Rowe's vc!Hclc was li l' hl •
Marshall was cited for improper backing.
·• •
In an accident late Tuesday afternoon. Lawrence K Fyffe. M , ·'
Columbus was pulling from a parking space on East Main Street at &gt;:
3:26p.m. when he struck a parked 1989 Chevy, ow ned hy Shann on ' ·
L. Scheiderer, Middleport. Scheiderer's vehicle was th en pu she~ into
a parked 1986 Dodge, owned by Tracy L Cund1ff. M1ddlepor1
· Light damage was reponed to Scholderer's vehicle . while no clam· • .
age was reported to the Fyffe' 1989 Mercury or the Cund iff vcl1idc .
No citations were issued in the accident.
···

FBI searches.~:linuedfrompllge l._
knapsack near the AT&amp;T pavilion .
Bomb experts quickly determined
that the knapsack contained a crude
pipe bomb, and while police were
cleanng the area, the bomb explod ed.
About 25 ·minutes before the
explosion, a man had called 911 from
a pay phone three blocks from the
park and said a bomb would go off in
30 minutes. The FBI has said it

assumes the caller was th e hrunl-..: r.
but it hasn't ruled oul the r o" Jhilll y
that more than one pcr, nn \\1';1 -..
involved.
' ·"
Ron Lcidcllncycr. an Nll&lt; · Iceil
nician who was mjurcd hy the hl:l&lt;l.
said he saw Jewell hd&lt;u c the hoinh
ing and believes il would have.: l~t~n
difficult for him "' have planted' nr,·
homb and made the 'I ll c&lt;rll
' u

Today's livestock
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday, as provid ed by the U.S. Department of Agri culture Market News:
Barrows and gills: 50 cents to 1.00
lower; demand moderate on a mod erate movement.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lhs . 57.5059.50, few 57.00 and 60.00; plant
delivered 59.00-61.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs . 51.0057.00.
Sows: firm to 50 cents higher.
U.S . 1-3, 300-450 ibs. 43.0046.00; 450-500 lbs . 46 .00-51.00:

Stocks

Am Ele Power ....................... 4n.
Akzo ...................................... 55~
Ashland Oil ............................. 37
AT&amp;T , .................................... 52~
Bank One ..............................34~
Bob Evana............................ 13').
Borg-Warner ................ ......... 34~
Champion Ind ......................... 18
Charming Shop ..................... &amp;'!..
City tfoldlng .......................... 21 ~.
Federal MoguL ..................... 16~
G1nneu .............................. ... 65~
Goodyeer .............................. 44'1•
K-mar1 ............................. ...... 19'4
Ohio Valley Bank .................... 36
One Valley ............................. 34\
Peoples Bancorp ................... 22
Pram Fln1 ............................... 12'o
Royal Dutch/Shell ................ 150
Shoney'e ...................................9
Star Bank ...............................75'.
Wendy' a ................................ 11'1.
Worthlngton .......................... 19'4

rep ort·. ~

500-650 lbs. 50.00-52.50
Boars : 38 .00-40.00.
Estimated rcrcipts: )6 .&lt;Xl0
Priers from The Pnutf ~e~~
ers Livestock Association:
Canlc: steady to I 00 lower.

Slaughter stee rs: choice '" m
6R.50; sclccl 5' (Ki -(&gt;7 Oil
•
Slaughtc1 hcil crs· choir&lt;·
till
'66.75; select 54.(K)-(o 2 00
Cows: steady to 2 Oil h~t• i ll' l" '.d'l
cows so.od and down
Bulls: steady to I 00 h1 ~ hc o . -~!&lt;
hulls 4).25 and down .
Veal ca lve'\ : h1ghn chn1n 1 &lt;1 [) W1
and down .
Sheep an&lt;! lambs: stcacly to 5 I&gt;
lower; choi ce wools H0.00-9H.tU
choice c lips K6 00-RX 00 : fec•il•'t
.lambs 84.00 and down. a ~c d ' "''''I'
39.50 and down .
; •..

'X

King, William Kuff and Robert Dickens, not transported.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:26 p.m.. VFD and squad to
motor-vehicle accident at state Route
Stock reports are the 10:30
7, Susan Brewer, Tara Congo, Jere- ' a.m. quotH provided by Adve11
of Gallipolla.
my Morris, Roy Reed Jr., not transpaned, Chester VFD assisted .

-·-·-

ter;

SUIICK!PTION IIATIS

.,. eome. .. MoW-

Walnut,
were
water-covered
overnight but were passable again
today.
"We are advising drivers to use
caution if they do comt across.high
water," Leach said.
County Highway Department
crews were out al 6:30 this morning
checking the affected areas, where
trees and debris had falltn on roads .
Those crews would probably be
spending the next three to four days
clearing debris, he said.
Another crew was out today
examining any effects of nooding on
bridges, Leach added.
The stonn had lillie effect on !he
Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds,
which was well out of the path taken
by the storms.
Rainfall amounts late Tuesday
and early today measured 1-3 inches
in Lawrence and Scioto counties, the
National Weather Service said. Gallia authorities estimated between 3
and 4 inches fell in some areas of the
county's southern end during the
night.
The Lawrence County sheriff's
office said a few homes were evacuated in the Pedro area. where more
than 4 inches of rain was recorded.
There were no injuries and the waters
were starting to recede.
A Hood watch was in effect for
most of southeast Ohio today with
more rain in the forecast

~-Local

Whirl you "" right down
to It, thty"re more
1mport1nt than 1nythlng
11M In 1hl -'do . Your
t.mlly 1nd your frJtnds fRI
your lift llld give II
!Mining.

DOUGLAS D. HUNT ER~
M.D. , INC.
P.O. Box 458
Fifth &amp; Pearl Streets
Racine, Ohio 45771

'
Specializing
In
Family Praetlee

Lotlng them It life'• worst
lxptrltncl..llld ...... here
Ill do whit . . Clll to blip
at IUCh I tlmt,

CREMEENS
FUNERAL HOME
Mt-3210
UOII

ANNOUNCING NEW OFFICE HOURS
Mon., Thes., and Wed.
Thursday
Friday

9:00a.m.· 5:00p.m.
11:00 a.m.-7:00p.m.
9:00a.m· 3:00 p.m:

For an appointment phone 949·2683

•••

•

�'·

-- .. ,

Sports

In other AL set/on,

'

.'

By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ray
Knight would have preferred to eel ·
ebrate on the field . First the Reds
manager got tossed, then he got
chased from the tunnel under the
dugout.
.
"Once again, I didn't get a chance
to run out on the field in the ninth,"
Knight said after the Reds' 5-4 vic ·
tory Tuesday night over the Houston
Astros.
" I' vc been saying how we
haven't had that many opportunities
to celebrate on the field like that. I
r
tried to stay down in the tunnel, but
they ran me out of there about the
CELEBRATION TIME comes for the Cincinnati Reds' Reggie seventh. But I did plenty of cele·
;Sanders and Hal Monla after Monla cornea home with the winning brating in (the dressing room) here."
Knight was ejected in the seventh
.run In the 1Oth Inning of Tuesday nlght'a National l.elgue game
for arguing a first-baSe call that led
.agalnet the vlehlng Houeton Altroe, who loll 5-4. (AP)
to a Houston run. In the eighth, the
Reds rallied to regain the lead, but
·In latest baseball's trades,
then had to go to extra innings when
Orlando Miller homered in the ninth

'

for Houston.
in scoring position. he felt he had to
" That's the srcatest win we've walk Larkin to get to Davis, even
had all year ... especially after the
though Da~s leads the Reds in
way they came back, " Knight said.
home runs and RBis.
" I.haven't felt this good all year."
"You've got to try to set up a dou·
Eric Davis almost hated to see the
ble play," Collins said. "Neither one
game end .
of those guys is very much fun to
"It was a good game to play in,
face."
probably an even better game to
If l..arlcin wasn't g~ing to have a
watch, " said Davis, who ended it in
chance to beat Houston, it was fine
the lOth with an RBI single. "I felt
with Knight that Davis would.
like we were scratching and clawing
"Fzic Davis has done that all year.
all night long."
He's been driving in the big runs for
Hal Morris singled off Terry
us all year. I feel great with Davis at
Clark (0..2) with one out and moved
the plate," Knight said.
to second on a wild pitch. Barry
Larkin singled in a run in the first,
Larkin was walked intentionally,
but Derek Bell homered in the
and Davis followed with a single
fou¢1. his I 2th, to tie it at I .
down the left-field line that easily
The Reds got an unearned run in
scored Morris.
\_
the fifth when Houston first baseman
Jeff Shaw (3 ·4) pitched the lOth
Jeff Bagwell misplayed Dave Bur·
inning to earn the victory.
ba 's grounder. Houston made it2·all
Houston manager Terry Collins
in the seventh when Sean Berry
said after the wild pitch put Morris · grounded into a force out, driving in

a run.
Derrick May drove in a run with
an infield single in the eighth, giving
Houston a 3·2 lead. In the bottom of
the eighth, Reggie Sanders hit a tworun triple for a 4-3 Cincinnati lead.
Miller tied the game at 4 with a lead·
off homer, his 12th, in the ninth 'off
Reds reliever Jeff Brantley.
Notes: Kevin Mitchell, acquired
earlier in the day In a trade with
Boston, popped up as a pinch·hitter
in the Reds' seventh .... Harris has
played five positions and committed
just one error this season .... Three of
Brantley's four blown saves this sea.
son have come against the Astros ... .
The Astros and Reds are 6·6 with
one game left this season .... House
ton staner Darryl Kite allowed three
hits, walked one and struck out six
in six innings to move into lOth
place on the Astros' career strikeou.t
list.

Baerga, Vizcaino
In other NL action,
and Mitchell make
Mets sweep Bucs in DH; Braves lose
1:nitial appearances
with new &amp; old clubs

~alllife .

"Myself and Espinoza thought
this was a dream, " Baerga said. "We
were so happy in Cleveland. All of
a sudden we find ourselves flying to
New York. We couldn't believe it
was happening . Now we have to forget about Cleveland."
And begin learning about all
:those unfamiliar faces on the mound.;Both managed to do some fast home·
'Work, and it showed.
:; " Since we didn't know anything
about the NL pitchers, we talked to
the coaches and asked them about
·them so we would know what to
:ex pect and not go.out there blind,"
:Said Baerga, who had another RBI
:l;ingle in five plate appearances in
'(h~ second game and played third
~ase for the first time in nearly five
1ears.
,
_. Espinoza had his moment in the
-spotlight. too. He hit an RBI single
4n the ninth inning of the nightcap to
lie the score at 3, and Todd Hundley
:Won it with a homer in the 12th.

J

'

j

"I'm just here to have fun,"
Espinoza said. "You can't play if
you don 'I have fun. I finally realized
this is a business. 1be shock of the
trade is over and I'm glad. Now
we 'II do what we can to help the
Mets win ."
The surprising trade of Baerga, a
three-time All-Star, came on the eve
of the trading deadline. Teams can
make trades through midnight (ED1)
tonight without having to put players on waivers.
Kevin Mitchell also hit the road.
The 1989 National League MVP
kept the same color uniform - he
just moved back to a familiar city.
And he says he feels right at home
in Cincinnati.
"It's good to be back," Mitchell
said Tuesday night, a day after the
Boston Red Sox traded him back to
the Reds.
Mitchell, who hit a combined
.333 with 49 home runs and 141
RBis for Cincinnati in I 993 and
1994, arrived at Riverfront Stadium
just before the Reds beat the Hous·
ton Astros 5-4 in I 0 innings. He
made a pinch·hit appearance in the
seventh, popping up to end the
inning.
"It's a little more motivation for
me," Mitchell said of fiis return.
"Over there, there was nothing to
fight for. I think I'm in a good situ·
at ion here."
The Reds acquired Mitchell for
minor league infielder Roberto Mejia
and minor league right-hander Brad
1\veedlie. The deal had Reds man·
ager Ray Knight all smiles.
"I guess ecstatic is the right
word . If he is healthy enough to go
out there and play, he's going to
make all the difference in the
world," Knight said, hoping the 34·
year-old Mitchell will add some
(See TRADES on Page 5)

By BEN WALKER
the Mets win."
AP Banball Wrher
Mets manager Dallas Green did
While Tom Lasorda was saying not get to see both victories. He was
goodbye in Los Angeles, Carlos ejected before the second game stan·
Baerga and Alvaro Espinoza were ed, right after umpire Joe West
making themselves welcome in New tossed coach Bobby Wine, claiming
York .
he was late in presenting the lineup
A day after the surprising trade card to home plate.
that brought them from Cleveland,
The Dodgers won in the lOth on
Baerga and Espinoza each got big Rick Parker's RBI single. Mike
hits that helped the Mets sweep a Busch reached on a fielder's choice,
doubleheader from Pittsburgh, 5·4 Greg Gagne singled with two outs
and 4-3 in 12 innings Tuesday night. and Parker singled up the middle.
"Myself and Espinoza thought
The Marlins tied it with two outs
this was a dream," said Baerga, who in the ninth when reliever Todd Wor·
arrived at Shea Stadium in a white rell balked home a run . It was the
limousine.
Dodgers' third balk of the game.
"We were so happy in Cleveland.
In other games, San Diego
All of a sudden we find ourselves
flying to New York. We couldn't
believe it was happening. Now we
have to forget about Cleveland. I felt
like a rookie," he said.
Lasorda, no doubt, felt a little out of place, too.
Dressed in a coat and tie instead
of a blue-and-white uniform , Lasor-.
da spoke to the Dodger Stadium
crowd of 34,973 on a microphone
from behind the plate before Los
Angeles played Florida. A day after
retiring following 20 seasons as the
team's manager, he told fans: "Now
a new era begins for the Dodgers '
today."
The Dodgers responded with a
win, 5-4 over the Marlins in 10
rnnmgs.
Baerga, in his first at-bat for his
new team, delivered a pinclr-Nt sin·
gle that drove in the go-ahead run in
the eighth inning of the opener. Baer·
ga started the second game at third
base and added another RBI single.
Espinoza came through with an
RBI single in the ninth that sent the
second game into extra innings.
Todd Hundley won it in the 12th
with his 30th home run.
"I'm just here to have fun. You
can't play if you don't have fun ,"
Espinoza said. "I finally realized this
is a business. The shock of the trade
is over and I'm glad that it's over.
Now we' ll do what we can to help

Blue Jays post 3-1
win over Indians

a

Trades.

1996 FOOTBAI.L PREVIEW:

:fu.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28TH
FEATURING

• MEIGS MAUUDERS
• SOUTHERN TORNADOES
• EASTERN EAGLES
•:WAHAMA WHIR fALCOIS:i
• OHIO STATE
.
• OHIO UNIVERSITY
• CINCINNATI
• CLEVELAND
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE

·

Baseball

AL standings
HuttmDI,.IIIon

Ila
ll 41" . .ra.
New York.. .........63
606
·Bitlimore ............. 52
Toroftlo ............... ..49
Boa10n ... .............. 46
Detroit
.... :w

52
H
!18

Ill
II
I'
17

.500
.462
.442
J21

72

~0

Cntnl Dhhlon
O.EVELAND .......64 42 604

Chicaco.................. 58 48

.~7

Milwaukee ..... ........ 52 S4
Minneeola .............. .S I .S4
Kanw City ........... &lt;18 59

.491
.486
.449

Western DhW..
Telu ............. ........ 60 46 - ~
Seanle .................... 57 48 .54J
o.ttand .................54 53 .505
Califomia ............... 51 H .481

6
12

It~

16\

2\

6\
IJ

Tuesday's IICORI
Tororwo J, CLEVELAND I
Drtroh 12, Clllifomia 9
Kanw City 7, 8ott011 0
Baltimore 16, Miueaota 4
Tew 15, New York 2
Chic:~~o 2. Ooltland I
DH: Sc.nC 6, Milwa~kce :t Milwau·
koe4,Sealolel
1:\ -~ ) 11

Ollkland

California (D.
·nan J.(J) 01 Detroit
(Will.,.. !-8~ 7, p.m
1
Toronto (Ouzma• 9-6) at CLEV£LAND(N'IY 12·ll, 7,05p.m.
New York (Ke)o 1-7) DI -TeiUU (Oliver
8-4). 7J 5 p.m.
. Sellltte (Hitchcock lo..t) II Milwaukee
tO:Anico,I.)).I:Ol p.m
'
~raore (Mr.mina 11 ·8) ot Minnesooo (!Ide 6-ll~ 1:05 p.m

2 FREE WEEKS of the Best Regional
Sports Action I Beginning Thursday,
August 1st.

Boslon (Wakefield 7· 10) 11 Kanu s

Cioy (Honey 8-9). 8:05p.m

'.

Sgt!J[QQy

5:30 p Sportsman's 12:30 p Horse
Showcase
Racing

,,
·•

: ~:OOp

N. American 6:00p
Flsh&amp;Game
•
f :OOp Sportsbeat
6:30p

.

:8:00
p This Week
•,
lnNASCAR

7:00 p

.•

7:30p

.•

Saute (Waaner 2·.1) ar Milwaukee
1~). 2,05 p.m.
Ch!CIJO (Topani 9-') 11 Oakland

(lllclloolld

IWudinll'l ), J'U p.m
Toromto (HanaoD 9· 12) at CLEVE·
LAND (Mater :l-6), 7,05 p.m
&amp;c.son (Clemens 4-10) a1 Kansas Cily
1Bclc:loer9-6), Ull p.m
New York (Hulton 0-l) Ill Tuu (Hill
l l ·l), 8'15 p.m.

....

•
•

1

•

RTS

•

•

•
•

•
•
•
••
•

..

~

••i:

•
•
••
•

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C.NIDbW.

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.453

Soo lli... ..............ll 50 .537
LooAo~t~n ...........56

.•

lt

League.
SEAITLE MARI~EU Troded OF
OIUTCn Brag to the Boston Red SoJ. for
UIP Jamie Moyc:r.
NollonoiLoopc

CINCINNATI RliDS' Acqaired OF
Kevin Mitchell from the Boston Rtd Sox
for INF Roberto Mejia and RHP Brad
Tweedlie. Sold lite concr~e:t of OF Eric
Anthony 10 tlae Colorldo Rockie1.
COLORADO ROCKIES Designaced
OF Milo 'l1oono&gt;oon row llliJnmeDO.

SAN AIANCtSCO Ot:~m: Tnoded

RHP Matlt Leiter 10 the Montrelll Elpo•
lor RHP Tim Sc:oct IIIII ~p Ki!ll Kucoa.
l'lool:ed RHP Rlclo Deloocla oond 28 Robby
Th001f10n on the I$· AJ disabled lin
Called "P INF Jay Caaiwo from Pbocnia
o1 lfle Pacific C0011 t.ooaue .

SUPERIOR TOYOTA
SUZUKI

AUTO LOANS

Bukethall
NldeMIIMlttW.•r

• . ..,

BOSTON CEL11CS ' Wolml F Doua
Smith. Renounced the riJhu to C Todd

.521

• Cohnl0 ...............54 5Z · .509
• S o o - ... _ ..46 l9. .431

0---·

FootbaU

1

4\
I

t\
J
101

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is C~ming

Nollonol F... boll Loot•

7
14
21 \

't

•

retrooclive lo July 21. Recalled INF fllUI·
to Cruz from Toledo of the lntermlionaJ

Ill

.406

Ploltodtlploi............ 4l 61

I , _.. ................S7
,,ll
• CINCI'INAn ........ " 5t ..!110
o Cloie~~o.................."
54 .416

KANSAS Crrv CHIEfS, SiJoed LB

Ao!doony
om. ... VIKINGS: Wohed
MINNESOTA
WR Gilben Groonotlo ood P Mike Neobi• .
NEW YORK lETS: Apoed ro .....,
wlcbO HooTy~.
OAKLAND RAIDERS: Slpcd RB
Ricky Ervins IO I Otle-)'al" ~lrracl .
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES : R&lt;·
to.al Q81oy l'looller.
ST. LOUIS RAMS :. Si1ocd lB
Lawreoc:e PtulfiPI to 1 ttno.yar CCNJrr.:t.
WASHINGTON REDSKIN$ , Re·
lei.Kd P Lonny Calieehio and K Sun

August 8, 1996 .

Advertising Deadline Is
August 1, 1996 .

AeminJ.

CALLDAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR AD IN
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

Hockey

co~~Sipod

0 Paori&lt;k Roy ud D Aleul 0..0. oo

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Surrounding Areas 1-800-766-0553

The....Dail
Sentinel .......
___._______
..____
"

'
0

_,..J

' So. Looil ................ 56 50 .5:11

•'

0

ra.

.610

tl\

ll

obaed list. Optioned RHP Bri~an Keyser to
NuhviUe of the American Auociarion.
DETROIT TIGERS' PIIIC&lt;d SS Alan
Trammell on rhe I.S-day disabled li l t,

,.nen~ativt .

New York' .............. 51 l6 .477
Florido ................... 49 l7 .462

Pinol&gt;oorJio .............41

a-han
A•-Loo.CHICAOO WHITE SOX: Activared

(Continued from Page 4)
homered for the Expos. White hit his
fourth homer of the season. and first
since returning July 16 after spend·
ing 79 days on the disabled list.
Phillies 8, Cardinals 7
Mickey Morandini singled home
the winning run with one out in the
ninth inning at Veterans Stadium.
Philadelphia had 22 hits, its high·
est total since getting 24 on May 19,
1990. Ruben Amaro, who homered,
and Ricky Otero each got four hits
and Morandini had three .
Ron Gant hit his 19th homer and
Gary Gaetti and John Mabry also
connected for St. Louis.
Cubs 4, Giants 0
Sammy Sosa hit his NL·Ieading
36th home run and recorded his
major league-best 13th outfield assist
as Chicago won at Wrigley Field.
Sosa matched his career high for
homers and also hit a run·scoring
single. In his last 21 games, he has
10 home runs and 28 RBis.
Frank Castillo (5· 12) teamed with
two relievers to shut out San Fran·
cisco on I0 hits. The Giants have lost
16 of their last 18 road games.

PHILADELPHIA 76ERS , Named

ll! L
• r
Alluoo.o .................. 64 41
•• Moncrcal
................ ~7 41

Advertising Deadline
Augut 21st
Call Dave or Bob At
992-2155 For More Information

Transactions

NL games •..

Worl.i B. FR!t c:omnwnit)' reiMions player

-OMiioo

•;•

Thundaf'• cames

Pittsburgh (Parris 0-1) at New York
(Cioot IO.R), 1:40 p.m.
Colorado ('!Toompoon 4-7) • Chicqo
( Nn·~m~8· 9), :1:20 p.m.
At lan11 (Wade J-0) at Su OiCJO
(Tim WOiftll t.:--4), 5:0S p.m
St. Lot,is (Oibome 9-6) llt Phitadcl·
pllio (Mulbollond 8-7), 7,Jl p.m
CINCINNAn (Salkeld $-3) :11 MOittte~~l (leiter4-IO). 7::t' p.m.
FloridA (Burkett t.-9) AI los Angele1
tR. Maninez 7-4). IO:Ol p.m.

THE 1996

Mundt.

NL standings

•
•
•
•

Or&lt;;fer PRIME. SPORTS KBL During
. the
Free Preview and Receive a
:·
FREE INSTALLATION
·'•'

Thundlly'1 pmes

California (8otkie 10·6) at Detroit
(U116-I), r,tlp.m..
Baldmore (Well• 7-10) at Minneaota
IR-OM04-9), U~ p.m.

1:00 p Auto Racing
2:00p STARS
'
Auto Racln(j
Woods &amp;
5:30 p Steelers
Wetlands
Pre-Game
larry Nixon
6:00 p Steelers vs
Outdoor
St.LOUis
Sportsbeat
9:00 p Steelers
Pgh Pkates
Post·Game
.....
Phil.

. Houston (Wall 6-2) at CINCINNATI
(SnUiey 9·9), IH5 p.m.
Colorado (Bailey 1- 1) al Montreal
(fwerol0.7), I'Jlp.m.
San Franc:iiCO {Wanon 7-8) ru Chicago
(Trochoell-6~ 2:20p.m.
·
So. Loull (Morgan J.4) 11 Ploilodel·
phia (ScloilliOOJ 4-417J5 p.m..
Pi111burah (Neagle 12-4) at New
York (Wilson 4-6), 7,40 p.m.
Aorido (Rapp !'i· l l) at Los Angeles
(Astacio 1-7), 10: 3~ p.m.
Atlanta (Gitvine 11-!'i) 111 S1111 Diego
(Tewklbury 9-,), 10:35 p.m

I 8 Fnnk Thom.as from the I ~ - day dia-

Tocllly'scames
ChicaJD (Alvarez
(Adoma~). J , I!~m

E[ICCY

...

Scoreboard

CHANNEL 18

Thursday

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

0-

•
By TOM WITHERS
loss of the year.
I expect Juan Gonzalez to drive a run shutout innings in his lut scM~,
AP Sporte WrHer
Gonll\lez hit solo homers in the in every at-bat, even when there 's struck out one and walked tlwe. llln
Everything has gone right for the
third and seventh innings, giving him nobody on base," Rangers manager the left·hander with a deceptive
New York Yankees this seasop 31 this season and 14 in July - a Johnny Oates said.
motion to first, erased two of ~
except in Texas.
Rangers record for homers in any
Elsewhere in the American walks with pickoffs.
••
The Yankees, who boast the AL's
month.
Lesgue, it was: Toronto 3, Cleveland
Boston starter Vaughn Eshelflllll
best record and who swept their six
I; Detroit 12, California 9; Kansas (4·3) gave up seven runs, fi!e
Pettine (15·6), who has been
away games in Cleveland and Balli·
bothered by a tightness in his left City 7, Boston 0: Baltimore 16, Min· earned, and seven hits in five inni~s
more , dropped their fourth straight elbow, said his arm hadn't felt as nesota 4; Chicago 2, Oakland I ; and of an emergency start. He repl~
game at The Ballpark in Arlington good in two months. But the Rangers Seattle spilt a doubleheader with :scheduled starter Jamie Moyer, triil· Tuesday night with a 15-2 shellack· clobbered the .Cy Young candidate Milwaukee.
ed to Seattle just houn before llH:
ing by the Rangers.
Tigen ll, Aqels 9
game.
•
by scoring 10 runs in 2 213 innings.
It continued a losing trend for
At Detroit, Cecil Fielder hit an
Marintn 6, Brewen 5 .
"It's real frustrating that it hap.
New York in the Lone Star state. The pened here," said Pettitte. "It's kind RBI single during an eight-run first
Brewen 4, Marinen 3 :•
AL East division leaders have not of embarrassing. This is going to hurt inning off Jason Grimsley (5·7) and
At Milwaukee, Jose Valentin ind
won a season series in Texas since because I expect a lot more of later hit his fourth homer in three. ·Dave Nilsson hit back-to-bad: hoille
runs to highlight a four·run s~
1983 and have lost 13 of their Ill$! 15 myself. It's going to take a couple
games.
· OUT OF REACH- Cleveland aacond uckar Jeff Kant (left) can't
inning that gave Milwaukee a spljt.
Fielder hit his 26th homer in the
get the tag clown In time to get Toronto'• Shawn Green takea the games while visiting the Rangers. days to get over this."
In the opener, Ken Griffey· Jr.
New York is 20-51 in Texas since
belly allele toward ncond ban for the ataal In the elxth Inning of
Doubly frustrating for Pettine second inning, reaching the upper
1984.
Tuelday nlght'e Arilerlclln League contaet In Cleveland, where the
was that llis horrendous outing came deck in left. It was Fi~lder's 24Sth went3-for·4 and rut his 32nd homer,
Blue Jaye won 3-1. (AP)
On Tuesday night, the Yankees
in front of a sizable contingent of home run for the Tigers, moving him a three-run shot, to give the MuiJiers
the win.
sent ace Andy Pettitte, the league's
family and friends from llis home· past Lou Whitaker for fifth-most in
winningest pitcher, to the mound and
Tim VanEgmond 0 · 1) hekllhe
town of Baton Rouge, La., and his team history.
the Rangers ripped through the left·
Marinen to five hits through 7 1/3
CJ. Nitkowski (2·2) got the win.
current residence of Deer Park,
hander like a tornado demolishing Texas.
innings of the second game, earning
Royals 7, Reel Sox 0
that doomed silo in "1\vister."
At Kansas City, Mo., rookie Jose his first win since Aug. 3, 1994.
Gonzalez is batting .404 (42-for·
Juan Gonzalez homered twice
. Greg Vaughn homered twic~ en
I04) in July with 34 RBis, matching Rosado pitched a three-hitter,
and went 5·for·5 , and Ivan
Dean Palmer's club RBI record for extending his scoreless streak to 18 the opener for the Brewers.
Rodriguez drove in four runs as the July set in 1993.
Seattle's Joey Cora had his ~8innings.
.
By KEN BERGER
The Indians' new lineup got sliut Rangers handed New York its worst
game hitting streak snapped in llie
Rosado (2· 1), who pitched 7 213
"ibe way he's swinging the bat,
CLEVELAND (AP) - The down by Huck Flener, a 27 -year-old
Isecond game.
Cleveland Indians ' new middle rookie. Flener, whose last major·
•
infield tandem played fine. The rest league appearance before this season
of the team could use some work.
was in 1993, allowed four hits in 7
After making a blockbuster trade 1/3 innings. He walked three, struck By STEVE HERMAN
yard 400 in 1994. He took home"a
n' t get a fulltime Indy-car ride.
seconds off from the fastest guys
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - It's no who tested there.
despite a comfortable lead in the out one and retired 13 of his last 15
Practice for Saturday's $4.7 mil· NASCAR-record prize of $613,000
wonder Jeff Gordon loves the Brick·
American League Central, Cleveland batters,
lion race, the richest in NASCAR · from a purse of more than $3.2 mil·
''But we were faster than any·
yard
400.
.lost3·1 to the Torontoillue Jays on
lion. '
·;
body
when
we
were
there,
and
I
history,
began today.
It didn ' t matter to Flener whom
The
transplanted
Hoosier,
who
Tuesday night.
thought
it
was
a
pretty
good
test,"
Gordon
started
from
the
pole
IllS!
The top 20 starting positions will
he was facing. The 2S8th selection in
Instead of Carlos Baerga at sec· the June 1990 free-agent draft was grew up 15 minutes from lndi· said Gordon, whose 199S record
be locked in place after the first year after qualifying at 172.S36 ml"t
ond base, the Indians had newly out of baseball in 1994 after having anapolis Motor Speedway, won the qualifying lap at 172.536 mph is a
round of qualifications Thursday: but wound up sixth in the race, whlch
acquired Jeff Kent. Jose Vizcaino, elbow surgery and thought he might inaugural Brickyard two years ago record.
'
The nellt 18 fastest qualifiers will was won by Dale Earnhardt.
and started from the pole last year.
Earnhardt, third in the series
·the real replacement for Baerga, never pitch again.
''I'll be real surprised if those oth·
join the field Friday. Four other dri·
And Gordon, who leads the er guys come back and run as fast as
played shortstop for the injured
vers' who do not make the field standings behind Gordon and Tcll)l
"After being hurt and having a
NASCAR
Winston
Cup
series
after
Omar Vizquel.
they
did.
I
heard
the
weather
was
ide·
through qualifying may be added as Labonte, suffered a fractured left cql·
year taken from me, I'm much more
The problem was with the regu- appreciative now," Flener said. winning the DieHardS()() last week at al when they were there, but I find it provisional staners, based on season Jar bone and sternum in a crash Jll
lars. Jim Thome was ()..for-3. Man· "Now I can play in beautiful yards Talladega, is again among the hard to believe it was a second or points, and a 43rd startin~ spot is Talladega on Sunday but said be ~II
second-and-a-half fastef. We'll find •available for any former Winston try to qualify at Indianapolis and then
ny Ramirez was l·for-4, although he like this, and I'm very happy about favorites at the Brickyard.
"We tested three days, and I don't QUI when we get there and we're all
did just miss a solo home run off the that."
C~p champion who does not qutili· at least start the mce. If necessuy, he
know
what
the
pole
speed
is
going
to
together,"
said
Gordon,
who
began
will be relieved by Mike Skinner.':an
wall in the sixth. Albert Belle fy.
Mike Timlin got three outs for his
be," Gordon said. referring to recent racing the U.S. Auto Club short
occasional
Winston Cup starter and
remember him? - was J.for-3 with 19th save.
Qordon held off Brett Bodine by.
sessions
on
the
Speedway's
newly
the
1995
NASCAR
Craftsman Truck
tracks
as
a
teen-ager
but
headed
walk, stranding two runners in the
.53 of a second after a late duel with
Dennis Martinez (9·6) took the
Series
champion.
· ,•
first and striking out to lead off the loss, allowing six hits in five innings. resurfaced 2 112-mile oval. "We south for NASCAR after he could·
Ernie lrvan in the inaugural Brick·
were
at
least
a
second,
almost
two
ninth.
Martinez said after the game that his
Much like it's been for two days elbow was bothering him again. It's
;c;ontinued from Page 4)
: in this town, the talk afterward was the same injury that had Martinez on
--~------------------~----------~----------~
· about Monday's trade with New the disabled list recently.
punch to his punch· and·judy lineup.
from San Francisco for pitchers Tim Ottawa on July 16. Just how mtt~·h
park when I got a call on my cellu·
: York that sent Baerga and Alvaro
Martinez, 41 , said it might be
The
Reds,
who
also
sold
out·
Scott
and Kirk Rueter. The Mariners, helP' Leiter will be is anybodfs
lar
phone
and
we
had
to
tum
back
: Espinoza to the Mets for Kent and wise for general manager John Hart
fielder Eric Anthony to the Colomdo
around,"
said
Mitchell,
who
was
bat·
trailing
Texas by 2 112 games in the guess. He was 4· 10 with a 5.19 ERA
to deal for another pitcher before
zeaino.
Rockies,
carry
a
.253
batting
aver·
AL
West,
acquired left-hander Jamie in 23 games for the Giants and h~As
ling
.304
with
two
home
runs
and
13
• "I'll say it again," manager Mike today's trade deadline- just in case.
age, third-worst in the NL. But they
RBis
in
27
8ames
for
Boston.
"I
Moyer
from
the Red Sox for out· allowed the most homers (iS) and
: 'll'grove said. "As much as I love
"I guess we have one already in only trail the Central Division-lead·
fielder
Darren
Bragg.
have
no
cleats,
no
bats,
nothing
."
runs (93) in the NL.
"
) 8rlos, we're a better team right now Kent Mercker," said Martinez, who
ing
St.
Louis
Cardinals
by
three
Moyer,
33,
is
7-1
with
a
4.50
and
Montreal
also
tried
to
Seattle
At
times
I
pitched
bad,
ut
time~
1
~ than we were yesterday."
(See INDIANS on Page 6)
games.
ERA and has won his last three threw well and came out with loss·
boost their chances at making the
Mitchell, who has been bothered
starts. Leiter, also 33, will take over es." Leiter said. "Things just didp 't
postseason. The Expos, leading NL
· this year by hamstring problems,
the starting spot that opened when come around ."
teams .in the mce for the wild card,
arrived without any equipment.
Ru~ter '!'_a~ demoted to Triple·A
• acquired right·hander Mark Leiter
v
"I didn't think I was going to get
traded. Mo (Vaughn) and I were
halfway from the hotel to the ball·
Today'scomes

PRIME SPORTS KBL

..

..

Gordon picked as favorite to win Brickyard 400 ...•

one run, on John Flaherty's RBI dou·
ble, in seven innings_
Expos 3, Rockies 1
Colorado's trouble away from
Coors Field continued as Ugueth
Urbina combined with a pair of
relievers on a three-hitter in Montreal.
The Rockies, 38-18 at home anll
averaging 8.25 runs per game, have
lost 13 of their last 16 road games.
They've scored a total oftwo runs in
their last three outings on t~ad.'
Urbina (6-3) allowed only an
unearned run on two hits in seven
innings.
Rendell White and Mike Lansing
(See NL on Page S)

stopped Atlanta 2·1, Montreal
downed Colorado 3-1, Philadelphia
got past St. Louis 8· 7 and Chicago
defeated San Francisco 4-0.
Padres 2, Braves 1
Fernando Valenzuela outdueled
Greg Maddux and San Diegp sent
Atlanta to its third straight loss in a
matchup of NL division leaders.
Valenzuela (7· 7), the 1981 Cy
Young winner, blanked the visiting
Braves on five hits for 6 113 innings.
Trevor Hoffman gave up Chipper
Jones' 23rd home run leading off the
ninth, but got his 24th save.
Maddux ( 10..9) has lost three in a
row for the first time since the mid'
die of the 1994 season. He allowed

'

,Rangers beat Yanks; Brewers split DH

Wednesday, July 31, 1996

Reds get by Astros 5-4 in 10 innings

. Sy JOHN KEKIS
. AP Sports WrHer
Carlos Baerga said it seemed
strange to be in a New York Mets
uniform, mainly because it didn't fit.
But the former Cleveland star quick·
ly made it apparent he will be a nice
fit with his new teammates.
Blierga, in his first National
League at-bat, hit a pinch single
:Tuesday night to cap a two-run
· eighth inning that rallied the Mets to
a 5-4 win in the opener of a double·
header against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Baerga was traded Monday with
Alvaro Espinoza for infielder.; Jeff
- Kent and Jose Vizcaino. The threetime All-Star second baseman
· a(rived at Shea Stadium a few hours
before the game in a white limou~ i'ne , still in something of a daze
about the sudden change in his base-

The Dally S'entlnel• Page s

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

mallirt- contnct~. Apeed to lenni wilh

.....

RW Cllude l.zneu oa a coeu.er u~

HAR'Il'ORD WIIALIDtS: Sl1ood 0

Jean Srb ''" Gia-e.

CALL LINDA
30.-424·5t22

992-2155

' ,'.

~~----~----------.-----~----~

�•!

.-..

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 31, 19Sil

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In the Olympics,

;

·

U.S. softball team wins gold as Lewis starts controversy
. By LARRY MCSHANE
All.ANTA (AP)- For Lisa Fernandez and her U.S. softball team.mates, one gold medal was enough.
Per Carl Lewis, nine proved insufficient.
· For the Dream Team, a gold
appeared inevitable. .
" · The American softball team did
\\VI'lat it was supposed to do Thesday:
W\n the gold medal in the first
plympic competition in their sport.
1'h• favored Americans, behind a
cqntroversial two-run homer from

Dot Richardson, defeated China 3-1
for the Olympic title.
"It's sweet when you have to get
down and reach deep inside and give
it everything you have," said
Richardson. whose homer just inside
the right field foul pole gave the
Americans an early lead: "And then
you can say you did it."
Fastballer Fernandez. the winner
in Monday's semifinal, closed out
the game with a strikeout in relief.
Fernandez, screaming and jumping
on the mound, tossed her

jubilation before she was buried in a
pile beneath her teammate~&gt; .
Lewis, one day after cementing
his position among the all-time
Olympic greats, did what he does
second best: start controversy. The
four-time Olympic long jump champion lobbied for a spot on the 400meter relay team and a shot at a
record I Oth gold.
He and Mark Spitz now share the
U.S. mark of nine.
"People want me to run the relay
and they think I have the right to

-

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t
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ATTEMPTS TO STEAL - The U.S. Dream
Team's G!'11nl Hill (left) tries lo steel !he bell from
Brazil's Wllaon-Fermandso Mlnici during Tues-

,:
1

dey night's Olympic quarterfinals In Atlente,
where the Dream Teem won 98-75. (AP)

run," Lewis said- a stance that didn't go over well with the four runners
curre ntly on the team.
Dennis Mitchell. who will handle
the anchor leg once run by Lewis.
said: "To put Carl on, you' ve got tc
take somebody off. And that's no1
cool, man .... Carl's had his moment
let me have mine."
Boxer Nate Jones and everrbod)
else competing in Atlanta's 9nal five
days share Lewis' lust for gold well, everrbody but those unlucky
hoopsters who must play the guaranteed-gold Dream Team.
"I don't want no bronze medal,"
the 23-year-old Jones said Tuesday,
when he and two teammates guaranteed themselves at least that by
moving into the boxing semifinals.
Sharing that sentiment were
Charles, Shaq, Penny and the rest of
tlleir millionaires club. The Dreamers rolled over Oscar Schmidt and
Brazil, 98-75, for their sixth easy
Olympic victory and a spot in Thursday's semifinals.
One of the possible bumps in the
U.S. road to a medal was eliminated when Australia, led by former
Seton Hall star Andrew Gaze's 26
points, stunned Toni Kukoc and
defending silver medalist Croatia,
73-71.
Earlier, Yugoslavia pounded China 128·61, and Lithuania routed
Greece 99-66 Tuesday. They'll play
in the other semifinals.
The medal fever was contagious .
Mr. Image, Andre Agassi, staged a
.late comebac:lti&gt; get within one win
of a medal in ~en's singles. The
American wrestlers want gold in
memory of their slain teammate,
Dave Schultz. Boxer Terrance Cauthen was cocky about his chances of
going home with gold.
"My hook was picture perfect,"
he declared after beating Thailand's
Veongviact Phongsit, "and so was
the jab."
So were Mary Joe and Gigi Fernandez. The pair, bidding to repeat
its Barcelona gold-medal perfor-

mance, moved into the doubles semifinals by eliminating Valda Lake and
Clare Wood of England 6-2, 6-1.
The American baseball team
warmed up for its semifinal showdown with Japan by blasting the
Netherlands 17-1. Cleanup hitter
Travis Lee hit his first homer of the
Olympics, prompting coach Skip
Bertman to observe the team is right
where it should be.
"Everybody in the lineup is contributing, and that's important going
into the medals round," Bertman
said.
,
The Americans remained atop the
medals board with a games-high 66
(25 gold, 28 silver, 13 bronze), followed by Gennany 's 41 (I 0.12-19)
and Russia's 41 (19-14-8).
But all the U.S. news was not
good. Wimbledon finalist MalaVai
Washington, who at one point was
serving for the match, instead collapsed and was ousted by unseeded
Spaniard Sergi Bruguera 7-6 (I 0.8),
4-6. 7-5.
And the women's volleyball team
was pummeled by trash-talking, fistpumping Cuba in the quarterfinals
Tuesday night, losing 15-1, 15-10,
15-12. With the American men's earlier loss, it's the first time since the
1980 boycott that the United States
did not win a volleyball medal.
Agassi, who was penalized twice
for scatological complaints about
officiating, did just the opposite.
Trailing 5-3 in the decisive third set,
he came on to post a 7-5, 4-6, 7·5
victorr over Wayne Ferreira of South
Africa.
"Mal se.rved for it and lost,"
Agassi said. "My opponent served
for it, and I ended up winning.
You've got to figure with those scenarios, one of us deserves it."
Boxer Albert Guardado Jr., the
first American in the ring Tuesday,
will settle for Atlanta grits instead of
gold. He was a quarterfinals loser,
defeated 19-14 by Ukranian nyweight Oleg Kiryukhin. Teammates
Jones, at 20 I pounds, Cauthen, at

On the NFL training camp scene,

l

\Yedneedlly, July 31, 1996

The Dally Sentinel• P1198 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mother puts her nose where it shouldn't be - son's marriage

I

•''

do with me. She keeps pushing
"Freddie" to be with her family and
never wants to spend any time with
Landers
his.
1995, Lot t\Rrrkt
My biggest complaint is that Neln.a s,..,itMt ..t Cit·
lie
will not have a child. They have
*"SJ'IId_._
been married for six years, and I
know Freddie wants children, but he
"
so afraid of her. he will no~ speak
Dear Ann Landers: My son marned the wrong girl, and I want him up. I want him to divorce this selfish
to divorce her. I blame myself for woman and find someone who loves
this mistake because I encouraged him enough to give him children
him. !thought "Nellie" was a love- while he is still young enough to
ly, family-oriented young woman, c•njoy them.
My son is a professional man and
~ut I was wrong.
good-looking.
He could have his
I have tried my best to be a friend
pick
of
women.
I have tried everyto Nellie, but she wants nothing to

Ann

132 pounds, and Rhoshii Wells, at
165 pounds, fared much better i~
moving on to the semifinals.
Winners in those bouts will fight
for the gold, while the lose~ bot~
collect bronze..
The other Olympic boxing news
came from Miami, where a Cuban
trainer who critlcized his country''
training methods announced his.
defection. Mariano Leyva, a 13-yeaf
veteran of the Cuban national box·.
ing team, had disappeared from
Atlanta on Saturday.
"I had certain problems bad
home, so I decided I had to stay for
my freedom," Leyva said. "I w~
afraid they would try to squash
me.
•
The U.S. wrestlers rememberec!
Schultz, the 1984 Olympic champi•
on who was murdered in January, by
wearing black bands on thei{ unifonns.
"Dave was the most beloved
man in wrestling in the world," said
Kurt Angle, one of five U.S:
wrestlers to win first-round matches
Tuesday. "I loved him, and he will
always be on my mind ."
Super heavyweight Bruce Baumgartner, seeking a medal in his fourth
consecutive Olympics, opens his
quest Thursday.
America's biggest Olympian 6-foot·3. 412-pound Mark Henrrfinished 14th in the superheavyweight weightlifting and moves on
now to a career in professionat
wrestling.
..
Another positive test made it
clear the new perfonnance-enhanc_.
ing drug of choice among Olympian~
is bromantan. with a fourth athlete
getting banned. Russian swimmer
Nina Zhivanevskaya tested positive
for the stimulant, making her the
third positive drug test on the Russian team -all for bromantan.
The fourth bromantan positive
was a Lithuanian cyclist. The,
Lithuanian cycling team's coach and
physician were thrown out of the
Olympics on Tuesday.

OU dean's
list posted

..

Numerous area Ohio U11iversity
students \Vere named to the dean's
ljst for spring quarter.
To be named to the dean's It&gt;!, a
student must have earned a grade
point average of 3.3 or better on a
4.0 scale for the quarter and have
earned 16 hours. 12 of which were
taken for a letter grade.
In the group making the dean's
list were:
· Amy Oooley, Rebecca Meier,
Robby Wyatt and Walter Williams,
all of Middleport; Charity Waugh of
·
Cheshire;
Arthur Kopczinsky, Courtney
Midkiff, Edward Bach-Davis,
Heather Howard, Jacob Heck, Kel·
ley Grueser, Marcy Hill and
Michelle Young, all of Pomeroy;
Sarah Duhl of Portland; Brian
Anderson, David lhle and Michelle
Winebrenner. Thomas Holter,
Trevor Petrel and Wendy Johnson,
all of Racine;
· Terry Kaylor or'Reedsvillei Lori
Stuart and Stacey Neff, both of
Shade; Denise Laugherr of Tuppers
Plains; Julia Gallaher of Coolville;
Lorre Osborne and Tyson Rose, both
of Long Bottom.
f

·-

thing I know to get him to see the for your ham-handed interference tic bag and pick up cigarette butts beaChes and in other public areas:
··who will pick it up?" The ans'ttr
light. I have never interfered in their and promise to MYOB in the future . before my son finds them.
Everyone knows discarded butts may be a youns child.
lives until now, but this issue is so I hope it's not too late and they will
I respect smokers· rights to
are dangerous because they can '
important, I just can't keep my give you another chance.
mouth shut. I know Freddie would
Dear Ann Landers: For years, cause fire s in the home and in •moke . However, with that right
love to have a family, but he hasn't you have published letters regarding wildlife areas . Few smokers. howev· comes the responsibility to di5Clll'd
got the nerve to stand up to Nellie the perils of cigarette smoking. I er, think of the danger to a child who cigarette butts properly and .to
and insist on it.
·
hope you will address a different may find a cigarene bun. Children respect the rights of others to enjoy a
..
Please tell me what! should do. · kind of cigarette problem that many can become burned by eatmg or clean and safe environment.
I
hope
you
will
UlliC
your
readers
· Illinois Mother
parents face in public places.
stepping on a ltghted butt. A child
While at a park with my 20- can become ill by ingesting toxins who smo~c to deposit their cigarette
Dear Mother. You should butt
out. Nellie has everr right to resent month·old son, I was horrified to such as tar and nicotine. not to men· butts in trash cans. -- A Concenled
your interference. Whether or not discover he had a cigarette butt in tion germs from the smoker's Parent in San DieJO
Dear San Diego Parent: After. all
your son and his wife f~elthey want his mouth. I spent the next half hour mouth .
these
years. I thought I had hl;iid
Smokers. please ask yourself the
to have a family is up to them, and picking up cigarette butts scattered
every
conceivable problem, bul I
not your business.
around the play area. Now when I follow ing question before throwing
was
wrong
. You have zeroed in on a
Your only hope is to apologize take him to the park, I bring a plas· butts .away on playgrounds, at
new one.

EASTMAN'S

FOOD LAND

4 Roll Pkg.

Kleenex

tyson Holly farms

Bath

Skinless Boneless

CHICKEN BREAST

t

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. Biakabutuka's holdout continues; Cowboys get depth on D
•

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By The Associated Press
"We've been trying to get a lot of
Tshimanga Biakabutuka might as work from our young running
well be in Timbuktu so far as the backs," Capers said. ''I like what I
Carolina Panthers are concerned.
see in Marquette so far. He's verr
·The 6-foot, 210-pound fonner strong from the waist down and he
Michigan running back, Carolina's · has good cutting ability. He is phystop draft pick, is nowhere to be ical enough for a guy his size. He has
found . He's still a holdout.
that body type of a lot of runners in
Meanwhile, Marquette Smith is the league right now. There is not
holding out hope that he can be the ._ much surface to hit him."
main ball carrier for the Panthers. · Oilers: The Houston Oilers
The diminutive Smith- he's only 5· expect rookie running b!ICk Eddie
!7 lnd weighs 190 pounds - has George back at training camp today.
' been sharing repetitions on the first· He's m1ssed two days ofpractrce.
• string offense with veteran running
George, the 1995 Hetsman Troback Tony Smith and rookie phy winner from Ohio State, was
Wmslow Oliver.
excused from training camp Sunday
• · So far, coach Dom Capers likes night to tend to an undisclosed famwhat he's seen in Smith, who began ily matter.
his college career at Florida State and
Oilers coach Jeff Fisher said
transferred to small Central Florida. missing two days shouldn't put
• He was drafted on the fifth round by George too far behind his teammates.
Carolina.
"We'll get him cau~ht up." Fish·

er said. " Before (ihe 'excused
absence) he was fine. He had a good
understanding of what we were
doing. He's a couple of days behind,
but we're confident we'll get him
!caught up ."
Fisher expects George to play in
Houston's exhibition opener against
the New York Jets on Saturday in
Jackson, Miss.
Meanwhile, the Oilers' lone holdout is still out. Restricted free-agent
linebacker Michael Barrow has yet
to reach agreement on a new contract. Barrow. a four-year veteran
from the University of Miami , was
second on the Oilers last season with
86 tackles and also had a career-high
three sacks.
Cowboys: Dallas' depth on
defense is decreasing.
The Cowboys have learned that
second-year lineman Darren Benson

is probably lost for the season after had this injury before," said Smith, day's exhibition game against tho
tearing his left anterior cruciate lig· who has yet to test his Achi lies on the San Diego Chargers in Japan.
,.
ament in practice Monday against practice field . "I am nervous but I'm
Two other Pittsburgh players,
the Oakland Raiders.
not scared."
injured in the game were not expect"We were counting on him to
If Smith recovers completely, ed to miss much of the season '
develop, " Dallas coach Barry Deion Sanders will be free to play though. Defensive end Brents~
Switzer said. "Last year was a year , wide receiver in the absence of Buckner and linebacker Donta Jonc~
of him trying to learn. This year we ·Michael Irvin, who has been sus- ialso suffered torn ligaments but wilt •
had higher hopes. This is a tremen- . pended by the NFL for the first five Inot need surgery.
:
dous setback."
games of the season.
' Two other Steelers have joined-~
Coaches had hoped Benson, who
If not, the Cowboys will have to the injured ranks on a day-to-day"'·
is 6-7 and weighs 308 pounds, would switch Sanders back to cornerback basis. Offensive guard Will Wolford
be the fourth tackle in a rotation that along with second-year player is suffering from back spasms and
includes Leon Lett, Chad Hennings Alundis Brice, who has disappoint- defensive back Lcthon Flowers has•
and Tony Casillas.
a sprained ankle.
ed coaches in camp·so far.
The secondary is creating prol&gt;.
Cardlnalll: Arizona coacll Vince.
"We've got a lot of ifs," Switzer
lems, too. The health of cornerback said.
Tobin says he's gotten more qucs-.
Kevin Smith, who missed last year
Stee.lers: Pittsburgh Steelers line- lions about rookie linebacker Ronald
with a tom Achilles tendon, is the backer Patrick Scott is upected to McKinnon than any other player
key to ~ow the Cowboys will spend miss the entire 1996 season due to since camp started.
what little money they have left tom knee ligaments.
At 5-11 and 230 pounds, Me Kin- ·
under the NR..'s salary cap.
Scott tore his anterior cruciate and non's size probably accounts for his
"I am nervous because I haven't medial collateral ligaments in Satur- underdog popularity.

JO ELLEN DIEHL YEARY

Yeary receives
promotion
Jo Ellen Diehl Yeary, a Pomeroy
native, has been promoted to coun·
sel in the Law Department of
Columbia Natural Resources in
O!arleston, W.Va.
Yeary attended Marietta College,
Marietta. where she received a bachelor's degree. She received her law
degree from Capital University Law
School, Columbus, where she was a
member of the Law Review.
Yeary is the daughter of Mrs. Ida
Oiehl and the bite Mr. James A.
J:tjehl of Pomeroy. She resides with
husband. John T. Yeary and their
, Philip, in South Charleston,
Va.

..

· Continentalvictory tabbed as 4-5 favorite in Hambletonian
By TOM CANAVAN
, AP Sports Writer
; · Some people may have written
' off Mr Vic in the S1.2 million Ham·
blctonian on Saturday. Ron Gurfein
isn't one of them. and for good rea·
son .

.:.
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•:
·,

Gurfein has histOrY on his sideat least recent history.
Two years ago. Gurf,in trained
Victorr Dream. a colt considered.one
of the favorites for the 1994 Hamhlctoni~n. In the colt's final prep for
trotting's most .prestigious race, Vic·
tory Dream raced poorly in the Beacon Course Trot.
" Victorr Dream raced lousy and
the press was really all over me, "
Gurfcin said.
Gurfein worked with the horse.
and the next week Victory Dream
went to the winner's circle in the
Hambleton ian.
Now it 's Mr Vic's tum. The colt
had been considered one of the

:.:. favorires for lhis year's Hambleton-

. : ian until he turned in a poor perfor-

•

mance in the Beacon Course Trot,
finishing fourth behind Lindy Lane,
Act Of Grace and ContinentalvictofY, who is also trained by Gurfein.
"I won't make e.cuses. Mr Vic
wasn 't right last week," said Gurfein, whose colt was undefeated in
four starts before last week. " But
this is a little deja vu ."
To win, though. Mr Vic must find
a way to beat the other members of
the Big Four:
Lindy Lane is last year's two·
year-old colt champion.
Continentalvictory is the 1995
two-year-old filly champion.
Act Of Grace, another filly.
recently qualified in a quick I :53.
which is faster than the Hambleton·
ian stakes record of I :53.4.
The presence of the Big Four on
Tuesday led to till: smallest Ham· ·
bletonian field since 1989. Twelve
colts and fillies were entered in the
race for three-year·olds at the Mead·
owlands Racetrack in East Ruther·
ford, N.J . The '89 race had II

jHuckabay's son gives up

entrants.
The Cadillac Hambletonian field

for Saturday was divided into two
six-horse divisions with the fillies
Continentalvictory and Act Of Grace
leading the first and Lindy Lane and
Mr Vic headlining the second.
The top five finishers in each heat
will advance to the final , which has
a 3:45 p.m. EDT post time.
"lp a six-horse field, post position
isn't a problem," Gurfein said.
"Everrone will line up and you
probably won 'I ~ee too inuch action.
You're just hoping you're not the one
eliminated."
ContinentalviciOfY, who has won
four of five starts and earned
$283,815 this year, was made the 4·
5 favorite in the fi~t division . Mike
Lachance will drive the filly from the
No.2 post.
Act Of Grace, a winner of four of
eight starts this year, is the e.ven·

money second choice. John Campbell, who will be looking for a record
fifth Hambletonian winning drive,
will break her from the No. 5 post.
The rest oft~ first division field
in post-position order with horse, dri·
ver and odds:
Freezing Cold, Berndt Lindstedt,
20-1; Continentalvictorr; Pine Man,
Ron Waples, 12-1; Tony Oaks, Sam
Noble Ill , 8·1; Act Of Grace; and
Pietro Pan. John Patterson Jr., 30-1.
Lindy Lane, who beat his rivals
last weekend in the final Hambletonian prep, is the 4-5 favorite in the
second division. Bill O'Donnell will
break the colt from No. 6 post.
Mr Vic drew the inside No. I post
and is the 3·1 second choice 'With
Lachance in the bike.
The rest of the second-division
field in post-position order:
Kramer Boy, Jack Moiseyev, 12-

Fl1d tM lint ltuys l1 "

To place aa a•, cal

Sentinel Classifieds

~ basketball for country music
~ HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)-

1983through 1989 and had a 129-59
record before he resigned during an
·i;ball coach Rick Huckabay is trying NCAA investigation that eventually
~~o launch a career as a country musiled to a two-year probation for the
:J; ian. Ricky Huckabay says hrs musl- Herd.
Ricky Huckabay moved to
] ;l:al genes must come from his mom ,
i&lt;aye.
Nashville. Tenn., seven months ago,
j ; ''My mom and her family have a and now works for a construction
;ieally strong music background," he company and does studio work once
!)aid. "My mom's a great singer. a week. He was to open for country
" 'f'retJY much growing up my mom music star Aaron Tippin at tonight's
lll -· •
• "
•frlto expose us to mus1c.
Summeifest '96 festival in Hunting~i
uclcabay, a 1993 graduate of ton.
Point Hish ~hool in nearby
"I know my parents never
!~o~ Point, Ohio, said he was con- thought this is what I'd do with my
i tunied by basketball when he was life," he said. "But they've both
•trowing up in Huntington.
been extremely supportive."
l ' . His dad coached at Marshall from I

992•2156

I; Running Sea, Campbell, 7-2;
Armbro Officer. Steve Condren, 10.

I; Stccler Spur, Richard Stillings, 20.1, and Lindy Lane.
·

MEIGS FARM MARKET
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North Carolna

Head Start, ·
W1c to recruit

POTATOES

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CORN DOG

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WITH FRIES......$1.5

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Hardy Mum's Asst. Colors

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CHILDS DOUBLE ROCKET 58.95

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ARMOUR MEAT

•· Gallia-Meigs Head Start and the
Womens, Infants and Childrens
Nutrition Program (WIC) wdl team
u~ in several county ~as. n_ext week
to identify and recru1t ehg1ble chddfen for their re~pective programs.
, At the same time, they w1ll offer
fun activities for the kids including
games with prizes, face painting, .
free balloons. stickers. sue kers and
snow cones. In additmn . parents
may register each day to win a childn:n's acttvity bag.
.
All activities will take place on
the Gallia-~eigs Head Start mobile
classroom from 10 a.in. to 2 p.m. at
the following dates and locations:·
Monday ••• Salem Center Fire
Department; Tuesday -· Tuppe_rs
Plarns Chll'lll:h of Christ; We4tfsdaY
__ Portland at the Buffington' Island
State Memorial Park.
Head Start provides comprehen·
sive pre-school services to ~­
and four-yesr·old' children and therr
families while assistins them tn
~ling health and family soals.
WIC is a nutrition program that provides supplemental foods to promote good health for pregnant.
breut feeding ·and postpartum
women, infants and chrldren up to
qe five.
.
.
families interested rn semces
from either prognm IIR invited to
attend the eventJ.

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1\-• ..a

Tea S239
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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

\..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday,
July 31,1996
I
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· Weclneaday, July 31,1991

.

Community calendar-The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to unollnce
meeting lllld specull eveats. The
calendar waot designed to promote

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun:h,
Middleport. Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
1be Rev. John Neville invites the
public to attend.

sales or fund raisers of any type.

THURSDAY
POMEROY •• PERSIPERI noon
'luncheon at the Senior Citizens Center. Reservations to be made by 9 a.m.
Thunday at 992-2161.

Items are prl,nted as space pennlts
and cannot be guaraateed to run a
specific number of days.
TUESDAY
RACINE ·• The Southern Local
Building Committee will hold a
parade 1\Jesday, 7 p.m. to campaign
for a proposed building project in the
district. Participants will meet at 7
p.m. at the junior high school.

TUPPERS PLAINS -· The 1\Jppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary,

Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the halL
Potluck dinner and silent auction.
FRIDAY
REEDSVll.LE ·· Olive Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
township building.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPOIIT .. Penn Creek,
Pa., quartet will be at the Middleport

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

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VAUG

SATURDAY
ALBANY .. Annual reunion,
Samuel and Lilly Smith faniilies, Saturday, 12 noon, Lake Snowden,
Albany.

Taste Of

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS •· Annual
Parker reunion, 12:30 dinner, 1\Jppers
Plains Elementary School Sunday.
CHESillRE •• Taylor reunion,
Poplar Ridge Fellowship Hall,
Cheshire, noon Sunday.
MONDAY
CARPENTER·· Columbia Board
of Trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
fire station.
POMEROY ·· Meigs County
Right to Life Chapter, Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library.

COLORING CONTEST WINNERS - In conjunction wHh the Farmer'• Bank aaiH·bratlon
recently, a clrcua·lhemad coloring conteat was
held for children. The winners, pictured hare
with Trecy Davldaon, loan clerk and Michael

- -

CHUCK COMBO
PACK

Kloes, loan offlcera, are Sarah Wllke1 of Rut·
land, In the llx to 10 age group, left, and Samantha Hively of Pomeroy, nve and under. The
youngatera were presented Meigs County Fair
passes.

'

MOUNTAINEER
• PORK
SAUSAGE

STEAKS
• ROAST
• GROUND CHUCK
....---..&gt;.
e

29

(HICK THI (WIIfiiDI fOR All YOUR

LB.

Customer Appreeiation Da,
AUGUST 3, 8:00 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
The Members of the
Racine Village Council

Wagner Hardware Sponsoring AFund Raiser For 'The
Racine Volunteer r~re Depart~~tnt

u:oo A.M. till It'• t•n•l

do endorse and encourage voters
of the

Local School District ·

BRUSHING UP ON SKILLS- Rlverbend Playws through fundIng from the Ohio Arts Council completed two WHkend work·
shops with presentations Sunday afternoon. Here Amy Plrrln.
Middleport, and Jake Birchfield, Rutland, are directed In a confrontational scene by Bob Hupp, New Haven. Otherl enrolled In
the workahopa were Cella McCoy, Dixie Sayre, Bob Hupp, Dawn
Spalding, Amy Roush and Gina Tillie, directing; and Karin Johnson, Andrea Neutzllng, Don Snyder, Robert Tltu1, Kelly Grutlll',
Annie Chapman, and Evan Struble, acting. The workahopl .,_
held at Trinity Church, and conducted by Kay Bo118, realdent
actor, and Mareha Hanna, artl1tlc director, both at The Human
Race Theater Co. In Dayton. The workshops -re aponaored by
the Rlverbend Arts Council.

BEAVER
The 18th annual reunion of the
Charles W and Fannie Lee (Wolfe)
Beaver family was held July 13 at
the Star Mill Park, Racine, with 69
present.
. .
John I. Beaver, 79, the last hvmg
child of Charles and Fannie Beaver was unable to attend as he was recuperating at home from surgery, He is
the last of seven, as his sister, Mattie
Beaver Hill, died Dec. 30, 1995, at
age 93.
Table grace was given by Ernest
Bush. Recognized and presented
awards were: Ernest Bush, 74, oldest man; Flossie Bush, 73, oldest
woman; Rowan Holsinger, youngest
boy; Abigail Beahrs, youngest girl;
Ernest and Flossie Bush, married
longest, 49 years and I I months;
Tim and Teresa Gillilan, newest
married. eight months; Earl and
Sarah Baumgardner, Mike and
Christy and a friend Charlie Brown,
traveled the farthest, from East
Springfield, Pa.
Harold Bosler and Charles Cline
both won door prizes.
ThoS4 attending were John C.
and Carolyn Beaver; Douglas and
Tracy Beaver, Chcyene and Shandi;
Raymond and Dolores Donahue;
Lori Beahrs, Rachael and Abigail,
all of Pomeroy: Mary ~· Forester,
Robert and Joey; Krista Smith;
Catherine Grady; Don Manuel;
Erne st and Flossie Bush; Leona
Cli ne: Gerald and Shirley Simpson;
and Mildred Williams. all of Racine.
Grace Holsinger and Rowan
Holsinger of Rcedsv1lle; Carol
Cline , Seva Lee; Kristen and
Heather Foreman: Jay Sayre; Paul
and Brenda Holsinger; Todd and
Diana Bissell, Andrew and Brady;
Sharon Hupp, Jamie, Jarod, Jessica,
Jennie, Joshua; Abbie Thompson, all
of Long Bouom: John Holsinger and
Johnny; and Jay Holsinger, Bidwell.
Tim and Teresa Gillilan and Heshia of Syracuse; Roy and Mary ·
Gillilan of Chester; Harold and
Helen (Wolfe) Bosler, of Carroll.
Steph Stemple; Jamie Stemple;
Harley Rose, all of Xenia. Virgil and
Patricia Collins of Circleville; Beaj
Cline of~nterburg; William Baum·:
gardner and Curtis of Columbus;
Charles and Lois Cline of
Moundsville, W.Va.; Earl and Sarah

Baumgardner, Mike and Christy,
and Charlie Brown; all of East
Springfield, Pa. '
Officers are Grace Holsinger,
president; Carl Cline, vice president;
Mary E. Forester, secretary; and
Shirley Simpson, treasurer. Due to
healtb problems, Helen Wolfe
Boster resigned as secretary-treasurer.
Reunion in 1997 will be at the Star
Mill Park in Racine, July 12.

.Fully Cooked
Spicy Chicken

BARBECUE
ROAST BEEF
DIIIIIER s4oo

to utilize their voting privilege.
Please vote "YES" on the bond issue
to be held
6th!!!

Family reunion--

SANDWICH

$200
"

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Department for Equipment.
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89

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89

Rainbow
Potatoes

./

BREAST

.,,

All proceeds go to the Racine Volunleer Fire

Paid for by the
Southern Local Building Commiuee
Kim Phillips, Trea•urer

s 29

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5 LB. Bag

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CAMPMEETING
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PASTOR MilE &amp;JO IIIII PIIIGIO
EYINIEUSTS: DIVE PUllEY &amp; JOHN POLIS
AUGUST 2'~3-4
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SRDIY 10 Ut ·&amp; , PJL-- ·' '
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l'rrll• &amp;W""' &amp; Gos,, Si¥rJ Nlglltly
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LO\'E OF JESUS 4 POWER OF GOD

.8.tDre Hou~~t., Aug. 3, 8:00 ,f•n.!· J9.~:3G. P.~m,
Door Prizes Drewn Every 30 Minutes

EdtUOD
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s 39

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i SIXTH STREET

ol TV Ttme5···
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Smoked Sausage

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RACINE, OHIO 45771

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Boneless
English
Steak

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Featu; ~Vee"
Free..I Tbe ·
n
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In an effort to provide our readership with cunrent news, the GalltpoJis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel. will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
artii;;les in the society section must
be submitted within 30 days of
occunrence.

,,

. . ,:.&gt;,: ~. coF:FEE

.BitS

/;: . )·: ,':". •

''

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• .._.;..)-,'0·1·

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!Products
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2 Uter

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Chipped/Chopped

HAM

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OPEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS A WEEK
UNLIMITED DOUBLE COUPONS
EVERY DAY· UP TO 50c

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¥funbll! eat~ .. ~~
Tele"tstOil
Area
cl
Listings an .
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Assorted
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News policy

j\. '

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

AT THE CORNIR OF

GEN. HARTINGER
PKWY. AND PEARL
ST. MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY 18 SENIOR
CITIZEN DAY
VAUGHAN"818 THI ONLY

·&amp;TORI THAT OIVD A
DISCOUNT
TO OUR BINIOII CITIZIN8

5"

•

'

'

�Wednesday, July 31, 1996

•

Page 10. The Dally Sentinel

''

PEPSI &amp; MT•.

Whirlwinds, water votices showcased March of Dime's
at weather-based rt exhibition
offers grant funds
The Central Ohio Chapter of the
March of Dimes Binh Defects
Foundation has announced the 1996
Campaian for Healthier Babies
Grant Program.
.
Programs considered for funding
are those that I) increase the avail·
ability, accessibility, and quality of
1preconception, prenatal care with
,emphasis on high-risk and target
·populations, and/or 2) develop and
·expand community and professional
programs for education and advocacy to improve pregnancy·outcomes.
Program goals should coincide
,with those of the March of Dimes

By MARTHA IRVINE
A81ocllted Pre81 Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- It's not always easy for
Ned Kahn to explain what he does for a living.
He's part artist, pan scientist, pan kid. And he uses
things like water hoses, cloudy fluids and sand-like glass
heads to create tornadoes and sand storms.
"Oh." said a businesswoman who once sat next to
him on an airr' ' ne. "So you're kind of a fine arts
plumber."
Others might call him a rebel with a hose.
Whichever it is, visitors to San Francisco's
Exploratorium museum can decide for themselves when
they view"Turbulenl Landscapes: The Natural Forces
That Shape Our Wbrld." The show runs through Jan. S
and includes 30 nature-oriented an pieces, 18 of which
are Kahn's.
-·Ned---K•••h•n•.-. This is not your average an
worlr
Include• show. For one, it's funded by a
ev,......,.lng from grant from the National Sci-''"
ence Foundation. For another,
boxN filled wtrh it includes the works of anists
bubbling aand who create things like smelly .
pita to aplnnlng mold farms and call them an.
gla.,
apherea
Kahn's work includes every·
filled with fluid. thing from boxes filled with
One
aphere bubbling sand pits to spinning
roughly mlmlca glass spheres filled with fluid.
the way WMther One sphere roughly mimics
pattern• collide the way weather patterns col·
and move around iide and move around the
the globe.
globe.

DEW PRODUCTS
STORE HOURS

Campaign for Healthier Babies: to
reduoc infant mortality, low binh
,weight, and to ensure early consis'."
!' tent prioatal care.
:
Match of Dimes funds are available for community and medical sci'vices, as well as health and educationa! activities. The chapter ca~
approve grants up to S10.000. All
grants are considered seed grants
awarded to organizatiotls not indi'
viduals.
Application forms are available
by calling the March of Dimes at
(614) 4865243 or 1'-800-686-2569. :

"When you apply this to the
atmosphere, you wonder how
they're ever .able to predict the weather," Kahn said.
Perhaps because of the movie "Twister," the most
popular of Kahn's,exhibits appears to be two simulations
of tornadoes - including one that extends from the
Expioratorium 's floor nearly to its high ceiling.
The components of a tornado, in this case, are a fog
machine and a fan that creates an updraft.
"More often it's just experimenting and playing with
materials." said Kahn, whose San Francisco home is
filled with some of those experiments.
Kahn, 36, began his science/an career in 1982 as an
apprentice to the late Frank Oppenheimer, the renowned
physicist who founded the museum.
Earning S5 an hour, Kahn played with bubbles and
oil lo create wild slicks of moving color that can stili be
seen at the museum.
Since then, he has become a respected anist, working
with architects and engineers lo create fountains and
other public an projects in San Francisco, Seattle, New
York and other cities. His work also appears in Canada
and Japan.
He obtains most of his work through word of mouth
and "sending videotapes (of it) out into the darkness,"
TORNADO MAN • Ned Kahn site beelde one of his exhibits in 'Turbulent Landsaid Kahn. whose interests have included botany and
scapes:
The Natural Forces That Shape Our World," an art show that Includes 30
astronomy.
11
nature-oriented
art pieces, 18 of which are Kahn's.
He staned out to be a scientist and spent a couple
summers working in labs.
"II was really pretty boring what they did, " he said.
"The aerospace industry has probably SJI!=n! billions of dollars trymg to
instead, he was drawn to chaos - "industrial mischief," as he calls it get rid of the things I make," he sa1d, laughing.
- like whirlpools, air funnels and natural collisions.

Moatlay tin S.llday
·aAM·IO PM

Treadmill

- Calories burned (running eight

miles): 920.
-Area emphasized: Lower body.
-Pros: The treadmill makes run·
ning or walking possible any time.!
The level of intensity can be
increased or decreased by adjusting
the incline and the speed on many
motorized models. or all fitness
equipment, statistics reveal that it's
the one rpost likely to be used regu·
lariy. it's also the most versatile for
families with members at different
fitness levels.
-Cons: Like running outdoors,
its high-impact nature makes it high
risk for injury. Can take up a lot of
space and of ail the equipment, tends
to cost the most to get a good, solid
model.
- Price: For a motorized home
model, expect to pay at least $1,500.
Most manual treadmills are not recommended, but a few adequate models cost SSOO.
Stair climber
-Calories burned: 410.
-Area emphasized: Lower body
on most climbers. The whole body if
it's a lluai-action model with levers to
be polled with the arms.
- Pros: Less impact than real
stairs, and because it's like an endless
flight of steps, there's no coming
down between- mi!its. which can be
hard on the knee joints.
-Cons: Many people have a ten·
dency to lean or prop themselves up.
on the rails by locking their elbows.
This reduces the effectiveness of the
workout significantly. The rails
should be used only to maintain bal·
ance.
If your steps are too shon, this also
will decreue the intenuty of the
workout. Some people with existing
knee 'problems have found steppers
aggravate them . .
- Price: Electronic steppers,
SI,000 and up: manual, S2SO-SSOO.

.

(

298 SECOND ST.

•
•

POMEROY, OH.
Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU AUG 3, 1996.

COCA COLA··

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

PRODUCTS~

ESTORE

·Several area students were can- Heath Savage of Coolville, bachelqr
didates for spring quaner degrees of science in education: Tricia Baer
from Ohio University.
of Middleport, bacheiar of arts:
Graduating with high honors Brian Corsi of Pomeroy, bachelor &lt;if
were Charity Waugh of Cheshire, science in industrial and systelll)'
bachelor of fine arts: Kenneth engineering; Lori Hayes of
Hymes of Coolville, bachelor of Pomeroy, bachelor of science in
ans; Robby Wyatt of Middiepon, sports science; James Circle &lt;if
;bachelor of science: David lhle of Racine, bachelor of science in elecRacine, bachelor of science: trical engineering: Jason Circle Of
!Kathryn ihle of Racine, bachelor of Racine, bachelor of science in eleC!science in physical therapy; Mark trical engineering; Ryan Riffle oJ
!Murphy of Reedsville, bachelor of Racine, bachelor of science in
health: Matthew Gibbs of Shado,
tscience in mechanical engineering.
Graduating with honors were bachelor of science in industrial
.
Amy Wagner of Pomeroy, bachelor technology.
Receiving a graduate degree was
of science in athletic training:
Janelle Harmon of Racine, bachelor Rhonda Hovatter .of Middlepor~
of science in hearing and speech sci- master of science in physical educa;
tion.
ences.
Other graduating seniors were

7 UP, DR.
QUARTER PORK

• s1·1ced•••••••~~••••••••
·
Lo1n

more than 5 million copies arK!
spawned 45 other guides written &lt;t
Master birder, artist, writer and edited by Peterson. Topics ranged
photographer Roger Tory Peterson, from rocks to wildflowers to buue.:.
1 who turned millions of Americans
nies. .
•
iinto bird watchers through his easy·
In h1s field guides, PetersoJl
to-use illustrated field guides, died grouped birds by similarity of appc.,..
Sunday in his sleep at home in Old ance rather than by species, so real£.
Lyme, Conn. He was 87.
ers could compare a bird to one f&lt;O'
Peterson's soaring passion for which it might be mistaken. Then~
birds began 76 years .ago with a painted them in similar poses ami
brownish WoodJl("cker called a flick- drew little arrows to point ooi ide.;
er. "There was this bundle of brown tifying featurr.s . "It seems like aO
feathers in a tree. II was asleep bot I obvious thing to do now, but nobodr
thought it was dead," he recalled in had ever done that before," Petersoft
a 1994 interview with USA TODAY. said.
'
"I poked it and it burst into color. ...
Born Aug. 28, 1908, i6
II was the contrast between some· Jamestown, N.Y., Peterson said it was
proper form when rowing. Without thing I thought was dead and some- his seventh-grade science teache~
proper technique, knees and back are thing so alive. I came to ,baiieve birds Blanche Hornbeck, who encouraged
strained .
are the most vivid reflection of life." him to draw birds and to apply his tal;
- Price: $200-$900.
His "A Field Guide to Birds" en! for meticulous detail.
(Houghton Mifflin, 1934) has sold

/

Stationary bike (13 mph)
- Calories burned: 545.
-Area empbuized: Lower body.
- Pros: EaSier on joints because
of the seated position. Most don't
take up much space. Good choice for
those on a tight budg~. It's easierto
read books and magazines while
using them.
Those with knee or leg problems
that prevent treadmill use might be
able to use a bike, making it a popo·
lar tool for physical therapy.
Those with cluonic back problems, who might be uncomfortable
on upight models, can try the recumbent style, which prqvides more back

'

)

suppon.
- Cons: Standard single-action
models offer no upper-body workout.
- Price: Electronic models, at
least $1,000: manual, $300-$500.
Ski simulators (five-eight miles)
- Calories burned: 610.
- Area emphasized: Whole body.
- Pros: A non-impact movement
because the feet glide back and forth
on roller-mounted boards or foot
pads. No strain on the joints.
- Cons: Have been described as
the least user-friendly machine. It can
he awkward adjusting to the crosscountry skiing motion.
- Price: $200-$700.
Rowers (Ergumetns)
- Calories hurned: 815.
- Areas emphasized: Whol e
body.
- Pros: Low impact. One the few
aerobic machines that puts extra
emphasis on the trunk area .
- Cons: Many people do not use

rr====-=-===--~=--===

PEPPER, CRUSH,
MUG ROOT BEER
12 PK.

Pork Chops ••••••••••••••• ·
Ll.

PLUMROSE BREAKFAST

Bacon •••••••••••••••••L!~••••

'Birdman extraordinaire
Roger Peterson dies
By ARLENE VIGODA
USA TODAY

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$249

MOUNTAINEER

$189

Sausage Links••••~.:.••••
Steaks •••••••••••••••••••••~·
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USI)A CHOICE EYE OF ROUND
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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

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Not all exercise.equipment will give an equal workout
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Aerobic exercise helps prevent
heart disease, boosts energy,
improves mental health and bums fat.
That's more than enough incentive
for many to hop on the nearest cardio contraption.
While there's a slew of exercise
machines out there, most people
head for the treadmill, according to
the Fitness Products Council, a North
Palm Beach, Fla.-based trade association of I 80 manufacturers of fitness
equipment and accessories. Sales of
fitness equipment increased 6 pen:ent
from 1994 to 1995, to S1.9 billion,
with treadmills driving those sales.
"Treadmills are the mosl popular
piece of equipment, both at home and
in the health club," Gregg Hanley,
executive director of Fitness Product•
Council, says. "They complement
the boom in exercise walking, which
attracls both new exercisers and
aging baby boomers." ,
in May, the case for the treadmill
grew stronger with a study published
in The Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers at tbe
Medical College of Wisconsin in Mil·
waukee and the Milwaukee VA Medical Center found that the treadmill
burned more calories than five other
exercise machines rower, ski
machine, stair climber, standard
upright stationary bike and dual action stationary bike - when used
by 13 fit subjects. (Researchers note
findings might not apply to those who
are out of shape.)
Although tbe treadmill garners
high marks, no one machine is pelfeet for everyone.
" It's very important for the consumer to select something they will
enjoy," says Jon Hoag, exercise
physiologist and manager of the Fit·
ness Store in Springdale, Ohio. "Sa
11 really dQesn't matter how many
calories the studies say the treadmill
bums if you don't use it consistently."
Here's a closer look at the most
popular aerobic exercisers. Calorie
estimates wca: reported in Medicine
and Science in Sports and Exercise.
The results were based on 1 !SOpound person exercising for one
hour. Those who weigh m&lt;n than
150 pounds and exercise a1 1 high
intensity might bum more calories,
while those who weigh _less and
exercise less vigorously might bum
fewer calories.

2 LITERS

ilocal students
!receive OU degrees

•------•

By REON CARTER

The Dally Sentinel • PageJ 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeday, July 31,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, O~lo

·- .

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

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AVOID SURPRISES!
CALL BEFORE YOU DIG:
1·800·362-2764
If you're planning a project
that requires digging. you can
save yoursell a lot of trouble and maybe even your life - by
calling·the Ohio Uttlities Protection Service (OUPS) before
you star!
S tate la w requires
you to call OUPS two
working days before
excavation begins
to make certain

you won't hit any underground
electrical. telephone, gas or
water lines . OUPS will handle
the details for yoiJ-. free of
charge. Just call the toll-free
number at least two work .
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begin your project. and
they'll notify member utili ties so they can mark
their lines in the work
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s
199
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Rinse &amp;
Vac Rental
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GROUND
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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 31, 1996

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Th' Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Regional Briefs:---. FEC charges Christian Coalition with violations ~
.

· Suspect built coffin as part of plot

·• MANSFIELD:- A man who built a coffin in his basement was going
!O kidnap hts ex-grrlfnend, keep her in lhe box and use it as a coffee table
: police said'.
'
Dwight Stout, 32, of Mansfield, pleaded innocent to a charge of conspiracy to kidnap on Monday in Municipal Court.
Police would not release a motive or lhe identity of lhe woman, saying lhey are still investigating. Additional charges may be filed, police said.
Stout allegedly built a room in his basement to w!irk on the coffin,
Y.hich measured 5 feet tO inches long, 16, inches deep and 24 inches wide.
· Detective Neal Grafton said lhe box had breathing rubes. The lid, which
~ad not been cut, was to be used as lhe top of a coffee table to disguise
the coffin, police said.
" He was trying to make it soundproof," said Sgt. Jan Wendling. A ven, ti)ator fan was found )lear lhe coffin, waiting to be installed.
Stout was being held on $75,000. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for Thursday to determine if there is probable cause to bring lhe case
to lhe Richland County grand jury.
Mansfield is about 70 miles north of Columbus.

Teen accused of trying to kill dad
: COLUMBUS - A teen has agreed to testify against a friend who
· allegedly staged her own kidnapping in a plot to kill her falher.
Shanna Rockey, 15, of Columbus, is charged wilh a delinquency count
of conspiracy to commit murder. Her trial has been postponed until Aug.
19 at lhe request of lhe defense .
Daisy Mae Justice, 15, of Columbus, has pleaded guilty to a reduced
delinquency charge of felonious assault and agreed to testify against Rockey. Justice was being held in lhe Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center until her sentencing Aug. 8.
.
Police said Rockey staged her abduction on July 3 in a plot to kill her
father, Scott. She called pol ide from a relative's home lhe next day and
was arrested hours later.
Police have not said what role Justice had in lhe plot.
. Scon Rockey has said he had grounded his daughter for four weeks
for poor performance in school and for disobedience.

.Model apartment set to open
TOLEDO - Plans are moving ahead to open in September the first
model apartment in a former abandoned downtown department store.
: Renovation on the former Macy's building began in December. The
project will cost S12.7 million.
The Alexander Co. of Madison , Wis. announced plans two years ago
to transform the building into lhe LaSalle Apartments. The company plans
to show the first model apartment on Sept. 17.
About 40 different floor plans will be offered. The one and two-bedroom' apartments are expected to cost from $500 to Sl ,000 a month.
"There will be a mix of people who are united by one thing: lheir interest and love for urban living, and their love for historic architecture," said
Susanne Voeltz, a company official said Tuesday.
Much of the original decor is being preserved. The company plans to
· display memorabilia and mementos from the building as part of an exhibit focusing on its history.

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a
lawsuit raising questions about the
·mixing of religion and (llllitics, th~
government on Tuesday charged the
Christian Coalition wilh improperly
aiding Republican candidates lhrough
its voter guides and other activities.
The group spent lhousands of
dollars to promote lhe candidacies of
figures such as former President
Bush, Sen. Jesse Helms, Senate candidate Oliver North and House
Speaker Newt Gingrich, the Federal
Election Commission charged in a
civil suit filed in U.S. District Court.
Any action on lhe lawsuil likely
will come too late to directly affect
this year 's elections. But some coalition critics said the government's
action could discourage churches
from distributing lhe group's voter
guides in November. Churches can
lose their tax exemption if they
engage iit partisan activity . .
"The evidence shows everyone
that this group is a hardball political
operation that has been cloaking
itself in religion," said Barry Lynn,
director of Americans United for Sep.aration of Church and State. "Now
lhe cloak is starting to unraveL"
, Coalition Executive Director
·Ralph Reed called the suit "totally
baseless" and said he was confident
lhe courts "will affirm lhat people of
faith have every right to be involved
as citizens and voters."
The commission charged that the Christian Coalition distributed voter
guides, identified Republican voters
and used mail and telephone banks to

get them to the polls in federal elections in 1990, 1992 and 1994 - all
wilh partisan intentions. The FEC
said also said the coalition had used
corporate funds on behalf of Republicans.
Such activities amount to
"express advocacy" lor particular
candidates and legally should have
been eilher reponed as independent
political expenditures or as in-kind
contributions to the candidates, the
FEC argued.
The voter guides compare candidates in state, local and federal races
on a series of issues the group deems
important. The coalition plans to
distribute more lhan 60 million litis
year.
The suil asks the court to impose
fines that could amount to hundreds
of lhousands of dollars, to prevent
further use of corporate money to
promote candida1es and to force lhe
coalition to disclose lhe money it
spends on politics.
The Christian Coalition, founded
in 1989 by religious broadcaster Pat
Robertson , now claims 1.7 million
members nationwide and has grown
.to be one of the most formidable
Iforces in conservative politics.
I Part of its strength comes from its
•tax-free status. The coalition is set up
as what the tax code calls a "social
welfare" group, meaning its primary
purpose is promoting the public
good, and not partisan politics.
The Internal Revenue Service has
never ruled on whether lhe group
meets lhe test for tax-free status,

however, and officials said the PEC
•Case could damage the coalition's
claim.
"It is very important 10 their
financial viability to have lhe nonprofit status," said Mark Rozell, a
political scientist at American University and aulhor of "Second Coming," a book about the Christian right
in Virginia politics.
Because the Christian Coalition
claims all of its activity is educational
and non-partisan, it doesn't have to
report where ils money comes from
,or where it goes, and is not bound by
federal spending limits lhat apply to
political action committees. In 1994,
the last year for which figures are
publicly available, the group raised
$21 million in donations.
" I'm not optimistic-lite FEC will
prevail." said Larry Sabato, a political scientist who has studied the
coalition's activities. He noted lhat
recent court decisions have gone
against lhe agency, and lhat judges
are reluctant to impose any limits lhat
could infringe on First Amendment
rights to political speech.
Many nonprofit groups are politically active, from the Sierra Club to
the Ctiamber of Commerce. But
lhose groups channel partisan activity through a political action committee, which is subject to federal
reporting requirements and spendif\8
limits.
The FEC authorized the suit on
May 7 by a vote of 4-0. Republican
commissioners Joan Aikens and Lee
Ann Elliott joined Democrats Scott
1

CHARLESTON, W.Va.- A telemarketer will create 150 new jobs in
the Weston area after receiving a $100.000 loan from lhe West Virginia
. Economic Development Aulhority, Gov. Gaston Caperton said.
Philadelphia-based Tele-Response Center lnc. will use the loan to purchase telemarketing, printing and office equipment, Caperton said Tuesday.
Tele-Rcsponse conducts fund-raising for charities and non-profit organizations .
Also, SDR Plastics Inc. of Ravenswood will use a $1.4 million stale
loan to purchase a building in Millwood, enabling the 8-year-old company to increase capacity and provide additional plastics services. The
company plans to add 50 new jobs over the next three years, Caperton
said.
J

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

EASY

Tanunera

MATCH MAKIIIG
IS IIADJ
IIOW/1/
1-900-94~400

Ext. 3124
$2.99 per min.
Must be 1B yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420
7/ttf1 mo.

Psychic Tells you
about your financial
future, love,
success and your
health Ill
1-900-868-41 00
ext. 6495
3.99 per min.
must be 18 yrs.

With Chromium Plocollnlte

CoDI!truetion Inc.
Remodeling
Room additions
Roofing

Garage's, Deck's,
Painting, Siding

1·800-47G-2SS9

or

Norman Humphreys
Treasure him Lord
In Your garden
·above. Tell him we
him and give
our love. Our
hearts are saddened,
our eyes ftUed with
tears. We treasure
the memories he left
us here.
Sadly Missed by
FamUy

Public Notice

Diet Coke or
coca Cola Classic
12-pack

12~z.

cans

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

614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.
oRepiCK....t Wlatlows

V.C. YOUNG Ill

H2..215
Pomeroy, Olllo
t!Z'Wn

30 Announcements

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

S1. At. 7

4" &amp; 6" Sch 3S pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe

$3.99 per min .

Police probe double murder-suicide
YARD/BAKE SALE
Aug. 2-3, 8:00am - 4:00pm
Harrisonville .
Presbyterian Church

Robbery suspect captured

GKUied by him.
The outtlde of the Hlled

YARD SALE

bid

muat 111 mtrhd

"Aophall Pavll'lfJIId".

705 Art Lewis St.
Aug.1,2&amp;3
Numerous Items

..

The VIllage Counell of

P-r renrv" Ilia rieht

to reitct lilY or 1111110, and
to ..... Irreaularllltt.
Jcihn I. Ancleraon
VIllage Admlnlatnlor
(7) 31; (I) S; 2TC

-The AeeociMid Prea
J

TfN

253 S. Fifth Snett, M id dleporT ~
AugUII 1-3 , baby Crib, CIOthSI,
furn1ture. books and misc . Item._

ROBERT BISSEll
CONRRUCTION

All Yara Sates Mu st Be Pata tn
Advance . Deadl•ne . 1:OOpm the
day before the ad it to run , SUn ·
day &amp; Mo nday edition - 1:00Prt'1
Friday.
Aug 1-3, large moving 1111, ..,rnl·
ture, clothmg, household !lema.

•

169 l!ee&lt;h St., Middleport.
Auguat 1, 2, 3, 8 :00 · 4~0. Rustle

Hilla, Syracute. Ethan Anen sola;

Stop &amp; Com~re
FREE ESTIMATES

stereo console. game boy, ~In ­
tendo games, bedding, rwln head·
board, bad lrame , teen &amp; Olh. r
clothing , rowi ng machine, aiilnleaa sinks, much mort, 81•·182·

985..4473
7/UIM

Pick-up dlecarded,
appliances, battertee, &amp;
many metals.

614·992-4025
8em·8pm

Personals

30 Announcements

BISSELL ·I'UILDERS, INC. .
uew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
~~

614-992-7643

J

lose weight now, ask me how.

304-576-2728.
40
Giveaway

1 1/2 Year Otcl Male Border Cot ·

No, Full-Blooded, 814-256-6309.

1·Baa8!e dog, 1 year old, Herri·

good Wilh Cl'llld·
ren . to good home only. 2 112
If, 1 1r2 year Old,

2·8/mo o ld H lmolayan cats .

good homos, good
304 67 4650
. 5- .
Four gray

To

children.

WI

killens 10

1

Free kitten•

Let them tell you
about the futurelll
100
1•"""-868-4
lrvV'"

10

cats, 614·7•2 -

good

Cullom 1u11c11ng, Aom. .Nna · preny mark,no. 614-949-24_
5,

Frten&lt;t1 K•nens, 614-446·3897
Hall H1ma1ayoo k•nens, 8 weeks
Old, to goo&lt;~ rnme, 614-742-1016.

•Remodtlln~

•Siding

Largo d~ . pan St. Bernard, part

lUCk laD. 304-576·2778.

Gifts • Folkart
e Antiques

992-7696

Howard Excavatin
Trucking ·
Limestone
Bulldo7.ing and

Backhoe

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
Hut Pump
Air Condltlonlng
Furnaces
Refrl(letaton
We have the new FR12
Low Cos1 Replacement
for Automotive R12.

992-2735
7/11f18 1 mo.

Services
House Sites and
Utllltles

of Earth Work
-All Kinds
992·3838

SILl

30%·40%0FF

Remodeling
&amp; ·Roofing
Siding &amp; Some
Block Work
Free Estlmetes

992·2768
992•3274

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIIIIIOI·IITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

,.,,
..
.
vm

,.••tl... Let .... It
IIUSOIIAIU

URUfiUICIS
614-tiHIIO
4111

Jwly 16,,1996 to
??????

Drapes By Design
48 Sisti Strllt
Gallipolis, Ohio 45131
614 446-4110

1100-441.o310

Found : pg., 01

Subtcr~p~•on

sun-

glassn At IntersectiOn Of 325 &amp;

588, RloGrando.s1•-2•s-sa22

70

Yard Sale

Galllpotls
&amp; VIcinity
1838 Chotham StrNI, Thurl, Frl,

ingl. Etc.

Howard L Wrlteset

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

2 flm 1ty : v1nton Across Baplllr
Church . Antiques. Bicycles . Fur n•ture. Hou1ehold Items. N•ce
C lean Clothes, Chi ldren. Adults ,
Fr~,

Sal.

Gutters

3 112 M it.. On ISO From HMC

Down apouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

3 Famity Augu1t 111, 2nd, 5 Miles
From HMC On 180, Eatra Nice

.FREE ESTIMATES
94.2188
S/1MWTF11t

1¥10.

Mini Blinds,
Vertlcale,
Pleated Shades
and much morel

Found : Golden German Shepherd
V•C imty : Fa~tv1ew Svbd1V1110n Tag
Number 5818 Red Battery Pow ered Ooed1ence Collar . 614 -446
9629

Sal, Old Rocker, Microwavea.
711211 mo.
1----...;,;~~;;,:;;;.,1 Desk. Dishes. What Nota. Cloth·

,,· -·--···- ---

, ....... ,.1.... ..

FAnDRY

H&amp;H

Friday.

GRUESER'S
. GAUGE
BodY worll, c. truck •
truck painting, minor

1·900-868-4900
Ext. 7625

mechanical f'IPIIIr.
Tuna-ups, •
OU Change, Wax,

$3.1111 par min.
llust be 18 yra.
Sarv-U (11t)oe(5 1434

Long St., Rutland, 011.
742-2t35, Ask for Kip

.........

. Butllng

771-

Big yard sate, Thuraday, Friday;
baby 1tems. household goo~s.
boys clothes, adult cloThes , reasonably priced , 9:00-• :oo. Oiijdte
Residence. Bashan Rd. Ra cine~

&lt;lniO.
Carpon sate. ra•n or sh 1ne. ~88

Salem St, RUIIlnd, ~US1 1, 2. 3.

8· 5. lurn1tu re . !DOl l . guns. an.
hques. collochbles. m1 sc
'
Church yard sate, Aug . 2. 3, 9 111
?, 11 35870 Sl. Rt 7, (appro~e . 1
mile !i_. ol Chester, acrou !rom
undetground house. llama to nu merous to mention, also ba-k ed
goods. Beller come early lor all
the good bargal1a, rain cancels.
Five !amity - Fr1day, Saturday, Au gust 2-3, Allen Strettt acron !rom.
Chester f•re house. tastlflllet' on.
the nghl.
Fnday and Saturday , Watt1n11~
res•dence. SA 124. lo ts ol ~od
buys Ra •n cancels . 9 OOam .

ptihar. lots ot misc. Rain or shin&amp;,•
Qam-4pm
•

sate. Augu at 1·2, tu rn a(
Uemory Gardens, 112 mile to •n·.

terseciiOn , turn tell . hr st hol.lse.
Follow signs, raln or shne.
·
Garage ta le - August 2nd , Cot··
lege Avenue . Rulland , Adtlln.:

Snowden residence.

,

,

Garage sale · Augu51 1·2, ·oneo
m1te below Middleport, SIOry's Aun'
Rd .. second house on the r~ght,:
ra1n or st11ne, 103m-3pm.
Garage uta- Friday 812 &amp; Saft.lr-:
day 813, 1/2 mile from Five Point1.

on SR 7, watch for lion•. Rain or
shine.
Huge 2 family yard 1ale, Thur• ·:

large ,,ale· Thunday, Fr1d9y. ~
Saturday, long Bonom. Oh, SA .
1241, Carroll' s lancling . Mltily •
msc. nems, turniture, doors, wrnd-•
ows, tools, games, f1 shmg po6(!s,:
lila jacktls, boat anchor. motorc., . .
c lts. computer~ (3), boat. su .

1165-3442.

Laroe three !amity yard sale. Everything tncluded but the kitchen .

sink . rriday &amp; Saturday, August .
2nd &amp; 3rd, Gam to Spm, nert to ·

the Ohio Valley Chr~1tian Auefn . ;

bly Camp, County Road 20. 08r ·.
win, Oh.

L"'g• yard sale, '"'"""'• l•om 3 ·
mowe•. appl•an&lt;es. """· fwo J

on e bedroom apartments , r•dlrtg

bedroom tra•ltH5, ~• mper. bo•es
ol stutr $1 oacn OhiO Rive, Cqmp
Grounds, Rac•ne.

Mam Street, Ruilan&lt;l . August 1·2. ·
toddler. QHI ' s and more. Ram vr .

1.::.111--•ne.::.._ _ _ _ _ __
Mov1ng sale · August 1-4 . 9af'tl :

8pm. 107 Pleasant A1dge , 614 · ,
992 ·,.192 . Some1h 1ng for evefy .•
one- model tra~ns . lilt cabinet. fur . ·
nuure. tors and much , much
n-ora.

Clolhirlg. Mloc .

Mull• lam11r garage sale· Augu,st :
2·3 . .-ono Laurel Chi! Rd., Pomer . •

_. Family : Rain Or Shine' Thurs ·

or PreCIOUS Uoments, k lct'l •
clorhng . toys. m11t
•

81111 -3rd 1 112 Miles Out 2t8
A•ght . Wathtf tOrytH, ElectriC
Range, Che'll Freezer. J!JSnS.

Neighborhood 111ravaganu1 H.J ·
day, S alt.lrday, la -S H1gt\ Strte1 ,
Pomeroy, 6 lamll •os , Children 's
c:1othng, lOy• Parking imi1tr1

Sttlngelll Rood 011 218.

830 F ir11 Avenue . Thursday A"oJ ·

Let a Psychic
Answer your
Questio"sl

·
Page Sl., !&gt;lid·

day, Friday, 9· ?, 1 112 miles north
ol Chaster on Sumner Rd . ·151
house, plus lize clo1h1ng, childr&amp;n
clothing &amp; exerc1se equ•pment. .

Open Monday
nights until
7:00p.m.

August 2. Chester beh•nd S'uni·
merfield'a Restaurant. R1ding toyi.
clothes. boy's 8 - 12 , Qlrl's .c.-8 .

Garage

and while

giYHWay, 814-992-6879.

•New Home1
•Addition•
•New Gar1ge1

3pm.

'
month old Bo•er PUPPI· 304-675· 4:30pm
4650.
Garage sate, Aug 1· 2. .-1000
2 Mala Beagla Pups To G1veaway laurel Ct1lf Rd. (Ebhn s). GraV'ety·
tractor. bicycles. beds. chalf, am-:
To Good Home. 61H46-07D4.

b::::::;::~~S~u~n~d~a~~~· ~C~a~l;ls;)::?.;~==~~~~=;_:·-~~~~r~-·~-"Y_._sp_a_ni_•_P_u_PP_'"_'·
&amp;
SMITH'S
utp.
LIVE pSYHICS CONSTRUCTION lomalo
Free house
a
home, alle&lt;l•onale
cat,
black &amp; while
Want to Ht Ip
Youlll

August 1· 2. Dusky Slree t,
cuse School clothes. books, eto .
Someth.ng for ever yone 9am;

Rair\1 shine.
Big 1ard sale, 325
dteporl, Aug. 1·3.

1

Vap DiuretiC: Fru'lh Pharmacy.

eamc. to bllck II up

7&amp;12 .

a,.,._-.

FREE

Reduc6; Bu rn Oil Fa! While You
Steep, lake Opal Tabtels And E·

Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; WHt VIrginia
Toll FfH1-80().872-5967
.446-9416

HARTWELL
HOUSE

2 family, Thursdey, Friday, i ·4,
lamps, rail women's cknhes, Yam,
lota misc., 842 Pean, Grin'm. •

Walks &amp; Fr lend1hip. Send Re ·
To : ClA 309 Clo Galltpolia
·Tribune, 825 Third Avenve,
OH 45831.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

PUBUC NOTICE
Saalad blda wilt be
received In lha office of tha
VIllage Clerk, Pomeroy
Municipal Bulldlng, 320 E.
Matn Strati, P.o. Box see,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711, unlll
11:00 o.m. Monday, Auguat
11, 1tH for tho following
proponl:
332 tona mort or 1111 of
ODOT Sptclllcallon 101
otphelt concrete lnatallod
with tockcoal on vorloue
llrltll II dlllgnltld by
Vlllege Council.
All meltrlalo ond
equipment are to mnt Ohio
Department
of
Tranoportatlon
apaclflcatlona.
All blda are to be by the
ton tn place ond tha price
per ton ahall Include oil
nacauary · clnnlng.
Spaclflcotlont of the otreeta
to be ourtacod lrt on tile In
tho office of the Pomeroy
· Vlllaga Admlnlairator. All
wor~ performed undar thla
bid to expected to be
completed by Septombtr
11, 1t.. , unl••• an
txlentlon Ia grontod by
VIllage Councll.
Each bid muat eontoln tho
full name of every peqon or
company lntar..tad In tha
bid and muat by
occompanled by 1 bond or
eartltled eheck In tho oum
ot S percent of thtlr bid to
the aatltfactlon of VIllage
Council, 11 1 guaranty lhot
It the bid ta aeceptad, •
conlriCt will be entered Into
and Ita performance
properly aecured. Thue
cheokl or bond• will ba
returned at once to oil
except the IUCCIIIfUI
llldcltr. Hit check or bond
wilt be held until the
contract •• properly

CHARLESTON. W.Va.- The state is spending $10 million to buy a
butlding it doesn't know what to do with.
- . ·Administration Secretary Chuck Polan said lhe state will acquire Morrts Square. a former warehouse, by the end of August. LaWI!Iakers this
'year approved buying and renovating the building.
Polan said he wants a state agency to move into the building but that
~~ must be renovated ftrst. It recently was home to workers compensation
offices but most of those have moved to other buildings because of poor
· conditions at Morris Square.
·
· ' The state has been paying Sl million a year to use lite building even
. though it houses only the microfiche office for the workers compensation agency.
·
· Polan said he will insist on top-rate renovations before the unspeci- ·
fied agency or agencies move into the building.

Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricktes

lhip From Nice Female For To•s,

BENNETTS

Chester, Ohio

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Genllaman Saeklno Companlon-

714108 1 mo. pd.

Tool Bo~ee1, Garage Door. Fflrni·
lure , Books. 0 1the1. linle Tikt
Toy5, Car Seat. Boy• Girls
Clothes, lhur1. Fr~, e.-1 l'"hcf
Aven!A, 9- '?

32124 Happy Hollow Ad

005

SetV·U (619) 645-8434

Public Notice

I

·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

wtth the JMIU A

Each

Second Avenue. Acrou ~rom
Topes Furniture, Tues. Wpd\
Thurs. Prom Drea&amp;el, VCR. COm;
ict, Clothing Morel

,,,,wMill

4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe

Must be 18 yrs

985-4422

Fam111. Clothto. Houotwore end
Mora Fri and Sat Aug 2-3, tl-5

Remodeling

314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's thru 1,000' roll'•l
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
S" Graveless l,(IICh pipe
·
Gas pipe 1" thrit 2" . Finings . Regulators- Risers
Full assonmcnt or P.V.C. &amp; Ftc• lining• &amp; Water linings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.

"• .

Rio Grande ne11 to Mini Mart 3

H&amp;H

•Garages

Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"

Public Notice

Whole Red Ripe
watermelon

Drive, Bi-.

•New Homes

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-885-3813 or 114-667-41484

4" S&amp;.D - perf. · solid pipe

..

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

Bo1• Ctcthlng iSizo 7-tO), Bo11
Bike With Trolnino Whooto, And
More 9-5 Augull 111, 143 Arnold

614-992-3470

I &amp;WPWIIO IIID .PPLY

Ext. 5843

The Farmera Bank and
Sevlnga
Company,
PomtrOy, Ohio, reaervta
tha right to bid at thlo aale, , -4o-~~~~~
and to withdraw tho obovt r
collateral prior to tale.
Further, The Farmer• Bank
end Savina• Company ·
renrv" the right to reJect
•
ony oral blda tubmltted.
Further, tha above
DUMP TRUCK
collatnl will be eoldln the
SERVICE
condition It 11 In, with no
oxpruo or Implied
Umeatone • Gravel
warrantleegtven.
For further tnformotlon,
Dirt• Sand
conttct o..t,.. at 1112·2138.
(7) 31; (I) 1, 2; 3TC

Remodeling t\'ard Sale : Bed·
spreads, Curtaine, Windows,

·Complete

1-800-331-9989.
Public Notice

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

1-900-868-41 00
Ext. 5489

Foster Parents Needed in
Kentucky and Ohio!!! YDCA will
pay up to $40.00 per day for
keeping a child in your home.
If you are
interesteq in
opening your
home to a child,
please call

Moving Sate: 8/311MI, 10·4. TroJttt
Par1c, Centenarl, Rlin C.ncei. · ·

614-742-2193

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266 - 1-800-950.3359
· Free Estimates

LIVE II
1-900-446-2626

713t/96 t mo .

WICKS

Portable

talk to you

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

. Jay OriYe, Au1Jjl111~ 2nd, 3rd~

SAWMILL

Find out about their
gitted Powerll
Call
1-900-484-1515
Ext. 1985
$3.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434

LIVE!
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

HELP £BANGE A
£WLD'S LD'E

Plfll!fl.

•

·N-Garaga
•Eitctrtcal &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESnMATES)'

&amp;Fri.

LowRMee)

EVEN POLICE
USE
PSYCHICS!!

YOUNG'S
GUYS!!!
&lt;ARPEHTER SERVICE • Girls are waiting to
•Room Addition•

..... Ad!ltion

State to buy former warehouse

D

1·900·255·0500
Ext. 5266

...adGcrages
oStn Doors &amp;wiltlows

r&gt;ecustonw
at lhlr price

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A Rand man thought to be the driver
of lhe getaway car used in a Charleston bank robbery earlier litis monlh
was arrested in Kansas, police said.
· Kellie A. Hicks, 23, was arrested by military police 11 Fort Riley.
Kan.,where he was staying with a relative. Hicks had lived at Port Riley
when he was in the mllilary, police said.
Police believe Hicks drove lhe car used by suspected robber Carlos
SMidt when a City National Bank was robbed of $,,000 July 17.

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

7

Two 11.p;w:ks

· PIG OTI'ER, W.Va. - AClay County man fatally shot his girlfriend and
their daughter, then killed himself. police said.
· Franklin Conley, age unavailable, killed Angela Watkins, age also
.unavailable, then killed their daughter. Felicia Conley, 8, before calling
~ neighbor and relative to tell them what he had done, 5aid state police
Sgt. Terty Sanders.
Conley also said he was not going to jail, then shot himself in lhe head
Tuesday night. state police said.
~ Stall; police said lhey had been to Conley's home near Big OUer befm,
while a relative of lhe victims said the couple had a history of problems.
·. However, state police were uncertain what touched off the shooting
and no further details were immediately available.

• Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to
know??

Lk-". Ina-ad, IIMM

Second Street, Pomeroy,
PUBUC NOTICE
Ohio, li7' nil for eoeh the
· NOTICE Ia horoby glvan following
colllteral:
!lilt on S.turday, Auguat 3, 1183 CHEVROLET
LUMINA
JtH, at 10:00 a.m., 1 public EURO
Hit will be held II 211 W..l 2G1WN54T5Pt210003

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

UNEXPLAINED
POWER!!

10% off all quaiWing bids

In Memory

In Loving Memory

Kroger
Hambulller
Buns...... s-ct. 2/$1.59

CHEAPER RAlES

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.

We will work within your budget
Ph. 713-8173
FAX n3-5881
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV

Nnll'lll T

@IJ(JJE!l!

Mlltodill Church,
Augu11 2nd, 3rd,

Big Yard Silo: Roln 0&lt; Sino, ~37
Roush Lane, Cheshire, 8·5. Tt.Jro

(Ume Stone-

Replacement
Windows

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

INAll 3 DAYS
-Lltll"'

GROUND, GENUINE

148-2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Weldng SUpplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Servlcea • Steel Salea &amp; Fjlbrication •'Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, RaWings, Patio Fumhure, Fireplace
Hems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ot other sruflll

•
•

,u~T•rtDII:

SUNI,

TiN: i-5, Rlin IS/ino.

::10

Foundation to honor Caperton

State EDA issues grant to firms

Church

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

· TOLEDO - Mayor Carty Finkbeiner thinks fountains would brighten up the city's downtown and raise civic pride. So he has asked his staff
· to explore his idea of creating more fountains in the city.
"This is something I've wanted to do for a long lime," Finkbeiner said
Tuesday. "Fountains have a way of raising pride, and people respond to
them in a positive way."
·
Ther~ are already four fountains in lhe downtown. One is in front of
the city 's municipal building.
Destgning and installing a new fountain can cost between $50,000 and
$350,000 - sometimes more.
But Finkbeiner said he would not ask taxpayers to pick up lhe tab. He
: wants to look into creating private-public partnerships to finance them.
A private company could pay for the design and building of a fountain while the city would maintain it. That approach has been taken by a
humber of cities, Finkbeiner said .

Yard Sale

Bldwol United

Tboinas and John McGarry i'!
approving the action. One member
was absent, and there is one vacancy
on the six-member board.
.
The commission said the Christian
Coalition spent money to help thi
1992 Bush re-election campaign
identify friendly voters and get then)
to the polls, and published some 2~
million voter gutdes lhat favored
Bush over Bill Clinton.
:
Similar assistance was offered tcj
help Helms win re -el~tion in Nortl)
Carolina in 1990; to atd former Iran•
Contra figure North in his unsuc;
cessful 1994 Senate campaign in Vir:
ginia; and in the 1992 House campaign of Rep. Bob Inglis, R- S .C., th~
1994 House campaign of Rep. J.Dj
Hayworth, R-Ariz., and in Gingrich's
1994 contest in Georgia.
:
And in Montana in 1992, Reed ai
a two-day public conference advo;
cated the defeat of Rep. Pat William~
: D-Mont.. and failed to report lhe co~
of lhe meeting as an independe~
expenditure agamst Wtlltams, lhe
FEC said.

Fountains proposed for downtown

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Gov. Gaston Caperton's achievements in
· improving West Virginia's educational system will be recognized lhrough
a scholastic foundation .
.
The West Virginia Bankers Association plans to raise a substantia~
· endowment for "The Governor Gaston Caperton Scholastic Foundation"
and each year provide a fully paid four-year college scholarship for one
student at the state school of their choice, said Bankers Association President Thomas A. Winner.
The scholarship is based on the costs of allending West Virginia Uni. versity and will cover tuition, room and board, books, fees and olher incidental expenses, he said Tuesday.
: Caperton will be the honorary chairman of the selection commiuee for
the annual award. The award's first recipient will be announced at the association's convention next year.

70

gust 1II, g..4

All Ytrd S.le1 Mull Bt P11d In

:

Three family, Auouat 2· 3, 1388 :
College Rd., SyracuH. Home 11'1- •
ter i or, longtnberger, clothe• • •

.

Advonco. DEADLINE 2:00 p.m.

C.rllorll, kridi· knlclu.

llondly edition · 10:00 1.m. Sat -

~
Rd ., Greg Bailey · teen clolhing , ,
tors , desk, lrunk , other mttc . ,

the day before the act .-ia 10 run . : : - - - - - : : - - - Somday edition · 2:00 p.m. FrK111. Thu1sday &amp; Fr~day. Fltlwoods
urdly,

Augull 111. 2nd, 3rd. 10·5, Bull
Run, Vinton. Clothlno All Slzn

w.-, Si'*' Lollllioc.

nerTW. Watcn tor a.gns.

t

•..

Thuraday and Friday, AuQu11 1-2.
rear ol 365 S.1th Avtnue, Middl~ :

port. Joons, IIWII, big oote.
,
2nd , 8-1 Be1id1 Ar · Two family porch 1111, Augu11 1. ••
Malt, Crown City,
3, 1121 Elst M11n Strtlt fllrnor. •
llabr 1 - Mile.
~'
oy, '-"liU.
,• . r

Augual 111. P· S, D8 Main StrHI .
ViniOI"I.

..

Yard 1111, A1g, 2, behind two Ill· ,
lion i1 Muon, WV, wrain ~3. • ·

�.

·' Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page.t5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

........-..
_

BRIDOI:

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

....
Now Taking

Ap~llcatlono

For 2872 Third Strttl. Syracuse, 2
loll 112 OO't total, 4 BR, LR, FR,
'94
OR, ~!Chon, utilty, ,_ bath, ,_
~II 453 S.R. 7 ~ Galii'Oi&amp;
Mwo
plumbing, ovorloofdng Ohio ~.
POSTN..JOBS
~'.. 1 ng Sale : August 1St , 2nd, SIOrt l12.881hf plul beneftll. For ovaiablo ~Ill, $45,000,
A-cross From Crawlords Store, application and oqm lnlo, call I· 614-9112·5006 or 814-992-7496.
tftB Smith Street A.t Henderson. 407-338-6100 oil WVI27 , 8am- 3 Bed rooms, 2 Ba1hs . la rge
Heme lntenor, Otsl'les, Linen Etc. 9pm, 7deyl.
Kirchen fOintng, Garage, New
EJI~a Nice Clothes . Avon Furni Root Meat Pump, City Schools,
~a,ll-5.
Close To Gallipolis, 614 · 448 ~rd Sale Fridey Aug 2, lrom 8-? Pan lime houra available to aup- 2472.
)'ll~tly home interior, household
port people wllll diubillties living 4 Bedroom Ranch . Red Brick .
)lf'(ls. 321 7 Jocklon AYe.
In the Meigs Co. lrta. If inWMt- Newly Remodeled. State Route
ed call lndopondont Opportuni- 218, MereerviUe, Ohio. 814- 446 ~
PubliC 5ale
tloo at 51~80-2723 or 51~771 - 0418.
and Auction
1150
on rn...ilw.
Central Air, Garage, 3 Bedrooms,
1 112 Baths, Large Fenced Lot,
1HERAPIS111 AND lHEIIAPY
hit Alto Auction will be cooed lor
18'x36' lnground Pool, ConveniASSISTANTS NEEDED
2 weekends during Jackson &amp;
ent location, 112 Uile From SR 7
~ ason County Fair. Enjoy lair~ wl
t htldren, see rou August UHh &amp; Physical Therapf1t, Oecupatlonal On Georges Creek Road , 614 Therapia! and P.T. and 0 .T. as - «6-3108, Or 814-&lt;.1 ·5956.
17tn.
~ltanll needed to dlagnol8 and
provide direct services for the
90 Wanted to Buy
Ueiga County Board at Mental Six roonls , new kitcherv bath ,
Absolute Top Dollar : Alt U.S. Sil- Retardation and Developmental Peart Street. Middleport, $2'9,000,
ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets, Diubilitiea. Muat have appro - GU·992-3749, Uoyd Grimm, no
Di'amonds, Amlque Jewelry, Gold priate licenae. AppMCition dead - Sunday calls.
Atngs, Old Glanware, Sterling. ine:Tiwrsdrly, August IS. IG98.
Three bedroam home in coumry,
Etc~ Acquisitions Jewelry - M.T.S.
Coin Shop, t51 Second Avenue,
lleiga County Board oiMAIOO.
Whites Hill Rd., Rutland, one bath,
Gallipolis, 814--448-2842.
1310 Carieron Srtee~ P.O. Box
in-gtound pool, 614 -992-5067.
307
' syracuC:~:S 779 • 61 ..
320 Mobile Homes
Large Amounts 50'1, 60's 45
RPM Records, Aher 8P.M. 513- -,80:--:--w-a..;;.n;,;;ted..;;;,;;,li;,o_Do
__ l
for 5ale
675-2930. 433Q Ju~er Road.
~own. OH 4533~
12x65 Mobile Home On 1 Acre
Any Odd Jobs, painting, carpen- l&amp;Yel LOI, Sma ll Out Building. A
Ciean late Model Cars Or try, lilwn care, ett. 304~75-7112.
24 Ft. Above Ground Pool With
Tnltks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Fenced In Deck, Very Nice,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East- OabyslninQ In My Home, All $27,000, Phone 814-367-0126.
Houn, Cheal'lire Area . 814-367ern Averue, Gallipolis.
71149.
14x70 Needs few repairs, wonh

..a120

Monroe "ve . Augu&amp;t 1,2,3
Quilting tuppties. furniture,
elo~ lft-22.

Hairdt....,, Appty At: Hair High·

i-.

11-

...

J &amp; D' s Auto Parts.

Bu~ing

sal -

vehicles. Selli ng parts. 304773-5033.

vage

Large Trampoline In good COncl·
lion 614-25H800

Non-Working Waahers, Dryers.
Stoves, Refrigerators, FrHztrs,
A.lr Conditioners, Color T.V.'s,
VCR'S, Also Junk cars. e 14.250.
l236.
Top dollar - antiqull, furnllurt,
china, clocks. gold, siiY8f',
coin 1 , walches, estates. Osby
Martin, e 14-992-74-4 1.
glau,

Wanted To Buy: Jur1k Autos With
Or Withoul Mo1or1. Call Larry

l .rvely. 814-388-8003·
Wanrad- yellow root- yellow root
to~s- blood root Buying: JadcJon.
Qhio· 9am-t 1am at Holly Hil Motel parking lot, •04 ChiHI,othe
Slroot; McArthur, Ohio- 12:30pm..
2:30pm at l &amp; B llarllat on 11150,
112 mile west of McArther. Ohio
River Ginoeng &amp; Fur Inc. P.Q Box
2341 {At 267), Eutliverpool,
OhiO 43920. PllOno, 330·385!832. FAX. 330-385-1842.
Will

Bu~

Childrena Clothing 0-6T
· One Price FOf' All, 61 .t-44~ -

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

Child

$6,400

Care Provillar Opening

asking $3,400 flfm, serious

Soon In local Area. 24 Houn A inquires onty. 304-895-3357.
Day, 7 Oaya A Week , Competitive 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 1ull balh,
Prices. 61-4-256-6342.
central air, 16.000. 304-675·2382
or :IJC-675-2926.

Georgaa Portable Sawmill, don't
Nul your toga to tne miU juat call

107• Grandville 2 Bedrooms, All

304-875-t057.

Must Sell
61 ... 46·8172 614-251HS251 .
Electric, 12x60 S2,900

1·" - -

Driwu: In stale or out of
state, ~our car Dr mine, call lor

IQ68 Oakwood l4X72 3 Bedroom'S, 1 112 Baths, Large Front
Kltchan 8x20 Deck. 614-U6 112S.

morolnlorotetlon. 304-675-7618.
Sun

Valley

Nursery

School.

ChildcBTa M·F 8am-5:30pm Ag81
2-K, Young School Age During 1g94 Ux76 fleetwood 2 bed·
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini- room, 2 bath, ElK, LA, aN electric,
nwm 614-(46..3857.
Cia, appliances, skylights, garden
tub. rTlM'j 9XIrBS. No money down,
Will Clean Out Garages &amp; Bas&amp;menta. Reasonatie Ranes, Free tn payoff or take over loan of
soma Cues; Will Haul Old Ap- 121 ,800. 304-773-5302.
pliances Will Pay For Some. 6U1995 Skylinv, 2 bedroom, 1 battl
_4&lt;16~-0:164.:..:,_,.·- : - - - - - - - w1garcten tub, skylight, bay wind-::
Will do baby1itting in my home, ow, island stove. tors of kitchen
cabinets. nice, refinance for paycheap rates, any ahilt, day
off. 304-895-3573.
night, 61HQ2-9975.
8x24 Trailer Good · Condilion,
II,BS, et4-311UQ78.

FINANCIAL

limited DHorl 1997 doublowide,
3br, 2bath, I 179g down, S2711
- - ---B-u_s_l_n_e_ss
_ _ _,l month. Free delivery a aetup.
210
Only at Oakwood Homes, Ni1ro
Opponunlty
wv.~7ss-588s.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai you do busi ·
neu with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mail unlit you have investigated
the olloring.

Busine-,"",~'-.-,.-o-n_o_r_B_u-il-de_r_;-N-a-

"ATTN : POint Pleaunt• Poatal

tiona! Manufacturer seeking ro
quelily DEALERS in aome select
open areas. Sleel buildings 81
low as $3.00 sq. foot. Call (303)
call : {708)906-2350Ex t.3670. 758-4135,-£Kl1503
Positions. P8fmanent full lime for
clerklsorlers. Full Benefits. For
exam, application and salary info

Mobile Homo Loans Purchase Or
Refinance For Bill Consolidation
2• Hour Approva l. 1-800-•84l731 Ext. 9706.

N

0 1

ew 14x80 n y make 2 pay ·
I ,.,.,.,, no poyment af·

men11

tor 4 yoaro, ~.. IOI.Yp &amp; dalivory.

:11•·75§..5885.

New Bri Rapo'a. ontt 3

left. free

set-up&amp;delivery.304-755-7111 .

-Bank Aopoa. Only 3 loh. Stift
rn_,.,.,.304·7S5-7191 .
Older Schultz home, owner occupied, z- bedroom. excellent for
young or retired couple, prtced on
inspeclion. 304-675-5394.

Shir~ey

Spears. 304-675- 142Q.

Olclar Trailer Good Shape, Almost
New: Relrigerator, .-nd Furnace,
$2,300 Trailer Has To Be Moved,
BU-245-5003, 814.. 41-0754.
Price Buster. 1097 3bedroom .
1825 down, $159/mo. Free· deliv ery &amp; se1up. Only at Oakwood
Homes, Ni.. wv 304-755-5885.

330

Farms for Sale

100 Acre Farm For Sale, Tobacco Base , German Hollow Road .

eu-379-2522.

Baby Sl!tet needed 10 ~~ child off

school bus &amp; watch unt il 5 :30.
»1 · 67~204

340

aner 5:10.

Ba bys111er Needed In My Home
Non -Smoker Would Be Available
To Work Any Hours For More lnkmnataon Call 6t4-44 1-()6()2 Arter
6 ~M

Computer Users NHded. Work
Own Hours. 20K To SSOK !Yr. 1·
800-348-7186X 117.l.
Oelrvery Dnver, Part-Time Ferrell
Gas Leader ~ The Propane Gas
lndust•y 15 Se•ktng _Del ivery
Omen To Work Part-Ttme Flexi·
ble Schedule. Pos1ttons In Galli·
pohs &amp; Pomeroy Area . Ekctllent
Qpportuntty For Someone lookmg Fo r Addthonal Income Or
Seasona; Work . To Ouali1y Must
Have COL . WJth Hazardous Ma·
ter Jat' Endrose ment. Apply Or
Send Re s ume To : Ferrell G11,
8255 Stale Route 588, Gallipohs,
OH 45631 .

DRIVERS WANTED: Gosel Unes
e•p;lf"'dng our "-t ., our ,.., lmt
tn Texas . Mileage pay, paid in-

estate advertising in

,._r

tfu
1$ subject to
the Faderal Fair HooslncJ Act

ol1968 whicl1 makes Hilegal
to advertise ·any preference,
lirniltttton or discrimination
based on race , color, religion,
sex fanVIial status ·or rational

481 Soutt. l"Ntd, llildtoport,
OH,614-H2-2111.

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

This newspaper will not
knowlirvfy ai:cept
advertisements lor real estate
whictl is in violation of the taw.
Our readeJS are hereby

informed !hat an dwellings
advertised u-. this newspaper
are avai&amp;abte on an equal

OllPCllltJrity besis.

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes lor 5ale

sz.ooo -.. s-...

lboOOClm.
304-e75-7482.

FANTASIIC

OPPORTU NITY

Full Ttm e Sert" ite Technic1an
Prefer E•perienoed W11! Tra in
~ht Person. Ou-d l lnboar1l RMtty 304-eJS-3433.
tlOars. el4-3!17-7802.

3Mdroarn, bath, ltv 1ng room w/ .

Ho-Ho-Hum. 5 t.lonths To Ctvtlttnul Now Htrtng Oemonstraton
Cr'llfSimls Around Tht World !
614-446-371111.-

liar- ftoora, ~tthen I di"ng
are1 together, new roof, garaQS,
on Rl 2. 30• ·875-f139 or 30•-

HOME TYPIST. PC uoors noedS45.000 incomt potenlial.
Col 1-1100·51~4343 Ext B-0311&amp;

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
For Pennies On St Del inquent
Tax, Repo's, REO' a. Your Area.
Toll FrM {I) 000.8ii-D77e En
tl-2814 For C.....IJttttng&amp;

875-73:28 atter 6:3:1.

lmmedill• Oponlng loc;ol buli·
non. ful- Tlmt Solory Plus llonolll. .... Coltoe Ground ()no IIOry. 3 bechom. b e and Selling E-ieo ooo Ao41irod lie, · good loahon, '" the
Sand Reaume' to PO Box 542 bMt. owner
~ ou1 of sra1e,
614-9112-e302.
!(on, Otio 45503
LOCI! conD'KIOf Medl llbofltf,
carpentry experience hliphtll.
Sond .. Baa G-30 .... Pt.
·Pinaant Reailler 200 Ya1n St
Pt. Ploufrlnl YN, 255!0.

Commercial Or Residential. Comer Lot
On Route 7 With Income,
$54,900, 614-256-1•26.

Acres Su1table For Bulldtng
Or Mob•le Home Water And

FOR INVESTORS 10 apanment
unrs. VtanG St. tul y ren!ed, 1)00(1
tntome. Oflly S97 .SOO Watson

&amp;d .

Crown City Village : Triple,

t

1.38

600 - 333~ 711

~OUNTlFORD

1270.

.make any SUCh preference,
limi1atioo or dlscr1nlnalion.•

quali fy must l'la¥e COl lanse. 1·

lf'ltet'WIW.

Crown City, 100 Ft. x60 F'r. 2
Balha Wilh Heat Pump, 814-25&amp;- .

Acre loo1ers, water, seplic, garage , blacktop road. in Add is on
area. 614-388-8978.

origin, or any lnlentlon to

surance. profit shanng. 401K. To

ExpotioncodWork around 8-00em-5:00pm
5 'r2 my s pe'f weet~. Pad vacaoon. rredal ~'VIte. Cal tor

Business and
Buildings

Commerctal Buildtng On Route 7
AI rut

Electric Ava tlable S4 , 500 , 814 ·
441-0928.~

---··-~~­
rot114-9112-1'350 {No_,
Includes ded &amp; CN!ttal air,

Clfhl.

Houso for ront· t32 South Pork
Drive, 2 rafarencet, phone: 304-

875-3017.
Three bedn&gt;om houM " Chellor,

many updatell remodttlnv. 0.·
posit and r.eferences requir e ~.
e 14·4-45-9921 afllr 8:ot»nt
Two bedroom, Racine area,

lie&amp;~ full be-~ no depo~~

cal61 ..992· 7643

gas

~

Two or three b.troom houH on
beautiltJI lot In Pomeroy, HUD ac·
ce~ted , $400/mo. or 11811 or leou
with option 1&gt; buy on connet with
aood relerenc11, no pera, e14696-72...

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bedroom Trailer, 8 Mlln Routt
218, 1220/Mo + Do~ooit, Refer·
ences. et• -ue -8t72. e1• -2se .
6251.
2 Bedraom trailer, reference &amp;
deposit, no pell, Rtt Norlh Lucas

Rd. on ri~L 30H75- t Olti.

2 Bedroom, located 3 milel from
New Havtn, country settin·g.

1280/mo &amp;
5881 .

de~oolt.

304 -773-

.51 o

4411·2200.

t9 112 Pine St...t. Garage Apartment 2 Bedroomo, St&lt;&gt;rl &amp; Rafriaerator, Washer &amp; Dryer Hook-Up,
Window AC , No PelS, Referenc-

e~ 61 ...46-2&gt;•3.

Vf'RA FURNITURE

614-4&lt;16·3158

Quality HoutMIIlold Fumiture And
Appliances. Gr•t Deals On
Ceoll And Carry! RENT·:!-OWN
And layway Alto A110ilollle.
Free Oeivery Wiflin 25 M~es.

520

Sporting

2 Bedroom Apartment. All Unhties

Goods
Bailoy'a Bow Shac:ll ·
Utilities l'li6122S!Mo., 513-574- Archaryandllack-Sup2539.
plioa. 9:00. 8:00 llaiey. llorgM
Cantil Rd. Vinton. Oh.. 814-3882bdrm . apu ., total elec:tric, a_p0454
~liancea ltJrnlohed, laundry room
facllllie&amp;. doH to school In town.
Antiques
Application• available at: Villagt 530
Green Apta. 149 or call 61•·992- Buy or sell . Riverine AntiQues.
3711 . EOH.
1124 E. Main Street. on Rt t2•.
Pomaro~ . Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
Apartmenrs For Rent, First Ave- o.m. to 61l0 p.m., Sundey 1:00 to
roe, 614-4411-8221.
0:00p.m. 014-992 ·2528, Russ
BE AUTltUL APARTMENTS AT ·Moore owner.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We1twood Drive 540 Miscellaneous
from $244 to $315. Walk to snap
Merchandise
a mov1e1. Call 614-448· 2568.
16 InCh radial uw, 3 phau pow.
Equal Housing Oppor .. nity.
er, $200. 304-895-3394.
Furnithed Apartment 1 Bedroom,
607 Second, Gallipolis, $295.1Ao., 1988 Nissan Pulur; • Cyclindet;
Utilities Paid , 61• ·448-3844 After SSP. $759 .00. 2-12' Inch Speaker. 300 Walt Amp With Blau7~M .
buncll CO Prayor. ssoo.oo . Call
FurniShed Apartmenl 1285&gt;\lo., t Aher 4:30-30•-1175- Zl~
Bedroom. Utilities Paid. 920
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 814- Yellow Refrigerator Frost Free,
Small Tablesaw, Propane Healing
4-48-38-44 Aher 7 P.M.
Stove, Small Apatlmtnl Dryer,
Furniahed Apartmen\ 1 Bedroom, RC~ Color T.V. Hooked Up For
1295/Mo., Utilities Paid, AC, 607 Cable, Works Good. AFTER I
Second Avenue, Gallipolis. su. P.ll. 614-37Q-2720.
446-38U Alter 7P.M .
• -12 Inch Kicker Competition
Furnished Efficiency Share Bath, Subwoofers 4 Months Old, Under
S1851Mo. , Uliliues Patd, 607 Sec- Wa rran1y $85 Each, 614 -446ond, Gallipolis, 614-446-3844 Af- 8778.
ter 71'M.
488 OX Computer. 420 HD, ! M8
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom RAM, Super VGA Monitor,
1pattmenta at VHiage Manor and mouse and speaker, call 614 ·
RiYertide Apartment• In Widdle- H2-6293.
porl From $232-S355 . Call 61•·
992-50e4. Equal Houlling O~por . •i Ft. X18 ft. steel bfidgelguard
rail, 14-•tt. x18rt . crane mats.
turd•
welders . compressor. office
M~l N. 3rd Avo, I bedroom, .quipmenl, 35 ton Fruehauf traillurniahed ap~ dopollit &amp; relarence er, 12 ton rraJ•z railef, orr.c. and
_...,_304-a2·25M.
construction niknt, ford u-haul
1001 ~an, small roots, 1uet ranks,
Nww Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur- wood forms . 665ft. •m 600 volt
nished apiL Deposit &amp; referenc- alxlpe electru:al wire. 304 -875ot.:ll4-M2-2588.

5098 II no answer leave message
on recorder.

4 • Acres Off Bolav ~le Road Facing Rouit 35, 1-614-443-53116.

Room Apartment AI 651 Sec&lt;lnd BootS By Redwing, Chippewa,
Avenue Ntxt To Bonard library, Tony lama. GuaranlHd Lownt
1350/llo., Plus 1350 Dollosit Re- PrieM At Shoe Colt, Golfipolis.
quired. No Pell A~owod. Roleranu Required. Cal Ju&lt;ly Or Deb- Commodore computer, elcelbit 81+--446-73Zl.
kln1 for beginners, t'¥'erything included, also desk. 1300, Call61•·
Nitt 2 Bedroom Furni shed 992-5295.
Apartment, Gallipolis. Laundry
Room, Air. No P•ts, S38SIUo .. Concre1e &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
30(1 Ttuu 2,000 Gallons Ron
~s Dopollit, 61....e-2800.

S Acf&amp;S For Sale $10,000, Locared on Sa•ier Road Between Vinton And R10 Grande. 614 ·388·

Nice 2 bedroom,· WID hook·up,
ground floor. ReferW~ces &amp; depollit, no- 304-875-51112.

3 acres of land for sale in Henderson 304.-675· 5958 or 30•675-2445.

8521

·

I :::::._,----,---80 aa8!i timbefl wroods wirh mnn

ngh11. Indian Run Road, CliNe
IOWnahip, Meigs Co~m~. SBO,OOO ,

e14.s-3933.

Parcell on Aarburn Rd. Warer,
Plved road. reuonabft restr icIl ona . 304-175-5253. (no single~ires ploaao)
Scen ic V1 lley, Apple Grove ,
beautiful 2ac lots, public water,

Clyda -

Jr, 304-5711-23311.

RENTALS

410 Houses for

Rent

711011. ~

-~. . .oarbaoe
. . . . . . 1&lt;,
appll•nces.
water.
lneluded, l11HIImo 1 -•ri!J c~o­
pooit 304-e75-487S !M'*IQI&amp;

~~=---you PlY 1111- r.m IMtt T -. ,... ~

Ill' r · ,. 1or tllf. HUO lltboid•Zed opt lor olclorty and llondi~Eaf~7t.

450

Fum'-.._..
--

START

WORKlN'II

West

North

East

!NT
J•

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Db!.
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: •

I llinla.... Shtlland Ram, 2 0..
viol yowo. 304-875· t23• aftor
l'pm.

2 ~ FiMioa \lory ~. S600
For Plir. 6t4-2SI5-5087.
Limousin bull,

014~

742·2860.

re•' akt bred hliflt; 81._7,t2·

1500

AutOI for Slle

For.Uo, rM. t·oopt, Y-t, low
new tir•t. runt ••cehnt,

11..-...zv.

... -

.u

lilro. V-t. olltt motlof .,rllo, PS,
PB, K; . 5 apollll . . .111
Ropoirod, ' 1-I!IIJ.537.-_
In ,CIIIRonEwrw,
and lock I, "Great Car, • 15200
014-992·7076 or.,._.., .
Kerwno&lt;o Air Contli-. 26,000 28711
BTU, . . , _ 304-875-HU.
1H7 Mutll"ff 351 Aulo, NO.. tile
Paint QT Rims, llliiJ N• Pllr1l
~ 1It""
...5011: 1111 Gtand·AIII 4 Door,
-·
•.,
3.0 AuU&gt;, Looclocl, Now T1t11,
et4I•MI:I
Brakoo, Etc. 12,000. I1•·24S.
Rofngoratoro.
W1111ert o:Jtl.
And Drrtfo, AH Roc:onditlonod
And Gaul8ntoodl lt08•And Up, 1974 Corvotto N- Tlroo, Ex·
haul And Tuna Up, Rllll Willi
-~. 11t~lt41 .
Grow lntorior, ...5011, Or T -.
For}:.. Sia . . . , Of Equal ...
ue .,.••4(.1175 Or l14-44f·

-----------1-·_
•*liM

s-.

1795.

1 ...,. ...

2 llll'flllllnto
3 Church part
4 Doy, •• wino

211 ~:::tool
30 Forceful
31 Angle rodo
32 Long-logged
bird
33 Jekyll 'a

5 Llllen
&amp; Act of
--lng

7 Taohnlcal unlv.
8 Con1umecl

t2= . .

IOOCI
I Comacllan
Bpartta

11 Marking

.

wltll--··

10 lrownlahpurplt

1 7 , _ _.. .
It 1'lllt
~ -.::
21 South
Amlrleln ~
Indian
22 E - (2 well.)
23 QoNeft .-.

1

T~E SPELLING BEE

BEFORE E EXCEPT

WAS

?- 31

AFTER 'RATS' !"

TI-IREE MONTHS A60, SIR

NOvl Tt4Ai YOU'Vt FINISHtl&gt;
THUMPING··

m

t

l. ~IPr?

AM

i

,,
i ;.&lt;/&gt;--JF ~

•

Starcratt 19 Fl. With Trailer 70 ·
Horse Evenrude Excellen1 Condi·"

,,. •9'1f.l v, t-.ti.A . trw.

7-31

!

tiOn, Till, Tnm $2,500, 614 -318-

Q486, 814-3117-7071.

760

r:!"'.u~

Db!.

27

K

2tExlr~

oftlla
·' .
CGIIIiea
2t - and Jlf'IP8!

YOUTI-\INION
·~oaux.e

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

~~~1l\IN6

Y()J M 11-1 YOOI?:
51-\()E.!

An easy ques tion to starl: \Yhich
&lt;·ountry is lhe largest bicycle manufacturer in the world'
Defending at the bridge table is like
riding a tandem. Both defenders must
work together to achieve the best re·
sull possible .
This deal occurred during lhe semi ·
final match belw ee n Ca nada and
Sweden in last year's Bermuda Bowl.
In the other room. Ca nada had been
doubled in two s11ades and losl 500
points when West inadvisedly led the
spade nine. Now the defenders collected only two trump I ricks to go with two
hearts, two diamond s and one d ub .
At this table . the Swedish pair
seems to have had a misunderstanding ovt•r North 's double North was
clearlyyhasltlg a juicy p• na lty , but
South appears lo haw thought it was
for takeout
Agam•l fmtr spades doubled. West.
Mark Molson. did well in leading lhe
diamond king He continued with the
diamond jack. Afler winning wilh the
ace, •:ast . Boris Raran . limed the defens e pe rfec tly by swi trhing to the
heart 10: Jack. queen. West cashed the
heart ace and club ace before return·
ing another heart to Soulh"s king.
Declarer tried the s pade jack, but
East won with the ace and played a di·
amond , West overrulling South with
his spade nine. South ruffed Molson's
heart exit, but Baran still had to score
the spade 10. That was five down for a
succulenl 1400-point penally and 14 international m8tchpoints to Canada.
The 1995 world bridge champi onships were held in China, home ol
lhe larges t bicycle manufacturer on
lhe planet. Last year, 40.45 million
bikes were made there.

a.o:·..

3&amp;c. ...., turf

.

~

31 1'8111
37 Plotll

By Phillip Alder

1M READ'&lt; ~OR TI-lE SPELLING
. SEE, MARCIE..l'YE STUDIED
'Ev'ER'f WORD AND EVER'( RULE ..

.

211 OMye
. "
2t • ....,.. .. , · I

31 Decett.

............ .......

-

40 Fumbler'a 41 Ll¥ely

•.

42 ..... llnle ,q C'-lcal

11111111
" '
441'111111811 . •
46 One of 1M •
Stoogn

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

tt:tlt!brlly CIJ)her cryptograms an1 croalld lrotn
Each eT1e1 •n lhe cipher Sllnds 10, ~:~·r~~·~~peofl68S • PIISI aoo P'Sseol
......ys ~......,.
equal, M

·Z XK

VK MZ

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PM

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H C A G

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RHAZIPFK.

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YEZ

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PREVIOUS SO~UTION : "In lha end, you·re measured nol by how much you ..
undertake but by whal you linally accomplish."- Donald Trump.

...
WOlD
OAMI

.. .

I

TUJANY

- I' I 1 I I
2

"'

~IIII
r6~,Gr--rU,_R,,F_E"I,:-E'I-il ~ .Co·m~;ete
--,E,--X-r-1-.-P_r,..,..._,,~,'
i

..

_ __,_
L _J.__..J.L.....L._.J__.,L

e

My neighbor says that it's
better lo have a few weeds and
untidy edges and to enjoy your

lhe chuckle quolod ·

by ftlltng in lhe misJ~nfjl WOfdl
y.ou develop lrom srep No. J below.

PRINT NUM8!REO tEII(RS
IN THE SE SQUARES

... ,0.,1&lt;11&gt; I'rl GOtl&lt;lC. TO
t&gt;Et&gt;ICATE IT TO
THIS IS fOil.

YOU!

YOV, .SWEET CAKES 1

SCRAM-LnS ANSWIItS

\{

Tht Trtosurt You
Sovlnts You'll Find In the
Classl(led Stellon.

Drench - Enemy · Stole - Gritty - GET THERE
Inte rstates are great for getting to a place in a huny,
rf you c an gel off when you GET THERE!

IWEDNESDAY

-----------1

Local references furnished . Es-•
tabliahed 1975. Call {614) •46··
1082 1 Ton Chovy Short Wheel 0870 Or 1·800·2e7-0576. Rogers
Bue Standard, 366 Mo1or W8t8f'proofing:.
12.900.614-388-1878.

"·

1915 Chovy Tahoe, 2.8, V-6, new Appliance Paris And Sarvtct: All
runa great. mtnt Name Brands Over 25 Year1 Ex·
oond. 304-875- 70DS.
ptrience All Work Guaran1eed,
1g16 S-10, •cyl,
$1,500 French Citr Maytag, 814 ·•48·
linn. Calohor 4.... 304-8DS-3-I&lt;1. 7795.
1992 Ford F· 150, excellent c:oil· C&amp;C General Home Ma in ·
ttnence- P1in1ing, vinyl siding,
- _ 304-875-QIQ.
corponuy, - ··
belllo,
111112 rsuzu pickup. 5 IPMd. nice. tTObUe home r.,.ir and more. For
~eo nbmoto call Clio~ ., •.gg2.
15000,114-992-25114 lhor epm.

••pd.

w1-.,

6323.

Thf'H cows wltwtiler catvn: one

·•~sc.

DOWN

25 Capital ol
Vietnam
211 Stomach

tires &amp; rim&amp;,

Livestock

Regllttred

••l)lofef

411 ~~
5D Sight orpna

33 faclorl,

Auto, Good Condition. 304-675 - Unconditionallifelime guarantee.;

630

3033.

AERATION IIDTORS

15 601N' TO

2074.

2t Hone Diesel 4 WD
Tracror 5 Ft Belly Motor, Low
Houra; John Deere 301 With
Frontend loader I Sicklt Bar,
low Hour, 614-4411-3438.

!alia

•1 PriM
4f 11111-cenlury

10

••

1-eoo-537·11528.

.ET

PAW II BEANIE

I CAN'T
WAIT TO
CHANGE II/ ' " ' -.... TELL
PAW!!

. MRS. SMITH!! AS OF NOW
BEANIE BAGLEY IS MAKING

To Buy : 10 Inch Stoll ·
Convetler For General Mo1ora~
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Aul&gt; Loeno. o.ter will arrange fi. 350 Or •oo T.H.M Automatic
nancins even it you have been Transmi11ion,
814·441~ 75111
turned down elsewhere. Upton ~Meuago.
\
Equipment Uo&amp;d C1rs. 304·•58·
610 Farm Equipment
1089.
790 Campers &amp;
l 99• Now Holland oquare beler, SEIZED CARS From $175.
Motor Homes ·
•
modo! 565, e•collont condition,
Por~chea, Caclil lacs, Chevya, 1i80 Nomad 24' stl1·conlained
loss lhon 1500 boJoo bolod thN It, BMW's,
Cor'ltlnes, Also Jeepi, •
Sl!iOO, 814-742-2088.
wo·s, Your Area. Toll Free I· camper, ••cellenl condition,
31 00 1 7 2 1
. ____ :
sao gallon plootlc lmn ........ B00-8118:g77a Ext. A-2814 For 1·':..:::~:::.:':-6:..4--:...:•:.·:-2:..:8:..:1,.
Currerw
listings.
1993
Pop-Up
Coleman
Camper ,.
col tonk, on lied wltll hooo, 175,
61HI411-3403.
Sitver 1987 Ford E1cor1, • door, E•co:eller:n Condition, 1!14 -388- ~
caasena deck, good condition, 8293Dozor TDI5 International 150 $1,900.
304-875-6511.
Series, needt a head, Mil or
'
SERVICES
trodo lor tarm rac:tor or onylling
720 1tucks for Sale
ol oquolvoJuo. 304-582-5840. ·
Home
Drag Iliac &amp; Couple Sinalt Plows, '91 Ford Ronger XLT, 5 spoed, 810
Improvements
614-371-2720 AFlEIII ti.JL
, axcerrent condition, $4000, 614·
742·1603or-mosugo.
BASEMENT
Hydrauuc Ho101. Mode To Order.
WATERI'ROOFING
Sidofo Equipment Co. 304·175- IDBI Oodgo Truck, Slant 8cyl,
White

=-..

Pedal to success

Incredible
Williams
Farm, Syracuse, OniO, 614·992- 10Q4 Pontiac Flrebird, exc .cond,
3985 days or 81•·992-5866 Hop, loaded, UI,SOO mile•.
l13,1100. Call alter 5:00pm. 304IMtAngs.
675-7702.
Home Grown Tomatoes &amp; PepptfS, Jacob Stutznen, 55 Alliaon t 1184 T - Gl, Rod. 2 o-. PS,
PB. Air, Automatic, 34,000 M~es
Road, Patrio~ OH 45658.
$6,500, 814-245-5877.
Red Raspbemes. Taylor·s Berry
77 Ford Muslang Cobra II, 302
Patclt, 514-2.5-11047.
...,.., """'Y -~ Holly • ._rrel,
many new parra. body needs
- ' · price neg., e10-1192-538!S.
FARM SUPPLIES

2

3454-lpolo.

BARNEY
ACAREER

radio/cas•ene, 18,900. 30•·6750888 or ao.-875-4257.

7421 .

45

2• Qunntlna

1gD2 Oodgo Sha- 2 Door, A u - 1 - - : - - - - - - - .
tomtic, AC, Rear Spoiter, AMIFM
Waverunner Wit~
Gol814-388-9841.
19.000 Milos, $4,500 le!~~l!~l=3~,500=·~8~1~4·~·48=:.;~
Registet'ltd Weimaraner puppies. CaiURe,
OB0,8t4-258.e1119.
I:
71'M.
304-875-7740.
1092 Unc:oln Mark 7 Red $11,000
Checkmate Convincer, opan'
T~ree Jack Ruasell ~ppies, 1WO 814-592.,.111 .
atereo, Mercruiser moto,, :
lomalea and one male, 10 l&gt;s. ltJI
exc . condilion-inaide &amp; out, very•
1993 Ford Probe, 37,000 miles, sporly boa! $4 700 30• 882
grown, $2501oa., 614-742-2050.
aulD, loa&lt;led. 300-773-597• alter 2241 .
· ·
·
·
·;
6:00pm. or 304-773-6244.
570
Musical
20' 1991 Monarch pontoon boat i
Instruments
1993 Gao Metro, 28,000 Miles, with SO horae motor, 614-843A-1 Shapo, $4,500: 1g88 Chevy 5190.
Alto uxophono lor solo, like . -. Allro Work Van, $2, 500, 814614-992-3242.
38J.7755.
Price reduced : 2011 . Galaxy, ·
t 70hp, open bow. new covers/
580
FruHs &amp;
11)93 Olds Cudl11 Supreme, red. seat1, aluminum 11 praps . 304&lt;dr, auto, v-e. abo, all - · ac. 675-328-1.
Vegetables

416-7263.

lot lor Rem on Jericho One bedroom apartment '" Mid. . _ , .. poicl, t2701rru
Road. 30• I!IQ5 353'.
plus liCIO dopotlt. Cal 61&lt;-9112·

•KQJ8 543
• K J 9
• 7 4

Rabbits For Sale: Big And little
lop Eared Netherland Owarfa,
Min Rex, Outclt, Everytl'ing Must

u-

Tratl4r

South

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Stud Service Puppieo, Groomtng,
Buy, Soli a Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome. 8 U -3880429.

Evans Enterprises. Jackson, OH

Gr•wty nlk behind, 30· decll,
erectnc 111tt, tsoo. call 814-11112-

10 53
t A 8 6 2
• 3 2

14
\On)
15 Dove • home
15 Hare and 18 Annapolla grad
111 Rom1ln
20 Actre8a
Diana 24Howa-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer : West

Happy Tracko·Groom l Hydro
Bath Great lor Floo Probloma, Pt.
Plenanl, Central location. 30•875-2696 Werle TayiOt.

D11ney Area 5 Days, • Hottl 640
Hay &amp; Grain
Nights , Use Anytime. Yaluel320 1~~~11!.-:.,,..;.;:.:be~tes,~l20~-por~be~lo.
Nictt Clean 2 Bec:lfoom All Elec1 6
614-742
or814-742-3014.
tric, Furrilhed Kitchen. Clou To Soii$ 00 U-823-00IIO.
Spring Vllloy, No Pots, 1350/llo., Dress tn g table, baby bed , car
hay lrllm-. I up.
seat, troller, swing, walker. high- Exc. • 0.0. ...... 814-44&amp;-el57.
Morgan Formo, Rl 35. 304-137chaw. J04-675-&lt;o541.
2018.
Nice two bedroom apartmen1 In
- . , , n o - 614-11112-se5e.
EleCtrtC
Scoo1ers
And
Wheelchair&amp;. New fUsed, Van 1
fRMJ Sf-'O R fA fiOtJ
~ne ~room apartment, tur- cw lih lns~allod. Sooirglidol,
nelhed, 1n Pt Pleasant. no pets. Chairs, Call For Brochure, 014· 1 :--:-~-~~-=-:--....;,
304-875-138!S.
One bedroom ap1runent in Pt.
-..... 614-11112-585&amp;

•

•

Groom Shop ·Pot Grooming. f ...
turing H~dro Bath. Don ShHts.
c.u 514-401H!Zll .

For sale- nomegrown
corn and tomatoes,

• A 10 7 6

• A Q 7 6

•AQ7 54 ·

damage, 13055. OH lllvaga
6 10-949·Zl11 days or 8 14j

AKC White/silver/sable, German
Shephard puppiH, oxc.;renr teml*llm&amp;nt 304-875-7405.

;;;;;;:;-;;;;;;;;--;j;;;rlm;;;,..;;;nll,~;;: I GOOD

• 9 2

• K J

eoo Karare, 607 mitet;

07-31·96

tQI09 53
oloKJ986
East

West

1250,614-388-9220.

j

61~47112.

•• 8 4 2

AKC Regis1ered Rottweilers, 4
Femalea leh t4 Weeks Old
Shott And Wormed Are Up To
Dale Have Parent On Premises,

lhree bedroom mobile Carpet &amp; Vinyl Sale On Room
homes, Slllrlinu at S240·S300, Size &amp; Stock Mollohan Carpets,
water anct trash included, 81-...a..7.......
~!;!!~:!!!::.._______ COuntry FurniltJro. 304-675-11820.
Apartments
At 2 N, smiles, P1 Ptooun~ wv.
for Rent
Tu&amp;~-Salll-8, Sun 11 ·5.
USED APPLIANCES
i
unlurnlshed, security ·wuhera. dr~era, refrlgeratofl.
deposit required, no peta, eu. .ranoes. Skagoa Appllancts, 70
992·2218.
'Vine Street, Call 81•·•46· 7398,
·1-«ll-499-3&gt;199.
1 bedroom aparunenr in ·Middleport, call 614·••e-3001 or eu- Refrlgator and marching 30 inch
992-2178 or 8141-002-6304.
gas atove. Both excellent condi ~
lion cal814-446-0350
1 Bedroom apr, furnished, nice
"""'hborhood
· 18
tl
f Rtfrlgerator, Freezer, Washer,
·-~
' prna ' no pe ' '" ·Dryer, S10Ye, AJr Condkloner, ISO
:&amp;..:dopo::::~L::.;304::.:.-e.::..:75-:..:26=51::,·---J Eaclt 6tH58-1Zl8
1 Bedroom, Super Nice, $2881
llo., Plus Utilities, Usually Used Furnitu"' 130 Bullvillo .Pika,
Something Avallablei"Sun Vallay Llvlngroom Suitt, Bodo, Choall,
Apertmonll, 614-4411·2957.
Bunk 8oda, RefrlgtratO&lt;S. Dnkl.

rol'ci

)AKC Registered malo Chocolote
,_ab, all allotS. 1200, 7 mos. old,
'614-99:1-2508.

Two and

1-Bedroom apartment, acro11
from poll office in Pt. Pleasant.
304·675·217• aftor s~m . 614·

••nltlonal

KC Aegiltered Boxer pup~ios ,
~ion podlgreos, taill docl&lt;ed,
claws removed, parents on
....... 61•·742·2208.

Household
Goods

3 Bedroom., 1 112 Baths; 2 Bedrooms, I Bath, In Porrer Area .
Reference I Deposit Required, :Appliances :
Reconditioned
No Pets, You Pay All Utilities, Washers, Dryers, Rlnges, Refri814-388-0182.
gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
Tra iler For Renr.
4- 46_
'French Ci1y Maytag, 614 -•4o61 4 1279
77Q5.

Newly Remodled Furnist'led 3

14 parcels, lrom 1.2., 11 .6 &amp;Cfft.
some overloo-ing Racine. parbat
ftnanci ng . 6 14-992-71 o.c after
6flm.

Price. country t-ome 1n
town, beau btul 1 31• acrH wilt! 2-3 BR Corpe!od City smoot Oil· locotld ., vi- OICI. LG fomilr A l l - , . . _
rago of .....,
M~t .,"' o iovoly
1861 SciUto Spoc;ol E - me&gt; gust "' t350 Month 1150 D•
lito ............. hilt, .., ca'· -304-757-1013
poung mrougllout, aomo now,
Reduced

141 , $350 plua O.poolt 614·448·
11566

=Ill

34
.... _...
36 Poucrllll
36 Dull routlnl
3t 1101w or
1ne1aor
4 1 fWn
42 PuiieiUIIIIon

1 Dec. holldey
5 - being
10 lledt a bird
eouncl
12 Diminutive
13

Circle Mota!, GoHipolis, OH 014- 1 - - - - -- - -- - 448.2501 or 614-30H6I2 Effe- STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
'cioncy .Rooma, Cable, Ai, Phone. Uprigll~ Ron EV8no EnterprioH,
Microwave &amp; Relrigorotor, Taxi Jacklon. 01*&gt;, t-I!IIJ.537-0528.
~~~ce 112 Price For Motel Upright Freezer BecUiner for Futl
Size Ch..y Truck, 60 Meter
•Roomo for ront . or month Ftench Po111, 81~25t8.
"Starti"ff at I 120/mo. Go lila Hotof:
61--....aS«~.
Whltf181d Aclvanrago Pellet StOYO
lnHrt 3 Yeors Old Exc.;lent COn460 Space for Rent
ditiOn, Ceramic Logo Included
$1 ,100 614·448'-7417.
Commercial Spoco A~prox . 800
Building
Square FHt locattd Corner 01 550
Sllte s~.., &amp;Third -.... GarSupplies
lipolis: The Former Licanse Bu reau location Cal6t4-«&amp;-4839.
Block, brick, - r pfpeo, wind·
ows, llntets, ele. Claude Wintert, 1980 Pontiac Trans -Am AuTrailer lot tar rent ir'l Middleport, Rio Grande, OH Cat! 614-245- tomatic, 2 Door~, Sunroof •ss.
e14-1192-7367.
5121 .
Good Shapo, a l'lrll Cor, I 1,500
304-1175-4841 AFTER 5 P.M.
Traier lot lor ron~ 112 ocro, beau- 560 Pets for 5ale
tiltJI aoc:luded area, St. 7, Chesllr,
1983 Jaguar, 4 dr., 8 c~.. $6,500,
deposit &amp; referencea. St25J AKC lab Retrolver Pups, Water 81f-992..t111 .
monlll. 814-9112-2001 .
RetrM Ptua PDinl Upland Game
S. Dakota Sl&gt;ok Groat Hunting lnTwo C's Patk 3tM-67s.3507, 814- lticts Good Companion For
.4-48-8221.
Young Hunters $225, 6 14·25e6038.
490
For Lease
BEAUnFUL AKC REGISTERED
Trailer aite, river access, city wa- BOSTON TEARIER PUPPIES,
ter &amp; sewage. Contact Dean AND ALSO BEAUTIFUL AKC
Srritlt -21177.
AEOISTERED PUG WILL AC·
CEPT PAYIIENT OR DEPOSIT
,TO HOLD, 114-446-1270.
MERCHANDISE

Paid, S42SIIIo; 2 Room I Bath All

6am-8pm.

AVON ! All A.reu I

2 BR with Ba11ment Garage on

ACROSS

•.

IDOl Ch.. y OX! cab, 4·wd, 350

engint, IUIO WI 0\'ef-drWe, IOid· CR Houu Conttructian. Homes, •
Remodelir'IS Vinyl Siding, Wind·
od. 1,800 milto. 304-875-5332.
ows. Don Or Croig 61H5H8411,
614-258-IIOID, W'l 025el0.
730
&amp; ..wos

vans

DRYWALL
181111 Dodge Von 15 l'luongor,
Good Conc~ijon, 13.000 Or Tn1da Hang, finish, repair.
For Farm Troc:Dr Of Equal Value, Ceilings 18Jiured, platl., repitr.
Call Tom 304-875-•11145. 20 ,.ars
514--

ASTR0-0RAPH

eaperitnce.

111111 LE To!ola van. ~~~, ~ ......
-.&lt;frhot, dual air, dual ounrool. Ron'o TV Servlca, spodtliling in
Zonllll also servicing moat otller
304-875-71l85.
brtlndo. Houoo c1U1, 1.-7117·
1911 Minivan Plymouth Voyogor 001 W'1104-578-Zllll.
SE Cnoioo ill;, 5 Spoed, ...,nuor
T,.nln'ission 1 Pass. Gooc:1 Con- Roofing • gut- ~0 ttmodel ing decks &amp; siding, 35
Cfill01\CII614-446-t13!1.
para llptrionCI, B I B Rooting
1g1o Dodoo Ram Van B· 250, lnd CCMIIIN&lt;tion. 11• ·lli2-2384
12.000 Milt~. l•.ooo. 080 Con .. I·JOO 881131113.
Ba Soon AI: Glllipolis Deify Trib125 Third Aortrwo, Grollipolls IMO Electrlcallftd

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

s.

Relrtgtrltlon
11110 GIIC Jimmy, lvl tiZt. hiQit

RSESCERTFIED llEAI.ER
LAWR£NCE ENTEIV'RISES
Holt P,mpo, Air Conditioning, H
1112 Ford Aorostar, pw. pi, 'lbw Don1 Call Ua Wo Bolli Lolli
F'" Eslimltea. 1«10·291-0081,
cruiM, 11,300 ""ii· 30•·675- 614
4188301. W'l O!l2tt5.
1753.
milee. aoltlng 17500 080, 114·
742-2574.

111113 5-10, . 1 4 . - .. , lOPillf, hitch, 25,500- mileo,
111.000 firm. Cal oworings 300195!111

'

1115 tl2 Torota Tacoma 4••.
beige .......... bug INtld, ...
ad, 01111
Ill.31·lli,IIOO
1050 - firm.· -300·
875-1017.

Aa

or cofi'II'Mrtial wiring. ·.
IIOfVict or ,..,.;ra. lleolor Ll- '
censed etectrician . Ridenour
Electricll, WV00030e, 300·175- • '
1
'
1718.
Rooidantiol Or Commorciot Wir· :,;
lng. Service Or Rotooirs. Ll- •
CtnHd Eloclrteian. We1o11 Elec· "l
:;::.,114 ..•6·1t50, G1Nipolil, , ,
' 1+11till

'.

Thursday, Augu111 . 11196
" you have besn hoping to receivll recog01 In regard to your
Mwill happen In the yNt ahNd.
ISut nolln the way you flllliCiPtlltd.
LEO (.IUfJ 23-Aug. 22) If you gat
ltiiiOived In a dllllcull endeiWI ~. Ull
.. of yW ...... etpet:lallj; your 111111101Y·
your lnstincll and you&lt; logiC. Know wllere
to 1oo1t 101 romance and you wtll lind M.
The ~atro.Graph Metchmoklr lnllantly

nition, either soc1a1y

cat-.

'
reveals which ligna are romantically per·
teet for you. Mill S2 .75 to Marchmaker,
c/ o this newapaper , P .O. Bo• 1758 ,
MUII'llyHill Slallon. New YOlk, NY 10156.
VIIIOO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) Important
uslgnmenta can be conclUded to your
aaliafecllon today, provided
have the
will and the de&amp;lre 10 follow through willl
your promlaea.
LIIAA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) II you lhlnk
that a current project ia being mlahan·
died. don't complain on the lic»&gt;inee. You
mualltep in and take action.
'./
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It you've
accumulated a surplus !hie - k. spend
it on loved one a roday. II will be more
heartwarming than wuling your money
on a novelty item.

You

SAGYTTAAfti&amp;(Hov. 2~. 21)~

ciaiH ~· nol be aa petcapllve . . VIJU
are today. H you think you can Improve
on lltelr Ideo. p&lt;eeanl your game plan.
CAPIIICOAN (Dec. 22-.lan . 1t) You
ahould be gralolul for any benelill or
perkl that will come your way through
crlhM lodly. lnJieed ol expecting IT!Of8.
tltlnl&lt; ole way to repay these peopla.

AOUARIUS (Jan. »Fib. 19) You mighl
not underatand every aspect llf o curran!
elideavor . Instead ol pretending you do.
uk qyeatlona in order to get the inlormatlon you need.
PISCES (Fib. »March 20) J our 1nlu·
ltion migltr be more accurate J:n usual
today. However, the burden will be on
you to e•ecuta your ideas as! cleverly as
you envision them.
·
AlliES (Match 21-Aprll 11) Constructive
developments will be possible today as
long u you perfa&lt;m in IICtOidance with
your higheSt idealo and standerda.
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) You can
achieve your basic objectives today , if
you do not get involved wil~ individuals
Who are unable to COfllrt&gt;ute their ideas.
GEMINI (IIIey 21-June 20) Today. honor
ptevioua agreementa. even lhotJgh afte t
conMmplaling the maHer you might see
how you could have done better If yoo
had bargllinod- boldly. .
CANCER (June 21..Niy 22) Your feeling
of aall.wonh and your ......teem wll be
enheneed,loday Nyou put forth your besl
effort.

.....

...,
• . I

~ ---------~------------._------------------~------------w-------------~----~~~------~~ ------

�Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 31, 1996

Ohio Lottery

House finalizes welfare overhaul
~s Clinton considers another veto
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House moved toward passage on a
compromise welfare overbaul that
would end the six-decades-old federal guarantee of open-ended assistance to the poor.
With final House action expected
today, the Senate is pOised to act
Thursday and President Clinton is
pondering whether to veto a GOPpassed welfare bill for the third time
or ~ign this version into law.·
House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, called the
measure one of the Republican-led
Congress' "great victories for normal
people who don't live inside the
(Capital) Beltway."
II would create a system, he said,
"where people who arc able-bodied
are actually going to have to get
trained to go to work. because they
can't be on welfare all of their lives."
In the Oval Office, Clinton said
Tuesday : "There are a lot of things
1n the bill I'd like to sign .... But I
don't want to see harm come to the
children of this country."
The bill would set a lifetime limit of five years of welfare per family,
require an able- bodied adult to work
after two years and allow hardship
exemptions for up to 20 percent of
recipients. II also would give the
states block grants to run the programs and let them set many of the
rules, such as terminating benefits
sooner than ftve years.
House Majority Leader Dick
Armey, R-Texas, said he believed
Clinton would sign it "because he's
up for re-election."
Butthe president got a push in the
other dtreclion from AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, who urged him

Reds blank
Astros 1D-O;
face Expos

to show "the courage and the com-[!roppcd states' option to conpassion to veto" the bill. The labor ven food stamp programs into block
federation is reassening itself as a grants. The White House feared block
political force this year with a $35 grants would undercut the program's
million campaign targeting Republi- federal nature and prevent adjustcans.
ments in times of hardship.
Clinton, who vetoed two previous
-Replaced their cuts in the workGOP welfare bills, has endorsed this ing poor's earned income tu credit
bill's basics despite his professed with Clinton 's proposal to tighten up
worries about the legislation's impact loopholes to ensure that only the poor
on children. The White House has get benefits. Republicans wanted to
criticized the bill's projected savings make sure they weren ·t accused of
of more than $50 billion over six raising taxes.
years, particularly its restrictions on
-Eliminated the " family cap"
food stamps and other aid to legal that would have blocked extra federimmigrants.
al funds for a new child when a
"Children who go hungry will not woman became pregnant while
even know they have been reformed receiving welfare payments. States
- neither will their parents," said that already have such caps through
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D- Vt. "The aver- waivers of rules would be allowed to
age level of food stamp assistance retain them.
will drop from 80 cents to 66 cents,
But prompting an outcry from the
per person, per meaL I wonder if the Center on Budget and Policy Prioriones who wrote this ridiculous for- ties, which has criticized many
mula could feed themselves or their aspects of the bill, is a controversial
children forthat amount."
requirement that people ages 18 to 50
While the bill makes some con- without minor dependents- includcessions to Clinton, it remains tough, ing people laid off from jobs forcing people off welfare and into would have to work to merii food
jobs while cutting back on help to stamps.
move them there by eliminating a $3
If they fail to work or participate
billion work program the House had in a work program for at least 20
approved.
hours a week. they could get no more
It would let states deny Medicaid than six months of food stamps in
coverage to an adult who loses wel- three years and could receive only
fare benefits by not going to work. It three months of those benefits at a
also would make it harder for a sin- time, separated by work.
gle parent to escape sanctions for not
This provision "moves far to the
working because of an inability to right of both the Senate bill and a profind child care. Under the House and vision in the vetoed welfare bill, "the
Senate bills, the child had to be under center said, noting that the CongresII. Under the final bill, the child must sional Budget Office estimates that an
be under 6.
average of I million people a month
In line wit.h White House wishes, who are willing to work would be
the negotiators:
denied food stamps because no work
was available.

Pick 3:

437

Pick 4:
2201
Super Lotto:
7-8-26-33-38-39
Kicker:
713811

Sports on Page 4

•

'•

ST

UGUS,.

en tine
VoL 47, NO. 83

House OKs welfare overhaul
By CASSANDRA BURRELL
Aaaoclatecl Preaa Writer
WASHINGlDN - Driving toward a summer recess, Congress is nearing completion of a pile of legislation, capped by a historic welfare overhaul and election-year bills to fight terrorism, increase the mi,nimum wage
and broaden access to health insurance for millions of people.
The spun of legislative activity punctuated what bad been a sharply partisan, generally unproductive session of Congress so far this year and should
provide campaign fodder for both parties as they gear up for their national
nominating conventions and head into the fall elections.
"I'm still somewhat numb from what all has happened in the last few
hours," Rep. Clay Shaw, R-Fia., one of the authors of the welfllJ'e bill, told
reponers shonly after the House passed the measure Wednesday. "This plurality was- tremendously imponantto show the resolve of the American peo-

pie that we are going to change this welfare system."
"This is a remarkable vindication of the direction we're trying to help
all of America get to, " House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. , said. "I think
is a 'tremendous achievement"
The welfare bill, which would end·the six-decades-old federal pledge of
open-ended aid to the poor, passed 328-10 I shonly after President Clinton's
dramatic announcement that he would sign the bill after weeks of waverin g.
Ninety-eight Democrats joined the House's Republican majority, and the
Senate was expected to approve the welfare measure today.
During his 1992 presidential campaign, Clinton promised to end the current )Vel fare system, but he vetoed two previous GOP welfare plans, calling them too harsh.

request.
The Senate on Tuesday also
passed by 93-6 a bill to fund energy,
water and nuclear weapons programs
at $20.7 billion, compared to $19.4
billion in the House-passed bill and
the administration request of $20.6
billion.
The bill allocates $4 billion for
weapons activities. It would provide
$5.6 billion for defense-related environmental cleanup and $3.5 billion
for Army Corps of Engineers water
projects.
Also on Tuesday:
-The Senate passed, 93-6, a bill
funding the legislative branch at
$2.17 billion in 1997. The proposed
budget, which provides for House
and Senate staff salaries, the Library
of Congress and the General
Accounting Office, ts down $223
million from 1995.
-House and Senate negotiators
agreed on a SIO billion budget for
military constNction, with 41 percent
going to family housing. The funding
is $850 million above the administration request but $1.2 billion lower
than in 1996.
The Senate has passed seven of
the 13 appropriations bills needed to
fund the federal government in the
fiscal year .ltaning Oct I, and the
House has passed all 13. Both chambers arc making far better progress
thi s year on spending bills than last
year. when delays led to two government shutdowns.

wortc8n with Banka Cona.;uCtton; Pomeroy,

are completing facade upgradeato the O'Brien
building at 102 W..t Main Slnlelln Pomeroy.
The work on the building, which hou... Tlla

W~HINGlDN (AP) -In Baton
Rouge, La., an 18-year-old stands
occuKd of stealing bomb-making
materials from high school chemistry
labs with two friends in what authorities say was a plot to blow up a train
lasl May to kill her parents.
Iii Oklahoma City, a hotel room
c~ptoded earlier this month, leading
p!)Ilce to a harrowing discovery: A
rrian" had built four pipe bombs inside
the room thlt he said he planned to
use to kill his u-wife.
1\itd last December, disaster was

narrowly avened in Reno, Nev.,
when a homemade bomb consisting
of I 00 pounds of fertiliser and
kerosene fizzled in the parking lot of
an IRS building. Two men, one who
had not paid tues for a decade, have
been convicted.
The number of Americans attacking each Other with bombs each year
has nearly doubled this decade, from
I ,699 criminal bombinas attempted
or carried out nationwide in 1989 to
3,163 in 1994, accordinJ to the
Bureau · of Alcohol, Tobacco and

Firearms.
And for every Olympic park or
Oklahoma City tragedy. police repon
dozens of foiled attempts where
death and destruction are narrowly
averted.
The bomb "has become a tool of
preference not just for the demented
but those who are seeking revenge or
are trying to carry out a murder or
asSISsination that would be hard to
1111lve," says Buck Revell, the FBI's
fanner chief of criminal investigations.

"There's not a dime's worth of dtfference between the bill he talked about
today than the one he vetoed a few months bac k." Dole said while campatgning in Nashville. Tenn. "The only difference IS,,., 97 days befor&lt;:"tl\c
election."

VIdeo Touch and the O'Brien law offices, I• pal:!
of the ongoing revllallullon work In lh8 hlltorlc
downtown Pomeroy buslne81 dlatrlct. (Tom
Hunter/Sentinel photo)

'

'

The air permit also allows fewer
By MINDY KEARNS,
pollutants
than allowed in the draft
OVP Newa Staff ,
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. - Par- permit the state DEP proposed Ia"
sons &amp; Whittemore. Inc. of Rye year. The draft permit would have
Brook, N.Y., parent company of the allowed the mill to emit42,418.3 tons
proposed Apple Grove Pulp and of pollutants per year. The permit
Paper mill in Mason County, has issued last month reduced that by
made no d~~Cision to withdraw from 2,223.4 tons, or five percent.
Goddard said Wednesday the
the project, Ken Gnddard, vic~ president of the company told the Ohio company is not happy with the air
Valley Publishing Co .. Wednesday, permit, but did not elaborate. He statdespite rumors circulating to th~ ed Parsons and Whiuemore did not
file an appeal on the permit because
contrary,
The Point Pleasant Register con- it was already on appeal. Both the
tacted Goddard following rumors Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
that indicated the company was halt- in Huntington and the Buckeye Foring the project because it was unhap- est Council in Athens. filed appeal s
PY with the .air permit approved in with the state Office of Air Quality in
' June by the state Division of Envi- mid-July.
ronmental Protection .
"We will just wait on the outThe permit requires the company come," Goddard said, noting the
to conduct a year-long study of air- water discharge permit was also
borne dioxin levels before construc- appealed and should be resolved
tion . The study will determine exist- sometime in September. "That's also
ing levels of dioxin around Apple a wait and sec," he added.
Grove. The air sampling project must
Goddard stated certainly if the
continue for 12·months after the start company did decide to withdraw
up of the mill.

from the project, it would speak to the
people of Mason County first, before
the press.
John Musgrave, director of the
Mason County Economic Development Authority, said Thursday that
the pulp and paper mill is "critical to
Mason County."
· "We're doing everything possible
to keep the project going," he said.
Musgrave noted that the mill will be
the largest in North America. "Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper will provide
600 permanent JObs, as compared to
the less than 300 Toyota will provide
in Putnam County."
Musgrave slated the project would
also provide about 2.000 construction
jobs, and as many as I,800 jobs in
spinoff industries and businesses.
"We're still hopeful Apple Grove
Pulp and Paper will locate here and
that a permit will be forthcoming that
the plant can operate under," Musgrave concluded.
The air quality permit is the last of
three state approvals needed hefore
construction of the project can begin.

FBI continues search.for Olympic bomber

report, which contains 60 indicators
related to preschool. elementary. secondary and post-secondary education
that define the status of education in
the United States. Included arc data
on enrollment, student ·achievement,
curricula. revenues and expenditures. ·
staffing. degrees awarded and tuition.
"The record is clear. More and
more adults are taking the time to
learn new skills," Riley said. "But
there is a growing gap between those
who arc returning to school to learn
new skills and those who ·aren't. "
Riley cited new findings that confirm high school dropouts face tough
times: In 1994, they were more than
twice as likely to receive welfare a.&lt;
were high school graduates who did!1 't go directly on to college.
Less than I perceni of college
graduates received public assistance.
" I urge students to finish high
school (and) to recognize that if they
don't they may have years of strugJ!le ahead of them," Riley said.

Bombings on U.S. soil nearly double this decade

"an election year con,·ersion."

is not withdrawing project

Report: More adults going back to school
or certificate.
The rcpon also found that:
-High school pupils arc taking
tougher courses, panicularly in math
and science, and also arc completing
more advanced classes in the two
subjects .
-College attendance is increasing. The percentage of 18- to 24-yearolds enrolled in college grew from 33
percent in 1984 to 42 percent in 1994.
- The proportion of high school
graduates going directly to college
increased from 47"ptrcent in 1973to
62 percent in 1994, despite continued
increases in college costs compared
to family income.
Employed individuals and those
with more education arc most likely
to return to school, Riley said. noting
that opportunities for success in both
life arid work arc limited for those
who fail to complete ·even high
school.
The department's National Center
for Education Statistics prepared the

Clinton said the current plan had "serious llaws" but he would sign it
because "I believe we have a duty to seize the opponunity it gives 116 to
end welfare as we know it by moving people from welfare to work. demand ing re sponsibility and doing better by children."
Acknowledging the concerns of the Democratic left. Clinton said the bill
was "far from perfect" and that he would work to relievccuts ·in foOd .aamps
and benefits fm legal immigrants.
Likely Republican presidential nominee Bub Dole called Clinton's move

r---Work ·continues---. Pulp mill company says it

Congress moves on energy and
transportation, defense spending

WASHINGTON CAP)- The better educated you arc, the greater your
chances for success, Education Secretary Richard Riley said today in
reporting that a larger percentage of
adult~ arc returning to the natiOn 's
classrooms.
"My message to all Americans is
very simple: If you want to get ahead,
stay in school. go back to school or
take advantage of on-the-job opportunities to advance your skills,"
Riley said tn remarks prepared for
delivery at Jefferson Community
College in Louisville, Ky.
Riley was releasing the Education
Department's annual report on the
state of education, which shows that
40 percent of adults participated in
some form of adult insiiucuo,n last
year. up from 32 percent in l991.
The report showed that 21 percent
returned to school for work-related
courses and 20 percent for personal
development. A smaller proportion, 6
perCent, studied for a diploma, degree

35 cen'AGannett Co. Newspapei

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 1, 1996

2 Sectlona, 12 hgn

'

WASHINGlDN (AP)- Hustling offered an amendment to bring
to clean its legislative plate before Amtrak spending down to the House
heading home in August, Congress level, but it was defeated 82-17.
acted on 1997 spending bills coverThe House's 27 percent cut would
ing programs ranging from nuclear "build in a formula for failure for the
cleanups to air safety.
only intercity passenger service we
'The Senate worked well into the have in the country," said Sen. Joseph
evening Tuesday on a bill that pro- Biden, D-Del.
vides $12.6 billion for transportation
House ·and Senate negotiators also
programs in the fiscal year beginning finished work Tuesday on a bill to
Oct. I. In the wake of the May II authorize more than $265 billion in
ValuJet crash in Florida and the defense spending, $11 billion more
TWA Flight 800 disaster on July 17. than the administration requested.
the emphasis was on air safety.
The White House has threatened
Final passage was delayed until at a veto because of the extra spending,
least Thursday as lawmakers pre· mainly for weapons programs, but
pared amendments to toughen means the bill does avoid some of the social
to fight terrorism. Congress is going __ pitfalls that held it up last year. Negoon recess next week as lawmakers tiators of the final compromise
head for their parry conventions and removed language, inserted in the
prepare fpr the fall election cam- House version by Rep. Robert Dorpaign.
nan . R-Calif., that would have
Appropriations Committee Chair- required the military to discharge any
man Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. , said the service momber found to have HIV,
transportation budget. up $642 mil- the virus that causes AIDS.
lion from 1996, would fund 250 addiThe bill pointedly differs with
tional air traffic controllers and 130 administration pohcy by pumping
aviation hazardous materials inspec· money into missile defense research
cors.
and development The administration
The House passed a similar bill in · has questioned the need for a nationJune. although the Senate version wide missile defense system sought
would increase funding for Amtrak by many Republicans.
from the House 's $462 million to
The measure adds $900 million to
$592 million and would meet the the administration's S2.8 billion
administration request for $200 mil. request for the Ballistic Missile
lion for hi gh-speed rail improvements Defense Organization. Specifically, it
in the Northca~t Corridor. The House calls for spending $858 million for
voted to cut off all funding .
national defense research and develSen . John McCain, R-Ariz., opment, $350·million more than the

Clear tonight, low In
50s. Friday, sunny, high
In BOa.

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Jury finds McClanahan
.guilty of attempted murder

.: "[Uesday.

'

•

mother and other family members,"
Jewell's lawyer, Watson Bryant, said
this morning on NBC's "Today "
show. :·this kind of attention nobody
needs."
"I don 'tthink that this invcstigation should be conducted under world
spotlight. if you will, like this," he
said.
FBI officials here have maintained all along that Jewell was only
one of many people being investigated. A federal law enforcement
source in Washington described him
Tuesday as the "leading candidate"
at that point in the investigation.
The scene Wednesday at his apartment, in a low-slung brick building
on a busy four-lane road, was surreal.
As well over 100 reporters and
photographers from around the world
watched from the parktng lot and
Jewell watched from the steps, agents
Continued on page 3

SEARCH CABIN • Investigators with the FBI search 1 cabirt
Wednesday evening on the Chaltahooccbee River In northeast
Georgia. The cabin waa rented by Centennial Olympic Park bombIng suapecl Richerd Jewell. (AP)
·

Meigs to have booth at 1996 Ohio State Fair .

~----------------------------~ '.

•

left a timed pipe bomb in the midst
of a festive crowd.
"We are continuing and we are
going to find out who did this." FBI
spokeswoman Joyce Dean said late
Wednesday, after agents spent a day
exploring the most minute physical
details of Jewell 's life.
Two federal officials in Washington, speaking on condition of
anonymity, suggested that investigators' interest in Jewell was diminishing somewhat.
" We are somewhat less suspicious
of him, in part because a couple of
people have come forward and mod-

ified what they said about him
before," one of the officials said.
Deansaiditwasprematuretoconelude that the FBI was losing interest in Jewell, a 33-year-old security
guard who pointed out a suspicious
knapsack to police minutes before a
bomb inside e.ploded.
Jewell 's action gave officers time
to move back some people who had
been near the knapsack, likely lesscning the number of victims. One
woman died and Ill people were
injured.
Jewell was lionized as a hero- a
role he embraced enthusiastically,
though with "aw. shucks" modesty.
Since Tuesday, when it became
apparent that he was a prime target of
the FBI investigation, his life has
turned upside down .
,
.
I
"[think
like
most
decent
people.
CHILUCOTHE (AP) - Eleven for precautionary examinations.
people were ~ran sported to a hospital
None of the victims· identities or Richard is humiliated and embarafter one per~n was ovcrcon:te while condition~ were immediately avail- rassed. not so much for himself, but
removing·ashestos from a !itJtldtng at able. A nursing supervisor who ·did for all the problems it has caused his
the Mead Cotptiration paper plant. a not want to he identified said only
security officer said today.
. . one person had arrived at the ~ospiThe .officer, who refused to iden- ta' early today, and he was being
tify himself, said an emplo~ee of examined in the 'emergency room.
The security officer said the prob- By staff and wire reports
Azcon Williams, the Ch1lhcothe
Promoting tourism and economic
company Mead hired to remove lem was reponed shortly after 10
growth
in Meigs County will be the
asbestos from a boiler. house, ex peri- p.m. Wednesday, when smoke from ·
focus
of
a speciaL informational booth
·cnced difficulty breathing late a nearby welding project entered the
on
the
State
Fairgrounds during the
area where the workers were removWednesday.
1996 State Fair, which begins Friday.
Paramedics transported the victim ing the asbestos.
The Meigs County booth, located
to Adena Regional Medical Center
Although they were wearing
.in
the
Buckeye Buildin_g on the east
for treatment, the officer said. The breathing devices to filter out
side
of
the fairgrounds, will feature
other ten were taken to the hospital asbestos, the officer said, the devices
displays
promoting the county's agri do not prevent smoke inhalation.
cultural industry and tourism aurae lions.
Booth displays will include a live
garden with tomatoes, com, and other agricultural plants common to the
Meigs County farming industry, various live plants and trees, a pond with
·. . POINT PLEASANT. W. Va. • A gan said. The former police chief running
water and old creek stone,.
. Mason County jury found a former could face one-to-five years in prison . and a working old time pump handle
McClanahan was arrested March
: Henderson police .chief guilty. of a
21
by Sr. Trooper Eddie Starcher and water spigot.
.May indictment Tuesday ~n CircUit
· Various informational brochures
.. court, aceording to Prosccuttng Attor- Trooper Rob Talkington after ·he will be distributed on county tourism
allegedly met with an informant, who
. ney Damon Morlan.
attractions and events, and contest
· .Rev. Delmer Eugene McCiana- was wired. to discuss kilting Sheldon entries will be taken for a one night
- han, S6, of Point: Pleasant, W Va., Durst of S.R. 87. McClanahan stay at Pomeroy's historic Holly tlill
was found guilty' of attempted filii allegedly paid the informant with a Inn. according to Meigs County
.:degree murder in a trial which began 1988 Chrysler, which had the title tourism director Karin Johnson .
signed over to the informant, and a
.. Monday and cone: I~ around noon
Design of the county booth, which
12-gause shotgun with shells. He also
Moraan~ · .. :.
. allegedly
has
been a regular exhibit at the state
gave the informant gloves,
,, 'McCitiD(Iban wtU 'be · ~ntenced
fair for the past several years, was
Tuesday, Scp. l7, ~ gt30 p:m.; Mor- · trash bags and towels to clean up the planned by members of the County
..
.
mess.
By MITCHELL LANDSBERG
AP National Writer
ATI..ANTA - For five hours,
Richard Jewell sat glumly on the step
to his apartment, watclling federal
agents cart away his worldly goods.
Eighty miles away, agents picked
through a rented storage shed and his
previous home, a secluded cabin
overlooking the Chattahoochee River.
By early today, authorities had not
said whether they had found evidence
indicating that the "hero" of Saturday's attack on Centennial Olympic
Park coilld be the same person who .

.•
•

' I
I

~

. ........

-

'

'

Tourism Board, Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce. and various
volunteers. Planning for this year's
booth began immediately following
last year's state fair, according to
Johnson .
Over SO volunteers will man the
county's booth during the fair's 17day run. which concludes Sunday,
August 18.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Yes, there
will be fried cheese-on-a-stick at the
·Ohio State Fair. Along with tractor
pulls, pig races, and the butter cow.
In fact, about the only thing missing this year - the 17-day fair opens
·Friday - is controversy. And that's
good news for fair Gcnetal Manager
Richard Frenette.
In his first three fairs since taking
over for Billy Inmon in 1993,
Frenette has dealt with everything
from drugged steers to financial
deficits.
But perhaps his most difficult job
·has been rebuilding the fair's image.
"Our fi11t goal was to bring back
a positive feeling about the fair,"
Frenette said. ,"And I think we've
done that''

He has done it with an eye on the
bollom-line and another on improving comfort at the fairgrounds .
"We've paid a lot of attention to
detail," Frencllc said . "One of the
first things we did was to make sure
the bathrooms and the rest of grounds
were kept clean ."
Fred Dailey, director of the state's
agriculture department, is pleased
that the fair has returned to its roots.
" First and foremost, this is an
agricultural fair." Dailey said. "We
want to emphasize that."
During the 1980s, the Ohio State
Fair was a source of pride for the state
and its politicians. State officials
loved to brag that the fair was' the
world's largest in terms of visitors
and exhibitors.
Years later, it was discovered that
the attendance figures had been
fudged for years. The figures were
still impressive, bot not enough to
prove the "world's largest" claim.
But that was the least of the problems uncovered at the fair.
The Ohio Expositions Commis. sian, which operates the fairgrounds,
.had a debt of $3.8S million when the
1992 fair ended. That same year

marked the nsc and fall of Inmon. :
He had hcen appointed by :cov.
Georg~ Voinovlch to run the fair and
made enemies from the outset, banning a gay rights group from dis(ributing information at the fair and ~n~ ­
ing the pay one-pnce plan for all rides
and concerts.
He was fired less than a mo~th:
after the fair ended and state l~w­
makers bailed out mQsl of the fair's
'debt. Frenette wa~ hrought in to ~akc
sure the financial mess never happened again
·
He acknowledges that some .oC
Inmon 's ideas made sense.
"He just didn 't implement tHem
very well, " Frenelle said.
One idea that has continued is
charging a separate price for concens
and midway rides. This year it will
.cost adults $6 to get in the fair and
$11 for a ride-ali-day wristband . The
big-name concens at the Celeste
Center will also cost extra.
Frenette says the pricing policy
simply makes financial sense.
"It's just a matter of running the
fair like a business," he said.
·
:~

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