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,

. :·
,

Sunday,August18, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Lotte.ry
Rockies fall
to Reds 9-4
at Riverfront

Election
areas set
for FSA

l

RESERVE CHAMPION HOG- Riverside Food Mart of Pomeroy
purchased tha reserve champion hog from Arlc Patteraon for
$3.75 per pound. Shown are, from left: Little Mister Daniel Buck·
ley, Fair Queen Amy Smith, Patterson, Swine Princess "-Y Hunt,
Fair King Larry Willis, and Kathy Hall, Barbara John1011and Llaa
Mitchell representing Riverside Food Mart. (T·S Photo by Brian
J. Reed)

Home National Bank...
Continued rrom D·1
Weese, O.D.; Nicholas Detwiller, S2.25. Mid·
dlepon!Pomcroy Rotary Club; Nichole White,
$1.90, Holzer Chn&gt;c; Jennifer Gocghlein,

Roben Eason and Anomeys Little, Sheets and
Warner.
POULTRY
Prices are given as per market pe11 .

S2.3!5, Wcsam Construction; Chad Wheeler,

SI.90,1Wmon Heating and Coohng; Malthew
Justioe, $2, Forc~t Run Reody Mi.; Lester
Parker, $1.75, Oiler's Deer Cuning: Kristi
Warner, $1.60, Farmers Bank; Steve Kautr.
$1.75, HiD's Oassic Cars; Carrie Sheets, $2,
Ken's Appliances; Adam Chevalier, $1.90,
Bourn Lumber. Leslie Parker, $1 .60, Greg
Kaylor Home Medical; Andrew Upton. $2, TriGreen Equipment; Alyssa Hoffman, $180,_
Don Tale Moton; Nicholas Delwiller, S2&lt;f5,
R&amp;tG Feed and Supply; Amanda Wheeler,
$1.90, Farmers Bank; Chris J~de. $2.25, Jay
Hall; Joey Richard, $1.65, Mike Canan for
Sheriff and Jeff Warner lnslll'1J1Ce; Tmvis Lod·
wtck, $1 .60, Fanners Bank; Brandy Groham,
$2.20, Burlile Oil; Mary Rankin, $2.10, Jay
Hall; John01han Haggeny, $3.00, Jay Hall;
Abbie Chevalier. $1.95, Cannichnel's ~;&gt;wn
and Garden; Kayla G1bbls, $1.65, Hawks 76
and ~arm Supply; Billie Jo Welsh, $1.75, for-

Kevin BIIICher, G.C., $295, RidetiClW' Gas;
Edward Oil~ R.C., $310, J.D. Auto Sales aad
JetrWamer lnsuranoe; Manhew Kilt, $120,
Kroger Food and Pharmacy; Mike Guess,
Sl20.1!ankin's Oub Calves; Melissa CUCS$,
S100, Bob Ashcraft Logging; Odie Karr, $70,
King's ServiStar Hardw,..; Roben Johnson,
$90, Home National Bank; Alban Salser,
$125. Home Natiooal Bank; Bteot Butcher,
'$80, Produa:n LivestockAslocialioo;Jeremy
Shanks, $100, Burlile Oil and TltppeR Plains
Citgo; Brian Hupp, $95, Vaughan's I.G.A.;
RobbieWeddle,$100,AnomeyllemardFultz;
James Westiohn, $70; Manhew King, $100,
Pine Grove Fanns; Brad Runyon, Monro Muf·
Oer and Brakes; Eric Runyon. $95, Dr. Dou·
glas Hunter, M.D.; Melissa Kirk, $60, Ervin
Trucking; Ashley Graham, $95, Bobb's Log.
gmg and Lumber, Kenny Zuspan, S'Xt. Fann·
en Bank; Manhew Salser, $60, Holter Hoi·

es1 Run Ready Mix; Eric ThorrulS, $1.60,

steins; Mike Salser, $60, Birchfield funeral

Home Creek Enterprises; Billie Sellers, S1.80,

Home; Steven McDaniel, $60, fanncn Bank;

Home

Je§sica Amott, $50, Home National Bank
Sarah Hauser, $55, Ridenour Cas.
'

Nation:~!

Holzer Oinic;

Bank ; Betsy Sheets, $2.1S,
Lon Harris, S1.90, Greg Kay-

GALLIPOLIS - On AugustS, tlte
Gallia and Lawrence County Farm
Service
Agency
Committees
reviewed and detennined the local
administrative area (LAA) boun&lt;laries for the FSA area commiuee
elections to be held this fall. This is
one of the first steps in the election
process.
In compliance with changes
required by the Federal Insurance
Refonn and Department of Agriculture Reorganization Acl of 1994, the
county FSA committees set these
boundaries.
RESE!WE CHAMPION STEER - Big Bend
meat manager Bob Thompson, Foodland rap. Under the new regulations com·
area Foodland stores purchaaad the reaerve
resentlve Jim Johnaon, Beef Prince Joah
bined county offices will be repre·
champion steer for $1.75 per pound from Jaaon
Hager, Fair King Larry Wllll1, Ja1on Pullins, Fair sen ted by ONE area committee ratl)er
Pullins. Shown are Adrian and Tyler Eastman
Queen Amy Smith and Little Mlater Daniel
than two coun1y conimillees. FSA; 'an
with Foodland owner Bob Eastman, Foodland
Buckley. (T·S Photo by Jim Freeman)
agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture -· fonnerly named AS~S.
administers farm commodity, crop
insurance, and conservation pr{)·
grams for farmers and makes faim
ownership and operating loans.
Elections will be held to elect representative directly to the area committee. Galli a and Lawrence counties
are divided into five LAA's or voting
areas. All five LAA's will have an
election in 1996.
The LAA's in Gallia County a~e:
LAA-1: Cheshire, Addison, Gallipplis, Clay, Ohio, and Guyan Townships; LAA-2: Morgan, Springfietl:t,
Green, and Harrison Townshifis;
LAA-3 : Huntington, Raccoon, Perry,
Greenfield, and Walnut Townships.
1 The LAA's in Lltwrence County
are: LAA-4: Washington, Decatur,
. Symmes, ~id: Elizabeth, Hamilton,
Upper, Lawrence, and Mason Township; LAA-5: lronlon, Windsor,
:Rome, Fayette, Union, and Perry
' Townships.
' These area recommendations wer;
detennined by using similar farming
practices and the number of eligible
RESERVE CHAMPION RABBITS - Kroger
Kr9{1er manager Dick Wari'ter, Nick Leonard voters within each area. The Ohio
Pharmacy and Five Points Driving Ranga pur·
representing Five Points Driving Range, and State Committee will review the area
chal8d lha reaarve champion pen of rabbits
Little Mlater Daniel Buckley. (T·S Photo by Jim designations prior to c:lections this
from An Tobin for $600. Shown are Fair King
Freeman)
fall.
Larry Willi•, Tobin, Fair Queen Amy Smith,
Boundaries of LAA's, a boundllfY
map, and the number of farms within each LAAare available
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - A be challenged in court.
and Congress before getting Glick· are county executive directors Ot
compact designed to increase New
The compact won approval by all man's required signature.
the Gallia-Lawrence Farm Service
E;ngland dairy fanners ' incomes is six New England state legislatures
Agenry.
·
being hailed as a boost for the North·
east's small family fanns, struggling
to survive in the face of competition
rrom larger operations elsewhere in
the country.
· Bui dairy fanners in Midwes1ern
states arc distressed, saying it would
put them at a competitive disadvantage.
Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman's signature on the compact last
Friday capped an eight-year effort by
New England lawmakers. But Mid·
westcrn senators, who pressured the
Clinton administration to kill the
deal, said they expect the compact to

~~¥ER11o~

Perry Hill Farms; Kayla Gibbs, $1.80, Birch-

ftekl funeral Home; Kristi Wwner, S1.80.
Chester Agri-Servict;·Brandon Bobb. $2.75.
East Ohio Lumber Company; Kay Hunt,
Sl 80. Downing Childs Mullen Musser Insurance; Andrew Upton. S1.80, Hawk's 76; Alicia Walker. Sl .liS, Lakeview Fanns: Canie
Sheets, S2.10. Holzer Clinic; Eric Thomas,

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..

$.191. Dr Thomas Spencer. DO.; Abbie
Chc.,alier, $1.85. County Engineer Robert
Eawn 111\d Allomeys lillie Sheets and Warner;

Chad Wheeler, $1 .15, Bibee Motor Com·

pany : Steve Kauff. SI 80. Summerfield's
Restaurunt; Betsy Sheets. $2 .05, J.D. Auto

D &amp; p LANDCLEAR.ING

Sales;SheenaG•Imorc.
SI85.Dr. GregLinS&lt;ott, DD.S; Chad Hubbard, $3.20, Downing
Childs Mullen and Musstr Insurance: Adam

a..valiet, 1260. wcsarn Construction: Billie
Joe Wel!h. 12.01. Royal Oak Family Reson.
DAIRY MARKET FEEDER
Price IS eiven as per pound
RacbeiChapman.SI61.CountyEngincer

Patri"Ot, Ohi"O

614 _379 _9277

Farms, HOUSIOQ
. DeveIopmentS, Rl 9ht 0 f

ways,

Brushy Areas and morel Call today!

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;By KIMBERLEY MURPHY

Teton County Search and Rescue crew members, on toot and horseback,

Air Force officials had released no information about a possible cause of the

:garrytng gear for President Clinton. All nine people aboard were killed.
They cam~ at the rugged wreckage site, where bodies still had not been
"' The 15 mvesllgators received supplies from a helicopter that was able to removed. Eight Air Force crew members and a Secret Service employee were
i!!md near the high-mountain site in the Gros Ventre Wilderness area. No trails killed.
·
;Or roads lead into the location on Sheep Mountain, known locally as SleepWitnesses said the plane took off to the south and had started heading easl
Indian Mountain. "
when it struck the II,3()().foot mountain and exploded in a lireballlhat could
:.": The four-engine C-130, based out of Dyess Air Force Base near Abilene, - be seen for 20 miles.
:l'cxas,.crashed aboutl0:48 p.m. Saturday, about one hour after it landed in
"II was way too low," said Anne Skov, who watched the plane from her
;!.8ckson to pick up a presidential vehicle used during Clinton's nine-day v~a- front window. "After I saw it, someone called and asked if we were all right
•lion m the area.
and that there was a plane crash. I said, 'Oh, my God - I saw the plane."'
The airplane was to shuttle lhe presidential vehicle to New 'York City,
A Clinton administration official said the pilot reported havj~g mechan·
:wpere Cltnlon celebtated his 50th birthday Sunday nigh!.
ical problems and began to return to lhe airport at the time of the crash. But

before.
"First it looked like lightning had struck the mountain," be said. " But
when it kept burning and suddenly quit, I realized it WB!n't a forest lire."
Meanwhile, Jackson businesses flew thejr flags at half-staff and church
congregations devotcd Sunday services to the nine victims.
" It 's just all sad to me," said resident Susan Luers. "It makes you won·
der why, why all this had to happen."
Clinton said he and the first lady were "very sad and shocked " by the
crash.
"This is especially painful to us because (the victims) worked for me and
did an invaluable service," he said.

~Aatocieted Prats Writer
spent more than three hours Saturday night and early Sunday getting to the · crash by Sunday night. Officials tentatively scheduled a briefing for today.
:' JACKSON, Wyo. ~ Military investigators camped al I 0,500 feet near · site - located about 15 miles southeast of the Jackson Hole Airport along
·John Walstrom, a Jackson resident who saw the flames , said he visited a
:~e ":reckage of a military cargo plane that smashed into a mountain while . the nqrthwestem edge of Wydming.
. vanlage point Sunday to get an idea of what he had been watching the night

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~Magnate's 'bundling'
: h ighlights political
~contribution concerns

~

Auto. and Much,
Much Morell
Balance of Factory
Bumper to Bumper
Warranty!

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As usual, an overflow
crowd waa on hand for
$aturday's Demolition
Derby at the Meigs
County Fair. The derby
was held In front of the
grandstand before a
more than capacity
crowd. Above Ia some
of the metal grinding
action frofll Saturday's
action, wfllle.at right,
members of the Pomeroy
Fire Department worked
to extinguish a small fire
In the engine of one of
the cars at the derby.
The fire department was
on hand for the derby In
case they were needed,
as was the Syracuse
Emergency Squad In
caaa of Injuries. (Sari·
tlnel photos by Dave
Harris)

President Clinton's economic plan
would put an inlolerable tax burden
. .-2-n !_lit next, &amp;C9cratiOJl,f,RQ Sll~ -···
iiadm : " cannot lei that happen. •
1
1
The Texas billionaire beat fonner
•Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm by a
nearly 2·1 margin Sunday in a pri·
mary in which fewer than 50,000
people voted out of I ~13 million eli·
gible, a turnout that Perot found dis·
appointing.
Asked 10 explain the low turnout
-today on ABC's "Good Morning
America," Perol said "I'm not sure ,
,bul we'll find out." i'le said the
;1urnou1, coupled with his low rating
:i n the polls, didn'1 concern him
'because "I'm focused on trying to get
our country's problems solved. "
"The two parties and the estab·
lishment arc panicked," Pcr01 said on
NBC 's "Today" show. "The people
will have a voice. It's going to be a
really interesting period."
, Perot accepted the Refonn Party's
nomination Sunday ncar where
George Washington regrouped his
lroops during a biller winter in 1he
Revolulionary War.
. About 2,000 party mcmhers
.awa.&lt;h in campaign paraphernalia
'attended the high school pep rally[like p~rty, chccri~g Perot lhroughout
his hourlong acceptance speech.
The speech was vinlagc Perot He
kicked off his presidential campaign
saying he would talk of the hard
_issues, unlike Clinton who, he main·
1ained, only says, '.' I feel your pain."
1
"If you want them 10 feel your
pain, let lhcm have retirement and
health insurance like yours," Perot
said.
In a hoarse, often-cracki ng voice,
Perot turned his speech to Ihe nalional debt and jobs going overseas,
favorite subjects in 1992 when he
made his first run for the presidency,
garnering 19 perccnl of the vote as an
independent. During that campaign,
American Enterprise Institute said the his talks on a balanced budget turned
study demonstrates that poverty is the nation 's auention to the deficit .
As he has done previously, Perot
caused by lhe deterioration of Amerturned to chans and graphs to illusican families.
"Whal this shows when you gel trate his points.
He criticized the Republicans'
right down to it is that there is a great
deal of poverty in this country, and it economic plan that combines a tax
comes from broken families," Dou- cut and supply-side economics,
which have been dismissed by some
Rias Besharov said in an interview.
. Near Iy 38 percent of people in 1u "voodoo ~conomics ."
households headed by a woman were
"I said in 1992. if we ever do this
1
poor in an average month in 1993, lhc again we'll be in deep voodoo," Per·Census Bureau report said. Fony-six ot said, sparking laughter.
percent were poor at least two 1 Asked today about the RePUblican
months, atlll 17.2 percent were poor !Party's proposed tax cut, ·Perot said:
"This is Washington 111 its worst. It's
continuously for 'l-4 months.
I "The corresponding proportions irrational. It's not based on logical
of people in married-couple families planning and decision-making."
who were poor were significantly
Perot said Clinton's economic
smaller - 7.7 percent, 13.7 percent plans would mean "a liule baby born
and 1.6 percent, respectively," the tonight will pay an 82 percenl tax
rate. I cannot let that happen.,;
report said.
.
' An estimated 22 percent of people
A major decisi!&gt;fl still facing Perwho fit the government's definition ot is the choice of a vice presidential
of poveny in 1m rose above it in running mate.
1993. the report said.

Childre·n compr.ise almost half
of nation's 'chronically poor'

..

..

.

and over, were chronically poor dur·
ing the same period."
The average poverty threshold
for a family of four in 1993 was
S14,763. The government calculates
poverty levels based on a family''
income, its size and the age of the
head of the household.
People in families headed by a
married couple were more likely to
be above the poverty line than members of other types of families, the
report said.
"Single-parent families generally
have female householders (heads or
households), and people in remalehouseholder families
much more
likely tQ be poor than people in mar·
ried-couple families," it noted. .
· President Clinton has said be will
'sign a welfare-overhaul bill recently
pilssed by Congress even though
some of his fellow Dem6crats say it
· ·l m and '.l993,-"~ siid TJ. m~er. t11e is'too' hai-sh on children arid will push
re'""''s llilthor. "AbCut S jien:eill of mcire of them into poverty.
But a scholar at the conservative
~ elderly ~IJ!joa, persons 6S

(IIEC 210)-COIMtl Alti*l tPII: 017 or ACT Ill

IOCDI
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'

VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (AP) Ross Perot, fresh from claimins his
Reform Party 's presidenlial nomitla·
tion,.~nackcd the economic plans 'o f
his two major·party opponents today,
calling Bob Dole's proposed 15 per·
cent tn cut " Washinglon at its

WASHINGTON (AP) - Chil·
dren made up nearly half- 48 per·
~~ - of the chroni~y poor in
1992 and 1993, living in families that
·stayed below the poverty line in
every month orthose years, the Cen·
sus Bureau reported today.
Among the overall population,
more than 8 percent of all American
children were cllfonically poor during
the time period.
About5 pertent- or 12 million - or !he nation,'s total population
was cluoniCIIIy poet in 81124 months
of 1m tllld 1993, the report said.
That fi~. was not statistically different from the 5.'1 percent, or 12.5
- million, who wen poor for all of
. 1991 aM 199i. ' I
''Thedifferenc:es in chronic poV«·
ty are strikinJ. EIJht percent of chil·
dren venus 3 pen:ent of non-elderly
adults~ poil(iJl-:11124 months of

THURSDAY

soc

Derby draws overflow crowd . . . . . Reform
candidate
. .
takes aim
at rivals
-.

By PAUL BARTON
.'Gennett News Service
WASHINGTON - Employees and family members associated with
CinciAnati magnate Carl Lindner have given close to $400,000 in political
contribution&amp; so far in the 1995·96 election cycle.
'
Lindner's companies are just a few of the prominent Cincinnati linns
where executives and employees are busy contributing to candidates nationwide, Federal Election Commission records show.
· • Wl\en executives of the same company and their family members end up
gLving to many of 1he same candidates, the practice is refened to as
"bundling."
It remains one of the key issues in the ongoift! debate over how polilical
campaigns are financed, especially at the congressiomil level. Critics see
bundling as a way for companies and otl)er special inter~sts to skirt FEC lim·
.its on the amount of money ihey ca~ give to ~8ndi~ates through political
, actiQn CpqlQ)ittees.......,w ....... .-..~ .6A ·• · ot·· - -• ....ft-""1-· ~ ~
·
· ·:· The ii~~for ihe Lindn~ a'nd their employees rellkt contributions of
f200 or more oply, the FEC thre,lhold for itcmization. They also do not reflect
money given directly to political partie~ in the name of one or the Lindner
firms rather than an individual.
Contributions related to Lindner and his firms to the Republican Party
alone already total $794,000 so rar in this election cycle, according to Com·
mon Cause.
·
Among the Lindner-related contribulions to specific candidatcs so far and
c~ndidates receiving them :
·: - Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Cincinnatl: $2.000 from Ronald Walker of
'1\merican Financial Corp.; $1,000 from Thomas Hayes of Great American
Insurance; $1 ,000 from Alan Lindner; $500 from Beuy Lindner; $1 ,000 from .
Carl Lindner; $1,000 from Carl Lindner Ill; $1,000 from Charlene Lindner;
$'1,000 from David Lipdner; $1 ,000 from Frances Lindner; $1 ,000 from Keith Lindner; $1,000. from Martha Lindner: $1,000 from Robert D. Lindner;
and $1,000 from Craig Lindner.
-Rep. Rob Portman, R-Cincinnatl: $1 ,000 from Gary Gruber of Great
American Insurance; $1.000 from Thomas Hayes of Great Amorican lnsur·
tl!lce; $1 ,000 from Karen Horrell of Great American Insurance; $1 ,000 from
Donald Larson of Great American Insurance; $1,000 from Jerry Shroal of
Great American Insurance; $1,000 from James Evans of American Finan·
cial; $500 from Karl Grafe or American Financial; $1,000 from Neil Hahl
o! American Financial; $500 from James Kennedy of American Financial;
$1,000 from Thomas Mischel! of American Financial; $1,000 from Robert
Ruffing of American Financial : $995 from Fred Runk of American Finan·
cial; SI ,000 from Ron Walker of American Financial: $1 ,000 from AnthoQP Battaglia of Chiquita Brands International; $1,000 from Dc;nnis Doyle of
Chiquita; $500 from John Lanier of Chiquita; $1,000 from Robert Kistingcr
qf Otiquita; $1,000 from Joseph Stalenhoef of Chiquita; an~ $250 from Wil·
f{Cd White of Chiquita.
- Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolls: $1 ,000 from Robert Lintz of
American Financial; $995 from Fred Runk of American Financial; $1,000
from Ronald Walker of Americ11n Financial; $2,000 from Alan Lindner;
$~ ,000 from Betty Lindner; .$1 ,000 from Carl Lindner; $1,000 from Carl
Undner III; $1,000 from Charlene Lindner; $1,000 from Courtney Lindner;
$],000 from David Lindner; $1,000 from Edyth Lindner; $1 ,000 from Frances
l;indner; $1,000 from Keith Lindner; $1,000 from Martha Lindner; $1,000
(~m Paula Lindner; $1 ,000 from Richard Liqdner; $1,000 from Robert Lind(~Qntlnued on Page 3)
·'

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presidentia.l shuttle 'plane crash ·leaves 9 dead

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 19, 1996

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Pertly cloudy tonight,
lowe near 70. Tue1day,
partly 1unny, chenca of a
ttorm. Hight 85 to 90.

'

with Cassettes. Air,

Fall semester begins August 26th
COli"'

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Cars Fully Equipped

IJel Registered TDday!
MONDAY

Pick 3:
9-2-3
Pick 4:
14 44

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Northeast dairy farmers get new compact

lor Home
Eagle
RidgeMedical;
farms; Mntthew
Kay Hunt,Jus1ice,
$2.25. $2.10,
Home ~-----------------------..
Na1ional Bank: Jennifer Goeglein, $.190, Or.
Melanic: Wctsc. D.O.; Elaine Putman, $1.85.

1-~::.u

on Page 4

committee
elections ·

FEEDER CALF - The grand champion dllry feeder calf waa
purchlaed from Rachel Chapmen for $1.65 per pound by Melga
County Engineer Robert Eason and tha Pomeroy law firm of Lit·
tie, Sheets and Warner. Shown are, from left: Fair Queen Amy
Smith, Doug Little, Linda Warner, Eason and Chapman. (T-s Photo by Jim Freeman)

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Monday, August 19,1996

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Republicans hope word games win the· da\':·..,

'Esta!Jfisfrd in 1948

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A ~annett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGm
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Name that business
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bualneu Analylt
NEW YORK- Scores of personality traits set entrepreneurs apart from
other people and make them among the more interesting creatures on earth.
They are self-sufficient. They have vision. They are willing to take risks.
They are persistent, energetic, innovative, industrious. They don'tcomplain
about hours. They forego ordinary pleasures.
They have their failings too. Such as ignoring the odds and their health,
and never knowing when it's time to give up. And being so focused that noth·
ing matters but the current state of the business and its prospects.
They can be professors, retirees, kids who don' t know better, corporate
misfits, men and women in middle-age crises, former athletes, ex-cons and,
especially in recent years, downsized executives eagerly doing their own
thing.
Not all small-business people qualify as entrepreneurs. Some seek only
a paycheck from their little shops. Others just don't have the business
instincts; they open a dress shop, for example, because they like to sew.
But enough of them break into the sunlight, creating products to fill a
market need and make a fortune, and inspiring others to try the same. It is,
remember, how big companies are created: Microsoft, Intel, Home Depot.
And successfullinle businesses too. Such as "A Sticky Business," a cactus retailer; "A Wet Pet," a tropical fish retail shop; "All Bugged Out," an
exterminator, and "Autobody Experience," a collision repair shop.
This story is about one aspect of entrepreneurial genius, the imaginative
way in which proprietors present themselves to the public, and in the process
generate publicity for themselves and products, such as right now.
Cleverness is attractive, but in describing the product a name can also '
be practical. "Friar's Thckaway" describes a retired minister's bed and breakfast; "Get Out of Town," a travel agency; "Vital Signs," a sign shop.
These were among finalists in the annual name game conducted by Independent Business, a magazine of the National Federation of Independent
Business, generally regarded as the nation's largest small-business organilation.
The magazine received more than 500 entries, refined that to 52 finalists, invited subscribers to enter their three favorites, and will report on the
winners in its September issue. The judging task was formidable:
Try choosing, for example, among just these three: "Greatlmpasta," an
Italian. restaurant and caterer; "Groun&lt;ls for Thought," a coffee·shop and
bookstore; and "Glass Act," a glass and mirror shop.
Consider how appropriate "Just For Starters" is for an automotive electrical repair shop; and "Intensive Hair Unit," for a beauty salon; and "Seems
Sew Rig~" for a tailoring service: - .
Now a test. Try to identify the business of these companies: "Faults Alarm
Inc."; "Everything Your An Desires"; "Sweeping Beauties"; "Rid-0-Vit
Co."; "Sign Language"; and "Cat Calls."
The answers: Earthquake preparedness supply; commercial artist;
housekeeping service; debris remover, hauler; sign shop; mobile vet service.
This is a sneak preview of the September issue:
The gold medal winner: "Sweeping Beauties," owned by Pattie
Perushak, of Canton, Mich. And the silver medal winner: "Grounds For
Thought," owned by Kelly Wicks, Bowling Green, Ohio.
The bronze winner illustrates another aspect of the small-business personality, that being incurable optimism. It went to Blinn Salisbury of Glen
Burnie, Md. His company: "Many Happy Returns." He prepares tax returns.

By The Associated Prell
Today is Monday, August 19, the 23:4nd day of 1996. There are 134 days
left in the year.
Today'sHighlightinHistory:
On August 19, 1812, the USS Constitution -- also·known as "Old Ironsides" .. defeated the British frigate Guerriere east of Nova Scotia during
the War of 1812.
·
On this date:
In 1848. the New York Herald reported the discovery of gold in California.
In 1934. a plebtscne 10 Germany approved the vesting of sole executive
power in Adolf Hitler as Fuhrer.
In 1929, the comedy program "Amos 'N' Andy," starring Freeman Gosden and Charles Correll, made its network radio debut on NBC.
In 1942, about6,000 Canadian and British soldiers launched a disastrous
raid against the Germans at Dieppe, France, suffering about 50 percent casuallies.

Berry's World

lican National Committee, he rec- our political rbetoric." The word is •
ommends that the label "Republi- deemed "too bureaucratic and incliscan" be relegated in favor of "con- criminate, an.d suggests a 'blank · i
servative."
check'to erase important laws. It is
"In' a liberal vs. conservative hat- better to talk abou~ 'eliminlling the'!
tie, we will win far more than we . rules and regulations, the red tape and'
lose, but we CAN do better," the bureaucracy that come out of Washreport reads. "The fact is, we need ington.' It may take longerto say, but I
new labels for the new political real- it will have a greater impact.~~
'.
ity of the new political_ environ.. Republicans may not ha:v~ to .
ment."
hum "Hail to the Chief," but 'they
Some of the vaunted Republican will have to sing a different tune to ·
sions were incorporated in the 18- freshmen who were swept into office woo women back into the pblitical '
month project.
in 1994 with Luntz's help were clear- fold.
· '
Luntz, who was one of the main Jy targets for the new rhetoric.
"If we wish to win the unaffiliat- '
,"Some ot your colleigues have ;ed fetnale vote, we must be careful in ·
architects of the "Contract With
America," warned in the report that refused to accept the following point, the words and emotions· we use in
politicians have just seven seconds to but the American people are not ide- attacking the president," the reliort
make their case.
•
ologically anti·government," Luntz observes. "The angry, indig'nt1nt,
"And in those seven seconds, wrote. "They do see a limited role for inflammatory approach simply t'""s ·
'"liars," "'vicious" and "corrupt."
"Every conservative needs to con- your choice of words will either Washington that goes beyond defense women off. We have to appear less ·
sider whether lowering the noise enhance or destroy your message," and foreign policy to protecting the partisan, show more respect for the
level and partisanship of their rhetoric according to a copy of the report poor and the elderly."
office of the presidency, and incl.ude ,
a notch or two would help them com- we've obtained. "So use this docuOther highlights from the Luntz a better altel1)8tive to whatever.f!c: Is:
municate more effectively," the ment wisely and carefully."
lexicon include:
selling. It is simply not enough to tear
report reads.' "Remember, it is posLuntz argues for the repackaging
-- "Deregulation," once a code Bill Clinton down."
,
sible to understand public anger of the Republican revolution, declar- word to get government off the backs
.. When is a budget cut not'really :
without overtly expressing anger. It is ing that the "old ideological cate- of powerful business interests and roll a budget cut? The report offen !lie •
possible to express emotion without gories are obsolete."
back environmental protection, is a example of "not giving" vs. "deny· '
being loud."
In news sure to rankle the Repub- word that "should have no place in ing," which evoke vastlY. different
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - " - " , _ _ _ ::.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~_.:..__ _, images. For instance, Luntz's polling ·
data show that only 38 percent of vot· .
ers would "deny emergency room care paid for by the government to' t
illegal aliens." But that figure jumps -'
to a 55 percent majority when the
operative words become "not give ·
it:'
.
.. Welfare is anoiher example of ' ·
how word games can win tbe day.
Republicans lillk about "no lon'ger ' .
giving food stamps to the polir.:.·
while Democrats potel)lly assaji,GpP
efforts to "deny the poor food ·
sIamps. ..
• , , , ,.
"The policy results.are exactly·the J •
same, but the public reaction is different because the words are different," the report concludes.
-- The report includes a pre-pack- ·,
aged speech to tap the average vot- .;
er's disgust with negative campaigns. ::
"What angers me the most is tbe neg·
. ati ve, vicious, persona).attacks being
waged by politicians agajnst each
other," the sample spec~:h reads.
"We would do well to lower the
anger expressed against each other
. and address issues.and ideas in a.less •.
divisive and ... calnier demeanor." ' Jack Anderson aad Michael .
Bbuteio •re w~n for, UDlted •
Fl!llture Syil41dle, lac. ~
•.
' ~t4ti'
.. f • ,:,I ,, JII' · '·
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By Jack Anderlon
and Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -- The guru to
GOP bomb-throwers is warning congressional Republic"'s that a key to
retaining their majority is to begin
speaking with a more muted, mellow
• and moderate voice this election se•
son.
That's the theme of a confidential,
125-page battle plan • for the fall
campaign prepared by GOP pollster
Frank Luntz. Entitled "Language for
a New Majority," the tome represents
a dramatic departure from the rhetorical excesses of freshman firebrands
in the House and House Speaker Gingrich -- who is fond of denouncing
his enemies as being "grotesque,"

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

Today in history

Luntz refused to comment.
A thousand hours of research, a
hundred focus group transcripts, and
a dozen "Instant Response" ses-

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

t,

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The Democratic Party as I knew i t - - -·
By Nat Hantoff
In Boston, during the Great
Depression, my mother would walk
for many blocks to save some pennies
on food. One night, howeve1. we
splur~ed -· you know how poor people are .. and went to an amusement
park. I won a'brass clock dominated
by the figure of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, standing, at the ship's wheel
of the New Deal.
We icept the clock long after it
stopped keeping time. and I have a
copy of itin my living room. Though
FOR's accent was far different from
those in our neighborhood, he made
us feel we were not abandoned, even
though my father, during some
weeks. didn't earn a nickel.
It wasn 'I only Roosevelt. My parents, who had come over from Russia, considered it a privilege to belong
to the Democratic Party with such
decent men as Herbert Lehman and
Robert Wagner Sr. in the United
States Senate.
And that wily Democrat, James
Michael Curley, who seemed at times
to be Boston's mayor for life, also
saw the poor as more than inconvenient abstractions. Once, when he
was broke and a large fine had been
levied against him. I saw, early in the
morning, a line of not-so-proper
Bostonians going around the block
where he Jived to drop off dollar bills.
.. and some only had change -- to
help him out, as he had helped them.
But that was another time in what

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increasingly seems to have been ment the (work) requirements" in the otherwise occupied. And where is the
another country. In the White House law. So how will the still-jobless poor guarantee this Dickensian law will be •.
fixed?
now, a New Democrat, as he styles eat? Ask Dick Morris.
...
This is a deceitful, cruel bill and
There is a Democratic senator,
himself, has endorsed a Republican
to their credit, some in the Democra- Russell Feingold of Wisconsin, who
tic leadership voted against it --Tom seemed to be evolving into a,Lehman ,1
Daschle of South Dakota, Christo- or Wagner for our time. But Feingold
pher Dodd of Connecticut, Bob Ker· voted for this "reform" quicksand.
bill that cuts off the federal guaran- rey of Nebraska, Dick Oephardt of He sl!ys th•t faced with the choice of
tee of cash assistance to poor chil- Missouri and David Bonior of M,ichi- · voting f()J' the current "disastrous" . ,
dren, created 61 ye~ago by Democ- gan. But I did not hear from them any system, "I vote to .change the sys- · ,
rats.
·
sustained indignation at their leader's tern ... or course, he doesn 't hiive to
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., having solved the war on poverty by feed his own family under this New
is one of the last truly independent ordering the poor to take their Democrat system.
Of seven Democratic senators -;
Democrats in office, and I&gt;" the Sen- chances on the compassion of state
ate floor, he got to the bleak core of legislators who do not take calls from who are up for re-election this year, . '
this "reform" bill and the president such constituents, many of whom do only Paul Wellstone of Minnesota
who signed it: "The premise of this not vote.
chose integrity over politics and vot· . ,
legislation is that the behavior of cerOther betrayers of the Democrat- ed against the· measure even though - . "
tain adult~ can be changed by mak- ic legacy have engaged in remarkably he is in a tough race back home. llur- , ~
mg the hves of their children· as athletic forms of double speak. Sen. ing the 1992 De!llocratic Conventi011,
wretched as possible. This is a fear- James Lieberman of Connecticut: wh~n several middle-aged, pro.li(e . · '{
some assumption."
"The bill provides hope for poor women delegates from Minocsota ': ·r
Adults, moreover, will be' cut ofT Americans." We saw this kind of were being kicked by zealous pro- ,' ~
the rolls by the individual states now vision in the 1992 campaign docu- choice delegates, Wellstone rushed to
in charge if they do not find work in mentary heralding the deliverer from protect them. He is not a pro-lifer, just
two years. Also, there is a five-year Hope, Ark.
decent.
•
• ·t.
lifetime limit on benefits.
Rep. Gary Ackerman of New
These days. I loolr. at my FDR .'"
Dick Morris -- the master of York, a liberal, told the New York clock with renewed affection and my ~
three-card-monte politics and the Times: "Sometimes in O(derto make wife insists that she would never give
.
architect of this suategy to defini- progress and move ahead, you have house room to even a soltd-gold
•
tively put the poor in their place .. to stand up ~d do the wrong thing.·~ clock with the present incumbCnt -"
neglected to tell the president where His rationale for voting to cut food bestriding the New Democracy. That
the jobs are going to be. The Con- for ki~ is that if the New Democrats clock would run in two directions at -.""!
gressional Budget Office says of this take back the House, they can fix it once, and who needs that?
·
"reform" Jaw that "given the cosls all up. But in the meantime, of
Nat Hcnlolf Is • aatlonaUy
and administrative complexities course, very large numbei'S of Amer· renowned authority oa ·tbe Flnt
involved ... most states would simply icans will fall through the chasms AmcoclnHnt utd the rest or the Bill · ·,
accept penalties rather than imple- while Ackennaa and Lieberman are ofRiJhu.
·

NatHentoff

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"

Make D.C. a laboratory for GOP ideas

qa~

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•••llrNEA.Inc.

"Whht a leldOtlln - lhel8 were no LITTl.E GREEN
PEOPLE on Mllrs. •

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Bomb threats empty
two Gallipol.i s stores

The. Daily Sentinel

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Commentary

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G-1111 Manager

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By Jouph Spear _..
There is one sure-fire way to
prove the merits of Republican ideas
about tax cuts and economic growth
and reduced government and all the
rest, and it can be summed up in a
word:
Experiment.
Just slarl with a small government
entity that is having a difficult time
functionina as it is supposed to.
Make whatever structural refmns are
needed, then cut its taxes dramati·
cally.
Then, stand back and watdt. H the
experiment prods growth and increases tax revenues, then we've got a
keeper.
It could be do!lC so easily. Washington, D.C., wbete the J1111Y's ICiden wort and many of them live, is
- almost a total wreck. Two-tbirda of
the police department'• vehicles are
in 11111e of diaeplir.The.ldloolsyt:

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tern is so broke it can 'I pay for books probably built up an immunity to baz- The aim would be to stimulate ceo- ' ' ·
and substitute teachers. The city ardous substances.
nomic growth 111 ihe city and rever* ••·
morgue reeks with rotting corpses.
The point is, Washington, D.C., the steady flow of middle-c:lass tax· .•:to
Road crews are still fillina potholes· could ~ a. laboratory for testing payers, black and white, to 'the subRepublican tdeas -- and I hasten ~
,,
add that this_is not my idea. None o(lHouse Speaker Newt Gingrich · .·
.er ~an Ja.:k Kpmp, .now Robert q~ickly j'""j&gt;ed aboard the NortcinDole s.runnt~g ma1e, put forth a pro- Kem~ waaof .. New Senate Majpr)ty
from last winier's SIOf1llS. The wllter po~ m Fe~ary 1995, to ~vive l..eadCrTrCIIt Lott if rtportcilly ieln- .&lt;:
system occasionally muifests evil ~.C. s fia~tng fortu~ by mmpt- !n.J t~ it.A few~ favor ,
organisms, and citizens are ldvised to tng all resulcnts and busmesses from· tt as well , but N ·•White .'Hriiue lias
boil before drinking.
f~ taxes and levying a nat 15 COI1)C do~'apinst the flroposal. The
Last July, in fact, residents of the pertent.l~ tax. Kent~ woul.d also ldmi~i~on prefers.to lddms ~ · ~
area witnessed a scene so tragicom- have elnrunatod ~·Ciplta!·gaJns tax urban.cti!is ;•on 111 ltCrou-tbe•~ .,.\
ic that probably only the Bard of ~ any?"C w.ho 1nves~ ~n lhe Dis- basis,1' said • president's cliief of · •
Avon could have done it justice. The tnct H11 notion was sunilsr, Kemp staff Uon Pinelli. It would nlhef··
mayor of the District of Columbia, said, to one tlw has spurred 5 pertent inoreue the Dillril:t's innu&amp;l fedlnl •
Marion Barry, called a press confer- growth in Hona KQnJ.
· subsidy than try to ltimulate revenUe. ,;
ence and demonstrated t1w tbe ciry 's
In Aprill996, the D.C. delepae in throuJh JI'OWih. .
~·
tapwater was not inSflntancouJiy ~ Bleallor Holmes Norton, · . t.lk· lbbUt yOIIr clsssic ·llbCiaJ... •1
letbal,llleast, by drinking a gllsst\il inlnllb:etla bill dlil woold lowiii'die · ~duel.
:~
for.lhe CIIIIUU IIIII Jalllining on his to,P f~ inciJIIlOootax llle for Di5'JOMpll S,..... 11 :. .,.. fl hi ~'~
foet. Cynics joked tlw aiven his put lrlet ~taint&amp; ~o IS percent and WJtcer for New...l!er ~ ·
,.
"'~ of dntr atiuae. 8lll'v had acrlp _cap •ptDS taxes altogether. A.ociatlola.

Joseph Spear

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GALLIPOUS -Shopping was disrupted at two Easterlt Avenue depart-·
ment stores over the weekend as bomb threats for'ced evacuations-of both
the Gallipolis Hills and K mart.
·
Gallipolis City Police report the Hills store received threats on both Saturday and Sunday around 3:30p.m. A similar threat was received 111 K mart
on Sunday afternoon.
·
In ~ach instance, the stores were evacuated and searehes conducted. The
incidents remain under investigation.

Central State must
repay financial aid
wn..BERFOjtCE (AP)- The U.s·: Department of Education has ordered
Central State University to return about $482,000 in financial aid that was
awarded to the school, a newspaper reported.
·
The school must repay $435,611 in grants and loans it gave between 1992
and 1995 to students whose poor grades supposedly had made them ineligible for aid, the Dayton Daily News reported Satunlay. The school also must
repay $46,369 in loans given to Stuctpnts who Central State ~uld not document attended the university.
.
The ruling is the latest financial WOIT)' for Central State, Ohio's only statesupported traditionally black school. The university 17 miles east of Dayton faces a budget deficit of $8 million, and the state has closed its donnitories for safety reasons.

Hotter w~ather, storms
possible through week

Richard L. 'Dick' Beller
Richaid L. "Dick~' Beller, 55, RL 2, Poinl Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday,
Aug. 17, 1996 at his residence.
·
Born Jan. 22, 1941 in. Point Pleasant, son of Naomia Piclr.ens Beller of
Middleport, and the. late Charles s.Muel Beller, he was a retired employee
of the Shell Chemical and Goodyear plant. Apple Grove, W.Va.
He was a member of the United Rubber Workers Union Local 644, and
a 1959 graduate of Point Ple95811t High School. He was reared by his uncle
and aunt, Carl and lona Pickens Chattin, who also preceded him in death.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Frances Keener Beller;
a daughter, St4cy Beller of Point Plea1sant; a grandson; a half-sister, Mrs.
Harold (Beverly) Ridenour of Point Pleasant; and sisters-in-law and brothers, June and Rick Avis, Sue Nelson Hoschar, Nina Keener, Jo and John Alt.
Ellen Hogsett, Mary Grace Jackson and Albert Coleman.
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Crow-Russell Funeral Hoine, Point
Pleasant, Minister Sam Gwinn and Walter 0. Eads officiating. Burial will
be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9tonight.

Edith Cook
Edith Cook, 85,,Pomeroy, died Sunday, Aug. 18, 1996 in Holzer Medical
Center.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home. Pomeroy.

Local News in

Brief~.

Fire damages TP area residence
An electtical problem is suspected in a fire that damaged a Tuppers
Plains home Sunday evening.
,
. Firefighters responded to the one-story residence of Ed Parsons atl0:58
p.m. The hOI!se was heavily damaged.
The Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire Department responded with two
trucks, an emergency squad and 13 firefighters, and Coolville and Pomeroy
VFDs assisted' with trucks and manpower.
. Three firefi~hters were tmlled at the scene for heat and smoke inhala-

By The Alaoclated Prell
Showers and thunderstorms are
expected across western Ohio today.
The rain will last through tonight.
Lows will range from the low to mid·
60s in nOithern Ohio to near 70 in the
southwest.
Sunshine is forecast for Tuesday
morning, but showers and thunderstorms could develop statewide in the
afternoqn. Highs will be 85 to 90.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

by Bob Hoeflich
I couldn't possibly put the annual
Meigs County Fair to bed without
extending thanks to memben of the
congregation of the United Pentecostal Church in Middleport.
I think this year the fair was the
biggest chore yet and trust me I've
been through a lot of fairs in various
capacities over the yean. If it hadn't
been for the people of the Middleport
church, I think I would have konked
out about 'IUesday evening. However, the church workers who handle
the very difficult task of parking visitors at the fair, apparently are quite
aware that I'm 'n ot up to a lot of crosscountry stuff exercise.
As a result. every day - I was at
the fair.twice each day for five days
- members of the group managed to
find me a parking spot so that I didn't have to do the cross-country bit.
Not only that, but daily I got some
kind words and I needed that!
So big thanks to Rev. and Mrs.
Baker, Kathy and the gang! I 'preciate it!
I saw a lot of people at the fair that
I don't see that frequently and J'JJ bet
you did to.

the city, had little time for anything
else and felt son of "b'IJ)ped." Jeff
gave up both jobs and headed back to
this area, and I think over the lona
haul you'll find rum involved in •
variety of community and' church
activities.
What's the problem? Durint the
fair, a visitor advised me that upriver tomatoes are rotting on tbe vines
because of the shortage of piclr.en.
Over the yean, young people have
flocked to the tomato ftelds to elm
some extra cash tiDd apparently were
glad to have the opportunity to do
that. On the other hand, another
individual said that picking had
stopped in some locations because
the bottom had dropped out of prices.
No matter what the situation, the
tomatoes are really sood. eh?

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And, of course, dress at the fair ~
was most frequently pretty casual and •
that's all well and good. After all, tbe f
fair is the place to dress casually and •
have a good time. However, I'm won- :
dering if across America we aren't '
becoming a bit too casual.
On Saturday I atiMded a furieraJ . •·
Again, dress was casual - not county fair casual but 1:8SUal with even
one person - an ·adult - attired in ··
shorts. And ilon't get me wrong. I
love casual. As long as clothes are
clean and neat, no problem from me. '·
But shons at a funeral ta1r.e IIJC very
close to the edge .

station was I 0 I in 1936. The record
low wfs 48 in 1943.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennie Hill of
Sunset today will be at 8:23 p.m.
Racine must have visited the fair
Sunrise Tuesday will 'be at 6:48 a.m.
every evening. I saw them often and
· .Weather forecast:
shared a table with them one evening
Tonisht...Partly cloudy. Lows
at a "goodie" stand. I had a bit of
tiOn. ·
.
~
from the lower 60s northeast to near
heartburn for a couple of days.after
70 south.
that because of the "goodies" which
Tuesday ... Variably
cloudy
.
are
on my "no no" list. I wonder if the
No injuries were reported following a deer/car collision on State Route
west...Partly sunny east. Scattered, ·
Hills
had any problems. It was also
.
·
mainly afteriloon · thunderstonns.· · 124 in Sutton Township Sunday.
Guess I'm really not with it. For
pleasant
to see Jake and Mildred Gaul
•· Paula Ann Brbwn, 31, Millwood, W.Va., was westbound when she
Highs 8S to.90.
example,
I noted in an Athens newsof
the
Chester
area
taking
in
the
fair
struck a deer that ran into the pad\ of her 1996 Dodge, causing heavy damaction. I've known them for about a paper a photo of a what looks like 1
age, according to a Meigs c;ounty Sheriffs Department report.
hundred years. We go back long ago ·pretty nice new car. The automobile,
to the days of the Meigs County Farm according to the newspaper, was
seized in Meigs County durina 1
Bureau.
A Columbus man was Briested Sunday night by the Gallia-Meigs Post
cocaine bust. However, the vehicle -·
of the State Highway Patrol on charges of driving under the inflaence.
was given to the Athens DARE pro.
Coming
in
from
Belpre
to
lend
a
no operator's license and hit/skip.
hand at the Churches of Christ booth gram by the Southeast Counties of
David M. Laudennilt, 28, was placed in the Meigs County Jail Jll!ndThe Super Lotto numbers were 9,
CLEVELAND (AP).:.... A single
one day of the fair was Jeff McElroy. Ohio Narcotics Task Force. It
ing a coun hearing.
10,
21, 26. 3~ and 37.
Super Lotio game ticket is worth $4
Jeff commenled that he is now living seemed so logical to me that since the
The Kicker was 726766.
million from the Ohio Louery.
in Belpre where he has employment. car was seized in Meigs County, it
In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are investigating
because it shows the six numbers in
Jeff attended the University of Rio should have been given to a Meigs ·
number was 923.
the theft of sawmill parts from Rutland Saturday.
,
Saturday night's drawing.
Grande and settled in Columbus for County program. But then, what do
Iri Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
Lew King, Hartford, W.Va., reported Sunday afternoon that a 70-horseThe 'winning ticket was sold at
a spell . H~ was working two jobs in I know? Do keep smiling.
powerelectric motor, drive chains, an auger, steel parts, an axle·and oth- ·
Roger's Deli-Mart in Greenville. number was 1444.
Sales for the Super Louo game er sawmill parts were stolen Saturday. The parts were valued at approxWhen validated, it will result in
$153,846 a year for 26 years, before totaled $2,770,722. Kicker sales imately S1,500.
totaled $482,460.
People driving a light-c:olored Dodge truck with tandem axles were seen
taxes.
There were 51 Super Lotto tickets
(Continued from Page 1)
at the location loading up parts of the sawmill. according to the report.
· The Super · Lotto jackpot will
ner; and $1,000 from Robert Lindner Jr.
again offer $4 'million for Wednes- with five of lhe numbers, and each is The incident remains under investigation.
worth $1,494. The 3.205 tickets
- Rep. Jlni BIDialng, R-Southaale: $1,000 froni Carl Lindner; $1,000
day's drawing.
showing
four of the numbers are each
fro111 Carl Lindner III; $1,000 from Edyth _Lindner; $1,000 from Keith LindHere are Saturday night's Ohio
A Pomeroy man w~ 'cited by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department
worth $74.
ner; and S1,000 from Craig Lind.ner.
.... •
Lottery ~election~:
on a charge of domestic violence following a incident Saturday mortling. .
· Among other candidates to reeelve multiple Lindner-related contributions
Curtis R. Dalton Jr., 24, is accused of assaulting his live-in girlfriend,
are Rep. John Kasich, R-Westerville: Sen. Max Baucus. 0-Mont.: Sen. Jesse
breaking her nose and throwing her over a hill.
Helms, R-N.C.; Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.; Gov. George Voinovich (for
J:
1998 Senate bid); and Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D ..
By The Alaoclated Preas
County.
But the Lindner family and firms are far from the only Cincinnati-area
A 15-yem:-old Rutland youth was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi·
At least eight peopl, - three of
COLUMBUS- RobeitA. Thurn,
companies aggressively giving to candidates.
tal late Sunday lifter he fell out of a moving vehicle, the Gallia-Meigs Post
them motorcyclists - died in traffic h. of Worthington, driver ip a
Contributions related to Cintas Corp. and the family of Richard Farmer.
of
the State Highway Patrol reported.
accidents on Ohio roads ·over the motorcycle accident on a city street.
company head, total more than S147,000.
Eric S. Richmond, 37502 Smith Run Road, was transported from the
weekend, the State 'Highway Patrol
FRIDAY NIGHT
Farmer himself has given $1,000 to Rep. John Boehner, R· West Chester;
scene
by private vehicle, the patrol said. He was later treated and released,
CROTON - Jeffrey M. Lyons,
and other law enforcemen( agencies
$2,000 to Cremeans, $2,000 to Chabot, S1.000 to Portman and $7S,OOO to
a hospital spokesperson said.
. 21. of Croton, passenger in a onesaid today.
the Republican National Committee, among other contributions.
Troopers said Richmond was a passenger in a pickup truck driven by
The fatalities were counted from . vehicle accident on a Licking CounHls son, Scott Farmer, has given $1,000 to Portman, $1,000 to Bochner
Danual J. Dalton, 28, also of37502 Smith Run Road, that \vas westbound
6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday. ty road.
and $2,000 to Chabot, among other contributions.
on State Route 681 at1JO:SO p.m. when Dalton turned onto Scipio TownThe dCad: 1
ship
Road 259 (Vance).
SUNDAY
As
Dalton made the turn, the pickup'spassenger side door opened and
TROY- Mark T. Coberly, 38, of
Richmond
fell but, according to the report.
Veterans Memorial
Beavercreek, when his motorcycle
Bible achool
child's birth certifteate, Social Secu- -·
Saturday admissigns - .Darra
collided with a car on a, Miami
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church rity oard, shot record and any leaal
County ro~. ·
· · ·
Yahya, Middleport.
in Middleport will hold Bible school custody papers. Now- kinderglirtcn ~
Saturday discharges ~ none. ;.
HAMILTON -Randle J. Short,
this week starting toniaht at6, night- students can ·tegister at the junior !
Sunday admissions - Wesley
35, oflndianapolis,lnd., when his car
- ly, culminating with a program Sun· high. For moo:' information, &lt;:all
crashed off of Ohio 4 in Butler Clark, Racine.
day at 10 a.m. All welcome.
949-26,11. .
.•
Sunday discharges Elsie
County. _
URBANA- Timothy A. Dozer, Crouser, Rutland.
Alzheimer's support
Bold Dlm:tloas
Units of the Meigs County Emer- assisted.
Holzer Medkal Cmler
36, of Mechanicsburg. when his
The Alzheimer's and Related DisThe Bold Directions Mental
SYRACUSE
Dischafles Aug. 16 - Nancy gency Medical Service recorded 24
motorcycle ran off of Ohio 559 in
orders Support Group will meet Health Support Group will meet at
I :21 p.m. Saturday, Meigs Coun- Thursday, 1-3 p.m. at the Senior CitLowe, Terry Nichols, Shannan New- calls for assistance during the weekChampaign County.
ty
Fairgrounds, Rebecca Wolfe, izens Center in Pomeroy. Dr. Edward the Haskins Shclterhouse, Gallipolis
LYONS -Lee A. Colon, 43, of man. Jamie Schmoll, Eileen Games. end, including two transfer, calls.
Friday, 10 a.m-2 p.m. The public is
. VMH;
Wauseon, driver in a two-vehicle
Birthl .,.... Mr. and Mrs. Crais Units responding included:
Black
will
speak
on
"Stress
and
invited. Take covered dish. chips or
1
2:53 p.m. Saturday, Meigs Coun- Chronic Dlness.".
MIDDLEPORT
accident on Ohio I 08 in Fulton. Lemaster, son, Jackson; Mr. and
!soda.
·
9:41 a.m. Friday, West Main ty Fairgrounds, Agnes Stevens, treatMrs. John Sayre, daughter, Point
County.
Street, Colton Roush, treated at the ed at the scene;
Pleasant, W.Va.
·
SATURDAY
MJHS orle~~tatlon
Free doddna clay
3:01 p.m. Saturday, Meigs Coun·
DIKhaflesAug.17-Mrs. John scene. Middleport Volunteer Fire
BATAVIA - Sheryl ,I. Murray,
Meigs Junior High School incomThe PortlandiRacine Rcorgani1.ed
ty Fairgrounds, Matthew Casey, treat· ing seventh graders and lillY new
Department assisted;
34, of Bethel, driver in a two-vehicle Sayre and daughter.
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
10:19 a.m. Friday, Overbrook ed at the scene; .
accident on ·Ohio 133 in Clermont
Dlschafles Aug. 18 - Dana
eighth graders are invited to an ori·
II :27 p.m. Sunday, Main Street, entation session to be held Tuesday Saints free clothing day, Saturday at
King, Virginia Davis, Erma Roush. Nursing Ce111er, Thelma Garren.
County.
the church, 10 a.m.·2 p.m. Oothes for
Tuppers Plains, Scott Wallraven, St. at6 p.m. in the gymnasium. Refresh- entire
RAVENNA~ Roger L. lnhent,
Mrs. Craig Lemaster and son, Mil- Pleasant Valley Hospital;
family.
I:52 p.m. Saturday, Maples Apart- Joseph's Hospital.
42, of Alliance, driver in a one-vehi- dred Ingram.
ments follow.
1
Reanloo
TUPPERS PLAINS
cle accident on U.S. 224 in Portage
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Paul ments. Jean Hall. VMH:
The annual Seaver Reunion will
8:38
a.m.
Friday,
Main
Street,
10:33 p.m. Saturday, OBNC,
McBane, son, Middleport.
EHS orientation
be
at the West Virginia State Farm
Dale
Baker,
Camden-Clark
MemorSusan McBain, HMC.
(Publllhed with permlllloo)
Orientation for seventh graders in Museum north of Point · Plea.~ant,
1
ial
Hospital;
POMEROY
The
Sentinel
the Eastern Local School District will
1:31 p.m. Friday, Pooler jtoad, be held Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Eastern W.Va. There will be a picnic lunI :40 p.m. Friday, We&amp;t Main
(iosrs 21,.,..,
cheon at 12:3q_p.m.
John Pooler, HMC;
Street, Erica Lewis, VMH;
.High School. StUdents and parents
5:38
p.m.
Sunday,
Main
Street,
6:03p.m. Friday, Country Mobile
.
encouraged to attend.
Home Park, Darwin, Tommy Tony Jones, CCMH;
Am E1e POwer ...................42 1/4
10:58 p.m. Sunday, VFD to Main Soutllem enrollment
AkzO ........................................511
McChristian;
Street,
structure fire at Ed Parsons'
Alhlend 011 .......................38 5/8
11:14 p.m. Friday, VFDand squad
Students new to the Southern
ATaT •.,....................................54
residence
related ltory);
to
Fotest
Run
Road,
auto
fire,
DebLocal
School District may enroll at
- - The AllaciiMII ......... doe Oblo
Blnk One ..........................31l3/l
10:58 p.m. Sunday, Main Street, their respective schools Tuesday
6le
uid
Matt
Bradfonf.li'eated
at
the
New ; ; A...,.;edM
Bob EVMII ..................- .......... 14
Christal Sayre, St. Joseph's Hospital. through Friday, 9-11 :30 a.m. Bring
aorv-wamer .................... JI7112
sa:ne;
•
~ Scod lddrell ccw ct'm 10
1:41 a.m. Saturday, Villqe Manor
Chlmfllon .........................18 711
The D11t7 Seldocl, I II Coutl SL, ~
Teklng cere of ell the
Chinning 8l!opa .............. 71(11
Apanments. Rachel Lee. VMH;
Oblo4S769.
femlly'a
epeolel neecla
.Citv Holclng ............................23
7:11 a.m. Saturday, Stonewood
IJUCIIPl'I()NIIATIII
1
requl,.,
en extrl effort
17 l~
~ Mogul ................: ...
Apartments, Darra Yahya, VMH;
o.-.
.....noo
_ .. _., ........................... ,.
10:55 a.m. Saturday, Middlepon
:;fR~~~-VAll£Y CIWr,1n
on our pert.
HUDSON (AP) - Dairy Mart
Police Department, Bill Eakins, Convenience Stores Inc. is looking to
move its headquaners to Ohio.
~
But
the temlly'a
8JIIIGL&amp; COPY nJCII
·
lllndllnd...............................22 VMH;
350. ,\ · ~-·-·- .... , ...20'1/1
11:09 p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings according to published reports.
convenience,
l'llltllr tften
DIIIJ .................. .........- -- ·
· ~ • 01110 ¥lilly ~---.31112
Rehalrilitation Center, Edith Cook,
The move would place tbe offices
our own, Ia our flrat
S t .............. .., .. ....,...., ·OniX:Zi;;;~ --•311 VMH
closer to the majority of tbe compa·
90111*11.
...... ~...--~~~~"'~ : NupiP
'""-....- ••.22
'
ny's stores. ·
PNri!Finl~"-'"'"""i"""-··11
RACINE
"Dairy Mart has a major presence
II_ __. . .
' ( .: R.od wdl"!""-'"..._,;44111
11 :37 a.m. Saturday, State Route
No~loJIIIII..,....ill- [ · R.oraiiJ;IdiJIIIIII__,.......,1111
338, Deni1e Smitl\; i.reateci at the in Ohio," spokeswoman Betty Yopwlloli _ _ .... lo.........
: ; lbol~a
... ...,1114 scirie.
. '
..
ko said Saturday. "It'&amp; a move to sup·JMIL· . . . MWIIONI
_
t•
·
161rlilllt-··---78
port our operations best."
· ' ' ..
11 :Ofl
" • ..,.....,
~: 18 a.m. Saamlay, Midclleport
13~----:___ .__
W
fl~r:::;- ·'· ~-. Pohee Oopuunent, ,Bill Eakins,
~~ --=::--·---~ijou6,
tiDok reparll .,. 111110: ' VMH.
.... ~ ...... ~... 25 1
llftlllldaii~~J
. ~TWP.
Babe Ruih twia: bit t1ne 11ome
I J -.- ...
or~.le -·
.
'IJ;S6a.m.fridav, -iiJeD.--1 , nuJI in, oae
. pmC in World Series
1115
~.......,_
-.
•iin I'·, ·· -·---••-.--.-..• . auto fn, no injuria, Rutland~
- ....1compcuuoa,

No injury reported In accident

--

Columbus man arrested by patrol

One Super Lotto winner
emerges fro111 drawing

lI

Il

&lt;Sawmill parts theft reported

l

Magnate's 'bundling'

Pomeroy man charged in Incident

Weekend wrecks
kiU 8
.- -

Rutland youth ·,t lksn to hospital

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Meigs EMS.units.kept
busy with weekeod ·runs

Daily

.

Stocks

first
tblags
first.

&lt;-

Dairy Ma.-t making
move Into Ohio

.,_Cwtlor.,_._

~ ~::::::::~~~:::~:::: : : : :::::s·i::.

••-.*.;.'!:r'

7

~.::::::::::::::::::::1: tJ':

;,,

..,........,Cool!lf .
....:.,__.:m:= ' ·
.
:

•:=r;· -..--·.- -'

U.:v:..

.,

CIEMEE..S
FUIEUL HOllE

a·- .......

,.,.,210
ua•

vm

~··-·

•'
•

Beat of the Bend ...

'

\

�-·--- ~

----,--------~-----------......------....-------....------r----------. e_-.e.-.--- .-.•. ---.-.-.-.-.-~.-:.:-'.=-~-:~:-:-=_:::::::..,..;:-:;.::;..::;.;-:;:~--;;;;;:;;::;::.,...:--'r.~~;;;
•.

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.....

..

Monday, Auguat19,1998

~SpOrts

The Daily Sentif!.~l

\

•

•

•

Aided by Thome's homers,

•

Tribe· be~ts Tigers 11-3 to ·sweep.series

.
.
Monday, Auguet 19, 1996

With three wins over Rockies In 24-hoii;-span,

.

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP)- There's a

Reds move above .500 mark for first time since mid-April
By .IOE KAY

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Colorado Rockies' road woes reached a
new low Sunday, and they had only
· themselves to blame.
Kevin Ritz walked four consecu. tive blltters to hand Cincinnati its goahead runs and Joe 'Oliver followed
with a three-run double that sent the
Reds to a 9-4 victory, their third win
over the Rockies in less than 24
hours.
Kevin Mitchell hit a ihrcc-run
homer as the Reds matched their season high by moving three games
over .500 (62-59). Their record has
been that good only one other ti!f!e
this season: at8-5 on April 15.
The defending National League
Central champions have won 18 of
28 to move back into contention.
They beat the Rockies three times in
23 hours and 45 minutes - a doubleheader sweep Saturday night and
the win Sunday afternoon- and put
on a show in the process.
The Reds hit four homers in the
eighth inning Saturday night to complete their doubleheader sweep, then
added two more Sunday.
·
"Everybody's swinging the bat

well together, and that allows us to
set up big innings," manager Ray
Knight said.
The Reds were a little too showy
for Colorado manager Don Baylor's
tastes. With one game left in their
series at Riverfront Stadium, he
already was looking ahead to a
rematch at Coors Field next week.
"When they come to our ballpark,
we'll find out who the cheerleaders
are," Baylor said. ''I'm taking notes.
We'll stan swinging the bats well.
We've got a couple of guys struggling now."
The Rockies almost always struggle on the road, the reason th~y're
slipping in the NL West. The thirdplace Rockies have lost seven of
eight, all on the road, and have the
most road losses in the National
League at 22-43.
.
The most prolific offense in the
league was outscored 23-12 in the
24-hour span. ·
"We hit .220 as a team on the
road and .350 at home," Baylor said.
"There shouldn't be that much of a
difference. Nothing changes except
our basic attitude towards hitting."
"It really docs seem like a differ-

ent edge,;, said outfielder Eric
Anthony, who went 1-for-3. "It's not
that guys aren't trying. Maybe
they're trying too hard."
·
On Sunday, their staning pitcher
started pressing and wound up negating what little offense the Rockies
produced.
Ritz (13-9) gave up a three-run
homer in the first inning to Mitchell,
his second since coming to the Reds
in a July 30 trade with Boston.
·The Rockies rallied for a 4-3 lead
on Dante Bichette's two-run double
and Andres Galarraga's two-run
homer in the fifth off Kevin Jarvis
(6-5), but Ritz fell into another one
of his wild spells and gave the game
away.
Thomas Howard led off the bottom of the fifth with a double. Two
outs later, Ritz - who is second in
the ·NL in walks - lost his control.
The right-hander walked the nexi
four baiters, throwing 16 balls out of
21 pitches, 111 force in two runs. Reggie Sanden and Bret Boone walked
to drive in the runs.
"When you get in that situation,
you're trying to figure out everything
that's going wrong instead of just let-

ling it go," Ritz said. "That's what
I was doing. II wasn't a pretty situation.
"It'~ just a disgrace to pitch like
that. We've battled back and gotten
the lead and I end up doing tllat."
Oliver then worked Ritz to a full
count before doubling into the leftfield comer for an 8-4 lead, taking
the life out of the Rockies.
"He's a good pitcher, he was just
struggling with the strike zone
today," Oliver said. "That was a big .
inning for us, to come back with five
right after they scored four. When
they scored four, that kind of took the
wind out of our sails."
Boone hit a solo homer in the seventh off Bruce Ruffin, the Reds' sixth
homer in an eight-inning stretch.
The Rockies' offense went quiet
after the Reds' go-ahead rally, failing
to get a baserunner the last four
innings off Jeff Shaw, who got his
third save. ·
Notes: Ritz has walked IObatters
in his last two starts, spanning 10 2/3
innings. He has walked 90 in 168
innings this season .... A sign of how
bad things haven gotten for the
Rockies: Their four-run rally in the

...

In other AL action,

5'0 lead.
three-game sweep of Pittsburgh since
Leo Gomez's three-run, pinch-hit July 1991, and won their fourth in a
double highlighted a six-run rally in row overall. The visiting Pirates
the six.th for the Cubs. Dave Maga- · have lost eight of nine.
dan, Luis Gonzalez, Scou Servais
EXJICII!I7, Dodgen 3
and Jose Hernandez each had three
Mark Leiter won his third straight
hits for Chicago.
start and Randell While had three
Craig Biggio was hit by a pitch hits, including his second career
for the 23rd time, an Astros record. grand slam, as visiting Montreal
He hit two-run homer in the ninth snapped a seven-game losing streak
off Bob Patterson, and Turk Wendell against Los Angeles.
relieved for his 13th save.
Leiter (7-10) allowed three runs
Braves 1, Pirates 1
and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings afte,r
Chipper Jones puta happy ending being staked to a 7-0 lead.
on what had been a horrible day for
Tom Candiotti (7-9), who allowed
him, hitting an RBI single in the bot- just one earned run in 17 innings
torn of the 14th inning that won it for against Montreal this season, is 0-3
Atlanta.
in five starts at Dodger Stadium since
Jones was 0-for-6 in the game June 6.
before grounding a one-out hit up the
Padres 8, Melli 0
middle. Marquis Grissom, who earKen Caminiti, who received intralier extended his hilling streak to 23 venous Ouids I 112 hours before the
games, singled with one out and game, hit two home runs and pitchAndruw Jones followed with a er Joey Hamilton had his first career
grounder that second baseman Jeff homer as the teams concluded their
King misplayed for an error.
three-game series in Monterrey,
Joe Borowski ( 1-0) got his first Mexico.
win in the majors, retiring II of the
Caminiti said he was up all Sat·
finall2 batters.
urday night and vomited several
The Braves posted their first times. Before the !!81De._..h~ was

a

Mark Martin, winless in Winston
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Cup racing this season. Manin led
Dale Jarrett didn't take the lead until four times and was iri front for 87
there were only seven laps remain- · laps before the relentless Jarrell
ing in the GM Goodwrench 400. finally reeled him in.
"I knew Mark was a lillie better
Once he got it, he never gave it up,
adding another memorable moment for two or three laps after a restart,
so I had to be patient enough not to
to the best season of his career.
It was yet another heartbreak for abuse my car, but not get too far

behind him," Jarrell said. "I didn't
want to wait too long .'~
His Ford finished .168 seconds
ahead of Martin's Ford.
It was the fourth triumph this season for Jarrett, who had .won only
four Winston Cup races prior to
1996. His first career victory was
Aug. 17, 1991, at Michigan's high-

banked two-mile oval. In that race,
as in this one, Jarrett started II th in
the field.
"It sure brings back some memories of my first Winston Cup victory," Jarrell said. "I guess II is my
lucky number."
Martin, who has 18 career victories and has triumphed at least once

Jaguars and Pats
get latest vi~tories
By The Aaloclated PrHI

'

'

1- ... ~- •

' .

GOOD WORK, KEVIN! - Cincinnati's Jeff Bran1011 (left) con·
grstulatn teammate Kevin Mitchell after the latter's three-NO homer
off Kevin Ritz In the first Inning of Sunday's game agslnet the visIting Colorado Rockies, who lost 9-4. (AP)
&gt;!retched out on the Ooor of a room
outside manager Bruce Bochy 's
office and given an IV.
New York catcher Todd Hundley
wasn 't as lucky, missing the start
after coming down with a case of
food poisoning. Hundley thought he
got ill from a steak he ate at the hotel
housing both the Mets and the
Padres.
.
The game drew 22,810 to the
25,644-seat stadium, for a threegame total of 67,382. ·' '
Phillles 7, Giants 6
Rookie Wendell Magee Jr., in the
game because center fielder Ricky

Otero hurt himself diving for an
inside-the-park homer, had two hits
and drove in two runs for Philadelphia ..
Barry Bonds hit his 34th home
run of the season for San Francisco.
It was his 24th at Veterans Stadium,
moving within two of Gary Carter's
record for opponent homers at the
park.
Dax Jones hit hi~ first major
league homer, an inside-the-park
shot in the second inning that Otero
misjudgcd •.Otero sustained bruises
on his face, and Magee replaced him.

in each of the previous seven seasons, remained winless in 21 races
this year. Does he get any sympathy
from the victor?
"I have finished second five
times myself this year, so I understand what that's like," Jarrett said.
"He's a hard racer and he's going to
win his share of races. ije has won

his share, over the years. I just feel
·right now, we have ihe best race team
and car out here."
The record would seem to indicate that's true. Jarrell has five topfive finishes, including two wins, in
his last six races.
Jarrett, fourth in the Winston Cup
(See 400 on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Baseball

NL standings
Euttrn Dl'llioll
1. fl:l.

AL standings

:r.am
w
Allanta .. .... .. ......- .. 77
Momreal ...............67

Eut~m Dirision

~

Iaa

New York .... .. . ... 70

#

~

~

•~•

•

~

rd.

.." ...
~2
~K

Ballirnorc ..... ....... 6l
.... 60
Botton.... ..
..... 55 69
Toronto ...
.. 42 Rl
Dt:ln,iL.

. ~74
. ~2M

.4114

-~··

CenlniDMiion
CLEVELAND ..... .7l 49 .60S
... 63 ~7 - ~
Chicngo .. ..
...... 62 61 - ~
~mnel04a ...
Kolns:b Cily ..... .... 58 67 .464
Milwaukee .............~~ 67 .464

•j

. ...... . ,

j

!ill
~\

II
16
28'•,

7\

12 ~

Iii!

Pt&lt;iladclph~ .... .....lO

OUJatkl J . Baluri'IOfe I
Botton 6, California 0

Chkaco 6, Milwoukrc 2
Minnnota II . Toronto I
~tau~ City &lt;6. Teus I

Los Algeks .......... 66 ~~~
Son Dieeo .............. 67 59
Colorndo ,................ 62 6l
Son Fr.mcisco ........ 52 69

.400

lK

I

J~
~

14',

. ~J2

.m

.'oOO

4

.4J()

12'•:

S1. Louis 4. Floridoa J

Oiia~~o

12, Hou11oo J
DH: CINCINNATI :1, Colorado 1;
CINCINNATI 9. Colorndo 5
Atlnnto. 7, PinsbuiJh I
hn Frtn~.ia:o 8, PhiiUII)flio.4
N.:w YlM'k 7, San OiCJO .1
Los .a.naeles 7, Mon1rral6

Sunday'sacorea

Philadtlphla 7, San frlllk:IICO 6
CINCINNATI 9, CoiOIIIdo 4
Athwn 2. PiusbufJh I ( 14)
Sl. i...otUI s. Florida J

6

Clbfom.a 4. Boatoo 3

Ttus 10. Kanl:ll Cl!y J

Toallht'a pmea

Cafifani.a IGrims~)' ,_ 7) 11 Boscoa
(~·I). 7il!~. nt
'
(Balllwil 9-)) .. Dc1roil (Oii·
7 :~p.OL

ll-6) a1 CI.£VELAND

IO.lt 7:0.1 pm

s..ult (C.,_ ~II 11 New Yon

&lt;"'li"'
11-n Hl p.m.
Milwaukee (D ' Ami t;o )·') 11 htin·

r.....,&lt;W;u;..l-ll• KaMe•,

9l

RBI : ! Belle. CLEVELAND, IIJ ;
.RPalmeiro, Baltimore, 112: M. Vauaha.
Bostoll Ill : Buhra, Semtle. Ill : J. Qon.
z.a~. Tc1as, 107: Griffey. ~:utle. I~ ; F.
Tholl'IIU. ChicAP, J()(Y.
HITS : Molitor, Minnuolil, 169;

Lorton. CLE'IELAND. 16H ; A. Rollri1ue1. Scu.ule, 162; R. Alomw. Balli·
160".

Knubl:~uch .

MinMIOIIl. 159:
M. VlluJ.hn, Bostoa, 1~7 : I. Rodria~z.
TCiat,l~7 .
,
,
mort' .

DOUBLES: E. Maninez. Seuule. 47;
A. Rodrituez. ~altlt, 41; 1. Rodriaucz.
Tc1111. J9: Cordova. Minnesota. J7: M.
R..mirn . CLEVELAND, n ; Giambi.
Oaillnd. JS ; Gn:er, Tc1uu, :W.
TRIPLES: Knoblau~;h, Minrtttola.
II ; Vinu, Milwaukee , 7: Orrermon,
Kana City. 7: 0a¥C Mlll'tinn. Chic:&amp;Jo.
·7: Guillen. Cbkoso, 7; JoN V1lenlln,
Milw11ukce, 6; Cor11, Scaule, 6; C11r1er,
TUIUIUo. 6.

HOME RUNS: McGwire, Ooklond.

Chil:pto 10, tf&lt;miOn II

4J: . Belle, CLEVELAND, )9: Grill&lt;f.

n: M. VIILIIhn, bon, ~:-t. Gonlalc&amp;.
TcUI, J'; Bl.ahner, bile,"·
STOLEN BASES: Lofton, CLEVEUNO. !K: T. Goodwin, IUnll&gt;l Cill. 55:
Nh:on, Tcna10. 41 ; KIIOWaldt Mi~
1~ JJ: Vi14!uel, CLEVELAND, lO: t.;,.
IICII, MIIWOIIUt, 23; Ollrllam, Clli&lt;'IO,
l.l
PITCHING (14 dochlooo): NtiJ ,
a.EVELAND. ll-4, .7l0, 3_17: .... inc.
New Yort, 17-7, .708, 4.30; Hilchcock.
Sanlo, 12-5• .706, 5.26; A"'-a. Chb·
,l.,._ .100, ).\It; B. Welle, s..tll, 11.617. 4.70: Pawlik, Tuu, 1:1-6, .614.
4.63: - ..... r..... tJ-7, .61l. l .4f.
STRIKEOUTS: Cltmo... Boc1oo.
Ill: Finley, Colllonla, 161: A. f'cma,.
cia. Cli&lt;llo, I 54; A"'-a.
149:
141; """"'· X...u
Cily. 1&lt;16: ,....... llald.... 145.
SAVES: Wtt111ood, Now York. ll:
l. tta-. Cl!k., )); Pordwol, Col-

Tonlpt'saama

(lleynoldll S-6~ 1:0.1 p.m.

-..., !PJ. Mn• J0.7l II Son

Dleto (_,54~ IO:O!I'p.m.
"New York (H•nhcll 1-1) at SID
FnntU..-o (Ella H~ IO;Ol p.m.

Tlleaday'alllDa

r:o) 11 Cbic:aao

Floridll (Huflol
(Culillo 5-14), 2:20p.m.

New Yo•k (8. Jooec 10-7) 11 Sn
FtwiJco(O. Fa ' '-12U:l$p.m.
CINCINNATI (hrl&gt;l 7-11) II AI·
-(Oiori• IJ..1)1'1:40p.nL
· ' PiuaiNirall (Miceli 2-1) ae HOitiOD
(Will 6-4 ~ Iii! p.a '
51. Looit (Aioo- 11-7) II Col-

BAITING: A. ROOrigun. Sealllr,
.J6J: Knoblauch , Minnesota, . )~J : R.
Alomar. 8011himorc . .JH : F. Th()mtu .
Oicqo. ..\~2 ; E. Martinez, Seanlc, .:Wl;
Molitor, Minntsola, .JJ$ : J. Gonlaltit,
Terns. Jl2.
RUNS: knoblou~h . Min~teaul:t, Ill;
A. RodriJ.UU, Selltllc, 109 ; R. Alumar,
Baltimore, 10'1: Lofton, CLEVELAND.
97: . ll&lt;lle, CLEVELAND, 9~: Phillipo,
Chicaao. 95 ; M. VauJhn . Boston. OJ :
Griffey, Seaule. 9J: E. Maninea, Seattle,

Son OI&lt;JO I , - York 0
Montmal7. Los Anaeks J
Colorado (Thompson -'·8) at
CINCINNATI (PonupiiJ.81. 7:)5 p.m.
Florida CBrowo 1,1-10) at Chh:aaO
(Te....._.. !-6), Iii! p.m.
Piusbtn'Jh (Petm 1·2) 111 Houston

11-9). 1:0:1 p.a

tU- J-1 ~ Iii! p.n

.460

Saturday's scores

Sunday's scores

-(f.--

9'•:

WntcmDhlaton

CLEVELAND II. Dc1roi1 J
Taroa~o 6. MiMnOt:l 2
Milw111kce I . ClUcaao 7
S..Uiti), Ncw YO&lt;k 12(12)

(Md)owdl

!ill
20
20'·l

m

D '~

Sadr 10. ~w York .\

r ... (l'ltYbk

1l

.S49
.46-4

Central Dlvllk»n
St. Louis ......... . 67 H . ~
Hou5ton ....
. 66 ~R . ~i:\2
CINCINNATI... ...62 59 . ~12
Chi~ago... . .. ..... 61 61 . ~
Pi&lt;"bu•P&gt; ...... ll 11

tO\

CLEVELAND 6, Deiroil J

-7·1

.\~

.626

6

Saturday's scores

~9 . BaltiiJICft

46

N.:w V01k .............58 67
Florida... . .. .. .... 57 67

Jt··

Wftltm Dl•tllon

... .... 71 ~J . ~7~
Texa•
.$25
~8
Scanle .
.4118
Ool.lond . ............62
Ulifornil!. ............ l7 66 46)

'

AL leaders

9:0$-,. ..

(Wrip l-1),
· 1'111-(WCIII·I)•I.GI,.....

fl. 7). 10:0!1 .....
(Conolor 7.a) . . . Dloto
(T..-y ...~ 10:0!1 , ...

"' (VIIda
-

Selllle, Jl; Brad~ Andmon, Boltlmore,

r.

au...... ,.......

au..,.,

Allan!• JIK: Shd'f~ld. Aoridl!. Jl): L.
Jo.hnson. New York .. lll
RUNS: Burks, Colurado, 114; FiniLj',
San Dict;u. 9'1; Bunlis. San FmndR:u, tn:
Bichelle, CotoJOulo, ~~: Chlpptr Jones,
Allat~ta. ~J : Sllcfft~:ld. FloriLh I,IJ: Riu,io.
Huuslon. 92.
RBI : GalurruJOI , Color;ulo, Ill ;
Bil:hcuc, Colurudu, I OK; Bun\1", Sun
Francisco, I ().I; Burks. Colurado, 101 : 0 .
Bell. Hou ston, 97: Sosa, Chhmgu, 1,17 ;
t'hip('IL"I' Jontl. AIW.IOI. 9~ .
HITS : Gtinl)nt, All a n•~ . 164; L.
Juhntun. New York, 16·( Burial, Culurado, 162: Bicht:ll( , Colorado, 159;
~rudrielllt~k.. Monlreal. I~ ; Ank:y, Siln
DieJO.I~2 ; l..wtoiil(t. Montreul, I.X.
DOUBLES: Fialcy. S..n Oicao. :\1,1;
H. Rodri,ucz, Montreal, JS ; La.nsina.
Monl~ . J4 : 0 . Bell. tb!Sion, :W; Boa&amp;·
well, Houseon. :\4; Bcrr,v., Hous1on. :\);
Bichcne. Colorudu. Jl. ·
TRIPLES: L Johnson, New York, 16:
Grissom. AIIIII\C;a. 9; Finley. SWIIMJu. • :
K. Abbtllt, FluriiJD., 7; MorU:si. Los Aa·
actea, 6; How11rd , CINCINNATI . 6;
Ot:Shitld1, Los Aaaelea. 6; Vizc11ino.
~w Yod. 6: Burb. Cob-ado. 6.
HOME RUNS : So1a, Chica1o, J~ ;
HuncUcy, New Yortl. 36; 5hcO"rc:ld. f-lnn da, 15; Burks, Colurado. 14: Bonds, Sun
F~IUat.:ilfo:O, 34; Gal;m~o . Color~ . J4:
Piauu, Lot Al'lltlt!s, . 0; H. RodriJ.. CZ,
t.l..,n:al, JO: CUiilla. Col0f11do, JO.
STOlEN BASES: L. J(lhnsun. New
York . 44: f . Yuuna . Coluroulu, 42 ;
DcShieldt. Lo • An1clcs. 41 ; l;rkin.
CINCINNA Tl. Jl: R_ Ht ftdc,.on, Sun
Dil:ao. 32: McRae, Chi ~OIJU , " ; B.L.
~,u'lk.'f , Ho~talua, 27: ~nkfUJd, St l.oui1, .

o•

PITCHING
cb:islonal: Smolu.
AllutA. 20-6, .769. 2.91 ; Reynolds. Hous·
100, ~~~• .714, HJ: Neal~· Piii•N.P,
12-6, .667. :\.II ; 0~. Swl Frunci~~o:u,
10.,, .667: 4.23; Tno:hoel, Clli"''O, 11-6,
.647, 2.67. Fonero. Mootrul, 12·7. .6)2.
l'lO: Glovlft&lt;. All""'· 12·7, .6l2. l.K9.
STRIKEOtrrs: Smolu, Allan~o.l17 :
Homo, Lot Anacla. 11.1; Fuaeru, hton·
UCII, m ; PJ. Mlnlna, t . l -, 161 ;
Kile, HCM&amp;IIOI, 161 : Reynoldl. Hou1t01,
I~ : Sl..,lemJfD, St Lou It, I!(); A. Lei I·

lA nlNO: Plu11, Loa AIJtlea ,

SEATTLE MARINERS: Retailed C
Chris Widacr from Tocomu of !he Paoli~
Con.,l leagUe.!. Optioned RHP Bob WoiC( .. I 10 Tacuma.
TEXAS RANGER S: Signed RHP
Som1 Mauund: lu a minor-league cnn -

Save

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

lracl .

TORONTO OLUE JAYS : Placed C
Sandy . ~bni~:t. un tbc I S-duy l.lisubk.'t.l
li101. R.:~t~llcd C Juliu Mu sc.tuer u frnm
Sym~:u~

nf the lnlcrna~iunnl U:attuc. 1\c·
uv;at\'1.1 LHP Paul Spuljun~ l"mm lhc I~ ­
duy di ~a blcd lhl Opti oned R.HP Scnll

'Jn°/o

8ro'lll to Syr.M.'USC •

Basketball
NaiM.ftal Huhlb.H ASioci•tion
INDIANA PAC ERS: Sittned G
JL'fili!IC 1\lk:n IU I&amp; IIIIC· ycar I:Unlmcl .
ORLANIJO MAOIC : Rc ·s•gncd G

~ l&gt;urn:ll

Armslroatt

Football
Ntllonal foothol Lcaauc
ATLANTA FALCONS: Rc~•...J CB
Etlc J11.ck , DE G11ry Bandy, S Georae

20% Everyday

Save a minimum ol20%
oil manufaclura(s llal
. price everyday.

l Middleport Dept. Store

LOVING
FAMILIES SOUGHT

some

•

1.

0~~~
Plitt

;GM Goodwrench 400..•
Each year, thousands or famillca acrou the

alcion bolt AISE CI!Change

Trfln S;-JCIIon s

B.-.u

A-IAipo

BOSTON RED SOX: Aedwllod SS
Jolul Valntlo from 11M lS-41) dbMiocl
lill. Opdoood .... , _ 10 Paw-

like.-

oflb
t - 'SO'X
- ' "·: Placed
CHICAGO
WHITE
oo ,.. 15-417 db-

RHP Molt Kildow

•

·;,

I

-·ve

.... Wins lhe
If ...
f

8trett

cr.

Rimpn 10, Royall 3
Will Clark, on the disabled list
three times this season, drove in four
runs with a single, double and home
run as host Tex.u remained lilt
games ahead ol second-place Seattle
in the AL West.
Dean Palmer and Kevin Elster
each hit two-run homers, and Kevin
Gross (10-7) pitched 4 1/3 innings of
relief.
Kansas City starter Kevin Appi!lf..
(11-8) allowed six cl{1led runs in 2·
2/3 innings in his second-shortest
outing of the season.
The Rangers played their 14tb
consecutive errorless game, tying the
IAL record set by California in 1991.
, The major league record is 16 by the
1992 St. Louis Cardinals .
1
Allgell4, Red So1 3
Mike Holtz (2-2) struck out
Boston's Mo Vaughn wi!h the bases
loaded and two outs in the eighth to
preserve a 3-3 tie at Fenway Park .
In the ninth, pinch-hitter Jack
Howell led otT with a double and
Randy Velarde followed with an RBI
double that left fielder Mike Greenwell misplayed.
.
.,....
Greenwell, who missed the previous four games with a strained
lower back, moved in on Velarde's
line drive off Mark Brandenburg (34) before he backed up and the ball
sailed over hi~ head.
Troy Percival got three outs for
his 31st save.

I

'

QM~

~~~'!"'

500 Ill ,,,;,. ' ·,

~.

•

00
.'

I

..

pie of bad shots, and then I0 unbelievable. He ,is No. I - you are not
allowed to give any chances."
The winning point was a backhand volley that handcuffed lvanisevic.
"More incredibly lucky than
good." Sarnpras said.."I just put my
racket down and 'it went over the net
for a winner. I was surprised
myself."
lvanisevic had 15 aces against '
Sampras and 78 in the tournament,
giving him I,OIJfor the year. He set '

.••

•• • • • • • • • • • • •

•
•

an ATP record with 1,169 aces in
1994.
lvanise•ic, who has been in the
top 10 five ofthc last six yean;, ha.~
never won a Grand Slam tournament, and has
eliminated in the
first or second rounds at the U.S.
Open in Jour of his seven appearances.
"My goal' is to reach the socond
week," lvanisevic said, "to try to be
there on Monday, not as a tourist, as
a socon&lt;~-week player."

been

• •••••

REMINDER
:~TO LANDLORDS :
•
'

::

.: IN THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT
.: All Landlords
who rent property in
•
•

~

•

:
•

•••

•

. Mldd~ Ohio
(114) 182-1472

Overbrook Center, a 100 bed long term care
facility In Middleport, Ohio, Is seeking a Director
·.o f $0Cial Strvlcel. The preferred candidate will
be ~ LSW and have some long term care
' ~xperience. The salaty will be competitive as .will
the. benefit package. We have a strong clinical
~nd mJi'lagement team and are looking for a
'J!b.. candidate Who will help ·strengthen that team.
.S.nd resumes to Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Stlaet, M~. ,Ohio 45760. EOE

•m

IIIDII, 30; H_offmtft , S11

.

333

:
(Continued from Page 4)
Dulingll)ll on Sepi. I, Jmett will
: slandinga with 3,000 points, also is become just the second driver to
position to win a bis bonus. He claim the prize. Bi(Hilliou won il!
:has won the Brickyard 400 at lndi- the firat year it wu off.,-ecl, in 1985~
:anapolis, the Daytona ~ llld die
. Terty Llb.onte. the Winston ~
:coca-Cola 600 at Charloue. The points !Older,. slipped put Bmle.
;iaces at Daytona and Charlotte, , lrvll'l'l Fonl )ridltYfO lips mnainina
..Jona with the Winston Select SOD at ! 10 cllim dircl pllce, in hii Chevrolet.
:Talllldep - which Jmett did DO! : 'l'hllleft ~" \!filh ~.137 poi!"' .
:win- aild the Southern SOD com- ! llld a comf~ 134-P.Oint lad
·prise die Winston selecl MiiUon. '
over o.Jc l!lmliltdt uid Jeff Ocr,
: . "I feel like I million dolln ncrwtl . don. 'lboy • lied for ~ond.
:with evco-ciUna that's 80116 011 Ucl ·
Gordon llld l!amhlnlt.-l!oeh dri-'
:the way
nan," JIR'ett lljil; : ~~~~ Cbivyl. flaillli!d fiflll and J
...It's j111t uemendoulllldlhen'a no : reapecti~. !.~·· Yicu1ry ~~ -·
reuOniO'IIOPIIOW· Weniigbt-.WIIl • ford a aweep·of the. two W:Uilf!jft
ofW"IIIItOD'I JIIOliiDY.'~ . · . Cup -al.Micbipn thiJ yw. . '

students

are on pace to shatter the record of
240 home runs set by the 1961 New
York Yankees.
The Orioles failed for the second
straight day to gain ·any groUnd in the
AL East on the Yankees. Baltimore
trails New York by S 112 games.
Oakland starter Don Wengert (68) allowed six hits and ihrcc f\lns in
6 1/3 inninss.
Brewen 8, White Sox 7
At Milwaukee, Jeff Cirillo's broken-bat sinale over a drawn-in
infield scored the so-ahead run in the
eighth.
After Jesse l..evis 'blooped a double to left, pinch-runner David Hulse
went to third on Fernando Vina's sacrifice bunt 'and scored on Cirillo's
single over shortstop Morberto Marlin.
Angel Miranda (7·5) got one out
for the win, and Mike Fetters pitched
the ninth for hil22nd save. Jeff Darwin (0-1) took the loss.
Frank Thomas hit a three-run
homer for Chicago, becoming the
fourth player in major league histo1}' to drive in 100 runs in each of his
first six seasons.
Blue Jays 6, Twins l '
Pat Hentgen pitched his major
league-leading seventh complete
game for Toronto at Minnesota.
Ed Sprague hit his 30th homer
and Carlos Delgado also hit a tworun homer for the' Blue Jays.
Hentgen (15-7) won for the ninth
time in 10 starts with a six-hiller.
Rick Aguilera (6-5) was the los-

Sampras wins RCA Championships for third time ,

'

pbiL 2!.

-

the first half as New England
The San Francisco 49ers don't knocked Philadelphia quarterback
know much about their running Rodney Peete out of the game.
game. Their special teams play hasAs Peete led the Eagles to a field
·n'I given coach George Seifert milch goal near the end of the first half,
•of a chance to find out.
Willie McGinest connected with
Eiihltimes Sunday night at Jack- Peete's left knee. Peete limped otT at
sonville, the 49ers began•a posses- halftime with a knee sprain.
-sion inside .their own 20. Quarter- • "It's a little sore, but I don't think
.back Steve Young leading the team it's hurt that badly," Peete said. "I
.with 29 rushing yards in a 38-10 loss had an injury like this my rookie year
.to the Jaguarnhouldn't come as a and 1 was out five or six. weeks. This
surprise.
one is not nearly as bad."
San Francisco's 17 penalties for
Broncus :ZO, Cowboys 3
. 118 yards included three holding
At Irving, Dallas running back
penalties on kickoffs. And that was Emmitt Smith sprained 1\is left knee
·hardly the worst of the 49ers' special and ankle ~nd will be sidelined 2-4
.teams play.
weeks. He could play in the opener
Two botched field goal attempts, at Chicago on Sept. 2.
a blocked punt and a fumbled punt
"This is really good news," Cow•retum were other lowlights in a dis- boys coach Barry S~it~r said. "He
•mal effort.
has a ch~e to play in the opener.
_ "We'vegoltogetitresolvedand We hope He can. We've really got
do it quickly," said Seifert, whose- some problems with our offense."
team opens the regular season in two
John Elway and Bill Musgrave
weeks against New Orleans. "I threw touchdown passes for Denver.
imagine New Orleans is silting there
Rlllu 34, Chids 30
tonight just licking their chops."
At Kansas City, St. Louis rookie
Young completed 17 of 27 pass- Eddie Kennison caught three touc~
·es for 144 yards and helped the 49ers down passes aga1nsl Kansas C1ty s
(1-2) to a 10-10 halftime tie. But mistake-ridden defense, which had
Jacksonville ( 1-'2) scored two touch- · held opponents withoul a touchdown
'downs in both the third and fourth for nine quarters. ·
'quarters.
Colts 15, Seabawks 13
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Pete head competition.
The down side for the Jaguars
At Indianapolis, Cary Blanchard
"Goran is so difficult because he
Sampras heads to next week's U.S.
came when left tackle Tony Boselli kicked a 50-yard field goal as time
is so up and down, serves three aces
Open with new confidence.
limped off in the first quarter with a expired. It was his third field goal of
The world's top-ranked player in a row, double-fauits twice." said
•? Prained right ankle, and his backup the game.
handled the blazing serves of Goran Sampras, who also won al Indi: 1- Jeff Novak -was taken off on a
leU 13, Giants 6
,
Ivanisevic on Sunday to win · the anapolis in 1991 and 1992 and· colAt East Rutherford, N.J., Carl RCA Championships for a record lected $1 50,000 · for the victory.
• :Cart two possessions later.
: • "We lost two left tackles in the Greenwood stripped the ball from
third time, 7-6 (7-3), 7-5. It was his "You are not sure what is coming,
:'wink of an eye," coach Tom Cough- Lawrence Dawsey and returned it40 first tournament triumph since April. you just have to stay very solid on
: lin said. "Th~'s a rare thing that hap- yards for the game's only touchdown
"Whenever you win, il brings you· your service games and hopefully
- pens, and both guys with ankles. It to break a 6-6 tie on the last play of a lot of confidence, and that is one have a chance to break him."
Sampras had a match point in the
. : defies normalcy."
the third quarter.
thing I was looking for here and
lOth
game of the second set, but was
: San Francisco is expected to
Bills 24, Pantben 0
going into Aushing, I feel fit and
At Charlotte, J~
·
lly complet- ready to go," said Sampras, who is broken. lvanisevic then lost his ser• 1mnoun.ce the acquisition of running
back Terry Kirby from Miami as ear- ed four of five p s for 45 yards 25-4 in the Indianapolis Joumament. vice game on a double-faqlt, and
1Y as today.
and a touchdown in nly 10 plays.
The finalists are lakin&amp; a different Sampras served out to capture the
• ~'!look for,ward to having him,"
Steelen 13, Buccaneers 3
route to the Open, the year's final match.
lleifert said. "I am excited about it.
At Pittsburgh, the Steeleni' Grand Slam event, which besins
"I got another two double-faults,
hOI many first serves in," lvanisevic
but it is difficult right now to focus defense helped spoil Tony Dungy's Aug. 26.
pn Terry, Kirby after what just took return to l~e Steel City. The Bucs'
"I'll take the next day or two off said of the II th game. "I was servplace. There are plenty of other new coach IS a former Steelers play- and gel up to Aushing on Thcsday or ing much more aggressive, coming
things to address right now."
er and assistant
Wednesday and get into a good in. Then I started to throw it higher
: In Saturday's games, it was DenIn the race for Pittsburgh's start- groove," he said. "Get used to the and stay back. Even when I hit the
yer 20. Dallas 3; Pittsburgh 13, ing quarterback job, Mike Tomczak courts and there is definitely some first serve in, I didn't follow the
tampa Bay 3; Green Bay 17, Balli- was6-for-l~ for 71 yards, Jim Miller · room to get better."
serve."
inore 15; Buffalo 24, Carolina 0; was3-of-6for 14yardsandKordell
lvanisevic, the second seed from
lvanisevic, still seeking his first
Indianapolis 15, Seattle 13; New Stewart was 2-of.6 for 32 yards.
Croatia,
has 16tour victories, but is
toumarnenttriumph ever in the UnitPrleans 31, Chicago 21; New York
Packers 17, Ravn11 15
0-4
in
finals
played in the United
ed States, will play the du Maurier
)ets 13, New York Giants 6; St
At Baltimore, Richie Cunning- Open in Toronto this week.
States.
lo'lis 34, Kansas City 30; and San ham kicked a 42-yard field goal with
"I lost concentration a lillie bit,"
The victory, in a match that began
said
lvanisevic, who noted he went
Diego 32, Arizona 10.
three seconds lefllo keep Green Bay two hours late because of rain, was
• Also Sunday, New England beal unbeaten (3-0).
for
too
many big shots.
Sampras's first in three matches
"You have to always concen, Philadelphia 37-10.
CJween 32, Cardlnab 10 . wi¢tlvaniscvic on hardcourts, giving ·
At San Diego, Stan Humphri01 him an 8-6 overall elise in head-to- trate,'' be added. "He can hit a cou· Minnesota is at Miami tonight.
Patriolll 37, EaaJa 10
suided the Chargers to two touchi At Foxboro, Drew Bledsoe threw downs and a field goa~ on their first
: for 148 yards and two touchdowns in three possessions.

•

Dlolo, ll;
Soo Fnnt11&lt;0. 26; - co, New Yoit, 16; IOIIJiieo, Phlllllel-

Ht•u•••·
Teut. 26: No•taomery.
tc.ut Cllr. n: a. Mron. • -· l.l

.341 : a-. a..,..., .m: ''""·Col·
«Mo• .lll: B. v..... Colotlllo, ,))4:
- · · ~• ..Ill; Clllppor looa,

Sauvcur hom Nashville .

H; Tod~orrell , Lo• Ana•t••· 31;

lloroia, 31: Meu, l:LEVELANO, lO:

NL leaders

Teague, Wit DemciJius Allen, Qti Jim
Ballard. G James Cbri5linnscn, T Robcn
Couch, 012 Tommy Fosan, OT Jim Han.
nu, P Gr~g Ivy, CD Aldli Juhnson, WR
Tyrun~ Jotrn ~ nn , WR L&gt;crn.:ll Mil ~ hell,
IJT Mike Schlegel, QB Dan While llnd
1.0 Ricb Yunic.wicl.

li~t ,

n:-lr0ill.:li¥C IU 1\ug. II. ... l&lt;k:CtJ
LHP Larry Th(lmlls on the 15-dily di sabled liR Re~alled INF O~g Norton from
Nath¥allc uf lhe Amt&gt;rican Anocialinn .
Pureh us~: d the conlnct o ( LHP Ri..;h
abicd

" · """'""
SAVES:llO.
I. lkanck). CINCU'(NATI,

Wo"tu ,

back again.
"We took the game to extra
AP Sports Writer
Another thrilling one-run game innings. There's no reason for us to
that came down to the last out. Can hang our heads low," said Darryl
the Yankees and Mariners play any Strawberry, who grounded 10 short
other way?
for the final out with the tyins run on
The latest installment of Selltde in the 13th.
Sorrento, who homered off Jim
vs. New York looked a lot. like last
October when the clubs hooked up Mccir ( 1-1) in the 12th, drove in five
for five gui-wrenching games in the runs.
"I think we showed a lot ofcharAL playoffs.
acter
t!lllay," Sorrento said.
Seattle jumped out to an 8-0 lead
Bobby
Ayala (4-3) pitched out of
Sunday, but needed 12 innings to
a
bases-loaded
jam in the lith, but
hold off New York 13-12, giving the
gave
up
RBI
singles
'to Wade Boggs
Mariners tbe first three games of the
and Tino Mertinez in the 12th.
wraparound weekend series.
Mike Jackson relieved and got
And, although the -cities are separated by 3,000 miles, and the teams Strawberry to end the four-hour, SOaren't even in the same division, minute game.
"When he hit it, I said 'Thank
there has been quite a rivalry blosyou,' " Griffey said.
soming.
Elsewhere in the American
"Ever since the playoffs, it's really picked up," Ken Griffey Jr. said. League, it was Oakland 9, Baltimore
"They got Slime suys over there who 6: Milwaukee 8. Chicago 7; Toronto 6, Minnesota 2; TelUIS 10, Kansas
can score runs quick."
Jay Buhner hit a sacrifice .fly and City 3; and California 4, Boston 3.
Athletics 9, Orioles 6
Paul Sorrento hit a two-run hon1er in
Mark McGwire hit his major
the 13th for the Marine!i", whose
three straight wins at.~~~fee Sladi· league-leading 43rd homer, and
Scoll Brosius and Terry Steinbach
urn followed a 1-8 bOI}lestan4.
In May, Dwight G(!oden pitched also homered for the A's at Oakland
a no-hitter against the Mariners. Coliseum.
Brosius and McGwire hit back.-toThere would be no repeat performance, however, as Seattle rocked back horne runs in the second inning
Gooden for seven runs and 10 hits in as the A's jumped to an 8-0 lead
against David Wells (9-11 ).
2 2/3 innings. ·
But the Yankees, who fell behind
Steinbach, who hit a two-run
9-0 on Saturday, rallied for seven homer on Saturday, hit his 30th of
runs in lhe fourth inning. And, after the season in the first.
The A's, who have 205 homers,
falling behind 10-7; New York came

·In NFL exhibition action,

Jarrett wins GM Goodwrench 400 to get season's fourth win .
By HARRY ATKINS

Ramirez bid a career-hiJh three
him in the order and is hittin&amp; .185
doubles
- two 10 left llld one to
in
his
last
21
gameJ,
J
' "When you have Albert Belle hit- right.
~ tina behind you, it ~nly doesn't
Then.-. JOt a solo homer from
Brad Ausmus in the lhird and RBI
•hurt," Thome said.
Osea. meanwhile, continued to sin&amp;les by Ruben Siena and Tony
.provide much-needed pitching help Clark in the siltth.
·while Dennis blartinez is on the disSierra, acquired from the New
,lbled list lt'ld Jack McDowell's fore- York Ylllkees in lhe Cecil Fielder
,arm still hurts. Ogea walked IWO, ·trade, made two of Detroit's three
struck out five llld allowed siK hiu. ~errors - a bad throw ~ 1 dropped
"I think it's key for us 10 do that :foul popup.
to keep
consistency in our rotaNota: Williams failed to ao six
tion •." Oaea said. "We've sot to try innings for the seventh time in 17
to pick those guys up llld help them starts .... The Tigers hive bid two
get the rest they need."
four-error games this season. ...
: Tiaera manager Buddy Bell Bolle was hit by a pitch for the sixth
•looked like he needed a rest afte~ this time - the same total he bid last
lone. He lambasted his last-place seuon.... Jeff Kent wu 0-for-4 with
team for not beina ready to play.
lhree strikeouts llld is 5-for-32 (.156)
"I just think we .disrespected the since the Indians acquired him from
game of baseball,'' Bell said. "I have the New York Mets . ... Cleveland's
a problem with that."
Mark Carreon was a late scratch at
Cleveland scored four in the first first base due to the nu .... The crowd
off Brian Williams (3-10). Thome cheered loudly for the Green Bay
and Sandy Alomar had RBI sinsles, Packers during video hiJhlighu of
Manny Ramirez an RBI double and their 17-15 victory over the BaltiBrian Giles a sacrifice Oy.
more Ravens, who used to be the
Alomar also had run-scorins sin- Cleveland Browns.
gle in the second.

.

By TOM WITHERS

Cardinals, Braves-and Padres get wins

games.
AP Bllleball Writer
"It's been a four-team race all
Look out, Cardinals and Astros, year," Astros manager Terry Collins
the rest of the NL Central is catch- said. "I don't know why it shoulding up.
n't continue.''
While St. Louis and Houston
Todd Stottlemyre (11-8) held the
. have been going back and forth for Marlins hitless until Devon White
the division lead, the Cincinnati singled with one out in the seventh.
Reds and Chicago Cubs are making
Sheffield hit his 35th homer an
·
inning
earlier, and Eckersley wasn't
I heu moves. , .
The Reds won for the 18th time exactly enjoying the tense situation
in 28 games, beating the Colorado in the ninth.
Rockies 9-4 Sunday. The Cubs, who
"I like it if we win the game and
haven't had a winning record since I got out ofi~ butl don't like it while
May 5, reached the .500 mark with I'm actually doing it," Ecskerley
a 10-8 victory over Houston.
said.
"St. Louis and Houston looked
Eckersley got his 21st save as the
like they were going to run away Cardinals completed their first sweep
with it," Chicago's Mark Grace said. of Florida.
"Now we find ourselves back in it,
In other NL games, Atlanta heat
playing good, solid baseball."
Pittsburgh 2-1 in 14 innings, MonThe Cardinals managed to hold treal beat Los Angeles 7-3, San
on at home, defeating Florida 5-3 Diego blanked New York 8-0, and
when Dennis Eckersley got Gary Philadelphia downed San Francisco
Sheffield to ground into a double 7-6.
play with the bases loaded to end the
Cubs 10, Astros 8
game.
Jaime Navarro wound up as the
St. Louis leads the Central by one · winning pitcher at Wrigley Field
game over Houston. The Reds are 3 despite making three errors in the
112 back, and the Cubs tra1l by fi&gt;'t- tbird inning, helping Houston take a

RBI single. Then Thome made it II·
3 with his slam to right off Grell
Olson.
'"lb have a biasame liktlhllllld
have a arand slam to go with it is
pretty special,'' Thome said.
Chid Ogea (7-4), who one-hit
Seattle in eight innings I 0 days ago,
went six innings for the victory.
Thome's first homer in the third
innina came with a touch of controveny. A fan reached over lhe riilina
and touched the ball, and the umpire
ruled it a double. Cleveland lllll'lager Mike Hargrove clwJed out of the
dugout, arauing ~y that the
ball was above the fence and con~nced the ump 10 change his call.
Thome's focus is not ,Wiy 011 hitling home runs. Wilh 8j RBis and 92
walks, he is closing in on'his goal of
I00 of each in a season.
In the last 41 games, Thome is 52for-146 (.356) wiih 12 homers and
39 RBls.
.
"Anything he doe5 with the bat
should surprise no· one," Hargrove
said.
'nome gave the credit to teammate Albert Belle, who bats behind

Ma·riners get by Yankees; Rangers win

In other NL action,
By BEN WALKER

new crowd favorite - and a new
chant - at Jacobs Field.
Jim l'l!ome hit two homen,
including his first career~ slam,
and drove in a career-high six runs
as the Cleveland Indians beat the
Detroit Tisers for the 14th straight
time a1 Jacobs Field, 11-3 Sunday.
Thome, who also homered on
Saturday. went 4-for-5 and 7-for-11
in the series. When he came up with
the bases lo8ded in the eighth inning,
the crowd chanted, "TOE-MEE!
TOE-MEE!"
"l don'tthink they've ever done
that before," said Thome, who hit his
26th and 27th homers of the season.
"They always used to chant, 'Eddie,
Eddie,' for Eddie Murray, but that's
about it"
The Indians improved to 9-0
against Detroit this season. The
Tigers dropped to 1-18 at the ballpark since it opened in 1994.
Thome's solo homer in the second gave Cleveland a 5-0 lead.
Leading 6-3 in the eighth, the Indians added a run on Omar Vizquel's

fifth inning was their biggest inning longest by a Red this season.... The
on the road since June 6, when they Reds have not committed an error
scored four runs in ,!Ill inning against since Wednesday, a span of 52
Houston . ... Cincinnati's Hal Moms ', innings.... Mitchell is 13-for-56
singled in his second at-bat, extend- with the Reds, but seven of the hits
ing his hitting streak to II games, the have been for ex.tra bases.
.

The Dilly S.Jtlnel• Plge_

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
•
•
•

••

Middleport must submit an up-to
date list of their tenants
(full name and address)
to the
INCOME TAX ADMINISTRATOR
By September of each year

:VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT
•
••
TAX DEPART.NIENT
•
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•

•

•
•'
•'
•
•
•
•

•
•'

•

\

992-2827

.

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�.........

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Page 6 • The DIIJY Sentinel

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

"

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Sea World
.

...

1

~-·- -·

GIWiway

,'

accident

leaves 23

CIISftiUCftOI

injured

KIDDIE PULL WINNERS - The following
youths were winners In the 35-55 pound clan
during week-long Kiddie Tractor Pull competition at the 1996 Meigs County Fair. From left are

MORE WINNERS - The following youths
were winners In the 56-75 pound class during
week·long Kiddie Tractor Pull competition at
the 1996 Meigs County Felr. From left are Reed

Boster, fair grand champion; MatU16w Whhe,
fair reaerve champion; Aaron Sellers, Charlie
Eblin and Shine Milhoan.

Program allows Jarmers to hang
onto land while paying off debts
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) state protection for 10 years.
Before dairy farmer Chip Hager
The $40,000 Hager will receive
signed up for a new state program to over the decade will allow him to
preserve farms and farmland, he fil(- - make .some needed improvements,
ured he had two choices.
including putting a roof on his small
"We were at the point financially ~aw mill so it can be used in bad
where :r was either go out of business weather and starting a mail-order
or do something different," said maple syrup business.
Hager, who lives in Colrain in the
The idea of paying fanners to keep
nonhwestern corner of Massachu- their land off the development marsells.
ket is not 'a new one, said Roben
The program allows farmers to Wagner, national director of state and
lease development rights to their local programs for the private Farmland to the state for five to I0 years land Trust. Suffolk County, N.Y.,
in return (or help from specialists in launc)led the first easement purchase
farm diversification and manage- program in 1977, followed quickly
ment. The aim is to buy time for hard- by the states of Massachusetts and
pressed family farmers to get back on New York.
their feet without selling off their
The program has been attracting
acreage.
new attention, panicularly in the
In Hager 's case, the development West and Midwest, as suburbs spread
rights to the 750 acres on the Vermont further into rural fields, Wagner said.
border that h~ve been in his family
"Currently there are programs in
for 100 years will be placed under IS states," he said. "They are allover

the Nonheast. California passed a bill
last year. And we are working with
communities in Ohio and Michigan."
Massachusetts' new five-year, $5
million proJ1'8111 takes the idea of permanent easements a step further by
combining shorter-term leases with
business review programs aimed at
increasing the farms' profitability.
"The best farmland protection
program is a profitable farm," said
Massachusetts Agriculture Commissioner Jay Healy.
After a handful of pilot projects
last ·year, including Hager's farm,
Massachusetts is reviewing 61 applications from farmers interested in
joining the shorter-term program,
said program coordinator John
Jaworski,
'
Nearly half are dairy farms, the
state's most endangered form of agri·
culture, but they also include
orchards and vegetable and herb
farms.

Roofing ~ Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Guttera a_n d Downapouta

~
I

. .j.
l'

ers probably are not responsible
because Liilocaine leaves the system
within hours, lie said.
"We suspect some type of sabotage or contamination of the sampling," Pavlatos said.
Pavlatos said it would make no
sense to give an animal Lidocaine to
improve iiS appearance or . perfor·
mance.

_

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M. ·
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-Room Add!li!lls

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1·900·484·1515
Exl. 1985'

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SERV-U (619) 645-8434
7/'lJj

•New Garallft
•Electrical &amp; Plllmblng
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Elctlrlor
Painting
AlaO CCIIICI'N Work .

(FREE EStiMATES!'
V.C. YOUNG Ill
812-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
t/Min

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Tuppere Plaine • Chnter
WnrDIItrlct
39561 Bllr 30 Rold
Reedavllle, Oh 45772
Separate Hlied Bide for
the oonetruotlon of the
Hocking River Crouliijj ·itt
Guyevllle, Contract 116-1 will
be received by the Tuppere
Plalne-CII81IIf Water
Dietrlct at the office of the
Tuppera Plelne-Cheeter
Water Dlatrlct until 10:00
o'clOck a.m., September 3,
1996, and then 11 Nld ofllce
publicly opened and read
aloud.
The work covered by the
Contract Document•
lneludll the fOllowing:
Contract 96·1 Hocking
River Cro~alng II Ouyavllle
Conetrucdon of 1,900 llneel
feet of 6" weter main
Including river cro11lng,
365 tineal faet of 2" water
main and 2 water 11rvlc11,
together with the n-lllfY
appertaining work.
The eetlmeted conetruotlon
COli II $101,000 II of July,
1996.
The Bidding Documentt
mt1y be eumlnld et:
Tupper• Plaine • Ch11ter
W-Dietrlct
39561 Bllr 30 Road
Rlldlvllle, OH 45772
Burgeea l Nlple, Umlted
4424 Emer8on AYIIIUI
Parkersburg, WV 26104
Coplea of the Bidding
Documenta mey be
purchlllll et:
BurgMI l Nlple, Limited
4424 Emereon Avenue
Perklraburg, WV 26104
upon payment of $40.00
· None o1 Which Will Be

,_

AIIKlnds
'
c.ntctinfl

. :

.

.

scott INS~CE·

said.

t1f ~ ~ .

.

614-88 40U &lt;coiled&gt;
3m Swart Rd.'
Alllllly, 1110457:au

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;vi-..Complllln
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Co~!JP~Dia ind , bave
P""'Wes for ..ty

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Ext 3124
$2.99 psr min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall eo.

(602) 954-7420

GRUESER'SGIUGE

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IMdsaw Mill

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All Kinds of Earth Work

Danny &amp; Peggy 8rickles

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TFN

SIBVICIS

We have the new FR12
Low Coot Repla&lt;ement

Cor Automotive Rll.

1-800.279-3147

RemodeUng
Room addltictns
Roofing

DON SMITH
992·2735

, Mu: 814-247-4811
Jtiltln: 814-247-44111
Am!r_: 814-08:2-7074

Carage's, Deck's,

GUYS II!

lnatallatlon and
Service.
lnaured

10% ofl all quallflng bids

Girls are waiting to
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l.iciiMI. ............

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FICJORY

Serv·U (619) 645-8434

30o/o·40o/o OFF

713111111 1 mo.

Mini Blinds,
Ve~ca(s, .,

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LIVE PSYHICS

Pleated Shades

Wa1t to Help

and much morel

Y01lll

J•lj 16, 1996 to

Let them tall you

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about the future Ill

Drapes By Design
48 State Street
Galllpolla,.Ohio 45831
614 448-4199
800-441..(1399

(304)415 1541

DIItrlct.

Thll 12th .day of Auguat,
1996
Harold H. Blaclteton
Preeldent

Southern Ohio Coal
·u.Ia• Mine No.

~ny,

BING'S
AUTO

REPAIR

Sll.ll8 par min.

949·2057

;,1, P.O. Box 4SIO;i\thene,
Ohio 45701, 1111 eubmlttecl
on adllclnt- appiiCIIIon
to Coal Mining ud
Alclametlon Permit Number
D·0354·4, to the Ohio
Department of Naturel
Reaaurcea, Dlvlelon of
MIIIIIIRd Rlellmltlon. The
propolld -1 mining arid
reclemetlol! operetlon will
be conducted In Melge
County, Salem Townehlp,
Section I, 8, 7, 12, end 1a;
Melge . County, Rullend
Townlhlll, Section 31 and
38; Ollila County, Morgen
Townalllp, Section 5, 11,
end 17; Qallla County,
Chelhlra Townehlp, Section
a and 35. Till propoeed
underground mining araa
encompe..•• 2,343 1cr11
end 11 loeeted on the
Rutlend and Wllkeevllle 7
112 minute U.S.O.B.
q"edrangll
map1,
blglnnlng f.4 mllel Elit of
Dlnvllle end 0.5 mlln lOuth
of HIMivllle, Ohio. The
eppllcetlon propo••• to
111pend the - for full cool
extraction ml,nlng by
longwall m1t11oc1t and room
end pillar mining (Iongwell
development).

949-2168
5.!1&amp;'14~

Still
''"'"· ~ pick up. """'
11llr1M rotoy. 904-t75-705t ..

,

Off Forest Run

MIKE IlliG
llllft mo•

· · Tha •pplloitlon 11 on file
11 the olflca1 of the U.lge
County racorder, Melga
County Court Houae,
Second Street; Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 and the Gellla
County recorder, Gellla
County Court Houle,
Loculi Street, Oalllpollt,
Ohio 46631 for public
viewing. ·Written commenl8
end/or requeeta for an
Informal conference may be
11nt to the Otvlelon of
Mlnlt and Recllmlllon,
1855 Fountain Square
Court, Building H-3,
Celumbue, Ohio 43224·
1387, within 30 dey• of the
1111 data of publication of
thll notice.
(8)5, 12, 19, 26, 4 tc
Public Notice

3t94.
Wood Pollell Fret at 735 Second A••· Johnson' Grocerr
6t4-446·2601 Alit ler Br1r11 .

60 Lost and
IMI03.

Loll: Female Cat White With
Long Holr. Pug Noso. Vicinllr:
Third Avenue. 8t4-446-7108.
oi4-4441-10011.
Lo11: Sable Colored Collie, 8
Years Old, Wormed, Wounda On
Nolt Arta, Nome : RuiJt, 014·

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

FrH Estimate's

&amp;Vicinity

J. E. DIDI)LE, OWNER

ALL Yard Salol Mull Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad It to run.
S..ndar edlion - 1 :00 p.m. FriGay.
Uondlr edition · tO:OO a.m. Stt-

ll4...2512

·RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

urday.

WELDING &amp; FAIRICAn.OH
$20.00/HR.

dlc1rac:l&lt; &amp;Lo• ~I'll

UNEXPLAINED
POWER I!
Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to
know??

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.
~ew

Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and ReSIDENTIAL
f=REE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

1/tiMJHn

1-900·255·0500
Ext. 5266
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yrs.
Serv·U 619 645·8434

(UmeStone-

We will work within your budget
FAX 773-5811
Mason, WV

THE

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HAULING

SMITH'S
COISTRUCTIOI
AttnCidllina
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I'AEE ESnMATES

Cullom Building I

• It's'wsftfng
19.95/Month

lllrlllOI·IITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
flketlle ,........
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Public Sale
and Auction
Rick Pearaon Auction Company,

full lime auctioneer, complete
auction
11rv1ce. Licen~e&lt;l
166,0hio I Well Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or :1)4-773-5447.

l

I

I

_,

'

1.
,I

Abaolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sl
ver And Gold Coln1. Proolao ,
Diamonds, Antiquo Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Prt·103Q, U..s, Cll!rancv.
Sterling, Etc. Aequlll~Onl Jewelry
. M.T.S. Coin Shop. 1St Secor;ll!
-... Gallipolis. &amp;t'-446-2842 . .
Large Amoun11 50's, 80's ~~
RPM Recorda, Alter 6P.t.l. 513675·2930, 4339 Jasp11 Roali
Ja""'Biown, OH 45335.
Clean Late Model

Can Of

Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easb
ern Aven.~e, Gallipolis.
.. ,

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying oa)·.

vage vehicles. Selling pans. 304'!

773-5033.
Top dollar· antiques, furn itur.t;i
glaaa, c;hlna, clocks, gold, allvQJ; •
coins, watches, eatatea, old ltonH,
jars, old blue &amp; while dishes, oltt
wood boxes, milk bottles, Me i ~i 1
County Advertisement , O&amp;tJ•
Marti n, 614·992·7441 .

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

Wan led To Buy . Van W•th Whettt .
Cha1r li11."614- 387·70 16.

~--~--~~~~ ~

Plck·up dlacarded,
appliances, batteries,&amp;
many mata1a.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

80

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Wl)h l
Or Wllhoul Motors. Call lar

FREE

. ..

dai &amp; Monday ed•Uon- 1:OOtm
F11day.
'

Wanted To Buy : Good Used Set
01 Encyclopedia's. 614-446-035jl\•
Al18f -4 P.M.
··

1·8811-goNWNET

Unlimited Access • No Set U Fee

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm e
day before lht ad it .to run; ,Syn·

13DD.

812-6131

5

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Musl Be P'id In

Wanted to Buy •
100 ·t50 Balea 01 This Yea
Hay, Will Pay Delivery, 614-2Sli-

.
Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Suppllee • Industrial Gasea. • Machine Shop
Setvlcaa • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
614-992-3470
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental t..________
Steps -~lairs, RaHil)gs, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
hems; Planter han(l&amp;fl, Trellises l lots of other stufll!

"No Job Too ,_.,. or Too Sm•ll"

•

90

LowRatea)

Limestone, ·
Gravel, Sand,
1i S II Fill Dirt
op 0 r

Ph. 773-8173
108 Pomero Street

.

Auguot 20th, &amp; 2111. g:oo 4.M.
To 5:00P.M. 103 Unccln Pike, 5
'Fomlllea, Ml1c. ltomo, Clothll
Size lnllnlll To ex &amp; Adulll Nor-

CHEAPER RA1'ES

. t".

.

Loll: Bracelet at Captain D'1 Re·
ward 8U·446-2 t58 or 814-448·

70

Owner: Ronnie Jones

New

Fif~Und

~-2800 .

HOWOPEH

31801 Amberg1r Rd.

......

The Tupper• Plaine·
Cheater Water Dlatrlct
raeervaa the rlaht to reJect
eny and 111 ltlde or to
lncr1111 or deer•••• or
omit eny Item or lteina
encllor.eward to the l.,_t
end beet BIDDERS. Each
propo..l mu1t contain the
full n1me of every peraon or
compeny lntereeted 11!. the
..,.._ The Tupper• Plein•
Clleller Weter Dletrlct
mervae thl right to walvt
eny lnlormalltln or
lrflgullrftiN In the Bidding.
By order of tile Tuppers
Plaine· Chnter W-

Salts &amp;
l11tallatlon
614·992·5379

1·900-888-41 00
Ext. 2469
Mull be Ia yra.
Blrv·U (818)445 8434

.Public Notice

Buy Wholesale

CARPET

.$3.99 psr min.
Muat be 18 Yrs.

SALE

SAVE
nM'SCUSTOM

Ext. 5843

LEGAL NOTICE

Gorman Shtpherd 10 good home,
needl fOOn'l ID Nn, gantt., houH
&amp; chlln Included, 014-tD2-3t25.

367--0266-1-800-950-3359

614-742·21g3

992-3838

Refrigerator~,

Painting, Siding

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

Gutter8
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

1

;32124 Happy Hollow Ad.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Malge Rlfrlgeration
Air Conditioning,
Heat Pump, FurniCII,

111-

Public Notice

Friendly Kinena, liRer T11ined, To
Good Home Only, Ot4-44&amp;-38117.

Live~.

6t4-368-9303.

-

y

614-992-4025

~ ·

R.L. HOLLON· .
TRUCKING
Let a Psychic
DUMP TRUCK
Answer your
SERVICE
Questions!
Umeatone • Gravel

AVON I All Artu I Shi1tey
Spearo, 304-875-t429.
PUBUC NOTICE
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
Ablt Avon Reprettntatht&amp;l
COMPANY • MEIGS MINE .,.
neodod. Eorn money lor Chrill·
NO. 31 P.O. IIOX 4ilo,
mu biNI II home/at -k. 1-800·
' ATHENS, OHIO 411701
gg2-8350 or 30H82·28d. Ind.
Pureuant to Ohio Coal
Dirt• Sand
1·900·868-4900 ' Rep.
VIIY IWOIIAILI
Mining ond Raclomotlon
AmllitlOUI minded pooplel $tO
UYI llfiiiiiCIS
Rule 1501:13-3-04, SoU1hem
985-4422
Ext. 7625
weekly potential. Many POiillo
Ohio Cool Compony, Motge
614-915·4110
anilabJa. Start now, -no expe
$3.99 par min.
Cheater, Ohio
Mine No. 31, P.O. Box 410,
4131 mo. pd.
ance necessary. Call 1 dav ·
Atheno, Ohio 45701, doot_l
Must be 18 yrt.
407 -875-2022. ext 0598H33.
horoby aoak • variance to
Carel ot Thanks
Serv·U (619)-645-8434
AmDIIIOu&amp;M1M8&lt;1 People! St,OQI)1
permit a portal laelllty
,,.
Wkly Pocenual. Many Posti!Oil•·
I &amp; WPWnCS AID SUPPLY
within 1oo foet of Melga
Available . Start Now, No Expen·
To The Syracusj! County, Solom Townlhlp · St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plaint, Ohio 45713
once Noceuory. Coli 7 Dtilllb
Road
ItO,
boglnnlng
1114-985-3113 or 614-11117-41484
407-875-2022 Ext. 05211 H33.
Volunteer
Flte epproxlmetaly 1110 feat
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Dept.
A~d uuthent of the Pla!lic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;:D - perf. - !Oiid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie• pipe
Emergency Squsd • lntareactlon - of S1l1m 4"
005
Parsonals
&amp;. 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
Townahlp
Road
ItO
and
thank You! To All Stall Route 325 -In Soetlon I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
Rocluceuleand ..twllhOo·
Of· Our Nelgbbon, 11, Salam Townahlp, Malga 314" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i.-watcr pipe (100' roll'sthru 1,000' roll'~)
- - ond E-Vop djlrotlc.
Avalltblo Fruth Plarmlcy, Mid·
The 3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
Friends &amp; FamOy County, Ohio.
clitpofl
propoead
development
of
•
Who , Were There the porl81 lilt will heve no 8" Gravcless Leach pipe
30 Announcements
~ Offer Help &amp;
eHeet on the rold. Tho only Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings - Regulators- Rise11
Independent Contulten1 for Jafra
Sbow
Their dlaturbenco to be ·Full assortment of P. V,C. &amp; Fle1 fitting• &amp; Water fittings
Coamtllca in your area, now
Full line of Pstcm. Scplic &amp;. Water SIOIIIJC ta.nks.
conduc:tacl
within
100
felt
of
Concern Durin&amp; &amp; Townehlp Roed 110 will be
booking akin cw. CIIIMI in your
..... ....
homa. Expttltnce aomethlng
.AftJr ,My .Accident the conatructlon of thl .--~~~~~-,
·~l.ful lne ol lltln. body &amp;
• Thank You! The ICC- I'Oid, lnetalletlon of
nail core tor
&amp; womon. ¢111
111
-~~~ treatment plant,
n1
to,_,
Kimman
304-e75-57at.
Crews That Took the
water etoragl tank, rock
VourMII of Lonely
. Care Of Me Were dual
REWARD ssoo. tor tniormatlon
bin, emuttlon ayetem Ev.nlnge .nd WIIUncll
•
ltadtng to 1M . ,.. , 1nd convic·
Very Professional and eonatructlon of •
"CILL IDW"
"on-concerning tho rocont borbltllhOult . . Dlltul'lllnce of
--II
&amp; Compaulonate• the
:
gllty ond .vandallln) ol JTM Jn:
am .will be conducted
~To 11nt1e Quya anct
~
.........
St.
Rt.
.
duatrlel;
lnc. litho - H_,,
()ur Town :&amp; to the edge of the e~n• Cilia In Your- iAIOidiiiJ 10
124
...,_,.
W.VA. loclllty." Pl111e ctii.JTU
roed
eurfece.
lntareeted
IIIM1
.,_..
Uu
Youl
Racine, Oh. 45171
"lnduotrl•• ot 504·112-2115 or
County Are Very
partie• may comment 11 e
llfiLIJII!f
10:00
til
?
:
~CoUnty Shorlff .. atl4-t 75Lucky · To Hate pullllo
meet11111 of the hlem
~ ii"xt.
. TheH. Fine People townalllp Truatttl on · 1
1173
Ciothel 1:
-Would like to 11rn FREE "'''·
SUI Jill' min.
Volunteer . Thilr Aligutt 21, liMit 1:00 Llll.
• booM or Hflwlre'!? Colt ,_ lof
· to 1fe lllld 11 tile litem
llutl
Wbat·Dota
... dttllalltndlpandlnt
Educettoilet I ~;;;;:;-uu;u~ra~N~e;ldl;i;d.~W;;.,~~
11mel
Conauttant with Dlt-r TIIY•· f'
20w 1i ssow
~-~Hell, lelem
S.V.U (1110 uua•
"""'
l •••
··
O. " /Yr.
.
., ."""'1
_
_ ,•75-5701. Educatlonel T-o
., 100.,...711!1J
X"1173
RaJpll Oft'tallerpr, ~r.
(I) II, It 2TC

..,...

.....

"1'1111"

Ji'tre,·

F.OJ Curio Barn
.ackl

='_.....

~

&gt;

,,,,,

SAWMIU

JONES' TREE SE.RVICE

Rollback ~ Wedge
Open ~ Encloaed
Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Day or Night

2MEDIUM .
PEPPERONI PIZZAS ·
1 ORDER BREAD STiCKS
&amp;-2 PEPSI'S $10.~
DOMINO'S PIZZA

~.

·

H&amp;H

Truck_lngUmes.tone
BulldorJng 1nd
Backhoe

Hou.. Sitea 1nd
U_UIItlel

-

Body work, car truck &amp;
truck palnUng, minor
mach1nleal repair.
Tune-upe,
011 Chlnge, Wu,
Buffing
Long SL, Rutllnd, Oh.
742·2035, Alk for Klp

-

'

W H E·ll.E, t X T R A' EF f .0 R T I S_ 0 U II

'

Howard Excavatin
....

-

P.omlroy

.

IIHSI1

,..,. uentJne the
Ttle ()hie) Casualty

1-~945-4400

~
~

.

ROOFING
NEW·RI:PAIR

4UTCI MAKIII
IS IIADJ
IOWIII

(8)12, 18,28

Klnena To Good Homo, LUter

Small 4 roam houu In Middepo&lt;t
...__ _ _ _ _oollil_,..._, llo tear down &amp; mave. 11 . ..U2·

Howard L Wrlt...l

~

Dow .li1Qlls MII•Mn•llsaa•

FREE ESTIMATES

EASY

.

44-3479.

Trained, Ot4·440-83110.

.-

~

t

•New Homes

3

•
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Coinpire

1

-;!I !I!! till!!!! 11111111 !!11111111111111111111111111111111111111 -----------------------------::
BOARD DEADLINE:
::
-;: 2:00BULLETIN
PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! :::
-----

, · Your:lndep.ndem A.fe,.,
.s.r..tn,,... COIU!Iy Siace 1868

• Hip Safety I
• Wide Clloice of Annuities of

~hsaid.

NON-LNING PETS - In 1n lpparent effort to qold dlaclfml.
111tingag~lnat non-orvanlc CCJrnplnionl, a categcllj fot beat nonliving pet wea hlld at the Meigs County F1lr Pet 8tiOw Frldlr• Tll6
prize went to 1 atone.ducky dlapleyed by Thereea a.1re1: a member of the Shepherdi4-H Club.
'

Proapactlve Blddere RIIY
addr- lnqulrae to:
Burgeee l Nlple, Urnlted
4424 Emer8on AYIIIUI
Parklrsburg, wv 28104

Talk to yo~r independent agent. Insist ~n long· '
term eKperienca, community presence; and
someone who iii with you both bef?re and
after tlilngs happen. Just do thla one thing,
and. le1ve tt.. junllng ~ to ua.

I

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulalc or Monthly

. That's the 011ly I:8SC this year of
. pos4ible drug tampering with a fair
·.lllinial, the Agricult~m Department
Laws enacted following animal·
lllllpering scandals at the Ohio State
· Fair in 1994 make it a felony to
-adminislrer drugs without a pre. fcription.
·
Pavlat01 said the McNier family
bought the l11nb in April. The .,..._

Rlfundld.

3 Inside Lena Haired Klitona, 2
Calico &amp; 1 Grey l While, B14-

•Garages

BUYERS
'LAROE INYENTOIIY FOR
-EIMlE INSTAU.JinON8.

1·900·446-2626
Public Notlca

101111 IISSIU .
. COISIRUCnOI

985-4473

Tanunera
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa • Construction Inc.

You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add tliis worry
to your list.

C........Ceed Safety &amp;
Hlgb Interest Yields
AvaUable

.

!l!!U!!I '

•Room Addltlonl

ovol-10 QUALJFIED

FIIUCES

711ftl-

EVEN POLICE
•
USE .
PSYCHICS!!

'ON THE SPOT FIWICtNG

1...00.119-3943
..

J&amp;l SIDING &amp;
INiUUTION

Ahllttt,..s.

lrll1llllll with loll

·

~Yurt~

(614J 992·2364

\ER\ '()( IS
I~&lt;

~ equiJionent.

Decke ~ Bathrooms - Kltchena - Sieling""

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JUGG.tE

\l:&lt;n 1 1111
l \ I l \ I \1{ I\ I I ·.•

'FIIEE~on

Complete Relllodellnt~ ·

Livestock tampering
allegation investigated
CO(UMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Depanment of Agriculture is looking
into a possible case of livestock tam·
perinJ! at the Clark County Fair in
Springfield earlier this morith.
"There is an investigation under
way and some interviews have been
conducted," Agriculture Dcpanment
spokeswoman Deni,se Wible told The
Columbu~ Dispatch for a story published tod'ay. "Beyond that, there isn't
mu~h else we can say at this time,"
she added.
The newspaper said the target of
the probe is the grand champion lamb
shown by Charlie McNier Jr. of'
South Charleston.
- The McNier family attorney,
Stacey Pavlatos, said the 18-year-old
was shocked to hear his animal test·
ed positive for drugs.
"But Clw:lie is very rcsoiule in
saying, 'Hey, I didn't do anything
wrong. I know I didn't,"' Pavlatos
said.
Routine tests announced Aug. 9
found traces of the drug Lidocaine, a
local anesthetic, in the urine of
Mc~ier's 126-pound lamb, "the Dis-

...

'F_,
IIEE...,..,
,. ....

Residential ~ Commercial

AURORA (AP)- State investigators have determined a mechanical
:problem caused a I ,SOO-pound
ispeedboat to careen into a lakeside
Igrandstand, injuring 23 people at Sea
:world of Ohio.
"The preliminary indications have
led investigators to mechanical failure as the apparent cause of the accident," the Ohio Division of Watercraft said in a statement Sunday
night.
"Further investigation will continue. Details will be released 'when
available," the statement said.
FASHIONS FOR FALL- Meghan Haynes, center, was the over·
Agency spokesman .Dennis Evans 111 winner In the guya and gala lead cllsaea held Wedneaclay at
the Melga County Fair. Partlclpanta wearing garments of wool
declined to elaborate.
entered
the judging 1rena ~ding a bnsedlng sheep or market
Videotape of the accident showed
They
ware judged In age claaaes with Rebecca Sc~
lamb.
the operator turning the steering
Langavllle,
being
topa In the 16 and over claas, Haynes pt
wheel, but the 18-foot boat failed to
Coolville,
first
In
the
11 and 12 year old group, and Mendy Guen
turn and instead hit a guard rail,
of
Tuppera
Plains,
the
blue ribbon winner In the 13 to 15 year age
became airlx&gt;rne and crashed five
left
with
Scott,
Haynes and Gueaa, back, are Larry
group.
From
rows deep into the grandstand on SatWlllla, junior fair king, Amy Smith, junior f1lr queen, and Kristiurday.
na Kennedy, aheep prlncen.
"It looked to me like someone lost
·control even though at first I thought
it was a stunt," sail! Don Glassmire,
44, ofCoudensport, Pa., one of 4,000
spectators.
Most of the injuted were treated at
hospitals for . cuts ·and bruises and
were released. The most seriously
hun, Jeff Willis, 36, of Salem, suffered a head injury and was listed
today in critical condition at Mount
,.'
Sinai Medical Center in Cleveland,
said Margaret Bezoski, nursing
administrator. , . - • •
Three others remained at -MetroHealth.Medical Center in Cleveland
today, one in serious condition and
two in satisfl!=tot'y condition, said
Darl Schaller, nursing supervisor.
.The boat's driver passed drug and
alcohol tests ordered by police after
the accident, said Stephen D.
LeResche, vice president of public
communications for Sea World's parent, Anheuser-Busch Cos. of St.
Louis.
WINNERS ALL - Theaa three youngstera were·the blue ribThe Busch Entenainment Corpo- bon winners In the guya and gela lead classes for children four
ration, a~ivision of Anheuser-Busch, to seven Wldneaclay at the Meigs County Fair. Whh their lambs,
the nation'~ second-hugest theme from left, are Nathan Parker, Alyaaa Baker and Kendrick Oabome.
park operitor, runs Sea Watld parks
in Aurora -'- .22 111iles southeast of
~leveJa.ncJr: ~ Diego, San Antonto and Oitai\db; Fla.
Sea World~sman Fred Jacobs
saicl ski-shoWs ~were canceled Sunday
at the (Qui-parks. 'OthCr attnictions ·
remained open.
It was the first major accident at
the park in 27 years, and the first in
20 years of water-ski shows, said Ted
Molter, another Sea World
spokesman.
In the 35-minute show, an actor
who appears to be operating the boat
leaps off to perfonn a rescue. The
boat - actually piloted by a driver.
hidden from view - is supposed tO&gt;
veer toward the stands and splash the
crowd before speeding out into the
lake.
Instead, the boat hit a guardrail in
front of the grandstand, went airborne
.and plowed five rows into the stands.
Neither the driver nor the actor were
injured.
Denise Grant and Doris Carter of
Cincinnati, who visited Sea World on
Sunday, learned of the IICCident after
RODENT AND RABBIT - The bast rodent and beat-dreaaad
checking into their hotel -room on Sai- '
(In this Instance, a rabbit) plaques at the Meigs County Fair
pat
urday.
Pet Show Friday went to Brady Bissell and Nicolle McDaniels,
respectively.

Jacob Hunter, fair reHrVe champion; JaaiUI
Hupp, fair grand champion; Jarnt~a Nally, Josh
Hupp and Jeff Milhoan. Absent wae Hllther
Graham.
•

•..... He.. Ftnacn,
........
,
1111..,1'"mUJm. · Air Wtla••n IIIII

BIB ROOnll ad

---------. . .;; lorcl1ildrtnllirt1 .......

••

..

1---------

•~&gt;'' '

�•

J

Mbnd.Y, Augult 19, 1996

Mooday, Aug.ust 19, 1996M

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.............__~

,J

____
__
JfiA Croa1word Puszle

The Dally Sentinel• Paget

.....;___.:.__..._

;
·
...

BIIDOE

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

!·.

PHILLIP

...

....·

:...;.:.~-~...,....._

I

ACROII

ALDE~

540
CONSERVATION JOBS: Wildlife
Poailiona 116,000 -135,000 /Yr.
Clerical. Security, Game Warden
Ell:. No ElpttrltiOCo. For Info 219769-8a:l1 Ext. WOH581 , 9 A.M. 9 PM. Sun -Fri.
DENTAL HYGIENIST
Now accepting applicauans tor

the poaidon of O,antal Hygienist,
a"aile bta tmmadiatelr. Pie•••
send rnumeo 10 Denta Hjiionlat
Aoule 2, Box 857A, Pt. Ploount.

wv 25560.

.

Union Avenue, Pamero,-, two
baclrooma, o rooma, cen•oJ haat
1111&lt;1 oir, carpeted lhraugl&gt;ou~ 0111
=-~.:.....;..;,..------1 cor
btaoment. Mull IH
ProlesaiOnal Tree Service, Stump to 1
•. eu. .gg2·5322.
Removal , Free Estimates! In·
surance. Bidwell. Ohio. 810-398- 320 Mobile Homes
11648. &amp;14-307-70to.
for Sale

George• Portable SawrniM, don't
haul your logo ID tho mil jull call
304-07S.1957.

Sun Valley
Cltlldcare M-F 111"'5:30s&gt;m
2-K, Yaung School
Summer. 3 Doya por
rrum 014-4-4e-3057.

Domino'o PIUI al Pomttoy ,_
tiring clrNirt. 814-1192-2124.
DRIVER'S NEEDED: Goad Driving Record, Clan
Llconoe.
304-ll75-5113.

·o·

Earn Extra SIS In Your Hama
While You Enjoy lncreaoed Energy &amp; Dec•aaed Streaall Call Today For FREE Audio Tapti 1800·927-2527
Ext.
4552.
CT"'J!Pf1oot5t .

e--·

Earn up 10 StooCro w.1&lt;1y owl!ing
""""-at ha...,. St111 now, na

J:!:f.'·

12x65 2 Bedroom Trailer. Excellent Condition, Now Carpel, And
0oc:1t e14-4-0 1-1908.
12170 Gregory on ranted lot, 2
bedroom, new gat furnace, in·
dudoa aklrtlng, 10820 porch and
awning. $5,500. 304-773-5736.

18811 Schuh Trailer, 2 Bedrooms.
Will Do Bebylltllng In Mt Name, :1.::1,::500:::..:,6:.:l~+~4411-D908=.::::.:::.·
Bidwell &amp; Addaville rea, 5
Mirutea From Hoapital, ortlfied, 1972 14X74 Kirkwood t 112
9 Yaara. Heve CPR Training. If Bolho. Good Shape. 2 lledrooms,
12.900. 614-258-1717, Botween 8
Interested CaU 814-44&amp;-11373.
-8.
Will Do Babys itting Any Ago,
t974 Eagle 12x65, 2 bedroom, I
Centenary Area, Green SChool
112 blltha, decks, cant HIA, mu1t
District, 81"446-8741 .
move. se,ooo. 30•·876·1748 or
304-875-4486.

----I

FINANCIAL

Scenic Valley, Apple Grave,
beautiful 2ac l&lt;lls, public wa ter,
Clyda- Jr., 304-.571l-2336.

360

Real Estate
Wanted

looking For Vary Nice Big 3 Or •
Bedroom House To Rent Or Buy
On Land Contrae;t. Wanting To
Slart Own Butineu. 81A·••t ·
t~.

RENTALS

410

Houses lor Rent

2 Bedroom house lor sale or rant.
304-1175-2722.
2 Bodroamo, City Schoolo, Gorfield Avonuo, 13001Mo.. $200 Oeposit, No Poll, o 14-4&lt;11-4069 Belore 9 P.M

3 Bedroom, ac, utilitial not includ·
ed, 350/mo, relerencet &amp; MC:urily
depo~t

required. 304-773-56118.

.

SIGNS: portable changoablo IotCircle Mottl, Galllpolia, OH 8t4- ter 1ign wlletters, S32G. Free de•48-250t or 8t4-387-01112. Elle- livery. Plastic lellers, $55 box,
cioncy Rooma, Cable, Ar, Phona, (18cond box fret). AAA SIGNS,
Microwave &amp; Refrlgeraaor, Tui , -800-533-3453.
Service 112 Price For Motel
Guest
Solid walnut din1ng room table,
.:::..;::.:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , seats 8. 38' atorm door, good
Roomt tor rent • week or month. cond. 3().4-675-0878.
Slllring at I t 20/mo. Gall Ia Hattl.
614-446·9580.
Star Wart Items, Misc. Records,
Elvis And Bootlaa Bao~a . Mao
Sleeping rooms with cooking. Welt Collector Doll , SU ·882·
Also trailer 1pace on river. All 7994.
hoak-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m..
304-773-5051 , MaoanWV.
SToRAGE TANMS 3,000 Gallon
Upright. Ron Evant Enllrptlltl,
460 Space lor Rent
Jadloon. Oti~ t -eoo-!1':17·g&amp;28.
Commercial Spac:e Appro•. 800
Square Fftt loc:attd Corner Of
Siete Stt"' 6 Third - · Gal·
llpalla. Tho Former Uconao Bu·
raau tocallon Col 014-44&amp;--.

Table fan 12.00; Circular ftoor fan
SS.do; camlng pint jara 11.25/daz
quarll, $1 .501daz. White alclrrioU
tire $4 .00 ; door with hinge•· &amp;
knoO, $!1.00, 30H75-87Q.

Now taking applicollonL Country
Lant Mabile Horne Park, GalllpobForry. 30H7S.5421 .

Wiler Wallo Drilled, fut Roaaonable ServCa 614-888-7311

Trailer lot for Rent on Jericho
Road. 304-8115-3534.

n.

5o3

c!,

81

s.

car,.,

Dft"'•

17

Autos

\" 1

Sale

1986 Dodge 800, Exctllonr Con-Ar
dillon $1 ,OOQ, 614-24!&gt;«104,
' I
For u le· canning 10m110e1 and
SJrten pe,pera, William• farm,
Syrocuae, Ohio, 014·992-3915
daya I)( 614-992-51188 - ·

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

----------1

t980 Skyline 2 Bedroom' t Balh, Five room houae with balh in PoRemodeled, New Paint On E~~:lerl· meroy, oH atreet parking for one
210
Business
or, New 2 Ton Furnace, Hoot car, c:lean, deposit and relerenc·
MERCHANDISE
Pump, Installed 1995, 8112 Cov· es required, no pets, 8U·992·
Opportunity
ered Deck, •xe Uncovered, Ex· 3090.
cellon! Condition, Sil!laled On Pri·
Earn What You Are Worthl E~oy
510
Household
INariCEI
"
at 4• House For Rent: Within Cit11' Lim·
large Income Working Fram OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING Co. V8 l0 Secl Udad l 0t 0 I M0V8,
its, 3 Bedrooms, Basemen I. No ·
Goods
Home. Toll FrH t-888-200-7591 , recommends that you do bual- 255- 1011 .
Pets, References, l350tMo.• eu.
614 ...4&amp;-:1-238.
ness with people you know, and 1981 t.cr&amp;S liberty 81•· •48· ..S-8423, 814·..,.8·7550.
Appliancea: . Recond itioned
NOT ta send money tnraullh the 3545.
Waahara, Dryers, Rengaa, Ralri·
E~tperience,d carpenters and roof·
mail" unlil you have investfgared ::_::..,_________ Will Have 3 Houses For Rent Or gr110r1, DO Day Guarantee!
ers- experienced only need apply,
theortaring.
1D88 Oakwood 1••12 3 Bed· Sale In 3 Weeks, Can Be 3 Or • French Clay Uayteg, 1!11•·448·
EOE, 6t4-992-2384.
rooms, 1 112 Baths, large Front Bedroom1, Good loc:ations, Price 1705.
Business building lor lease in Pt Kitchen, Newer Carpet &amp; Wallpa· Ran~ 1500 TO $1,000/Mo., Plua
Erpenenced Carpenter· have Pleasant aero II from the Fire per, Bx:20 Deck, 814 _.. 1125.
Utiiitlea, No Pe11, Write; CLA 393, Beautilul oak tlnlah 2pc Hutch.
own tools, m~ad~ be, able to run Depl 814·742·2072.
clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 304-6'75-4C&amp;S.
residential butl 1ng rom ground
198D Palm Harbor 1•x12 w/tx· Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
up, heating and cooling experl· Busineupe11on or Builder; Na· pando, 3bedroom, 2balh. Mull be
Carpet &amp; Vinyl Sale On Room
45631 For Appointments.
ence is an asset, pay negotiable, tiona I Manufacturer teeking to moved. 30._882·3656.
Size &amp; Stock Mollohan Carpeta,
614·985-3511 . •
qualify DEALERS 1n some select
420 · MObile Homes
&amp;1-448- 7444·
areas. Sleel bulldingo as t99t Mabile Homo Sale, 3 Bodfor Rent
Coun- Furnltura. 30H 7 S~B20.
Exp.rl·onced Roolero . Truck 1 open
low as $3.00 aq foot Call (303) rooms , New Electric Furnace, ·
.. ,
....,
Hand Tools/ Relerencea A Muol 758- 4t 35• EXT. 1
Pipe For woodburner. 14,800,
Rt 2 N, 8milos, Pt Ploaaon~ WV.
Wag eo Baaed On Experience. ::;.;_;_.:.:;.;:..:..;__:.:..:.._ _,____e_t4_
-3_79_·:..
24.:.3.;.~;_
· _____
Tuoo-Sat D-11, Sun 11·5.
Applicationo Are Available At 1,~:~:~==~~ OUTDOOR WOOD
1403 Eastern Ave., Monday - Fri· l .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
11 Tha Moll Efllclonl 1995 Skyline. 2 bedrOQm, 1 bath
day, 8-5. Call814·••6·4514.
Emissions Outdoor w/garden tub. skylight, bay wind·
Washers, dryers, relrigeratora,
8 Miles Route ranges. Skagga Appliances, 76
W 0 d F noc. On Th. " ktt ow, island stove, loti of kitchen
HELP WANTED : lmmidiate
tral ~lltr Ia Currenu"',look. cabinell, nice, refinance lor pay·
+Deposit , Refer. -' Vine Street. Call &amp;1•·••8· 73$118,
Opening For A Full Time Cu110• off 304 99~573
enceo, 814 -•48-81 72, 814-258- 1-1100-499-3499.
dian. Send Resume To: CLA 391 , ling FaedrlaAteO..uaoloityFOoor "tn'•,.,r tmanTtlholn'
.
.
8251 .
cJo Gallipolis Daily Trib tme. 825
mm
,..r ·
1997·2.&amp; 3 Bedroom, 1995 down,
livlngroom Rugs: 17x13 Sculp·
Dealer
Of Far
A St951mo. Free del'wary g• set·up, For Ront Or Sale·. Land Contract lured Groen toO,· Bodroa~
Th.If d Avenue. G1 ;; ·lpo ;·11 ' OH On
FreeBecamlng
BrochureACall
1·800·
24t8·
.. , Rug
_
45831.
Dr
11_
75.
only
at
Oak
Wood
Homes,
Nhro
70&gt;14
Twa
BR
All
Electric,
CA,
~o
S
~u!!!u!~
B
_
lue
130,
Like
4881
1 21 782 25
WV. 304-755-5885.
Excellent Condition, On Rented •-. .,..._,.._.
Work From Your Homo, Earn A VENDING LAZY PERSON'S
.
·
Lot, Between 2 To 0 P.M. 014·
Large Income, 6tH41-D187, Toll
:
20x58 Mobile Hollll On 112 Acre, 448-2003,614-448-1409.
Uoed funilure : 130 Bulaville
·~
~
"522
DREAM.
Few
Hours
•
Big
U
.
Pike. Dook, Bodo, Ches•, Tll!blas,
f roe: t ~~~ ·
Will Sell Cheap. t -900 _820 _4353. Land Contract, 13,000 Down,
n...... ·ng No'··
·~
~
•
2.
$299.10
For
1
Years.
614·448·
Mobile
Home
Far
Rent,
814•448Couchoa, RelrlgeraiDro, Washero,
1-ouv-"""'""V 78
Job ...,~""""' 1
.......
659t
1279
Entertalnlmant Centers. &amp;1•·4C6Posoible pan-dmeoponng k&gt;rln:-::;.:.:·, . - . , . . - - - - - - - 1·.::.;.:~
· - - - - - - - - 4782230 Professional
structOrasslstantarcarieton
55x10 2 Bedroom. $1700. at • · Two and three bedroom mobile I~.:.:.._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Schaolto worl&lt; wilh lhe preachaol
Services
258-8228 or 614-256-t 4t7
homes, otarting at S2•0-S300.
VIRA FURNITURE
progam tlree (3) days 'i!. week.
sewer, water and trash included,
1!11•·448-3158
Must have or be willing &amp; able 10
HARTS MASONARY . Black, Gallipolis Ferry. t 988 Ux76 Hoi· 814-992·2t87.
Quality Hauoehald Furnillre And
obtain an educational aide permit
brick &amp; atone work, 30 yeara ex - ley park, 3 bedroom, 2 bath&amp;,
Appliances. Great OealaOn
from lheOhioDepartmentoiEdu·
perience, reaaonabje rates. 304· wooden porch, 2 storage build·
CuhAndCarryiRENT·2·0WN
calion. Ap~1ca1on deadine,
89S.359t after O:OOpm, no job ta ings, 718 aero lol. $28,500. 304·
440 Apartments
And lay- AJao Available.
Wednosdey, Augusr21. 1996.
ama11 or 10 BIG. WV-02t206
67S.t213.
for Rent
· F1eo Oelhlor)-Withln 25 Miles.
Send Resume 10: Carle!On
:-:--:--:-:-:------:--:School. 1310 Carlelon Slree~ PO. Siding, windowo, general building. Limited Ollerl 1997 daublewlde,
~..,...,.,._,;..:;.,;,.:;;;,;,;;__,_I Whlrlpoai .Waaher $95: Hotpaln;
Box3l7, Syracuse, Ohio 4S779.
Bumgarner's General Contracting 3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $27V/
t and 2 baclroom llpartmel1ta, fur- Dryer 195: Kelvinator frail free
WV020229. 304 -882-3342 or month. Free delivery &amp; setup. nlohed and unfurnlihed, aac:urlty White Relrlgarator, S1 50: Whirl·
Only at Oakwood Homeo, Nllro deposit required, no pota. 614- pool Whllll Refrigerator, Llka Naw
Manulac1ured Homo Dealership 304-882-2878.
looking For Experienced Full
WV. 304-755-5885.
992
-=.;-22::;;;18.::,__ _ _ _ _ _ S295: Whirlpool Washer like
Time Service And Repair Person·
. New $205; Whirlpool Cheat Type
Excellent Opportunity -Inquire At
New ,,.x80 Onl~ make 2 pay·
1 bedroom furntlhad apartment in Freezer • Fr. $100 ; Maytag
menta &amp; move--in, no payment af. MlddlePGII. call814..tU·30G1 or Waaner &amp; Dryer Set $175 Each,
Frencn City Homes -Gallipolis,
Ot'fo6 1 ._4~·93-40.
ter o4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery. 8U·902·2t78ori!I1-4·G92·5304.
Skaggs Appliances, 7fS Vine
304 7
'
55-5B85.
t
Bedroom,
Super
Nice,
12881
SIA&gt;O~ GaMipall~ 61 4-4-t8-l398.
Need lmmediatetyt
NEW I Bank Repo'o, only 3 loll,
Ma., Plua Utilitioa, Usually 520
Sporting
still under warranty, free delivery Something Available! Sun Valley
GOodS
Service Man For V11ccuum
&amp; sel-up. 304-75S.7t9t .
AparlmOrlts, 81-1·448-2957.
Clea ner Company. Must Be Neat
In Appearance And Have ExperiAll real eslate allvartlshg In
Older Schultz home, owner occu- 2 Bedroom ApartnMtnt, All Ulililitl Golf cluba, Spad·Pro Flight, tour
ence Wllh Electric Motors. Will
plad, 2 bedroom. excellen; lor Paid, 1425/llo; 2 Room I Bolh All blade, reg ., ping drive, wood,
this
"""""""''
It
Bl.t&gt;f8Cllo
Tram The Righi Person. Call 614the Federal Fair Housing Ad
young or retired couple, priced an Utllllloa Paid 1225/Mo., 513-574- coma, sand, pitch, nice, 13i0
441 -1 975.
ol 1968 wi11CI1 mak88 h Ml8gaJ
080. 304-ll75-42116.
lnspoclion. 304-875-5394.
2539.
to advertise •any pral......,.,
Needed Immediately
Sale: Big Savings On Singloa And 2bdrm. apll .. total electric. ap- Springfield MIA 1 Month Old,
limitation or dlacrlmlnatlon
Sectlonala By Schult, Clayton pliancea furnished, laundry room Fired 20 Rounds, Many Accas 10 People To Beg1n Work At La·
besed on race, cokir,rellglan,
And Norris Muat Make Room For facilities, dose to school in town. saries. St ,200, 814·~·311•5.
cal Busmess Due To Expansion.
aex lamlllalslatue or natlonotl
New Uodela Save Thousande Applications available at Village
No Expenence Necess ary Due
origin, or any Intention 10
Antiques
Free Delivery And Set Up French Green Apta. •~9 or call 81.,992· 530
To Factory Pa id Train ing Pro·
make any such pralerer ICO,
Cily Homes. Gatiipolis, OH 6t4· 3711 . EOH.
gram
Buy or tall. Riverine Antiques,
limitation or dlacrlmlnalion."
4-oll-9340"' 1-600-Zlt -4487.
3 Rooi"na, Bath, Washer /Dryer, 112• E. Main Street, on At. 124,
We Offer:
Seclionala: Big Schult Display Air Conditioner, Oiahwasher, Utl!l- Pomeroy. Hours: N.T.W. 10:00
Thlsne-wlllnot
·No lay-Otfs
Sale Going On Now. Save Thou· ties Paid, Good Quiet Neighbor· a.m. 10 a:oo p.m., SUnday t :00 .,
' Rapid Promodons
knowtlngly accept
sands Free Delivery And Set Up nood, No Pars, Reference /Ot ... e:oo p.m. 814-992-2528. Ru11
·Vacation Incentives
advertlsemenlllor raalotllate
Moore owner.
Included French Ci ty Homes, posit, 81•...cet370.
• 40 + Hours Per Week
whicl1 is in violation of the law.
Gellipoli
a,
OH
814·4•8·9340
Or
I!EAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
·Permanent Full-Time Positions
Our readers are hereby
540 Miscellaneous
1-800·231 -4467.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Informed lhet an _,lflgs
Merchandise
No EKpenence Necessary! !
ESTATES,
52
Weatwoad
Drive
Trailer &amp; land tor sale Applegrcwe
Bdvortlsed In tills newspapar
Call Monday For Appo1ntmon1 To
from $240 10 S3t5. Walk 10 ohap
WV.
30•·
576·2579
Leave
mes·
t987 Grand Am $1,750: Ameri are avalable on en equal
lnterv1 ew
&amp; mavioo. Call 614-408-2568.
sage
can Saddle Breed Gelding
opportunhy beals.
614·24 5-9895
Equal Housing Opparllnity.
S1,300: Eleettlc Pole New 70 Amp
330 Farms for Sale
Ne~ed lrnmooately:
Don't Let Thla One Slip By. Laroa Braker Box, 180; 275 Gallon 011
Tank, $50; 810 -387-021g, 814Telemark.elers Needed For lm ·
40 Acre Farm 800 Pd...,Jobacco 2 Bedroom With Lots OF Extrao. 307-7272.
REAL ESTATE
med1a te Open1ngs AI local Busi·
AIC,
Wash~.
Dryer,
Dishwasher,
Base, Drilled Wall Priced To Solll
ness Expenence A Plus. But Not
S10ve. Relrtgerator Included. 1400 4 Piece Bedroom Suite, King Size
814-256-6632.
Necessary. For lnter11iew, Plea se
Oepo1it, S•SO/Uo., Centenary
Wa11rbed, All Acceuoriea In·
310
Homes
lor
Sale
Cal\6 U-44t -t9 75.
Tuppers Plains area, 28 acres on Area, 81C·••&amp;-2205.
eluded, Mull Sell 1800 080,
black top road just off Route 7, 9
Nu rse A1de Training Progr11m ·
rooms, 2 baths, lovely farm house Duplex &amp;56 Third Avenue , Galli· et•-379-2900 Anytime.
RocM.sprmgs Rehabilitation Cent&amp;r
wlfree gas, 32x4C block garage, polis . 2 Bedrooma, LR, DR,
Automotive AC Recovery Recy.
w111 be ol,lering training cla1ses in
401152 barn, 20uo pole .barn, Fenc:ed Yard, Available Now: cler With leak Detector 4x8 pte.
131
51Mo
..
1
Month
Security
Doltle month of September. Applica·
1h2• shop, . reduced price
pa ail, Apply At; Tope Furn. t51 nic Table, I!IU-388·8304, I!IU·
lions are now beino accepted at
$130.000. phone 814-1187·3336.
5ea&gt;nd Ava., Galipolls, 10 A.M. - 3118-8961 .
36759 Rocklij)rlngs Rd .. Pomeroy.
4PM. 1Yr. Lao18.
Cla ss size i1 limited. Three (3)
340 Business and
BAHAMA CAUISEI 5 dayll•
refer ence papers are required
Buildings
Efficiency Apartment Across night&amp;, Underbookedl Mual Selll
with appliCation. Apply in pftfson
From Univartity 01 Rio Granda, S2991Couple. limiled Tickets.
berween 10am &amp; 3pm ~ -F. Stud·
ProfesaicnaVBusinns building tor All Utilltleo Paid, S225/Mo., 814- Some Reslrictions. 1·800·935ents that liuccesafully complete
9999 Olt6589.
su!Jieaao. Located at 509 nord :J811.9948.
the TCE class wilt be eligible for
Sueat, Mlddlopor~ Ohio. Excellent
employment. Absolutely no phone
tor phyaici an office or real estate Furnished Ettiec:iency Apartment. Boals By Rodwing, Chippewa.
calls. EOE
3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Large apace. Ample street parking . Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioning, Tony lama . Guarantead lowaat
Pricao AI Shoo Colo. Gallipolia.•
Kitchen IOin1no, Garage, New
Office Manager : Computer Proli· Roof /Heat Pump, City Schools, Available immediately. Contact All Utilltloa Paid, Prillatt Parking,
014·448·2fi02.
R.L
Kunz.
814-593-3375
collecl.
cient, Payroll. Acco unts Payable Close To Gal lipoli s, 61-4 ·•46·
Brand New Walker Ntvtr Uaed,
Aesponsibilily, Apply At: Tope 2472.
$50; Bedtide Commode With
Gracioua
living.
1
and
2
bedroom
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Furni ture, 151 Second AYenue
apartmentl at Village Manor and Bucket And Lid 125; 014 - 37~ Gallipolis, No Phone Calls Ptease. ' 4 Bedroom Ranch. Red Brick .
Riverside Apanmenll in Middle· 2728 Or 304-937·3303.
Newly Remodeled ." State Route 1 Acre, Garage, Water, Septic:,
Par t· Time ~y ste r y Shoppers 218, Mercerville, Ohio. 131C·•46· Footer1, Addieon Area, 118,000, port From 1232-1355 . Coli 814· Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanka,
992-5084. Equal Housing OpporNeeded For Local Stores, $10.25 0418.
8t4-388-8978.
300 Thru 2,000 Galiano Ron
turi~es.
... Per Hour, Free Product, Free
Evans Enterprises, Jackaon, OH
3
ac:rea
of
land
for
aale
In
Hen·
food &amp; Morel Call Now 818·759·
Middleport. North 3rd Ave . 5 t -1100-53 7-9528.
doraan
304-875-5958
or
3049099.
Room unlurniahed apt, also, 2
p.anets and black rod iron
67S.2445.
bedroom furnished opt Oopoait &amp;
from large parch. S27S. 304-882relorenc:eL
304-882·2568.
3 Acroa Mart Of Lna On Gr2438.
Valloy Road, 3 112 Mlloa From New Haven-2 bedroom, furnlahed
Hospital, Beautiful Houao Site, apartment, deposit &amp; references. Dryer 175: Wallrbtd St25: Plano
land Contract, S25,000 At 10%
$35: 1981 Olds 1700 Or Trade,
304-882·2500.
·Down, AI 8% lntereat, $200/llo.,
250 'rlamaha 1400, 614-44~ .
8t•·:J811.9948. Jadl Neal.
Newly Remodeled 2 Bedrgom
Scooters
And
Apartmen;, Crowll-City, 814·250- Electric
5 Acreo For Sale On Cargo Rood,
Wheelchair&amp;, New !Uaad, Van 1
8495, 814-258-t249.
Car lift Install~. Stairglidta, Uh
112 Mile Off Bladen Road, • 11&lt;4
Acre1 Field, 314 Wooded, Newly rem9(teled upstaira apt., Chairs, Call For Bro,hure, 014·
112,000, 01-4-368-1704.
new carpel. furnace &amp; stove. 304- 446-7283.
87S.8t96.
BRUNER LAND
Fax machine, exc. cones. :J04.87S.
ot4-nS.I173
Newly Remodled Furnished 3 8068.
Room Apartmtnl At 851 Socand'.
•
JET
Child Care Provider Opening 3bedroom, bath, living room w/ Meigs CountY: Hunting Property
Ntxl Ta Douard Librory,
AERATION MOTORs
Soon In Laeal Area. 2• Hours A hardwood lloor1, kitchen 6 dining 12 Of 10 ·Aeraa Eodl so,ooo Of 1350/1110., Plua 1350 Dopoait ReRepaired, New &amp; ReiiJih In S!odt
Day, 7 Oar.a A Week, Comperiloo area together, new roof, garage, Togothfr; ,17,500. Truo Cauntty
Poll Allowed, Rolor- Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.
Prlan.Ot~.
CaU Judy Of Dabon At 2. 30•·875-4138 or 304· LIYI!If On ,5 t,.cri Building Site
to.5oo ·or 10 Acraa 18,500.
Haulinli: U.111atolll, Gavol, Sand,
ManrT-&amp;StrKing wood and coal butntr wilh
Coal, Flrtwoad, Tapaoll, Can - Home Far Sale By Ormar: 3 Bed·
Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
ANl Moral o t 4· room s With Garage, New Deck GaJIIo County: Hlifwly To Hunl- Apartment. Gallipolis. loundr, - · $300,814-949-2297.
atruclion
3118-88711.
.
ingtOn. 3 Mllea Out Toeno Rill\ &amp; Roam, Air, Na Peta, $385/Mo.. lennox furnace, riling 20KW
16x2c 1 Acre Mil In Country
014·245-5008.
• Chambere RdL II Of 7 • Acrao Plua Oopoait,614-44&amp;-2900.
1110 heat pump riJtd 3 112 ton,
Like To Do l!lllvlillinG lly Nallll,
With Pond - Chalco 111 .~oo Dr
SP'ing Vallay ~-; C.P.R. Train· Middleport, cou ntry tiying, two 10 Acroo 110,000. Galllpolio · 2 Nice two bedroom apartment In 114-949·318!1.
ing E-ionce. , _ , Coli 014- bedrooms, 1Wo taroe ouibuUdinga
Miloa Out Nalghborhood Rd. g Pomeroy, nope., 014-1192-58511.
living room suite, like new, 1!114·
«6-8340.
extrt hookup, Heluded, well tlk: Aernl14,500, 10 Acres •17,000
992-4128.
Ont bedroom apartment, fu•
en care o~ 81.,H2·5333.
Or 22 Aa• With Pond I2MOO.
Mitzi'• TlC, I'm Here So Your
niahed, il"i Pt PleaMnt, ·no pall. Nice uoed woadburnlng halter,
Frool Adult Sltdng Experienced
OWner Financing • 10% 011 Coah 304-075-13811.
$225; rao1 nice 6!1,000 BTU noiUApproved, F,.xlbla Houri, loll
Purehaan. Call For Mapa &amp; Pay111 0111 ,...,.,, $488.50: 814·742Ona
bedroom
oportment
In
Pt.
Talk! 014-441-1843.
2511 .
mont Into.
Plld!nt. 014-1192-&amp;l!iL
Ptreols on Rayburn R4. Water,
RafriQeratorl, SIOvel, Wathfra
pawd roo4, r•aanobl4,roatrlc- TWin AMra TOW., naw -Mil And f&gt;ryora, All Rocondltlanod
afll)liclliortt
lor
1br.
HUD
l4bticj:
.And Gaurontoodl 1100 And Up,
dona. 304-875..5253. (m olngl•
lzt4 apt. lor elderly and hond~ Wll Oalvor. 01WI!t U41·.
-inqunaplea•l
- - Eal304-07U11711.
.

F1ae IUP!IiH.Intlr·
maion. No ablioalion.
Send SASE
ID: Buclcs Dept
3208-C E. Colonial Dr.. 1308, Orianda, Fl
32803.

71 o

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

720

Tl'ucks

3i

lor Sale

• I

1976 Ford 390 4 Barrell Heavy"' "
Hall, PS, PB, AC, AMIFM Cas -" . j
MUe, No Aual, Mint Condllion;'f""'
Runs Good. 814-448-7424. LOII'I~ .
1

M-

Equipment

30CI gallon plollla farm clternl·

eolian~. on lied with haaa, 175,
614-9411-3-10:1.

t99t Silverado. Call 304-875·
23511 aher &amp;pm.
·

Drag Iliac I Couple Single Plawa,
614-379·2720.AFTER I fl.ll.

1992 Blue S,IO. 5 Speecj, AMIFM
Caueue, Stdliner, New Tires.
14.8Q!!OBO. 814-379·2&amp;15.

Ford 800 tractor, approx. •:! hp.,
haa front end laadar 6 7 acnaper
blade, very good condition,
$3,200, &amp;1 4-992-11332.

710

Autos lor .Sale

'53 Chevy Belair, 1150, 614-992-

•580.

HAPPY

JACK

PARACIDE

SHAMPOO: Kills adUlt mail &amp;

r.

male !oaa &amp; licks. Chacka Daggy
Odor and Hot Spots. Contain•
NO pyrethrinsl 0-T-C al 675·
2790 HERALD OI~TCH.
HAPPY JACM TRIVERMICIDE:
Ree;ggnind Sale &amp; Effective
Ag1inat Hook, Round &amp; Tape·
worms In Doge &amp; Call. Available
O·T·C At BROWNS TRUST·
WORTHY HARDWARE 814·448·
8828 &amp; J 0 NORTH PRODUCE I
6t4-448-1933.
Jack Ruuell Terrier puppies tor
sale, 10 lbt . full grown, $250
each, IU-742-2050.
Pets Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza.
(10'11. 011 Every Thing, E""'' Doyl)
6t ...ot-D770.
Poodle j)uppies, tiny toy, shots
and wormed, 8 weeks, Ot•·tUS7·
3404.
Puppy Palaeo Kanntla, Boarding,
Slud Service Puppies, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome, 6 U-388·
04211.
.
Regiatered Beagle Pups, Bold
Stoke /Rodl.y Mt. Blue TiCk Exc•·
lent Gun· Dogs, $100 Each, &amp;1•·
388·9010.
Regiatered Chow Puppies, Cute,
Cuddley And Growing! Firll
Sholl, Papers, S150 Each, 8t4245-982t.
Regislared Siamese kinen1. all
males. 8t 4-992-5073
Silver Martins Rabbits 8 Week•
Old Mothtr Placed 2nd In Pur.
ebred Dao AI Fair, 014-307-70t8.
Thio Weeko Spaclals: Rottwliors,
Airedolo, Chows, PooGioa, Delma·
tiona, Wolf Hybrida, Pll Bulla,
Sconlah Torriar, Cocilor Spanitla,
Aloakan Malarruta, Huaky. Puppy
Palaeo - . 0 t4-3811-D429.
Twa Female AKC Rattwollor, 4
Mantha, Shall /Wormed Updllte.
Excellent Tempermenl. Mar Set
Paranta, 1200 Each, ~14 · 388 ·
9220.

570

Musical
Instruments

Canning roma.toes. pic::k your own.
bring your own container&amp;, Eu·
gene Davis Farm, 6U·2•7-32&amp;3.
Clarinet With Caae &amp; Uu lie
Slllnd Call Aher 4 P.M. 61•·4-oll·
7496.
CONSOLE PIANO: rooponaiblo
.,.,ty -led 11 make law mon1111y
palmen11 on piano. see locally.
co : I-II00-28lHZt8.

I

!

~.

Vans • 4-WDs

-···

' Wllrlitzar Conaolo Plano I ~
I'Kin Flnlah 1t73 Mobile Tuned
M4D seso ot4-44t-t843.

580

Fruits •

Vegellbltl

Rod Rolpbtfrln. Toytafa 8errr

!"*ft. 814-24H047.

BARNEY

11

South
I'LL

YOU'D 00

GO SET IN TH' LOBBY

I'LL

TH DOOR HOI.J.IRIN FER
MY BRIAKFUSS II

&gt; . 1 .. I

1

1999 S-10 4 WO, New Tirea, N.., ' :
Elhaus~ $3,500, BlH46-D744. --. I
'I
1g9o Dodge Ram Van 8 -2 50, -~
72,000 Miles, $4,000, 080 can 1
Be Seen At: Gallipolis Dally Trill. ,
ul)8, 825 Third Avenue, GalliP9Ii1 _.J
I

FuM aize 1992 Chevrolet van withJ q
39,000 miles, new ti es, PW, PM, ..
ptrear aeat makea queen slzr .. ,
bed, color TV, VCP, Irani &amp; rear~ •
heater and air, white .w/gray
atrlpea, like naw, uklno lt3,000 ·
or reasonable orrer, call814·992· ~ ~; 1
BOt 2 ahor 8:00pm..
· J

I

DO VOV I-lAVE ANV

WITil PICTURE5 OF
BUNNIES ON THE SIDE?
l-IE LIKES BUNNIES.,

~

1902 Ford Econoline """· cauV
814-742·2220.

ALL RI61-1T, WE'LL
JUST TAKE A
PLAIN ONE TI-IEN ..

:

:!::
'I
I

. ... ..~

1991 GMC Suburban ex•. heavy ' ~·
31• ton, V·B, automatic, air, ster·l ~ .}1
eo , runs and drives eJctllent : , .]
~:high mile' Sll!lOO, 6t4·992·4111 .
•
I'Jiotorcycles

.

t9gt Kawaseki KX500. 304-1182 0~ ·~

~~-

.,.il

1980 Pontiac Trans -Am A:u·
tomatic:, 2 Ooor1, Sunroof •s5,
Goad Shepa, &amp; Porta Car, 11,500
304-075-484t AFTER 6 P.M.

1005 Harley Oavtdaon Road l&lt;ing,
ertraa Include tu rn out mufflers,
pauenger back rest, •,200 miles,
garage kept, St6,500, 614·9928332.

750

.l'Vt ~ttlf, n~N StGIC A

/

..-:

PAY

·:.&gt;~--:....

6fltMS

TO

~~~

l:::i.dl~l-~ . . .

I

1

llfFUS~

MY BOI&gt;Y.

'I

1g75 ~e'tc:ury 20 HP Outboard.
Motor, Run&amp; Good, HaYt Tille,'
1
1964 Chevy Ctlebrity 2.5, all new ' •4so: e14-M2-71194.
. ...
... . !
parts in engine, run1like raw one.
1988 Ranger 373 V· coat With
, ,
11,050. 304·773-SUS.
150xP Evinrude Motor And 241 ;
198• one owner Monte Carlo, 2 Volt Evinrude Trolling Molo,r. 18
""
door V-8, nice car, asking It 900, Ft. Excellent Condition With Ex·
trasl$9,995. 81 4-992·2770.
_
can 6t4-992-30t4.
20" Checkmate Convincer. open
I
I
1988 Park Avenue, lull power, bow. stereo, axe. condition-inside
I
dimate control. new tirtl, balt8fy &amp; out, all equip included, E-Z load
I leather Interior. 304-1175-3284.
tra il&amp;f' w/aluminum wheels. S•.OOO.
304-882· 224, .
1996 Z·24 Ca,lalior, 2.8 'o'B rnrlliport Fl, loaded, nice car, 12,..00 760
Auto Parts &amp;
or trade for
~•.e7S..207• .
Accessories
1987 Cutten Calais. maroon WI
maroon velour interior, 12•.000 Budget . Price
mil11, recoYered theft , no dam· Used IRabuih, AU
age, 014·949·2311 daya, eu- 10,000 Transmiss1ons, Cllu'!Chat
949·2844 8¥81.. S1550.
Flywheels, Overhual Kits, 61
24S.5077
1918 Dodge Daytona. Rod Vary
Sharp, Auto loaded, t 12,000 Pos1Vacllon ~nit lor 1978 Camaro1l"
Miloa, Runo Good, 12,900, 614- I tOO. 2 aluminum brake drums lor •
4-oll-3334.
1978 Malibu 125. 00.-89~579 .
·:

MY LIFf··

~TAY IN

I

&amp; Motors
lor Sale

Boats

I~

8 -./'/

THE BORN LOSER
r

"C::

f'VE. 60111&gt;-. &amp;IV€. TH~ ~
5PINW\

~

~

7

cad ·

.llmblr
2SINtltM
:t1 Grlflld, )II
hetalclry
2S QcddrnOI

Weal Nortll

·I

""-.rtli

3.

Pua Pan

~~----~--~

• 21 Qlg (Ofl)
• 30 Grilne . . , .
with. 31 Actor
. 33 ~'=
for'-lrlg
31 Emphatic

......

A':nu:e.:-

41
43 Gnik leiMtl

===
............
.....
41Fregranl

There are times when it is all right
to play for an overtrick, and limes
· when it ian't. How would you plan tbe ·
play in today's three-no-t!"'lmp contract? West leada a spade in answer to
his partner's overcall.
· East had a problem over North's
three-club opening bid. Three notrump 'lflluld be a popular choice, but
be opted to show hie live-card m~or.
DouliUog wolb wei~ but Soutb went
for tbe game bonu1, hoping his partner had seven clube ID tbe king-queen
and out.
When tbe dllllllii.Y came down, Soutb
saw overtricb In his future. After winning tbe llnllrict witb dummy's king,
declarer ran the club queen. There
was good news Ctbe fines.se won) and
bad news (West dlacanled a dlamondl.
• The bed news outweighed tbe sood as
dummy's club suit was now dead and
Soutb had no route to nine tricks.
As the only danger Is a 3·0 club
break, Soutb should win tbe fil'llt Irick
in hand and continue witb tbe ace and
another club. Altboug!l East wiD duck
Ibis trick and win tbe ihlrd club, dummy'• auit is established while the
~ spade king still remains as an entry.
· Soutb will win at least nine tricks: two
spades, one heart and six clubs.
True, if Ibis were a deal from a plir
event, where every trick counlll, tbere
would be a case for winning tbe fll'llt
lric.t in the dummy and taking the
club finesse . This is wrong only
against a 3-0 club split, which baa a 22
percent probability. And if East bas
king-doubleton of clubs, which he will
some U percent of tbe lime, you will
rake In at least one overtrick. This
·makes it an aeceptable gamble.

so w.eoa.t

0011.
.11 CIO pe1tn1r

12LMaeu llclrit

CELEBRITY CIPHER
hrlrlilloi.,lhOclplrtr_,. _

'II

HFZFJ

HDTDIG;

IJIIFI

. D W I S W I I! .G

CLEF

NLP

Ill

r..,.._,

_

ID

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All

~litem 100ner.· - Red

••' ·

.r.~~.

-~

DWIPILJI

FLPMFJ

ID

IVFI! . ' - (VLOO

IIIIUVFJ)

.f
'I

Lula
C.!llpoa
c..tyCijNro-woaaro..,
_
_
_ lly _ _ _ _ _

IIIAAG

DC

SFLH.

men make mlellkea, butllllrrted men flncl eM

Skeleton.

....
-=~=-' S~\\(\~-~i.~s· ....

_ _ _ _....;._ Nlleol t.y C&amp;Al L I'OUAN
learranoe leltera of lhe
lOUt scrambled -cis b.
low to lorm four -cis.

.
•

REHAFT

\

lrlll

2

\
_

N A G YM

r I 1: I

1 _,Tr.;H...,;O;...;ST-11
I" 1 1 ·~_=,'

r
I I I I I I" 1 8
5.....p..J

••4.

t 988 Sunblrd, ps, pb, ac, tilt, 790
Campers &amp;
1
cruiM, Sarli Bm·lm CISIOOO, '"'nt
Motor Homes
wheel drive, gre11 tn the snow.
,
111,000 mlleL 12.000 080. 304- 11 Fl. Truck Camper Sell-Con·
1
7J3..g104.
tatned. Excellenl Shape\61•·446·
I
~~:,.:.:--------------12~ .
'
r
1919 Buick LaSabro, excellent
:
running condition, V-e. PB, Ps, Hl79 Atr Stream. 31h. long .
1
AC., -windows, 13800, 614- $4.000. 31U -578-2847
r
940-Z45or814-849-2203..
- ' - - - - - - - - - -'If 1
---,,...-~-------1 1993 Jayco Camper 26 Ft , Full·.-.. t
1geo Ford Tampa GL, Now Loo~- S1Zo Bod, Plus Bunk a I Couch,~ ,
lng Garage Kepi, Sliver Wllh Ma- Like Now, 8t4-44fi.0843.
;; J;
roon Interior. 78,soo· Miles,
_..
$3,500 014-379-2728 or 304 ;.~ ow
937·3363.
• - l
t990 Madolllullang GT, Tolally - - - ---Ho-me
_ _ __
Roller Engint Nitrous OXIde Tree· 8 10
tion Bars. Cuuom Wheal s &amp;
Improvements
Tire•. 8U·••&amp;·4827, 6U ··U6·
9671 Asi!For o- RuaUII.
BASE~ENT
-~ :
WATERPROOFING
, ,.,, f
1881 Chrylltr LeBaron Corwe1t· Unc:ondttlonai lile11me guarentee. !
abfa, ExceUtnt Conditkm. V-e, All Local references !urn.shed. Es· _,.......
Exiraa, Law lllleag8, A~Mya G•- tablished 1975. Cal! (8 tC)
~~
ragad, Ot~t37.
0870 Or ':800-287·0576. Rogers ~il
Waterl)(oolulQ.
......
1112 4 WO Suzuki Sldaklek,
4
Aull, AMIFM Coautfe, 1 Owner,
: A-ll
18.000 Negalii!Jio, Excolltnl Con- -A-pp-li-an_co_Pa_rta-An_d_Sar_v_ic_e_
clltionl 814-446·111110.
Nama Brands Over 25 Yaara Experitnce All WOr~ Guaranteed, ' .,
1993 Mazda MX-6LS, One Own- French City Maytag, OH·••e .. 1 1
1
or, Woll Mlinlllnad, - · Oriwr 7.,;,;795;.:·;_;__ _ _...__ _ _ r ·H
Air Beg, Suniool. Rear Spoiler: ..
.. I'l l
Gold Pockaga, New Tlru, 83K C&amp;C General Homo !4iin- ~ I
Milea.11,900, 114-4-0t-o&amp;lt.
tenenct ~ Painting, vinyl liding,
carponvy,
!IOOro, Windowa, baths.
1gg3 Plymouth Sundance, Au moble hOn\&amp; r.-lr and more. For · · •
tomatic, Air, Rear Spoiler, 52,000
MHea, Aaklng $4,700 080, I 14· free a1tima1e call Chet, &amp;1C·992·

-

e:'::W

231111Mdeal•te.
an melrtl
:
24 Lang piiOe ..

By Phillip Alder

l

t 40

21

Don't be greedy

I

1993 Chevy S-10, •••. low miles
&amp;loaded, $9,200, 8t4-949·2217.

17 Kitchell

10~

Opening lead: a 3

Ml?

COME BAR61N' IN

1

3NT

THAT FER

ALL NUSHT LON•·· AT SUNUP

1987 Dodge Pakola "1'4, V-8, IV_, .•
C, aJCcellent condition , 16,200, :
6t4-1149-22t 1.

'

118eull- .....
12 Lump

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

L-:--..,.....-..-______,. f ·l'f

1986 Ford Aerostat Van, Air,~
CruiiO Conttol, TiUO Goad Shape, J 1
Need Transmiasioh: 1985 Ford F•!:l 1
t SO 4 Speed, Naoda Tune -up;.., :
814-307-7532.
•! 1

Ohio.

7 Slrong pull

• GulclaS
• Flxecl

t K 5 I
• A7 2

1Qg8 Chevy ext cab, cwtit, .auto,1 t
350 engine, loaded, wllowing
pac:kage, 1,900 milea. 30C·675· t
5332.
, _I

730

tAQ

• K 10 3

8eul.b
• A 10 I
9 A J 9 8

I
I

'rlamaha 350 Warrior. Runs...
looks Grear! Uany Exrrasl
$2,500, Bt4-44ll-8772.

........r..--' .,
PEAR

L.--'-L...-"-.- L. .

T

1

'If you want to win an argu·
ment," the professor smiled,

.!~ -~~st first know you

- • -

f
Complete !he chuckle quotad
-L-..1.1.-..1.-"-.-.&amp;..__,
by filling In ol1e missi"'J -ds
L
you dovolop lr0111 step No. 3 below.
I-

.• rm:~r~:~~RES I' r r j• r r I'

BIG NATE

I' I
6 ~~f~{t"LE FORI I I ll I I I I I

l

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Gothic · Joint- Fetal • Ossify • THEY SING

You'll Find In the
Cltall(lfd Stctlolt.

Scrvtnrs

l

IMONDAY

My husband's definition of opera: ' When someone
gels stabbed, and instead of bleeding THEY SING!'
·;

AUGUST19I

-

•ll

---..,:,..,===---- ....,,,'.
I

••6·

::1
:1,:
:1/

::.U

~.814-25H487.

II3ZI.

1994 Dodge 11111- ES, 2 Door,
4 Cytlndar, 5 Speed, Air, AMIFM
caaaotte, 58,000 Milos, Asking:
114-258-8340. &amp;14·

H""9- lnlah,DRYWALL
repair. ·

•s.eoo oao.

uporionco.

111114 T - GL. Red, 2 Door, PS,
PB. Air, Au-lie. 34,000 Mllta
15,500, 614-245-&amp;877.

Aon'o TV Sarv)ce, opaclollzlng in ·
Zenilh al10 eerviclng moll olhtr
brlndl. House eoOo, 1-100-797001 '1. WY 304-578-239&amp;

- 7.

FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO
R01ponalblt Party Wanted To 111111 Pontiac Sunrire, 11!1,000
llaka Low Monthly Paymonta On, MMH, Auto,. Air, CD, CruiH, Tih,
Plano. Saa ·Locally. C.oll 1:eoo- • Stlckar: 114,500; Sale; 112,500,
81+379-28011.
Gulllr Letaono OHored In Coun:
try, Rock, Claulcol, And Morel
014-3117-oe57.

.

---

1973 Corvene. red, l·C8, 350ci.
good cond. $8,00.0 . 304·875·
. m 1.

EngUah Coon Doga 8 -·Old, 1980 Thunderbird 2 Ooan, Au125 Each, 614-258-11859.
lllmati\:, 2 Tone Blue /Grey, $500,
61 4-3711·2435. _ _ _ __
Groom Shop ·Pat Grooming. Foo· 1.::;~.:.:.;:.;:::,_
turing Hydro Bath. Don Shnta. 1D8• Buick Park A.vtnut Good
Call8tH4e.O~l1.
Condition, 1850.qDB14-448-7928.

•QJtl651
Wert
EM&amp;
• 7 6 3
• QJ us
• 10 7 5 4
• KQ2
tJI0986S

____

AKC Rogiattrod Be11et Pupplaa
0 Weaks Old, Wormed, CFA Blua Miniature Horse For Sale, OU·
Point Siamese Kitten. 814-387· 24S.8227.
7705.
Registered paned harolord bull &amp;
lhll yoera covas, 614-949-2257.
AKC regiatered Bollier puppies, 4
female, 1 male, p!lfanta on prem- Special Feodor Call Sale: Satur1181, IBiiS dociled, dew Claws re- day August 24th. 1 P.M. Callie
moved, 814-742-2209.
llay Be Broughl In Aller 4 P.M.
·on Friday. •o Head Of Limousin
GOlf Cluba-3 Wood S•O. Uizuno Canlt Con1igned. All Coneign·
Drlvar, Graphllo Shah 140. Ping menta Welcome, Hauling Avail·
Beg. 304-876-1504.
ablt, Athena Livestock Sales,
014·592·2322, 014-698-3531 .
AKC Reglaterod Cocktf Spaniel
Puppies, Shato, Wormed, Aaklng 640
Hav &amp; Grain
$200, Between g A.M .• g P.M.
Round Salol Hay Far Sole,
814-448-3275.
Stored It! Bam, 814·24S.51 17.
Auotrallan Shepherd Pupplao,
Out 01 Goad Working Stock Had
TRANSPORTATION
Shots, 014-258-1380.

w:::=~:=m

PA:lFIIS ~ !P I.'J
'IHEARST~R ...

tDg t Ford F-150 Cuatam 300 e
Cylindw, 5 Speed, 68,000 Miles,
Goad Condition, 15,800, 814-446.:118 Allor 5 PM.
~

Will Haul Cattle &amp; Flatbed Trail""· 814-245-5002.

AKC Cocker Spaniel Pups. 30•· Horan : All Kind&amp; And Colora,
875-1792.
81H48-4110.
:;.:...;,::...:;,;::_

Grooming
by appolntment. kennel care 7 day&amp; a
week, aetd &amp; feed, AKC regia·
tared dogs, AKC miniature male
Poodla, parakeell &amp; birda, and
other misc. llama. Start hours
10am-8pm, Uonday through Sat·
urday. 814·092·451•. after hour1.
614-992·2817.
Thank you, Chriaty.

• 72

1990 Dodge Ookala '5 Speed;"]
With Coppar Tap, Ex~lll!'t Con\ · ,
dillon, .,.,.2-os-6588
,

I

610 Farm

Wurlitzer Organ S300: Upright
Freezer 150: Alvarez Guitar
1350; Drum Sot $75; Chatt D-- Hydraulic Hosea, Made To O.dar.
ora, Tappen Sell Cleaning Range, S1dtr'a Equipment Co. 304-8757421 .
1150, 01··448-0591 .
New Idea 706 Diesel Unlayatem
550
Building
With Combine &amp; Grain Table
S3,SOO, Now Idea 2 Row Corn
Supplies
-$1,000,114-246-11615.
Bloc:k, brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintele, etc:. Claudt Winters. Pony- 175. 304-e75-1g25.
Ria Grande, OH Call Ot4 ·245630
Livestock
5121 .
Alpine Qoata, Does I Billeya,
560 Pets lor Sale
014-258-8282. •

CHRISTY'S PETS
:111 North Becood Avenue,

• K2

·• e s

, ._:.

Aull loont. Doalar ""' alranga 8nanclng wen if rou Mve been
turned down tiiiWtltre. Upton
Equipment UIAd Coli. 304-458-

101111.

·; ·
Ctihnga textured, pl~ar,r repair. .
Call Tom 304-875·•tlll. 20 yoara

840

.

.

,

.

ASTR6-0RAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Electrlcaland

Rtfrlgera~

•

:i

HtnPumpl, Air Conditiorlng, If
'lbu Don't Call Ua We Both ~out
Free Eotl,.toa, 1-800·281-1)098, ·1 •
614 uo 8308, wv 00294!1.
.. . .. •

-. ~':,:)'

RtaJdonllll or a&gt;mmarclol wiring,
Turn OclwnL Call Ruth 614 -448- ,.,. IOIVIce or ropolre. lrlaaler ·UcenaH tltctrlclan. Ridenour
28157.
Electrical, WV000308, ,304-67S.
A Cor, Na C&lt;edit, Bed C.ed- 17811.
1~ lle!tltupter? WI CAN HILl'
IIIIITULIIII CIIEDITt Muat Roaldontlol Or Camrt~O.Cial WlrMoke •uo - l y Toke Horne, lng, New SoMce Of Ropal11. 1.115'111 Down In Coah Or Treda To ctnaed Electrician. Wtlsh Elec·
814·448·8950, Galllpclia,
Qualify For Thla Bank Flnlncing,

g::,.

·~•q
l~•

-1'-~l~

"11

' '"~

'- • ·~

t'~

"'ftm

"".,

Matchmaker, c/o this newopapar, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Slltion, New Vorl&lt;,
NY 10158.
VIRGO (Allll- Z3 Sop!. 22) Outllde Inter·
eats m~ command a great dill ol your
lime toelay. Fortunat.ly, you will not mind
thiS oecause you wllllooll for COiliiNCtive
ways 10 keep buoy.
UlftA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ~ yourulf
today 1n sKuallonlln whic:ll you have to
prolec:t your malarial lntertlta. You can
manage lhll properly without alienating

othera.

RSES·CERTFEO .DEr\i.ER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

CNd" .......,,, E·Z Bank Flnonclnt. Far Uood Vahlclea No

~14-441-beo7.

~==~~==~~t:~~~~~~~
make the you
relatlonahip wor!&lt;. MIN $2.75 to

-

Tueol!da!r, Au~. 20, 1996
In lhe year anuc1 you mlghl be more
locuaeci on your goala than you Nlve
been in the peat. Thla wooldelful new
. _ w11 be 1 big l8dor 1n ~you 10
roac11 llllmparllnt Clbjldlve.
LEO Co!UIY a-Aug. Z:t) You cu lOCOI1l'
plillt IJI'illllhlt!IP IDdly ~- you wll

.

you
managed a djfllcutt assignmenl succeaa·
fully , tool your own horn today .
Management ohould know whom lo credit ·
far !he victory.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Activities
which .Slimulele you bolh mentally ana
pllyalcally w~l nneti yolir opeclfic needs
loday. These !hinge will rejUVIII1ale your
OUIIoof&lt;, attitude and energy .
ARIES (Mile~ 21·Aprll 11) Do nol be
l imld about defending your positions
lodlly. JuSt beea!lll your oppoo.ent has a

big IIIO!IIh. thiS doeln, make 111m or her
in aulhortly.
IJ.

TAURUS (AIM'...., 20) A fJiend with.
whorit yo~~'l converwe tocily m1g1t1 give
you on lntpjrlng Idea. File li away l9r
deal Willi M Murt llllerence, beca- you might find

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. :t:t) Do not
waate lime wondering whether or not
your ldeu will WOik today: Put them into

actloo. 11 you lilellea mlltlkt,
while you're 0111 roll.
•110011 Uiefor l _ ,,
SAGITTARIUI(Nov. aa-Dic. 21) You •GilliN! Iller 21-.Junt :ta) II yoU axel!
might reap be nell II today lrom a

J' - . e«ort

In

your -

today,

you wll

· Mlllldlplloua tftuiiiOri. You will be lnvit- _ , r.,. ~~~~~- Do not hlllilltll to
ad to participate beclluae you cu oller _ go the - . rnllll.
·.
..,IOII.;gapeclll. · ~'
,
·. 'CAHCI!fl ,(olu118 J1-.luly 22) Anen4 to
. CAJIRICOIIN (~. 22-.lln. It) TO&lt;Iay, your ptkiiiiiii!Ddly, bulllao gl¥a yollr·
hove . . lll*ytoftnllll- Kwllbea : you wll ~ ftiOf8 fl.ft II you M1091e11 1811 oome lelaure tlftle. A 1-,fllllonal
OOOd day to eiXlePI dlr"rngll;g Ullgn- · wllh phyrlclly ~
You w11 not tnllt will not ~lnvoiOUa. • wll be oanmenta. Trrlno to p'lltch up a broken •• fill at~ • ~.,... along wllh pair .llrUC:IIw.
1"
11lf1111D? The ~
j
. ·Mtrtdlitlfl1• .I WfiOdntgllllrfwl.
...
.

""'*·

..

,.

J

,."•
'

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�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page10 · ·
Monday, August 19,·.1996

Ohio Lottery
Suns hand
off Barkley
to Rockets

Pick 3:

1-4-6
Pick 4:
3-1-o-2 .
Buckeye 5:
16·20-25-29-32

Sports on Page 5

Partly cloudy tonight
with 1cattered thunderstorms. Low• In the 60a.
Wednesday, partly cloudy.
Hlgha near 90•

f

•

en tine
Vol. 47. NO. 76
1 Section, 10 P~ge~

35oenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 20, 1996

A Gannan Co. NewlfiiPII:

Commissioners review
landfill closing plans
PREITY BABIES - These girls are the winners of Saturday's Pretty Baby Contest, sponsored by the Meigs County Sanlor Fair Board.
Front, 1-r, Kelale Fife, Meigs County Little Miss
Julie Lantz, daugher of Dan and Rhea LanU:
Pomeroy; Sharon Wright, daughter of Tammy
Wright of Pomeroy; Alison Rose Brown, daugher of Danny and Bonnie Brown, Pomeroy; and
Daniel Buckley, Meigs
Little Mister.

Back, 1-r, are Dakota Lamber, daugher of April
Hall of Racine; Shandl Beaver, daughter of
Doug and Tracy Beaver, Pomeroy; Shawna
Murphy, daughter of Billy and Chaslldy Murphy,
Reedsville; Morgan Gabrielle Ruaaall, daughter of Ray Ru11ell and Christy Dill. Also pictured is Meigs County Fair Queen Amy Smith.
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

WINNING BOYS • These boys won their ·
respective age groups in the Pretty Baby Contest held at the Meigs County Fair on Saturday. Fro.nt, 1-r, are Kelsie Fife, Meigs County's
Little Mtas; Benjamin Tillis, son of Don and
Gina Tillis of Rutland; Jacob Hayman, aon of
Jerry and Angie Hayman of Syracuse; Daniel
Buckley. Meigs County Little Mister. Back, 1-r,

are Keiton McCloud, son of Daniel McCloud
and Marcia Robinson, Pomeroy; "timothy Elam,
son of William and Penny Elam, Racine; Austin
Bailey, son of Brian and Lori Bailey of
Reedsville; and Thunder J . Clonch, son of Rod
and Delcie Clonch of Middleport. Fair Queen
Amy Smith joined the winners for the photo. ·
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

Karen Wal~er presents program for Racine UMW

BICYCLE GIVE-AWAY - Stephen Yost of Racine was the winner of a bicycle Thursday at the Meigs County Fair. It was vaughan's IGA Day at the Fair and the bicycle was provided by the
Vaugl!an family, thl Fair Board, and Bates Amusement. Bicycles
will be awarded both Friday and Saturday et noon in a drawing
at the hill stage. With Yost are Dan Smith, left, fair board president, and Jim Watson, board member.

-community CalendarThe Community Calendar is pub·
lished as a free serv ice to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items arc printed
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.

EAST MEIGS .. Eastern Local
School District Board of Education
meeting Monday. 7 p.m. in the high
school cafeteria.
POMEROY·· Meigs High Sc hool
open house for all freshman and new
students Monday. 7 p.m. in the high
school cafeteria. Students and their
parents arc urged to all end.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT ·· Meies Junior .
High School Vollcyhall -meeting
Monday. 10 a.m . for students wanti- TUESDAY
ng to play volleyball. For more inforMIDDLEPORT .. Orientation for
mation. call John Arnott at Y92-3058. incoming seventh graders and new
eight graders. 6 to 7:30p.m . junior
LETART ·· The Le tart Township high school auditorium. Rcfn:shmcnt
Trustees will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at to follow.
the office building.
RACINE ·· Racine Village Coun·
cil. recessed session . Monday, 7 p.m.
Star Mill Park.
POMEROY ·· Me1g&gt; High
School. open house. freshmen and
new students. 7 p.m Monday in high
school cafeteria. Students and parents
invited.
RUTLAND ·· Rutland Volunteer
Aood Com!nittcc, to present results
of project development process work
for FEMA Ha1.ard Mitigation Grant
Program· application, Monday, Rutland Civic Center. FEMA rep to be
present.

WINNER -Gary L Bowman
was the winner of this 1988
Chevy Corsica donated by
Meigs auto de•l•r Bibbee
Motors for Ill• Coolville-Tuppers Plains Llona Club
Founder's Day ob1arvance earlier thla month.

Chester group increases membership
. 'The Chester Courthouse Restoration Committee of the Chester Village Shade ·Historical Association
increased its memhmhip by 204 during the Meigs ·CoUJtty Fair. Pat
lioltcr, activi!ies ~nator. reponed Sunday.
Membership in the Association

'.

now stands at 284. she said. Winner
of the $20 signup prize at the booth
in the grange building was Regina
Kimes. Middleport.
·
Holter also announced that Denise
Mora of Pomeroy won the picnic basket awarded at Chester-Shade Days.
•

"United Nations--A Time for
Pe~ce " was the title of the program
presented by Karen Walker at a
recent meeting of the Racine United
Methodist Women held at the church.
United Methodist seminars arc
part of a long tradition of mission
education in relation to the United
Nations, it was noted. for her scripture Walker read from Luke, Isaiah
and Micah, texts from the last two
being carved on t~e wall across the
street from the entrance to the United Nation s. She said that 1995
marked the 50th anniversary of the
founding of the U.N. and repcrtcd
that from its original 51 members the
organization has grown to over I80
member nations to-day. It was noted
that many Methodists have participated in seminars in New York to
Jearn more about the vision' and
work of the United Nations.
The UMW purpose and the Lord's
prayer led by President Lee Lee
opened the July meeting of the
Racine United Methodist Women.
The song "Let Me Go Home" was
sung by members. Chris Hill iead the
secretary's report and Clara Mac Sargent gave the treasurer's report.
Thank you notes were read from Etta
Mae Hill and Ryan Hill. The penny
fund collection was taken.
The shrubbery committee reported that the shrubs have been purchased but have not been plants.

Ecotourism training
offered at Hocking
College

""--

Headphones for the sanctuary are still
being checked on.
Marilyn Bogard gave a mission
rcpcrt on her trip to School of Mission which she rece ntly attended.
It was decided to start working on
Monday ll'lomings at the church to tie
rugs and make school kits for the
upcoming Festival of Sharing.

done, who is leaving Racine to live ·
in Orlando. Fla. A gift was presented
to her from the UMW.
Others attending were Margie
West, Martha Dudding, Opal Diddle,
Etta Mac Hill, Sharon Hall , Donna
Matson, Lucille Cardone. France!
Roberts, Margery Roush, and Jen:
nifer Walk .
•

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Vllllge ot Pomeroy
Sepllrate S..led Bide For:
For
River
Front
Amphitheater ProJect
Including Concrete aeatlng
.,.., welka, concrete • area, electrical dlatrlbutlon
and lighting, and related
work.
Will be .received by the
VIllage ol Pomeroy et the
Office ot the Mayor, VIllage
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 11 o'clock am Wed.
September 3, 1998 and then
at the office of the Mayor
the bide will be publicly
opened and reed aloud.
Contract apaclllcatlone
and bidding document•
may be viewed at the office
ol Mayor, at 20 Eaat Main
StrHI, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or may be picked up or
ordered by mall for $50
which Ia nonof'elund.lble.
Thla proJect Ia being
partially funded by alate
ODNR LWCF Fundi.
Engineer'• eetlmett for
thla proJect I• 1119,000.
A bid guaranty, 11
required by Section 153.54
oltha revised cOde ol Ohio,
ehall .acompany aoch
plolropo.. t eubmltted, oe

the contract Ia executed.
or
2) A bond lor the lull
amount ol thla bid. Tho
owner will reteln the bond
or lhe IUCCIIIful bidder but
the owner will return the
bond ol each unaucce11lul
bidder but the owner will
return the bond ol each
un1ucce11ful bidder after 1
contract Ilea been executed.
Attention ol blddera Ia
called to all requlramentt
contained In the bid packet
Including; thla proJect Ia
Federaly
ualated .
Contracll to be awarded
under thla Invitation for blda
will be subJect to
Presidential Executive
Order 11246, 11 amended,
requiring affirmative action
lor equal employment
opportunhy. Contractore are
further advl1ed that the
Jonuary 27, 1972 Equal
Employment Opportunity
Elecutlve Order ol the
Gove, nor ol Ohio Ia alao
eppllcoble to thla bid
Invitation.
No bidder may withdraw
hla bid within elxty (60)
d.lya a!Uor the actual elate or
opening lhereof.
All bld1 shell be properly
signed by an authorized
r~pr~Mntatlva ol the bidder.
All bld1 shell be 11eled
and plainly marked "Sealed
Bid lor River Front
Amphlth .. ter ProJect·
General ContriCI, Pomeroy,

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Village ol Pomeroy
Seperote Sealed Bide For:
Few
River
F~ont
AmphlthNier .
Including Sheet PIIng '";s:.
Rallied wort..
Will be received by the
Village ol Pomeroy at the
Office of the Moyor, VIllage
Holt, Pomeroy, Phlo 45769
until 11 o'clock am Wed.
September 3, 1996 and then
.at the office ol the Mayor
tho blda will be publicly
opened end read aloud.
Contract 1peclflcatlona
end bidding document•
moy be viewed at tile office
or Mayor, 11 20 E111 Main
StrHI, Pomeroy, OH 45769
or may be picked up or
ordared by mall for $50
wllleh Ia non..,elund.lble.
Thle proJect Ia being
partlefly funded by elite
ODNR LWCF Funds.
En~;~lneer'• eatlmate lor
lhle proJect 11 $70,000.
A bid guaranty, u
required by Section 153.54
ol the revlaed·code o1 Ohio,
ahall accompany each
proposal 1ubmltted, a a
loHows:
1) A certified check,
caahlera check, or letter of
cnclt aq,.lto 10 percent ol
the bid. A letter of credit
mey be revocable only by
the owner. Upon entering
Into 1 contract with the
owner, the contractor mu1t
then file a bond for the
amount or tho controct, end
the check or lener ot credit
will then be returned to the
aucceaaful
and
un1ucceeaful blddera when
1111 contract II IXICUIId.

Iowa:

Ecotourism training is available at
Hocking College and the program
begins with five intensive modules
·
ranging from seven to 10 days in
length.
Individual modules may be taken
separately or several modules may be
combined to provide the successful
students with an ecotourism specialist certificate.
Ron Black, associate dean, School
of Natural Resources and Ecological ,
Scicnc~s. said the program has been
modeled after the successful Natural
Ranger Training Institute (NRTI).
"Short intensive modules allow students to move through tbe program a.~
time or work schedules permit without a lot of disruptions to schedules."
Black said ec01ourism is defined
by the executive director of the Ecotourism Society as "respcnsiblc travel to natural areas that con&gt;crvcs the
environment and sustains the well·
being of local people-. 'Our students
will have the oppcrtunity for international study travel to locations in
Brazil, Costa Rica. Canada and the
Caribbean." •·
"Hocking's ecotourism program is
the first of its kind in the world and
train reople for pcsitions such as nat. uralists, nature interpreters, ccotour
guides and adveAture guides," Black
said.
Hocking College is finalizing a
two-plus-two program with the Uni:versity of Aorida that will allow stu·
dents who complete the eeotourism
;associate degree program to. transfer
credits afld begin in the third year of
study at the University of Aorida.
For information about the ec()tourism program or specific times for
the individual modules, contact Claudia Clinton, admissions office, 7533591, extens,ion 2890.

The next meeting will be the
ch urch wide picnic, Aug. 26. It will
be a "Welcome Back" for the minis:
· ter and family and there will also be
a White Elephant sale, so bring an
item to be auCtioned off.
A decorated cake was part of the
refreshment&gt; served by Ruth Stearns
and Lee Lee in honor of Lucille Car-

A certified check,
caahlera chick, or lder ol
credit equal to 10 percent of
the bid. A letter ol credit
m1y be revocable only by
the owner. Upon entering
Into 1 controct with the
owner, the conlnlctor muat
then tile • bond tor the
amount ol the contract, end
the check or letter ol credit
will then be returned to the
I u c c e 11 f u I
• nd
uniUccenlul blddere when
1)

Ohio".

The owner r..orv11 the
right to reJect eny or all bids
aumbiHed, and waive any
lrregularit111.
By the Owner
The VIllage ol Pomeroy
(8) 12, 19,2 tc

Public Notice
or

2) A bond for the lull
amount ol thll bid. The
ownll' will retain the bond
or tho •uc-lul bidder.but
the owner will return the
I ~~ol uch un•uc-lul
bldd .but the owner win:
return the . bond of each ;
un1uc~:-a"'' bidder llfllr 1
co .. 11M been llt11Cullld.
ttentlon ol bidder• 11
called to ell requlrementa
conlllned In the bid pacltet
Including; thl1 proJect Ia
Fedoraly
ualated.
Contracll to be awarded
under thll lnviWIOn lor bkll
will be aubJact to
Prllldentlal Executive
Order 11246, a1 amended,
requiring affirmative action
for equal employment
opportunhy. Contractore ere
furthar advlaed that the
January 27, 1972 Equal
Employment Opportunity
Executive Order ol the
Governor ol Qhlo Ia 1110
applicable to thll bid
lnvltlllon.
No bidder may withdraw
hi I bl!l within 1ixty (60)
d.lya after Ill ectuel date ol
opening thereof.
All bfd1 lhlll be property
1igned by an authorized
repl'llllllltlve ol the bidder.
All bld1 a holt be Haled
and plainly rllllrlced "llllled
Bid lor Rlver Front
AmphItheater ProJectGenerel Conlnlct, Pomeroy,

Ohio".

The owner 're1erva1 the
right to reJect any or all blda
aumblttad, and waive any
lrregulerltlft.
BylhiOwnll'
The Vlllge of Pomeroy
(8) 12, 19, 210

.

Fair "Thank You" Ads
2 Columns x 5 InchesSolid Line Box

ssooo
r--------------------------,

1

I
I
I

2 Columns x 3 Inches
Dotted Line Box

1 Col x SinMulti Line Box

$1500

1

3000

I

I
I
I

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street
1
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
F~r additional ad sizes and prices, please call

1

992-2158

•

•••••••••••••
•• 1 Col x.21n•• Dottedlln~

••

.•
••

plat are also needed for the Howell
Hill landfill . In addition, the road to
the landfill needs to be maintained.
"These are not major problems,
but they do have to be addressed,"
Jacobs explained.
Following renovations to the
county recorder's office, the board
met with Clerk ,of Courts · Larry
Spencer to discuss improvements to
the title office, which is administered
by Spencer.
Spencer's propcsal for the title
office includes painting, removal of
a counter top, lighting and electric
upgrades, and the installation of a
rotary filing system.
Commission President Fred Hoff.
man stepped down as president and
made the motion to approve the project. which will cost around $22,000.
Vice President Janet Howard
abstained, feeling Spencer should
have advertised f\)r bids for the filing
system.

The filing system, from GarrisonBrewer of Marietta, costs $14,900,
$100 under the $15,000 limit at
which point bidding would have
been required.
Howard said she suppcrts the
project.
"'I just feel (Spencer) could have
saved money if it we(e bid out," she
said.
Hoffman and Commissioner
Robert Hanenbach voted in favor of
Spencer's proposal.
In other business, the board:
• Met with Recycling and Litter
Prevention director Kenny Wiggins
to endorse a grant application for a
recycling grant;
• Agreed to instruct County Engineer Robert Eason to install one-way
signs on Sand Hill Cemetery Road,
making the road a one-way road from
SR 124 to SR 248;
• Paid weekly bills of
$182,956.13. consisting ol'' 201
entries.

Box

'
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MORE WRECKAGE FOUND- A cargo net containing wreckage from TWA Flight 800 II lOW·
ered into a truck Monday at the U.S. Coast Guard station at Hampton Bay, N.Y. The wreckage
11 being taken to a hangar In Calverton, N.Y., where FBI and National Transportation Safety
Board officlala are looking for clues to determine the e•uae of the crash that killed all 230 people aboar~ the 747. (AP)

i

I,,

Eastern Board approves
Investigators may rule out
smoke free b.uilding policy engines as cause of jet crash
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newl Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Edu5~~"~ ~k ~lion ~'! seve~l policy
· "lllTie)l!illleh\Sllfl4~hluring its
regular meeting Monday night at
Eastern High School.
·
The board discussed the new NeoIa policy revisions, and approved tli'e Neola Board Policy Manual with
revisions as the district pel icy and
proceuures manual.
•
Buildings in the district will now
be smoke
free , under
a
Tobacco/Smoke Free Schools Act
resolution approved by the board.
No smokir.g or use of any type of
tobacco product will be permitted in

any fonn in any of the district'~
schools. The board also amended the
district building use form to include
this provi~ion.
Revis&amp;! teacher and student handbooks for the 1996-97 school year for
the elementaries and the high school
were reviewed by the board and
adopted.
In personnel action, the board
approved the following certified substitute teachers for the 1996-97
school year, on an as-needed basis:
Nancy Wachter, Keith Savage, Craig
Wright and Kristi Skinner.
The board approved Sheila
Spencer as hea&lt;! cook at Tuppers
Plains Elementary, and approved

Confirmation of Clinton
visit expected for today
By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett New• Service
COLUMBUS - Official confirmation of a presidential visit to Chillicothe on Sunday should come today
with the formal release of a detailed
schedule of a pre-convention train
tour through Ohio's heaniand by
President Clinton, according to Ohio
Clinton campaign officials.
While Clinton state officials
would only publicly confirm train
stops in Columbus on Sunday and
Toledo on Monday, Chillicothe will
be named Clinton's first Ohio train
stop, according to wire repcrts. Oth·
er reported possible stops in the
northern pan of the state are Kenton
in north centraL Hardin County, and
Bowling Oteen.
Clinton's uain tour through West
Virginia, Indiana and Ohio will begin
in Huntington, W.Va., Sunday afternoon and conc lude in Michigan City,
ind., on Wednesday, Aug. 28, accord·
ing to Clinton National Press Secretary Joe Lockhan.
.
That means the mid-portion of the
Huntington to Columbus leg of the
rail journey, which would pass right
through Chillicothe, would occur

early Sunday evening.
Ohio Democratic Party Chief
David Leland would not con finn that
Chillicothe had been chosen for a
presidential visit, but did acknowledge that the town is being strongly
considered.
ije said that is because the town is
in the middle of southern Ohio - a
"critical" area of th~ state.
"Some people might think those
areas are historically Republican and
not understand why we arc campaigning there." he said. "I think that
it just underscores the fact that we're
not going to concede any county, city
or district to Republicans in 1996."
Seeing President Clinton up close
and personal is nothing new for
Chillicothe voters and many others
around the slate, who saw Clinton in
1992 as he made numerous campaign
visits to the state .
Leland acknowledged that the
1996 blueprint for victory in Ohio is
torn from the same page.
"He'll probably be around here so
often that we'll register him to vote
in Ohio, " Leland said. "Seriou~ly, I
think we will see a lot of Bill Clinton between now and November."

SM ITHTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Investigators are close to ruling out
the plane 's engines as the cause of
the explosion of TWA Flight 800,
reducing the possibility that a missile or mechanical failure downed
the jetliner.
Yet chemical tests on the
plane's wreckage have not come up
with any traces of chemical residue
from a bomb bras!, James Kall strom. head of the FBI investigation team. said Monday.

Barbara Barringer and Helen Frank
as substitute cooks for the 1996-97
school year.
In 9ther matters, the board:
qrj)proved the schematic design
as prepared by Vargo, Cassady, Ing·
ham &amp; Gibbs for the construction of
the new K-8 elementarv school and
the renovation of the existing high
school facilities.
• approved an addendum for the
architects to be paid for printing
drawings and project manual for
contractors' bidding of work on the
school building/renovations project.
• approved a supplemental pay or
20 days for John Redovian. guidance
(Continued on Page 3)

WARM MOMENT- President
Clinton shared a moment Menday with cancer patient Ashley
Stagg1, 13, In Jackson, Tenn.
The president, his wife Hillary,
daughter Chlleea and VIce President AI Gore-e in Tennesto assist with the rebuilding of
the Salem B•ptiet Church In
Fruitland, burned by an arsoniat
last year. (AP)
Leland said Clinton's campaign
themes in Ohio will generally focus
Qll Hime. balanced budget. job
growth and targeted taitcut issues.

Alleged attempted bombing incident
may result in federal charges for trio

5

1 Want to show your appr~latlon? Fair
exhibitors "Thank You" ads are available at
1 these sizes and prices. 'Ada must be paid In
I advance by m11il or delivered to: _

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County Health Depanment
Director Jon Jacobs updated the
county commissioners Monday on
environmental requirements to properly close two old county landfills.
The landfills, one located off State
Route 143 and the other on Howell
Hill Road. have long been closed to
trash haulers. but some Ohio Environmental Protection Agency require·
ments have yet to be met.
Jacobs said OEPA reqw:sted the
county purchase a gas monitor to
detect methane emanating from the
landfills.
. Methane is an odorless, colorless,
flammable gas, created by the
decomposition of organic matter.
The gas can migrate, Jacobs said.
Commissioners approved the pur·
chase of a monitor for about $600
with the health department to conduct
the aetualtesting.
Jacobs said an aerial photo and

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (APJ- er, 19, of Apple Grove; and Michael short time later and arrested the
Three men accused of putting an Hancock, 21. of Chillicothe, Ohio, three. Talkington said.
Police found another explosive
explosive device in a mailbox outside · were arraigned Monday. TalkingtOn
'd
device
and a loaded shotgun inside
a Mason County home may face fed- 531 •
They were released from the the truck, TalkingtOn said.
eral charges, state police said .
A state police bomb squad defused
The U.S. Postal Service and the Mason County Jail on $20,000 bond
both devices.
federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco each.
A man told police he saw the tine
Tile device found in the ttuck was
and Firearms are considering charges
a11ainst the three, said Trooper Rob in a ttuck parked next to his mailbox made up of pan of a door hinge and
on Sunday night. After the ttuct left. gun powder, Talkington said.
TaiJtington in J&gt;oint Pleasant.
It was not immediately clear why
'!be mailbox device was made up the man, whose identity was withheld,
found
the
device
in
his
mailbox.
.
the
device was put in the mailbox or
of a small canister, BBs and gun powwhich of the three men made the
der. but did not explode because of a Talkington said.
The man gave police the truck's devices. Talkington said it did not
burned-out fuse, .Talkington said.
Rex D. Cupp, 18, ofFrazien Bot- description and license plate number. appear the man at the horne knew the
lorn, Putnam County; Benjamin'Bak- A sheriff's deputy spotted the ttuck a three suspects.

"Everyone is pretty well satisblast once it appeared that the
engines weren't at fault. The other
fied the engines were not a factor
in this accident, or whatever it turns
main theory is that a bomb was
out to be, " said Robert Francis,
planted on the plane.
vice. chai rman of tile National • ·-·111\IU!igators- were"tencentftiting on piecing together the plane's
TranspcrtatiOn Safety Board.
Ruling out the engines as a center section, between rows 17 to
source of the July 17 explosion
28, where they believe the explomade a heat-seeking missile an
sion originated. a source told The
unlikely theory. A mi ssile would
Associated Press.
have honed in on an engine.
All 230 people aboard the ParisMechanical failure also seemed
bound Boeing 747 were killed .
a' less likely explanation for the
Twenty-four bodies remained
in the ocean.

Pomeroy Council seeks
action on old buildings
By JIM FREEMAN
.
Sentinel News Staff
Dilapidated buildings and delayed projects were the topics discussed at
Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy Village Council.
Council read a letter from Fire Chief Danny Zirkle, who had designated
three buildings in the vill age as "threats to public health and safety."
The buildings are the Sugar Run School Building, the old Lyons Tavern
and Hotel on Spring Avenue. and a collapsed house on Liberty Lane.
Zirkle recommended that the 'owners of the property be required to cor·
reel or remove the structures.
In addition. council members also pointed oul other structures needing
razed , including a burned-out home on Rutland Street nc ..r the Middleport
corporation line. Councilma~. Bill Young said the property is overgrown with
·weeds, causing nieghbors to worry about sna~es and rats.
Young also added that the owner of the now-closed Twin City Machine
Shop should cut the grass and weeds growing there .
,
He also suggested the installation of "scenic overlook" signs on the parking lot promenade, noting that more people arc using the area. Councilman
Larry Wehrung agreed that trees growing up along the river bank arc obscuring the view of the river.
Also, counci l members commented on planned village projects thai are
not taking place including the Union Avenue Sewer Project, the demolition
of a house on Laurel Street and installation of a guardrail on Lincoln Hill.
This is damaging the village's credibility, it was noted.
The biggest long-term project remaining on the drawing board is the water
well drilled last year in Syracuse in an effort to improv~ the quality of
Pomeroy's drinking water. The well has yet to be hooked up to the vi II age's
water system.
"That's why we raised the waler rates," said Council President John Musser, calling for action on the project.
Council instructed Mayor Frank Vaughan to get a timet~ble on the project from Village Administrator and Water Department Supervisor John
Anderson. Also, Vaughan said he hope s work on the Union Avenue sewer
project will start later this week.
In addition, council approved the sole bid submitted by S &amp; W Dean
Asphalt of Proctorville for $13,944 for Spring Avenue paving, and discussed
future paving including Main Street from Locust to Ebenezer streets.
In personnel matters. Robert Klein of Pomeroy was approved as a water
depanmcnt employee. In other personnel matters, Vaughan said workers seen
not wearing their orange safety vests while worki ng may face a day's suspension.
During a discussion on non-working water meters. it was noted there arc
about 40 of them in the village. Homeowners with dead water meters arc
charged at the minimum rate if they have always used the minimum amount.
' The cost of installing a new water meter is about $200, it was reported .
In other business. council:
• Denied a request from the Celebration Center Church requesting ongoing use of the village auditorium for services on Sunday mornings .
• Authorized Vaughan to collect bids to replace the exis~ng telephone system in village hall.
• Approved a continuing education course in sanitary sewer maintenance,
rehabilitation and reconstruction, for Anderson at the University of Wisconsin
for $!14~ .
• Met with a Lincoln Hill resident on a persistent sewer and water leak
on the hill.
Council's ne~t meeting will be Sept 4 at 7 p.m., due to the Labor Day
holiday.

\

•

Hall's medication
irks his attorney
IRONlDN (AP)- Todd Hall 's
lawyer says his client is being overmedicated. which could interfere
with his competency evaluation.
Hall , 24. of Proctorville. is
charged with nine counts of invol·
untary manslaughter and four
counts or aggravated arson in the
July 3 fire at the Ohio River Fireworks store ncar the southern OhiO
village of Scottown.
Nine people died in the fire , and
I I were injured.
Hail is being held in the
Lawrence County Jail pending a
hearing to determine if he is competent to stand trial.
Attorney Richard Wolfson told
the Herald-Dispatch of Huntington,
W.Va ., that he may tile a memorandum with the court today outlining his concerns or ask that
Hall 's medication be stopped.
Wolfson said Hall has been
getting four times the recommended dosage of Thorazine. a tranquilizer.
"The effect of Thorazine is sig nificant," Wolfson said . "It makes
him overly groggy. Jcthargic ."
Wolfson said he docsn 't think
the jail's doctor, Rodolpho Canos
Jr. of Ironton. a general surgeon, is
qualified to treat Hail. who is
brain-damaged.
The doctors at Shawnee Forensic Center in Portsmouth who arc
evaluating Hall shared his concerns, Wolfson· said.
Hall pleaded innocent by reason
of insanity on Aug. 13. Wolfson
says Hall lacks the judS/DCnt to
knowingly commit the crime
because of his brain injury, the
result of a 1987 skateboarding
•accident.
A hearing to present the doctors ' findings must be conducted
before Friday. But Wolfson said h:
may get an extension •
Jim Cochran, chief deputy at the
Lawrence County Sheriff's Department, said he wasn't sure what Hail
was taking but added that there is
nothing wrong with the medication
and dosage.

...

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