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                  <text>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

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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)

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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

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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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Eleven.people examined
after. problem at Mead Plant

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Jury finds McClanahan
.guilty of attempted murder

.: "[Uesday.

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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 .

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

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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 .

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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.
·
:~

�. . ...

•

Commentary

PageA2

Thursday, August 1, 1996

. Thursday, August 1, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Danv Sentinel • Page 3

--Local briefs---.

OHIO Weather
Friday, Aug. 2

The Daily Sentinel Discontent siz·ztes in the Saudi kingdom·
By Jack Anderson

and Jan lloUer
WASHINGTON - Repealed pub~c stalemeots by the Clinton admin111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
istration and the U.S. military to por614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
tra} Saud1 Arabia as a stable. secure
country duufully tgnore both com;
mon sense and scnet C.S rntelli gence reports that pomt to mynad
&lt;~gns of trouble
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Last week 's State Depanment
announceme.nt that the U.S govern·
ROBERT L WINGETI
ment would pay for the return home
Publisher
of dependents of Amencan mrhtary
and CIV Ilian personnel IS a case m
. CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
pomt.
General Manager
Controller
State Department spoke sman
Nicholas Bums stre ssed that th1 s
was not an American effort to abandon sh1p . and that the U.S. govern·
LeNers ro the editor 11re welcome They must be lf.!'ss tfan 300 words. Alll«ters •re
subJect to eOttmg ana must be 11gn«1 ana tnclude llddre., and tel.,moM number.
mcnt remains ··confident in the staNo uns1gned leNert will be pubiiJhed letters should be in good taste, add~lng
bility of Saudr Arab1a and 10 its comISSues, not perton•litiea.
mitment to prov1de secunty for all
Amencans rn the kingdom ."
Try telling that to the fam11ies of
the 19 U.S. servtcemen killed 10 the
June 25 Dhahran bomb blast. or the
fi ve others who penshed rna bl ast rn
R1yadh the prevrous November The
IJe"r 1-.drtor.
We hear about these mce people 5,000 troops and 40.000 American
· Vott: r'l ""ho vote on the Sou thern who tell us we wrll never have to pa)
Local School by 1hould read the II
la&gt;t parag raph at the bottom ol the
But remember these are uncertain
.., ha llot
umes and when you say · yes " you are
: • The language of that paragraph lay rng yourse lf open to paymg 11.
lay; the voter open to an addrtional
A. Warner
. four mrlh
Racin•

'Lstahfishd in 1948

!2w

Letters to the editor
Uncertain times

civilians ~viog in Saudi Arabia know di stability:
that there is no guarantee of safety m
-- A struggle to succeed aging
the ldngdom.
King Fahd 1s underway m Saudr AraBums· statement contradicts bia. The jockeymg for power has
expanded some long-standmg rnterBy Jack Anderson nal nfts
Saudi successron and mtemal fam and
rly squabbles are the most closely
guarded secrets of the kingdom . But
Jan Moller
the Central Intelligence Agency has
secret U.S. intelligence repons and been intrigued by a report that Kmg
the fru stratmg expenence of Ameri- Fahd. 75 and having suffered a stroke
can terronsm investigators. who have last November. may be looking forward to reurement soon
met with little assrstance thus far.
Krng Fahd turned over power to
" Intelligence cooperauon with the
hr
s
half-brother. Crown Pnnce
Saud iS rs vmually nrl. " one U.S.
Abdullah.
on'Jan. I. but took back the
rntelligence source fam11iar with the
throne
on
Feb. 21. The abrupt tum·
sHuauon told us "The FBI may fly
about
was
occas10ned. CIA sources
over there, but the 10formation they
say,
by
Fahd"s
1mproved health
get rs d1ddly The Saud1s smile. tell
Fahd
st1ll tires more
Nonelheless.
some non-pubhc details to them and
easily
than
before,
and
he no longer
assure them that they' II solve the
demonstrates
the
same
cn thus1asm
case. But a month has gone by with
wrth
wt11ch
he
once
ran
the
ktngdom .
no real progress ..
Abdullah IS the most likely sucU S rntelligence reports identify
several factors that cou ld prov1de cessor. though Pnnce Sultan. the
clues to Saudr Arabia's reuccncc m defense m1mster. and Pnnce Nayef.
helping the investigatron The reports the mtenor minrstcr, are not far
also co ntradict the State Depart- behind. Meanwhile. hundreds of othment's professed confidence m Sau· er Saudi royal s remam j~a lous of the

SOMEWHERE ~ATLANTA ...

Political drug war
gets personal
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
\\'AS HI:'\GTON - This drug war is getu ng personaL brtterly so. and cutJ(n::!

t ()n~,. lr ,'lc

to home fo r White House comfort

-t&lt;cruhlllans arc questron mg Pres1dent Clinton 's fitness and commrtmcnt
to uc.ol "rth the nau on· s drug problem on ground s that range from unmhaled
"'""lu,ma 1o the drsclosurc thai former users of 11legal drugs served on the
\'. hn ~..: l-l ou~e . . wrf
\l: hilc Clin ton\ spokesman denounced what he called rnflammatory. poln.c.olh dr11c n Wild accusations, the one that could prove most damagmg rn
• !JCJI; c.on pargn hands " not m drsputc. The Assoc rated Press reported and
. S&lt;:crel Scr\ 1cc te stim ony to Congress confirmed that 21 While House staffers
. h:Jtl used drugs 1 ncludr ng cocar nc crack or hallucmogcnrc substances, with -

: ta: the )t..:ar pnor to ~c c u nty

bal.:k~round checks for thctr JOb clearance s.

Nrnc arc stoll there. none '"top JObs, accordrng to Mrke McCurry, the
: : [.JfL' ~" ... ~.: actary They arc requtrcd 10 undergo spec tal drug tests under a sys• JCIIl set up rn May 19Y4. "' that employes who had used drugs could get

:

~c.:._ ret Scrv tcc ~ cc unt y clearance

: ·: :Random drug testing for all While House em pl oyees d1d not begm with,
:: (i&gt;Cs ,,Jm 1nrstratwn - 11 has been the rule ;rnce 1986. Job applicant s have
:-;

t Opa~~

drug

t c~ts

under tho!)C

~ arne

: •cia\

'

Gutless, stupid, or both?_ _ _ __

decade-old ru les

• McCurry sard no Clinton appor ntcc had fa1led a drug test and anyone who
· J rd ""uiJ be out. rmmedratcly " The presrdcnt has a zero tolerance.pohcy
_: J•11 Jrug usc. · he sard . McCurry also sard that Congress IS lax about drug
-: res h fur 1ts uw n.cmployces.
•
Cha llenge r Bob Dole was qUJckly on the case. saymg there wouldn 't be
: ~"" drug users on hrs presrdenual staff There are none now. accordmg to
: : th~ Clin ton Whne House, the drspute IS over past drug use
: "No wonder we're Josmg the war on drugs when you ' ve got such a big,
: h1'g problem'" the Wh1te House nse lf. " Dole sard Wednesday. House Speak·. •c1 Newt Gmgrich sa1d the Whnc Hou se IS "scandal ndden ."
·:: . ~Rep ubli c an s have been argumg all year that thrs adminrstrauon has cut
·:and crrppl ed dru g control budgets and personnel. pomtmg to rncrcasr ng use
: . among teen-agers and blammg Clmton pohcres The admrnJStratJOn . of
: ·eourse. drsputes that. clarmmg rts strategy rs strong
:: - But the problem has worse ned "Cocame use rs down by about a thud .
·: hut random dru g use among peop le between the ages of 12 and 17 has been
: g•&gt;•ng up \I nee IYY I. so that conc·crn s me." Clmton said in Denver on Mon• ~ .H " drug pulr cy aJ\Iscr h.1 s sa rd there has been a resurgence 111 the usc
• , f hcrorn. callrng that a nc" threat that has to be confronted
:
Pohtrcal arguments over drug- frghun g polic1cs aren't new · George Bush
:;J::ceJ Democratic mmplam ~; that he wasn 't domg enough to dea l wrlh the
.prnhlcm cM iv 1n "" adm1nrstrat10n.
· Tim suuatHm "" nh cs past drug usc by people 10 federal jobs. and Rcpub: lrcan ' arc usr ng It to ope n another fro nt as they try to make the drug prob·
: 1cm a carn p"' gn 1,; uc
• Comgrrch armed 11 at Cl rnton's own record '"Thrs, IS a presrdent who sa1d
: Jlt I 'J92 that he tried manJuana but didn 't inhale." the speaker said " What
~&lt;&gt; rt 11 / r11k 11111dd " that ?" Cl rnton sard dunng the last campa 1gn that he'd
," ""II"' .• student Ill Eng land, drdn 't like II and didn 't Inhale.
: .(;mem h alre.rd\ had denounced McCurry for acknowledg mg man1ua-flc&gt;u sc ~'' " 1oun e ;~an rn the 1970s. wnhout saymg that 11 was a mistake .
: fh.n ',,'"'her Jin,c d"lincuon lor a Republican who has been quoted as say : tAL' . tlr.~r h~..· ' rno~l'J manJuana htrn sc lf 1n the same pcnod "That was a stgn
• ·'
1
d
•
..
• thAt,~~..· \\l.' fl .r 1\l' :tn tn gra(1uatc 'ichoolm that era. The Economtst repon·
: c·d he 'd s:11 J Ill 1995
.( l lfl~ n ~..· h ,,nd the ddfercm:c ts that he's satd It was wrong .
_,"' d1d \ 'rce Prc"dcnt AI Gore when he acknowledged in 1987thal he 'd
; r~._· d nurquana J'l a &lt;.:ollcgc ~ tud c nt and m the Anny.
. It , H&lt; H~mo n &gt;tory rn the gencrauon that. as Clinton 's drug czar observes,
· h,,, l' l l [Jll' D ! age to take charge m government and private enterprises. Bar+
: 1'. \1 ,C.d lrn ' a1J ahout 50 mrll ron Amencans who have tried drugs and
: ,hl l\ t . _·,,ndt me therr U\e shou ld not " be precluded from servi ng thctr coun: '" 1n ""' posnr nn a&gt; long a&gt; th ey now reject all rllicit drug usc."
-~ .. Th~H " not gt1 1ng to "J!cncc the Republicans.

By Ben Wattenberg
Rep. Charles Canady. R-Fia..
recalls a moment m June, on the day
before Bob [)ole resigned as Senate
maJonty leader The depanmg leader
approached Canady and asked
'"How's the bill coming?"" referring to
proposed Dole-Canady legislatiOn
des1gned to peel away preferences
and propomonalism in federal c1vil
nghts policy. '" I don "t care what any·
one says, .. Dole went on , 'Tm not
walkmg away from II ··
Technically, Dole's promise has
not been broken. It is therefore still
redeemable . But everything that
Dole . Ihe Dole campaJg~ and the
Republican w ngresSJonalleadership
has done recently gives the imprcssion of walkmg. ambling. striding.
pacing , running and fleemg from
'\ tough-rnrndcd action on civ rl rights
1hat could help Amenca, help Dole
and help Republicans. It wasn "t'long
ago that the argument about the ?OP
was whethe~. 'l s~~uld be called th.~
stupid party or the gutless party.
For the mo~ent. a new momker 15 1 ~
the offing. the stupid gutless party.
Ear~y b las~ ~car the prosrect;
seeme
ng 1 or senor"stri mea

reform~th~seaspectso: ~nna!Jve

ann!:?

~~~~~n 1 ~ ~vc ru~ amo h• R
ac 5 an w tdtesh.. s eacd d cpu . Ican announce
ts can 1 acy 1or

president he stressed the fact that he
opposed preferences. proponionalism
and quotas. In California. the movement that would put the CCRI (Cal-

Ben Wattenberg
ifornia CJvll Rrghts Inrtrative) referendum on the 1996 state ballot was
gaining steam. Supreme Coun decisions curtailed overextens1ons of
affinnative action 1n commercial set,
asides. educat1on and votmg . Dole , a
legislator with a progressive record
on c1vil rights. made a splash introducing Dole-Canady. des1gned toreestablish crv1l nghts law in the non-.
discriminatory but anti-preference
mode of the 1964 Civil R1ghU Act.
Meanwhile. Presrdent Clinton
appointed an m-house task force to
assay the role of affinnative action.
After leaks !hat he too would bite the
bullet and rem in runaway expansion
of affirmative acuon. he didn "t. He
specch1ficd that affirmative action
worked well and that we should
" mend it. not end II " He never sa rd
what had to be mended . H1s task
force report d1d not find a single affirmatiVe actiOn program to end or

re form Moreover. Clinton 's two
Supreme Court appounccs had voted
m the mmonty m the 5-4 dccrsron s.
allowmg Republr cans to clarm that rf

Climon were re-elected the expansion
of group preference would continue
unabated.
'
It seemed like a set-up for the
GOP. Surveys show that by about 7030, mcludmg a Jesser maJOnty of
African-Amcncans, voters have
opposed legal preference m JObs or
schools.
Yet today. Republicans arc apparently backrng off. The GOP House
leadership refuses 10 bring up DoleCanady for a vote. If asked. but only
if asked. Dole will acknowledge that •
he still supports CCRI. Massive
funds arc flowing into the,anti-CCRI
campaign in California, while the
pro-forces are underfunded . Clinton's Justice Department is using
every legal tactic to obfuscate and
delay enforcement of the court 's
decrsrons -- and the GOP is silent
about 11.
What's going on&gt; There is Colin
Powell to consider. He opposes
CCRI. and wi II be speaking on the
ope ning n1ght of the GOP conventron
-- don't want him going nega11ve
There is the •·gender gap'" -- wouldn't want to lake away slots for
women w1th that gomg on. Wouldn"i
want to stress a hot button like affirmative actr on before first commg out
with an economic program. Have to
be careful not to play into the charge

of "e xtremism ... Don't want 10 alien·
ate the black conservative super-star
congressmen (Gary Franks of Connecticut and J.C Watt&gt; of Oklahoma)
who feel that tbc timing of DokCanady isn "t right.
The timing isn't nght '' Hey.
Republicans' Your candidate is down
20 pornts' Thi s is a plus-40 point
issue. that Americans arc properly
concerned about. that can differenti ate Dole from Clinton a. Clrnlon
sw1pes most of the GOP's other
social issues. Colin Powell '! Fine
man . great addition to the GOP, let
him stale h1s v1cws at the conventiOn
-- but if he wants to run the GOP
agenda he should have run for president. If Watts and/or Franks want to
run the Republican House leadership
let them run for Gmgrich "s job. rronounce on taxes and the economy
first'&gt; Sure. do it now. And extremism&gt; Which is the cxucmtst position.
race· neutral or racc-cons&lt;.:ious'!
Extremism '' There arc only two
kmds or cxtrcmrsm al work 1n _the
GOP today· extreme stupidity and
extreme gutlessness.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior
fellow at the American Ent•rprise
Institute, is the author of a new
book, "Values Matter Most," and
is !)le host of the weekly public television program, uThink Tank."

Lamm-Perot ticket could change '96 race
By Morton Kondracke

maJor candidates.
Council's JUSt-issued mamfcslo for a get and stop borrowing from our chilRoss Perot has pul hi s brand on
If Lamm has a problem as a prcs- "new progressive"" po[itr cs. He also dren ; ten years to reduce or eliminate
the Refonn Party -- even its inuials tdential candidate -- beSides Perot and says that. 1f elected president. he'd the trade deficit; len years to fix our
are his-- but if its rank·and•tile mem- money. of course -- it is that hi s mcs- appoint one of the manifesto's key instrtutrnns and make them work
bers are truly independent. they'll
authors. Will Marshall. preSident of a~arn ; ten years to promote responbolt to Dick Lamm, who could have Morton Kondracke the DLC"s Progrcssrvc Policy Insti- sibilny mstcad of mdulgcncc as a
a transfonn ing effect on U.S. poliucs.
tute , as h1s top White House domes- nall onal vi rtue : ten yc?f'S to put
Neither Lamm nor Perot. nor the sage of '"compassionate austcnty'" tiC advrscr. Marshall and !he DLC Amcncan polit1cs and / governmcnt
two of them running as a ticket. rs comes across to many as dour rather propose usmg government to stimu- back m the hands of the people."
gomg to win the presidency or even than hope ful.
late ·rndiVIdual cmpowenncnt and
The "decade of renewal" idea is
finish second in 1996, but Lamm has
Balancmg the budget. rcducrng personal responstbility rn the econo- somc thmg scnous-mindcd voters
the chance to rivet the nation's atten- retirement benefits, closing tax loop- my of the future as a thind alternative could rally around -- not a majonty,
tiOn on urgent tasks that have to be holes, rationing medical care. raising to drsmantling government. GOP- perhaps, but a significant number of
faced , especially Social Security gasoline taxes. increasrng the savings style. or maintaining direct-service moderates who arc worried about
reform.
rate. reducing immigration -- the bureaucracies. as traditional Democ- the1r children\ future . By railing
Perot also can raise the issues -- as Lamm program sounds like rcdemp- rats arc wont to do.
agamst the "raw dcal "" lhJs generation
he d1d with budget-balancmg m 1992 tron through sacrtfice, the politics of . In some respects, Lamm's agenda is wreaking m the next. Lamm also
-- but if he wins the Reform Pany;s purgation rather than JOy.
rs even more expansive than the has a chance of appealing to young
nomination. its appeal will be cloudBut in an interview, Lamm said, DLC"s and certainly more than Per- voters
ed by doubts about hi s personal " I vigorously deny thai I'm preach· ot's, which has an edge of resentment
The key to Lamm "s refonn system
about it
qUJrluness .
ing gloom .'"
IS to mcrcasc the savings rate. which
Lamm. who served for 12 yean as
He is calling for a "decade of he says will lead to investment, ecoSaid Lamm, "The Republicans
Colorado's Democratic governor and and Democrats will avoid the prob- renewal and refonn .. that transcends nomic growth and opportunity for
is a public policy scholar. carries lem of the baby boomers' retirement budget policy and government belt- average Citi zens.
none of Perol"s psychological bag- un'til 11's a cnsis. I envision a much tightening. expanding to a "'rebirth of
And the keys to increasing the :
gage .. authoritarianism and paranoia brighter future for the country than values.'" including savings instead of savmgs rate are balancing the budget ·
leap to mind .. and none of h1s pen- we'll have if we let these problems consumption. delayed instead of and entitlement refonn. As the baby :
go. ~
instant gratification. and positive boom generation reaches retirement :
chant for shooting from the hip.
A Lamm-Perol tiCket. benefiting
Unfortunately. Lamm rarely instead of negative politicking.
age beginning just 17 years from :
"'America doesn 'I need just a new now. Lamm argues tht! Medicare and ·
from Lamm"s ideas and Perot"s mon· describes this future in compelling
ey,' conceivably could gam~r up 10 25 lenns. One good sign that he is gen- president,"' he said in a speech !his Social Security costs will leave no :
percent of the vote this year, proba- uinely an optimist. however, is that he month in Denver. "' II needs a whole room for any other government :
bly drawing · equally from the two admires the r&gt;emocratic Leadership decade. ten years to balance the bud- spending.

: :EI&gt;ITOR 'S ~OTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
:ror The ~"ocialcd Press, has reported on Washington and national pol·
.'itics for more Ihan 30 years.

jToday in history
:Sy The Associated Press
~
Today IS Thu"day. Aug . I. the 214th day of 1996. There are 152 days
ieft m the year
' To~ay's Hlgh lighunHt slory :
.
; Fiftyyears ago. on Aug I. 1946. President Truman signed.the Fulbright
frogram mto law. establishing the scholarships named for Sen. William J.
-fulbnght. D-Ark .
: "on th1s date :
: In 1714. Britam 's Queen Anne drcd . she was succeeded by George L
· In 1790, the first U.S census was completed, showing a population of
nearly 4 mr lhon people.
. In 1873. mventor AndrewS Hallidie successfully tested a cable car he
l!ad· designed for the clly of San Francisco.
• In 1876. Colorado was admiued as the 38th state.
• 1n 1914. Gennany declared war on Russia at !he onset of World War L
~ In 1936, !SO years ago, the Olympic games opened in 'Berlin with a cerimony presided over by Adolf Hrtlcr.
;: In J943. race-related rioting erupted m.New York 's Harlem section. resultl~ jn several deaths.

.

continued hegemony of these three
sons born to the same mother. The
fam1h es of the 37 other sons born to
different wrve s of the late King
Abdul Azi z bm Saud appear lo be
maneuvenng for brgger Jeadershrp
roles
-- The Saudr royal family is nagrantly corrupt As the oil Oowcd and
world pnces climbed. billions of
dollars were wasted on ill -fated public projects like desert farmmg
Untold m1llrons were siphoned to the
6,000 members of the royal family .
who took a cut of every contract
Meanwhile, the wages for middleclass Saudi s remamcd relatively
stagnant. Islamic e&lt;tremists agitating
agamst the government have found
deep veins of di scontent among middle-class Saudis who arc disgruntled
w1th the royal profligacy. The worsenmg cconomrc situatiOn in Saudr
Arabia -- brought on by stagnant ott
pnces-- could deepen the discontent
-- (raman-style indigenous terrorISt groups contmue to grow in mlluence .
Saudr " patnols ·· who fought
besrde Afghan mujahedcen dunng
their long war wnh the Sovrct Un1on
learned valuable military and organrzauon sk rlls in the process. It 's
heiped them to form effective revolutiOnary "cells" that have operated
under the noses of the Saudi police
and royal famrly .
Frnally. the royal family's authority is mcxtncably ucd to their per·
ccived ability to protec t the holy
mosques of Mecca and Medma from
outside rnllucnces. The rnd1gcnous
extremists raise doubts among thcrr
followers hy pointing to the extensive
U.S. mrlrtary presence in the kingdom
To combat thrs. the royal fa mil y
makes a point of both publicly and
privately spurn1ng U.S. offers of
assistance on many driTcrcnllevcls ·
. wh1ch then angers Congrc».
promptmg calls for withdrawal of
troops from that country. It is a
vic1ous cycle that strains rclat1nns
between the United States and the
country that provides one-fifth of
America's orl1mports.
Jack Anderson and Jan Molin
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

'

0

Road work underway

~cuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH.
William Denver Parsons, 73, of Vera Beach, Fla., fonnerly of Racine, died
Tuesday, July 30, 1996 in the Indian River Memorial Hospital. Florida.
Born Oct 20. 1922. in Dunbar, W.Va., he was a son of the late Joseph
Clayton and Docha (Cottrell) Parsons.
He was a disabled U.S . Anny veteran who served in World War II.
Surviving are his wife, Velma Parsons; daughter, Lisa Parsons of Vera
Beach; three sons. David and Billy Joe Parsons. both of Vera Beach, Joe Parsons of Bellmont. W. Va.; sister. Eloise Huling of Rapid City. South Dakota; three brothers, Delmer and Carl Parsons, both of Point Pleasant, Charles
)'arsons of Westerville; _seven grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
Graveside serv1ces wtll be held Saturday, I I am .. at the Gravel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire. Military rites will be held by !he Stewan-Johnson VFW
Post 9926 of Mason and Smith-Capehan American Legion Post 140 of New
Haven.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home Friday, 5 to 8 p.m.
&lt;

• IColumbus je2o I

Wilma Pearl Martin Sullivan, 54. Glouster. fonnerly of Ewinglon died
Thursday{ Aug. I, I 996 in the Cleveland Clime.
'
. Arrangements will be announced by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vmton.

Ice

VIa Associated Press GraphicsNet

Sunny Pt. Cloudy ClOud}!

Carl H. Wilson Sr.

Carl H. Wilson Sr.. 61,609 Beech St. , Middleport. died Monday, July 29,
1996 at his residence.
Born Oct 4, I 934 in Buffalo, W.Va., son oft~ late Howard Andrew and
Rachael A. Runyon Wilson, he was a retired riverboat captain, and a member of the First United Penteooslal Church. Leesville, La.
Extended forecast
He was also preceded in death by a brother. Shirley Wilson ; and a sister.
Salurday... Dry. Lows 55 to 60. Bertha L Soltesz.
Highs 80 lo 85.
Survrving are his wife, Betty F Wilson, Middleport; two daughters. Mary
Sunday... Dry. Lows 60 to 65. .K. (Don P.) Smith of Racine. Amondal Fay (George B.) Fields of Pomeroy;
Highs in the 80s.
four sons, Carl H. (Becky E.) Wilson Jr. of Racine, Michael R. (Diann E.)
Monday...A chance of thunder· Wilson of Chesapeake, Arnold A. (Phyllis M.) Wilson of Boyceville, Wis.,
stonns. Lows in the 60s. Highs 85 to and James A. (Geraleme E.) Wilson of Cheshire; 12 grandchildren and a great90.
grandchild, two brothers. Charles D. (Yvonne) Wilson of Middleport. and
Paul (Missy) Wilson of Hixson. Tenn.; and three sisters. CoraL. (Larry) Lee
of Harrisonville, Ida M. (Frank) Martin of Middleport, and Rachael M. Craig
of Hornbeck. La.
Services were held Thursday afternoon at Foglesong Funeral Home.
Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. Gene Anspach officiating . Burial was in the Graham Cemetery.

Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Ohio
Today ...Areas of dense fog this
morning. Then panly sunny. High in
the lower 80s. Wesl wind 5 to 10
mph.
Tonight...Moslly clear. Low in
the upper 50s. Calm wind.
Friday... Mostly sunny. High in
the lower 80s.

No injuries reported in
southern Ohio storms
By The Associated Press
Several homes were evacuated in
southern Ohio after a heavy storm
flooded creeks and caused nash
flooding .
No injuries were reported after the
overnight storms subsided early
Wednesday.
Rain measured I to 3 inches in
Lawrenc~ and Scioto counties. the
National Weather Service said.
Flooding also closed at least seven township bridges and temporarily
rendered some road impassable in
Lawrence County and damaged the
tobacco crop in Scottown, The Iron-

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

ton Tribune reponed.
The Lawrence County shenff's
office said a· few homes were evacuUnits of the Meigs County Emerated in the Pedro area. where more gency Medical Service recorded nine
than 4 inches of rain fell. The water calls for assistance Wednesday
began receding around daylight and including three transfer calls. Unit&gt;
a flash nood watch was cancelled at responding included:
mid~ moming.
POMEROY
,
Pedro resident Katrina Hackworth
2:43 p.m.• Rocksprings Rehabilisaid she woke Wednesday morning lo tation Center, John Hite. Veterans
the sound of rushing water.
Memorial Hospital; ·
""I woke up and (the creek) was
7:16p.m.• Mechanic Street. Kencoming up,'" she said. "II started neth Swanz. treated at the scene:
commg m the tra1ler and I waited
II :47 p.m., RRC, Margaret Johnuntil it was up to my knees. then I
climbed up on the. refrigerator."

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thursday, as provided
by !he U.S. Department of Agricul-ture M111ke1 News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady
to 1.00 lower; demand moderate on
a moderate run.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 Ibs. 58 .0059.50, few 57.50 and 60.00; plant

delivered 59.00-61.00, few 61.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 5!.5057.50.
. Sows: under 500 lbs. steady; over
500 Jbs. steady to I .00 lower.
U.S. 1-3, 300-450 lbs. 43.0046.00; 450-500 lbs. 46.00-5 1.00;
500-650 lbs. 50.00-51.00, few 52.00.
Boars: 38.00-41.00.
Est1mated receipts: 36.000.

Gallia County Junior Fair

Carleton Church VBS
The Carleton Church, Kingsbury
Road. will conduct Vacation Bible
School, beginning Monday from 6·8
p.m. each evening. The week will
conclude with a Bible School program next Friday. at 7:30 p.m. All
children ages two and up are invited
to take part. For more infonnalion,
call Yvonne Young al 992-7690.
Star Grange .to meet .
-Star Grange #778 and Star Junior

THURSDAY, AUG. 1

FRIDAY, AUG. 2

Divorce actions flied in Meigs Court

The Daily Sentinel

r.bUohcd .-y .r........ Monday lhrouah
fridly. Ill Coun S1 .• Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
Ollio VIlle)' l'llbliwna eon-y/Ouneu eo..
"'""""'· Ohio 45769. Pit 092-2156. s..on.t

d u o - poid 11 Pomeroy. Ohio.

--.The Auoclllled Press,

aod dle Olio

- -Auocllllon.
POSTMAI'I'BRI $ettd

1be

Mdteu con"'C:tiDU to

Dally Seodnct, HI Court 51.. l'omcn&gt;y.

Obio4S769.

., Canter..--SIJliSCIIIPTION RATIS

:::;:~:.~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~

0oe v•

.••."....................................SIOI.OO
SINGLB COPY PIIICB

Dolly .................................................... ,, Ce!lll

SYb• &amp;bas • delkila"' ,., • cw6er mar
,...., lot ........ -~~~The Dolly-...
.. 1 - . Jb or IZ , _ booiJ. Qodil wiD bo:

.....

~~--No subl&lt;ripdoo by Nil permined to _.

----il•valill&gt;k
52 _

Akzo ......................................&amp;&amp;'•
Ashland 011 ...........................37~

AT.T .....................................5:2'Bank On• ..............................34:0
Bob Evans ..............................14
Borg-Warner ......................... 35~
Champion Ind ......................... 17
Charming Shop ......................&amp;\
City Holding .......................... 21 '!.
Federal Mogul. ......................16'4
Genr.ett ....................................65
Goodyear ....................:-...•..•.44'1.
K-mart ...................................10'4
Landa End .............................20'!.
Limited ................................. 111'4
Ohio Valley Bank.................... 36
One Vel ley ............................34\.
Peoplel Banc:orp...................22
,...., Flr\1 ...............................12\:
Roclrwell ...............................55~
Royill Dutch/Shell .'.............148\
Slloney's .................................9'4

Star Benk ................. ~ ..•..........75

__._

MAIL SIJli8CIIJPTIONS
...... MolpC-'J

_ .............,......~- ..---·--"3.82

Stock reports 1re the 10:30
e.m. quotn provldad by Advest
of Gallipolis.

__ ...............~..~--- Sllll-'6
-~Mo~pc-,

13 -

Am Ele Power .......................41~

Wendv's ................................ 17~
Worthlngton •..••••••••••.•..••..•....
19~
..

1 ) -............................................... $27.!0

76 _

Stocks

...........:...........................

m•zs

76 -----·--'""'""'""'"""""""~'""""SS6.61
,
__ .........- -...........J109.n

Grange #878 will meet in regular scsSlon Satunday. with a potluck supper
at 6:30p.m. and regular meeting following at 8 p.m. Rocksprings Grange
will be guests.
Elswick to speak
John Elswick will be guest speaker during evening services al the
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church, Middleport. Sunday at 7:30
p.m. Pastor Clyde Henderson invites
the public to attend.

-FBI continues..~ontinued

of the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Ftrearms trooped in
and out of his apartment.
7 p.m. Parade of Champions - Show Arena
They brought in a police dog.
7 p.m. Dairy Sweepstakes~ Show Arena
They brought out boxes. among them
7 p.m. Rick Trevino - Main Stage
a military ammunition box. They also
.
7 p.m. Antique Tractor Pull - Pulling Track
impounded a plastic bag tilled with
•
9 p.m. Rick Trevino - Main Stagelaundry.
On a hill overlookmg the Chattahoochee in northeastern Georgia.
more agents and dogs pored over the
9 a.m. 36th Annual Market Hog Sale - Show Arena
property where Jewell had lived
10 a.m. Pretty Baby Contest - .Main Stage
while worlung as a secunty guard al ·
Noon 45th Annual Markel ~teer Sale - Show Arena
nearby Piedmont College.
2 p.m. I4th Annual Tobacco Sale - Show Arena
The agents seemed pnmanly
2:30p.m. 38th Annual Market Lamb Sale - Show Arena
interested in a blue cement shed,
abou16 feet by 10 feet . near ~ dilapidated wooden cabin. They also
inspected a 55-gallon drum .
By late evening the agents had
The following actions to end mar- Goble Jr., Syracuse. from Melissa J. left. leaving only a van belongmg to
riage were filed recenlly m the office Goble. Pomeroy, July 25; Paula !he Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar• Wood from Keith Wood. both of Two agents worked at the back of the
Long Bouom, July 24; Rhonda G.
ry ~pencer:
Divorces asked -- Billy Raybert Mozingo from Duncan Eric Mozingo, both of Portland, July 23.
Divorce granted -- Jennifer S. .
'
Cochran from Wesley K. C~hran.
(IJSPS ZI&gt;9Jill)

son. Holzer Medical Center.
SYRACUSE
I :54 p.m., state Route 124, Harry
K. Clark, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:25 a.m .. state Route 681 . Angela
Edmond. HMC;
II :06 p.m .• motor-vehicle accident on Scout Camp Road , Jesse
Maynard. VMH. Chester VFD assisted.

Meigs announcements

Today's livestock report

Youth injured in accident

A Racme youth escaped serious injury Wednesday night when the
pickup truck he was driving overturned on Scout Camp-Road near ·
Chester.
·
Jesse R. Maynard, 17. was eastbound when he drove 100 close to
the edge of the road. according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depan·
men! report. The truck then slid over an embankment. coming to rest
on its top.
Maynard was transported by the Tupper$ Plains squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and released. No citations were issued.

Crash remains under investigation

Wilma Pearl Sullivan

Showers T-storms Rain

Joint repair and resurfacing work on state Route 7 between Tuppers Plains and Chester will continue through Oct. 3 I. according to
the Ohio Depanmenl of Transportation.
The Shelly Company of Thornville is the contractor on the $1 .06
million proJect to Improve approximately four miles of roadway
between the two communities. Flaggers will maintain one-way traf· ·,
tic throu~hout construction, however, short delays may be expected.

rrom page I

van, apparenlly conducting chemical
tests .
FBI agents also showed up
Wednesday alan 8-by-10-fool metal
storage shed in Cornelia. Ga .. that
was rented by JewelL Employees at
the storage business. not far from
from Jewell's former cabin, declined
today 10 say how long the agents
were there or what they took away.

A one-vehicle accident on State Route 692 late Wednesday is still
under investigation by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Detruls remained incomplete this morning . but troopers said a pickup truck registered to Delbert R. Sanders. 7686 Wood Road. Albany.
was nonhound in Sc1pio Township at 10:25 p.m. The driver was nol
identified as of this mommg .
The pickup went off the right srde of the road, struck a tra(tic SJgn ,:
went into a ditch and then struck a culvert. The vehicle then went air:
borne across a private dnveway and struck a utilrty pole. according
to the report.
The vehicle continued on through the pole and came 10 rest on its
passenger side in a yard. During the crash, troopers said. the vehicle
tore down a cable television line. causing damage to a nearby house. ·
The pickup was severely damaged, troopers smd.

Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the otlice of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, James W Jr. and Rhonda L
Casey to Kathleen M. Smith. Middleport parcel ;
Deed, Ronald E. and Sandra G.
Cannan 10 same, Bedford. 1.158
acres.
Deed, Charles A. Cremeans to
Amy J. Wilfong, Olive parcel;
Deed, Mary J. Murray lo same,
Suuon lot;
Deed, Mae L Watson to William
W. and Norma S. Albaugh. Olive .. 67
acres;
Deed. Mae L. Watson to William
W. and Nonna S. Arbaugh, Olive
parcels;
Deed. Jim Walters Homes Inc . to
Mid State Trust, Rutland parcels;
Deed, Jim Walters Homes Inc . to
Lure! K. Dailey. Rutland parcels;
Deed. Edward and Ruth Durst to
T1mothy E. and Krisli A. Durst, Salisbury:
Deed. Sarah Agnes Morrison 10
Roscoe and Sandra Mills, Chesler.
167.024 acres;
Deed. Robert and Gladys Chancy
to Charles Louis Shain, Salisbury
parcels;
Deed. Robert and Charlotle Elberfeld to Scott M. and Julie E. Dillon.
Chesler parcel;

Deed. Mrldred V and La!To/ E.
Laudenn11t to Drcama D. Bell, Middleport ;
Deed , Jerry. Barbara, RObert ,
Wanda, George, Vivian, Jacob and
Kelly Roush to Charles and M3rtha
K Wheeler, Pomeroy parcel; :
Deed. Eblin Family Trust Agrecment to Dreama D. Bell. Middleport
parce ls:
•
Deed, Robert H. Oiler to Roy L.
and Sharon S. Pierce, Letart JlllrCCI,
267 acre:
Deed, Elsie G. Oliver to James E.
and Mary Oliver, Orange;
Deed. Earl D. Clickenger .. and
Freda E. Sapp to Mark and Melinda
Miller. Bedford, .46 acre;

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Harry
K. Clark, Racine .
Wednesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges July 31 - Roberta
Sales, Marilyn Bates, Paula Miller,
Oliver Stover. Jared Golden, Jeremy
Johnson, Cathy Stephens, Melinda
Logan .
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Luckeydoo, son. Point Pleasant.
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bartow Pearson,
son, Point Pleasant.
(Published with pennission)

FRI., SAT., SUN.
DEMI MOORE

IN

STRIP TEASE "
AND
EDDIE MURPHY IN

THE NUTTY
PROFESSOR ....

SUCCESS

To committee members for
all their efforts and hard
work, the Chester-Shade
Days Committee wishes to
thank the Veterans Assoc.
and Duane Longenette for
. the flag pole at the Chester
Court House. Those who•
gave donations and the
public for their support, for
making the First Annual Chester-Shade Days
Celebration was a resounding success! We
couldn't have done it without you!
THANKS

..

.,. .....

-··-·-

q_k~T~ANYONE CAN
AFFORD.
:

Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2588

VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.

388-8603

0

�l

•

In the Olympics,

Devers and Bubka exit; O'Brien on
. top: .

.

In other NL action,

'0)
'~

Braves beat Padres;
Mets edge Pirates

MORRIS SCORES - The Cincinnati Reels' Hlllllorris gats put
Houston catcher Klrt Manwaring as Manwaring'- trouble wftb the
throw after Eric Davia' fifth-Inning triple in Weclner.,y's Ndonal
League game In Cincinnati, where the Reels - . 10.0. (AP)

Reds notch 10-0
victory over Astros
By JERRY KINNEY
GINCINNATI {AP) - Kevin
Mitehell didn't do it all by himself.
He said he wasn't even necessary.
But key Reds think he could have a
crucial impact on the NL Central
race,
':It 's obv ious. You just have to
look at the scoreboard ," manager
Ray Knight said after Cincinnati
routed the Houston Astros I0-0
Wednesday.
"That shows what Mitchell 's
presence can do. He loosen s everybody up. There was just a great atti-.
tude and enthusiasm on the bench.
Everybody in there was a threat."
Mitchell doubled, had an RBI single and walked in his first stan since
being acquired Tuesday in a trade
with the Boston Red Sox. He drove
;,.;just one run; Brei Boone and Barrj. Larkin drove in seven between
~m. and Joe Oliver homered.
: "They could have done that with-

out me," Mitchell said.
Maybe, but Reds haven't been.
They rank lith in the NL in batting,
run scoring and RBis.
!
Home runs haven't been a problem; Cincinnati is founh in that category. But general manager Jim
Bowden put his finger on the problem when he announced the acquisition of Mitchell.
"It gives us a guy that can drive
in runs," Bowden said. " Home runs
don't matter, what does is batting
them in. Kevin is the man who can
do it."

Knight .said Mitchell, a feared
slugger and a tough out, will make
everybody in the lineup better.
"Kevin Mitchell is a true pure hitter," Knight said Wednesday. "He's
a truly outstanding clutch hitter.
Pitchers have to expend a lot of energy on Kevin Mitchell."
Knight figures that with Larkin,
(See REDS on Page 5)

By The A8aocla1ed Press
Judging from San Diego's 7-4
los.s to Atlanta, the Padres need a
boost. And they 're looking for Greg
Vaughn to provide it.
" We felt power was imponant if
we are going to compete with the
Gtants. Rockies and Dodgers,"
l'~s general manager Kevin Towers s.aid Wednesday night after the
Padres acquired Vaughn fr.om MiiWlluk« for pitchers Bryce Florie and
Rc&gt;n Villone and outfielder Marc
Ncwtield.
,
San Diego then quickly fell
behind the Braves 6-0. Tom Glavine
\ 11-5\ retired II straight Padres and
l&lt;ft wtth the: six-run lead after giving
up a single to Wally Joyner !O open
the &lt;Jghth.
.
·T m probably throwing the ball
bener than I have at any point in my
career.'" Glavine said. "I know
everybody's going to judge what I do.
by 1991 when l won the Cy Young
Award. There 's quite a way to go in
the season. obviously. I don 't know
if my numbers will end up the same.
But as far as the pitcher I am right
now. I don't think I can be doing
much bcner."
Brad Clontz replaced Glavine
and walked Jody Reed with the bases
loaded. ending the shutout.
Brian Johnson followed with a
t~o-run double and Archi Cianfrocco hit an RBI groundout.
Mark Wohlers pitched the ninth
for his 25th save.
"He's as tough as they come,"
said the Padres' Ken Caminiti, ejected by plate umpire Frank Pulli for
arguing a called third strike in the
seventh.
"He just works you out there,"
Caminiti said. "He has such a good
·idea of what he's going to do with
every pitch, and then he executes as
well as any other pitcher."
St. Louis ' game at Philadelphia
.was rained out with the Phillies leading 2-0 in the third inning. They're
scheduled for a doubleheader
tonight.
.
At San Diego, Bob Tewksbury {9·
6) allowed five runs - two earned

- and seven hits in six innings. He
had won his four previous decisions.
"We took advantage and held
on," said Chipper Jones, who drove
in two runs. "I can honestly say we
were overdue for a sill- or seven-run
game. We' ve been struggling."
In other games, New York beat
Pittsburgh 3-2 in 10 innings, I,os
Angeles beat Florida 3-0, Montreal
beat Colorado 6-2 and Chicago beat
San Francisco 4-l .
Mets 3, Pirates 2
Chris Jones hit a two-run h~mer
off Dan Plesac (3·2) with one out in
the lOth at Shea Stadium. New York
has won five straight, including
three consecutive come-from-behind
victories.
Jerry DiPoto (5-1) got out of a
j&amp;ll) in the ninth but allowed Jason
Kendall's RBI single with two outs
in the lOth.
Dodgers 3, Marlins o
Ramon Maninez (8-4) -allowed
four hits in seven-plus innings at
Dodger Stadium and Eric Karras hil
a two-run single in the first after
three straight walks by Pat Rapp (512).
Antonio Osuna struck the side in
the eighth and Todd Worrell pitched
a perfect ninth for his 27th save.'
Rapp allowed three runs and five
hits in six innings.
Expos 6, Rockles2
Jeff Fassero (II- 7) pitched a sixhitter, and Moises Alou homered and
dro~e in four runs to complete a
.three-game sweep for Montreal,
which has won fi¥e of seven.
Colorado has lost 14 of 17 road
games. Roger Bailey (1 -2) gave up
three runs and six hits in six innings.
Cubs 4, Giants 1
Steve Trachsel (9-6) gave up four
hits in seven innings at Wrigley
Field. Chicago has won three straight
and seven of eight. .
· Turk Wendell pitched I 113
innings for his lOth save .
Allen Watson (7-9) allowed just
three hils in seven innings, but lost
to Chicago for the third time this season. Barry Bonds hit his 28th homer.

'

OUT OF THE BLOCKS- American Dan O'Brien ltlrts out of the
:blocks In the decathalon's 400-meter run In the Olympics Wednea·
:day night In Atlanta. (AP)

Winston Cup slate
and standings posted
219 N, 2ND

City (Appicr 9-7 ), 8:05 p.m.
Chicago (Fe rnundez I 0- 1) a.r Texas
(Pavlik 12-4), 8:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Karl 10--'J at Oakland
(Prielo 2-4). 10:0-' p.m.

Baseball
AL standings
Haslem Division

~

.W L fcl.

Iwn

New York
..... 6J 42
.. Bal!imore ........... .SJ ~2
.. Tnronlo ............49 -~R

.600
505
458

" Bo~to n
" Delroil

~8

448

72

.~27

47
. ......l5

NL standings

Gil

1-800-817·1 094

Atlanla ........... 6$
Montreal . ........... 58
New York ... :........ 52
Florida
.. 49
Philadelptua ........ 4)

16

29

Ctnlral Dhlsion

CLEVELAND ...... M

42

607

Chi cago.

. .. J8

49

542

Mllwauk~ ..

. ... 52

55
55
.48 00

.486

7
J .1

.. 51

481

IJ ~:

444

17 '.1:

Mmfll!sola .

· Kansas Ci ty

Wutrrn Division

• Tc~as

: Seanle

!i"

Oa kl~nd

Ca lilnr lli&lt;J

61 46
58 48
.55 5.l
51 ~6

. ~70

.ci47
.509
417

2 ~.
1

6 1·
10

Wednesday's scores
Oakland 5. Chtcago 4
O.:nm1 10. Cii.liforma 5

41

61J

48

.547

.16
:1i8
6)

.4R I
4511
.406

1
14
16\

22

Western Dlvisioo
San Dr ego ........ .. ~8 ~I ~.'\2
Los Angeles.. ....... ~7 ~ I 528
Colorado .. ......... 54 ~ ) .505
San Frand~ r:o .... .. 46 60 .434

\
2\
4

8\

-\
)
1

10 h

Wednesday '• scores

CtNCINNATI ro. H~uston 0
Montreal 6, Coloradci 2
Chi cago 4, Som Francisco I
New York. \ Pillsburgh 2 (I 0)
Los Angeles 3. Florido 0
Allanta 7. San Diego 4
Sr. Louis nl Philadelphia, ppd .. rain

Halumore 9, ~hnnesu 1a _,
CLEVELAND 4. Toromo2

Today's games
Cu li f orm a 1Bosk1 e 10-6)

&lt;It

De1 rou

(W,JI,ams 2-fl). I 15 p m

Today's games

Balnmore !We lls 7- IOJ ar Mrnnu01 a

(Robcmon 4-!J). 1 I ~ p rn
Seank (Mn yt' r 7- 11 .:r r Mrl"" a uk.~ t'
1 M ~.: Donald 10-4 ). 2 0~ p m
. C hr ~.:agu !Ta p ~ n r 9 - ~J al Oa kl an d
_(Wa.sdm 6-.lJ. ' I~ p m
. Toro mo I Hans11 n 9- 121 ar CLEV E.
LAND !loJlt'l. l-2 l. 7 0~ p m
. Bosrun ICit'mens 4-10) at Kanus City
(lklc~r 9-6) . 8 0~ p m
New York (Rogers 7 - ~) ar Tua~ (Hill
II - ~). 8..1~ p m

Friday's games

Piusburgh (Parris 0· 11 at New York
(Clark 10-8). 1:40 p.m.
Colorado (Thompson 4- 7) at Chicago
(Navarro 8-9), 2:20p.m.
Atlanta (WGde J.O) nr San Diego ITim
Worre116 -4J. 5:&lt;ri p.m.
OH : St. Loui1 (OsDome 9-6 ond Andy
Bents 9-8) ot Philadelphia (R. Springer 2- .
9 and Mimbs 1-6), S:OS p.m.
CINCINNATI (Salkeld .~-3) ot Monrreal (M . Leiter4-10), 73~ p.m.
Florida (Burir.etr 6-9) at Los Angeles
(Asrado .~ -7). 10:05 p.m

Seanle IM W::.gner J -2) ar Detroit

Friday's games

p.m

• ,MJnnesola (Aguilera 4-41 at Ro~ron
.(Gordon 8- ~ l. 7 : 0~ p.m
Baltimore (Ench on ~ - 9) at CLEVE'LAND (Henhi SC"r I0. 7), 7:05pm.
C alifornia (Finley 11 -8 ) ar Toronlo
(Hemgen 12-6). 7.:\5 p m
• New York (Gooden 10-51 ar Kan sas

N1tlonll IA1pe
NL Suspended Chris Sabo, Cincinnati :lB, fo r seven game• and fined the
Reds $25.000 for using a corked bnl .
FLORIDA MARLINS : Traded RHP
David Wearhen lo the New York Yon·
kees for RHP Mouk Huuon . Plat:ed C
Charle1 John~on on rhe 15-day disabled
list. Purchased lhe COillfliCI ofC Joe Sidall ·
from Charlo!le of !he lnternalional
League
PITTSBURGH PIRATES : Pl•ce d
RHP Elmer Deuens on the 15-day disabled list. Purchased the contract of RHP
Dove Wainhouse fro m Caro lina of rhe
Sou1hem l.&lt;3gue.
SAN DI£GO PADRES: 1\ctivored
INF Crnia Shipley from rhe I ~ - day di silbled list Ploced INF Uri) Lopez on the
15·day disabled list . Purchasc:d ·th&lt; ..:fln lracl of RHP Oacio Vcrus (rum Ln~ Ve1~

Transactions

Gll

Centnl Dlwision
Sr Lou15 ............... 56 50 .:'i2R
Housron .............. .17 52 :'i2.l
CINCINNATI ...... 52 51 . W~
Clli cago .................n 54 .490
Pimburgh ...........48 59 .449

Bos1on ."i. Kans:u Cil y .1
Tckas lJ . Nc:w York 2
Scanlc 9. Mi lwaukee _,

J O/i'o~a.rts ~ - 1). 7 : 0~

.W L fcl.

Iwn

I~

or

(8 . Jones 9-6), 7:40p.m.
San Francisco (Gordner 9-3) at Hous·
1on (Droibek 4-7). 8:05p.m.
Atlanm (Smohz 17-~) at Los Angeles
(Pnrk.~ - 3). 1 0 : 0~ p.m.
Florida (A.l..eiter ll-9) at San Diego
(Hamilton 10.6), 10: 0~ p.m.

Eastern Dh•lllon

10

MIDDLEPORT

992-5627

Scoreboard
•

NEW YORK {AP)- The 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
racing schedule, with winners in
parentheses and driver point standings:
July 28 - DieHard 500, Talladega, Ala. (Jeff Gordon).
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 18 - GM Goodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn.
Sept I -Mountain Dew Southem 500, Darlington, S.C.
Sept 7 - Miller 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 15 - MBNA 500, Dover,
Del.
Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Martinsville, Va.
Sept. 29 - Tyson Holly Fanns
400, North Wilkesboro, N.C.
Oct. 6- UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20- AC-Delco 400, Rockingham, N.C.
O~t. · 27 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix
Nov. 10 -' NAPA 500, Hampton.
Ga.

Baseball
Amtrian La:pt
BALTIMORE ORIOlES: R"; lled
OF Jeffrey Hammonds from Rochester of
the International Lea1ue. Sent RHP Jimmy Haynes 10 RocheJfer. Sent RHP Greg
Dean from Bowie of tbe &amp;stem Leag!K!
to High Desert of the CAlifornia Lt-ogue.
Promoted SS Richard Paz from Bluefield
of th e App11lachian League ro Hish

1-614·991-6614

~E~

1996
.~E~ 1996 GM'C
CHEVY CAVALIER
SONOMA P/U
1996
PONTIAC SUNFIRE

Driver standings
I. Jeff Gordon, 2,631.

2. Terry Labonte, 2,622.
3. Dale Earnhardt, 2,608.
4. Dale Jarrett, 2,549.
5. Sterling Marlin, 2,285.
6. Ricky Rudd, 2,260.
7. Rusty Wallace, 2,247.
8. Ken Schrader, 2,216.
9. Mark Martin, 2, 192.
10. Ernie Irvan, 2.188.
II. Ted Musgrave, 2,095. ·
12. Jeff Burton, 2,032.
13. Bobby Hamilton, 2,029.
I4. Ricky Craven, 2,0 16.

oflhe Pncific Coasl L..e::~gue.

o....,.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: 0.:•i ~­
IUI1ed I 8 Dun PeltiL'f for mittnmcnt.

DETROIT TIGERS: .Tn&gt;&lt;kd OF Cbod
Curlis 10 the Los An&amp;clcs Dodgen for
LHP Joey EiiChen ami LHP John Cummings. Tl'llded RHP Greg Oohr 10 the Cal·
ifomia Angels for INF Dounion Ea'ley
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Tn11.led
OF Greg Vmughn urid a player co be
numed 10 1M San Digeo Padre5 for RHP
Bry~.:e Aorre. LHP Ron Villone and OF
M..-~.: Newfieki.
NEW YORK YANKEE!\ : Acquind
IB-DH Cec il Fielder from 1h~ Dt-1roir
Tigers for OF Ru~n Sima 11Rd RHP Marr
lmw•
SEATTLE MARINERS : Acquired
LHP Terry Mulhollllf'ld from the Ptlil~l·
phia Phillie• for INF ~!i RclafonJ. Ouign:u«&lt; RHP Bias MillOf felr ;u~ignmcnl.
Recalled OF Ruul Ibanez from Tncoma. of
the PCL Named Kewin Malhcr vit.:e president of finance and adrrUniscrnrinn.
TEXAS RANGERS . Acquired LHP
Mike Sranton from 1he Boston Red Sox
for RHP Mark Brundenburg and RHP
Kerry Lacy.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Acli\ltued
R~P Bill Ritley from the! U -duy dis:rbled
list. Placccd LHP Paul Spoljaric on 1he
IS-d:ry diaablcd lia!, relro~civ e to July

$

B•sketball
N1tklnllllaRktthall Auotlration
NBA : Disuppruvcd rhl.' contracr he·
twc=en F Juwun Hnwurd arul lhc Miam1
Hcnt bccliUIC Ill~: muncy Cl Cl'&amp;:dcd rhc

'"I"'Y'"''·
CLEVEL~NI.l

Ci\ VAUERS .

Waived C· F John Amo~ei.:hi .
IDS ANGELES LAKERS: SiJI1&lt;d C
Travis Knight to a one-yerrr contr~t~.· t.
NEW JERSEY NETS : SiJncd G
Robert Pack 10 a mult~year controct.
ORLANDO MAGIC: Siilifll G Gerald Wilkin110 a OIM!·~arcunlrDL1 .

Football
J'lllatkJNI FaoCt.ll Ln~H
CINCINNATI BENGALS : Clnhncd
QB Jay Fiedler off waivers from the
Philadelphia E.o&amp;les . Waived QB Dave

BarT.

DENVER BRONCOS : Sianed RB
Tetn!ll O:lvislo a fiwe-ycar contract.
JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS :
Sisned OL James Bailey.

199

1995

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Piusburgh (Lieber 4A) al Philadelphia (M. Munoz 0-2), 7 : J~ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Ji\nlil .._J) Ill Montrc·
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15. Jimmy Spencer, 2,015.
16. Mi~hael Waltrip, I ,992.
17. Bobby Labonte, 1,912.
18. Jeremy Mayfield. 1.804. ·
19. Rick Mast, 1,794.
20. Kyle Petty, 1,769.
21. Geoff Bodine; 1,735.
22. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 1,725.
23. Morgan Shepherd, 1.678.
24. Brett Bodine, I ,669.
25. Robert Pressley, 1,627.

By RICK WARNER
ATLANTA (AP) - Gail Devers,
Sergei Bubka and Dan O'Brien waited four years for Olympic redemption. Devers and Bubka,didn 't get it.
O' Brien looks like he will.
Devers, who was headed for victory in Barcelona before tripping
over the last barrier in the I00-meter ,
hurdles, lost the race again Wednesday night This time, she simply wasn't fast enough to beat gold medalist Ludmila Engquist of Sweden,
runner-up Brigita Bukovec of Slovenia or bronze medalist Patricia
Girard-Leno of France.
"Obviously, it was not to be,"
Devers said. "But I finished fourth,
(one place) better than I did in
Barcelona. And I finished on my
feet."
Devers, who won the 100 meters
in Barcelona and Atlanta, once again
failed to become the second woman
to sweep the sprint and hurdles in the
same Olympics. Fanny BlankersKoen of Holland did it in 19~ .
"It's not a disappointment, ·said
Devers, who was edged out of the
bronze by one-hundredth of a second. " Definitely I wanted to come in
here and win, but I'm the type of person who thinks everything happens
for a reason, and if it didn't happen
it wasn 'I meant to be at this time."
Bubka, the greatest pole vaulter
ever, with4rew from the event with
an injured right Achilles tendon. The
32-year-old Ukrainian won a gold
meda:l in Seoul eight years ago and
was the favorite again in 1992, but
failed to clear any heights in the
final.
"For me, it is great tragedy," said ·
Bubka, who has set 35 world records
and is the only person to clear 20
feet. "It was incredible pain, pain not
only in my injury, but in my heart."
0' Brien, like all competitors in
the decathlon, was in pain after completing the first half of the grueling
e'»ent. Unlike the others, though, he
was in first place.
O'Brien, who failed to make the
U.S . team in 1992, heads into the
second day of competition with a
124-point lead over Frank Bu5emann
of Germany. After finishing his

Fact:

•

c

·Please Vote "YES" For the
Southern Local Bond Issue
August 6th!!! ~
Pilid for by the
Southern Local Buildina'Coouniuee
Kim Phillips, Treasurer

...
..

This seems like little to
for our children's future!

This seems like little to pay
for our children's future!
Plea.•e Vole "YES" Fur lhe

Southern Local Bund Issue
Paid for ~y the
Southern Local Duilding Cummiucc
Kim Phillips. Treasurer

{Continued from Page 4)
Mitchell and Davis batting 3-4-5, the
Reds have to be respected. John Smiley, who threw a four-hit shutout
Wednesday for the Reds, said that
lineup would certainly get his attention .
"When yop've got guys who can
hit one out anytime, that's a big
plus," Smiley said. "Getting
Mitchell back was a big plus. I know
if I was out there pitching against the
Reds I'd consider it a tough lineup."
· Smiley did his best to stifle trade
deadline day rumors, allowing Houston just four singles in his first complete game shutout since May 2,
• Andcncn 1111 Windows
• Stanley Doors
1994, at Wrigley Field.
Smiley (10-9) and another big· • 216 l!llerior Walls. 16 ln. On Center
ticket staner, Mark Portugal, have "-_. • AnnllroniiOilrian .Floor "nlc long been rumored to be on the
• Mlrilllle Cablneu
. Reds' trading block. Teams could
• 8 fool CeiHna
make trades through midnight EDT
•2xi0Flo0rJoint.l61•. 0nc•pter
a
Wednesday without having to put
• 52 Ollloo Willet Heater
1
players on waivers. . .
.. .
• Shaw Cafllels
COMFORT ASSURED
"We're ill contention now, Smi• Delta Faucets
•
ley said. "If we were eight or nine
• M - T-loc:k Vinyl Sldlna With Ufetlme Warrant~
games out, I'd say yeah, one of us
• 25 Ys WaiTIIlly Aspbllt Shlfllla
has got to go."
• 10 YCir SINctllnl Watnnty On 1be Home
The Reds, one of at least six
"
Oar Prices Are 1be Lowest In 'lbe Area.
teams in the wild-card hunt, have
won eight of 10, Including two wins
against Houston.
Smiley faced only 30 batters
Model ~orne Located at
Wednesday. He walked one and
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
slr\lck out seven, throwing 119 pitches -74 strikes- in getting only his
Pomeroy, OH 614·992-2478
second win in more than a month.
Model Home Vle.wlna
1:00 ·5:00p.m.
usually keeps me at 90-100
Tue.· S11t. or by llppllintmenL
pitchea, and thai's all right with~·"
Smiley said. "I'm not worrymg
about I:OQIIllete. gUIICI, as long as
they put a •w• by my name."

..Jlf1

.

wtro·

live in Letart Township and my property is
appraised at $74,000. My taxable value is
$25,900. My taxes would increase $140.38 a
year.

NFIIL

At no time during the s~hool day will the. higll4
school children be associating with the K-8
children other than on the school bias.

opening day with a victory in his show I'm the best in the world and
hi s gold medal around his nlother'~
400-meter heat, the world record- win a gold medal. ..
neck .
Americans Antonio Tarver and
" It's a very emotional day for
holder left the track and received
intravenous fluids to combat dehy - David Reid also won Wednesday.
me." he said . "It's been so stressful
dration .
With six fighters in the semifinals,
and anxious . It 's pure happiness, but
"I' m only a couple of points low- which guarantees at least a bronze. it was a hard day for me."
. Lindsay Davenport wept afq:r
er than the Olympic trials, and I was • the U.S. boxing team will double it s
on a world-record pace there ," medal total from Barcelona.
beating her best friend and Ul) .
Led by 6-foot-5 center .Lisa
teammate Mary Joe Fernande z -in
O' Brien said.
O'Brien's bid for gold should be Leslie, the U.S. women 's basketball
strai~ht sets to reach the women's
one of the highlights of today's team beat undersized Japan 108-93
tennis final.
·
_~
Olympic schedule . Also on tap: io move within two wins of a gold
" I don 't want to go out there ~a
Michael Johnson's attempt to com- medal. Leslie, who moonlights as a sec her lose." said Davenport, ~Q .
plete a hrstoric sprinting sweep with model, looked fabulous scoring 35 will play for the gold agai nst Spaif!~:
a victory in the 200 meters, Andre .points, an Olympic record for an
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario,
Agassi vs . India's Leander Paes in a American woman .
downed lana Novotna of the Cu;.,:
men's tennis semifinal , and AmeriU.S . freestyle wrestlers also Republic in the other semifinal. .: : :
cans Terrance Cauthen, Rhoshii looked good. Kendall Cross {125
China and Africa also had caus; •
Wells and Nate Jones in boxing 112) and Kurt Angle (220) won
to celebrate.
• •
semifinals.
golds, while Townsend Saunders
China's Fu Mingxia. who had
Plus. the U.S. women's soccer (149 112) got a silver.
already wqn the platfonn title , capteam vs . China for the sport's first
Angle wrestled Iran 's Abbas Jadi- tured the springboard gold. becomOiympic gold and· semis featuring "'-di loa 1- llie, but won on a referee's ing the first woman in 36 years to
the Dream Team vs. Australia and 'decision. Angle cried as he draped win both at the same Olympics.
the U.S. baseball team vs. Japan .
Johnson. who won the 400 Monday, and Namibia's Frankie Fredericks both had 20.38.second clockings in their second-round heats of
the 200. But Fredericks, who ended
Johnson 's 21-race winning streak in
the 200 on July 5, said he 's the clear
underdog.
"Michael's the guy to beat,"
Fredericks said. "He's the world
.record-holder and he's got 80,000
fans watching."
Three more U.S. boxers advanced
, live in Sutton Township and my property
to the semifinals Wednesday, includappraised at $24,000. My taxable value is
ing Floyd Mayweather Jr. , who
became the first American fighter to
$8,400. My taxes would increase $45.53 a
beat a Cuban at the Olympics since
1976.
year.
Mayweather edged Lorenzo
pay
Aragon by one point in the 125pound division for t~e first U.S.
Olympic win over a Cuban since
!'lease Vute "YI~S" t 'n1· the
Leon Spinks defeated Sixto Soria in
the 178-pound final at Montreal. The
Southern !.neal Rnnd hsue
Americans had lost six straight
Olympic bouts to the Cubans before
.··.
P&lt;.~id fur hy lh~
Mayweather snapped the streak.
"I'm happy, but I'm not satisSnutht.'rn Lc\Cal Building Committct!
fied," said the 19-year-old from
Kim Ph ill ips, Treasurer
...
Grand Rapids, Mich. "I'm here to

Reds win ...

4 Dr, auto, air, stereo, air
bag

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'

·-

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The Daily Sentinel • Pag• S.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·.

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Sale Ends Sunday, August 4

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992·6691

'

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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy·· Middleport, Ohio

NOTHING RUNS . . .
UKEADEERE. . .

MUFFLER SHOP ~-2196

992·2196

Parts

See

.Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Acrose from Galli&amp; Auto Sales on old Ate. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon. - Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

SeMce

Steve Meadows

See Jeff Clark

M;,t:~,!;~.:tj

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t:f4_;;;a. "J"

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1, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

DAV donates van to assist vets n_eeding transportation

~

You've Got QuestJoila, We've Got Anawtra. ·

Area veterans need not worry
about transportation to and from the
Huntington Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) Medical Center for
treatment.
That VA medical facility recently
received a van from the Disabled

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Thu~day, Auguat

Thursday, August 1, 1996

•

American Vetc-l s (DAY), a million
member nonp~fli organization.
The van willlle driven by a corps
of local volunteers organized by the
DAY and its Auf iliary. Heading up
the effort is Rus "Williams, hospital
service coordina r at the Hunting-

ton VA Medical Center.
The donation, made possible
through a cooperative effort
between the DAY's national organization, the DAY Department of Ohio
and local service organizations, is
part of the nationwide DAY Trans-

portation Network. This van is one
of the 141 new ford vans that
departed DAY national headquarters
July II in a caravan bound for volunteer drivers in 35 states and Puerto Rjj:o.
"The DAY simply could not stand

aside and watch hundreds of thousands of veterans being lefl without
health care simply because 1hey li ve
some distance from a VA hospilal
and have no means of transportation.
Thanks to contributi ons from grateful Americans. the DAY was able to

respond 10 lhis need."
• •
Area velerans needing tr•n• ponation assi stance to 1he Hunun!ilon M edi cal Cenler should corita¢t
Rush Williams at (304 ) 429-6741:
Ext. 2979.

Back-To-School
Sidewalk Sale
DAVE'S
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St. Rt. 7· Pomeroy, Oh

tore

992-3422

1WO DAYS ONLY • FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
.,
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..,., .
.....,.,,,...............
l\llllolate Le..at

PrleeeoaN._•
«:.nA'Iftlekl

Weekly ranldngs by lhe NASCAR ~"his Weak wntor Monte o..-. Last

week's ranking is In paranth&amp;Ma.

I am writin&amp; in response lo
Rono.ld Riggs' letter earlier this

1. Jet! Oordcm (1)
Never was the kid better
2. Dole Eomlllnlt (3)

Looks Uke FOR, drives like A.J. Foyt
14. TodMuogrove(14)

Only time wiU tel

Hu lhe ritlfll slyle lor Indy

13. Johnny Bonaon Jr. (131

3. Torry L - (2)

aeuon. Ned Jarrett calls the
Winston Cup naces juslllil,• .,.,., I

•

15. -Waltrip (15)

Aoother Innocent crash victim

Engine - . al Tolladoga
16. AlckyCrl- (11)
Needs lo regain momentum again

4. Dole Jorrt11 (I)
&amp;nlved tho do&amp;e call
5. Ru01y Wall- (4)

Olher broadcll!iter. l have never
heard Ned. or anyone soy. "You
know, I think Dale: Earnhardt
just tried to pulthat driver i110

•

•

1 7 . - -.. (17)

Should be 'bact! In bldneas' 1hla

~lng llixll&gt;plooo flnlsh al
Taladoga Sunday
18.- lurlon (Unro_,
AmoS! in lho monay las! weet&lt;
19. Jonmy llloyWd (11)

weekend at Indy

6. Ernie lrvon (I)
A tiger on the k.lose

7. Sto~lng llerllfl (7)
And he walked 8W!IV
8. Rk:ky Rudel (I)

wreck drivers. He is Ill ways
hitting and bumping other
driven. Why NASCAR allows it
to happen. I don' t know. In
the Goodwrench 400, EamhiU'tlt

'

Trust me ... he'M win soon
10. Kenny &amp;ch-(10)

wrecks drivers bener.
I would also like to comment
on the renwk that Eamhlirdt
inheritAnce, family name or ties.
Earnhardt had a father that
raced NASCAR. His ftame wu
Ralph Dale Ellrllhardi Sr. Dole
followed in his father's footneps.
Dale's dad was a great racer ar~d
he helped Dale set 11111e&lt;1.

From 39th to 13th al Tanadtga

23.0..0-(un~
Best finish since 1994
24. Kyle P.ay (unro_,
HlghesHiniSfljng Pontiac
25.11orgon ShopMN (211
StroMd 10 14111 a1 Taladogl

Coming oft anolhor top 5

12.Bollby L-... (12)
He finished oecondamong tho
Chevrolels al Talladega

•--- S
7t h &amp; Pwm
t,
Parkersburg, WY
304-424-5337

Dolo
Feb. 1t
Fob. 18
Feb. 25

L--------"'
wr.erw ,,... profe ..lo...J. an/

Mar. 24 TranSouth 400

Darlington, S.C.

w. Bunon

Mar. 31 Food City 500

Bristol, Tenn.

Martin

N. Wllkllllolo, N.C. T. Labonle

Earnhardt
Gordon
Gordon
T. Uobonta

Martinsvlle, Va.
Talladega, Ala.

Craven
trvan

Wauace
Martin

Sonoma, Calt.
Conconl, N.C.
Concord. N.C.
Dover, Oet
Long Pond, Pa.
Brooklyn. Mk:h.
Daytona Beach, Fla.

T. Labonte Wllace
Gonion
.M. Wllttlp

Gordon

Gordon
A. Wllllce
Mallin

Loudon. N.H.

Craven

lrvan

~1 14 FirS! Union 400
April 21 Goody's 500
Aprtl 28 Winston 500

May 5

Save Mart 300

May 26 Coca·Cola 600
JLne 2 MUN!Ir 500
Juna 18 UAW·GM ·500
Juna 23 MHieo 400
Jliy 6 Pepsl400
July 14 Slick 50 300
July 21 Milar 600
July 28 DieHard 500

~

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May 18 WinSion 5elocl

~~~~~~~~

Silo

Busch Clash
Daylorla 500
Goodwrench 400
Mar. J Pomtac 400
Mar. 10 Purola10r500

Aug. 3
Aug. 11
Aug. 18
Aug. 24
S8pt. I

Daytona Beach. Aa. Mall
Daytona Beach, Fla. Eamhardl

Jarrea
Jarrett

Roct&lt;ingham. N.C.

Eamhartll

Long Pond, Po.

Tllla&lt;loga. Ala.
Brickyard 400
"Indianapolis
Bud eltho Glen Walklno Glen, N.Y.
GM Good. 400 Brooklyn, Mk:h.
Goody's 500
Bn11101, Tenn.
Soulhern 500
Dar!nglon. S.C.

S8pt. 7 MUier 400
Sept 15 MBNA 500
Sop!. 22 Hanao 500
SSpt. 29 Holly Farms 400
Oct. 6 UAW·GM 500
Oct. 20 AC-Oek:o 400
Oct. 27 Ou&lt;a Lube 500

Rk:hmond, Va.

T. Labonle
T. Labonla
Benson

Gordon
Gotdorl
Gordon

.

Gordon

Hom111on
Mantn

W.lal:e

Mayllold

Gordon
(Eomhordlj
(Martin)

(Gonion)
(Martin)
(B. ~18) (8. L8bente)
(Mar1i1)
(T. Labonlel
(An&lt;l,.ttl)
(Gordon)
(MaS!)
(Gordon)

Phoenix

(Ruddl

(Elliott)

Hampton, Ga.
(0. Wa!Oip) (Earnhardt)
• Names in parentheses indicate 1995 peN and race wlnnera.

Nov. 10 N.VOA 500

-

-

t 996 points standings
. .nOM CUP

1. Jefl' Gordon. 2,831 .
2. Terry Labonte, 2,622
J. Dalt Earmard:. 2.808.
4. Dale Jarretl. 2,548
5. Stel11fl0 Martin. 2,28S.
6. Rc~ Audd, 2.260.
7. Rusty Walla~ . 2,247
8. Kenny SdlrOr, 2.218
9. Mart. Marin, 2.192
10. Emle lrvan. 2.188

1. Owld GINn, 2 ,480.
2. ~ l&amp;Joit, 2.425.
3. Todd Bodhe, 2,104.
4. Jtfl GrNn, 2,041 .

1. RonHomadrltJr., 1,M4.
2. ..... 8kmet. 1,100.
3. Jack stngw, 1,112.
4. ~ Rutnclll, 1,541.
5. .Jimmy~- 1,171.

5 Cw1ll Maltd\am, 2,021 .

6 Juon ~- 1.001.
7 Phil P•f'IOnl, 1,884.
8. Jeff Putvll. 1,872.
o. Chad utttt. 1,814.
10. Old. Tllddll, 1.786.

• . Rk*C.NII. 1,511.
7. (Ia) MIQ . . . InC! Jot
Runman, 1,510.

9. Bulctl Miltr, l,52t.
10. IIIyan Reiner, t,514.

Call :

JEFF
WARNER

Gordon had maybe lhe sttongasl

tl,W. :Molllli'-.~-OJ, OH41nt

Otnce: tt2·547t

1-aoo-742-31611

..............
--·....---·
Fu: t14-tt2..,11

--

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

car anyway but got a
boost when top
contenders Dale
Earnhardt, ·ster1ing
Marlin and Ernie Jrvan
crashed on lap 117.
Earnhardt suffered a

fractured sternum and
left clavicle
TOP10
1. Jetl Gordon
2. Date Jaffe"

J Mark Martin
4 Ernie l~a n
5. Jimmy Spencer

6. Geoff Bodine
7. Jetl Burton
8. Bobby Labonte

KEY TO THE RAC!: The big .
crash. Earnhar&lt;ll lod lito moallepo.
and Mart;n·aalwayl11rorgll

real1k:lor.plala rockl.
-

Bolli-•

...ted.

THE BIG IUAPIII8E:
Gao« Bodine 40ih

ondfi-~11111 .

THE BIG DUD: Allor
winning hlo lim pole.
Jeremy Mayllold come
home orly 18111.
ANATOIIY OF A
WAECIC:Martlnwu
-Eomhlrdl.willl
lrvan -..g Earnhlrdt.
Marlin
IDwltd IM!n lllghlly. They
Gordon
mode no COIIIICIIIton, bol
lrvan wolll&gt;lod. than olld beck lniD
Marlin. Marin llton 1umod lnlo

movod-

Eamhordl and lito 1w0 t:ero hllllto

-Ma~in ondlrvon
-"""'·blamed
N18r tno
roce.
each o11tor
lor tho c:raoll.

9 Darrell Waltrip
10. Rusty Wallace

'

modem hfltory of
NASCAA, which Ia
generally defined - 1972
to the pnHnt.
AH of Waltrlp'a 84
vlctoriM hive come
dllllng that lime flwM.
~enll, Waltrip Ia tied
lor third with Bobby
Allllon on the 1111 of IllUme NASCAA , _
wtnnera.
Still active, Waltrip has
owned hla own taam
alnce alnce 1892.
The paraonable Waltrip
IIWIII 1 race teem ·In
Harrllburg, N.C., but IIIII
IIVII, It IIIII when hi
can, In Franklin, Tlfll1.
W.ll-rlgardtcl In the
country millie: lndultry,
Waltrip hla hollecl variety
lhowl on The Nalhvlte
Network anclla a 1nquent
analylt on BuiCh Grand

Englewood,
Dear Your Tum,
I definitely ha\le something to
get off my chest. I 11m so tired of
Ned latrell and Buddy Bilker

Nashvlle); YlciOry (May
10. 1975, at NUhville).
• FAVORITI! DRIVER:
'A.J. Foyt has always
been one of my heroes.•
• WHAT I DRIVE OFF THE
TRACK: "A 1996
Chevrolet Suburban."
• FIRST SPEEDING
TICKET: No responae
• WHAT I DO TO RELAX:
"Spend time wllh my
•AGE: 49
family. Play golf."
• SPOUSE: Stevie
•
WHERE
I GO ON
• CHILDREN: Jessica leigh
VACATION:
"Nantucket
(9) and Sarah CaHin (3)
ISland."
• CAR: No. 17 Pa~
• WHAT I WOULD DO IF t
America Chevrolet
COULDN'T DRIVE A
• HOMETOWN: 8o"1, In
WINSTON CUP CAR:
OWensboro. Ky.. biJlllves
"I'd like to be a
In Franklin, Tom.
professional golfer."
• RECORD: 675 S1arts. 84
•
WHAT I'D UKE TO
victories. 274 top Ss, 382
CHANGE
ABOUT
top lOS, more ltlan $15
MYSELF:
"I'd like to have
rniUion in career eamlngs.
more time lor my wife and
• LAST RACE: Started
children."
nlnlh and finished there.
•
MY PERSONAL MOTTO
• FIRSTS: Start (May 7,
IS:
"You don't know where
1972, at Talladega): pole
you
stand until you stand
(July 18, 1974, at
up."

••ceecl

mentioned Eamhllfdt'i name
(106) ind how mllll)' times "our"
driver wa~ mentioned (R). And
hc'Jin the! top 10.

Tlno lngn1m

another

NASCAR This Week
TALlADEGA. Alo. - Who!
is a thrtc·hour-plus rain delay
good for? Gossip.
For the second week in a row,
ruiTIOfs were everywhere ru
teams attempt to finalize plw
for !be 1997 SCIUOII.
Winning !he DicHonl SilO pole
did rl&lt;llhing 10 Allcviiltc lhc ·'
prasure on Jeremy Mlyllald
to finAlize his plw.

Fooli~:~~m.

lhe No. 37

ofMic""'=l
Krunefuss.
John
And..nt
npJlll"nlly
will not be
'

that CAr.
M•yfield hu noc officially
lh:U be will leave
Call Yarborough, but his
depanure is widely anticipated.
The so-clilled Rick Herolrick
....,elUte '""" .. - ledlnic:atly to
be owned by lhlft South
annoo~

tnlensety wooed by Bulch
Mock. owner of lhc No. 75
Remington-sponsored fool
,.,..ndy being driven by
Morpn SMpherd, MAyf!Cid
is now mid 10 be leanins townrd

rctnined
AS dri vcr or

Carotin:~. bu."incMJncn - will
include Winston Cup. Bu.~: h
Grund Nalional and Cr.1ftsm;m
Trudt Series \."tlmpuncnl11.
Tony Stewart. 11&gt;: young
op.:n-wllecl star who n..:tarly wun

II&gt;:

lndiwtapOiis 500 in May. is

still considered tht: lik..:ly driv~r
or tOO Pontiac te41n. Stcwwt
crashed in Stuurday'• Hui!Ch
Onmd Natilllllll ,_ ht:n: bul
impreascd many by nmning a.•
high ._, 5Ccond during lht: late

~

hl

97 Pontiac
·~
lt,.=_,l

Sloge• of lht: Humminbinl ~liiK .
Another driver COYCI&lt;d by
sevcruftClli!L• is Rick Mall.
who will nppon:nlly lake hi•
services elscwhcn:: after "ix
seasons with RichMd Jackson.

,Advertise on this age:·.

Bulck·Pontlac

~

1900 EBSI8m

Cat~lsette

Tapes
Country &amp; Oldies
Reg. .... only '3.39

Super Lotto
&amp; All·lottery
Games
Five Points
Express
Drlve-Thru
Carry Out
Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Five Points

l;rlwofthtWiek

~!'&lt; Bud Moonl Ef1alntering

,li!id crew cltlel Jimmy

Tolloclep. Dllllnblch

Boats New &amp; Used
"Professional
Service
Guaranteed".

*rlt!l 35th but eliolto the

fnlnt, 1aklr)g second
polltlcn at lap 31 . He
!j ·..m.Jfild among the
;flliiiclerw
dlap t17,
.
Wilen he wu caught up
In the cratli thet
etlmlnoted, among
othera, Dale Eamhanlt
~ lnd Silting Ma~ln.
:~~;i;
. .

~

SIDEWALK ·sPECIALS
Friday and Saturday
Savin s Galore·~

Marine Service

I

2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH
614·992·6520

~

~~~!fr!J~.
'212 East Main

'

.·

.

r.

Pomero , OH

The .l')·y~·ar-uld rrum Rn,;LOiotriiModlly

hrit.lgL' Halhs. Va .. ha.~~: talkL'tl
witt! Felix S8blt• omd ,lth~..·rs.

Tr1-!Me11 Wlllr ~. Inc.

An~erson's

the water treatment c:otnJ*'f
COfdialty inviln you 10 pa1lciplle
in a tree, no ObliglliOn,
comprehtnliYt wllef an8fVIil.
We win 1~ tor 1he tolowing·
TOS. Mineral Hlldneu, Iron, PH
p ..... call RalnSoft. 81 • ·• ·

..TDY:Oncdnm
imprc sS~.•d

wittlttk: new p,lnliu. .·
is Bobby Llbonte. whu l~sh·d
a Gmnd Prix la."l W1.'l.' li. and
n:ptlf1\'tUy a.'ili.cd In drin· unL" oil
Indianapolis. Chcvn•l~t wt,uld
nut ullow lh41t, hul LahuntL' &lt;llld

SIDEWALK

4472 Middttport or 814 811 uee
ProclorVIIIO 10 . . up jOIII ~­
Wiler onolylil.

""'Y

this W\.\:Lcnd in '
rhl,:· wa...tli~lun RccJskins ' I.'Uiurx
in honor of Gibh•. 11&gt;: ftlfltlCf
~'&lt;Xk:h who w.a." induct~..-d into 1bc
Pro FootbAll Holl of Fame in
Conlon. Ohio. on Sa!urday.

.'

New Shipment of Eastland
Just Arrived For Back to School

Chapman Shoes
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

•

2 Days Of Saving
Friday, Aug. 2 and
Saturday, Aug. 3

'

. ..••
.....
•

•
.•
'
r'

'

·~ ··

BIG SALE

FLOOR MODEL AND INVENTORY REDUCTION
Oaly I Modeii1022Reg. $299.99"-SilE 116900

Only 2 Model19240 Reg. $999.99 ...-SALE

'179 00
1
259 00
$449°0_
'58700

Only I Model QU Reg. $1299.99 ...........SALE

s83700

The frH•Ar• Sewln1
Machl•ellotlel1022

Only 4 Model 18002 Reg. S299.99 ........ SALE

Free·arm for sewing cuffs and sleeves
• Se~-threading take-up lever • Bobbin
winds with a touch of a linger • Three
needle positions to sew along edges and
make buttonholes.

Only 3 Modei1901S R•g. $429.99 ..-SALE

Only 3 Model 19217 Reg. $699.99 ........ SALE

The Q•antum1M CXL
State-of-the art technology
•Over 300 built-in stitches
•Unique two-color stitching
•Built-in automatic block and script
alphabets and numbers
•600 mm wide stitch width
•Memory storage •String-along stitching
•Sideways sewing for mending •LCD
display guides sewing
•Sews with hand- or foot· control

-

f)o·,'t'· Miss lt..

Sl•g•r Ultralock1M
MaChine Motlel 14U34
Sews 3-thread ovorlock and flat lock
. ' . etlich plus 4-lhread mode safety stitch
• • BuMt-ln sewing light • Sews up to I~
' ltltches per minute • Singer-exclusive tree
tirm and lay-In threading • Stnch length
lldjl'lstment controls • Narrow rolled hem
plate il)cluded · Carrying handle

Oily 2 Moclel QL R... $2499.99-SALE 1168900

.., i''"AI••

It

'' -.
·~·
&gt; ••
'•

T

... 1'

....

J

Only 2 Model fi4U34 Reg. $599.99••..,.$ALE

(Wy,3Mo!Wf14U~85R... $199.99-SAU

I -

s39900:
•59910

LAY·AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

We Csnnot Take Trade-In On The~e Dra•tlcsl/y Reduced Prices•

.J.

...

'

.'

•

v

"

•

The

on Everything in the Sf re!

''I.

l

SA~E

10%; 20% '
,40%
p to 50%

Lubnntc'!l Nu. IH Chevrolet
WU."' t.lct.'tlflllt.."tt

.

~

For Women &amp; Children

,...,. gaw drtYer Wally
Diltenbllch Jr. • car he
oould take to the front at

Call 992~21 5

.

Suntan
Products
1/2 price

SALE
PRICES
GOOD THRU
TUESDAY, AUGUST 6

at

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Bob Atwood Ext. 105
For More lnformatiQ.n.
.

&amp; SAT.

Women's
Colognes
20% off

ATtENTION ADVERTISERS!!
.

FRI.

SMI'B

Hyou've (101 a queotlon or
e comiMfll, - : NASCAA
Thll WMII Your 111m. c/o
TheQ- G - , P.O.
lox I~ G-o. N.C.
210113. Your Tum aleo may
be ,...toed by e-melllng
amurrayOgaat.guatte.com.

,IIWilch in 19l)7.

1-800-484-7962·51 n

SIDEWALK SALE

..

See It Today At••

Magnot;a springs•, All&gt;.I

car uwncr Joe Glbbl

&amp; BOWS
Pomeroy

992-S1n

Rain waters rum'ors of driver change~
., ..... 1111111

BUTTONS

Grand Prix GT

CCMI•Ied how 1nany times they

National etock car
telec..ta.
Waltrip won Wlnlton
Cup chemplonlhlpt In
1981, 1882 and 1985 and
waa the llret driver ever to
510 million In
ca'"' eamlnga.
Here'a more about
Wllltrlp:

Just Arrived!

Large Selection
Stuffed Animals
for Babies
100 E. Main St.

Around the aaraae

The last time out
Jeff Gordon survived rain daaya,
crashes and more rain delays to win
the weather-shortened DieHard 500
Sunday at Talladega, Ala.

.

nlways mentioning EaJ:nhardt
during a race. How o.bout giving
other driven the same amount of
air lime that you do to him?
During one rnce, my husband

.D~rrell Waltrip
wlnnln~t d~Jn tpa

(Earnhortll) (Walllce)
(Gordon)
MartinsVIlle, Va.
(Eamhllrtll)
N. Wilkesboro. N.C. (Musgrave) (Millin)
Concood, N.C.
(Rudel)
(Millin)
Aoc~nghem. N.C.
(SiriCklin) . (W. Burlon)
Dover, Oal.

While hla lortunu heven1 been ao grlt•t thla Huon, Darrell Waltrip 11 the
wlnnlngell Ktlve driver on the Wlnlton Cup circuit.

Derrett Waltrip Ia the

JamoU
Gordon

"""'" CIINNA5CAR Thll Week

Large Selection
of Summer
Clothing for
Back-ToSchools.
All on Sale.

Ray &amp; Pam - Owners

J - Drllllllll

Results. schedule

Pomeroy
Merchants
flnnoal
Sale

30% otT

114-992·79811
114-992-6759

didn 't become c:hlllllp by

22. Bll E - (24)

- - - - - - - - . before
Oaspera181y
- n genda
vidofY lana
this Jeason
..
11. Jlmony llptnc:er (11)

ProciiSSing. Bait &amp;
Tackle
249 West Main Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Open 7 a.m./9 p.m.
7 Days a week

wreck mny have c,:ost Bobby the
win. Earnhardt can drive, but he

08-

9. Mort&lt; Martin (f)

· Archery, Clothing,
Taxidermy, Deer

cruhed Bobby Hamillon. Tho!

Won first career pote
20. Dlrrwtl Wo1111p (Unrankod)
Corning oft basi ftrlih otaooson
21. Wally
Jr. (22)
Speclact.Uor unll criiSh

Should be ready lor Indy

Bowhuntera
Paradise

the wall."
However, Earnhardt does

Casual &amp;
Pageant Dresses

�. '.

•

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Doctors generally passive
about their patients' smoking
By MELINDA VOSS
The Des Moines Register
Dr. Robert Lee, a family pracliii oncr in Des Moines, Iowa, has a
-ce rt ain nai r for talking lo patients
about smoki ng .
Fiest , he does n't avoid the topic ,
Second, whi le he doesn't leel ure . Lee also never misses an
op portunlly to hroach the subject
·:_ c\·c n if a smoker comes in for
treatm ent of a cut finger.
.. I co unsel every patient every
v:s it about smoking ," he said .
Such tenac ity is unu".. .1L
Acco rdin g to the American
.Medi cal Association, onl y about
half of curre nt smokers report that
!heir doctors ever have asked them
a bout their smoking habit or urged
them 10 quit. ~ till fewer patients
have received specific advice about
hilw to stop.
· These ·low numbers rece ntly
•purred the U.S. Agency for Health
·c are Policy and Research to issue a
tall to action for doctors. nurses.
denti sts and other clinicians to
. b.ecomc actovely engaged in helping smokers lo quit.
: To ass ist, the agency issued specific guidelines for practitioners to
Tallow. They call for identifying
smokers , advising them to quit,
, 1-telpi ng will ing patients set a quit
date. offeri ng nicotine replacement
!hcrapy and encouraging them to
h'u il d a support network.
. Why do so many doctors routinely fa il to talk with smokers
ahoul the country 's No. l health
· hazard ''
Physicians tend to mistakenly
hc li cvc smokers don 't want to quit.
said Dr. Michael Fiore, director of
the Un iversity of Wisconsin's CenLcr for Tobacco Research and lntervc nt :on. Yet, more than 70 percent
of smokers report in surveys that
· they want to quit. and have made at
least one self- dcscnbed " serious" ·
a/tempt. Smokers also cite as an
important motivator a physician' s
~d v ice 10 quit.
" Two other factors dampen doctors' effort s. according to Fiore.
iv ho headed the panel of smoking

· Thursday,'August 1, 1

The 19th annual reunion of the
'.Harden Family was held recently at
the Carleton School shelter house in
'Syracuse, with 48 family members
.attending.
Don Harden gave the blessing for
the afternoon potluck dinner. Minutes of last year's reunion were read
b y Tami Harden Nelson and Teresa
/'larden Williams.
i Various gifts were presented to
1guests at the reunion, including, D.J.
:Harden, men's prize; Angie Harden,
, women's prize; Brian Kendall, teen's
prize; Teresa Williams, door prize.
All children under 13 received
pnzes.
Attending were Bob and Esther
Harden, Syracuse; Jim and Johnetta
Harden, London ; Debbie Harden
Shepley, North Carolina; Keith,
Karen, and Nick Lisle of Syracuse;
Kay Siblani and Brittany
Walkowski ; Ken, Connie, Brian, and

70

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

HELPING HAND- According to the American Madlcal Association, only about hall of current smokers report that their doctors ever have asked them about their smoking habit or urged them to quit.
Still fewer patients have received specific advice about how to stop. Dr. Robert Lee, a family practitioner In Des Moines, lowa,doesn't hesitate to address the issues and steps to quitting.
cessation ex perts that developed
the guidelines: Doctors are not
trained in strategies to help patients
quit ·smoking, and they frequentl y
are not paid to provide these services.
The g'uidelines are an auemplto
change doctors ' mind-set "Just as
we would not ignore someone who
came in with high blood pressure or
uncontrolled diabetes, we need to
view smoking as a condition that
demands clinical intervention ,"
Fiore said .
Just look at the damage done by
tobacco.

Smoking is responsible for 30
percent of all cancers (including 90
percent of lung cancer); 30 percent
of heart auacks and strokes ; and
virtually all the emphysema and
chronic bronchitis in America ,
Fiore said .
Overall , one of five deaths in
America (420,000 a year) is directly caused by cigarettes. In addition,
medi cal costs for smokers total $50
billion annually, with an additional
$47 billion for such indirect
eKpenses as time lost from work
and disability.
Despite the grim statistics, 46

million adults - about 25 percent
of the population - smoke.
Primary care clinicians have a
golden opportunity to make a difference, Fiore said. Each year, at
least 70 percent of smokers see a
physician and more than 50 percent
visit a dentist, he said.
Seizing that opportunity, however, takes persistence, ingenuity and
a willingness to confront patients
about something they may want to
avoid, Lee said.
He has the " us-vs. -lhem"

14TH BIRTHDAY
Priscilla Lilley, daughter of Lisa
· Lilley, Pomeroy, recently celebrated
her 14th birthday with a party held at
her mother's home.

IU1CH IUKING
IS IIADY
NOW/II

• By MELINDA VOSS
whether smoking cessation aids and programs work.
The Des Moines Register
Dr. Ray Webster, Principal Mutual's medical direc tor for group coverThe burden of inOuencing smokers to quit shouldn 't rest solely with age , said success rates for smoking cessation programs average only about
~ ac t ors . says the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research.
25 percent
Health care adm ini strators, insurers and purchasers of group insurance
However, in developing the guidelines; the Agency for Heahh Care
should craft policies, provide resources and di splay leadership in smoking Policy reviewed more than 3,000 scientific articles dealing with nicotine
; eessat:on effort s. according to the agency. · ....;_ _ _ _..;.,_ _ _..;.,_ _..;.,_____ addiction and tobacco dependence .
' Yet, few do. One survey found only ll
Success rates for smoking cessation
The panel found using the nicotine patch or
percent of heal th plans pay for the treat- programs average only about 25 percent. gum significantly improves the chances of quitting
mcnt of n:cotinc addiction. the agency
if it is combined with a clinician's encouragement
· . says.
and practical advice on how to cope with behaviors
· Dr. Edward Lichtenstein, a research scientist at the Oregon Research that trigger the urge to smoke.
Though Principal Mutual , which provides group health ·insurance to 3.5
_Institu te and nati onal smoking cessation eKpert. said the whole medical
--system needs to generate a plan and commitment to assist smoker&gt;.
million Americans. pays for Nicorette gum and nicotine patches if pre·
Ti) improve that situation , the Centers for Disease Control and Preven- sc ribed by a doctor, the company doesn't reimburse policyholders for
tinn has set universal insurance reimbursement for the treatment of nico- smoking cessation programs, Webster said.
tine addictiun as a national public health goaL
Bu t it is nmlike ly to be met soon. if reactions of two large Iowa insurBlue Cross-Blue Shield oflowa, which insures about l million Iowans.
:cr's arc any indication. Officials of Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Iowa and has an even stricter policy. h does not pay for nicotine patches, Nicoretlc
Pronupa l Mutua l Li fe Insurance, a fee -for-service insurer. questioned gum or smoking cessation programs for individual policyholders.

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
ProcaiiCo.
(602) 954-7420

Gifts and cards were prese nted to
her, along with a cake adorned with
14 roses.
Attending were her sisters, Jessica and Valerie Lilley, her brother
Ben H. Carroll, Kathy Rockhard.
Wayne Capehart, Jaye Harrison .
Ron Capehart, Savanna Capehart.
Oretha Snider, Michelle Snider.
Cheryl , Dave, Dana and Gabe Cop·
Icy.

CARD SHOWER
A card shower is being held for
Irene Miller Hayman, formerly of
Meigs County, for her 90th birthday
Aug. 4. Cards may be sent to 5800
Forest Hills Blvd., Columbus, Ohio
43231.

3.99 per min.

must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (61 9) 645-8434

SATURDAY
ALBANY -- Annual reunion ,
Samuel and Lill y Smith families. Saturday. 12 noon , Lake Snowden.
Albany.

lun~· henn a l the Seni or Citi zens Ccn- SUNDAY

" '- Rc,crvations 10 he made by 9 a.m,
'l lluN b y al 9~ 2 ~ 2 161.
' I' UI'PERS PLA INS -- The TupPlaon ' VFW Ladies Auxiliary,
Thv " Ja y, 7 30 p.m at the hall.

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Annual
Parker reunion, 12:30 dinner, Tuppers
Plains Elementary School Sunday.

CARPENTER -- Gospel Sing,
Carpenter Baptist Church, State
Route 143, Sunday, 2 p.m. Lisa lordan of WXIC Radio, Waverly, to
sing.

Mobl

...

614-992-2772

-Replacem•t Wlntlows
..llild Gnges
•Stn Doors &amp;wlatlows

The district will be moving 'a ll the
"old stuff'' into the new building.
The building will have new furniture and
equipment. Money saved from maintenance

Public Notice

of old buildings will be used to buy textbooks

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Right to Life Chapter, Monday, 7:30
p.m . at the Meigs County Public
Library.

PUBUCNOnCE

. NOnce •• h1raby g1v1n
.thll on S1turd1y, Au gull 3,
'11M,II10:00 a.m., 1 public
:111t will be htld 11211 Wttl
, second Str1at, Pom1roy,
· Ohio to 1tll for c1ah thl
: loll~ng collllaral:

Please Vote "YES" For the
Southern Local Bond Issue

111t3 CHIEVROLET LUMINA

Poid fur hy the
Local Building ConUllittcc
Kim Phillips. Trc usurcr

:euRo
·201WN14T5P1210003

s~,)uthcrn

992-3051

I

1·900-868-41 00 '

Foster Parents Needed in
Kentucky and Ohio!!! YDCAwill
pay up to $40.00 per day for
keeping a child in your home.
If you are
interested in
opening your
home to a child,
please call
1-800-331 -9989.

Adult &amp; toddler clothel, toys,
Hot Wh181&amp;, 4-wtlealer &amp;

1

1 -I

,t ••: ( J . Ji rl+
r I' I
1:

•'

_,' (,,l()

ryr

r

Portable

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

BtllldstwMI

Dirt• Send

614-742-2193
TFN

985-4422
Cheeter, Ohio

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

HARTWELL
HOUSE

Body work, car truck 6

Open Monday
nights until

truck palntlnl!, minor
mechanical repair.
Tune-up1,
on Change, Wu,
Buffing
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Alk for Kip

rn-

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Downepouta
Gutter eleanlng
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES •
949-2188

Gifts • Folkart
• Antiques
992-7696

7/11'i6 1 mo .

30_%·40%.OFF

,

le111odellng
· &amp; looflng
Siding
&amp; Some
I
Block Work ·
FrH EetlmatH

992-2768
992-3274

from

HMC

Famtliea: 812nd, -3rd. 9· ? 5
Miles Down Route 1 Past Willts .
BIDy SIUII, Boya, Girls, Like New
3

Clolhas, Good Condibonl

Family: 9·5 Fr1day Only, August
2nd. Clolhes, Old Rooordo, Timino
Uta, Bak1ng Stove, And lota Of
SruHI g14 Fourth Avenue.
333 Ne'ojhborhood Road, Frl, Sol,
9·-4. School Clothes, Toya, Etc .
looms Under $1.00 Rain /Shine!
4 Family: Rain Or Snine lhun ·
saotroaus Rood Off 218.
81111 -3rd . 1 112 Miles Out 216
Right. Washer /Dryer , Electric
Ranga, Chest Fra&amp;l&amp;f', Jeans.
All Yard Sales Mull Be Pa1d In
Ad~Jance . DEADLINE : 2:00p.m.
the day betore the ad is to run..,
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edilion · 10:00 a.m. Sat·
umay.
August 111 ·3rd. 2 112 Miles Out
218, I 0-4, Clolhes, Crah S..pplies,
Houtehold Items, Knlck·Kna.cks.
3

Ohio.

Carport sale . rain or ahtna , 388
Salom St. Ruoland, Augull 1, 2, 3,
8-5, fu rniture, tools, guns , an tiques, collectibles, nne.
Church yard sale, Aug. 2, 3, 8 111
?, at 356 70 St . At ?. (appro• . 1
mile S. ol Chester, across from
underground house . Items 10 nu·
merous to mention, also baked
goods. Beller come early for all
the good bargaina, rain cancels.
five family· friday, Saturday, Au·
gust 2·3. Allen Street across from
Chester lire house, last tra.iler on
the right.
Friday and Sa turday, Waldntg
reaidanco, SR 124, loll ol good
buys. Rain cancels, 9:00am ·
4:30pm.
'
Friday, August 2, 11 1 Pearl
Street, Middlepon GlJOI , tools,
ta,'S. mtsc.

Garage sale , Aug . 1·2. 41000
laurel Clill Rd. iEblinsJ. Gravely
tractor, bicycles, beds. chait, am.
plifier, lots of m1st, Ra1n or shine,
9am-4pm.
Garage sale, Aug . 2·3, 1 10 · Fr~nt
A.lJQUSI 1st. 2nd, 3rd. 10·5, Bull St. Mason, Cub Cadet mower and
Run, Vinton, Clothing All S1zes, lot more Items.
Windows, Sinks, Lots Mist.
------:-:--~
Garage sale, Friday &amp; Saturday,
August tst. 2nd, 9· ? 653 Filth A~Q . 2·3, 9-4, corner of Sixth &amp;
Avenue·
~a in Middleport.
August l SI, 2nd. 9·? Bes1de Ar · Gara~e sale- August 1·2. 1urn 11
nolds FooCI Mart , Crown C1ty, ~emory Gardens . 112 mile Jo tn ·
Baby Clolhes, Baby llems, Mosc
tersect1on, turn tell, lira! house.
.812nd, 3rd, 7-5. Sprong Valk&gt;y Sub. Follow s1gns,rdln or shine.
Oak Drive. VHS Camera. Garden
sale· August 2nCI,, CP I·
Tiller. Fiah lank. lnfan! Boy Garage
lege
AvenlJe,
A!JIIand, Adeline
Clothes, Misc.
Snowden 1eS1dence.
August 2nd, 3rd, 9·5, l28 7 Pleas- Huge 2 tamtly yard sale, Thurt·
ani Valley Road, Household
Items. Miscellaneous.
day, Fnday, 9·?, 1 112 miles no~th
ol Ches ter on Sumn•r Rd, 1.11
August 3rd, 8·3, 608 Fifth Ave· house, plus size clothing, chlkt...n
nue, Bike, Cabinets, Wardrobe, clothing &amp; exercise equipment. ·
Sofa, Clothing, Curtains, House·
sale· lhuraday, Friday,
hold, Misc .
Saturday, long Bottom, Oh, SR
Bidwell United Methodisl Church, 124. Carroll's Landing . Uany
Church Street, August 2nd, 3rd, misc. lten'tl, furniture, doors, wind·
Time: 9·5. Rain !Shine.
ows, tools, gamea, fishing poles,
tile jackets, boat anchor, motorcy·
Big Yard Sale: Rain Or Sine, 337 cles, computen (3), boa I, .61.4·
Roush lane, Cheshire, 9·5, Thurs 985-34-42.
&amp; Fn
la(ge three family yard sale. Eve·
Friday, 1112nd, 8 To •. 453 Hodge- ryohing included but the kitchen
wood Drive. Something For Eve- sink. Friday &amp; Saturday, AuglJst
ryonel
2nd &amp; 3rd, 9am to Spm, n•u 10
the Ohio Valley Chrillian Astem·
Garage Sele: 811st Thru 3rd. One bly Camp, County Road 20, Dlr·
El~lh Milo 011 Rt 180, 314 Wrilo win, 011.
Road, 9-5,
Large yard sale, f~rnl1ure from:3
Garage Sale: Saturday And Sun· one bedroom apartmen!l, rldi"G
day 8·5 Center Street Olf Lake mower, appliances. tHier, two•3
Drive In A1o Grancle.
bedroom trailers. camper, bDxla
(l! stlJII S1 each, Ohio River t'afllp
Jackson Ptke, 91 Frale~ Drtve Grounds, Racine.
Beside Park lane. Augusl 1st · l - -- - - - - - - 3rd.
Moving sale· .Augual 1·• •. Qam·
6pm. 107 Pleasant Ridge. 01•·
Jay Drive. AuQUI!Ist, 2nd, 3rd.
992·4192. Something tor .wary·
JlJII Moved In 2 Miles Out lillie one- model trains, file cabinet. fur·
Kyn8f August 2nd, 3fd.
nllure, toys and much, ..mu~h
•

005

more.

•

'"

Personals

Genlleman See)ling Companion-

:1.

PAINTING

992-2735

814-992-4025

160

-

Alr Condldonlng
Fumac••
Rdrlgeraton '
We have the new FR12
Low Coat Replacement
tor Automotive R12.

FAC1'01Y

M11es On

Big yard sale, 325 Page St. l.lldAug. I -3.
Big yard sale, Thursday, Frid1y,
baby llema, houaehold S~OO~I.
boys clothes, adult clothes, t••·
sonallty priced, 9:00·4:00,.Dlddlt
Residence, Bashan Ad, Raoine,
d!Gj)Or1,

Howard h'avatin

7:00p.m.

Pick-up dllcarded,
appl•ncaa,blftarlea,l
many rnttsls.

Friday,

·

....

Heat Pump

Gutters

J 112

!Gin/ aNne.

...

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION

Howard L. Wrlt-1

o.sneo. eo-. sao 3rd, 8-3.

Augull 2, Chiller behind ~um·
11181fltlda Rtstaurant Rldl~ 10y1,
clolhu. boy's 8-12, glrl'a '4·8.

LiVE PSYHICS

Llrneetone • Gravel
'

Cleen Clothes, Children, Adults,
Fri. Sot
2596 Slole Roul8 141, Desk. )1/a·
ttrbed , Wood Dining Room Table
Chaifl, Exerciae Bench, Golf
Clubs, Manual Treadmill, Quilts,

Sale

Large Yard Sale : 960 Scottsdale Mull! lamtly garage sale· Auguit
Road, Fri, Sat, Sun, Tools, House-- 2.3. 40720 lauret Clitl Rd., !lamar·
hold Items. Somethtng for Every· oy. Precious Momenla, kid's
ahip From Nice Female For Talks. one!
Cu.- hlldlng • lltmodtllng
ckHhin9, toys, mite.
•
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Re •New Home•
plies To: CLA 309 Clo Golllpolls Moving Sale: 73 Spruce Street, Neighborhood e•tr•Y-aanzal Fr) .
•AdditionI
Daily Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Tl1ura, Fri. Sat. 9-? Furniture. day, SaiUrday, 8·5. High 91rftl,
Gallipo~, OH 45831.
Clotti ng, Misc. Etc.
Pomeroy, 8 !a mille a, C~lkben's
•New Garag11
Moving
Sale:
813!98, 10·4 Trailer clolhtng, toys. Parking llmltad.
·
•RemodallnO
' 30 Announcements
Park, Centena.ry, Rain Cancol
Three family, Au gull 2·3, 1388
•Siding
lose weight now, ask me how. Moving Sale: Thursday, Fr1day, College Rd., Syracuse. Homt lri·
•Roofing
304·578-2728.
Furniture, Washer, Dryers, Relrig· terior, longenberger, clothes,
•Painting
eratcJr,
Stove, Clothes, Mi sc. 621 Carharts, knick·knacks.
FREE EIITIMATES
40
Giveaway
Third Avenue, 9·7
Thursday &amp; Friday, FfatWooda
(81 4) 112-6535
1 112 Year Old Male Border Col- R10 Grande next to Mint Mart 3 Rd., Greg Bailey· teen clolhlng,
814 112-2753
lie, Full-Bioode&lt;( 614-256-6309.
Family, Clothes, HOlJSeware and roys , desk, trunk, other mile.
I :':-'e_ms~._w-:at_ch_to_r~sog,;_n_s.:--:----:1 Female Cal &amp; &lt;4 Orange T1ger More Fri and Sat Aug 2·3, g.s
Kirtens, 61,.-446-9278.
3d
9
3
•u
cr
h
Two lamlly porch sale. Augutt 1·
5
aturday 81 ' ' • · ,.. erchan·
ot as 3, 1128 East Main S!reet, Pdmtr·
1-Beagle dog, 1 year old, 1-Tem· .25t Each, lots Mise M
disef Chrlsl!an ConstruCiion, oy, Ohio.
Bf', 1 112 year o~. SPCJd with cl'1ildren, to good home only. 2 112 1403Easrern Avenue.
'fllrd sale, Aug. 2, behind fire ataWalt to Help
monill old Boxer pupoy. 304-675· SalUfday, Sunday 1·4. Furnilure, lion inMuon, WV, if rain Aug.3.
4850.
Youlll
Sko Equipmen: . Books. Elec:ron P1. Pleasant
2-8/mo old Himalayan cats . To 1cs. Wallpaper. 631 Second. Gal Let them tell you
&amp; Vlcinhy
good homes, good w/ children . lop&lt;jos
304-675-&lt;850,
about the future!ll
Second Avenue. A~rou From Garage Sale-Aug 2 &amp; ~. 0·4, 303-Angora 4 Month Old K1t1 ens, To Topes Furniture, Tues. Wed , 7th Sl. New Haven, kids clothn,
1-900-868-4100
Good Homea Only, 1 Black Cat Thurs. Prom Dresses, VCflt, Com· turtains, bike and many other
Ext. 2469
items.
Very Pretty, Neutered, 1 Year Old, 1cs, Clothing Morel
81H4e-9685..
$3.911 per min.
Tool Bakes, Garage Ooo,r, Furn1· Garage Sale·ExerCISD bike. 10
Muat be 18 yra.
Black lab, 1 112 ~rs old. 1 - P~re ture, Books, D1shes, little Tike speed bike· storm door ·walnut
bred Semolina dog, 1 112 years Toys, Ca r Sear. Boy s Girls lable. se111s 8·lots more. leWt s
Serv-U (818~5-8434
old, 3-Mixed bfed pupptOS, ready Clotl"1es, Thurs. Fr1, 641 Th ird Lane, Sandy Haighls. Fri·Sal
Avenuo, 9·?
10 go, 304-882-3210.
Gigantic lir1t lime yard salo, loll
Five small healthy puppies, four Toys, Atari Tapea, Video Plus I ol clothes, some apptiences, mis·
male and one lemale, black, tan Chi l drt~ n • Clolhea, Whai·Noll, cellaneous. Approx 12 112 milts
and wllilo, 614·992·5083.
1837 Chalham. Friday, Sal.lrday.
South on AI 35 !rom McDonald's
at Glenna Williamson's. Aug.'1·2·
TruckingFour gray and while kitten s to
Pomeroy,
3, D-6 Rain Concels.
g-y.814-992-8879.
.Limestone
Middleport
Moving Sale: Augu11 111. 2nd ,
Free kittens &amp; cats, 61 4· H2·
· Bulldo7.lng and
&amp;
VIcinity
Acroso F•om Ctewlords Sooro.
1010,
208 Smith Slreet At Henderson
Backhoe
112 Mile Out St Rt. 124 , Towards Home lntet'ior, 011hes, l!nen Ere
Free Pupp111 To Good Home, 4 Ruiland,
Augull
2nd.
3rd.
Exira Nice Clolhes, Avon Furm·
Services
Weeki Old, Ready To Gol 614·
-446·4765, 814·A48·5180 Afte-r 5 .
2 family, Thuradoy, Friday, 9·4, lure, 9·5.
House Sites and
taN women's clothes, ~arn, Tan family yard aale·2429 L1ntoln
Free to a good home, aHectionate limps.
Utilities
toll mac., B-&lt;2 I'll~. Grimm
Ave. Fri·Sat. Aug 2 &amp; 3, e till 1 tn
female houae cat, black 4 white
back yard . Not respomuble lot
pretty
ma~i ng, 614-949·2-451 .
253
S.
Filth
Street,
Middleport·
All Kinds of Eorlh Work
August
1·3, baby crib, clothes, acc~ents .
Friendly Klneno. 810 -&lt;48·3897.
lurnloure, books and 11'iiC. !toms.
Yard Sale Friday Aug 2. !rom 8·?
992·3838
Hall Himalayan kmena, 8 weeks All Mutt Go I Sat., Augual 3rd Mostly home mlerior, houseflold
old, 10 good home, 814-742-1016. Only. Moving Sale! Curtains, items.3217 Jackson Ave.
Houu~ld Gooda, Cloillos, Sew· 80
largo doo. part St. Betnard, part ing
Public Sale
Mac hine, lOll or Fabrics,
tllack lab. 304-576·2778.
and Auction
Cralls, Vacuum Cleaner, Homt
~INDA'S
Stove, refrigerator and couch. lnoerlor, Boby Items &amp; Ctoohes, ~~-:-~--::-::::-::=~
Much llorel Letart Falla s 112 Mt. Alto Aucuon Wtll be clos"' br
810·992-78-&lt;1.
Milt• South Of Racine 0"1 SA 338 2 weekends dur~ng Jackso·n &amp;
To Good Home: 1 Year Old Fe· {SR 1241 D•tour) Watch For Mason Counry Fa1r. En,oy la1ra wJ
INTIIIOI·ImiiOI
children. aee you Aug~ II 18th &amp;
male English Sener, Good Hunlef, Signa. •9585 SR 338.
FREE ESTIMATES
171h.
Bu t Needs Tratned e14·4-41 ·
All Yard Still Must Be Paid In
1687.
T11l1 tile pel1 Ml of
Advonc•. Deodllnt: 1:OOpm tho 90 Wanted to Buy
pel1tl.. Let •• llo It Two kifler!aiO gNeaway, 6 1•·i49 · day bttlore lhe od il 10 run. Sun- ---=~~-:-:-:-:':--::::­
day &amp; Monday edilion· I :OOpm Absoluta Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil ·
3055.
F
ver And Gold Coms, ProoiHtl,
r~.
01amonds. Anti Que Jewelry, Gold
60 Lost and Found
YEIY IUSOIIAIU
Aug. 1·3, large moving sale, furni. Rings. Old Glassware. Sterling.
DYE UfiUICU
Found: Golden Garman Shophord ture, clOthing, household 1tems. Etc . .\tquis1110ns Jewelry · U.T:S.
Com S1"1op, 1 S1 Second AV~n\.11,
Vtclnity : Fairview Subdtvlsion. Tag 189 Seem SL, Middleport.
614-915-4110
GaiUpoli' 0 1H46·2842.
Numbec
5878.
Rod.
Banory
I'Vw·
41)1 mo.
trod Obodltnca COHor, 814-446· August 1, 2,· 3, 8:00·4:00, Rustic
Hilla, S~racuu, Elhan Allen sola, large Amounts SO's, 80'1 45
lttrto console, game boy, Nin· RPI.l Racordo, Alter OP.I.I. 513·
Foul]ll: Pair 01 Subacrlption Sun· ltndo oe-. bodmng. owin head· 675-2930, 4339 Joap•r Rood,
glfiut AI lnlet'ltCiion Of 325 I boerd. bed frame, tetf'1 &amp; oltltr Jame!tCM'fl, OH A5335.
588, Rio Granc». 814·245-5822.
clothing, rowing machine, srain·
ltsa sinks, much mort , 61•·992· Clun lat• Mod•l Cars Or
70
Trucks, 1~0 Models Or Newer
Yard Sale
71112.
Smith Buic" Pontiac, 1800 ~~~~
Augult 1·2, Duaky SlrHI, Syf11· em AMnut, Gollipolio.
Gallipolis
cu11. SChool clothes, books, etc.
Somtlhlng for everyone. 9am· J I 0'1 Auto Peril. Buylnq Ill·
&amp; VIcinity
3pm,
voge whlclu Selling portL 304773-!i033. •
1e:Jg Cholham SUM ~ Thuro, Frl,
Sat, Old Rocker, Microwavea, G1r1gt uta· Augul! 1·2, one l11ge TrMJPOI!nt In good CO:n&lt;J!Dnk. Ollhoa, What Noll, CIO!l&gt; mtll below loliddltpor~ Soory·a Run tlon l14·2fe.e800
Ext. 7625
ingl, Ell:.
Rd , atcond houoe on the right.
roln or lhino, 10fJ11·3pnt ,
$3.11!1 per min.
Non -Wor~tnv Wosh•ro.~. Drroro,
2 F1mlly Yard S1l1: Cloth.. ,
Stovta, Relrlgtratora. t-ruzera,
Mul1 ~ 18 yra.
Dlllhto, 9conMr And Iliac homo. Garage ult· Fr1d1'1' 812 &amp; Sarur- Air
Condl tlo.~ora, Color T.V/o,
Sol I Sun o\ugUII 3rd, I 411, 1.3 doy 1'3, 112 mte kom Ftv. Poinll VCR'I,
Serv-U (1118)-e4511434
AIIO Junk Core. 114-~.
M~n 1'111 Hoopi!OI On RouiOI 110 on SR 7, watch tor ligna. Rain or
1238.
To 1114- Rold.
oNpt.

J, I' -, .

()
(: , )I! ; 'I

SMITH'S ·
CONSTRUCTION

TRUCKING

71121'1 mo. pel.

I

ANNOUNCEMENTS

I

J\r 1\' r I ' I \ ; I
f) I II ,-; 'I~ : , .

•••

H&amp;H
AUGUST 2-3
9-?
VISTA in Racine

f\... rl•' ( :,I

SAWMill

FREE

YARD SALE '

(No Sunday Calls)

l '. :y ;\: ,: ,,
I! 1' .: J' . !' :•

I ' r :- :

•

MEN'S ITEMS

614·992·7643

I ~ .1 •'.'

R.L. HOLLON

8am-8pm

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

All Ohio

It

"'WIT_FN

LARGE SELECTION

~ew

$3.99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs
Serv-U (619) 645-8434
1141f16 1 mo. pd.

32t24 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middlepon. Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

~·

.ISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

Ext. 5489

985'14473

HELP £BANGE A
£HIIJD'S LIFE

~

1 ON 1

FREE ESTIMATES

--

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual walland Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D - perl. . solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex p:pe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. PYC. pipe
I l/2"thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4"' &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's lhru 1,000' roll'•)
3/4" U.L approved Conduit
8" Gravelcss Leach pipe
Gas pipe l"thru 2" - Fittin~s- Regulators- R:scrs
Full assonmcnt of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fitting• &amp; Water littings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water storatc tanks.

PSYCHICS

•

Thl F1rm1r1 B1nk 1nd·
Slvlng1
Compuy,
Pomeroy, Ohio, raa1rvt1
lhl right to bid at thl• ul1,
1nd to wlthdr1w th1 1bovo
coll•t•ral prior to ••lt.
Furlh1r, Th1 F1rm1ra B1nk
1nd S1vlnga Comp1ny
raa•rv•• th1 right to rtllct
•nv or all blda aubmlttld. ·
Furlh1r, tht 1bovt
coll1ttr1l will bt aold In lht
condition II 11 In, wllh no
axpr111 or tmplltd
w1rrantl.. glvtn.
For lurthlr Jnlorm1tlon,
conllct Da1lrae It 1182-2138.
(7) 31: (I) t, 2; 3TC

St. Rt. 7

LIVE!

-Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop 6 Compare

·" '

I &amp; WPWnCS AIID SUPPlY

7131/96 1 mo. Dd.

•New Homes

11111 mo.

- -Public
--Notice

-

MltDUPOif

'

Yard

--------

Estimates

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

10:00 til?
Clothes a:
What-nots

367..()266 - 1-800-950..3359

Ext. 5843

614-992-3470

45633 Sl Rt. 124
Racine, Oh. 45n1

Owner: Ronnie Jones

1-900-446-2626

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

HI fllere,

Lordy, Lordy
Look Who:. 40!
Could Thu Be
Chm Bailey?

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • Insured

LIVE II

WICKS
HAULING

and Manufactured Housing

with ftJe plllfll a aMV#ce to back It up
Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; West VIrginia
Toll Free 1-800-872-5967
446-9416

Fine Jewelry
•••usmn

•EliCiriCII &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
P1tnll119
Also Concrete Work.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
112-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1/VI!n

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

ALL IN S,.OCK
CLOCKS
.9LCQf{liSI~I09{$

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Happy Ad

JONES' TREE SERVICE

YOUNG'S
GUYS!II
CARPENTER SERVIa • Girls are waiting to
·Room Additions
•New Oareget .
talk to you

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

BENNETTS

MONDAY
CARPENTER -- Columbia Board
of Trustees, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
fire station .

orr

imnrno..:xJ.

IWV010212

Pt.ltlul' k J 1nner and silent auction.

I

lkttse4 I.-e4 loHH

F&amp;J Curio Barn
Is lack!

Fact:

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

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

Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps,
FumtiCetl. All equipment In stock
tor lmmedlllle Installation.
Free Eetlmates

1'""

In memory and honor of
renown ed rcgoonal art ist. the late
Mts . Eleanor Dailey Davis of Oak
f{ill ( 19 19 - 1988). a collection of
inorc than 70 of her paintings will be
exhibited :It The Bob Evans Fam1.
The hi .lloric homestead . built in
-1'820, sets the scene for this show·
-i:~i;e of paintings. Aug. 16 through
Sept 9.
Mrs. Davis traveled throughout
ih~ eastern United States to gain
inspiration for her paintings, and
became well known at The Bob
Evans Farm Festival where she
.Xhibited her work from 1972 to
1,~ . Paintings for this exhib!t were
obtained from pnvate C()llecuons m
central and southern Ohio. ,
.
: :-Admission to ·the Eleanor Dav1s
Art Exhibit, open·rrom 10 a.m. to 4 .
p:·m. daily, is $1 per person:

EVEN POLICE
USE
PSYCHICS!!

(Lime StonaLowRitel)

'

Davis' work
to go on display

UNEXPLAINED
POWER!!
Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to
know??
1-900-255-0500
Ext. 5266

..0011

August 6th!!!
CHESHIRE -- Taylor reunion,
Poplar Ridge Fellow ship Hall,
Cheshire, noon Sunday.

• (814) SMe-3013 Phone
(814) IMI-=1018 FAX
814 594-2008 NIGHT

8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

ext. 6495

Sunday, August 4th
Pomeroy Fire Station
Serving begins at 11 am

-----~Community calendar----FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Town~hip
Trustees. 7:30 p.m. Friday al the
township building.

IIJDUUUC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

10% off all qual~ing bids

1-900-868-41 00

Limited Time Offer
Call today with
your window sizes
for a free quote!

R1clne, Ohio 45n1

1·800·470·2559

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

•Insulated

28563 BASHAN RD.

Remodeling
Room additions
Roofing
Garage 's, Deck's,
Painting, Siding

711til mo.

and supplies.

The Community Calendar is
tiublished as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
•11ccting and special events. The
_ralcndar i' not designed to promote
' ales or fund raisers of any type.
-ltt•ms arc printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
:,; ticcific number of days.
TJI.URSDAY
POMEROY -- PERSfPERl noon

$20.00/HR.

Tammera
Construction Inc.

1-90().945-4400
Ext. 3124

• Tilt-in
• Double Hung

WELDING &amp;FAIRICITI.ON

We will work wfft&gt;ln your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX n3-511111
Street
WV

EASY

Replacement
Windows

CHEAPER RATES

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Small"

Chicken &amp; Rib
Bar-B-flue

Continued on page 12

14HS12

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine ShOp
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Weldiog
• AlumlnumtStalnless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumnure, Areplace
nems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulll!

- ;Society scrapbookBIG TREE q&gt;NTEST
The deadline for submitting
entries in the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District's first
Big Tree Contest , is quickly
approaching.
The last day entries will be
accepted at the Meigs SWCD offices
is August 30. This year's tree is the
Tulip Poplar (yellow poplar) and
must be located in Meigs County.
Rules and nomination forms can
be picked up at the Meigs SWCD
offices, 33101 Hiland Road,
Pomeroy. This contest is ope n to
anyone . For more information contact Janis Carnahan at the SWCD
offices, 992-6647.

Yard Sale

2 Family : Vinton Acro11 Baptist
Church, Antiques, Bicycles, FUr·
nilurt, Houlthold Items, Nice

Cindy Gates, and Derrick Gates; Bill
and Leota Harden Kendall; Garrett,
Kathy, Christopher, Be~. and Sarah
Jones, all of Michigan;
Dorothy Harden Yates; Don and ·
Angie Harden ; DJ., Stacey, and
Wesley Harden, all of Oak HilL
Tami Harden Nelson and son Heath
of Pomeroy; Teresa Harden
Williams, Holley, Hannah, and Hailey, all of Middleport ; Jim and
Pamela Harden Foreman, Amanda
and Erin, all of Portland;
Mary Harden Lisle, John Lisle,
Todd Lisle and Christy Collins,
Scott Lisle. Tracy Pierce and son
Taylor. Rose Ann Jenkins, Kimberly
Jenkins and Toni Sellers. all of Syracuse.
.
The 20th annual Harden reunmn
· will be held at the same location on
· the last Saturday in June, 1997. Ka~
; Siblani will serve as reunion secre' tary for 1997.

'"' ....

The Dally Sentinel ~ Page 9_

-Family reunion-

•Few in health care industry leading fight against smoking

II

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~·

,.,,...

IALI

Mini Blinds,
Verticals,
Pleated Shades
and much morel

Let a Psychic
Answer your
Questions!

J•ly 16, 1H6 to

?????? ·

--

1-900-868-4900

Dr•s By Deslp
48 Statt Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614 4411 411111
800-441-o3IKI
.\

I

�..

... 1

~

Thursday, August 1, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, O.hio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
PHILLIP
ALDER
S1x rooms new kitchen/ bath

Pearl S1roe\ IAGdlepor\ $29 000, 2 Bedroom, located 3 rm!es !rom
D14·992·3749, Lloyd Grimm, no New Haven, country setung
Sunday caHs
$260/mo &amp; deposu 30.- 773
5881
Three bedroom home 1n country
'Ml1tes H1l Rd , RuUand one batn

3 Bedrooms, I 112 BaCha 2 Bed
rooms , 1 Bath, In Porter Area
Reference &amp; Deposit Requ~red
No Peta, You Pay All Ut11it111,
6 14-:Je&amp;.G 1ez.

ll&gt;giOUnd pool 61Hg2.5()67

320

180

Wented To

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12x85 Mobile Home On 1 Acre
l""el Lo~ Small Out Bullcllng. A
24 Ft Above Ground Pool Wilh
Fencod In Dock, Very Nice,
$27,000, " ' - 614-311N1120

Do

1411:10 NHda few IIPiin, worth

S6.400 uklng $3,400 linn, -ua
onquorea ony 304·895-3357

Wil e.iy C!Wdrens Clol!\11\Q ~T
OnoPriooFor Al, 614 ·~ 036&lt;
8abt'Si tllng , expenenced my
Mine 1'1 NN Haven M F, Sam to
&amp;pm 30&lt;-682 3270 or 304 882-

EMPL OYMENT
SERVICES

3731
C h1l d Care Prov1der Opening
Soon In local Area 24 Hours A

He_, wanted

110

DeJ 7 Days A Week, Competl;ve
E 1penenced W1ll Baby au My
Home 614·441.0603

(7D8)908 2350Eil 3870

ca ll

~

304-675 1957

VON I All ,lt,reu I ShLrley
Spear!, 304 675-1429

Needed Ortver In stale or out of
state , your car or m1ne call for
more tntormaoon 304-675-7818

Abl e Avon Representatives
needed Earn money lor Chrtstmas bills at home/at work 1 800992 6356 or 304 882 2U5 tnd

ProfeSSIOnal Tree Servtce Stump
Removal, Frat Esttmates! ln auran e Btdwell, Oh1o 614-388-

Rep

9648, 14-367 7010

Ambros1a Mathme Inc looktng
lor mach1n1s1 5yrs expenence
Call 30.- 875 1722 Monday Fr1
day 130 300

Sun

alley

Nursery

School

Childc re M·F 8am-5 30pm Agea
2-K, Young School Age During
Summer 3 Day1 per Week Uim-

Bat&gt;y •ner fl&lt;le(led 10 get child off mum61+446-3857
s... "'' oo l bus &amp; watch unttl 5 30 Will Clean Out Garagea &amp; Base·
304 675-4204 al1er 5 30
ments Reasonable Rates Free In
BabysLtter Needed In My Home Some Cases, W• ll Hau l O!d Ap
Non Smoker Wou!d Be Ava•lable pltances Wtl! Pay For Some, 614
To Work Any Hours For More In 446-ll364
klrmauon Call 614 44t 0602 Mter
6 PIA

W1 ll do babysitting m my home,
cheap rates , any sh1ft, day o r

nghL 81 4·992·9975

Oel1very Ortver Part-T1me Ferrell
Gas Leader In The Propane Gas
lndus1ry Is Seek1ng Delivery
Onvers To Work Part T1me Fle.11
ble Schedule Pos1110ns In Ga!hpollS &amp; Pomeroy Area Excellent
Opportunity For Someone look
1ng For Additional Income Or

W11l Do Babyslttmg In My Home
Centef'Vlry Area, Expenence Daycare Prov1ded With CPR 614·
446-3047 Green School DistriCt

FINANCIAL

Seasonal Work fo Oual1fy Must 1 - - - - - - - - - - Have COl W1th Hazerdous Ma 1·
Business
um a l Endrosement A.pp!y Or
Send Resume To Ferrell Gas
OpponunHy
8255 State Route 588 Galhpolls

210

OH 45631

INOTICEI
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHING CD

DRIVERS WANTED Gasel L1nes recommends that you co bus •
011pa.nd1ng our !loot 1n our new flrm
10 Teaas M1leage pay, pa•d 1n
sura nee prol1t sharing 40'1 K To
quahfy mvs1 have COL license 1

ness wllh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma1i until you have 1nvest1gatecl
theoftenng

600 333-64 79
Businessperson or Builder, National Manufacturer seektng to
quality DEAlERS tn some select
open areas Steel buildtngs as

EJperienced Mechanlc:t
Work around 8 OOam 5:00pm
5 112 days per week. Paid vaca
uon med1C8IIOSUtDnce CaU for
tntervJew

low as $3 00 sq loot Call (303)
758·4135, EXT 1503

TRI.COUNTY FORO
481

SouthThlni,Middlapo~.

Busmessperson small 11ze Con
tractor Nauonal Manufactur&amp;r
awardmg loca! DEALERSHIP lor
steel D.u ldmgs 81g Prof1t Potential
on sales and construction (303)
759 3200 ext 2300 •

DH, 614·992·21 98
FJ.JII T1me Serv1ce Technlc1an
Prefer Expenenced Wi ll Tra1n
R•gh l Person Outboard &amp; Inboard
Boats 614 367 7802

HELP

WANTED

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
lmmod ate FURNACE Is The Moat EfiiCient

Openmg For Fu ll T1me Ma1n
tenance Pos111on Send Resume
fo CLA 391 c/o Gallipolis Da11y
Tr1bune 82S ThtrC Avenue Gall1
pol1s OH 4563t

And Lowest EmiSSIOns Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market
Central Bo1ler Is Currently Look
mg For A Oual1ty Dealer In This
lmmed•ate Area For lnlormauon
On Becoming A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1-800 248
4681 Or 1 216-782 257S

Ho Ho Hum 5 Months To ChriSt
mas 1 Now H1r1ng Demonstra1ors
Chust mas Around The
614 44&amp; 3769 Konme

World!~~---------·
11

HOME lVPIST PC users need
ed $45 000 mcome po1en11a1
Call HIOO 51 J.4343 EkL B-9368
Now ac cept tng app!1cat1ons for
th e j)OS1\Io n ol Demar Hygtemst
Please &amp;end resume to
09nta Hyg1en151 PO Box 380
Mason WV 25260
Now Tak 1n g App hca t on s For
Ha1rdresser Ap pl y AI Ha1r H gh
(.ghlS J. S3 S R 7 Nor th Gall1pohs

OAK ~ I LL COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER
JOB POSTING

Overbrook Cen1er has pan 11me
LPN RN and STNA pOSI I!O ns
available lot all shtln For more
mlorma11on please contae1 Jackre
Cremeans at 814 9Q2 64 72
Sryhll Wanted No Chntde Neces
sary apply at Fmest Ha u and
Tanmng Salon 1JgO Ea!!ltGln Ave

Gallipolll, Ohio 45831 446 8922
SUPJ10r1 Slatl
Part t1m1 hou~ available to sup
porr people wuh dlslblflbea hv1ng
Jn the Weigl Co ar81 If Interested ull lndtpeltdtnl Opportun1

liN II 513·680-2n3 or 513·771 ·
1150 to JChedu" lltllf"'l8f'VI9W

l'tiERAPISTS AND l'tiEAAPY
ASSISTANTS HEEDED
Phyalcal Thoraplat, Oc&lt;upa110nal
Tneraplal and PT and 0 T aa·
atatanta ntedec1 to dlaonosa and
provi de direct atrvlctl for the

IAtlgl County Board of IAenlal
Rllardii!On and Developmental
01satulities Must have appro

pnatt licenaa Appllcaqon dead·
,.,. Thu(lday, Augull1S. 1998
M~~~ga Cowny Baird of MRIOO.
1310CarlttDn S~IOI, P.O Bo1

307, Syracuee, OH 457711, 614992-688t

1125
1995 Skyline, 2 beclroom, 1 bath
wlgardan 1Ub. skylight bay Window, Island stove, loll of kitchen
cabinets, mc:e, rel 1nanc:e tor pay-

a" 304-895-3573

All rea! estate advertising 1n
thiS newspaper 1s subject to
the Federal Fa!r Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes 1t lllega!
to advenlse wany preference,
!tmltallon or dtscr1mlnallon
based on race , color religion
sex familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference,
hm1tatlon or d1scnmlnation •

28 72 T h ~rd Street Syracuse 2
tots 112 acre total 4 BR lA FR
DR ~ ~!chen ut1hty new bath ~
plumb,ng overlook 1ng Oh1o A•ver,
avalla D!e september 1St $45 000
614 9!}2 50013or614 092 7~96
3 Bedroom s 2 Batha Large
K1tchen 10Lnmg Garage New
Roof /Heat Pump C1ty Schools
Cl o se To Gat11pohs 614 .tt46
2472
4 Bearoom Ranch Red Br1ck
New!y Remodeled S tare Route
218 Mercervtt!e Oh10 6t4 446

0418

8t24 Tra1ler Good Condition,

4483108 Or614-441 ·5958
FANTASTIC
OPPORTUNITY
FOR INVESTORS 10 eporlmem

3bedroom , ba !h hvmg room WI
hltdwood lloora kitchen &amp; dinmg
area together, new roof garage,

on Ri 2 ~04 · 6 75 41 39 or 30&lt;·
87S. 73215 """ 8 30
One

11ory,

3 btclroom, basemenr.

Ole, gerage, I)Ood locat1on 1n the
lor1fH. _,., moYiriG OUI Of State,
81•·992 8302.

1 Bedroom "Pirtmant

Living

Room Eat·ln Kitchen, Large Back
Porch, Newly Decorated, 458
Second Avenue, S.CuriJy Depos.
It Relor8nce, 81"-"&amp;-2581

Mobile Home loans Purc:hase Or
Refmance For 8111 Conaoltdatlon

24 Hour Approval 1·800·U41731 Ellt 9706
New 14180 On ly make 2 pay.
menta &amp; move-tn, no payment after .11 years, free set up &amp; dell'llt')'.

1 Bedroom, Super Ntc:e, $266/
Mo, Plua Utihues, U•ually
Somllhtng Available! Sun Valley

Apor'"""'ll. 61 "'"'~~·2957

448·2200

2 lleclroom Aparlmen~ All U~l~os
Poid, S42M.Io, 2 Room &amp; Both All
U!illlles Pa1d S22511Ao , 513·574·
2539
2bdrm apts , total e lectric, appliances furnished, laundry I'Ciom
lacilltiaa, cloM to school 1n town
Apphcauona •va•lable at Vi llage

304-755-5885

Green ApiL f49 or call 814·9923711 EOH

New Bank Repo'a ony 3 lafl, fr8e
aet·"P &amp; dallvory 304-75S.71g1

Apartment's For Rent, Firat Ave-

New Bank Repoa Only 3 left StMI

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES ·AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 W•atwood Dnve
from $244 10 S315 Walk 10 shop

10 WBn'Bnry 304-755-7191

Older Schultz home, ownat' occupied 2 bedroom, e•c:ellent lor
young or retired couple, priced on

1nspecoon 304-1175-5394
Oldor Trailer Good Shape, Almoat
New Refngerator, And Furnace,

$2 300 Tra1ler ~as To Be Moved,
614 245-5003,814 441-ll754
Pnce Buster 1997 3bedroom
$825 down $159/mo Free de/iv.
erv &amp; setup O nly at Oakwood
~omes,

Nito WV 304-755-5885

330

Farms for Sale

100 Acre Farm For Sale, Tobac:·
co Base German Hollow Road

614 379 2522

340

Business and
Buildings

Commercial Bulld1ng On Route 7
Crown City 100 Ft x80 Ft 2
Baths W1th Heat Pump, 614·256·

1270
Crown City Village Tnpie, Commercl81 Or Aesldenbal Corner Lot
On Route 7 W1th Income,

$54,900,814 256 1426

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

14 parcels from 1 2 to 11 8 acres,
c;ome over lookmg Racme partial
llnanc 1ng 614 ·992 7104 after

nue,614~8221

&amp; movies Call 814-4-46-2588

Equlil Housing Opponunlty
Furnished Aparunem 1 Bedroom,

807 Second, Ga!Hpolio, S2g511Ao,
Udlltles Paid, 814-448-3844 Aher

Grac1aus llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manor and
R1vers1de Apartme'nu 1n M1Cdle·

port From $232 $355 Call 814
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor
tuniues.
Middleport N 3rd Ave 1bedroom
furnished apt, deposit &amp; reference
rQ(luwed 304-882 2566
New Haven 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom tur
mshed apts Deposit &amp; referenc

80 acres t1mbert woods with mmera1 nghts, indian Run Road, Ohve
townshtp Me1gs County, $80,000,

Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom, depoli1. you pay uhli·

- - 304-675-2535
5 Room Houle &amp; Bath For Rent &amp;
6 Room "partment &amp; Bath,

Washer Dryer Room CIA, Apple
IAollol'an Carpet~, 814~7444

SS waterbed, bookcase head
board, e•tra etpenstve mattress
w1re1ntorced edges $250 080

304-1175-7349

AKC Regtstered male Chocolate
lab all shots S200, 7 moa old

Used Furnuure 130 Bulav1/le P1ke
Liv1ngroom Su11e, Beds, Chesta,
Bunk Beds, RefrLgerators. Desks,
614-44&amp;-4182

20e3
Canary s S40-males-S30-females
laymg Hen s $2 ooea 304-8 75-

Sporting
Goods

4003

Ba1ley'a Bow Shack
Archery and Blad&lt; Powder Sui&gt;
pliO~ 9 00 • 8 00 Daley' IAorgan
Cenl9r Rd Vin!On Oh 614 388

CFA Himalayan 7 Week Old K11

04S..

Eight month old male Shelt1e lor

530

tens 6 1o4-44fl-3188

..1e. S250 080 614 992·3761 or
814-992-3884

Antiques

Groom Shop -111 Groom.ng Faa

Buy or IIIII R1verme Antiques,
1124 E Ma1n Slreet, on At, 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T w 10
am 10 6:00pm Sunday 1 00 to
e 00 p m 614 ·992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

turing Hydro Bath Don Sheets

oo

540

Cal 614~48-0231
Happy Tracka·Oroom &amp; Hydro
Bath Great for Flea Problems PL
Pleasant, Central Locauon 30.tt

875-2098 Valone Taylor

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

PupJ¥ Palace Kennels, BoarCmg,
Stud Service Puppies, Groom1ng,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds
Payments We lcome 614-388

16 Inch rad1al saw, 3 phase pow-

er, S200 304 895-3394

0429

1986 N•asan Pu !sar 4 Cycllnder,
SSP S759 00 2· 12" 1nch Speak·

•

Aabbns For Sale B1g And lillie
lop Eared Netherland Dwarfs,
Mm Rex, Dutch, Everythmg Must

or 300 Wall Amp With Blau·
S500 00 Call
After 4 30-304 675-2352

bunch CD Player

Gol814-38a.9844

2 While Alum1num Glass Pallo
Doors Garage S1ze 9 Ft Wide x7

Three Jack Russell pupptea, two
female• and one male, 10 lbs full
wown, $250/ea, 014-7.-2 2050

Y~llow Aelrlgerator Frost Free,
Small Tablesaw, Ptopane Heabng
Stove, Small ,lt,partment Dryer,

Plua DepoSI\ 614 446·2100

'

N1ce 2 bedroom, W/0 hook up,
ground lloor References &amp; de -

poOl\ no pets 304 675 5162

+an References

614 4.4&amp;.8157

Nice two bedroom apartment 1n

Pomeroy, no pels 614-992·5858.
One bedroom apartment fur
nlshed, 10 Pt Pleasant, no pets

304-675-1386
One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasant, 614 992-5856
One bedroom apartment 10 Middleport all ut1h11es pa1d S270Jmo
p!ua $100 dtpos1t Call 614 992·

7800,.·5prn
Small 1 bedroom apl upsta1r1 ac
appliances water, garbage in
c!ude4, $190/mo &amp; security de·
poSit 304-675-4975 8'.18n!ngl.

corn and tomatoes, W1ll1ams
Farm Sy racuse Oh1o 614·992

rad, 14-.-Jt •18lt crane mats
welders , compressor
olllce
equtpment 35 ton Fruehauf trail
et, 12 ton rra1~ez rra 1!er, olhce and
construction trailers, Ford u·tlau!
tool van, small tools fuel tanks
wood forma, 66Sh .-10 600 volt
alxlpe electr~cal w1re 304-1575
5096 If no answer leave message
on recorder

3985 clays or 614 992·5886
HOme G~own Tomatoes &amp; Peppers, Jacob Stutznen, 55 At11son

Road, PainO\ OH 45658
Reel Raspbemes Taylor's Berry

Patch, 614-245-9047

Alpine Car Stereo, CD Tape, ED
Speakers, 3 Rockford Fosgate
Amps $500 For AU 61.11·448

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Farm Equipment

300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron

614-949 3403

Evans Enterprites, Jackaon, OH

HIOCHi37-8528

Dozer TD15 International 150
Senes needs a head, sell or.
rrade for larm tractor or anyrhmg

D11ney Area 5 Daya, 4 Holel
Nlghta, Use Any~me Value S3:ZO
Sell $100 614-823-o.GO

of equal value 304· 562 5840
Drag Disc &amp; Couple Smg!e Plows
814 379 2720 AFTER 6 PM

Orest1ng table, baby bed, car

aeaL atroller, awing walkor hiGh·
choir 304-87!&gt;-4548

Hydraulic Hoses Made To Order
S•der's Equ1pment Co 304 675

Electnc
Scboters
And
Wheelcharrs, New /Uaecl, Van 1

7421

Car L1lt lnatallod, Stalrolldea, Uh

620

Cha1r1, Call For Brochure 51.11

448-n83 •
Grtvely walk behind, 30• dec:k

Wanted to Buy

Wanted vmtage Barb1e dolls,
c:loth&amp;l and ICC!SSOfleS 11958-

630

Rooms for rent

week or montn

Good $2 500 Aller 4 PM 614
245 9657
1989 Blue Olds Cullan Cala1s
106 ooo M11es /Quad 4 /Automat
IC AC Cru1se Con tro! Front
Wheel Onve, Intermittent W1pers

$1600, 614·992 6531
1989 Toyota MA2 Black wLth Red
lntenor, 5 Speed, AC , loaded
Good Condtuon 67 000 M1les
SBSO) 61.11446 2510 alter 5 pm
199f.iCadlllac 12 000 M11es You
Pay ON Its Voursl614-682 7830
1991 OICs Della 88 Royale actual
m1les 60,424 loaded red 4dr
Loan value $6 225 1rade value
$6 900 reta11 va!ue $8 850 Ask
mg $6 goo 304 675 5523 Leave

Imessage

1992 Dodge DyneSiy Loaded
$5,800 080 614 256 1252 or
614-256 1618
1992"Dodge Shadow 2 Door, fi&lt;J
l tOmtiC, AC Rear SpOiler, AMIFM
Cassette, 69,000 M1les, $4,500

lOBO, 614 256-6169
1992 l1ncoln Mark 7 Red S11 000

61&lt;·592 4111

$13 BOO Call otter 5 OOpm 304
675-7702

' Loans Dealer Will arrange fiAult&gt;
n~nc1ng

even 1f you have been
turned down e l sewhere Upton

Equipment Used Cars. 304 458·
1069
Trucks for Sale

1075 3/4 ton Ford pick up V-8,
ps, pb, auto, runs good, 814 992-

Forcl F·15D 4x4 114,000
$2,000 OBO, 814 446

5003
Queen tiD WllerMcl
w1th 1 aec:ondmanre~~, $175,

814·948·3403
Recliner Table With 4 Chatrs,

1500 lb. hoy bales, $20 per bale,
EJC allllllo hay lrom S601ton &amp; up
Morgan Farma, Rl 35 304.g37
2018
Straw·square baL!ed m ftel&lt;l on

wagon 304-875-1807

llres &amp;

r~ms

Motor

new

r.una great mmt

cond 304·675-7495
1985 Ford Ranger, 4 cty, luel 1n
J8&lt;:ted 5 sp 42,000 actual miles,
cauene, chrome wheel a, gnll
guard, roll bar With lightl, some
NS\ $1,500, 814-247·•292.

896-n44

460

Space for Rent
Commercial Spoco •·pro• 800
...,.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprljjhl, Ron Evona Entorprlaoa,
Jad&lt;son, Ohio. 1-fi00.537.JI528

15700, 81~4227

1986 Dodge Van 15 Poaaenger,
Gpod Condi110n, S3 000 Or Trade

1go3 Ford Proba, 37,000 mllea

For Farm Tractor

Sialt Streel &amp; Th1rd Avenue Gal·

Tam111g llecl, 814~48-12DG

auto loaded 304 773-5974 attar
e 00pm or 304-7r.J.8244

814·383-8205

Upnght FrMzer Bedtlner For Full
SIZI Cf'ltvy Truck , 10 Metal

1993 Gto Metro, 21,000 M1les

over dnve, dual a1r, dual sunroof

2 Bedroom Mob1le Home $250/

lAo , $250 Oopo11L Groon School
llialnCl_ D14-3117.()832

2 Badroom Trailer, 6 II lin Route
216, 1220/IAo + Oepollt, Ralerences, IU-U8· 8172, 814-258-

8251

2 Bedroom tfllller, reference 1
dopoll~ no poll, Rn Nor\11 Lucoo
Rd. on rl(;1t 304-417'-10111

Square Feet Loc:aled Corner

or

llpolls The Former L1cen11 Bu
rau loc:aDon Cal 614 448-4e39

Trailer lot lor rtnl1n lllddloporJ.
8 14.JI9.2 738 7

1989 1T baas boat, 150 hp Mer
cury Bladt Max 0 B anome, loaded must se ll 304.882 3529
even1ng1 or 614 992-2310 days,

M F ask lor Greg
1993 750 SS Kawasaki Jet sk1,
very low hours wl tra1ler, $3 700
1993 Polaus Wavarunner Wnh
Trailer &amp; Cover, $3 SOD 614 446-

Fronch Poata 614-448-251l
Wedding drou size 8, 1150 4
8rldoama1d drHIOI, 14DH. :104773.aU!8

Trailer lot lor ..,1, 112 aero, beauDNI IOduded 1111. Sr 7, C!'Mior,
depoolt I reforoncaa, 112511~~:-:-~-:----:-.,--­
rnontll, 114412-2001
Whitfield Advaniaga M f l l lnlltt 3 '1'1111 Old E - 1 ConlWo C'a Plrtl 304-11'15-3507, 614- dillon, Coramlc Lo., lf\Ciuded
448-t221
I1.10011..__T.17.
~

710

Autos for Sale

'88 Formula, red, t-topa, V-8, low

mllaa, new ilrao, runa eJcollenL

A 1 Shapo, $4,500, 1988 Chovy
Alire Work Van, $2,500 814
387·7755
1883 Ply Colt AC, A&lt;lto, AIArFM
Caueuo, Alum Whtela, Lou
Than '-4,000 IA1It1, Gtta Great
lllloego, Rod Wnh Roar Spoiler
S5,500 Allor 6 PIA 814·258:
1275

.

'

' '

8253 All!r 7 PM

875-3284

$5000. 814·992·2~ '"" 6pm
1G06 ~ Chavy ext cab 4-wd, 350
engme, auto w/ over dnve, laad·

8d 1,800 nileL 304-&lt;175-5332.

730

Vans

Equal Value,

1987 LE Toyola Van ps

p~

au10

304-(;75-7965

94116, 614·387 7071

760

As lhe years go by, lhe numbers
are falhng But we've sbll got to carry
on , no maller who shows up" What
was the speaker talking about'
Perhaps you thtnk tt was someone
commentmg on the number of bndge
players tn North Amenca, but tt was
72 year old Sonny Carreras refernng
to war veterans last Memonsl Day
The A,mencan Contract Bndge
League has tned - wtth hmtted sue
cess - lo encourage more young
players to take up the game And to·
day sees the start bf the Summer
Nattonals m the Fontamebleau Hilton
Hotel, Mtamt Beach There are games
for all levels of player from novice up
to expert Twtce datly there are lectures And after play on many
evemngs there are soctal functtons
Every bndge player should expen
ence at least one Nahonals
Th1s deal was declared by Ltla
Perlstem whtle wmnmg the Women's
Knockout Team s at lasl years
Summer Nattonals m New Orleans
Sadly , Perlslem cannot defend her
tttle as she died lasl Apnl
Both teams were m lour hearts At
the other table, the declarer tned to
ruff her club losers tn the dummy
When East oveiTllffed, she went down
Perlstem won tnck one wtth the
spade ace and cashed the heart ace to
get the bad news about the 4-0 trump
break She conhnued wtlh a dtamond
to dummy's queen and East's ace A
spade to West's queen was followed by
a club to dummy's king Now came the
diamond king, a diamond ruff tn hand,
the heart queen, a heart to dummy's
king and a wmmng dtamond, on whtch
South threw a club loser Perlstem
had held her losen to one spade, one
heart and one dtamond

BIG NATE

.::Over::::"";.::.:•;.:'K.::"::';.:8;.:n,;,·.:.24;:;S.;.:se:::.n:....._

"'790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

NUI'II!&gt;Efl!. ONE'

i1

WA.TE V5 GJI.RY

11

:
,, 1

.,.. ,

rrv-"-~~~

Tne
You
tne
Sovlnrs You'll Find In the
Classified Section

' 'I
'

_,I

Home
Improvements
BASEIAENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond11Jonal lifetime guarantee
Local references furnlsh&amp;d Ea-

7795

C&amp;C General Home Nam
tenence Pa 1n11ng v1nyl atdtng,
carpentry doors windowS, baths,
mobtle home repa1r anC more Fgr
tree est1mate call Chet 614 992-

ASTRO·GRAPH

6323
DRYWALL

~

'

·.•
i

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

I '

eliP8f'lence

llrlndl Hou .. calls, 1-800 707·
001;, wv 304-578-23911,

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Hoot Pumps, Air Condlilon~ng 11
You Don't Call Ua We Bolh Loiel
FrM Eatimatta, 1-800·291-0096,
814-446 8308 wv 002945

Friday,August2. 1996

.

t78e

u:

•

Ing, How Strvlct Or Repelro Ll-

canlld Elao~lclan Wtlah Elec·
814-448-9850, Galllpoha,

g::.,

lnvesltgale all possiblilhes which might
provide 8 eeconc1 source of 1ncome In 1he
year ahead You could have good luck "'
this are1 and you may even hit 1he jack-

. '"

Relldtntlal or commerc1al Wiring
or repat,. Matter
cenaed eiectnc:1an Ridenour

new lltYica

IE C

AKGDFMOEZR

aJ

CKJFMO
aJM

N E J

U M Z

G

a

GWM

FOMEGMCG

HZEJMG .

GWM

AKZZ

MZZE

WMO

J B

CWBMC

0 UM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The best IS lhe enemy of the good - Vollaore
"Always stnve to e)(cel, but only on weekends" - Richard Aorty

- --- -

'::~;~:~'

S© ~&lt;;\\ ~ -l&amp; t. irS e WOlD
GAM I

Edhe4 ~y CI.AY R POLLAN-------

letters of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words
low to form four words

I

P HRE p 0

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1

K I l NE

~---------------,~

I

UVL AT

I

OSEMJG

_

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.

.

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.

Whtle paymg our monlh ly
btlls my husband stghed · 11
you ltve on a s hoe stnng all you
can do
- - -·

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.

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Co mpl e le ihe c huckl e q, ole d

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SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS L--..1-....L.....L....J

·••

Ha~. finiSh. f9PII•
CeH~ngs textured, plaster repair

AMUEZM,

ao

I

o-.o
''!

1980 Nomad 24' sell contained
camper. excellent concl1t1on

810

by Luis Campos
Cel&amp;bnty Crph" cryptograms a f8 crealed !rom qUOiahon s by lamous people pa&amp;L and poo!ienl
Each I'"'' ro Lt\a cll)her ataf'ld a lor another Today s clve R equals D

UEZM

pot

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Ftnely IUned
adjuslmentS can be made loday IO vastly

1mprove a 6ituallon with s person wno re
enormousty impOrtlnl to you eocillly. Oo
what you have to dO Get a jump on IIIII
by unclerstanding 1he l n f l - IIIII 'PI"

I lhe
Aslro-Grap/1 predic11()nS loday by ma1hng
$2 and SASE to Aslro·Graph c/o th1s
newspaper, p 0 Box 1758 Murray Hill
SlaiiOO. New York. NY 10156 Make sure
lo stale your zociae &amp;!Qn
VIRGO (Aug 23-S.pt. 22) A Situation
lhat has leh JWo crooal maHer&amp; dangling
can be successfully concluded loday 11
you make n your poorily
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Words and
1deas m1ght come 10 you more eaa1ly
today Take advanlage of lhls conditiOn
to celch up on both verbal and wr~llen
communiC8t\OnS
SCORPIO (OcL 24-NOY 22) You dO 1101
nave to be loud and dramaltc lo be
underslood loday ln11aad of making
demand•. your auggetlrons will have
greateflmpecU !hey are more eubtle
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec 21) When
manegong aubordinalos loday try 10 recognlze lheir' needt and dealrea If you
view lhlnga from tllelr perspectnre , you
wtrl succeed
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22..Jan. 11) Let your
compaaslonate and cllefltabla incltnat~cm motivate you IDCiay H you knOw of
aomeone who needs your help, try lo
help him 0&lt; her.

should be on your besl behavior when
you go out In public today Whal you
wear and what you do Will be observed
closely by adm~rers and cnllcs
PISCES (Fob 20-March 20) In f1nanc~al
and career manors Ieday your percephans coold be sharper lhan usual Try 10
lrusl your 1nsllncts
ARIES (March 21-Aprl118) You m1ghl
have a learmng e•penence Ieday You
w111 acqwre spec1hc knowledge wh1ch
could be used to bonefll Olhars tn lhe
fulure
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Someone
you know who manages money well
m1ghl come to you w1th an 1nvestmen1
proposal today Lislen carelully lo whal
ne or she proposes
GEMINI (May 21·Juna 20) Make an
effort lo cater 10 the person whO 18 No 1
1n your me loday You Will en1oy the expe·
rlence and the objeel of your affeclions
Will be enthralled
1CANCER (June 21..July 22) Aside from
your personal ,sense of accomplishment,
lhe probability ol larger-than-usual
rewards Mil be slrong today Strive conslatcintly to dO 1he bllsl you can

I

I,

Jaunty - Da1sy - Prxre - Refuge - GARDENS
My netghbor say s lhaltl s better to have a fe w weeds
and unttdy edges and to e nJOY your GARDENS

.

.
&lt;

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~~ic:~~~liR lE TtER S TO

WRE!&gt;TLING M.A.TtH

1
.. 1

, :

SERVICES

: ::: : :

suffix

PRINT NUMB ER ED lEITER S IN
IHE SE SQU ARES

(:,fi.ECO • ROMAN

I

Budget TransmiSSIOns, Used IRebutll All Types Accessible To
Over 10,000 TransmiSSion, Also

• •

~2 wds.)
38 Actresa
Martha 39 Reverla
40 Unite of
measure
45 Enzyme
ending
46 Marry
48 Chemical

b y I dllng 1n !he m• ss1ng wo rds
'--1--...L.-.L.......J.-..L.......J you de¥elop fr om sl ep N o 3 belo w

1985 Ntssan Sentra M1sc Body
Parts 614 446 9219

Residential 0 . Commercial Wir-

•

Pass

_ _ _ ..:J

' I

1988 Mlntvan Plymouth Voyager
Transm11110n 7 Pass Good Con-

3•
Pass

Pass

f---,.1-..,...1--?r.-1-rl..,.' -rl-j O

.'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Electrical, WV000308 304·875·

cino,.. eau 814~1139

Pass

Cr8ftier

••

••

22 Oral
25 Concord
27 No~ aligned
wKh a
·
polillcel
•
group
31 Leaned over
32 The girl
34 Not 10 short
35 - - Janeiro
38 Have
dinner

East
Pass
Pass

•

1988 Doclge Caravan LE PW
POL AUlD 130 000 lAIIta $3000
814-&lt;4&amp;-37.17
SE Cru11e lAC, 5 Speed, IAanual

North

Starcralt 19 Ft W1th Trailer 70
Horse Evenrude Excell ent Condition, Tilt Tnm S2 500 614 388

&amp; 4-WDs
Of

West

r;~

'•

Pnce reduced 2011 Galaxy,
170hp, open bow, new covers/
seats, alumtnum ss props 304

Ron's TV S.rv1ce, Specllllllng 10
Zenith alsg Hrvictng moat ather

And Gauranllodl 1100 And Up,
W1U DellvB&lt; 81 4-MQ-844 1

Mobile Homes
for Rent

'

1992 IIWZU ptCk~p, S lpeed, niC:I,

304-773-5651 , 11...., Wll

'

SORR'(, 1M BOOKED UP
FOR T~E W~OLE YEAR ..

1988 21 Ft Century Boat W1th
Cuddy Cab1n, Camper Top With
New Windows, Trim Tabs 350
Merau1ser, 814-441-1803 Daya,

C•ll Tom 304·67S.41W:ZO yura

c:epted, $400fmo or hll or leaaa
With opoon 10 buy on contract Wllh
good references, no peta, 814·

s

TRAN SPORTATI ON

1

1987 BaJa 180 ls!ander 130hp,
tra 1ler all access, $6,500 After
5 OOpm 304 675 7499 or 304675 1415

t992 Ford F· 1SO excellent con
dinon. 30+875-4360

ngerato11, tovet, Waa~trl
And Dryers, ,lt,ll Reconchtlontd

1

W~ICJ.l

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

614·383-8978

v.a.

A D06,

1984 Bandtt Bass Boat 50 HP
Mercury Motor, Good Condition
$3600 Call Between 1 pm and 5

2886

t985 CheVy Tahoe, 2 8,

~AD

I DON'T, f.IE 1D RUSH OUT
TO MEET ME WI-lEN
I GOT !-lOME .

$3000, ~14 742·2181

1 Ton Chevy Short Wheel

814 742-308Q or814 742 3064

IF I

1964 Star Craft, 181 Runabout,

Name Brands Over 25 Yeara ExperienCe All Work Guaranteed,
Franc~ Cny Maytag, 614 44e

large Berkllner rocker recliner,
e11cellent condtllon , 014-882·

'

75hp Johnson. $2 ooo 304-675·
5332

91 Ford Ranger XLT, 5 speed,
tllcellent cond1t1on, $4000, 614
742 1603 or leave mesaaga

3138

~

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

304 773 9585

~ollar

shape

Opemng lead • 4

1992 Honda 4 Wheeler 300 2
Wheel Dr1ve $2 500 Nord i c

l~rm

18

at home

$1850

814·"'11·1588 Elionl11gs.

fauna
10 Word USed
before circle
or clly
:
12 Water pllchor
13 Refreshing
beverar
wda .
• •

8 Kidman!
Baldwin film
9 Flora and

By Phtlhp Alder

1990 Yahama Wamer 4 Wheeler
Ike newl Cal! 304 675-2217 Pnce

19?4 Tempo GL, Red 2 Door, PS,
PB. A1r Automatic 34 000 Mtles

Standard,

HE'S ALL YOR'N If

pm (304) 875·5131

1989 Plymouth Sundance 4 door
hatchback automatic, 4C, PS PB,
4 new tires, very good cond1t1on

720

1•
4.,

'I

2924

750

AC I'll PS PW $750 614 446

LIKE l BEEN
DOIN' THAT
ALL MY LIFE

1990 Kawasaki 600A 4,700 Miles
Black In Color, $2,500, 13 1.t-U6

949·2045 or 614·949-2302

1969 Olds Cutlass C1era Body
Oamage ' Good Motor 4 DoOr

SEEMS

work 304-675-1501

1994 CBR90QRR 7,000 IAIIOS,
$6,500 61H4!Hl401

6

7 Climbing plant

Open the door

92 Suzuki 600 Katana, 9 000

T111c1&lt; E&gt;cei $300 614 446 791 ~

1989 Grande Am LE Burgundy, 2
Doors Auto NewT1res 117000
Miles Very Good ConC1t1on
S3 ooo 614 446 373 7

IT

Motorcycles

1989 Bu1ck leSabr e excellent
runnmo cond1t1on, V 6 PB, PS
AC, power wmdows, $3800, 614

304·87!HI020

Grain

SNUFFY II

•

$4 000, 080 614-367-7t37

R8 f

420

88 Bronco XlT 4WO 6U 446

Appliance !'oris And Serv1ce All

&amp;

I'M GOING TO GIVE UP
MY BEANBAG BUSINESS
AND JUST MANAGE

4pm

JVC Turn 1ablo $30 SL Sorloa

Hay

BARNF.Y

1980 ¥ahama 650 Spec1al, needs

1988 Pon11ac GranCe Am Grey 4
Door, Power Locks, Wmdows
And Seals Looks Good Runs

4
5

21

MPG $1,850 080, 61&lt;·379
2645

Sleep~ne rooms with ~ooking
Also trailer apace on nver All
hook-ups Call after 2 00 p m,

blaunlul lot '" Pomeroy, HUD ac·

push bunon 4wd au10 overdnve
trans ac cru1se stereo 304 895

740

2
3

Gymnast
Comanecl
Long (for)
Do a pollee job
Ape
Reparation
Compaaa pi

Vulnerable Netther
Dealer East

~n~les,

3563

DOWN

• A 7 4 3

."'

Cotlee Tobie With 1Aatehln9 ~nd
Teblea, Wood Chtll, &amp;14·446 ·
054 7 Aller 5

Two or three bedroom haute on

1995 Chevy S 10 lS 3 300

wound

23 Comedlen
Conway
24 Slorage
building
26 Bernaleln, for
short
28 Concell
29 Ending for
opal or glees

• 8 5

675 8017

dual cauette tape deck $30

640

,

1988 Ford Tempo GLS 2 Door 5
Speed, Red, AMIFM Casselte
New Brakes E11hau&amp;t Ttres 32

Star11ng at s1201mo Ga!ha Hotel
8 14-4411· 9580

dopo10t. ceH 814-9G.2·7843.

1995 112 Toyota Tacoma 4x4,
be1ge wtgold tnm, bug shield, e• tended cab, 31 • 1050 tread, loaded, must seH, $18 900 l1rm 304-

tlbllahld 1975 Call (814) 446·
0870 Or 1·800·287.0578 Rogera
Wa\erprODfing

16' camper 814·992-7801

South
• A 6
•AQ986

895 3803

JET
AI:RATIOH MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; RebuNt In SIOdt.
Can Ron Evana, 1·800·537-g528

picl&lt; up, AKC regiJtored Pooclu,

• J g

9e Suzuk1 600 Kalana 607 m1les,
front clamage, $3055 OH salvage
111!e, 614·949 23t1 dars or 614
949 2ti44 evenmgs

1986 Chevy Cavalier statiOn wag
on 304-1375-4853

Livestock

450

Two bedroom, Racine area, ges

1993 5 · 10 4•4 Tahoe I 4 3 auto
topper tutch , 25 500 m11es
$11 000 hrm CaU evamngs 304-

•

1072), call814.a90 08t9

electriC atart, SSOO, call 814·992
3454 anor 119m.

East
• K 9 7 5
• J 10 7 5
t A J 3

1992 Ford Ae~Cs1ar1 pw, pi,
CrUISe 18 300 fleQ 304 675
1753

miles leh !ade slide, $2 555 OH
salvage title, 6t4 9.-9 2311 days
or 6 14 949 2644 evemngs

work, pr~ neg , 614·992-5368

3090

Three bedroom house tn Chester,
many updatell remodeling De·
poa1t and rererencea requ1red,
814 445-9921 alltr 6 00pm

1983 Jaguar 4 dr 6 ely $6 SOO,
614 992 4111

77 Ford Mustang Cobra II, 302
motor newly rebuilt Holly 4·barrel,
many new parts, body needs

lace stock, Frank Cleland 614
1149·2071

44 250 1 or 814-367.01312 Eltec•ency Rooms, Cable A r, Phone,
M15rowave &amp; Relrtgerator Tax1
S8rv1ce 112 Pnce For Uotel
Guest

304 675 4841 AFTER 6 PM

300 gallon pi11Uc farm chaml·
cal tank, on sled w1th hose, $75,

King IIZO bed, $100, 88 lsuzu

C1r~e IAotel GallipoliS DH 814·

1980 Pont1ac Trans Am Au
1omat1c 2 Doors Sunroof 455
Good Shape &amp; Pans Car $1,500

Concrete &amp; Plasttc Septic Tanks

capped EOH 304 675-68)g •

875-3017

V-8, New Front Tires, $950, 614
446.0519

$6,500,614 245-5677

T¥110 polled hereford buUs, 14 and
15 monlha old, out ol good while-

ROO !liS

1980 Dlds Omega 98 000 lA IIes

$8500 814 742 2086

Kenmore ~lr Condlllonar, 28,000
IITU, like now 30•-675-1714

r

$400, 080 614-446-0323

992·5295

Tw1n RNera Tower, now acctptlng
appllc:abons lor I br HUO aubsidIZecl apt lor elderly and handi -

Houu for rent 132 South Park
Dnve, 2 references, phone 304·

1977 O!da Cut!au 4dr, pa pb
ac good mtenor good runnmg
cond1tlon aome rust 304 882

1994 Pon11ac Firebud exc c:ond,
1 top l oaded, 19 500 m11es,

Five room house with blttl m Pomeroy, on street parking for one
car, clean, d•poait and relerenc
ea tequ1red, no peta, 6 14·992-

Furnished

1977 Corvette All Or1g1nal Parts
Black T Tops PW, AC, Aebu1ll
Trans Engme $6 500 f•rm 614
446 1417

1615 AfterS:x6144461244

1994 New Holland square ba!er,
model 565 excellent conditiOn
1811 then tSOO bales baled thru n,

Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
Apaflment, Gal l 1po!ts laund r y
Room, AH, No Pets $365/Mo

8795

• K 8

1996 Jeep Cherokee Spott 4
door !oaded key !ess entry Alloy
wheels au1omat1c 12 000 m11es
$16,400 OBO 614 992 3085 alter

814 992 7853

520

1974 Corvette New T1re1, Ex
haual And Tune Up, Red W1th
Grey Interior $6 500, Or Trade
For Full S1ze Blazer Of Equal Val
ue 614 441 1975 Or 614-446

tKQ96 2

m1les ask~ng S750D OBD 814
742 2574

1978 Ford Mustang New Motor

10gal tank set up specaala F1sh
Tank &amp; Pet Snop 2413 Jackson
Ave Pomt Pleasant 304 -675-

Washers and dryers lor sale,

$4,500, 1986 Grand·Am 4 Door
3 0 Auto , loaded, N•w Ttrea,
Brakes, Etc S2,000, 6U-245·
0319

• K 43 2

1990 GMC J1mmy full s11e h1gh

AKC Shih Tzu pupp1es $300 llrm

Shephard pupp1es, exce llen! temperament 304-675-74Q5

Cash And Ca.yl RENT 2-0WN
And layaway Also Ava~labl 9
Free Delivery Wllhm 25 Miles.

1!ia87 Muatang 351 Auto New
Pa1nt GT Rims, Many New Parta

08 I 96

• J 3

"

Ohio.

3788

AKC White/sliver/sable, German

Oualtty Houaeho~ Furniture And
Apphanc:es. Great Deals On

unt 825 Thrrd Avenue Gallipolis

2019

304 675-1S89

VrRA FURNITURE
614 446-3158

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250,
72,000 Miles, S4,QOO, OBO Can , ,
Be Seen At Ga1hpolls DaLly Trtb-

614 992-2500

Commodore comput1r e11ce l
lent for beg1nners everythmg 1n
eluded, also desk, $300 call 614

qulred No Pets Allowed Reference Reqwed Cau Judy Or Deb

Spnng Valley No Pets 135011Ao

410

At&lt;C Registered Boxer pupp1es
champ.on pediQHHIS 1a1ls dod&lt;ed
dew claws removed parents on
premses, 614 7412 2209

610

Par ce!s on Rayburn Rd Water,
paved road reasonable restrtctlons 304 675 5253 (no tingle·
Wide mqu res please)

RENTALS

1 800~99 3499

Boots By Aedw1ng Chtppewa
Tony lama Guaranteed, lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe Galhpohs

N1ce Clean 2 Bedroom All Elec
trLC, Furn1shed K1tchen Close To

Clyde Bowen Jr 304-576-2338

BEAUTIFUL AKC REGISTERED
BOSTON TERRIER PUPPIES,
ALSO BEAUTIFUL AKC
GOOD USED APPLIANCES AND
REGISTERED PUG WILL AC·
Washers, dryera, refrlgeratora,
CEPT PAYIAENT OR DEPOSIT
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 78 TO ~OLD, 614 446 8270
Tue .. S&amp;tiHI, &amp;In 1H

Newly Remodled Furn•shed 3
Room Apartment At 1351 Second
Avenue Next To Bosaard L1brary

614 985 3933

Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove.
beaut1ful 2ac lots, publtc water,

6038

Country Furniture 304-875 8820
At 2 N, 6ml11, Pt P!easant, WV

0323

ble614-448·7323

ton And Rio Grande 814·3888521

Carp•t I V1nyl Sale On Room
S•ze &amp; Stock Mollohan Carpets,

es 304-882 2566

4 + Acrea Off Bulav•lle Road Fac
5 Acres For Sale $10,000 located On Sailer Road Between Vm-

Pets for Sale

AKC lab Retre1ver Pups, Water
RatriB'Je Plus Pomt Upland Game
S OakoiB Stock Great Hunbng In
sticts Good Companion For
Young Hunters $225 614-256

7795

l1tre, V-8, elne model turbo, PS
PB, AC 5 speed, power seats
and locka, •Great C.ar ,· $5200
neg, 614 992 7478 or 614 ·949

2879

570
Musical
Instruments
RCA Color TV Hooked Up For
Furnished Aparlment S2851Mo. 1 Cable, Works Good, AFTER 8
Alto saxophone lor sale like new
Bedroom, UUht1ea Patel, 920 PM 81 4-379·2720
814 992 32&lt;2
Fourth Avenue, Galltpo!ls, 6144-12 Inch Kicker CompetitiOn
448-3844 After 7 RIA
&amp;lbwoolers 4 IAonlhs Old, Under Story Clark P1ano, $900 Bach
Trumpet $200 both 1n good con
Furntshed Apartment, 1 Beclroom, Warranty $85 Each, 614 446
dillOn 304-675-6515
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Oak H1U Co rrmun1ry MeG1cal Cen
ter Is Seek ng A Ouald1ed Can
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Th1s newspaper will not
ra!ory Care Pos n oo n Job Re
knowllngly accept
tpons lb lllt!es lncl1.1 de Ptannt ng
advertisements for real estate
And Superv1s ng Tne Adm1n1 stra
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Our readers are hereby
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tory Ttlrr apy Pr oceaure s The
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advertised 1n this newspaper
01 An AJ.AA Approve d Rc sp1ra
are avaHable on an equal
tory Care Program And Be Reg1s
opponumty basis
tered By Tne NBAC t.A ust Be l1
censed By The Dn1o Slate Board
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At Least 3 Years Of Cl1mca l Ex
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To Human Resou 1ce s Depart
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6 Rain clouds
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~2 Wdl)
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former name
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Chuck19 Chamlcal
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52 Semestera

ACROSS

�Page 12 • The Pally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday,,August 1, 1996

Ann eats her words on remarks about slovenly truck drivers...:
Dear Bob Lawley: You are right
at truck stops.
Obviously, you have never eaten on all counts. I have never eaten at a
at a truck stop, or you would know truck stop and had no business
customers in tank tops are not assuming that they were frequented
by males with hairy armpits wearing
allowed in lhe dining area.
Also, Ann, before you make dis- tank tops .
My apologies to all the truckers
paraging remarks about people in a
specific line of work. you ought to and their families whom I offended.
Dear Ann Landers: I was very
give some thought to what those
people contribute to YOUR life. If pleased with you.r response to
you ate it, drank it, wore it, looked at "Every City, Worldwide ," who
it, slept in it, lived in it, drove it, wrote you about caring for her
flew in it or sailed in it, be aware Alzheimer's-stricken mother. I read
that several truck drivers made it it in the Oregonian.
Like you, I believe love, affection
possible.
I doubt very much that you will and compassion are the only reliable
prin't this letter. but if you do, it's ways to penetrate the wall around
OK to use my name. --. Bob Lawley the victims of this terrible disease.
My belief is founded in my experiin Fairfield, Calif.

Ann
Landers
1995, Lot Anaetc:..
and Creuon S)'ftdic11e.

Tl~r~e~ S~ue

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 55year-old male who has been reading
your column for . many years.
Although I have disagreed with
some of your advice, I have never
wrillen to you until now. When
"J.R. in Houston" complained about
diners in tank tops with hairy
armpots, you asked if he were dining

ence with my own father, who died
of Alzheimer's four years ago. I
knew nothing about the illness but
became an authority when I had to
deal with it on a personal basis.
After two traditional nursing
homes had evicted my father
because of his increasingly temperamental behavior, he ended up in the
Oregon State Hospital. I visited him
regularly, and toward the end, he
neither recognized me nor acknowledged my presence. It is not possible
to describe the pain of not being recognized by someone you have been
close to and loved for years.
One day, after sitting with him for
an hour, talking about our many
happy times together on the off

chance he might hear and under- only for a moment, and it is wort!!·a
stand, I kissed him on the forehead lifetime of trying. -- L.B., Portland1
'
as !Was leaving and 10ld him I loved Ore.
him. For a quick moment, the fog
Dear L.B.: What a beautifUDy
lifted. He looked up at me with clear sensitive letter. It is sure to bring
eyes and said, "I love you too, Pal," comfon to those who have family
which was his pet name for me when inembers with Alzheimer's. It also
I was a little boy. Then, as quickly as will let !hem know they aren't alone.
it had come, the recognition passed Bless you for writing.
.
a~ he returned to his Alzheimer's
Gem of the Day: A devoted hps'
world of solitary confusion and frus- band is one who stands by his wife
iration. Mine were the last words he in troubles she would not have tiaifl'l
ever understood and his were the she hadn't' married him.
last he· ever spoke. He died several
weeks later.
'
No one knows what Alzheimer's
Send questions to Ann L,anders,
victims feel · or how much they Creators Syndkate, 5777 W. Cen•
know. But I Cllll attest to one thing - tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
- that wall can be broken down, if Calif. 90045

Meigs residents alerted fo family root with heart disease, strokes
The prevention of heart disease
and stroke can he a family affair,
according to the American Heart
Association.
"Research funded by the AHA
and other entities indicates that a
tendency toward heart disease or
atherosclerosis may be hereditary,"
said Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Meigs
County AHA President.
"If one or both of your parents
has had a hean attack, atherosclero-

sis, angina or stroke, your risks are
greater. Race is also a consideration.
African-Americans have moderate
high blood pressure twice as often as
whites and severe hypertension
three times as often. so their risk is
much greater."
The AHA recommends that
young adults and even children
whose parents have cardiovascular
disease be screened for cholesterol

level, high blood pressure and other
risk factors. By developing a risk
profile, a physician can determine
the most appropriate medical treatment or diagnostic test in an effort to
prevent or forestall diseases that
have affected relatives.
Selective screening is a costeffective means of identifying those
young people at risk and suggesting
changes in lifestyle which may

improve their odds for surviving or
avoiding mid-life cardiovascular
problems.
"Studies show that when people
are aware of high cholesterol, high
blood pressure or other risks, they
are more likely to read health messages, read nutrition labels and
select low-fat food~ ." said Dr. Mansfield. "Young people deserve to
know their risks for cardiovascular

disease. A health screening now is residents should be aware of AHA
more practical than coronary bypass guidelines for a hean healthy
surgery or stroke rehabilitation later · lifestyle as well as the warning signs
in life."
for a heart attack and stroke.
Dr. Mansfield also cautioned that
For more information on cardiaeven if no close relative has suffered vascular-related topics, please cQnfrom heart disease or stroke, local tact the AHA at I -800-AHA-US.-'\ I.

Smoking .. ......___ _ __
Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

So it's time to welcome the month '
of August and don't ask me what happened to the summer. It just son of
slipped by a lot of us, I think. Personally, I haven't finished with July's
notes.
It was in July--the 13th to be
exact--that Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
Barnitz of Pomeroy hosted the 1996
annual Barnitz Family Reunion held
at the Great Seal State Park in Chillicothe.
Hayman and Dean were assisted
by their sons and wives, Gary and
Bev, and Keith and Fran, in hosting
the reunion attended by 75 people
with the traditional picnic being held
at noon. Afterwards, there was a
heckuva lot of visiting going on plus
games and taking photos of the various family members on hand. By the
way, all eight children of the late W.
0 . and Ruth Bamitz of Pomeroy were
present for the event.
.
On the evenong precedong the _
reumon , a donner was held at the
Canal House '" Cholltcothe wnh
some 35 famoly members on hand for .
that. .
.
Relauves came from Texas. Mtssoun , Mochogan, llhnoos, West Vorgonoa. Maryland , South Carohna and
Ohoo for the reunoon.

Layne, her daughter and husband,
Rick and Tara Hughes of Richlands,
Va.; Leo L. Vaughan, Pomeroy; Tony
Vaughan and children, Matthew, Victoria and Martin of Lawrenceville,
Ga., and of course, the Roy Vaughan
family and the honored guest.
Mrs. Carolyn Montanez of Arecibo, Pueno Rico, was back.on home
ground last week to visit with her parents, Jean and Tom Ables, in
Pomeroy.
While here, Carolyn visited her
sons, Shawn who lives in Cincinnati,
and Todd of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Incidentally, Shawn flew down to
Atlanta where his met his brothers,
Todd and Agustin, Jr., and the three
attended lhe Olympics for a few days.
Speaking of the Olympics. here's
a nice local touch.
Mike and Pam Sharp and their
daughter, Maria, accompanied by
Pam's mother, Eileen Mees, were in
Atlanta for five days and four nights
where they were guests of Jack and
Phyllis Blackwood Handley who
have resided in Atlanta for some 29
years. Both Jack and Phyllis are former residents of Meigs County and
Phyllis and Eileen are sisters.
Jack is a nuclear physicist and is
the head of research at Georgia Tech.
Mike took a batch of interesting
photos at the Olympics. Perhaps,
you'll get an opportunity to see them.
The Handleys were genial hosts,
of course, and made getting around in
Atlanta easy for Mike and those
accompanying him to Olympic
events. Incidentally, Mike who used
to be a sportswriter in the Ironton area
thought the Olympics were terrific.

Continued from page 6
method. "Us" is Lee and his
patients. 'Them" is the tobacco
companoes.
"It's those darned tobacco companies that addicted you," he frequently tells patients.
More often, he simply presents
the facts. By pointing to the relation•ship between smoking and the problem that brought the patient to his
office, Lee makes the most of smoking's negative effects.
Usually, the connection is obvious, whether a stomach ailment,
high blood pressure, an ulcer, a sinus
infection, a cold or asthma. Smoking
exacerbates almost every medical
problem, he said.
Lee also plays on vanity. Smoking. he notes, causes premature
facial wrinkles, yellow teeth , a gravelly voice and, often. a hacking
cough. And the acrid smell that
clings to the body and clothes is
unattractive.
For smokers with children at
home, Lee talks about the harmful
effects of secondhand smoke.
Lee, who never experimented
with tobacco beyond puffing on a
few cigarettes in high school, recognizes quitting is tough and creates
problems. Most iJeOple gain an average of five to seven pounds, and

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'· Johnson, Perec
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·Vol••7, NO. 64
:1. Sectlon, 14 Pegee .

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-

A O.nrwtt Co. Newepllper

:eombing suspect hoping for vindication
ATI..ANTA (AP) - As hours tum into days, the security guard at the ceo:ter of the FBI's Olympics bomb investigation is growing more optimistic that
he will be vindicated, his lawyer says.
Federal officials say, in essence: Not so fast.
· Watson Bryant, the lawyer for bombing hero-turned-suspect Richard Jew·• ell, said Thursday that Jewell is still worried, in part because federal offi.cials won't tell him anything about their investigation.
: " He's still in shock," Bryant said on CNN's "Larry King Live." Still, he
added, "As time passes without an arrest or any more trouble from the government, he becomes relieved .... Every minute that goes by, we feel a little
· better."
The Washington Post today quoted sources who said Jewell told colleagues
..: At his old job that he would he a "hero" at the. Olympics.
.

Responding to that report, Bryant said, " If that's the 'probable cause,' I
think it's ridiculous." He used the legal term for evidence of guilt that must
be cited when a search warrant is sought.
"You could take police officers or law enforcement people anywhere in
the world and if something was to happen, they'd love to have the opportunity to be on the spot so that they could help people and solve the problem,"
Bryant said this morl\ing on NBC's "Today'' show .
Jewell was hailed as a hero after he spotted an unattended knapsack in
Atlanta's crowded Centennial Olympic Park during a rock concert. The knapsack contained a bomb that exploded early Saturday, splattering the park with
nails and slirapnel that killed one person and injured Ill others.
On Tuesday, Jewell turned from hero to what one federal law enforcement official called the "leading candidate" in the investigation. Authori-

Congressional
hopeful meets
with seniors
By JIM FREEMAN
· · Sentinel News Staff
Former U.S. Rep. and congressional hopeful Ted Strickland. DLucasville, outlined his positions
on Medicare and Medicaid Thursday afternoon before residents of
the Stonewood Apartments, a Mid. dleport senior citizens community.
Strickland told the dozen or so
seniors that he is opposed to privatizing Medicare or transferring
Medicaid to the states in the form
of block grants - a position he
says is supported by his opponent,
incumbent Rep. Frank Cremeans,
· R-Gallipolis.
• Citi.ng a personal example,
·S~kland said" Hidather·.::... who
died recently at the age of 92 was one of a thousand relired
steelworkers who found himself
without medical coverage due to a bankrupt insurance company.
"Because he had Medicare and
eight kids, he didn't have to worry," he said. "The federal government sbould be responsible for
Medicare so you can count on it
being there for you ."
Strickland that in 1965, when
Medicare was signed into creation
by President Lyndon B. Johnson,
33 percent of all elderly people in
the U.S. lived in poverty. Today,
that figure is around 12 percent,
largely due to Medicare, he said.
He also attacked attempts to
transfer Medicaid, which p.rovides
health care for poor people as well
as long-term nursing home care to
senior citizens, to individual states.
In addition, h~ also criticized proposed reductions in the program
that he said would result in higher

CANDIDATE VISIT - Former U.S. Rep. and congressional hopeful Ted Strickland, D·
Lucasville, lett, visited Meigs County Thursday, mMtlng with local senior citizens about
Medicare end Medicaid. Strickland Ia seen above speaking with Sheriff James M. Soulsby, cen·
tar, and Prosecuting Attomey John R. Lentes.
•
'

.

taxes or reduced levels of care.
· "We are one country .. . and
should be able to expect' the same
leYel of quality in any state.
"Senior citizens are seeing
what's being done ... and are starting to react.
"You are a powerful person ...
you've got power in your right to
vote if senior citizens stick togeth-

men arc out of touch with their
constituents.
"If you make $133,000 a year,
it's hard to imagine living on $400
a month," he said. "They ought to
experience buying health insurance
at the going rate. If they had to fend
for themselves they wtMIId have a
different attitude."

er."

As a former congressman ,
Strickland said he rejected government insurance and purchased
other insurance.
"It was not right for me to have
that insurance when the people

One resident said the cost of
Medicare goes up every time they
get a raise, and the cost of medicine
just keeps going up.
Strickland said most congress-

who live in southeastern Ohio
couldn't have it," he said.
Strickland was accompanied by
state representative candidate Jeff
Fowler. D-Crown City, and Democratic Meigs County commissioner candidate Jeff Thornton.

and

ties were looking into whether he planted the bomb in order to "find" it
become a hero.
·
,
For two days,.agents of the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms have been putting Jewell 's life under a microscope, exllllining
everything from his underwear to the paint on his door.
Jewell, a 33-year-old former deputy sheriff, has not been charged or anested, and FBI officials have stressed that he is only one of several potential
suspects. As time goes on, speculation has begun to rise that investigatots
may be losing interest in Jewell.
.
Federal officials cautioned Thursday that their investigations often take
a long time. and that it is premature to expect an arrest . At the same time,
they continued to stress that Jewell should not he judged prematurely. .
"Nobody is about to be charged with a crime ," FBI Director Louis Freeh
said in testimony before the Senate Intelligence Commottee.
·

National jobless rate
edges upward to 5~4°/o
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate edged up
to 5.4 percent in July as job ~rcation
slackened, fresh signs of a slowing
economy that may not need an inter'
est rate increase to keep from overheating.
The Labor Department said today
the unemployment rate crept up from
5.3 percent in June, lowest since 5.2
percent in June 1990 when the economy was in the final stage of an earlier expansion.
The number of new jobs totaled
193,000, down from 220,000 in June.
Job creation had averaged 273,000 a
month during the April-June quarter.
The report - the government's
first broad look at lhe economy in the
current quarter - also eased concerns that wage pressures were about
to boost prices. The average hourly
wage fell2 cents to $11.80 after spiking up 8 cents a month earlier.
Without commenting directly on
the fresh figures, President Clinton
said today, "There is now no substantial evidence of innationary pressure in this economy."
·
The data was generally in line

with analysts' expectations, in contrast to four of the last six monthly
reports that sent financial markets
into turmoil with surprisingly strong
growth in jobs and hourly wages.
"This falls into the category of a
benign report,' ' said Robert G. Dederick, economic consultant for Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. "It's just
what (Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan) Grte~~span would love to see,
just what the administration would
like to see."
"It shows J;trength, but not too
much strength. It shuts the door on
any near-term tightening."
The moderate jobs gain immediately sent bond prices higller, push·
ing yields on 30-year bondt down a
tentb of a percentage point to 6.70
j&gt;ercent.
'
In another sign of economic slowing, the Commerce Dcpanment said
today that consumer spending fell 0.2
percent in July, the first drop since
last winter when blizzards kept shoppers out of malls.
The decline came despite a 0.9
percent jump in personal incomes, the
largest in a year and a half.

Veteran businessman
Thomas D. Crow dies

Longtime Pomeroy rcstauranteur Thomas D. Crow, 72, died Thursday at
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipoli s.
Fowler said he is opposed to the
A veteran member of the Pomeroy business community, Crow was costate being responsible for the proowner of Crow's Steak House and Family Restaurant for 39 years.
grams, believing that southeastern
He was born May 24, 1924 in Pomeroy, the son of the late Dr. Thomas
Ohio wi II be neglected.
H. Crow and Josephine Webster Crow.
"We know how southeastern
He was a member ofthe Pomeroy United Methodist Church, a U.S. Navy
Ohio is treated by the state when it
veteran of World War II, a member of the Drew Webster American Legion
comes to schools. highways and
Post, and a life member of the Pomeroy Gun Club.
jobs."
Crow is survived by his wife, Vera A. Crow; a son and daughter-in-law,
Danny and Carol Crow of Pomeroy; two daughters and sons-in-law, Debbie
and Rodney Gilkey of Lancaster. and Donna and Mike Morrison of Coral
Springs, Florida; a brother and sister-in-law, Bob and Katie Crow of Syra- .
cuse; five grandchildren; and two nephews and three cousins .
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a half-brother, Webster
Hodge.
the 1846 Agricultural Fair exhibit feaFuneral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Ewing Funeral
turing farming life from that era.
Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating. Burial will folThe 17-day fair also includes the
low
in
the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
traditional tractor pulls. pig races and
hours will be observed today, Friday, from 6-9 p.m., at the funerCalling
fncd cheese-on-a-stick . New areas
al
home
.
include the Thrill Zone- a futurisIn lieu of Oowers, the family requests that donations he made in memotic playground that will virtual realiry
to
the Pomeroy United Methodi st Church, in care of the Rev. Robcn Robinty games, laser tag, bungee jumping
son.
211
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
and a rock climbing wall.

Governor officially opens 1996 state fair ·
. COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich today opened the
Ohio State Fair. Then he planned to
go fishing.
. • " The Ohio State Fair is one of the
greatest fairs in the country, and I am
ptoud of its emphasis on agriculture,
families and youth,'' Voinovich said
at the opening ceremony.

Later today, Voinovich planned to Depanment of Natural Resources
fish with some children at the "Kid- ·says. It is stocked with about 5,000
die Fishing" pond. which is one of catfish . Children may take the fish
the oldest attractions at the fair. He they catch with them or have it
also was scheduled to speak at the released back into the pond.
Before the ceremony, Voinovich
Ohio Folklife Festival Show.
led
a media tour of the fairgrounds .
The pond attracts more than
14,000 children each year. the Ohio Stops included the Cox Fine Arts
Center, the Virtual Ohio exhibit and

Voinovich removes name from Dole VP list
• COLUMBUS (AP)- When Bob the voters who re-elected him in
bole ·s campaign contacted Gov. 1994.
"I enjoy the job of being governor
:tleorge Voinovich for background
jnformation, the governor hadn't of Ohio. I believe my work is not fin)hought much about becoming Dole's ished. There are many projects that
are under way that are not completfllnning mate. he says.
• . It turns out he didn't think much ed. There are several that we're
undertaking now thjlt need my leadf the job after all .
· Voinovich
on
Thursday ership to be completed,'' he said.
Voinovich, whose state is crucial
1tnnounced he would remove his
'hame from consideration for the No. to Republican chances of recapturing
2 spot on the Republican ticket, and the White House, said Dole needs a
focus on the final IWo years of his running mate focused on winning in
November.
Jerm.
Voinovich said he told the Dole
~ He said he wasn't prepared to
make a decision when the back- campaign about his decision on
i round checkers called late last Thursday but had not spoker with
bole.
blonth.
!, "When that happened, all &lt;?f a
"He indicated that fundamentally
i!!dden it hit me. This is serious. l bct- he understood and he respected my
ttr think about it. Is this what I want decision," Voinovich said. " It is
o do for myself, for my family, for really important that Sen . Dole has a
Sen. Dole]" Voinovich said at a hasti- running mate that really wants to be
vice president"
ly called news conference.
~ He had another reason for bowing
Voinovich said he would do everybut: his intention to run for bemoc- thing he could to help Dole defeat
tu John Glenn's Senate seat in 1998. · President Clinton. .
ilut first, he has a job to complete for
"If Ohio goes for Dole, Dole is the

..

,·

:....,...

35-*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 2, 1996

.Strickland outlines Medicare position

New whooping cough
shot safer for infants

By ANITA MANNING
USA TODAY
A safer vaccine against pertussis,
or whooping cough, was approved by
the Food and Drug Administration
Wednesday for use in infants.
The new vaccine is far less likely
to cause babies the high fevers and
crankiness or swelling at the injection
site parents have come to dread after
a DTP (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis)
shot.
The new class of vaccine - ConA couple of nine-year-olds in
naught Labs' version is the first of
Athens County allegedly fired a pelseveral to win FDA approval - is
let gun at police officers hitting a
called "acellular" because it is made
deputy sheriff. Dumb move. Do keep
with only those parts of the pertussis
smiling.
·
bacterium that cause immunity, rather
than the whole, killed bacterium.
Missing is the part of the organism
Hocking College nursing student - Smith was nominated for the , that contributed to many of the side
Kimberly Smith, daughter of John award by Hocking College professor effects, said Dr. Carlton Meschievitz
and Ella Wilson of Pomeroy, has Dawn Holtzmein, and her biography of Con naught.
Acellular vaccine has been used
been named as a recipient of the will appear in the United States
United States Collegiate Award , pre- Achievement Academy Official- since 1991 as booster shots for chilsented by the United States AC hieve- Collegiate Yearbook national publi- dren at 12-18 months old and before
starting school. But whole-cell vacment Academy.
cation.
. cine has been used for babies at 2. 4
c~-:-:c:---7-=----c---.
The award is an honor given by
' Jim McKay holdl the Olympic recand 6 months old.
the Academy to less than I 0 percent : on! fot time in the lllChor booth. He
Studies show acellular vaccine
of all American college students.
was ABC's hoi! of the 1968, '72,
I, "76. ' 80 (winrer) oncl '84 Games. 1 re41uces:

And on July 20. Linda and Roy
Vaughan and their daughters, Crystal
and Bridget. hosted a party at their
home in the Salem Center area to
honor Roy's Mother, Rowena Vaughan of Pomeroy, on her birthday.
Adinner was served with a )'ell ow
and purple color scheme carried out
-in the decorations. All five of Rowena's children were on hand for the
party and since they are scattered
about it se ldom happens that all five
arc at the same location at the same
time, so that was a bit unusual.
At the party were Thurma
McDaniel and children. Eva and
-Loring. of Rochester, N. Y.; Hilah

many smokers must make two or
three attempts before the habit is
gone for good.
And he recognizes that smoking
cessation aids - the patch, gum, ·
classes - won't work unl~ss the
person also musters a lot of
willpower. Breaking the smoking
habit requi.res avoiding tempting situations, like a bar or a favorite lunch
haunt.
Lee counsels patients to eat lunch
in new places, so they don 't experience the auditory or sensory triggers
that typically make them want a cigarette. Continuing to take breaks at
work - but not with smokers also is important to relieve stress, he
said.
For patients who resist trying to
quit, Lee doesn't pressure them hut
also doesn 't stop talking to them
about it. Only two patients actively
have resisted. One argued the
research was wrong. Another
patient, with lung cancer, refused. ·
She died last month.
Lee doesn 't keep track of his successes. And though he admits success stories sometimes seem few
and far between, he remains undeterred. As Lee tells patients: "You
wouldn't want a doctor who ignores
the most imponant thing affecting
your health."

..

'\

next president. And we certainly
need a new president of the United
States."
Christina Martin, Dole's cam(l_aign spokeswoman. said: "Sen.
Dole respects Gov. Voin-ovich's decision and the two men will continue
to work closely in the Republican
fight to take back the White House."
Ohio Republican Party Chairman
Rollen Bennett speculated that
Voinovich was not that interested in
playing second fiddle t~ole .
"He certainly understands the
role of vice president," said Bennett,
who signaled his early suppon for a
Dole-Voinovich ticket in a letter he
wrote to Dole in the spring. " He 's
picked a couple of lieutenant governors. He's been a lieutenant himself."
David Leland, chairman of the
Ohio Democratic Pany. said
Voinovich 's decision came as no
surprise.
"First, Colin Powell turned him
down . Then · (New Jersey) Gov.
Christine Todd Whitman said 'No.'
Now it's George Voinovich's tum. In

add1toon to not being able to fond a .
message, Dole seems to be having
trouble finding a running mate."
Voinovich was the first governor
to endorse Dole, and comes from a
state no Republican has ever won the
presidency without carrying.
Voinovich had a number of thing s
in his favor, according to source s
close to the vice presidential search.
He is the nght age, 60; the right
re li ~ ion , Catholic; and on the ri~ht
side of the abortion issue, anti -abortion - but not enough to scare moderates.
Critics dubbed him "Rockefeller
Voinovich" for extending lhe sales
tax to services such as health club
memberships, imposing a soft drink
taX that was repealed by voters and
increasing the top income tax brack·
et.
Voinovich 's decision came a day
after Dole expanded his search to
include Arizona Sen. John McCain.
Tentative plans call for Dole to
announce his choice Aug. I0 in his
hometown of Russell, Kan.

~

WATERWORKS- Upgradaa to the 100.year-old W8tar ayat.m .
on Lincoln Hill In Pomeroy nre completed Thuradl!f with the '
Installation of new ~mpa. A new raaarvolr, .,....auriled 1tor1ga
tank and two MW pumps tra expect.~ to Improve the reliability of the wat.r ayatem on the hill, according to Pomeroy w.t.r
Department SuperviiOI' John Andaraon.ln addition, the new.tern corr.cta unllfa alactrlcal service. Water Dapanmll'tt WOI'It· ·
er. Waalalf Manley, above, adjusts one of the MW pumps. Total '
coat o1 the project, not Including the twervolr, waa about $15,000. · .
The project Ia part of an ongoing watarayatam lmptowllllantpro. •
g111m In the village.
·_
'Q

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