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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Bulla take

Plck3:
604
Plck4:
1269
SuperLoHo:

command~ng

3·2 aeries lead
Sports on P1ge 4

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5-10.12·1~

Kicker:

215183

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·Air, aluminum wl.x\s; ·.
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and'Moch

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Boarc;t hearing testimony on mill
proposal's air pollutiop permit .
a

V6, air, tilt,~ ..

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2 St!ctlano, 12 Pogq, 35 centl '· '
A Gannett Co. N-IPII*

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. a.tes set for second an. nua.I Exp'o

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Event slated
Sent. 20 21 .
at fall'&lt;'grounds

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ..,.. An air poll~tion permit for proposed
$1 .1 billion pulp mill in Mason County does not protect human health,
· said anexpen·witness for an environmental group opposed to the pennit.
1
The Air Quality Board began taking ev~~ Tucsday·on whether it
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" should rescind the pennit.
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Environmentalists oppose the project of Panons &amp; Whittemore Inc.
of Rye Brook, N.Y. They believe dangerous level• of cancer-causing dioxBY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
in will result from the plant's.operalions.
,
Sentinel Newe Staff
_ Environmentalists also contend the state is wasting taxpayers' money
The '97 Town and Country Expo,
geared to showcase 001111J1Crcial and
. by proceeding with the process since the comp..y's interest in building
. the tnill appears to·be wanins.
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collector inten:sts coupled with enter, PBBons &amp; Whittemore has said it te'mains interested in th~ process.
tainment and exotic tinimals, has been
· but the company has not renewed its option to ili!Y the land for the.plant
set for Sept. 20 and 21 at the Rock
in Apple Grove, along the Ohio River. The optj9p·expired March 1.
Sprinas Fairgrounds;
In approving the original pennit, the state Division of l;nvirolllllental
It is the second annual Expo at the
·: Protection failed to consider non cancer effects~ dioxin, such as reprofairgrounds where admission is free
· ductive disgrders, said Peter deFur, a witness fQl:. the Ohio Valley En vi·
and the committee promises "some. ronmental Coalition.
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thing for everyone." Hours both days
' State regulators also did not account for the culjlulative effect of dioxwill be 10 a.m. to S p.m.
. in to which people are already exposed, deFur ~·
Kenny Buckley and Hal Kneen
DeFur is a scientist at Virginia Commonwealth University_and an ad viare co-chaiimcn, with Kneen also
sor on dioxin matters for the U.S. 'EnvironmenUij..Protcction Agen~y.
handling demonstrations and special
The agency permit would al)ow the plant to p!llit 8.4 million pounds · eved~her chairmen are Addollou
of pollution into the air yearly.
&lt;.
Division spokesman Brian Farkas said agency",Iawyers will continue
Lewis. inside exhibitors' spaces; Jim
to defend the air pollution permit and may iss\JC..&amp; new draft water perWatson, outside spaces including the
· mit by July.
.
·
car display and food booths; Dale
The proposed mill is backed by fonn~r Go.v. Otiston Capenon and Gov.
Kautz, antique tractors; Dallas Weber,
Cecil Underwood.
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·
:r•. ·
. antique tractor pull and Expo promotion; Roy Holter and the Rev:
L
, _,,
William Middleswarth, things of his·'
UI.• I
f.,.I
torical interest; Becky Baer, enter• ., 1
1\
W., 4
tainment, and Eugene Underwood,
the worship· service to be held on

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ~ey, June 12, 1997.

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01tll7, Ohio lllllly·I'UIIItlhlng Con;&amp; IJ.

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Muggy tonight, chance
of ehowera, row In &amp;Oe •.
Friday, ehowera, high In
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PULUNG CONTESTS· Antique lrllctor pulls
are alway• popular with trl-county realdanta.

the imponance or public involvement.
·
"We need businesses, ~rafter.;,
flea market people, churches, food
vendors. and the general public to
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participate," said Weber.
"We need youth to become
"
involved .. 4-H clubs, scout groups,
and church groups," he continued.
11
met
Entenaincrs are needed to perform
during the two days, and anyone .
wantins to participate is asked to con·
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cncoyragang,partaCipalton.
.
. Laft Bll!'r.at 992,6696 or 992-5860.
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"' It ~ ~.~ that the Monster Arrangements have been made to
,.....IJ.olQ.f#t SQI;&amp;... -~ .- ..- . ~;em with.Jeen..age drivers; · he said. --~ ll'iU ..~~~di)'~.and·that have • · ·public ·eddress•·•yste·m· In ·
Aaaoc'"'ecl PI'HI Wrl1er
Rep. Rop. AmstutZ, R· WOoster, 'beside' doing. denidltsttations will operation to announce events as they
occur.
·
CoL"OOUS".::;'r"n·a,ers rn~~ said the bil\ was a cue of the ·state offer' rides to' kids for a small fee.
Again this year the Big Bend
be 'able to hii the road earlier than going beyo'nCI its bounds.
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. To ~mote the event, arrange··~
......
they are ~lo)Ved now, but they would _ . "This bill sets rules and regula- ments were made to secure business Antiques Club will have an equiphave to speild more or that time dri- tions that an; damaging io youngsters sponsor.; for ,IO,OIJ!l Expo '97 place ment display and also an antique tracving with Mom or Dad.
who are lie\ng responsihle," said mats listin~ the schedule of events to tor pull. A Saturday feature will be
ANTIQUE EQUIPMENT· An extenaive display of antique tracHouse lawmakers approVed a bill AmstUtz, who ·added that he favored be used in tri-c~ty area restaurants. games on tractor driving skills.
tors and farm equipment will be on dieplay It 1M Town and Coun•u
Meigs Countians with herbs and
Wednesday that ·would let teens get peru of the wll that force young dri· . It ~~!' . also . decided .to .sec~re 500
try Expo '97, Sept 20 and 21 at the Rock Spring• .Fairgrounds.
.
dried flowers to display, those with
their .Ieamer's permits at age 15112 . vers 10 get tilore experience.
addauonal ~ters for dastnbut!on.
This photo shows a part of what was exhibited at last year's
Continued on paae 3
event.
while also requiring them to spend
Once teens get their learner's perEmphasazcd at the meeung was
more time driving with an adult. · mits, they would have to wait six
Teens now get the pennit when inonths bef'll'e taking their driving
they tum 16. . .
. test. The wwld also have to get 50
. ..,.
· The legislation was designed lO hours of driving experience require more supervised road experi- including JO'hours at night- with a BY CHARLENE ·HOEFUCH
governments.
That would provide the basis for will he gi.ving a conccn on July 10 at '·
cnce for the state's youngest drivers parent or gu)lrdian before gelling a '"--u--· "".
s
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the
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•.._...
The
role
of
Project
Good
START.
development of an economic devel- 6:30 p.m. on· Coun Street. An art · •
because statasttcs ow Yarc more probationarv. license..
M han A
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·
·d
.,.
The
Pomeroy
ere
Is
ssocasaid
Liulc,
is
to
assist
with
fonnin
a
likely to be mvolv m acca ents.
"It!s not ,the age, it's the cxperi·
Pro
~ opment strategic plan for the village, show will he held in the park lhat
.
De
f.
Publ'
ation
will
participat~
in
~CCI
Good
a
commil!ee,
developing
and
proLittle said, adding that a plus of the night also with Becky Anderson in
The Oh10 panmcnt o ,
ac cncc," said ·,Rep. Randy Weston. D- ST.'"'.,..,. (Small "'own Assessment d ·
·
dh ·
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Safety found that drivers 16 to 20 · Morral.
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. ucmg commumty an usmcss sur- contacts is that it tends to bring more charge.
Susan
Clark,
president,
also
residents
into
the
process
·
and
gets
make up 7 percent of all drivers, yet
Probati.or\ary licenses would be and Readiness Techniques), a com- vcys, as well as community leader
·
d
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r
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economic development strate- surveys, assistinooc with publicity and them to think about positive things ·reponed that Jane and Larry Banks • ••
1
they are mvo ve m percent o a
valid un.til age 18, but they could be munity
·
crashes, and make. up I S·percent of revoked after two traffic violations. gl·c p·Janna·ng ini.tiative through the promota'on • compa'la'ng and· analyza'ng that arc happening in the communi· will handle all phases of the duck derby at the Stcmwhecl Festivallhe first ••
all drivers in fatal crashes.
The bill; ,which was approved 71). Corporation For Ohio Appalachian data from the surveys. facilitating ty.
According to the development weekend in October c'xccpt sales.
Development, (COAD).
community meetings, and making
· .. Auto accidents' arc the No. 1 26, also wouJd require that: ..
killers of teen-agers," Rep. Dennis
_ Stud'rint drivers could not
Meetins Wednesday with the recommendations and referrals based specialist, 10 communities will he· Pla.n• were also discussed fi&gt;r the hem ..Pomeroy
merchants
to discuss
tbe on the infmmation in the surveys.
selected to panicipatc in the program festival and antique show to be • "':'
StapIeton told Housc members.
obtain the Ji?""'tionory license if they.
G
·
staged that same weekend.
Stapleton, R-Washington Coun have had ai[y·· -violations in the last program was ary D. Lillie, comThe . survey form s. Lillie ·at no charge.
.
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muniiy
development
s
...
.cialist
for
cxplaa·
ned
would
go
to
every
house
After
a
vme
of
the
Pomeroy
MerThe vandalism to the brackets on · •
House. he Id up newspaper cIappangs {hrcc months,ofthcir Ieamer's pennii. ·
r··
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that ·detailed the sad stories of dead_ Passcingers or drivers under 18 COAD's Ohio Rural Enterprise Pro- hold and would a.&lt;k for a variety of chants to participate in Project Gmld . ihe period lights and the lights on the
START,
Bobi)i
Karr
volunteered
to
trees wa.• discussed. The Association :;;:
ly car accidents involving teen dri- in posses~ion of alcohol Wl)uld ject.
infonnation such as general imprcs,
Little explained that Project Good sions about the community, what they serve as chairman for the. steerin@ V&lt;~ed to donate $50 to match $50 givvers.
receive a six-month suspension of ST."'RT •• offered 'ree 10 selected
ld l'k ·
· h
,.
"That's why thero. is so much con- their licenses.
n
,,
wou · 1 e to sec tn t e way o, new commiucc which wi)J he composed en by Farmers Bank for a reward to ;:':
communities through funding from stores, how they. feel ~bout village of 10-11 people tn include service . anyone providing inliJrmation lead- • •
the Appalachian Regional Commis- services. and what they feel is impor- cluhs, minislcrial associations. and ing to the arrest and conviction &lt;if the • ~
si&lt;!n .. assists communities in their tant about their community a.' .a 'village officials:
vandals.
:"':
crrort to develop, maintain. and. · place to live. He said his agency
Little said it takes ahout two ·
Musser reponed a balance of :
.expand bu.&lt;incss. All segments of the would · prepare the survey forms . months to complete the process nnd $3,874.90 in the treasury not includ- ::-;
community arc: encouraged to partie- "!hich' would then be distributed by suggested that the prnjcct,get under- ing $750 which has bOOn contribufed
ipatc in the process. he said, includ· · community . volunteers one week, way this month.
by Pomeroy village toward the land- ~­
ing businesses, community, business collected the next, and then compiled
In other action, it was announ.:cd scaping project. The bracket con- ·~~
· and development orga•izations. and analy1.cd bY COAD,
that the Oi.J CoriJmunivcrsity Band slruction and banners have not heen
youth groups, schools, and local
paid for, it was reponed.
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· .·a er.s ••'ant.
La m
teens·to spend .more Sun~=~~%"~r ihe commit~ce
· d·..,heel·
:~::~~pr~~~~~: !~:~: =~
tl·me,beh,·n

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Merchants to participate in Project Good Start

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Ground broken .for $13 million correctional. center -:..

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In Lskln, W. Vs.

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By M..DY KEARNS

O¥P·newa mtf

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CHEVROlEI • OlDSMOBilE • lEilUS • I uYD i.a

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FIRE· Fllw.1gltlssa ollw Poms:OJ lild IIJ:IJpllft Wlllln.. , fftdii'Sd.iMIIIIJ-r.nfiJJtoliliiiiOU .. 't
.~c:.~I"OiltiiiJ!I
;: ·In Pot••ov •a unci :10 liiJ morning. No
.... up an•
8nd •1111 on~,......,.. IICIIagll]ble pa
time.

. ·:.eel

of..,_

A ceremonial ground breaking
was held Wednesday for .the $13 mil·
lion women's Lakin Correctional
Center, with Otis 0 . Cox, Jr., Cabinet Sa:retary, Military Affain and
Public Safety, as guest speaker.
€onstruclion of the 240-bed
prison is expected to take approxi·
!"•tely 24 months, with Summer
1999 u the scheduled opening date.
The facility wlll be appro11imately
I00,000 square f~t over 30 tto:rOS. of
land, and will employ &amp;bout as people. All posilioni, except the warden,
will be covered u...- the Division of
Pc:nonnel.
Cox said it is hard to predict the
ruturD. but he can predict crillll! with
atay with us fen-. He atatocl then:
&amp;re no'euy 101wen or IOiutions, and
the JIUWilllllifll prililn populatioa
is Clllllitll new problema. '~We can
build new and blaer prisona. and

know they will he filled," lie said. . community, and you arc very fonuAIDS is a problem with most pris- nate lo have a senator with vision oners, also, hecause many have hecn Qshel Craigo."
IV drug users. Cox said theN is on : . Craigo, who have heen credited
idea that we have·to put people some- with bringing ihe new prison to
place, and we load correctional facil- Mason County, was not only lauded
itics with all those we consider unde- by Cox, but by Master or Ceremonies
sirable, but he added it is not work- Nicholas J. Hun, Commissioner of
in g. The ~loot camp philosophy is not the Division of Corrections, and
working either, Cox stated.
J
local authorities, as well.
What we do need, Cox advisecl. is .
Hun said Craigo is both a states·
hiJh technolol)l, workable policies, man .and leader, leadi~g our state forperhaps charaing a \ISCr fee to ward. "Spmc legislatory arc tough,
inmates and their families. "We must and some legislators are sman. Sen!
w~ to bring about a society where
ator Craigo is both tough and smart .
crimes does not ovenake us," Cox and he is not afraid to use it."
'
sald. He sald that comes through eduSenator Craigo stated there are
cation, alternative programs and stop- women in three different facilities in
ping crime before it starts.
West Virginia at the present time,
"Violence is a symptom of Olher some in coed prisons. He praised
probiCIIIJ ' said Cox, lddin11 the Commissioner Hun . •and said the
btnd lid 'piOIJIIIIS do not work and aroulld breaking would nilt be hap11111 action is nee,ded. "We must plan ~ penina if he 1w1 not ~n open to new
tottay IIIII must have a vision ol ideas and t new locatiOn: .
chaqc. ~is bopnniq in your
~on County Comm1sston Pres-

idcnt Phyllis Anhur welcomed those' '
aucndiilg to the ceremony, saying the •
corrccti&lt;mal center is a positi ve s!cp
forward, as well as a way io ' put - ·
Mason County on the map.
•
· "Mason County is on the move," ~
Anhur stated. She noted that correctional faciiity officials have said they -~
want the center to he "good neigh- ...;.
bor.;" to the county. "We in Mason
County also want to he good neigh- ::::
bors to the correctional facility."
•
Charles Lanham, president of the • ·~
Mason Couniy Economic Develop- : ..
ment Authority, and Jack Fruth, vice
president. made several presenta- ~:;;
tions of paper weights to'commcmo- t
ra~ thC occasion.
,
Among other notables attending ~ ·'
were West Virginia Lonery Director ~
John Musgrave, who was formerly . ~;.
the county economic development • , :
authOrity director; Point Pleasant •.Mayor Russell Holland; Lakin • '•
Caadl!llld CJII .... 3
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�Thu...ay, June 12,1tt7

Commentary

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'EsttJ6Dslid mI!H&amp;
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

614-992·2156 • FIX 992-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

Controller

odttor"""' til,_, /fUll/-.
Son-.
L..:'""::::::':,:or.::•.:;FAX:::,,::to:.;':;.:';:;Uft.Zf=;:,::II1;;.;.
· _________.______

Tile Smllnel _ _ ,.,_to lite
fMd«a·on ol&gt;rood- tlllillpleL
Sllott- (3IIIJ -·or-~-,,.-.,.,_
Tnlod Ill._.,. PfWtod tnd lllltNy,.- EliCit oltoUid- o ~. - - ·
tnd~pf!OM!IIItllbM. ~•-ItliMN'•••n•wtoo,..ot1oo•or-.., tw./1 1o: to lite Edllot; Tile
m Court st, Ponttroy, 011/o

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Budget-balancing whets
appetite for pay increase
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press WrHer
WASHINGTON- OK, we're on our way to balancing the budget. Must
be time for a congressional pay raise.
Rtght. Ntce try. But probably no jackpot.
Ltke mushrooms, hmts of congressional salary increases sprout each year
10 the dark- only to be stomped back down by an outgo10g stampede when
there's a sudden glare of publicity.
House and Senate members, who earn $133,600 annually, pnvately grumble they're pa1d far less than top managers in the private sector- and have
the added burden of hav10g to mainta10 two res1dences And they haven't
had a raise in four years.
Thus, it was hardly a surprise that talk about a pay ratse would surface
wu h lawmakers feeling good about themselves for passing a blueprint for
ach1eving a balanced budget m five years
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, began the charge - but soon found htmself Without any apparent followers.
In an mtcrv.tew puShshed last week 10 the Cap1tol H1ll newspaper Roll
Call, Stevens said he would push for a cost-of-living mcrease for lawmak·

By Morton Kondrec:U
Have congressional Republicans
given up the dream of radical taX
reform? They say no, but their budget deal with President Clinton heads
in the opposite dtreetion.
Aides to House Ways and Means
Chairman Bill Archer, R·Texas, say
that the•r boss remains commilled 10
replacing the income tax With a consumption tax, but the package he 1s
expected to unveil cuts against that
k•nd of reform.
It contains at least two new entitlement add-ons to the existing tax
code -- a $70 bdhon child tax credit
for m•ddle-class famtlies and S35 b•lhon worth of tax breaks to make 11
easier to pay for college. These and
other items in the Archer tax plan also
move m the opposite d"1rection from
the other leadmg GOP tdea for radical reform .. the flat tax proposed by
House Majonty Leader Dick Armey
of Texas, among others.
New deductmns and loopholes
contradict the logic of flat-tax plans,
which would require all persons to
pay the same tax rate regardless of
mcome or mvestment ponfolio
The new GOP package -· also
contammg capital gams tax reduc-

crs.

He suggested stagnant wages were turnmg the Senate mto a club for the
already-wealthy. "Whal it has led to IS the fact that there's probably 70 mtl·
llonaires here and 30 of us who aren't millionaires," he said.
Stevens has long advocated higher congressional salanes. The difference:
thts year he's chairman of the Senate Appropriations Commlllee with greater
clout to do something about 11. .
Pay-raise fever was fueled by 1m11al remarks suggestmg acquiescence
Irom the House Appropriations Commiltee chairman, Rep. Bob LIVIngston,
R-La
But dcnunaiations were rapid - and predictable.
"Now is the last lime Congress should be considering a pay ratse," said
Peter Scpp of the National Taxpayers Un10n. "What CEO would have the
nerve to go to h1s board of dtrectors and say I'll balance the budget m five
years but !PVC me my ra1se now. "
Consumer advocate Ralph Nader and the leaders of seven other mtercst
groups told House and Senate leaders in an open letter "Members of Congress arc paid too much and recetve too many emolumcms from the taxpayers .. One small step towards restoring hum1llty and moral authonly to
our Congress would be to forsake thl!t·mappr'?pnatc pay ra1se."
W1th attention multtplying, the congrcsstonalleadcrshtp dtd a qutck twostep and issued assurances that no such plan for a pay ra•sc thts yellr cxtsts.
" It 's an annual deba1e.lt's not one of the things on the leadership table,"
sa1d Michelle Davis, spokeswoman for House Majority Leader DtckArmey,
R-Texas. ·
John Raffetto, spokesman for the Senate Appropnauons Comminee, said
Stevens had no spec1fic proposal m mmd for a pay increase. "We don't have
a btll. We don't have a 'Dear Colleague' letter," he said.
"He has been a supponer of raises in the past," Raffetto added "It's a
polll1call y dtfficult thing to do. Senator Stevens IS not exempt. But he also
has a reputation for standmg up and takmg tough stands.".
Many memhers thought they'd come up w11h the soluuon to the annual
agony with the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, wh1ch featured an annual costof-hvmg clause to keep their salanes nsing automatically with inflation, along
wnh the rest of the federal work force.
It worked unt1l early 1993 But since then, members for three straight years
have voted to block the increases. The stampede.
LaSt July, the House voted 352-67 to renounce the pay ra1se, adoptmg a
rKH31SC amendme nt by Rep. Jack Metcalf. R-Wash, then a freshman .
Metcalf and Slmllar-mmdcd lawmakers arc hnmg up w11h ra1se-blockmg
measures th1s year.
Freshman Sen. Sam Brownback, R-Kan., plans to ID\roduce a b1llto both
repeal the automatiC cost-of-livmg allowance and reduce member pay by
10 percent. Smcc January. Brown back has been returning I0 percent of his
own pay to the Treasury, said spokesman Bob Murray.
"He knows the climate 1sn't nght for a pay ra1se," Murray sa1d.
Rep J1m Kolbe. R-Artz., cha1rman of the subeomm1ttce w1th JUnsdtc:
11011 over congressional paychecks, mdicated last week that he would do nothing thiS year to block the pay ra1se.
However, a lop Kolbe aide, who ms1stcd upon anonymny. later emphasl7.ed that Kolbe wasn't acuvcly pushing for a pay raise In fact, she smd,
be fully expccu an amendment to be offered to block 11.

Th~,June1~1197

Et&gt;ITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers politics and national affairs
tor The Associated Press.

Berry•s World

cent .. oui" vole. with over 60 percent

of the Francophones votmg to go.
English-speakers from Quebec continue to migrate, dishcancncd hy linguistic nationalism, which can be
both pelly and dracoman. There will
be another referendum w1thtn a couple of years, which may well pass.
Will Quebec split? A big player is
Reform Pany leader, Preston Man-

issue only in the 2000 presidential dential candidates are free to propose
campaign, With nat-taxer Steve exploclin8 the budsct deal, Arch4:r is
Forbes once 11ain cballensina con- unvcilin11 package that shapes lito
ventional GOP polititians.
GOP specifications.
Forbes, competing with 1996
Sources say Archer wdl propose
vice-presidential candidate Jack culling the capital gains rate from 28
Kondracke Kemp for the title of Mr. Supply percent to 21 percent and forgoing
Stder, urged GOP members of Ways indexing, doubling the estate tax
11s -- will sweeten the mcome tax and Means recendy, "Don't be bound exclusion from $600,000 worth of
code and actually make it harder fo~ by self-imposed·lirnits" ·• meaning, property to $1.2 million, and, possithe GOP in coming years to scrap it. the budget deal.
,
bly, lowering the inheritance tax rate
An aide said that "Chairman
His ideas ' included eliminating from its present 44 percent.
Archer wants a consumption tax, but the marriage penalty. doujlling or
Archer's $500-per-child tax
he recognizes reality. As long as you 1riphng the child exemption, killing deduction will be between $20 billion
haye a Democratic pres1dent in the death taxes, and culling the capital and $30 billion more generous than
While House, there's no guarantee of gams tax from 28 to 14 percent and Clinton's proposed $47 btllion over
indexing it for inflation.
an overhaul of the tax system.
five years. It will cover II million
Forbes made no estimate of what more children than Clinton's propos"So for now, he's more mterested
in making first downs than touch- his program would tost .. but then al, including those up to 17 years old
downs, whtch means culling taxes supply-s1ders don't believe tax cuts instead of 12, and families earning up
under the system we've got, and cost revenue, but instead increase it to $175,000 mstead of the $110,000
rewnting the tax code later."
by stimulatmg growth.
in Clinton's plan.
Archer held seven hearings last
Earlier, Kemp wrote to GOP lead·
The GOP will maintain the budget
year to listen to proponents of vari- ers proposing a $350 billion tax cut deal's $35 billion in education tax
ous consumption, sales, value-added, -- "as opposed 1o the $85 billion cut cuts but will alter Clinton's idea of
and flat taxes. He's held one this year. in the budget deal" -- including givmg parents' a chotec of a S1.500
Aides say that tax reform could "ehminatmg capital gains and estate tax credit or a $10,000 deduction to
emerge as a GOP issue in the 1998 taxes altogether. or at a minimum cut- pay college costs.
campaign and, if Republicans expand ting both rates in half and indexing
Instead, the GOP is proposmg to·
their majorities m Congress, get act- them for inflation" and repealing aliow parents to w1thdraw money
ed on in 1999. More hkely, though, 1993 rate increases for the rich.
from IRAs without penalty to pay
radical reform w1ll become a major
While non-office holding presi- educatton expenses and deduct interest payments on college loans.
Archer defended h1s tax bill m the
recent GOP radio response to Clinton
liy saying that it wtll "prov1de lox
relief throughout your life. It will be
a hclpmg hand from the childhood
years to the education years, from the
savings years to the retirement.
years"
Archct's staff also released a chart
defending the budget plan agamst
both hberal cnllcs who say that tax
tuts will explode the deficit after
2002 and against conservatives who
say that it contains no spendmg cuts.
Over a 10-year period, Ulx cuts
Will be 194 percent greater than over
a five-year period, the chart showed,
but spending cuts will grow by 344
percent.
And the total package will produce a "fiscal dividend" of revenue
growth 3.6times greater m 10 years
than in five. So upbeat is Archer's
argument, in fact, that it begs the
question: Who . needs radical tax
reform?
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper .
of Capitol Hill.)
.

Monon

.

'

nmg. Reform won 60 seats this time,
up from 52, captunng second place.
All 11s scats come from Western
Canada

B.en Wattenb~rg
Manmng campaigned on "tough
love" for Quebec. Says Manmn~ :
Stop rewarding cry-baby blackmail
from the Quebecois; stop their special
pnvileges for "a distmct SOCiety"
w1thin Canada; treat all provmccs
equally; 1f Quebec wants to leave -"au revoir." This stick-it-to-'em sentiment had prev•ously bubbled most·
ly beneath the formal pohtical
rhctonc. But Reform's second-place
fimsh makes it the official opposition
party, giVIng Mannmg a bully pulp1L
If he rubs 11 m, he may push Quebec
to leave Canada. AlternatiVely, the
tough-love strategy may inform the
Quebecois that there ts price to pay
for nag. nag, nag.
The ruling L1bcrals claim they arc
the only truly nat1onw1dc party. They
d1d WI~ some seals most everywhere. But66 percent came from the
super-large provmcc of Ontario,
where they won I0 I of I03 ridings.
The Liberals now have 155 scats in
the 301-scat new parliament, a perIlous maJonty, down from 115. They
gnt only 38 percent of the popular
vote.

In ad&lt;llllon, Canada's Atlantic
Man11mc provmccs voted for noncnf-thc-ahnvc. splilling their votes
bet ween two small panics: the sociallSI New Democratic Party and the wet
Progrcss1vc Conservatives

Good or had for America·!
Canada IS a mcc country; we have
a nice border. In a world tull of tribalism and terror, this status quo is
fine. But it's not our call. The Canadians w1ll deal with their own problems.
If Canada sphls up, we should be
wary but not womcd. It's true, fractunng nations can become ugly
places and bad neighbors. Recall that
Americans killed 600.000 other.
Americans in our spasm of regtonal
separatism, the Civil War. Still. it's
remote. No one in Canada wants to
invade Quebec. "Au revoir" is a long
way from "Charge!"
If Quebec secedes, some of the
nine other Canadian provinces may
become American states Secession
could leave the Mantimes geographically Isolated. The provmce of
Alberta might jump. British Columbia would prov1de an American land
bridge bet ween Alaska and the Lower 48 . h all sounds strange. We
remember from our maps and history books where and why Canada 1s.
But we forget that h•story and cartography keep on happemng.
Would this be good for Amertca'!
A country composed of Canada and
the United Slates would be 'the largest
in the world. God ISn 'I making any
more land. If America 1s already the
world's only superpower:· the new
nation &lt;?f strong, free, prosperous
people would be a super-duper-power, sclliflg a global agenda for llhcrty, redounding to the greatpr glory nf
all SO-something statos. (Canadians
are touchy ahoul thi~;:Why n()l call

'

\
\
.\

•'
-·~
··

...

.•~
. .&gt;'f . . .

oullo one another· "Is Tiger on Ill
Which way to 13?"
When they're not sprmting hkc
wildebeasts, they 're wandering
around such things as the "Merchandise Tent," a Wai-Man-sizcd
emponum packed w1th ovc'rpriced
sh1rts, hats, shoes, artwork, photographs, tees, mugs, umbrellas, golf
balls, golf bags, golf books -- everything but golf clubs.
People snatch up this stuff in the
hope they will become mstantly talented. Wo()ds has commilled the
unspeakable crime o( making golf
look easy-- not just the shot-making
but also the travel, speeches, appear·
antes. commercials and press interviews.
He was at his best on Tuesday,
when he stepped into the tournament's press room .. nonnally part of

•

Wednesday's GPLA results

•

ciation:

•
Rain

Fiulllflo

VIa AsSOCf8t8d Prass GraphicsNet

·Today's weather forecast

HOGS: Butc~er hogs, $53-$56;
$42-47; $35-50. Feeder pigs - .$56
and down.
CATILE: Steers, $3, lower;
heifers, $3, lower.
Steers, $62-63.60; $58-$60; $56$58; He1fers, $62-$64; $58-$60

Dates announced
...
asked to contact e1ther Lew1s, 992-

Saturday. .Dry. Lows 50 to 55
Ohio forecast
Tonight.. Showers and thunder· north and 55 to 60 south. Highs lowContinued l'rom page 1
,storms hkely south. Mostly cloudy er 70s northeast and m1d 70s nonhcreative ans to show and share, and
w1th scauered showers and thunder- west and 75 to 80 south.
those who want to demonstrate p1oSunday
...
Dry.
Lows
in
the
50s.
.storms north ... Ciearing nonhwest
Highs lower 70s northeast to near 80 neer skills are encouraged to gel
after midnight. Lows 60 tq 65.
mvolved by the commillee.
friday .. Partly to mostly cloudy far south.
Activities are also to include a flea
Monday .. A chance of showers
with a chance tif showers. Highs 75
market,
a dog show, and a vintage car
and
thunderstorms.
Lows
mid
50s
to
to 80.
show.
60.
High
75
to
80.
Extended forecast
On Sunday mornmg at 10 a.m.
\
there wdl be an open· air worsh1p service on the hill stage.
Spaces for d1splays are being handied by contract this year, so those
interested in reserving space are
70s..
By The Associated Press ,
The record-high temperature for
Ohio will get some more showers
and thunderstorms tonight as warm, this date at the Columbus weather
moist air from the south continues to statiOn was~4 degrees m 1954 while
clash with a cold front, tl)e NatiOnal the record low was 43 in 1980. SunUnits of the Meigs County Emerset tonight
be at 9 p m and sunWeather Serv1ce sa1d.
gency Medical Service recorded five
Some showers will linger in east· rise Friday at 6:02 a.m
calls·for
asststance Wednesday. Units
ern and southern Ohio on Friday Across the nation
responding
included:
Powerful storms rolled across
morning, but the rest of the state wtll
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
have panly cloudy skies, forecasters Kansas and Flonda early today, and
2:33 p.m., South Founh Avenue,
scauered showers hned up along the
said.
Middlepon,
Margaret Ohhnger,
East
Coast
and
from
the
Pacific
The advancing cold front will
Holzer
Medical
Center;
bring cooler and drter au for the Northwest to Iowa.
8:08
p.m.,
Mam
Street, Racine,
weekend. Highs will be mostly in the
Apnl Nichols, HMC, Racine squad
assisted.
continued rrom page 1

2924, for space in one of the buildings, or Watson, 985-4372, for space
outs1de.
Weber said the Expo is designed
to feature the versatility of sk•lls, the
avatlability of p~ucts , and the ere·
alive talents of tri-county res1dents.
He mvited businesses, crafters,
c•vic groups, churches, and clubs, to
be a pan of the event which IS geared
to ~.ntenam. and. educa11on.
Expo 97 " · e~~rythmg good
about where we live, he concluded

Rain to end lnj Friday

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

rill

Ground broken...
'

,•

the new naunn "Canada"?)
Would Canad~an pohucal divorce
stnke a chord 1n Amenca? Aller all.
Amencans also argue about bilm·
gualism, Balkani1a1ion, multtculturahsm and identity politics. We've
llccn on a preference binge. Acuvist
blacks, Latinos, lcmm1s1s and gays
issue stark demands.
But we arc safe. The root of Cana·
da's problem is a thin sense of
national identity. Canadtans oltcn
describe themselves by what they arc
not. (Not Amcncans! NOT!) But
Amcr1ca oo1.cS Identity -- the most
patriotic country in the world, w11h
transnallon!ll public opimon polls to
prove 1l. The rhetoric of America's
multicultural activists is stormy, but
most of their putative constituents
want a bigger share of the incredible
Amcncan enterprise, not separation
And we arc lucky. Our regional
differences are less sharp than they
were. There arc Republicans m the
South, Democrats in New England.
Blacks live most everywhere. So,
increasingly, do Mexican-Americans,
Jews and Asians. There is a large Ita·
lo-Amcrican population in the Southland. Women l1vc everywhere. (Yes!)
In America, identity politics 1s not
regional politics. A sepamtion move- ·
mcnt would have to unscramble an
egg.
Copyrightl997 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenherg, a senior fellow at
the American Enterprise Institute, is
the author of "Value.~ Maner Most"
and is the host of the weekly public
television program "Thmk Tank."

Admmistrator James Burke; Hnuse of
Following the ground breaking, a
Delegates member Kelly Given; sign was unveiled that will be erectMason ·County Commissioner Rick ed on the correctional center s11e.
·Nonhup; State Senator Bob Diumar;
The invocatiOn and benediction
Frank Shumaker with the Regional for the ceremony were given by Rev.
Jail Authonty; Joan Ohl, Department Steven Doney of the Trinity United
of Health and Human Resources;- Methodist Church. The posung and
: Regmnal Jatl Authority Director retiring of the colors were presented
Steve Canterbury; House of Dele- by the Division of Corrections Color
gates member Jerry Kelley; Super- Guard, with Seth A.. Fallon, Star
intcndcnt of Mason County Schools Scout, Troop 259 lcadmg the pledge
Dr. Larry Parsons, and Mason Coon- of allegtance. Singers were Heather
ty Economic Development Director Watson and StephaniC Moore
Tom Way.

.Racine court cases settled

f.Aeetlng to discuss utility Issues set June 19

The Daily Sentinel
tUSP!i 213-MO)

•

Pobll•h&lt;d evay ........... Monday lhr011p
Fnday, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio ~ley Pubh•bina Compony.IO'"""' Co..
Pomeroy. Ohio 4'769, Ph. 992-2156. Secood
cla11s pos!qe pa.d a1 Pomeroy, Ohio "
Member: The Anoc:laced Preu, ud lhe Ohio
Nllwapaper Auoclnrioa
,
..

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Am Ele P~ •.•••••••••••:••••..•.•41'.Akzo ....- ................................63\
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c;tty ~"11··~···········
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Shol1ey'a ...................................&amp;~

-·-·-

Stocll rwports are tiM 10:30
provtdld by Adveat

•·vo'"
·~

Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
processed 20 cases in Mayor's Coun
on Monday evening
Forfeiting bonds were: Patricia
Boyles, Middlepon, $83, consummg
alcohol m a motor veh1clc; Thomas
Anderson, Pomeroy. $63, failure to
yield; Jeffrey Rieger, Point Pleasant.
W.Va., $83, expired registration; Norma Mills, Pomeroy, $83. drivmg
under suspension; $66, s~d; Ralph
Shoemaker, Chesh1re, $69, speed;
Bruce Bower, Lancaster, $66. speed;
Frednck Heldrith, Pomeroy. $63.
failure to yield.
Fined were: Earl Scott McKtnlcy. ,
Middleport, $150 and costs, FRA suspension; Rtcky Qyeen, Pomeroy, $63
and costs, disorderly conduct, $100
and costs, assault, $60 and costs, public intoxication; Donald May.

The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently m
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Roben Buck:
Ferrel Wayne Day, 53. and Mary
Kathleen Moore, 47, both of Rutland;
Steven Lewis Story, 43, Pomeroy,
·and Elizabeth Ann Schaad, 43.
Pomeroy; Jon Travis Mugragc, 20,
Columbus, Ga, and Samantha Dyann
Sisson, 19, Syracuse; Ray Roger
Proffill Jr., 22, and Mary E. Smith.
22, both of Racmc;
Johnnie Glenn Gilland, 18, Meigs
County, and Rebecca Marie Parsons,
21, Columbus; Mallhcw C. Ervm, 24,
and Vinda J. Btggs, 26. both of Long
, Bouom; Ralph Keith Jeffers, 48, and
Valerie Gail Bailey, 39, both of

Hospital news
Velerans M-orilll
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS •
None.
'WEDNE$DAY DISCHARGES •
'Ralph Graves. •

•

•

•

~'*£it($$

costs, operating under suspension;

'"

In adduion to providmg the
llcp.&lt;tlt" B vaccine to all children
horn o~ltcr No vember 22, 1991. the
prnvram. ; long with the Oh10 Depart-

menl of Health IS now offenng the
Hepatitis B vaccme to all eligible II
and 12 year-olds. Eligibility ts contingent on one of three rcqutremenu:
enrollment m the Med1ca1d program,
lackmg any health msurance, or
being an Amencan !nd1an or Alaskan
Na11ve. The vaccine is a three-shot
sencs over a mm1mum of stx months.

The chmc IS provided m cooper·
alloll With the Meigs County Health
Department and McDonald' s of
Pomeroy. Parents should bnng the
child's prcv1ous shot record More
mformatton is avmlable by calling the
(800) 844-2654 or the local health
department at 992-6626

Meigs announcements
•·irst meeting
The Me1gs County Fam•ly and
Children F1rs1 Council wtll hold a
spec tal mcetmg Tuesday, 9 a.m. at the
Meigs County Department of Human
Scrvtccs m Mtddlepon
Waivers needed event
Adult and child volunteers parttc·
tpating in the ninth annual Ohio R.tver Sweep on June 21 need to sign a
wmvcr form Those working at the
Forked Run/Reedsville s11c can
phone Ke11h Wood (985-4400), Tom
Hayman (985-3509) or Ron Epling
(378-6272)
, For volunteers at Racme, Pomeroy
or M1ddlepon, p1ck up forms at
Me1gs County Recycling/Liner Prevention Office on Umon Avenue
near Pomeroy.
Dance set
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will have a dance

Saturday, June 14. from 8 to II p.m.
at the Semor Center in Pomeroy.
H1lben McCombs wtll be the caller.
lc~

cream social pl~nned
The Tnnity Church of Pomeroy
will hac an old fashiOned tee cream
soc tal Saturday, 3 to 6 p.m as pan of
thetr I 50th anmvcrsary celebration.
Homemade icc cream, p1e, cake and
beverages will be served
Hymn sing planned
There w1ll be a hymn smg Saturday at 7 p.m with Eastern Vessels at
the Mt Olive Communny Church,
Long Bonom Lawrence Bush, pastor, mvlles the pubhc.
Board meeting set
The Eastern Local Board of Education will meet at7 p.m Wednesday
at the Tuppers Plams Elementary
School

State Senate .approve$
abstinence, voyeurism bills
COLUMBUS (AP) -The case of
the " peepmg pnncipal " has spurred
the Senate to expand Oh10's
voyeunsm law and increase penal lies
in cases involving minors.
Sponsor Judy Sheerer, D-Shaker
He1ghts, said the bill was a response
to the recent case of a high school
principal who secretly v1deolaped
cheerleaders as they changed clothes
at a beach party at h1s Mentor home.
Walter Conte, 51, was sentenced
last month to SIX months in jail after
pleading no contc.st in April to
charges that he eavesdropped on the
girls' conversatiOns and v1dcotaped
them through a two-way m1rror in his

house. He "was convicted of inter·
ccpuon of oral commumcatmn and
possession of a cnminaltool - both
felonies - and six counts of
voyeurism, a miSdemeanor.
Conte was the pnncipal ol Brush
H1gh School m the Cleveland suburb
ol Lyndhurst when he invited the
cheerleader&lt; 10 a party Sept 3 at hts
house along Lake Enc.
The cheerleaders noticed a red
light m a hathroom m1rror and told
thetr parents. Police found videotaping equipment behind the mirror.
Sheerer's b•ll would make
voyeurism a lelony il the accused
holds a posttmn ol authority

No one hurt in two-vehicle wreck
The Pomeroy Police Department
repons a two-vehicle acc1dent on
Wednesday afternoon, mvolvmg a
United Parcel Service fre1ghttruck .
At 2:35, M1ke Floccan, 74, Mid- .
dlcport, backed into the UPS truck
wh1lc 11 was parked at the Meigs

County Health Department. The
:ruck was driven by Daniel Neff, 47,
Stewart.
L•ght damage was reported to
both the 1997 freight truck and Floccan's 1993 Ford No citations were
ISSUCd.

River Sweep planned for East Meigs

Joshua Dickens, Pomeroy. $63 11nd
costs, opcratmg under suspenston,
costs only. cxp1red tags.

Me•gs County sponsmcn clubs
and other groups arc conductmg a
clean up of the Ohio Rt vcr bank from
the Bcllcvtlle Dam to Portland as part
of the annual June 21 Oh1o River
Sweep.
Participating groups mclude
Letart, W.Va, Chad I;. Taylor. 25, Amcncan Electnc Power, the Corps
and Rebecca D Evans, 26, huth of of Engineers, Mc1gs County IKES.
Syracuse ;
Forked Run Sportsman Club, Meigs
Shawn Brett D1ddlc , 26, ami Amy County F1sh and Game, Tuppers
Beth Harrtsnn, 25, hnth of Syracuse; Plains Boy Scouts and 4-H members
John Ftnlcy McClintock II. 25. Lan- and Olive Township Trustees
caster, and Tara Sue Clark, 26.
The goal, accordmg to site coorLangsville; Steven Priodc Swatzcl. dmator and Mc1gs County Game Pro·
22, and Tura Dawn Walker, 20. hnth . lector Keith Wqod IS to have 100
ol Pomeroy; Chnstnphcr Dale Han- people assisting in the clean up
mg. 28, Rutland. and Mtsty Dawn effort. Participants w1ll meet at 8.30
Frum. 20, Pomeroy
a.m at the Forked Run Ohio River

*I!

**

*

E3J

$

FRI, SAT, SUN
JOHN CUSACK,
DAN AYKROYD IN

Boat Launch ncar Rcedsv1lle.
For more inlormallon, contact
Keith Wood at 985-4400

ROBIN WILUAMS,
BILLY CRYSTAL IN

FTHER'S DAY,.,.

GROSSE POINTE

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
MIKE MEYERS IN

BLANK"
AND
MIRA SORVINO,
USA KUDROW IN

AUSTIN POWERS:
INTERNATIONAL MAN
OF MYSTERY'""

ROMY AND MICHELE'S
HIGH SCHOOL ~EUNION "

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

446-1088

~'*£it I:S !!'. 1$. ~

Opening Soon

•,;~

K·9 DESIGNS

*6!

Boarding • Training • Supplies ,

*

f!1&lt;&amp;

·

ProfadOfllll Pd Grootni.., .~

tf!1 "We treat your bell friend like our best friend" ctll&gt;
f!1 St Rt. 881 ,
Cell for Appolntmentf!l
TUpPers Plaine, Ohio
.
{614) 667-3526 · ~~j

e

&lt;&amp;

....

Pomeroy, $63 and costs. opcratmg
under suspension, Ronmc Johnson.
Ra1cnc, $150 and costs, FRA suspenSion; Mary Cogar. Pomeroy, $5
and costs, illegal parking; Dcmse
Qualls, Middleport. $63 and costs,
failure to comply.
Garold Evans, Thornville, $63
and costs. speed; Lance Pauley, South
Point. $48 and costs, speed; Steven
Vance. Albany, $163 and costs, reckless operatton; Charles Walker. Mtddlcporl, $88 and costs. open contain·
cr, George Baker, Pomcory, $231 and
costs, pcuy thclt; Crystal Gheen,
Racine. $46 and costs, speed, $63 and

The Ohio lJ11ivenity College of
Osteopathic Medicine C~fldhood
Immunization Program (CHIP), a
mobile health program, will provide
free childhood immunizations m
Meigs County next week.
The mob•lc umt will be at R~'s
Country Store in Reedsv1lle from 2to
4 p m. on Thursday, June 19 and from
5 p m tn 7 p.m. at McDonald's m
Pomeroy McDonald's will provide a
free fond coupon to every child
1mmunized dunng the Pomeroy elm-

Couples issued marriage licenses

of

I

RUTLAND
II :06 am., Hysell Run Roaq,
Jess1e Ferrell, HMC;
9: 15 p.nl., Hysell Run Road, Crystal Dexter, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
SALEM TOWNSHIP VFD
2: II a.m , Pri~e-Strong Road,
structure fire at Charles Allman residence, no mJunes reponed, Rutland
VFD and squad asststed.

Pomeroy Court news.

Ltd.........................................19\

ova .......................................H~

Star Bank ...............................42~
Wendy' I ................................ 25\
Worttilngl;on ......................,.1..,_

"

I

The OCC is the state agency representmg residential utility customers
of Ohio's mvestor-owned electric,
natural .gas,. telephone and water
compames. The agency prov1des
informauon to consumers to help
them make informed choices about
utihty services, investigates and
resolves tomplaints against uttlity
•companies, discusses utility-related
concerns in~luding scrvti'C, bill reading and financml assistance options.

Representatives from the Ohio
Consumers' Counsel will discuss
competition in the utility industry and
services offered by the stale agency
at the Meigs County Council on
i:\ging on June 19 in Pomeroy.
, The meeung will hegm at II a.m.
at the Senior Citizens Center.

II)' C1rrttr ., Motor Reutt

the roogh?"
It takes adult folbcBrancc to with·
stand ~uch a siege without breaking
into lauahtcr, bu.t Woods maintained
his composure
It is difficult for mortals to appreciate what Woods has accomplished ·
in hts nine-month pro career. But one
young black man in the room under·
stood completely.
.
David Canncll5tood in the far corncr of the tennis complex, Wearing
khaki pants, basketball shoes, a
Tltleist baseball cap and a black polo
shin bearing the job title: "Security."
He was in chllfllC of auanlink the . :
win?"
larp:, loading-dock-sized door · •
"Tiger, how does i,t feel to be 111 throuah which Woods would make · :
'
. escape.
inspiration to kidS?"
h1s
· ••
"Tiger, did your dad help llllke ·
CtUMII is- a aolfer, one ,._. . •
you tougher?"
· ,
younger tJ.n Woodl.
•
"Tiger, what do you think about

port, spec!!, $54; Delores Lyons,
Racine, speed. $55;
Barbara Johnson, Marion, speed.
$53; Charloue J. Stotts, The Plains,
speed, $53; Allen Pape, Syracuse,
speed, $53; Michael Boulter, Plam·
well, Mich., speed, $63; Agnes Sell·
ers, Portland, speed, $53, Michael
Drumm. Dearborn, M1ch., speed,
$56; David Milliron, Racmc, defective exhaust, $43.

The followin!: cases were resolved
recently in the Racine Mayor's Coun
of Mayor Scoll Hill.
Fined were: Sonja Medley,
Racme, speed, $55; John Morgan,
Sandyville, W.Va., speed. $56; Phillip
'Vc Hovaller, Middlcpon, speed, $56;
1"!eather M. Grimm, Mason, W.Va,
speed. $56; Nancy Prater, Racme,
speed, $43; Dennis Adkins, M1ddle-

;I!OSTMASTERo Selld _ , , ~~ 10
The Dally S&lt;nllnel. II t Court Sl , Pomet'Gy!
Ohio 45769. .
, ·· '
•

an indoor tennis center. He.s'auntercd
in at ease -- wearing a tastefully cOor·
di nated bro'!'n outfit and his ubiquitous Nike baseball cap. He plopped
down on a comfortable red armchair,
crossed his right ankle over his left
knee and sat back. This was his subtle way ' of Jelling journalists know
th,at their audience with him could
'
commence.
Reporters, who like to think of
themselves as savage inqutsitors,
approached Woods like, hiall-school
hoyt conducting an exploratoty Air·
tation with a new date.
'"nger, do yoU think you can

•

COWS Steady, $2 lower, Standard, $38-$42; Ullllty, $JJ.J6,
Holsetm, $56-58.
BULLS: Steady; Butchers, $3K45
FEEDER CATTLE: Steady ,
Steers, $68-78 Heifers, $64-72,
Calves, Steers. $78-87 50; Hctfcrs,
$68-78; Back to the farm babes,$100
and down

Auction results from the June II
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Asso-

•

,.

• IColumbus lao• l

82"

n

•

' died Wednesday, June 11. 1997, at
Lorine H. Harless, 87, Mason, W.Va.,
the Veterans Memorial Hospilal Extended' Care Unit in Pomeroy.
She was born J111. 6, 1910, in Hinton, W.Va., daughter of the late John
W. and Mary Alice Lowe Hedrick.
A fonner hairdresaer, she was a member of the Mason United Methodist
Church, the Mason senior Center and Ordet of the Eastern Star Chapter 157,
Mason.
She is survived by a Son and daughter-in-law, Roy R. and Peggy R. Harless of Columbus; a son, William C. Harless and a daughter, Doris Sayre,
both of Fan Myers, Fla.; a daughter and son-in-law, Kathryn ~nd Willard
Ward of Elizabeth, W.Va.; a brother, Willard Hedrick, and a sister, Clancc
Vest, both of Maxwelton, W.Va.; nine grandchildren and several great-gl"Jndchildren.
·
Serviees will be Friday, I p.m. at Foglesong'Funeral Home, Masun, w1th
Pastor George Weirick officiating. Burial will follow in Graham Cemetery
Friends may call Thursday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

IND.

Tiger Woods has made' gQ~f look easy
By TONY SNOW
Crutors Syndicate
BETHESDA, MD .. Tiger Woods
has transformed golf ullerly, and
there's no beller place to witness the
changes than the stately Congressional Country Club, site of this
week's U.S. Open golf tournament.
In the old days, you had to stop by
the cadd1e shack to see serious concentratiOns of non-Caucasi11ns at a
golf event. The closest the game got
to diversity were lome jovtal Hispanics -- Chi Chi Rodriguez and Lee
Trevino -- or reserved blacks, such as
Charhe Sifford and Lee Elder.
But these days, pro competitions
attract people of all colors and
income brackets. Together, they participate in a group event known as
"Where's Tiger?" You see them
moving in great fast hordes, calling

Larine H. Harless

MICH.

lions and special breaks for reinvestment in small busmess; bigger estate
tax deductions and a lower rate;
expanded iRAs; al)d education tred-

Canadians deal ~th their own problems
By Ben Wattenberg
TORONTO -- And you thought
America had one nice, peaceful
neighbor to our nonh. Wrong How
about THREE, or FOUR" Canada
may be bland, but 11 may be breaking
That's the buzz here after the recent
parliamentary electmns The words
you hear are "reg•onahzatmn," "separation," "splitting apart" and
" Balkantzation."
What you don't hear much about
in Canada, or in America, ts whether
what's gomg on here 1s good or bad
for the Umted States. Relevant or
irrelevant? Funny. Here we arc, two
ne1ghboring transcontinental, democratic, bioceamc nations, and we're
not paymg allention.
Consider the Northern Balkans.
The maJonty (82 percent) of the population of the provmce of Quebec ts
French-speaking ("Francophone" ).
The majomy party is the Bloc QuebecOis (BQ), which seeks to form a
new French-speakmg nation. The
BQ won 44 scats m the new parliament, carrytng 59 percent of the Quebec "ridmgs." The BQ holds no seats
outside of Quebec
In late 1995 a. referendum for
Quehec secess1on drew a 49 4 per-

Free . immunizations
scheduled next week

Ac:cuWeat~ forecast for daytime conditions and hisll temperatures

.

,,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weilth cr
Friay, June 13

Budget plan may end GOP dreams

The. Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•Acrou frOm 1\lppett Plllna Ellmtntlry SchoOl"

lti. ~ 1$ ~

@&gt;

'*' ~ ~t~• ~I$ tli'. ~ --~

Birchfield Funeral Home Is re-opening the
doors to their newly remodeled facility, and Is
ready to serve you. Due to the March flood,
we were unable to provide our service In our
own building. I would like to thank the
families that provided us the opportunity to
serve them while our building was closed •
Please feel free to stop by and see the new
changes.
742-2333
James C. Birchfield

�.

Sport~

The ..Daily Sentinel

•

hge4
June12, 1117

MJ's prime-time
effort leads Bulls
past Jazz 90-88
minutes. That's an amazing elTon."
Jordan said his energy level was
SALT LAKJ' CITY (AP) .Remember, he is Michael Jordan. down all n_ight, and he was on auto!Datic in the final minutes.
The NBA's greatest player has done
"Once I got in the act, I didn't
it again.
have
time to think about it," he said.
Sick in bed all day with a viral'
"II was more or less instincis."
infection, so ill his teammate Scot·
The Jazz, stunned by their first
tie Pippen wondered if he could get
his uniform on.. Jordan took the home loss in 24 games, had no idea
Chicago Bulls to the brink of anoth· Jordan wasn't feeling well.
" I don't lhink he was sick," said
er NBA championship.
"Sometimes you've got to come Bryon Russell, who. lried to guard
Jordan most of the nighl but left him
out an~ do what you've·got to do,"
for a double-team on the crucial
Jordan said. "We wanted it real bad,
three-pointer.
"Did he look sick to
and me as leader had to do my best,
· and hopefully the team would hove you guys'/''
·on the bench, Jordan did. In the
to rally around me."
·
Before the game, he couldn't first half, when he gol a breather,
stand up without being nauseated o( sWeat headed on his head like a
dizzy. But on Wednesday night: Jor- windshield in a rainstorm.
He seemed to pick his spots. He
dan scored 38 poinls, IS in the final
quarter, and led the Bulls to o·90-88 . had just four points in the first quarvictory over Utah, sending the NBA ter as Utah raced to a 13-point lead.
The leadhitl6beforcJordan's 17
Finals back to Chicago. with the
defending champions up 3-2 in the second·quarti:r points brought the
Bulls back.
best-of-seven series.
In the third quarter. Jord~n manThe Bulls can win their lifihNBA
aged
just four points. Then came the
title of the '90s With a victory ut
fourth-quarter
e~:~~ption.
home Friday night. ·
At the start of ihe game. the
"In ·the fourth quarter, I don't
know how I got through that," Jor- BuHs' dynasty seemed on the verge
dan said. "I was just trying to gut of crumbling. Jordan was sick. Dennis Rodman was in trouble wilh lhe
myself through it."
Even when Jordan failed, he NBA front office again, this time for
turned it into success. After he his anti-Mormon comments. And the
missed the go-ahead foul shot with Jazz 'fanatics were loudly anticipatless thlin a minute to go, he scram-. ing crowning a remarkable home
bled for the loqse ball and sank a season with their biggest viclory yet.
The Jazz raced to a 16-pointlead
three-pointer that put the Bulls ahead
for good 88-85 with 25 seconds to early in the second quarter. But they
were under no illusions that the.Bulls
play.
·
Jordan called it his best perfor- · were finished .
"When you gel down like that
mance, considering the degree of dif·
from the start and have any compel·
ficulty.
"I almost played myself into itive spirit in you, you dig in a little
passing out," he said. "I came in and bit deeper and fight a lillie bit ha_rdI was almost dehydrated and it was er," John Stockton said.
No one is more competilive than
all just to win a basketball game."
Pippen, long accustomed to Jor-. Jordan.
"We had made a lot of mistakes,
· dan's achievements, said he'd never
bull didn't have the energy'to yell
seen his teammate so sick.
"And the effort he came out and at people," Jordan said. "I jusI had
e·us was just incredible," Pippen to sit back and wait until our defense
kicked in and for s.ome of the guys
.
efore the game, Chicago coach to get over their nerves and fight our
Phil Jackson worried about how way back into it."
Pippen struggled through a 5-for-·
much Jordan would be able to play.
17
shooting night, but had 17 points
" He said, 'Let me play, and I'll
regulate my minutes and I'll let you - and 10 rebounds. On defense, he
know how I'm doing out there,"' swarnied alJ over the floor, and on
Jackson said, "and he played '44 offense was able 1otake advantage of

••

NL action...
(~tinued

'.

a

....

.

heim and Lot 'Anaelos at Oakland.
While many players and fans are '
looking rorwlrd 10 interleague play, ,;
many others are against it.
.:
"It's changing the tradition of the
game," said Giants second baseman '
1cff Kent. "h's taking a lot away 1
from the game.,..
·
'
By The ~IOClatH p,...
In addition to making history '
San Francisco's next game will be
unlike any in. Giants' history. .Or tonight, the Giants will try to break 1
major league history, for thai malter. a two-game losing streak and hold
lnterleague play starts tonight onto first place in the NL West.
San Francisco's Joss to Florida, :·
with four games, beginning with San
Francisco-Texas at The Ballpark in combined with Colorado's win over •
Atlanta, reduced the. Giants' lead •
Arlinglon.
.
"I! is pn:Uy historic," Giants over the Rockies lo a half game. ·
"We are losing some ugly games, .
manager Dusty Baker said Wednesday nigllt after his team JO.tto Flori- but we are still in first place," Kent •
da 6-3. "I told (starter) Mark Gard- said. "So it's OK to be upset about ',
ner he's going !O go to th~ HalJ of a couple of games." ·
'
Fame tomocrow after that balJ- ·
&lt;;&gt;ne day afler geuing no-hit by
game."
Florida's Kevin Brown, the Giants
The Giants-Rangers game is stranded a season-high' 15 batters
scheduled to .sU!M at 8:3S p.m. EDT. against the Marlins.
Three West Coast interleague games
(See NL on Page S)

Mariners down Blue
Jays 5-1 ; ._ Orioles lose

,.

By

LAUNCHES CL,UTCH TREY - The Chicago Bulla' Michael Jor·
dan launchele three point lhol out of the ..ah of Utatt g1181'd John
Stockton In the laet minute of Geme 5 of the NBA Finale Wednes·
day night In Sah Lake City. The Bulla' 110-88 win gave.the defenll·
lng NBA champions a 3-2 Hries lead. (AP)

Olicago's defense and lheir own
the smaller Jeff Hornacek a few
mistakes.
times on post plays.
All three of .their big offensive
It was the threat of that play that
weapons - Karl Malone, Stockton
freed up Jordan for his big threeand Hornacek - failed to come
pointer.
through. Together, Utah's big thm: .
Toni Kukoc emerged from hiber·
were 2-for-10 from the field in the
nation to make 3-of-4 three-poinlers.
founh quarter.·
Luc Longley had 12 points on 6· for"I don'l practice lying," Malone
7 shooting.
·
.
The precision offense of the Jazz, said. "I'm really heanbrokcn as a
meanwhile, fell apart like a cheap player in a position like this."
Chicago's defense kepi Malone
watch when a victory in the Della
Center, where they had lost only away from the basket. The league's
three times in 51 games; would h,avc .MVP scored a team-high 19 points,
brought them within one win of'the but was just 1-for-6 from the field in
the second half and scored only one
title.
But the Jazz could nol overcome point in the fourth quarter.

RICHARD

ROSENBLATT
AP Sporte Writer
',·
Roger Clemens escaped with a.
no-decision the last time Ken Griffey Jr. came to Toronto. HC:.wasn't so
lucky this time.
Griffey doubled home two runs in
the seventh inning Wednesday and
lhe Seattle Mariners beat the Blue

I

.

AL standings
Ea!lttrn Division

loll

Balti~~K~~r

.w
... .... .... 42

New York .......... ~fl

J. l&lt;l.

I K .7011
.n 1

21
Toronlo ..................2CJ ·' I
Desroil ......... .......... 29 .' 2
Bos.Un .......... ... ,... .. 2~ ~1

. -'H~

..17 ~

.40.1

(Antr•l Di"l~ion
ClEVELAN!&gt;... ... '2 27 . ~42
K&amp;UW&amp;s City ....... :... 2Y n .41 ~
Milwoukee ....... :..... 2M J2 At,7
Chicaan ......... ........ 211 ~4
Milllrwesuta .............. 2K 1'1

.4~2

!ill
7

I1
l.l
1111

~

~

"i

.4-44

'•

-\Nnlt'm J)ivi~ion

Se:tntl: ......... .. . . . ~-l 211 . ..'WI
Anllheim ............ .... :\.\ 211 ~\2
TCI415 ... . .. ..... :n 2'1 .'i2'i
0.1kh•nd ......... .. .2fl .1'J 4!10

I
'J

Ctlilrtl lllwi!tiion
HuuMnn ........ ......... n :n .492
PiU\hurl!h .. ........... ~1 :U .492
S1 l.uuis .. ..... , ... .. ~0 ~J .476
CINCINNATI ....... 2l1 ·J7 .41J
C.:hi~ugo ................. 2.&lt;1i

J91

Wr!ilrm Diwlliion
San 1-"mnd~~.:u ........~~ 2H .:'i56
Culuratlo .. ..............1'1 29 - ~41
J.m 1\ngl.'l~ \ ...........~1 .12 .492
Sau IJicttn .... ..... 2M J'i .444

&lt;Telghedcr 1·)), IO~p. m.

Colorado (Holmes 2- 1) at Sctllle
(I,..Qwe t - I ). 10:05 p.m.

6~

20

Transaction s
I

Baseball

~

61J

.
\
4
7

Wednesday's scoRs
c :lllc~ IJ!I l &lt;:ul'ls :'i. N.Y. M e l ~
( :hl !i f1HJn 11. 1\t J;IOiil ft

4

Hurula (, , S;tn 1-"romc::iM.-.1 ~
M•mtrt:;ll4. l'hihtdcljlbia .~
{:IN( 'INNATI 2. Jlitl shur~h I
I,11 \ An)..telc~ HI. Huustun 'i

'

Anitric•n Le~al'
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Sign&amp;.'il Of

Brett Cariltlonnil, LHP Jim P~ll'qUC. RHP
RockJ Biddle und RHP Ju~ Meyer.
CLEVELAND INDIANS' Rmlku
LHP Brian Andc:l'$0n rrom Buff11lo of 1hc
American A 11~ u c i:uinn . Pr1inn~d RHI'
Dunny Gmve~ 111 BuiTt~ln.
NEW YORK YANKI~:F-"i : Optinrtt."lJ
IF Andy Fflx 111 Columbu~ or tlk.- lntt:rn;~
tional LA:a~uc .
TAMPA BAY l&gt;EVIL RAYS: Sit.~K-'ll
OF Kenny Kelly. LHP Rohl:rl Ouvb. &lt;.:
Tnhy Hnll, C Co trln~ Va7J.(lk'Z 1t1td C llan
Cnr1~:r ,

Sl l .o.tu\ M, San ll~~~~]

Wednesday's scnrts
Scntllc ~." TurnntH I
tktrnit 4, O:ddund 2
Kun~W City 6. Anul~im I
Bnsmn 10. ltullimun: I
N.Y. Ylmkce!i 7. Chil.'ill:'' Wh11r.: Sr ri Ill
CLEVELAND 4. Milwt111kcc 1 r It 1

)9

Los Angeles (N0rpo 6·5) at O.aldnnd

4'1J
6';,

TEXAS RANGERS : SiFoncd kHP

Todd Van Poppc:lm

'l'oniKht's K!IIII&lt;S

lntcl.

AL Ys. Nl.

San

h'nnci~cu

f(ilartfncr f.-2} at

TCIUIS

II lh ~t o.:t 1-71, H:fl.'i jUn.

S;w Otcr.t" fMum1y 1-01m Am1hcim
JII:U'i jl.lll.

1 1 1\' fl ~if! •fl - 21,

:1 minttr- l~::~u~: ~· nn­

·

N~tilunat ~aRUf .

'

'

Jays 5-1, .handing Clemens his first ' .
Jo"ss after he stancd the sea.~on with
II victories.
.
"You know Roger's going to give· ·
everylhing he has on the mound," ·
said Gri !Tey, who hit two homers earlier this season against Clemers; ~
" You know you can't gel behind
because he's going to put you out of .
your misery if you do."
Clemens has made everyone bul
Griffey miserable this season. In his ·•
only no-decision, on April 26, Grif·
fey hit two of his three homers off ·
Clemens in a 13-8 win over the Blue •
. Jays.
"I thought every play that could '
be made.was made," Clemens· said. '
(See AL on PaRe S)

ARIZONA . l)IAMONDIII\CKS .

AL

.,

"

PHILDI;LPHtA PHU.LIIlS: Signcd
RHP l&gt;crck AUalr. SS Brinn Hami1. SS

"

Kevin Kurilla, RHP GeniT Z&lt;~WOIIAiii , C
Jnhnny Estrada. RHP Jt1mc• (ln tllh, SS
Jerr Tcncll. ~8 J:~mc5 McNamara, ()f
Goary Burnh:tnt. RHP 'Dretl Bl11.'k. IDAndrew lluminiqur. RHP Kevin ShiJ11•. C ··~
1117.j1411rkk. SS Urk-1 Cllllillas. RtfP lll•Jl.'f
EIUllO . RHP P~tcr Munddln. IUHI ~8
larM~ Frill: and aMiJfll.-.1 IIL'm 141 Bata111ia
nf1hl: ~w 'tnfk Pt:nri l.4r4ue. Sigetr:d OF
l.&gt;uanc JuhMtHt. LHP Put llri5(nJI, C k..-ry
Vullkl, LHP A.dum Wullu.•r. RHP Ch;kl
hlhuut~h. flHP Murk M~nh.:ck, RH~
Chri~ HumphriL"J, INF' Ln Mnnc~ Cullit.T,
RHP Tum K'1y; L_.,P Jeff Huul~t:llc . C ·

5,111P

Pitao (Mona)'

1 ~ 0~

SiaootJ LHP I.:H Wil!mn unl1 LHI' Jo:ff'

He~d -really love a wir.e leu

Milwauke. (0' Amit:u 2- ~) II l"hh:nltn

"

Cub~

(Mulhollantl ~'il••1:20 r .nl.
N.Y. 't'ankec~ (C\lnt 7-l) 011 Florida
[l.d ... J-1~ 7:0l p.m.
KoMol City IPillllcy 1·4) M PiulbwJ)I
(f. CMIM'a MI. 7:.15 p.m.
ChieiJO White So• ( Al•lftZ 3-t.l Ill
CINCINN~TI &lt;S.:'-k 5-I~ 7 ,.\~ P·"'-

DIIIroit

(OiiYIWI +4)

ar Mnntmd (C.

r..n(&gt;-41. 7:.1J p.m.
Torof!IO (W. WIUiiml 1-6) MPhiladtl[lllio t5chilina ~-~~ 7:)J p.m.
.

Balli""'" ilt&lt;y tO.'I) 01 Aclaooa (Mad4oo 7·21 7:-10p.m.
Bottan (S~p•n 0·0) at N.Y. Meu
( - 4-.1 17:
.m.
.
CLEVEL
D !Colon 1· 21 a1 so.
IAoia (lltooN 4-)), 1.~ p.m.
MI•Maola (Radke 5 · ~)· 11 Hout~on
tWo112•2), B~ p.m.
Saa Fraac:bco (Estel 8-2) 11 Teu1
[HID 4-)~ 1:.\J p....
Soo DleJO (F. v - . 2·1) a Ano-

-t-- '

- ( 0. spriop4-2), ID:OJ p.rn.

20 10

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. San

At Chicago, Scott Servllis scored
the go-ahead run on a wild pileh by
Greg -McMichael with two outs in
the eighth inning as the Cubs stopped ·
el League game In Cincinnati, ·whirs the Reel•
LOSES CONTROL - Clnclmetl btlcketop
a six-game losing streak.
won 2·1. JoM1011 accxed the Plt'lltiH' run on Dele
Joe Oliver Iosee control of the beHball lifter colAfter New York's. John Olerud
Sveum•a alngle. (AP)
.r
liding with the Pittsburgh Plretlla' Mark Johnson
tied it4-4 with a three-run homer in
In the fifth Inning of Wedn11dey night'• Netlon·
the 10p of the eighth, the Cubs came
back.
Servais led off . with a single,
moved up on Rey Sanchez's sacri32), but remain lied for first with ba~k .on May 23, the Reds have gone
fice and took third on a groundout. By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - While Houston. The two-game sweep in 12-6 and cut the deficit to live
But McMichael (3·.5) threw a wild
·.
. · .
Cincinnali was excrucia~ng- Pius- games.
pilch with a 1-2 count on Doug they surprise everyone by hanging burgh blew a five-run lead in the first
When
lhe
Pirates
showed up for
Glanville, aJlowing Servais to score. around first place, the Piusburgh glime and Esteban Loaiza (5-3) gave the series, manager Ray Knight
Pirates are waiting for someone else
·Rockies 9, Braves 6 .
up a pair of runs in the seventh called it important. After Cincinnail
At Denver, Andn:s Galarraga and in the NL 'Central to make a·move .
"We're kind of waiting for a learn inning Wednesday night to waste pulled off its first sweep i&gt;f the seaJeff Reed each hit two-run hoiners as
son, he said the same thing.
another lead.
the Colorado Rockies won consecu, like Cincinnati," manager Gene
"Those were a couple ·Of huge
Joe Oliver's sacrifice fly tied it
tive home games for the first time Lamoni said. "'They've started to and Terry Pendleton's pinch double ball games for us," Knight said.
play. a lot beUer."
since late May.
"Some people scoff, but we could've
Yes, they have, and lhe Pirates - only the sixth hit off Loaiza Galarraga had three hils and
been qjne games back. u·~ been a
knocked ·in the go-ahead run.
increased his RBI101ai to 68, lops in ean lllke some. of the credit. The
long
road, and we slill have a long
"Just like last night, everything
Reds rallied in the seventl\ inning fo~
the majors: Reed had three hits and
way ·to go.
a 2·1 victory Wednesday night and · went their way," l,.oaiza said.
drove in three runs.
·
"We just made a liule statement
do'
seem
to
be
going
bet·
Things
a two-game sweep that made the
we can play with them . They
that
Fred McGriff, Chipper Jones and
major leagues' weakest division even ter for the Reds, who are climbing
dominated
us over there (while winEddie Perez homered for Atlanta.
out of their worst stan in 47 years.
tougher to figure. ·
ning
three
of four in April), but I
Expos 4, Phillies 3
The Pirates have losl their last After falling a season-high 17 games
At
Montreal,
Mark
three games to fall below .500 (31· under .500 (14-31) and nine games think we can play with anybody."
.
.
Grudzielanek's RBI double with two
outS in the eighth gave the Expos
· their sixth straight viclory.
F.P. Sanlangelo singled with one
out in the eighth off Jerry Spradlin
(1-3), and Mike Lansing grounded
in10 a fielder's choice. Grudzielanek
folloWed wilh a liner into the left·
.
Pinch-runner Pat Borders scored
field corner. ·
By KEN BERGER
''With the type of team we 've had
Jim Bullinger (4·5) allowed three
CLEVELAND (AP) -. · Imagine here, you don 't use il," Cleveland on Omar. Vizquel's one-out.- one•
runs and six hits in eight innings.
runnen are at second and third in the manager Mike Hargrove said after strike squeeze lhat eluded the grasp
Ugueth Urbina pitched the ninth for
lith inning, and Alben Belle puis the Indians us~d the squeeze to beat . of Milwaukee reliever Doug Jones.
his lOth save.
ilown a squeeze bunt to ,win the the Milwaukee Brewers 4-3 in II The Brewersclosertriedlobarehand
Cardinals 8, Padres 3
game for the Cleveland Indians.
innings Wednesday night. ·"If you the slow-roller and flip it home, but
At San Diego, Royce Clayton's
Never. ·
do, you ' re not very smart."
couldn't.get a grip on it.
·
bases-loaded triple in the seventh
Eddie Murray? Carlos Baerga?
They were smart this time. Dif"I! was a changeup," Vizquel
broke the game open, Alan Benes
Not a chance.
ferent, but smart.
said. "The first pitch he threw to me
matched his career-high with 11
was a changeup, and he came back
strikeouts and Tony Gwynn had his
&lt;_c_o_n_ti_nu_ed_fi_ro_m_P_a:.ge_4&gt;;__ _ _ _ _ _;,.w_it_h_il_a_g_a_in_.I_i,;.!!_st_g_o_t_m_y_b_a•_o_n_i_t._"
hitting streak ende!l at 20 games .
r The Cardinals had six doubles and
"!.throw mph and the ball is com- 4-0 in the sevenlh. Seattle look a J. hiuing · his 15th home · run in lhe
a lriple in beating the Padres for the
ing back at you at 125 - a blink of 0 lead in the first when Alex fourth.
Royals 6, A1111els 1
fourth time in six games this year. an ·eye."
Rodriguez reached on second base'
Chili
Davis hit his fourth homer
' San Diego has lost nine of its last II
Lifetime, Griffey is . 22-for-53 man Carlos Garcia's error and scored
in live games and had three RB!s lo
home sames.
- {.415 ), with five homers and 12 on Benito Santiago's passed ball.
lead
Kansas City at home.
Before Rodriguez left in the fifth
Dmitri Youn,g. hining only : 1_94
RBis; against Clemens, a three-lime
Davis
doubled in two runs in the
when he pulled a muscle in his left
w1th. ru~ners m sconng _pos1110n
c:y Young winner.
firstand
added
his lOth homer of the
commg m, went 3-for-.5 wrth three
Clemens lost for the first time side, he added an RBI single in the
RB!s. He drove in St. Louis' first two
since a 4-2 defeat to lhe New York founh . Joey Cora added a sacrifice season in the third for lhe 308th of
his career .c.. good for 70th on the
·
runs on a two-out single in the first
Yankees I&amp;St Sept. 28 while with fly in the eighth.
and doubled in the go-ahead run in
Boston.
·
The B.lue Jays scored in the sev- all-lime homer list.
In the last seven games, lhe 37the seventh.
·
JeffFassero (6-2) allowed one run enth on a wild pitch by Fassero.
In Olher AL games, it was: Detroit year,old Davis is 12-for-23 with IS
Dodp!rs 10, Astros S . .
and five' hits over 8 113 innings and
At Los Angeles, Ra~J Mondest hu · lhe top four Blue Jays in the lineup 4, Oakland 2; Kansas City 6, Ana- RB!s.
Jose Rosado (6-3) allowed ooe
two homers and drove m five run.~ as
were a combined 0-for-16 wilh five heim I; Boston I0, Baltimore I; the
run
in·eight innings for the victory.
lhe Dodgers defeated the Houston
strikeouts.
.
· New York Yankees 7, the Chicago
Chuck
Finley (3-5) took the Joss.
As1ros.
· .
"Maybe .1 concentrated a bit more. White Sox S; and Texas 9, MinRed Sox 10, Orioles l
· Mondesi hit a three-run shot m the
because of the pilcher I was throw· nesota 6.
At
Boston, Tom Gordon ('4-6)
Tigers 4, Athletics 2
first off Mike Hampton \2' 5) 'and · .ing against," Passero said. "But it
came
within
one out of his second
· AI Detroit, Curtis Pride's lwo-run
added a two-run blast olf Ramon
sure was nice to get the opportunity
shutout
and
se!!led
for a four-hiller
Garcia· in the sev_enth. Mike Piazza
to pitch against a. guy who's pfayed single capped a three-run eighth as
the Tigen completed a two-game a.~ Boston won for only the third time
hit a. three-run homer for Los Ange14 years and played so well."
in 12 games.
les in the eighth ofTM1ke Magnante.
Clemens fell one victory shy of sweep of Oakland.
Reggie Jefferson matched his
Doug Bnx:ail (1-4) pitched lwo
Houston's Bill Spiers entered the · selling a team record for consecutive
career
high with four hits and drove
game in the fifth inning and walked
wins. He gave up four earned runs in scoreless innings for the win. Todd
in
two
runs as Bo,~ton Jed 8-0 after
in the seventh, re~chm~ base safely seven-plus innings, struck out five Jones pitched the ninth for his eighth
for the 13th stra1ght ume -. one and left with a I .94 ERA, still tops save. Aaron Small (S·2) look the three ·innings.
The Orioles scored witli lwo outs
short of Pedro Guerrero's NLrecord.
in the AL. TIJe Blue Jays averaged Joss.
in
the
ninth on Dave Dellucci 's RBI
But Todd Worrell struck out Spocrs 5.75 runs per· game in Clemens' 12
Oakland's Geronimo Bcrrou single- his first major league hit.
in the ninth to end the streak.
previous stans.
homered for the thirt,l straight game,

Squeeze play pushes Tribe ·
past Brewers 4~3 in 11 frames

.,

NEW YORK Ml:.TS: SiJ.ncd S.~ Ja.
son 81"1!11 unO .18 J1111on Bowring and u•··
' i ~ncd them tu Kin~"pun n( the A1•·
palu~.:hinn Leap. Sig111..'1.1 RHP r.nc Cnntmou:k, RHP Dnvid Lohnnan, RHP JO..:rh
MabL'n)'. OF lnM! Rijo-BcrgL'I utili 3H Ja·
lllln Rnna:h ouklauitv~e..t th..'flll~l Pit11ficld
tlf liM! New York-Penn ~.. ~uc . ·Si,:na.l SS
Bohby Hill, C Brian Jenkins, C (.' hut
l.umhcn. OF N~k Rnin11und 28 Anthuny
Valcntillll! and nuigncd 1hen_1 tn the Ci11U.
Cuallt l..cuplt!.

Ryan Cody. and 18

1995 LINCOLN

Reds get 2-1 win over Pirates,

•·
Aorida ................... J7 26 .'187
Mnmr~:otl.. ..............~~ lK .5:'i6
New Yurk ........... ] ~ 2K .'i'i6
Ptulitdcl('hiot .... ..... 21 41 .:nY

1995 LINCOLN
SIGNATURE, V8,

Cubs 5, Mets 4

Scoreboard
Baseball

from Page 4)

"If you wait for the three-run
homer, it jUit isn't JOinJ10 hlppen,"
Bater laid.
The Marlins scored ,four runs in
the lint innina. includins a thn:e-run
homer by Bobby Bonilla.
, "It W!IS big for us 10 get the four,"
B~lla sajd. "Coming after the nohitter, it was like, 'Are we g!ling to
hit the ball again or what?'"
Elsewhere in the Nalional
League, it was Chicago 5, New York
4; Colotado 9, Atlanta 6; Montrea14,
Philadelphia 3; Los Angeles 10,
Houston .5; and St. Louis 8, San
Diego 3.

will follow at IO:OS p.m. - Colorado a1 Seldtle. San Diego a1 Ana- •

...

The Dally Sentinel • , . 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Giants prepare to play
first interleague ga~e ;

NBA Finals continue

ByBOBBAUM

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:

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�.
Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, June 12, 1m

Honor rolls fOr Meigs Local Schools announced!
•

•

BllADBVRY ELEMENTARY
Billy Fink, Steven Hudlon, Christy McKinney, Jesse Mowery. are,ory cliff, and Maule Rupe.
KINDERGAil'fE:N:
Lyndsey Miller, David Poole, and Whi!ney Musser, Cwandra Patterson, BritGRADE FOUR (EVANS): Renee
Clley, Ruche! DaVJs, J.T. Evans, Smith, al) A's. f.nsela Casci, Cody lilly Payne, Grant Phillips, Mo11an Bailey, Ashley Baylor, Madison
Action FIICCmyer, Amanda Gilkey, Davidson, Briuany Haning, Joey Powell, Jerry Pullins, Brianna Rif- Kina. Adam Snowden, all A's;
Shawn Hawley, Hannah Hoffman, Kimes, Man Landers, Eric Litdc:ton, fie, Travis Roseberry, Amoreue Shane Collins. GRADE FOUR
1iffany Johnson~ Morgan Kennedy, Amanda Schartiger, Dustin Van Salser, Felicia See, Jessica . Sheets, (ROBINSON): Slfah Wilkes, all
Stephanie Lew1s, Ashley Ma~es, . Jnwagen, and Kasey Winter. ·
Molly Smith, Kaylyn · Spradling, A's; Justin Coleman, and Miranda
GRADE • THREE (BEVAN): Steven Stewart, Megan Still, Megu- Simpkins. GRADE FIVE: Chrissy
Andrew · O'Bryant, Jesse Pulhns,
Kerri VanReeth and Christi Will, all Sl!Jilanlha Cole, 'Jamie Ellis, Kayla mi Swann, and Caitlyn Thomas.
Miller, and Pam Rupe, all A's; Tyler
S's.
Fetty, Tara Lee, Me!lhan Leslie, and
GRADE TWO: Zachary Arms, Barnes, Randy Hadson, and MiranGRADE FIVE: Kenny Carsey, Eric VanMeter, all A's; Man Boyd, Meghan Clelland, Randy Collins, da Stewart.
Sheena King, and Ryan Stoban, all Amber Fisher, Laura Hollen, Josh Cecilia Core. Mark Cozart, Ashley GRADE SIX: Brook Bolin·, Mallory
A's; David Boyd, Page Bradbury, Kimes, Kayla McCarthy, Bobby DeMoss, Heather Elam, Nakita Fitz- King, and Allison Williamson, all
Jessica Curfman, Jennifer Dunn, Stone, Tyler Wayland. .
patrick, Kayla Grover, Courtney· · A's: · Kerry Allen, Step~anie ·Barr,
Ryan Frazier, Heidi Gilmore, GRADE THREE (WHITI'): Anna J;laggy, Sarah Jeffers, Dayton Jenk- Ashley Bartrum, Melissa Cn:means,
Jonathan Larkins, Ashley Payne, Hartenbach, Autumn McLaughlin, ins, Glenn Johnson, Rebecca Klein, Hollie Ferrell, Crystal Jacks, Jessica
Erica Poole, Angie Smith, Heather Cory Shea, Nathan Becker, Justin Dustin Lyons, Scotty Musser, Ron Justice, Manhew O'Brien, Jenni
Young, Raymond Hess and Brian Bell , Michael Durst, Sarah Davis, Powell, Dru Reed, Casey Richard- Priddy, Samantha Tilley, and Nicole
Thomas.
'
Brittney Jacks, Amber McKown , · ·son, Nate Riddle, Christopher Runy- Wines.
GRADE SIX: Abr8J!I Sayre and Charissa Stanley, and Melia Whan. on, Ashley Russell, Britnee Sauters,
DH (PRIMARY): Shade Cald·
Emily Story, all A's; Rachel Chap- GRADE FOUR (SEBERT): Katie Brandon Shull, Stephen Will, Wes- well, Bryce Laudenmilt, and David
man, Sara Casto, Carrie Darst, Reed, Anna· Sayre, 'Brooke Venoy, ley Wright, Jerod Wyau, Christeena Young. DH (INTERMEDIATE):
Tirzah Dodson, Casey J:;lunfec, Zach Natasha Wise, Chuckie Davis, Young, and Tiffaney Zornes.
None. LD (PRIMARY): Barbara
Gilkey, Lucy Howenon, Andy Megan Mayes, Michelle Neece ,
GRADBt THREE: Wes Ault , Jones, Mikie Lavender, Christina
Hysell, Brooks Johnson, Kathy Sara Oliver,Jordan Rawson, ·Luke Bryce Davis, Weston Fife, Heidi Pauley, and · Emily Pickens; LDJones, Will Kauff, Brandy Shea, Roush, Cassie Windsor, and Mike Grirtith, Justin Holley, Cody Hysell, · lnterm~iate : Rebecca Houser, AliStephanie Story-Schwab, Jimmy Stewart.
Amanda Jeffers, Nathan Jeffers, Jil- . cia Pickens, and Carrie Walker.
Smith, Angel Stone, Hannah
GRADE FOUR (ZURCHER) : ian Jenkins, Jacob Kennedy, Joshua
Woolard and Beth Wilfong.
Sarah Bush. Ashley Litchfield, Car- Kennedy, Lacey Kennedy, Jasmine
SALISBURY ELEMENTARY
MIDDLEPORT ELEMENTARY rie Michael, Kasi Smith, Daniel Parkinson, Adam Pines, Brandi
GRADE ONE: Amy Barr, Jared
TUESDAY KINDERGARTEN: Thornton, Megan Tibbetts. and Chet · Reeves, Jordan Shank, Abby Stew- Griggs, Kirk Legar, and ·Tn:nton
Kevin Laudermilt, Jessica Might, Wigal, All A's; Terry Bell, Lee an, Whitney Thoene, Jacob Venoy, McClintock, all A's: Kyle Boggs,
Hailey Ebersbach. Ryan Beegle, Bryan , Brandon Carpenter, Lisa Joshua Venoy, Alison Woods, Laura Fields, Heather Graham,
Tess Thomas, Megan.' Bush. Willie Gheen, Man Holley, and Amber Miranda Young
·
Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee ,Kennedy,
Barcus. Zachary Schwab, Ashley Shane. GRADE SIX: Andrea BurGRADE FOUR: Alisha Crc- Daniel Lawson, Michelle ScarMcHenry, Amber Hockman, Lian delle, Kayte Davis, Maria Drenner, means, Brittany Cremeans, Shawn brough, Joseph Scheimann, and
Hoffm~n. Breanne Patterson. Aman- Michelle Drcnner, Amanda Fetty, Day, Jason DeMoss, Justin DeMoss, Valerie Scheoppner; GRADE TWO:
da Goode, Caleb Bevan, ~icki Candice Fetty, Robyn Freeman, Trevor Depoy, Justine Dowler, Shauna Clark, Andy Games, Andy
Smith Megan Smith, Ben Jacks, Kyle Hannan, Heather Hysell, Katie Eddie Fife, Eric Fitzpatrick, Cory McAngus , Brandon
Pearson,
Rebae Richmond. and Jonathan .Jeffers, Brandon Ramsburg, Jeremy Freeman, Brandon Grover, Jesse Bradley Ramsburg, and Jennifer
Hodge.
Roush, Michele Runyon, Ben See, Haggy, Matt Krawsczyn, Maggie Smith; GRADE THREE: Travis
KINDERGARTEN:
Robert Jennifer Zielinski .
·
Molden, Jeremiah Parkinson, Amber Butcher, Cody Huddy, Matthew
Grover, Chelsea Davis, Laura.
M.H. CLASS: Gene Buckley, Pierce, Regan Shuler, ;lach Shuler, Meadows, Brooke O'Bryant, nnd
Gheen, Jared McKinney Seth Perry, Joauana Fetty, Katie Kibble, Jamie Clare SisSOf\, Diedra Strong, Antho- Christopher VanReeth; GRADE
Roben Shane, Damian Wise, Corey King, Randall Mahon, and Ruth ny Tennant, Mike VanSickle, Jenni FOUR: Nathan Brickles, . Nikki
Fink, Chassidy Wills, Nikki Law- Snyder. L.D. CLASS: Grace Barrett Young, Jilli Young, and Willie Butcher and Tia Pratt: GRADE SIX :
son, Jennifer Fife, Nicole Haley, and Erick Sydenstricker,
Zahran.
Jon Halar and Jen!)ife.r Walker, all
Cyndi Kauff, Chris Kimes, and
POMEROY ELEMENTARY
GRADE FIVE: Kara Buffington, A's: Marc Barr, Jonathan Diddle,
Courtney Mayes.
.
KINDE!!-GARTE~: Chad BohNicoleBurman, Jaynee Davis, Ryan Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin, Ashley
GRADE ONE · (ASHLEY): nett, Virginia Brickles, Deanna Cun- Hannan, Nicole Harper, Cunis Jew- Fields, Meghan Haynes, and Jason
Austin Dunfee, Ashley Littleton, diff, Ryan Cunis, Shane Da_v, Henry ell, Rosemarv Lacv, Aira Little, · Roster. ·
·
I,esley Preece, Alexa Venoy, Patti Doerfer, Daniel duPiantier, Emily Xantha Smith, Brandi Thomas, Jor·
Vining, all A's: Katie Evans, Kayla Fields, Lucreshia Howard, Sarah dan Williams, and Angela Wilson.
SALEM CENTER
Jacks, Caitlin Leslie; Tyler Little, Hubbard, · Doug Jenkms, Jessica Rt.JTI.AND ELEMENTARY
ELEMENTARY
Rebecca Oliver, Tiffany Simpson, Jewell, Thomas Klein, Ricky LaudGRADE ONE: Jacob Barnes,
GRADE ONE: Natane Adams,
·Casey Smith, and Lacey Stoban. ermil!, Branigan Long, Aaron Emily' Davis, Katie Doczi, Bethany Ryan Barrett, Corinna Cross, DonGRADE ONE (BRAUER): Joshua Oliphant, Alexandria Patterson, Erin Gibbs, Seth Johnson, Kori Priddy, aid Neal, Savannaha Rife, and Jamie
Eakins, Chris Goode, Sarah Hollen, Perkins, Billy Ramsey, Calee and Cassady Willf&lt;ird, all A's; Brit- Stites; All A's; Dusty Adkins, Joshua
Brenna Mitchell, Tn:vor Nichols, Reeves, Randall Reeves, Bridgette tany Harrison, Lindsey Houser, Burnem, . David Davis, Nathaniel
Doug Noel, Jessica Smith, Frankie Russell, Kelsey Sauters, Devan Jesse Mullins, Joshua Starcher, and Davis, and Lance White: GRADE
Stewart, and Katie Patterson, all A's; Soulsby, Caitlin Swartz, and Matt Keith Williams. GRADE TWO: · TWO: Anthony Davis, Cain Me KinBeth Cremeans, Kayla Gheen, Will.
·
Andrea Banrum, Keilah Jacks, · ney, Samantha Shontz, and James
Natasba Knapp, and Lisa Tiemeyer.
GRADE ONE: John Baker, Bethany King, and Joshua Taylor, all . Wallace, all A's; Terry Li$hl, Brandy
GRADE TWO.(CfiiLDS): Sarah Michael Ball, Georgeua Brickles, A's: Alisha Compson, Nikkie Nottingham, Raymond . Reynolds:
Engle, Beth Hysell, Jenny . Kuhn, Erika Bush. Kyle Crislip, Travis · Ginther, Amanda Miller, and Mor- GRADE THREE: .Zachary Weber,
Erinne Kennedy, all A's; Chalsie Eblin, Kelsey Fife, Chelsea Hicks, gan Wolfe.
GRADE TJ"IREE: all A's, Kelly Napper. GRA&lt;.DE
Manley, Danielle Phillips, .Katie Danielle Hopper, Casey Hubbard, Adam Humphreys, Sarah Dawn FOUR: . Jeffrey 'Baughman,, Randy
Rodehaver, Michelle Weaver, Cassi Briuany Jeffers, Whiuney Johnson , . Jenkins, all A's; Josh Bolin Valerie Han, Aaron Ihle, all A's; Zachary
Whaq, Chellsie Riggs• GRADE Bradley Jones, Jessica Lilley, Drew Diddle, Carita Gardner,, .Tyson Bush, Af!!ber Handley, Kayl' ~llf
TWO(LOGAN): Valerie Carpenter, 'Long, Kenny Lunsford, Lindsay George, Taryn Lentes, Vind'a Ral- ·hower; .GI'ena Jarvis, Samanil\3

Second birthday ma'rked
.
'

Amber Dawn Laudermilt celebrated her second binhday recently
at the home of her parents, Don and
Jennifer King Laudcrmilt, New
Lima Road, Harrisonville.
·
Attending hesides her parents
were her sisters, Jamie and JoAnna,
·her paternal grandparents, Donnie
and Donna Laudcrmilt of Middlepan: her maternal grandmother.
Joan King , Rutland; . Julie King,
Shawn Reeves, and · Dave Reeves,
Jake and Matt Older, Pageville, and
Jack King, Jr., Harrisonville.
Cake, ice cream and chips were
served. Gifts were presented to
Amber, who is also the granddaughter of the late Jack King, Sr.

'J'he Ru11aors Are

ER

•

Klein, Aaron Krautler, And~nj
Kraw~zyn, Michael Lambert, Car-,.
Jouna Bowetsock. Rosie Ea,ers. ric Liahtfoot Beth McMillan, Car-•
Aubrie Kobcc, Brittany Powers, Jes- son Midkiff, Dcn:k Miller, Bea
sica Smith; GRADE SIX: Lindsay gan, Trint Noltn, Melissa Pauley,:
Bolin, Kelly Johnston, All A's; Ash- Chris Pic~ens, Jessica Poweli,.Shin-:
. ley Colwell and Krista! iohnson.
non Price, Jus.tin Robson, Brad:
. HARRISONVILLE
Searls, Adam Shank, Brooke Smith.•
ELEMENTA~
Albert Steams, Tricia Walker, Cbns:
GRADE ONE: Talisha Bchal. Ward, Stephanie Wigal.
· ~
Chelsey Noel, Carrie Phelps. BritMEIGS HIGH SCHOOL • '
tany Preast, Daniel Runyon, KayGRADE NINE: Kyle Smiddie,•
lene Slater, Ashley Wervey, Hannah Jere'miah Smith, Joshua Sort~Fn. :
Williams, all A's; Jonathan ·Black, · Wesley Thoene, All A's; Keith Bar-;
. Cory Gates, Nicole Hill, Samantha rett, Steve Beha, Stacey · Brewer,•
Hivley, Cindy Lambert, Janetta Beverly Burdette, Melissa Davis,:
Stover, Anthony Wervey, Cory Wit- Amber Giordano. Marjorie Halar,:
son; GRADE TWO: Daniel Book- Wesley Harris, Michelle Kennedy,::
man, Ashley Brownin~. Heather Amanda Miller, Amher Perkins, Jen-:
Kerns, Sarah Lantz, Cayla Mell, nifcr Shrimplin, Julie Spaun, Daisr.,
Sean Phelps, Celeste Taylor, all A's; Spears, James Stanley, Lori Thomp..,
April Butcher, Cory Dill, Lucas son, and Amanda Upton.
· • ~
Fackler, Amber Haning; AJ Haning,
GRADE 10: Lacy Ban~s. Trioiai:
Cayla ·Lee, Jonathan Preast: and Davis, Melissa Holnan, Justin Jef-i:
Joshua Williams.
fers. Becky Johnson, Tamra 0'~11,:;
GRADE THREE: Miranda Beha Rebekah Smith, and Bridget Vaugh-:
and Rachel Gardner, all A's: Joshua an, all A's; Vanessa Blevins, Kristen"
Spires, William Taylo~: Kay leigh Brown, Melissa Darnell, Jason HarWard; GRADE FOUR: Pcll!!lY [lull, ris , Jessica Johnson, Kristina':
all A's: Jodi Donll\Jue, Nikki Kennedy, T.J. King, Kelli Lightfoot.~
Mitchell, Carl Noel, Brad Runyon. Alyson Patterson, Franq&gt; Romu~o ~
Lindsey White, Jcnna Wilt; GRADE Tiffany ~avage, Brandy Snider ~
HVE: Maegan Dodson, all A's: Georgiana Spears, Jeremy Thomas;:
Kevin Butcher, Jason Drumm, Jesse Clayton Tromm, and Jonathari:
Oates, Sarah Lee, Holley Williams: Wyatl.
:•
GRADE SIX: Ben Bookman, WesGRADE II : Michelle Bissell;:
ley Call, Jessica King, ·Christopher Michael Leifheit, Nancy . Whaley,~
. McDaniel, and Jessica Preast.
Matt Williams. and Sandra Young'
all A's; Melissa Barrett, Jerico Clatk,'f
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH .
Eli Cline, Leanna Davis, Jenny Du(l:!
GRADE SEVEN: Carrie Abbott,. can, Crystal Eblin, Elizabeth Farley,•
Joelinc Allen, Andrew Baker, Lana Emily Fowler, Jeffrey Fowler::
Barnett, Danny Buffington, Jessica Danielle Grucse.r, Conncy · Haley;:
Cundiff, Zach Davis, Dclana Tasha Jude, Mall Sellers, Wen&lt;:l~
Eichinger, Zack Glaze, Tasha Green . Shrimplin , Amanda Smith, Am~:
1iffany Hall, Erin Hanson, Ashley Smith, Jonathan Stewart, Andre\Y.i:
Hoschar, Caleb Jones, Jonathan Lee, Vance, Melissa Williams, and Bri~q~
1osh Lynch, Antoinette McClintic, Youn~ .
·
:
Nick McLaughlin, Monica Moon,
GRADE 12: Sherry Burke, Amy:
Mindy O'Dell, Crystal Pennington, Clonch, Betsy Houdashelt, Libent .
Autumn Phillips, Rristy Puckett, King, Erin Krawsczyn, Leslie Park-•
Misty Puckett, Jenntfcr .Reeves; er, Robert Qualls, Stacie Reed, Ash-,$
Melissa Richmond, Michelle Riffle. Icy Roach, Cynthia Sandy, JodiC'1
Leslie Runyon, Joseph Rupe, Jody Sisson, Zinnia Spears.- and Beverly,;
Saxon, Budd Smith, Rcbl;cca Smith, Stewart, all A's: Scott Authcrson.~
Amber Snowden, Allison Story, Heather Barney, Lillian Barriha;
· Daisy White, Brittany Williams, · Angel Caner, E~a Crabtree, Brooke: .
Matt Williamson, Tara Wyau.
Dailey, Paul Epperson, Jennifer '
GRADE EIGHT: Cara Ash, Cba- Carey, Aaron Hockman, Ricky;:
sidi Biggs, Joey Blazer, Derrick Hoover, Joshua Howard, Eddi How-:
Bolin, Jennifer Bricklcs, Reatha cry. Robyn Hunt, Aimee Kloes:
Bush, Marianne Carsey, Kendra Chris Lambert, Shawn Leach,;.
Cleland, Sarah Clifford, Andrew Timmy Lewis, Kellic Maurer, Jessi- :
Davis, Michael Day. Tiffany Day, ca · McElroy, . Teresa McGrath. :
Chris Dodson, Jennifer Fife, Hollie Heather McLain, Brandi Meadows, ·
Griffith, ..Michacl H;)mmon , •Ashley Michelle .Miller, ..Patrick , Mullen:
Hannahs,' Holly Hannan, Abby Har- Christopher Roush, A,mbcr Slaven,
ris. Erin Harris, Alison Hays, Sarah Jennifer Smallwood, Chandler Watfiousc;r, , D~rck · Johnso?, ~uliq son, Ricky ~os(a.l)d Debra Zoigler.
Kennedy, Grace Kitchen, Brian
Pien:e, Kim Reynoids. Curtis Vari-

u; GRADE FIVE: Jlllh Ray. all A's,

Mor-:

True.t~·•.

BING D

·GO!

I'DIIi;IS CLOSI G
I,.S DOORS .. PEl
I!

I

WAREHOUSES ARE PRACTICALLY EMPTY.
OUR FLOORS ARE BUL-I"G WITH UMAINING
""-----News policy·,.--- - - MERCHANDISE·••• PRICED,TO GOI . ~·
AMBER LAUDERMILT

In. an effort to provide, our rcad~rship with current news, the Sunday
limes-Sentinel will not accept wc!ldings after 60 days from the date of the
event.
Weddings submitted after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune..
.
· All cluh meetings and other news an ides in the· society section must be
suhmittcd within 60 days of occurrence.
All hinhdays must he submitted within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material suhmitted for publication is subject to editing.

Are you 55
or older ·
and
Looking
for a Job?
De Callfa·Htf«s JtPA pi'HI'flm

, ........u:

!

EVERYTHING SOLD •AS·IS" .
CASH &amp; CARRY, DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Thunldly,June12,1897

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Time out for Useful tips on sewing procedures
By BECKY BAER
entin: se11111 open.
fabric aboutl/4-inch below the zipper stop. Pivot again, scam. Stitch that many mon: stitches, then pivot again&gt;
llelga County ENnllon
On a flat surface such as an ironiag board, place the and proceed with the hand basting up the other side to This will assure you that the stitching is the same dis. Femlly end. Coneumer 8cllnoniCotnmunlty zipper face down over the seam allowance for the the top. Remove pins.
tance on each side of the center. Pro-

._,nt ,

Development
IDIIChine basting. The lop of the zipper tape should be
Replace the sewing machine's presser foot with a zipDo you 'lew? Do you enjoy putting in zippers? Many even with the raw edge of the fabric. Pin the zipper in per foot. With the fabric right side up, begin stitching on
people feel that it is the hardest sewing function to per- place, centering the teeth of the zipper directly oyer the the upper left side of the zipper. Try to keep stitching
form, but it can be one of the easiest. Hen: is all you do basted seam. Pin frequently throu&amp;h all thicknesses.
114-inch from center of machine-basted seam. Go slowto apply a centered back zipper:
After that has been completed, hand baste through all ly to keep stitching straight. At the bottom of the left side
First pin and stitch the back seam from the symbol thicknesses around the zipper, starting at the top. (You · when you n:ach your hand basting that' goes across,
repn:senting the bouom of the zipper to the bottom of should be looking at the wrong side of the fabric and zip- pivot, To pivot, you place the sewing machine needle in·
the seam. (Backstitch to secure the beginning and end of per.) Keep the basting close to the center of the zipper the fabric, raise the zipper foot, tum the fabric one quar- ·
. the seam.) Nexf pin and machine baste from that same tape. When you reach the bottom of the first side of the ter tum, then lower the zipper foot. Tum the hand wheel
symbol to the top of the seam, leaving the basting zipper, pivot the stitching across the bouom, making to slowly stitch across the bouom. Count the number of
threads long (do not cut close to stitching). Press the sure the basting stiich shows on the right side of your stitches from the pivot point to the center of the basted

----...----Community
. The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non.profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and speeial events. The
calendar is not. designed to promote sales or fund ralsen of any
•~pe. Items are printed as spac:e
:pennlts and cannot be guaranteed
:to ·run a specific number of days.

EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Athletic
Boosters, 1 p.m. ThurSday, at the
high school.
. TUPPERS PLAINS -- VFW Post
9053 meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments at6:30 p.m.

: THU~DAY

• Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
•ThurSday, 8 p.m. Work in the F.C.
:Degree. Refreshments.

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYf ·
REFRIGEUTORS '
UNGES
WASHERS
DRYERS
HUGE DISCOUNTS

TV'S •ll'!-TO liG SCREEI
ZENITH, MAGIIVOI
'\

FRIDAY .
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows FelloWship, Ponderosa, Gallipolis; II
a.m. friday.
SATURDAY
Eastern OAPSE 448, picnic,

POMEROY -- Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter DAR, to meet at9:45 ·

The 63rd anniversary· of Chester
Council No. 323, Daughters o(
America, was observed when members met recently at the hall .
Esther Smith, councilor, presided
with Zelda Weber being recognized
·as a charter member. Other charter
:mernbers not present were Ada Mor-.
:ris and Elizabeth Hayes. .
·
. The flag bearers esconed Zelda
·Weber to the front of the hall where
::she was seated. The Charter was
·:placed on an easel. As each chaner

member was named, Mary K. Holter
placed a flower on the chaner for
Mrs. Weber, Opal HoiJon for Ada
Holter and· Esther Smith for her
mother, Elizabeth Hayes.
Goldie 'Frederick read . "Daughters of America An:."
Mary Joe Barringer n:ad a page
. of what Ada Morris had written
years ago about when the lodge was
organized in 1934. Mrs. Morris was
the organiier. Helen Wolf, at the
piano, sang "How Great Thou An."

TABLE

Y2·PRICI,·

.. Jeff and Peggy Bole entertained
·:with a farewell party for the foreign
' ·'exchange .student, Sascha Sperling,
·:who has resided with them for sev::eral months. He flew to New York'to
.-;meet his mother to do some sight.- 'Seeing before leaving for their home
·:in Germany.
. :: Mr. and Mrs. Dan Arnold, Mr.
~'and Mrs. Bobby Arnold and Sherry
Arnold Shamblin visited the Walter
Edmonds family in Duncanville,
Te!'~S. h !1~8~ Dallas, where they.
attended a family reunion.
· Mrs. Louise Eshelman and son
visited her daugljter, Nancy 'Price
and family in Otway, and attended
the graduation of her granddaughter,
Sara Gilkey, in Lucasville. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole have
returned home after visiting friends
in Winston/Salem, N.C.
John and Linda Hysell of Evansville, Ind., are spending a week vis- .
iting his mother, Margaret Hysell;
and sisters, Lena Napper and Bonnie

Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. David Napper
recently spent a day at' the home of
their daughter, Julie Stanley ·and
family in Norwich.
Ed Chapman of Syracuse visited
Louise Eshelman; who is recovering
from a Marc.h stroke.
Lorene. Scott and son, .George,
Nelsonville, and Geraldine Ross,
On a, W.Va.•. ¥/ere n:cent •visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley. ·

Correction
ConneyHal~y

is the delegate and
. Racliel Ashley, the alternate, to
Buckeye Girls State which will be
held at Bowling Green University,
June 21-28.
Haley is being sponsored by the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Ameri~a~ Leg~on, and the Farmers
Bank. She is the daughter of Vicki
and Robert Hl!fey of Pomeroy.
Rachel is the daughter of Keith
and Rachel Ashley, Pomeroy. ·

TWIN, FULL, QUEEN
AND lUNG BEDDING
.~
-AVAILABLE

Da~'sDa'

''This

Sunda~
'

.

•Belts
•Shirts
•Work Boots
•Caps
The Place for Work
A .Western

·"

FR·P·Y 4ND S~TU~DiY · ;' . ·
.JUNE
13TH &amp; 14TH
~·
.
.

•Men's &amp; Ladi,s Rings &amp; Wat(hes
•Earrings, Charm.s, Bracelets
•Bia(k
Gold Items

~p,llanc••
.• ,.. the Pkbres
'

•AIHI8mlnll include
qgtlllone for lnlnlng or
~ lldlll for

1997 CHEY. C1500 WT PU
air, sliding rear window, 5 speed .
•t11\ · MSRP $18,085

5 speed;cass., air, ext.
appearance pkg.
MSRP $13,4112
: Don rite sate Prlct '12,466

tl\1997 CIEY. S·1 0 PICKUP

ta£111 1997 tlq MOlD
5 speed.
SAVEl
MSRP $1,1120

'

MSRP

MIDDLEPORT STORE .ONLY
,

'.
'

r.

.91 MILL ST..

!fine J~wefry
MIDDLEPORT

r ·

. (
..:o,_-

' \. '

'

-~~~ 1997 CHEVY iLAZER .

'""'

Don Tate Sale Price

,...;...-.:...._...,;;;~1996

PONTIAC
SUNFIRE GT

· a£1111997 CIEY.IIiALIIU
Auto., bucketS, PW, PL,
air, cassette.
MSRP $17,091

Loaded, s apeed,
.black ext.
MSRP
. $18,480

~n Tat. Ball PriCI '15;999 .

2 Dr.. V6.llll, cruise, locking dlff.• elec.
transfer case, more.
·

MSRP $23,705
Don Tate ·Sate Price '22

,,.

' f
/

I

••

481

•ti\1997 CNEV. Cl$00 ED.
CAl PICKUP
· 350 VB. auto., cass, keyless entry, PL, ·
PW, Silverado MSRP $24,175

•

1997 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
Auto., V 6, cruise, air, cass.,
more. The Legend
liiSRP $111,425

1997 CHEVY
VENIURE VAN

Don Tall Bale Price '17,829

lll'll1f97 CIEY. LUMINA LS
Auto., VI, po.,..er seat,
keyless entry"
MSRP $21,280

1996 lUlCK ROADIWTER

4X4, convertible, air, 5 speed, cass.
MSRP $16,829

va, 15" alum. wheele, all power, CD

DON TATE SALE PRICE '28,....

MSRP $28,885

'1

Don Tate Sale Price

•1

1996 OLDS ACHIEVA
Auto., air, etereo, PW, PL, tilt, crul11.

10,999•

8
.

.

1995 CHEVY LUMINA VAN va, auto., air, PW, stereo, crulse ................................:..........................................$14,795
1996 CHEVY S-10 EXT. CAB 5 speed, air, stereo ............................................................................................ ~.$11 ,629
1998 FORD RANGER XLT 5 speed, ·air, stereo, -:nore............................................................................~ ............ $8,929
1995 CHEVY SUBURBAN VS, auto., air, loaded, leather.......................,...............:..........................................$26,959 ·
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP va, au,o., air, stereo, crulse ................................................................................ $14,995
1995 JEEP CHEROKEE V8, auto., air, stereo, cruise, 4X4.......................................................................;....... $15,959
11M CHEVY 5~1 0 BLAZER V&amp;, PW, air, autO., cruise .............................................~ ........................................ $18,995
1995 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP LS PKG. Auto., air, tilt, cruise ............................................................................... $10,329
1996 CHEVY TAHOE va, auto., air, PW, PL, cruise, CD player ........................................................................ $23,900
1992 CHEVY LUMiNA EURO V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, stereo........;................:.................................................$5,995
1889 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE VS, auto., alr,·leather, loaded ......................................................;...............$8,195
1995 CHEVY MONTE CARLO va, auto., air, stereo, tilt, cruise, green ........................................................... $13,929
1H4 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V8, auto., air, stereo,tllt, crulse ..................................................................$11 ,995
1115 CHEVY MONTE CARLO Grean/gray, V6, loaded ......................................................................................$11 ,995
1981 PONnAC SUNFIRE Air, stereo, !5 speed, whlte .......................................................................................... $9,969
1995 PONTIAC FIREBIRD Auto., air, •tereo, PW, PL, tilt, crulse ................................................., ...................$12,929
1995 FORD MUSTANG Auto.,·air, stereo, tilt, crulae .................~ .......................................................................$~4,900
1996 PONTIAC GRAND AM va; auto., air, stereo, tilt, cruise .........................;;,,;........................................... $13,995
1 • BUICK PARK AVE. V6, auto., air, PW, PL, stereo, tnt, crulee, maroon ...................................................$22,999.
1198 OLDS 88 LS V8, auto., air, PW, PL, tilt, crUise ..........................~ ....................................._.......................... $16,829
1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE Low miles, lelther, VS, loaded ................................................................. $14,995
1fl94. CHEVY CAVAUER AUto, alr, ·•tereo, power locks ...........................................................:......................... $8,999
1194. CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE V8,
loaded ...................................................................

'

f1Lcquisitians

'

5 speed, cloth seat, Apple Red.
l,tSRP $11,582
Don Tate Sale Price '1 0,295

VI, 111 powar, CD player, Kel~e111
DON TATE SALE PRICE

All pre-owiled cere end truck• eold with • Umlttd Power
Trllln Wmenty except wtte,. rectory wetTIInty appll11.

Ae!l .e bout

aur wide r•ng• of •mncled llrviCI plene.

·

' .DON lATE MOTORS, Inc.
.

'

·

··

·

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

Bankrupt. slow cred1t. no crPc1tt?
Let u s show you how you can dnve
a nt ce car now' Ask fo1 Mr B.ucus

·.

Att prices Include

to dealer. ·

Columbus to Cherlelton
'

·~

VB,

.,.

'

'

of .

MONDAY
LETART -- Letart . Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at t~e
office building.

.This ad could save you unnecessary
loss and expense
Bring your jewelry in for a FREE
·inspection. Most repairs are done on
premises. Prompt Service

Refreshments were served by
Betty Denny, Lillian Demosky,
Erma Cleland, Opal Hollon and Jo
Ann Ritchie.
It was reponed that Elizabeth
Hayes had back surgery on May 22
at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Others
present ~ere Marcia Keller, Doris
Koenig, and Beulah Maxey.

4 Door, autcJ.,

Alllte•s Sol. At Yt OH Our ,ttall Prlct

*"•
with Job blnk
40,000 employerl from

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Arius Hurst,
pastor of the Forest Ru'n Baptist
Church, will be guest minister Sunday, 10:45 a.m .. at the Naomi Saplist Church. Public welcome.

1996 CHEVY CORSICA·

v..,. GfHHI Selection .

•F.... IIIHirnent of your
lldlll to hetp you decide what
job Ia right for you .

oCGmpUIIr t1IIICII ot your

Gabriel Quartet. Located near Car:
penter.

CARPENTER -- Mt. Union Baptist Church, to observe IOlst
anniv10rsary, Sunday. Potluck dinner
following Sunday school 9 to I: 30
a.m. Afternoon service to feature
special speaker and special singers
including "Friends of Jesus and

1£11~ 997 CIEV. CAYAUlR

Don Tat• Sail Price

SIDEWALK SALE

JTPA Hrvices Include: ·

...........

. Others participating in the observance were Thelma White, Opal
Eichinger, Evereu Grant, Doris
Grueser, Jean Welsh, Betty Denny,
Kathryn Baum, and Gary Holter.
Esther Smith gave Mrs. Weber flowers and Jo Ann Ritchie made the
decorated cake. Helen Wolf was
pianist for the meeting.

L.L~-~....::...1

:- --Harrisonville news-

, Lamps

..........

a.m. Saturday, at 'Meigs High
School, for car pooling to Parkersburg for tour of Blennerhasset
Island. Take sack lunches. A shelter
house has been reserved by chairman, Anna Cleland. Members may
take guests.

ann~versary

:chester D of A observes 63rd

ceed stitching up the other side.
Secure both ends of thn:ad by
tying a knQt on the underneath side
of the zipper. Remove the hand basting and eare.fully remove the
machine basting by pulling on the
long threads.
Congratulations. That's all then:
is to it. You have successfully
applied a perfectly-centered baek:
zipper.

calendar-------------,.;~

..TIME IS

Recliners·
Glider Rockers .
.Bean Bags
.CoH•e &amp; End
tables
lelevl.slons
:Mir,ors
. Cur.los
..,

members and families, .Royal Oak
Reson, Saturday S p.m. with meal at
6:30p.m. Meat; drinks and table service provided. Take coven:d.dish.
BURLINGHAM -- Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp 7230,
will have a family cookout June 14,
6:30p.m. at the Burlingham Modem
Woodmen Hall. Fathers will be honl&gt;red. Tl)ose attending are to take a
covered dish. Guests are welcome.

'•

HOF BUYS 011.COOl
All COIIDIFIOIIEISI

The DaHy Sentinel• Page 1.

.,

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5

\

I
I

iI
'

'

'

•

�The Dally Se11tlnel• Paget

Page 8 • The Dilly Sentinel

70
Panta~W.

Mtddllpaft
• VJct111y

.........

June Sale
.
·oays

tabacco memorabilia.
~pecltiizingin

matchbox·cars.

Students
recognized
at Carleton·
School
An awards and graduation ceremony for students in the School Age
Program was held recently at Carleton School. Linda Warner. vicepresident of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation/Development Disabilities gave the commencement 'address.
Graduating from the School Age
Program were Angel Day, Chris Lee
and Lonnie Rush.
In addition to the three diplomas
which were presented, students in
the Transition Class also earned the
following awards: Timekeeping and
Class Assistant, Mike Bissell;
Money Skill Award, Angel Day;
Communication, Lonnie Rush;
Independence Skills, Adam Crouso
and Chris lee.
Intermediate Class students
received the following awards:
Computer Skills. Amy Davis and
Billy Reese; Most Improved, Justin
Boyd; Classroom Assistant, Jessica .
Simpkins;. Art Award, Deidra Car-.
leton; Listening Skills, Andy Lam-

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

'

. .

Catnapper Swivel Rocker/Rac:llnar, mauve, or Blue$579 ... $419
Flexatael Chalaewall ' recliner, tan ............................. $717....
$499
. .

. .~ftop

'

-

Quality Work at
· • Fair .,-leal
550PagtSt.
MiddlepOrt, Oh. 45780 .
Home""·
614-992-3120
Don Geary, Owner

992-2825

."

.1012!5JIIJtfl1 ·

614-992-3470

..

BANKRUPTCY' can

relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a lair
distribution of assets. Debtors In bankruplcy may
keep "exsmpt" property for their personal use.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regar~lng Bankru.plcy contact:

(611) 592-5025

,i

1·900-656-2700
Ext. 8789
$2.99 per niln.
Must be 18 yrs.
Se.rv-U (619) 645·8434

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS
Wagner Line .
Pomeroy .
Delivery or Dfne ln.
More than just s

plzzs place.
·C1ll for Our S.ultle

INC~

. Uc. WV 011030

Roofing, Painting
Guaranteed
Qlualft»
Worlnnamflfp
Free Eetlmetea
992·9057or
992·1056 ....,; ma

·. (No Sunday Calls)

5121117 1 ma.

CELLULAR PHONES

•New Homes ·
•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMAtEES
985-4473

$239 set.......$149 HI

Full Size Miss Match Sat ................... ~ ......... $32Sisal......$199 HI
Full Size Posture .Profile Set 15 yr warr..... $599 sal ......$369 HI

Set......................$549 set.......$379 set

Queen Size Serta Elegince

Pillow Top ·Set ................... ~........................... $7V9 Hl......$54.9 set.

Monday-Fri~- B:OO.a.rri.· 4:30p.m.
. Saiurday - ~;00 a.m. ' 12 noon ·

113 W. 2ND ST.

Pl)one: 614:992-2406

' . 7/22ltln

Two 110r old lomalo Pomoranian,
al lholl, rroo to gooct home, 61 •·

H2-e813.

a.

60 L.,_. and Found
Found: nuffy while puppy, SA 32
..,.., or Alllons, &amp;14-584-:IIStt .
Found: HI of two ktv•. SHS vi·
dnlty, cal IIIlO, 81 ..11112.:11113.
Found : SR 7 vlclnltr, amall red ·
dish brown Pomeranian, 814-667·

0188.
' Found: Young Medium Slza F&amp;·

.

Yard Sale 14 Fosler Or. ln , M• ~
son. Thur June 12, FriJune 13.

VQrd Sal&amp;-403 2•1h St. Tlv I Fri
June 12&amp; 13 th. Mise,
knick·
knacka, Homallla chain aaw,

Loat: Black And Cream, Long •
nalred German Shepherd Lnt
Seen 8J1JQ7, Brown'l Markel
Stare Routo 1110, Ploue Colt 814-

24'bar.

446-7467, 814-448-4470, 614·
4&lt;48-~.- Ol!oradl

70

Yard Sale. Rl 2 N, south of &amp;7.

Thur, Fri I SaL 9-8. HouM I 1 31
48cres for sale alto.

PubliC Sale
and Auction

80

Yard Sale

Auction - Friday, June 13tn,
7 :00pm . Hartford Community
Bui lding, Hartford, WV. Howard.

Gallipolis
a. VIcinity

llwsley, Aucdo"""' 1470,

112 Prlca Yard Sale: 8114th, 9·3,
Behind iJodimert, 588, Clothes,
Toys, Happy Meal , Disney, Home
Interior, Car Seat, Popcorn Tins;

Lemley's Auction Service, Leslie
Lemley, Auc tioneer. _Hoi.nenald,
Estate, Farm Sales. Phone 014·

101 Sl11on Road, Bidwell, Ohio,
Friday 1 Saturdlj, 9-? Misc.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lltne auctioneer, campl1t1
auction
aervlce. Llcenud

cassettes.

·

31111-9443.

ree,Ohlo &amp; West Virginia, .304113-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

(lllfllllfly ol Dean'•

Trane., Albany)

..........

· Now Opa for

Five Drawer 30" Cheat Maple Finlah ....................."'""""'$118 ........$79
Ught oak 4 pc, Door D-, mlrroi'H
~adbol.rd ..........................~ •. ~ ............................................ 1879........$499
Whlt•!Grey Laquer 4 pc, Contemporary .
·
·
"C10aeout"....................................................................~ ...... 1811.• ~ .....$399

123 Pleaunt Ridge·

Pomeroy,OH
Cell 992·9045
for all your
tranemlaalon needa.

..,,_

.AIJ. Yanl Saloe Mull

BoPald.,Aclvance.
DEAQUNE: 2:00 p:m.
tho doy bator. tho ad .
II to Nn; Sunday
Friday. Monday adhlon

Wanled· older bicycle. 814•992-

3498.

! Wanted:
Used ~8rdwood Flooring ·
In Good Condition, Call 81•·245·
581!7.

• 10:00 ula. S.lurdiy.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Centenary Tnurt, Fri. ·
Name Clorhlna. Jrlt.tlases •
0- 24 Montha &amp; Men; Curtains,

Zenith 19" Receiver/Monitor; remota color...............;.....$349 .$249

1~~ertlth 20" Remote color ..................................................1381

£TREAT giftG
fer

Aods, Oreaaer, Espon Laser Ink

Jel Printer, Adult /Teen Paper-

$259

backs, Working Built-In Oven ,
Light FIXturtL '

fZttnlth 25" Remota Color "SEQ" tllbla modal .................$499 $369

You'll Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds ·

..

I Zenllth 25" eon-. remota color· stereo ......................;$639

$499

11rap&gt;pan 30" Electric·or ga~ l'lnge.....................................$388

$329

Qlb~ electlic ~uta/lime d,Y., ....................................·...$438

.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

$339'

Garage Sale: Roule 7, South To

.ROB'S' .

.

Glbaon built-In dlahwaahar, full features ......................$3e8 $339
Glbaon 15.4 cu. ft refrigerator, rollare. ................;..........,$829·

•·

POftABI.E
:,.
WELDIII
'

$488

White Westlnghouaa 18.0 cu. ft. refrigerator,
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL Baglnnlng
at . the
Notlca to Cont~ore:
lnteraectlon ol SR·124
1n -accordance wllh lhanca North Eaat on CR·
section 307.1111 pltha Ohlll ~ lllr approximately 1.18
Revloed Codl, aealed bldo mil•• to the lntaraactlon ol
will be rectlvtd by thl CR-403 and Cfl.30.
aoard . ol Melga County
Bid apaclllc811ona may be
comml .. lonera, Court picked up at tha Melga
Houae, Pomeroy, · Ohio County Engl-r'a Olllce or .
45711, until 8:00 A.M. on the Olllca ol tha Melga
Mondly, Juna 23, 11187. The County Comml•lanere.
The Board ol Melga
blda will then be opened
and reacllloud at 2:10 P.M. county Commt81lonero
an Monday, June 23, 111117 may accaptthe Io-III bid,
lor realirlaclng work on or •tact the beat bid lor the
detlgnatacl county roadt lntendad · purpoae, end
, betwHn cartaln termini "
reMrvH the right to accapt
IOllOWt:
and/or reject any or all bide
Job No. 117·01 C ·3 and/or any part the..af and
Beginning
at
tha wlll-acontracttothal
lnllraactlon ol CR-12 and bidder whiCh 18 In thl bMt
CR-3 thlnCI North on CR·3 lnterMI ol llelp County.
lor approxlmatiiY 1.63 mllel Gloria Klan, C!ltrk
·
to thl CorporatiOn Umlla. ol a-d ol Melp
the Vlllege a1 Aut~W. ·
County Com111111!o..,.,.
Job No. 17·~2 C·352 (8) s, 122tc
saglnnlng
at
thel==:i~~~~~~
lnteraactlon ol CR·12
and
CR·352 thence aouth on
CR·352 lor approxlmataly REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
ma Notice to Co-on: ·
0.81 mUll t 0 th e G1
In eccordanca wtth
cOunty Una.
MOtion 307.• ol the Ollto
Joll NO. 117·03 C·12 RIVIMCI Code, -lad bldt
Baglnnlng
••
lht
... by lht
bt raoe1v...
lnter••ctlon ol CR·3 and will
Boerd ol Mtlga County
CR-12 tMnce SOUth on CR· Comml ..lonare, Court
12 lor approxlrnaltly 0.15 Houae, Pomeroy, Ohio
mUlti to the lntaraectton ol 45711, unUI 1:00 A.M. on
CR-12 and CR-352.
Monday, olunt 30, 1111•.Thl
Job No. 17·04 C·22
wiU lhen tie openacl
Beginning
at
I he
aloud 1112:10 P.M.
lnwraeotlon ol CR·75 end "". !I~~!Y.! Jun.e 30, 1817
Cfl.221htnce 1!1111 on CR-22 ::
lor epproxln Hy 1.14 miiM
to the Jnteraaatlon ol CR-22
!11111111-124.
.
Jo• No. 117•05 C·35
ltgln'nlng
at
the
. ~- 11111011 al 811-124 end
CIWIIIMIOI 1111 on CIWI

Public Notice .

Public Notice

'

Hlghwtly8 Conlllructlan and
Materlala Specification
Manual.
THIS WILL BE A TOTAL
TONS BID: The . MBE
Supplier will btd total tone
ol AC:.20 Liquid that cen be
delhtered lor a nxed 1111ount
ol $50,000.qcl. .
.
Bid apeclnc.tlona may be
picked up 11 the Melga
County Engl...,'a Olllce or
the Ollie a · ol the Melga
County Commlaalo.,.re.
The Board ol Melga

County Commlealonera
may aoc.pt tht lowalll bid,
or ulact the beat .bid lor the
lnt•ndtd purpoaa, and
riMrYII the right to accepl
and/Or reJect eny or all blda
tnd/or eny part thl-1 and
wiU -rd I OOilhiCt 10 that
blddtr which II In thl titat
lntareat ol Mllga County.
·
Olorla Klou, Clerk ·

glan s~lv11 ... ~......'...........:...............................................$818 $529
Amana 20.0 cu~ ft. rafrl!ltrator, bottom treazer

w/ICe maker ................. ~......................~.........................,.~.$~~~ $7H

,
., ·
'· •·

McCumber Rd.
·. Rutland, OH
•Small Joba
•Large Jobs

:'

Experienced

· "' An.on1ble Rata•

Board aiMelge County

CommlniOIIIfl
(8)12,192tc
.
'

~~ ·· I..,
WAS
NOW
PC Drop leaf tllbl.a, 2 -.ck OMira..;....................;. . . . $249
pc Country oak
tllble/4
chalra ................. $489 $299
pc Paclaatlel42" tllble/4 noatalglc chah ................... $599 $439
pel Oek treatle tllbla/blnch/4 bow .,_.ck ohalre ............ $719 $549
pc Whlte/Natura1 .38d0 tabla/8 bow back chalra .....;.. $719 $569
'
pc Country oak 42" tllble/2 1..,.,. extra hlflvy .
Nck
...............................,:...~........~.~.............S1 111

wood

38x41

'

·

'

10:00-2:00

MOOSE LODGE
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
"HIT AND RUN BAND"
(The Uon Sleeps Tonight)
9 til1 A.M.

llll', M10:00 a.m., alllllllllo
. . will bt hlld • 111 w.at
hoonct ltreel, Pomeroy,
Ohio. to aa11 10r ani! the

•

,

2nd StrHt

773-5592
'

.

'

MOBILE

AT'

. HEATING &amp; COOLING

SalVIng Soulheilatern OH &amp; W1J
014 446 11410
1-IIIJ0.872-511117
1391 Salford
SchoOl Rd., Gallipolis. OH
.
'

BillILl
992·7074

•Small Engines
•Lawrt Mowers
~Ch1ln Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7
Leading Creek Rd.

Gravel, Umaatone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sind. No Mlnlnum.

.._,,_,r
,.....,.. ..

Junc•w.,

Public Notice

fqloeulng aa· In~: .

•

.

•

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

ta.vlnga

Company,
l'omiiOy. Ohio; riHI'ftl
lilt rtghlliQ bid II thlll '....,,

~ to

).

WtihciiAW ... .....,.

collateral ·prior to ..Ia.
l'llrtlllr, Tilt , . , _ link
end lavina• co...-ny
,......

abOYe
nlltlrKWIIIIIe IOidln lilt
oeudlllon I 1e ·In, Wltlt ·no
eapreoe or IMpHtd

•

thl

WMIW U I " " " '

· . . r.s.r
. DM'.......
.,_ .IMII
.,,....,_

wv
'

••'
••
J

: !)

'••

i'-~

~'.

.KINGS'

iel!dl...... to tile

.............aala

ciamrlotlon of

..., .... ..,..din ·
l!'f:lllllll a PIDPIItJ

lnalateeatat..-r

,_ ful1hiJr haruamdon,
_..atJIIryM . . .7~
fll11, 11,.11; SfC
I

OIUI ..........,o

'

LD.Calellt
CllllaDt Ron Milar
. . . .011

'·

742-2925

•1,000 RIW~I
,.~

' rtiiRII the ':a':~ot
.., or II llldl
·

I·TURE CO.

SON FU

5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Oigilal Thermostal

PubliC Notlc!
1114
, BUitK
'
PUBLIC NOTICE
·'MOTICIIe heNbJ glvtn 1G4'Pfr-HiiUII l
Tile Fannara lank and
tllat on ·eaturday, Junt 14,

lcMIIIh••m 3 pc blown/lrlln,'burg l'llbo1o.........................S1'"*1199
frrl~.,. 3 pc IIIIU\Ie blue~ throw pillows.......
~-Ill' Tradltklnll aofllkMsaltt navy/IIUrg alrlpe.......12718
Boy Traditional full aile alllp,ar muJtl..prlnt .............. Cawood Colonial Quaen Size 8encll . . . 1111Ua...............;..t141
Back OU11n IIIIi t11n multi
·

SAT., JUNE 14th

•Fr~

33111 Happy Hollow Road
Mld~l~ 011, Ohio 45780
.... ~.Addlllot•,

RoOI!nQ, Siding, i'olt
Same, o.cks, Painting,
oane-. Puu:t-

c:w IAt I'Gr A 1'1Wt I

II ••

1114-742-30110
1114-742-3324
114-742-3078

AVON .1 Al l Areas

I Shirley

Spears, 304·675-1429.

Able Avon Representatives
needed. Earn money foi Christ·
mas bills at home/at work. 1·800·

THE MAPLES

Demo~lion.

Auto Body Repair Man Needed,
Must Have Experience. 014·441 1195.

Juno 13th, 8 T~ ? 3 112 Miles Oul

Avon S8 ·$ 18 IHr. No Door ·To·

141 , Baby Furniture, Glothes,
Misc. Furniture, .'Adult 'Ciothes,
Mloclll

ing. 1-800. 73tHl188lrd/IIJirep.

Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
· · appliances.
Ai,.L PRIMARY UTIUTIES PAID

(Paymon11 based on appove&lt;t cro&lt;111)

tJ'ublit is invited

''

ly.IKir ci'IOice .......................................................~................1~ 1811
BAD HABIT LIVE

RL 2 Pt. Pleasant, WV.
1304) 675-5955.
Call after 8pm.
Wed thru SaL

June 13tn, 14tn, 9·? ee44 Route
588, Rodney, Miscellaneous, Etc,
Windows, ·Doors, Old Housu

in Pomeroy, Ohio

Air Conditioners Installed .128" amonth
Heat Pump$ Installed 1311" a monlh

(114) 992·743:4

Room Suite, Lamps, Clothes, R•
diner, Frk:lay &amp; Saturday.

·

Will Your Utilities Put You
In ·rhe Poor House?
Consider:.

Easy Bank Finandng

WIJ.LBI&amp;-·

IC&lt;II'Itlmpora1ry 3 pc tlln multi OCIIol' IWirl fabrlc ............. $17llt $1199
pc sultae traditional or ~·...,.porary etyla
..

·PreMnti

,_ .

·udlai'-P•

1\aesdays allc,l Thundays
Serving from '5:00 • s·:4S
Donation $4.00 'for me•l

I tnwn ltef'YIIc.............................................................:-····•1~ $988
IE111yAmtrlcan 3 pc oak trim, ifelnlmauve ~I ................$2411 $1
•

319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
.Sales Service ·
Installation . ·
American Standard ·
Freedom
Heat Pump ·~

·&amp;am•llr

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER
·Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy

'

1

MORRISON'S H~n~G ·
&amp;COOUNG

Clipper Mills Follow Signs, Living

EVENING' MEAL

IC&lt;IIonllal 2 pc pillow lmt~ blue/niiUYI prlnt""""'"""'"'.' f1il •S449
IAiit.ln 2 pc country, greenlburg, throW plllows ...........;$1018 $899
B~~tlhHr.. 2 pc trl~ltlonal over aWffacllug or
•
.
·

WAYNE'S PLACE

_,_.,..

(61.)
.. 742·3100

lli\1\L
.

Georg11 Creek Road. Kelley
Drive, Girls Clolhes, T-14, Toys,
Household trams, Large Indoor
Dog page.

Help wanted ·
$$$ DANCERS S$t
2 Positions available
Soulhtork Show Bar

Friday The 13th, 9·5, 112 Mil&lt;&gt; Out

Mayhig aUto waaher, large capaclty .... ;...........................$559 $479
.

110

Dabble Drl.. Chapel, (Oif Route
141, 1 112 Milos From Willis Fu neral Horrel 12th ·1411\ 9-4.

I Zttnlth 27" Remota color "SEQ" tllbla.modal ....,............ $571 . $399

Public Notice

I

10th ·1•th.

3/17fiMITFN

SI271TFN

the
.· Wjcker Buggy

JOb No. 17oOI C-403

5 :00 . Weathaf Permitting. Juna

614·367-1160.

adhlon • 2:00p.m.

::'
..\! :m~!:"c=
!11111111-124.

Yard Sala 110 English R&lt;l. 0:00·

RAY'S
TRANSMISSION

Primary Class students received
the following awards: Best Friend,
Ashley Rhoades; Good Listener,
Nicki Wilson; Most Helpful,
Mitchel Powell; (:lass' Leader, DerTAANSmON CLASS - Members of the Transition Class at Car·
rick Trimmer; Most Athletic, Luke laton School recognized were, from left: front, Angel Day end Adam
Lowery; Most Cheerful, Mark Bog, . Crouso; back, Lonnie Rush, Mike Bissell,. Chris Lee, lnatructl.onal
ard; Most Lovable. Chris Edwards . . assistant Pat Carson and instructor June Radcliff.
Many other students were recognized for achievement in speech.
•
physieal therapy and adaptive physical education .

271 X :Ind. ~liddl~ 992-SlOS
\"isa. MC. Layaway

Pl. Pleaunt

.

.,

bert.

everyone~~
10-S Tues • Sat

School.

. Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE' ESTIMATES
949-2168

P'OMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

· Fax: 304·773-5861

Yard sale, Frl·Sat 11 Jam11
SWoln's on C.R 28 • - Eaitorn

ROOFING
NEW·RI;PAIR

EFF WARNER INSUUNCE

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
, A Division on Nichols M~tal, INc.

1\oo e -k Pupplea, 1 Mala, 1
.. 814-3117-(1311 .

Howard L. Wrltasel

360° Communications

'lg Bend Fabrkation,
Machine·&amp;Welding Shop

Silver Ridge Rd., I milt of! Ill 7
lrom Eatlern, couch. AJC. atMt.
old VIUI I loll of miiC, Frltlly
1311\ g l!l3. 814-08S.ol258.

1"'"'1.

r---------~~~~--------~~--~~----~
~----------------------~
Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrkatlon
ROBERT BISSELL
·, Steel Sales, Weldtiig Supplies, Industrial Gas
CONSTRUCTION
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement

Wood Rockera, oak, 3 stylft, MYour Choice" .......... $179..... $99

'

, 2 Black 1 Whlto
8 Woeka Old,
5P.M.

81ack MuzzJe, Blazer Road Area,

J(.
CONSTRUCTION

614-992-7643

·
Athens, Ohio

Park.

malo 0Qg, Reddish Blonde Wilh

992-9200

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

Attorney William Safranek
. Attorney At Law

NOW OPEN

. UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

BISSELL BUILDERS,

A.' *ri'*' ....... lftll1mo.

'

For more lnlll ctiiJ'am
085 un or u.. 962052
Auctlo-r:
Rhltt Mllhotn

National Recliner, Brown Strlpe ................................$3es.... $249

D.Gfa~'s

·l adle lllaell
. Dealer

'

Sat., June 7, 1997
6P.M.
MelgaCo•
Fairgrounds
Sponaored by
Mtlge Co. 4-H Horaa
Commlttte

· Catnappar Rocker/Recliner leather touch, Ivory .... ~$64SI ••• $459

Queen Size Serta-Reet Ill

.

FREE ESTIMATES.

CELLULARONEe

2ND ANNUAL
TICK ~UCTION

LIZ-Boy Rocker/Recliner, _Tuttecl Back, Blua ........... $499 .... $369
LaZ·Boy Rocker/Recliner, Traditional, Green or
.·alue.............................................................................$579•••• $399

1\vln Size Mlsl Match Hl ............................

'.
'

985·4422

wAs Now

Glider Rocker, oak, bow back, tan or blue ............... $429.... $269 ·

25280

Not••*' Flnlnclll

INGELS ELECTRONICS
Mldi:lieport, o~

Cheater, Ohio

Laz-Boy Rocker/ReciiMr· Channel Back, Green ..... $489.... $329

PRIMARY CLASS .- Members of the Primary Class at Clrleton
Schools School Age Program were recognized at a ceremony held
at the school recently. Shown ere, from left: front, Chris Edwards
and Mark Bogard; middle, Luke Lowery, Mitchel Powell, Derrick
Trimmer and Nicki Wilson; rear, Diana Aah, Instructional aasistant,
and Kathy Stamm, Instructor.·

..

Llmeatone • Gr.Vel
Dirt • Sand

I

1:ou\l -: 1:~

Mon-Sun

Rt. 1, lox 44-C
lill.eon,wv

Jhf•I.. ........ CDPMA

tyumlnum Welding

.

Limestone,
Grav,l, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.....,

Saturday, June 14, Oam· 4pm .
Somelhlng for .ver~ne, bJ1 4·H
Pleuure Ridett at Syracutt

HAULING

.. '

'

..IIIIIU Llll WI BILGW"

l"

'

I

'

EVERY ITEM IN THE STORE
REDUCED UP T0.60% OFF!
1: Feu\ EJ:~

~tick/MIG

614-74:Z-3513
9

304-773-5822

._oft

Foor lamlly. June 10•14, loll o1
SA 7.

.,fl. SA )«1. 114

Fridtr lnd StlurtiOy, Karr
Sfntouao.

WICKS

FAMILY DENTISTRY ·

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

frH IDt CUl·

LowRitn)

......, B.llnsta, D.D.S.

A/C CondenHra/HOH AIII-II ,
Ntw LAicatlon: 2 mil•• off At. 7 on At.124.

.·.R. L. HOLlON '
'•
• TRUCKING
'

Summer is just ciround the corner and
temperatures ~ill be rising. tJut, at Mason
]urrtiture Prices Are [owerinq ...

INTERMEDIATE CLASS- Intermediate Cllll membere at Clrleton School recognized recently were:
front, Deldre Carleton end Andy Lambert; rear, reader guide Trlcla Baer, lnetructor Sherry McCleery,
lnetructloneleeslatant Betty Smith, Justin Boyd, Bill Reese, Jeaalce Simpkins and personal cere aaelstent Ed Cozart.

.
New Rldlatorl• A~
'

lins. cigar boxes, ami

.

~ _IISOI DEITll CARE

lndultrtll• Automat~ ....

Buyent ttl 'liallp IOJI,
sp(lrtlcards, sporll
memorabilia, tabacllo

tun• Stone-

Must be 62 years of age·or handicapped.
Must ineet HUD eligibility requirements
For further details pallloday {;.) ·

..:a:r
.... _
0i111MtMr

1·614·992·7022
·

LINDA'S
PAiNTING

II1J/11 t IM.

YOUNG'S
. (ARPENTER SERVIa

....,n

Addltlonl ·

tHewO.o•
tlflctlloal • Plumblntl
ofloofl... .
otn•lor al!xtirtor ·

........

Aleo Col MOt ell Wort!
(FRII UTIIIATU)

Sarurday, 8t14th, 4 Family : Nice
Clolhing, Women• &amp; ChHdrens.
Roule 7 Add•son, Beside, G&amp;G
Maltl.eL

.........
~

114-912-4025
Call lam-e

ANNOLINC&lt; M EN IS

CABLE TV ORDER TAKERS
Earn $15 ·$18 Per HGur +Commissions. Elltremely High Customer Demand, No Overnight
Travel. Immediate Openlnga .
Candida!&amp;! Must Be Available To
Sran Paid Training Program Now.

CALL PAUL TOLL FREE
1-888432-7378
Cemetery sales? Its lha bast kept
secret in America, High corrmllslons, bonuse s, beriefitl, llldl,
heallh plus 401tt $500 last atart
training bonus, call 614 ·IJI2·
7440.-

800 -348-718611508.

Pick Up Dlacarded

Appllancee&amp;
Many Metals.

Ooor, Quick Cash, Fun &amp;' RelaJ·

Computer Users Needed, Work
own hours .. $20k Ia $50klyr 1·

fREE

nudret it 1eem

I/11(1MO.

Wall Res~dent On Sunset Drive,
Table &amp; Chairs, Other Furn.
Chitdrens &amp; Adult Clothes,
Spreads, Drapes. Toys, Kitchen
Items, Childs Jeep, Loll More!

LocaiArn

A pod pautl j"'b on
n11y ciDudy .U.y,
bf'iBitler.
· Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave me..agt.
. After 6 p.m .
114-1185-4180

Large Yard Sale: June 12th ·14th,

992·6356 or 304-882-2645, Ind.
Rep.

J&amp;R Sporl, EaSI Main,
3· 14 , furniture, clothing,
8Y8fVQn&amp;.

.

Driver needed !rom Pt P,leaaani
area. Need&amp; COL,w/tanh., &amp; haz
mu endors·ement. t ·800·Saa.

81 22.

.

DRIVERS WANTED

lamilt ward sale · Saturday,
14th, Oam-Spm. Two miles
of Chtlltf on SR \7. ra in

500 Mile Radius • Home Every
Weekend, Family Insurance Paid

Gt111gt 1 yard sate- Monday lhru

scriplion) 401 KRetiremenl Plan.
First In • First Out Oiapalth, La-.
Model Co11v. Tractora With

Friday during summer, 1Qam-•pm.

38400 SR 124. f'l&gt;moroy.

By Company (Denial. Eye, Pro·

Flatbed Trailer• .Competitive Pay
. Percentage Of Gross.

005

Plnlonals

GRANT TRUCKING, INC.
a&lt;I88 .SR t3
OAK HILL, OHIO •1888

80Q.282-21!13

Earn $1 ,000 Weekly Stulfi"tt E!!-

v..opet At Hamt. S&amp;arl Now. No ·

E•porlonce. Frn SUppllel, tnlo.
No Obllgauon. Sand lSASE To:
ACE, Otpt 1351, Box 5131, Olot·
mond !lor. CA 811&amp;5.

e •• , Work I Excollenl Port AI··'
aem~• Product• at

Homt. Call

Toll Free 1·800-487- SSit EXT.
12170.

V.C. YCKNJ IU

Front Otak Clark, Apply Thllro•

--II
PlD!MrDY. Ohio . . .

day &amp; Friday Uorning, Ftom 1

'-

A.M. To1 12. William AM llotel,
GllliltDIL
g18Sacbnd, .

�NEA Croaaword Pufzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

.,......., om- lith c......
Haurt, WoQe • Ceel1
polloLoc-..

Fuu.nme -~Time W. Are Ac·
cepif\1 Appiicadona By Appqlnt·
....,1 Onft For Dedicated, Dt·
Hndllllt EmpiOW*', 'Oullllnllil1g
llenefltal • WHklw S.lary. • lncenltv• Provnom &amp; Comprehen11,. Benefit PackeQe, • Paid 'Ia·
calion Alter ' YHr bt Condnuouo
- . 1·-772-2&lt;155.
Hair Stylist Wanted Rtnt Your
OWn S.llon, Or Moill $10 To $15
An Hour, Caii .Carol King, 814·
448-81122.
.
HOME BUSINESS Cneop Stan,
Send· SASE • $5 To C. Ro11olli
P.O. Box 7428, Conlon. OH
44105.

HOME TYPISTS,
PC uurs nttdtd. $45,000 In·
....,. potondal. Coil 1·80G-5t3434S Ext B-831111.

1!JO'

~ANY~-0-DD_oiO_I_I_o-E-at_tr_lo_r-pa-ln-t·· J New Ha.,.,, WV- lhrH bod...,.,
lng, ohtubo · &amp; woods trimmed,
londacoplng, aldowolka .Geed.
lawn ..,., tiC. Coli Bill 304-8757112.
1
Exporltnced c:arpontry and

deling.

Inside

rtm0-

and · outalde,

Individual ICompony NH~ To
Clean Oftca On S.R. 160, Galipo.
Hs On Daily BaaiL Call 814-448•

Mature dependable woman wilf sit
wilh l1td de llghl houltlleej)ine l:tr

9140 For Information And Submit

Bldl To SEOEMS Dimict, P.O.
Boa 527, Kart, OH 45043 By 81171

n ..

LPN

-ly. cal et-1-992-7558.

Palnllng -lnterior IE•tarlor

pari time posilion

availa~le

lor progre11lve RthabJHtalion
Center ICFISNF. Elpltianced
preferred; but will c;:onslder the
rjght candidate. Excellent benerit
package ror parr time employeeS.
Call BU-882·6608 or ltnd rt·

IWO bedroom. Of18 bath, ••celiant
condition, liking $12,000, 814·

8411-2223.

1884 14170 mobile homo on 4th
SUn Mason, 132'1i4' corner lot
Concrete drive war-. Sidewalk
pa~tio. central air. dilhwath-

and

et, !ridge and atovo. 12112 &amp;tor·
tige building. low 20'a. 304•7735372.

1887 Skrllno 14a72 ready to

cond . Call JD 8U·..48-8340 or

Qe.l8, 814-367·7010.

304·675·8051 leave message

move In, lots of extras, exc:.

304-875-5043 loaYo message.
1958 OakwoQd 14a70 2br, 2 bllth,
Ramav81. Free Eatimatetl In· 8x12 deck, on ranted lot, exc .
auranct, Bidwell, 011io. l14' 388- ~ond., aokitig $13,300 OBO.

Root Pa'inllng, House Trall~r.
Barn, FfH Estimates, Call After
5:00P.M. 814-448-6445.

Must Soil
1988 Redman River!flew 1.4x70 2
Bedroom Mobile Home, 1 112

Bolho. Call814-448-8231.

lion Center, 36 759 Rocksprings

Signs .UadeJRaturblahad. Metal
roofs painted, lawns moWed·.
trimmed. Hanctrman work, wood·

Rd., Ptlmoroy, OH 45788.

1gg3 Spruce Ridge 18x70 mobile
home, excellent condition, nu·

8flll9tL 304-875-8925 RK:k

morous

"'tnt to Rocksptings Rehabilitl·
·

MECHANIC

G'reenwood Mo1or Linea. ona of
nations laruesl larnily·owned
lTL motot freight carriers, it ac·
cepting applicationa far a 3rd

m,

lltlh (11jlm·7:30am) prov81l .. ~ve
malntanance machanlc. Mutt
have exp In heavy engine repair,
knowledge ol Cumlno &amp; Mack
englnat a plus. We offer TOP
PAY with comprehenstva benefit

HOllE HEALTH PSYCH RN
·• MuatH&amp;.e 2 - . Pqch Exp.
• Homo H•lth Eap APiuo.
• Good Organlzallon
ICorrm.lnlcalian Skill

• RN l.icanlu,. WV IOH
HOME HEALTH RN
• Home H - /Critical Co,.
Exptrltnoe A PluL
· • Good Organlzallon
ICornt!lnic:dcn Skill•

• RN LlcaniU,. WV IOH
It lntereated Pl111e Forward

littomtt To:

•• ~~Home~ Agency
Roglonrtl H....,
-Diroclor

Now-1887 14 Wiele· I batti, $8881

210

Business
Opportunity

down, l139fmo, wilh approved

!"edit Call t-800-881-8777.
1997 14x70 2 or 3 ·a.droom,

$995 down, $1851mo. Only at
Dlk"M&gt;od Htimoa, Nitro, W'l 30+
755-51385.

5885.

t·800·6V1-6n7.

1sr Time Buyers E·Z Finainclng, 2
Or 3 Bedrooms Around $200
Monlh Free Delivery &amp; SOl Up. 1-

Services

1100·251-5070.

2 Bedrooms. Cenlral Air, In Galli·
HARTS MASONARY · Block; polis, On Rented Lot, Ready To
brick &amp; stone

work~

30 years ex·

perience, reasonable rates. 304·
89~·3591 alter 6:00pm, no job to
omoll or to BIG. WV-021208
Livinqston's basement water·
proofing, all Dasom&amp;nt repairs
done, tree estimales, liletii'ne
guarantee. 10yu on job experi·

ence. ~-875-21 •s.

remo••· beautiful land: Mtlu•
County, Scipio Townllip. SR 882
GUll SR ~~. OWnetllnM:inQ.

Kings .Mottl lowett Ratetl' In
Town, Nowly Rtmodtlld, HBO,
Coil tor good mop, 1·814·58:1· Clntmll, Showll!ftt • Disney.
~ Raiii•. Or MonthlY RalOI.
1541. .
Conatrucllon Wortlert Welcome
814-448-81122. 11~1-1187.
RE~HA l S
S!ttplnq rooma, with cooking.

o"

410

Al1o 1rad1r sp•c• .on river. All

HouseS for Rent

1 Bedroom, Fumlalled, 735 Root
Third Avtnut, Qalllpolil, $150
Oaposil, $150/MO., GI4· U8...:

hook-upo. Calloltor 2:00p.m..
304-713-5051, ..... wv.

4eO Spice for Rant

3870.

Two camplilea· one with lull
-:-::-:---:---~-:-:--lltookup. Oflt lor. boOU118 and lish2 Badfoom hou• In New Haven.
81.c.QI2.5858·.
· .
Rent S250tmo + $1001dtpoait .

lrv.

Call 517-458-7703 cotlactal!tr
opm.

490

..For.l:.ease

ProltoalonaiAiuolneoa buildinG lor
2 Bedroom, fuU blittmanr_ ntWI, IUbilolt. loca1111 II 508 S. fhltd
dacotattd, rtftttnott &amp; doposl~ SIIHI, llldllrpor~ Ohio: EI!OIIItftl
NO pall304-875-5182.
lot
oftlco ot tall tltall
apace. Ample'· ttraot patklng.
3 Bedroom, luii·IIZt battment, Avalloblo lmmedllttly. Conlact
garogo, Iorge ptd, polio. 1450/ R.L Kunz, 114-583-3375mo, $250/dopoliL 304-875-44811.
r.1Ef1CHArmi S E
Clean thrH bedroom house In
PDmtrow, stove abel rtfrlttraiOr.
..-and dtrer. no lnoldt r•ence• and dtpoall requlled, 510 · · Household
llol-812-3080.
Goods .

""*'""

Rio Grandt. No Pata, Dtpoolt. Appliancea:
Reconditioned
814-~.
Woahtra, Dryers, Rona••· Relri·
Smoll two bodroom houao, lull grators, 80 Dly GUarantee/
French City Maytag, 8!4·408illquoatod, •300/mo., dopollt and 7715.
' Uliltlet, 01-2587;
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Twa bedroom houa•. nice and waahera, dryere, rerriueratora.
clean, no lnaldt pelt, dtpollt and tangn Skaggt Appllanctt, 78
Vlno S!rHt, Call. 8 14' 448-73g8,
references required, 814·882~ 1.--3488
. .
3080.
KiiA:hon Corpot ta.50 Sale On All
420 Mobile Homes
Cotptt In Stock &amp;' Room Size
Molohen Clttct, 814-448-7444.
Rent

no-,.,.,..... t•

tor

3 Badraom,
· 011
Smd
Oonlln- Spol~
'BY 100.
Appolrnttl Onlr. 814-~50.

Ritrlgorator $7&amp;; Waahrlr 185;
Dryer US; Eltoltlc Rona• US;
Ralrtgora101 IISO; ·Air Coridillonor
5,000 .BTl) $125; Skogga AppNanct, 78 Vine S:.11~ Giilipolis.
814-4411·1388. 1. .818-0128.

For Rant: 2 Bedroom Trailer In
Smlll Ttllltr Pa(tt, Dlpoolt I Rlltroncot Roqulrad. Phona 814·
448-1104.
Throe 5,000 BTU Window Air
Condltionor&amp;, 114-448--1)71.
Mobile Home: smill 2
Furnlahea, $2351Mo., Water &amp; Uaod Air ·Conditioner. &amp; Haal
Trallt Paid, 820 Fourth Avenue, Unill It 50 S1oim Door&amp; $50 8f4GoiNpolls. 814:448 3844 Afttr 7 448-3301,114-ol46-3!83.
P.M.

Btdt"""'"

440

experience. benell1t provided,

company vtchlle. Orman Hall
Inc. 1317 Ohio St. Pt. Pleaaanl
wv. 30+075-287'7.
Pall-Timo Ptlaltlon Availabla Now.
Sewlni ~~ Required, Appl~ in Person At JoAnn Fabrics
and Crafts: Silver Bridge Plaza,
Gdlpoh.

Pr"'ention Position · .An Alcohol

And ON&lt; Drug Coynttllng /Pro·
vwntlon Agency located In Gallio
And Jackaon Counti01, 11 S..k·
tno An Ambitious Individual To
Fill A Now PrtYentlon Poiidon.
This Parson Will Work With All
Ael Groupo In Tille CommuniDIL
Ouollllcliono: Baohtlora Deer11.

PrMnliou Ctr11fted A Plut. GOod
Communication• Skills (Wrlnen

Ataponaibllitloa:

AWitMnl Actlvlrias, Edueatlon
Program•~ Training Programt,

AI realeatate advertising In
this newspaper Is sub;ect to
tho Federal Far Housing Act
ot 1968 whk:h makes nIllegal
to ~lse "any preference,
llmllalien or dlscriml1'181ion
based on face, COlor, religiOn,
seX familial stalus or natiOnal

origin, or any Intention to
make anv such preferenCe. ,

limitation or dlscriminatfon.·
Ttt~

newspaper will not
knowingly accept

advertisements for real estate
which Is In vk&gt;latlon or the
law. OUr readers aie hereby
lnlormad that all dwellings
advenised In this newspaper
· are available on an equal

opportunity bllalo.

And - - • And lmpitmonratlon Of New Grant Projects.
Send R-me By Junt 23, 1887
.To: F.A.C.T.S., 1770 Jacklon 310 Homes for Sale
Pike, BiciWtll, Ollio 45014 EOE, loll
1116 Sunsel Drive, 81"4·"8·8238
FIH.
Far Mora k'lfamw.rlan.
Pt PI ·nt • Domino'a PlD8
2 t12 rw okl hOme, 7 112 acres
- '*'"llal polifonl.
in New Haven. Kalhl'n Htuan
RN, LPN Or AT, Rttponliblt For 304-112-31127 Shown lly appointSlltif\1 Up ln,.nt APMO Monitor flllnl.
In Homes And Doing Uonlhly
Homo VIIIIL Thlo loA Pati·TICon~ot Poaitlon. Send Rtlumo
Or Pick-Up Appllcation.At: - ·
mon'o Homocaro, 7D Plno S•lll,
Golllpolla, OH 45031, Anenuon:

6 A 5 ·3

'• Qaes

K J 10 » 3
• 7 8 2
K Q J 10 5
• 982
Sou&amp;ll
• 10. 2
¥KJI075' 42

Two 8x7. Wood Flull'l Garage
Dooro $50 EoCh; New 8a7 Whl1o
Rotted Panel Model 530 , $215,
C.l 814-388-8285.

•

•
.....".c:~~
~

.. • • ... ~

-~

I HOPE I DON'T HAVE

Whool Chait, Electrle .Battorlae,
$400, 014-388-8558.

Move Inial 614·U6-1409, Arter

4P.M.
. Dlllllw Rellol Program

We hava $1 000 to $2000 per
home In disaster relief funds

Building
SUpplieS

YO'RE

NEXT II

ONMY

DOCTOR

Block, brick, JIIWer pip81, wi"d·
ows, lintels. ate. Claude Winters,

BILL II

Rio Gtandt, OH Call 014-245·
5121.
.

A Groom Shop ·P•J Grooming.
Footutlng Hydro Both. Don
Sheela. 373 Georges Creak Rd.
814-448-0231 .

AKC German Shephttd Pupa,
White . Chtimp Line; 814 ·38891114.
AKC Rog Black lob PU.P(&gt;V. $75
wlpoporo, 304-875-2151 work or
304-875-83511 hornt.
.

,

AKC Rog Mlnillturt whitt poodle
for stud, will nogotialt, pick ol
lllor Of' IIUd Ill. 304-882·2732 l:tr

.

•

. .

"

IAI~

AKC Rau Weimaraner puppies

UOOta. 304-e75-n40.

AKC 'Raelalerad Roll Woilor
Pupa, 6 Wilko Old, 1st Shoto &amp;
Wormed, $300 Females : $275
Mlltt; 814-44&amp;--882!.

-·

AKC llo-'ltr puppy, pick ol tho

THE BORN LOSER

iller, $250. 814--2333.

•

10g•l tonk oat up &amp;pacltls. Fl&amp;h
Tank I Ptt Shop, 2413 Jackson

"wcu..D ~en£
f91i!'.~'?

"YE~, r WOULD! DO YOO ~~VE: ,
N-I.Y (.OFFEE ()¥.(.?

£.~,-----1

•

·aow. 4.3' LII8f V8 Morcruioer. Full 't

'

Canvas, Ver~ low HoUr, Excel·
lent Condition. Gqti~ , -..ain·

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

I'

'1 Bedroom Near Holzer Extra

tonanoe. (814)44&amp;-:-2282 f'oll lor
Greg.
.
I
. •
j

Nloo. Ctntral Air, I2Dt11Mo••
Utllldoo, Deposit Rtq. 614-448,
2857.

1987 20' Citation &amp;~/outboard t
170hP. 'Trailer 4 acceas'oritl in- '
eluded . Runs &amp; lOoks great :

2 Bedroom Aparrmtnl. Central

$8,500. 304-875-4221.

Air, Goo Hoot, WID Hook-Up
Close To Galllpollt. 814·4482072. .

- ,J

t8jl8 Rang11 373V l8' 12 ·24V • ''

Trolling Motot,' 150 XP Ellinrud•.~
Ouiboatd, H.800. 8t4-802·277D . . -,; i

available ,o.halp you purchase a
feplacement home. Cal\1·800·
466· 7671 to set appointment tor

1986 lroc V-8, 5 Sp'o ad. 84,000
Milea, .T-Tops. Black, 6't'4-2459185.

derails.

580

Fruits &amp;

Vegetables
Sltawbefllea, Pick 'mur Own, Call
ClaucleWII1ters, 814-245-5121.

shop OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO, WY. 304-.755-5085.

Strawberriet, You Pick, We. Pick,
Opened: 8·8 Mon, Wad, ~rl; Sat
B·Noon. CIOS!td Sunday's,
TayiDt't Barry Patch, Kerr Rqad,

Firsr TiN Buversl E·Z Financing.

114-245-8047.

2 or 3 bedroom, $200fmD. Free

delivery &amp; aet up. 1-800·251 5070.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

For Sale: 14x70 Mob~e Home On
46 Acres MIL .South Of Euteka

t987 Toyota Supra ,OOK Ma·
roan, E•cellanl Condition, OBO

61,4-448-8851 . .

1987 Trans Am, V-8, Auto, Air;

ltll

$3800; 014·882-8824.

.

New Tires, Powar Sunrool, AC,
CUotltl S•rto. Eactll8fll Condi·

month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Onl1 at Oakwood Homes, Nilro

lion. Runo Great, t Owntr, 'asK
Mlloa. $8,000 080814-448-6013.

W'l304-755-5885.

1882 Do&lt;lgt llakoll 88,000 Milot,
Auto, M'gnum V-8, P14·258·
8789. '
I&gt;

Naw 1887 141'/q throo bodtDOm,
lnciUdH I monlhl FREE lot rent
Only l181 .e5 par mootlt with
$1050 down. Call 1·800·8373238.

t9a2 Ponti~ Flrebird, automalio,
V-6, Hops, teal ~alar, all power,
gray int~rior, excellent ~ndition .

Now lank Ropo"'l Only 3 loh,

rotr .cleioQQOI, 83.000 miiOI, 814·
24 7-31101 Olttt 5:30pm.

owner finencing available. 304·

755-7181 .

18i3 Chryoltr Concord, Loaded,
58,000 Miltl, Shorp, 014·256-

Ropo"o ()nly 2 loh. N- lived
In, Frtt DtilvOiy I Stt Up. 1-800251-1!010.
.

1400.

19V4. Pontiac Gtand AM GT 4
Ooon, Red', 45,000 Miles,
$12.500.814-448 0000.

.

lo·Z·Bo~e:cktr AtoMnor 140,

114-448-

.,

.

Like Now Graco Toddler Bad
With Mtnttll &amp; Bedding; Bally
Bed With Mallftll Uaad Chain
Link 'Ftnct Wllh Pool I Go to,
Coli e 14-81111:64 n. ·

Now Holand I

Httllon Hoy Tool
8a,._472 THIYII111117.500. 488
.. ...,_ 17.100. 4U t"Hoylllnt
11.400. ea. R. Bal01 eso1
II, 700. 144 R. 8olot 10001
.113.100. UO R. Bol01 10001
lalo Co-nd N•t Wrap
115,100. 181 R. lltiOt 15001
111,100. -11 Dlio Mowaro I' I'
CUI t4, 100.. Htn)Dn 30' V Rolla
t4.2110. Hooo)Dn 710 Dloc Mow.. tuoa. _.., 10' 1'111 Tld-

~ .

'*·

11 Pre'· k

11 ~ .
21 ltlll*ld "1
C8P
aa OUie
24 8rnllf8ll21 Hltullcel rope
27 Slortt focldlr
21 Dl'
volrt "'••
31-Mai1W8
3:11 VIle ltuellnl

112 'CIOilucllono
53 l'cOfl I
114 llwlrt
118 0.1
118 Olui:-

DOWN
1 Torl'l did

lAnny ....

2 lltnllf8ll food

•
1

1885 Fotd Wlnd11or 3.81. 8 Cyliil·
dtr. P/Wil, AMIFMICuatUt,
Rtor Air, Ktylou EniiW, ABS,
14,500814-448-9247.
'

'

1

.

..,

Accessories

.•.,

''!
,

Rebuilt, All Typos, Over .10,000-

5677

New

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pus
Dbl.

unit

·1

Lalln Amer· )

..,
~

~c

42 Pooll'ty·

. 0 111\17 by ~EA. Inc.

,.

HluSiralor ,
45. l"tgpen

.-1

-

50 Tin, 14110unl I
lt

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,,

by Luis C.mpoa

. .

JroM quohltiofw br ~peopll. pat and pr...m
Eild'l ktftctr In tt\1' ~Ilardi lor II'Oltw. Todly'l ellA: X ~ G

CelebrityCiphttoyp~Gg~••• .,.~

OZRUZV

' II T

HVER

WYBZFH

HWABIIIIVK

G U J · V A .H ,

L•zzav

WY VR

liZ

L

~

8 H

LUCHV

e

G U UF

WYV

HW

.,"

LCHIID

,

'j

W. Y II Z F

I&lt;

...

,.

HVER.'

'..."

XGVZKO
NOOFHUZ .
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "There is more slupidily around lhan hydtogen and 11
haslonger.shelf IHe."- Fran~ Zappa.
.
·

..·

"

sct:~~lA-~t.~s·
::::
- - - - - . . . ; ; ; 1411011
CLAY I. POUAN _;......_ _ __
111A1NILT
'VULII

...

"

loy

Ofoor
Rearrange letteu · of
Kromblod wlltda

the

ba·

low to fotm lour Simple words.

WO RAMR

I 1~.1 I I 1
II II P

.. .......•

,.

2

R I G E V·

..

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

I

V 0 R ~·E C
1

·(!

'1:~, .

Our neighbor put a sign on
his freshly painted bench: Wet
. I I I ·.
,_.....;._ _ _ _ ____, Pair\tl Watch It Or •••••• I"

•••

....

SCIIAM-LITS ANSWERS .
Forbid· Ledge· Humus· Weapon • MIND to E!E
Granny always lold us that you can be as happy as
you make up your t.,'IIND to BE.
,•

.... ,1

...'•.....
''"
,. ...
~~

,;.
. •I&gt;
·. '~

.,••. .
,;&gt;

I

·.~

Two 2:15-75-R1'5 w.w:A. w.A. , I
very good condl~on;aollil1e $11 I
J*r, 614-1148-211113 llltt spm.

Motortlomla

i

•tttcun
...-4-4-+--1 ·45Art-dec:o

"I

790 . camptrs "'.

23 8upOiflclll

,

·~
.,=:k
...

·'
truck.:~;

~

.'

luniiMwl
31 GOimln

wheels &amp; radiators . 0 &amp; R Aula,""' • li
RIP,I~y, wv. 30.C-372· 3933 Of , . Vl,l ~

800·213-8328.

4

aflwcUon

, 38

. •.

ga&amp; lank·a, 1 ton

;

attta.ctvefttlt ~
21 , . . . .
J
Nlellve
•
21 KMo IEid ~:
30 lulllnllllna ~ .
34 lleploldocf ,
38 --flow
~
38 Thermom•r ~

" ..:..c.

1

••

I
l

~

~~~~~'-:-:-~-:::-::::~ J .,

11

1874 Lark ctmper, olr, $1800, • I

btvwn- ISO. 514·•2-3824.

1003 Terr1, · ur. small truck can')l j
pull, $5500; 1VT3 Coachmln, 28', .
titctllont condlllon, $3500; 81~- _
1196 8002

.....

~·

'::~~~==~=~~===

SERVI CES

ia1«ot:~HoiH;
· ;miii~e;i..
...,~
'
.
lmprovtmtnta
:
r
' :•.;; - :.- :. -

BASEMENT

W.IJ'ERPROOFtiG
Uncondltionot lllttlmcl gllllanlft...
local reler41ncu lurnfshed. Es· .
tablilltod 1875. Call (o11l.,=~ .
0870 Or .1-800·287·0578.
~

.... ,• . ·=

~

.

,,. .
...

.

fl. .

sure to slate your zodiac sign.·
pursuit of yow' goals today. Do'not be
CAN.;:ER. (June 2l •July 22) A inlimidal~d by impedimenls. Inner
'
·,lose frici\d migi11 pa.~s on some · strenglh will conquer all! · ·
mutual infonnation today for which
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
you'll find a. ~onslruclivc usc: Act ·~~o .considering significant matters
promptly or you miaht lose, interest. ulday, take the lot\g -range view.
BERNICE
LEO (Jul:,: 23-Aug. 22) Trends Your benefiiS will be greater if you
. BEDEOSOL 11)111 rellecl upon your earning capac·· plan ahead for your tomorrows.
·
ity look promising loday. Additional
AQUARIUS (Jan. · 20-Feb.. 19)
gains mishl be made through your . Joint endea~ors look promising for
u~ual channels or a second source:
you IQday, especially if yo~·re assoVIRGO (A,ug. 23-Scpt. 22) Com- ciated with people who share your ·
panions will be looking to you today . ambitions·and standards.
'10~
OUI matte~ of mutual concern.
PISCES (Feb:20.March 20) Your
Friday, June p, 1997
Comply wilh their expectations by keen judgment should enabie you to
,
see both sides of ml\ior issues clear·
.· OE~INI (May 21-June 20) ~ 11$SI!rling yourself. • .
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Some· \y tOday. Base your decisions irpon
number of endeavors can be finalized
to your.salisfaction today if you have thing profitable may develop for yoo yo1,1r own impressions .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ,
,the fonitudC lo 'do so. Establish your toda~ in an un"'ual manner, possibly
lhrouth
a
relacive.
Do
not
demote
its
.1bere
may be. bonuses in s1orc for
objectives and proceed toward them
worth
because'of
ill
soun:e.
.
you
Ieday
If you're enterprising. Do
·Without wau:hins .the ciQCk. Oet a
SCORPIO (Oct. 74-Nov. 22) '1\vo an extra Sood job. especially if you're
j~mp on life by ilndentandirig lhe
friends
ate u equally anxious u you beins employed liy ~on\Cone else.
.inftuences II* aovem you in the yell'
arc
10
110elhat
you pt 10methin1 for
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) This
~ - Send for your Altro-Onph ·
IJ!e(lictiOIII today by mailiq $2 llld · which you've~ hilpi111. They will can be ~ extremely enjoyable day
SASE 10 Altlo-Onph. clo this newi· 111ill you if wlthin !heir purvi6w. . . for ~ou . 1f you adhere 10 youf comSAOITI'AJUUS (Nov. 23:Dec. passtonate urses. Do not be fettered
IJIIICI'• P.O. BoK 1758, Mllfi'IY Hill
21)
Be c:onlillenl and lllnll:iOIIS in the. by worldly, malerialistjc honds.
Station, New York, NY IOIS6. Be

AST·R O·ORAPH

sa.• ca-;

r

L~

. .I

Transmiaaions, Access Trenalar ...
Cases &amp; Rear• Ends, 814· 245· . ~
.

f

• I

~~~~~~~~~
Budget Price Tran'smllllons,
Star~ne ot $99.00 and Up, Uled 1

Dbl.

l~lhe .....

l~=~
20 Thinlll

Eall

f

I

Auto Parts &amp;

3•

)

10&amp;~

SOMETIMES I l)IINI( A80VT
WE TMOII6JIT YOU
M16HT.9E AIJI.E TO • Ml{ ~OTIIE~5,AND'I' AND
TELL VS WI-IER.E
i (;)LAF ..• I WONDER WIIAT
OV~ I(IND·WOULP
TI-IE'f'R.E OOIN6 NOW .•
FIT IN •.• .

t

New Interior, lot&amp; Of Room, 2 G.M ~
Engine~ $8.500. lronlon Mtrina,
1
6'"1-4:'·534-.;_236=5"-._ _ _ _ __,..,
::-

Norlb

8 Molol'llll'

~;:;. .; [I.T' ~~T.;..I..::E:.,I--1,.,

!

Stll 614-245-9391.

Wnl

,

7-Ptrrk, S.D. , .

3 Lil*l

'

(2wdL)

N;.;.,.;l
•.
cornple1e •he ehuekle quoted
.
•
•
•
.
.
.
by t.lllng in the missing word1
"--L-....._-t-..t...-~...1 you develop frolft step No. 3 below.

1885 Sparta Coupa Slhitn, grNt
condition, $11,000 ot lake ovot
..... f!Oymtnt. 8t4·0e5-347ti Dt
114-8411-:11125.
'
. API!Iianco Parll And Sortlcl: All
Homo Btanda Dvet 2S -... ExModltn 2 Bodroom Apattmtnt, Ntw loptlc Tank Alrotlan Mo·
Aulo lOint: AUto Dtaltt Will At· parltltct All Work Glillantled
114 Ul 0310
• IIIII; 1381 piOI ••. (114)·448·
range Flnanclno Even II You Ftonoh City Martag, 814-441:
H- 11Hn Tutned Down Baloro. 7715.
•712
.
.
.
,}
illrl 11,100. tlttlllln T llowoi• loana
Ont bedroom ·aportmtnt In Pt
fwalllblt For No Credit,
Coni
Hlnton'l30
Pleaun~ Futnllltld.
clltn
814 Crtdlt And BlnkfliPl&lt;Y Suy- CIC Generll Home Main ~ -~~!'!
R. Baloll.., 17,1100. Htatllln ..._
• ..... No ptlt, 3M-875-1 • •
Col Dilnt114-~-8172,
t•n~~nco- Painting, vinyl oldlng, · ·~ nt .
140 R.....,. 1Cif01 110.100.
TOWnhouee Aparlmenll, - o y Tlvllt ~!tap- - ltup.g Httrlln R..... llloao WN- CARS FOR $1001 Tiuckt, boots. WP'!f1\ry, doort, ~. ,lt!IIIS. t "'I
Spaclout. 2 BtdtO-. 2 .....Ill... -.,~., clotltt, 111117 • 7,1110. Aa-Wflip R. .... liiMt 4..whMiwa, mo10r homes, furftl.. - - ...... ond--.Fo; 11.
""ttlllme• caii .CIIa~ 114-tll- 't "
CA. 1 112 llltlt. AMy Clr· 1101111 ancliarge tOft. Call 814- . , . _ , 17,100. Ae WNp Flfm
11 1'1{
11110, -f11a, · - - · .... 1323.
Adult Pool • 8oby Pool, •2-3'121.
. . . . . . . . por,rilltO'll •I
11W fBI, IRS. DEl\. """'- your
171
pw
IIIII.
I
Utili
Round
llal,
Sttri ·IUO/Mo. No Pala,
"~ HI U1
- · Coll1·100·513-4343
IIIPOIUIIJIIGI
.,. 10 Cltoott Ft11111. Ktt ..r't 1111
e.. .._
Pluo Security ~ flo.
, 11 111
To Rid Ri'IOr.F!OOdll\l Foe- 11&lt;¥111 Oen•r Sl. 111. 17 PI,
81 ...7-11!6:
'l'leaoMI
•
Riplef
Ad.
104
.5
Ctldll Pl"'lt:me? ao ...f1llltl Fl••:;~: Two All IIHI OUonnt
au
· Far' lilmldilltt Soli, (I) 1174.
nllnclng, 1o1' Down, Paymontt
40x80. Novor Etoclld. WINTalto
As low AI $160 Par Month. No
Btlanct Dwo4. Coil Bill 1·ioo· w. .......dtaullc ...... Tutn Dowilll CaN Rulli 114-1-!1·
1111••· Sldlr"t EqUipmtnl 304• .7.
511-2SCIO.
1111-1421.

var,

m

f•

. ·r·. ...,.I

1994 Stratos Basa Boat 150 HP 1 '

Evinrude Intruder, low Hours~'
Tournament Ready, Priced To

760

1000 Toyota Celica, Auto, Red,

Limited Olterl 1887 doublowidt,
3br, 2bath, $17,98 dpwn. U781

304~~

42' Sunllner Steal Houseboat,

19DO Chevr- Corsica, black O(l
gray, cold alr, tilt, automatic,
66,000 actual miles, excellent
condition, book value s•eoo, will

3 boclrqotnL Stattlng at 13485.
Quick delivery. Call 1·600·837·

Ot

4 Speakers, Boarding laddtf:.-..1
~op Up Changing Room WiUr1
Port-a-pony, 814·441-Cl1_08.
~

1987rNjuan Maxim1,1m $4,500 .

1984 ChOYy .Cullom Yan $4,000.
304-895'3928. .

$1500, Ooll 614-367·5055

01

1

2• Ft. Pon1oon Boat Trailer, 40....-...1
HP·Motor, AMfFM Ca·~sa~te Wilh;.J

$2,200. 1985 VW Jalla, 5spd,
$900; 304-675-1851 or 304-6756197.

19.9. 2 Door Chav·y Beretta

Large stlecrion of uted home. 2

out board, full canva•

:J
covarJn

1987 Nissan Maxima, aula, air,

1989 Cavalier RIS AIC, 87K
$3,195: 1992 S·10 Auto, PIS, PIB,
58K, $4,895, Trade-Ina 'Welcome
Cook Mollrs8t4-446-0103.

IT'S SIG. 1887 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1,849 DOWII,
$318/MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NIT'RO, WV. 304-755-·
seas.Llmilld 011tr.

I

J:J

$14,000. 304·875·2151
675-6358.

Cond, 614-245-55119.

Hook Up And Largo Shop. Great
Hunting, $65,000 Call 814·250·
6068.

.1993 21' ,Mirada Cuddy C~bin
Boat, porta polly, am·lm cas· ·
utta radio, 4.3 Vortex ec~l. inJ

1g88 Subaru, loaded, all power,
sunmol, $1,350. 304·675-3324.

PS. PB. ,PW. Gmund Elltc:tL Cowl
lnduclion Hood, Louvers, E»ec .

'll(ilh An Additional Mobil~ Homa

lime
151111illflalll"'::::Ill\
·•47 fiiVOilfl
mt••
.
="

·The postman
rings twice

======::;:--, .
F

'

.

Bllet Ptrson With Alltlll 2
v..rt Expotl•nc• In Lumbtr ·•
Hordwlro, Full· Time Position
1\UIIIIIIt, C.l814-4*-2002. For
•lt)!ln ......

t\

1988 Invader, 17', open bow, 130'"~
Mercruisa, stainlaas statl prop, .-1
amtfrn cas,.ene ••eo. cover, ga~
rage kept, eXceltnt to "'¥' conch· ; :
tion, 6,.·9G2-5124.
.:. -t

2 Badtoom Apattnitn~ Adjacent
To Unlvefllty · 01 Rio Orondo
Campus, Available 8111117. 514·

Soulb

Thursday, June 12, 1997
By Phillip Alder .
There are cenain plays that an
expen makes almosl "in sleep,"' but
that the less capable player always
seems to miss. Today"s.deal features
one. II ·~;~ms declared by the Italian
superstar Pietro Forquel in the 1968
World Tel!lll Olympiad. . .
Agamst four heans; 1he defenders
cash thi-ee spade tricks before switch-.
· ing 10 a club. Over 10 you.
Pre·empiS are meant to make life
· difficull for the oppqneniS. In the second position, though, you have
already got ):last one opponcnl, and il
.is likely partner has a good hand. So,
. I think you·5hould have n respectal)lc
suit,So¥1h's henn holding is.a mini·
mum (notlhat the Young Turks will
agree). II isn' l apparent 'to me why
East ·doublcd four hearts. ·
After winning Irick four wilh
dummy·~ club ace, Forqucl made the
critiCal play: He ruffed a dub in hand.
There followed a hean to dummy 's
ace, the heart nine, anolhcr club ruff,
a diamond to dummy's quee~. a lhird
club ruff; and a diamond 10 Inc ace.
II was Irick I 2 wilh lhe lead in Ihe
dummy. Forqucl had lhc K-J of
hearts and Easl the Q-8. Leading
eilher of dummy"s cards allowed For·
quetto win lhe last 1wo tricks.
Yes, if East swiiches to a diamond
at Irick four, th'ings are trickier. For·
' .quel would have to ruff dummy's last
spade (wi'h the heart seven), playing
for lhe likely 4-0 hean break (or
West's having lhe singlelon lhree or
. six).
. To pull otT .the trump coup, For·
. que1 had to reduce his uump lenglh
10 the same as Easl's. When you may
have lo do this, start ruffing as quickly as po.&lt;sible. Here, no lrick-live rull',
no lOth Irick.

Pets for Sale

1885 Faur Winno .1V FT, Open

245 595'

.. ;.;..."

Opening lead: • K

MI%SMIFII

'tO WAIT MY
TURN TO
flAY $2.00

2003.

1 BtdriiOm In Gallipolis, No Fwts.
Vf11Y Nlca, 814-44&amp;-780:1.

taw-.

14 v.t

Vulnerable: l!:aat-West
Dealer: East

Woahtt lo Drye&lt;, Twin Wate&lt; Btd
Framo, 814-446-2856.

560

:l'M'f!IIIIIY

... ·8

,....101\

sso

11--fwM

+.5.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uptight. Ron Evans Ernetptleea, ,
Ohio, 1·800·537-1528. . .

3238.

REAl ESTATE

Eut

Ave. Point Pleasant, 304· 875·

SAVE$$$$.

NEEDED: Service ·Man HVAC
carlifled. salary to camerate with

+A Q B•
•A74S

. Control Air
2 T'l" $1, 115; 2 112
Ton 11.285; 3 Ton 11.385:3 112
Ton $1,585; 4 Ton $1 ,815; Prlcla
Abovoi Include Normal !natalie·
lion. FuP 5 Ytttr War1111~Y.' "II 'ibu
Don't Call' Ua We Both LOtti'
Free Estim1te11 Add·On He1t
Pumpa Only Sllghty Hlghtt. Con
Uo Todoy, 1987 Ia Tho TWiflty
Savtnth .Yatr In Tht Hoatlne '&amp;
Cooling Businesal 8U·4..ci..e301,
1·800-281-0088.
Condlionot~:

Oakwood Homes 11 rhe only
dealer in · tha · trl ~ atata area that
builds and tells their own
homes. For factory direct pricas,

11..-.at34.

I

Rooma

FACTORY DIRECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN.

NHded Someone To Mow LaWn
In Mcintyre Park Dlslrlct Call

'
!j

0

Just Below Locks And:Dam. Sor·

Prolesslonal

4§0

tr.tMIO-

• " ' .....

1

17

¥AI

woqd Homes Nirro, WV. 30.C· 755·

luos Inquiries Only. BU·258·

230

,__

•ta7e

$1,358 down, $228/mo. FrH air,
tkirllng, &amp; delivery. 0n11 at O.k·

Own Business? Here's Yout
Chancel ·smarl Grocerw IAestuar· 1997 dou.blewlde $1445 down,
ant Loc:ated On St AI. 7 South $229/mo. Free delivery &amp; setup.

8100.

f-~~~~~~~~~~

no

1997 14x80 3 or • Bedroom,

E.O.E.

~

inolu~lng:

814·992-2805 8:00am·10 :00am
Monday lhru F~iday.
Ntw·1V87 14 Wldt· l bath, $8881
down, $13"/mo, wilh approved
ctedit Calt-800-891·8717.
FINA NCIAL

P.O. BOXH7
GAll POUS, OH 41131

And Otol).

up~radao

cathedral cellll'IQI, new CIA. u•r·
Will care lor disabted peraori for den tub. rwo fuif balhl, and much
evening shill, have relettnces; ITIJre, St8,800, can 814492·3335.

pkg to includt 401(k) . Apply 'ot
INCTICEI
Roure 1 Box "6 Galllpolis Farry
. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
WV 25615. MlfMil.
11commends that you do busi with ptk)ple you know, and
MEDI-NOME HEALTH AOENCY, ness to
send monet throu~h the
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE IS CUR· NOT
mall until you have invttl!uated
RENTLY LOOKING TO HIRE
THE FOLLOWING FUll·JIIIE rhe olftring.
POIITIOHS:
Ever Dreamed Of Owning Your

I ,

·

ow Glozing No
Too
Upon Re&lt;IUOIU ,
Eslimatet, Call Ann
·: :28-4.,..5.---::------·l
Prot.aalonal Tr11 5arvk:e, Slump
Rel~tencet

La C111tlno Mtllcln - . . . ....
O.Nipolil Fony WY
Wll~tll nttdtd. Apply Won thru
Fri ~ 2-5pm.3tloW75-7115.

por~814-882-3415-5pm.

Fotm Work $8.00 An Hoor. 114· 14x70 Trailer On 112 Acre, '3
258--1233.
Miles From Gallipolis, On S.R.
588, 814 -441-0187, 814 -448.Gtorgu Ptltllble S.wmlll, don't 9258.
hriUI rour logs to lhe n;n juat cal
30+075-1957.
1881 Scroltz mobllt homt, 14170,

pal'*'-

lnatlllotion RSE'S Cor'tlfitd EPA
Ctrtlilld 014·U1 •5531 .For Ap-

C.A., tltcrio hta~ atorm w1.-o,
battmtnt, $35,000. 814 ·8g2.
1
!!&amp;4 .
NIIW!y rt,_ld thral bedroom,
.... l1td 112 balh h6n1o In ~~­

dtcko, ·vinyl aiding, add-on oddl· 320 Mobile ~mea
tlons, cabinet ref8cing .or newly
,_ a .. le
1
rebuilt. Rtlttencts·frto Eati · J.,-,,..,.,.,..,,..,.,
"'-:'"",.---,.-72
mollll. Jim Stall 304-875-12 •
12a85 Mobllt Homt Thtrma
Experlenc.ct Carpentry And Rt· Guard r•placemenl windows,
modeling Add-Ono, Docila, Walko good ftoo"- c/11, wll deliver withFrom Framihg To Finish Work, In 20 miles ol Henderson .
814-441-0124.
$3,000. 304-875-2728.

Home Interior Servfces: Houae
Cleaning, ·cau For Appoi11tmant"
Loria Hall 114·445-3518, Or Flo
Tu~ey 014-448·3325, Gallipolis,
0111o.

HVAC. KnaWiedQe 01 Service &amp;

__

Lond Far S.le: 2.2 ,..,., On u~
Home for u.le on AL 2
II llulloldn At*, Apprott, 2 Milot
tboul 10 mlloo lrom Pl. I
100mo on ..,. Ia~ lhown IIW ap- on 218. 115.1100 Fltm, 814-440· T•
cltpor~
pttt,oportf111nt
at..-.-.
bodtoom
In Mid- ·
pointmenl only. Call :104·S72- 03111 ,
421611om 8-5pm.
Fumlahed
SPRING

Now Hiring Dellv.~e,r:v••·

.lion
Paid oauw. Floxlblp Sclledulu,
Un11onn Prvvldod, App!J AI Golll-

'

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