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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

lnterleague ·
lay debuts In
aMball
Sportl on PIDe 4

Pick 3:
1-o-8

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Plck4:
1-1-2-8
BuckeyeS:
4-9-15·22·33

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Mostly cloudy .t onight
with • chance of aholll .,.
and thunderatorma, Iowa
In lhiiOI. llllurdly. partly
cloudy. Highs 75 to 80. -

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8y BRIAN J ..REED
81ntln11 News Staff
Crews have been moving din for
several days, but now it's official: the
Eastern Local School District has
begun its multi-million dollar building project.
,
, A groundbreaking ceremony was
conducted Thursday afternoon, amid
the bulldozers lind piles of soil that
.have already been moved.
. ·$7.3 million will be spent on the
project, which will see the renovation
of the
school building,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, FrJciaY, June13, 1997

w.hich was opened in 1958, and construction of a new consolidated el~mentary/middle school.
'.
Funding the construction will
come froin a bond issue passed in
1996, and' assistance from the Ohio
Department of Education's bUilding
assistance program.
,
The general· contractor on the
project is Wesam Construction of
Pomeroy. Other contractors arc D.V.
Weber c ijnstruction of Reedsville,
sewage treatment plant: L.T. Mandeville Plumbing and Heating,

In addition to the asbestos abate·
!llent, Well hopes that the roof, .gym.nasium floor and bleachers can be
replaced before the school ·term
_begins in August.

- Plaatlcsanca- the windows and doors
at Elatem Hlah Bchoolaa asbeatoa removal and other ranovatlona blgln. ihe building Ia part of 1 $73 million project at Eaat·
WORK

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plumbing; General Temperature Control Inc., heating, ventilation and·air
conditioning; and Pioneer Pipe, electrical.
·
Kl~en-Ail of Amc,rica began
asbestos abatement work o~ the high
school building earlier. Windows and
doors of the building arc now ~ed
to facilitate the asbestos .removal,
which is expected to be completed in
mid-July.
•.
Superintendeni Deryl Well said
Thursday that theproject is on schedule.
·
"I think tlu!t thin~~:s arc going very
well," he said. "I think that the •
weather has been very cooperative
and things are being done on the
schedule."

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· Well said that window replacement may also be completed, if time ·
petinits, befotc the end of I~ summer.
School Board President John Rice
. said that,he is excited about the program:s completion.
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GROUND BROKEN- School officials, contractor&amp; and community memblra helped tum
earth on the Eastern Local building project
Thuraday. In front, from left, are Ll.. Rltc:hle,
clerk·traatum; Elol.. Boston, former clark·
treasurer; Ollta Heighton, ....latant director for
extension HrVIcea at the ,.-alga County Public:
Library; Pat Holter, library board memblr; John
Rlc:e and Jim Sml1h, ac:hool board'nwnblra; AI
Vargo, architect; Proaecutlng Attorney John
Lentn; Rick Sanders, school board member;

"I'm looking forward to seeing will be absorbed by the Meigs Counboth buildings whey they're com- ty Public Librlll')' Board, which will
p.leted," Ric.e said. "Obviously, tiie pay for the construction and opera-'
new building is going to be beautiful, tion of a library branch in the high
but ·! d~n't think peopl.e realize yet school building.
.
how impressive the high school
The board plans to have classes
building will he when.it's completed." meeting in the ~w buildings by Sep· Pllrt of the cost of construction tember 1998, so the · approaching

:Fireworks safety bill clears· panel,
ftftUL.,.:Jaad~
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his head," ·Sb~nnon said. But the
rocket hit Michael in.the back of the
·caL(JMBUS - · JIISi before Jack- head._ He died the next day.
Sha!\11011 began testifying against a
Shanbon noted that the fireworks
bill that would.allow adults to sci off had been bought in Ohio: The mod·
cenajn t)'llts of ftreworks, he showed elthat killed his son was pulled from .
·store shelves.
:lowmlikei'S a picture.' ''
It was a phoio of his 3-year-old
"However, · similar products
s,on who died after being struck by an remain on the market today," he said.
·
Ohio ·law currently allows the sale
:errant explosive.
. Shannon spoke to .the Scnate.:s of Class C fireworks, but requires
. Insurance, Commerce and Labor people to take them out of state to
: Committee on Thursday before it us.e. The new legislation would take
· passed legislation. designed to out that feclujrement.
iml!rove a,fety at fireworks stores.
The b,ll, which was approved 7'The bill also would .legalize use of I, will now so the 'full Senate. Com·
· , firewo.U such as boUle rockets and millee chairwoman Sen. Karen.Gill·
firecraokers.
mor, R-Oid Fon, offered the only
Shannon, or Cary, N.C., said he vote BJ~:ainst it.
and his son, Michael; were standing
"I want io be cautious,'; Gillmor
· ·about 40 'feet away from the fire- said. "I don't want to vote for any·wotlcs at a family reunion in Ken- thing that conceivably could hurt a
. tucky. He said one of the explosives child."
Julie Heckman of the American
· - ,a rQeket launcher ·- tipped and
·. Qew stiaight at his son.
Pyrotechnics Assoeiation in Mary·
"He .iusl had enough time to tum land countered that serious backyard

By JQHN .SEEWER •
AMocltded Pretl Wrltlt

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and Morgan Weber, Rlviii'YieW Elementary atu·
dent ilnd daughter of contractor David Weber;
back, from left, John Rlel»l, auc:*"dent of
the Malga county Educa11onal
Ice eent.r;
Roger Kerr of w-m Con...-uctlon; L. 8cett
Powell; a .. latant proaecu11ng attorney; Tom
Kerr of w- Conatrucllon; David Weber, o.v.
Wablr Conatructlon; a11d Grace Weber· and
Wilma Parker, rettrecl•chers at!d.mambera of
the district's levy and school dealgn commit·
tees.

·

school year will be the final year of
use for Riverview, Chester and Tuppers Plains elementary schools. 11Je
fate of those buildings have not yet
been determined, although the district
bas discussed the possibility of turning the buildings over to the respective communities for public use.
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fireworks
arc rare. lriillries
caused by fireworks have drc,j)pc.a
the past three years, she said.
She added that fireworks makers
were the ones wlio took the explosive
that killed Michael Shannon off the
market.
"The industry does not want
unsafe products out there," Heckman
said.
Rep. John 'Carey, R-Wellston,
introduced the bill in response to the
fireworks store explosion and fire last
July that killed nine peOple in Scottown, a village in his southern Ohio
district.
.. , ·
·
The bill includes· stricter safety
rules relating to lhe sale, storage and
exhibitiqn of fireworks. It would
require improvements in fireworks
stores, such as wider aisles, and
mandate sprinkler systems.
Wholesalers and retailers would
be required to attend a six-hour education program , once every three
years.

CAR FIRE - Thla 1979 Chavette suffered

'-¥Y damage after a fire on 'Tht,~raday alternoon. The Ohio State Highway Patrol reported

Stale Rout. 124 when lhl fire stamid undlir the
dlah. 'The vehicle waa towed from the scene• .
(Sentinel photo by Eric Wagner)

tt1at Diana Sigler, 17, Rutland, 111!81 driving on

::A.ppeals decision prompts resentencing ·in Salvation Army robbery ·
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·A 28-year-Oid former ·Pomeroy
&lt;man serving time for the Jan. IS,
:1!)%, rObbery of the Meigs County
·Salvation Army ' in Pomeroy was
~ntenced Wednesday in the Meigs
· :county Common Pleas Court of
. ~Judse Fred R. Crow m.
• . Robinson was originally sen·
~enced on May 14, 1996to:26-to-SS

year, in prison on two counts of rob- ' separately,
As a result, !{obinson l.ras resenbery, iwo counts of kidnapping and
tenced
to 18-to-40 years in prison.
one count of aggravated bUrglary.
However,
the difference in the sen·
Wednesday, resentencing followed
tences
may
not result in less prison
a decisiop by the Fourth District
Coun of Appeals that determined the time for Robinson since he would
robbery and .kidnapping charges have been eligible for parole in 15
against Robinson ~re essentially the years regardless.
In his appeal. Robinson also consame offenses and .not punishable

&lt;Jurors now delib~)'ating
·.ute or death for McVeigh
Oag: bright rell lie. white shin and
blue suit. "He is nPt alone. His flllll'l
are not alone.' He is not a demon.
though surely his act was demonic."
Jones hinted.darkly that executing
MeVeigh - convicted June 2 of murder and conspiracy in the April 19,
·J99S, bombing :- could cause more
bloodshed. .
"You have to make the first step
to restore domestic tranquility," Jones
said. "You know now that Oklahoma
City started so~thing."
l'rosc\:utor Josejlh Hartzler called
the statements "tantamount to almost
a lcrrorist threat."
"That is pure intimidation,'' he
said. "I am askina e~~th aad every
one of you 10 have the courage to di&amp;resud that."
Eadlcr. piOICICUia' Jleth Wilkinson
c:alled the slaughter of 168 innoceat
people "the aime dial the dellh
Waco. 'Jew.
.
: "It ia 1 political crime. It is aa ._ plllllty wu detdpM tor." ·
oqkll crime. "Jones said Tbunday,
Willi• Rl.... Mrc
. .he told
(Continued · Plge a)
th...cl ill the colon of the~.

DENVER (AP) - Before thC:y
, began . deliberating
Timothy
,:McVeigh's fate, jl,ll'ors heard his
lawyen
excuses for the.olda, homa City bombing and imply that
more violence may follow if the
'defendant is executed.
. The prosecution reacted sharply,
·c:allina the defense statcment."almost
.a terrorist threat," 1111d said the death
, ·(ienalty wu designed for a crime like
1he bombing.
.
.
. ; After spending nearly five hours
behind closed d~ Tbw:;day, the
jw'ors were 10 resume deliberations in
11J0 penalty phase of McVcligh's trial
. today.
.
.
: .In his ·cloSins qume~~t. dofome
)IIOmey Stephen Jones
the seed
1hat grew into the blast wu pl1111ted
it the dNdly 1993 sicae· of the
Branch Davidian&amp; compound nAr

make

wa

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE •

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tended that his conviction was against
the weight or the· eyidence. The
appeals coun disagreed.
·on the night of the crim,e, Robinson, accompanied by two minors,
broke 'into the Butternut Avenue residence of Dora Wining, 87, which at
the time housed a chapter of the Salvation Army.
'

They wcnt ·up to asccond-OQor . ag~eed with Prosecuting Attorney
apartment, assaulted and· restrained Jdlin R. Lcntes who maintained the
Wining and her 63-year-old daughter, · robbery and kidnapping counts,were
Helen Townsend of Ashville, and not allied offenses and punishable by
then proceeded to ransack the separate prison terms.
dwelling, stealing an undetermined
amount of mopey and other belongLentes said the kidnapping was
ings.
,
done not just to facilitate the robbery,
ln the original scntencing,.Crow but to aid in the escape.
·

Pared-down relief action
·wi~s Clinton's si·gnature
WASHINGTON (AP) - Pump- mental principle."
ing billions of dollars into 35 states,
Clinton's signature freed up $5.6
President Clinton signed a major dis- . billion for natural disaster relief in 35
aster ·relief bill after scoring a con- states, panicularly 'the Oood-ravaged
vincing victory over Republicans Dakotas and Minnesota. Another
who tried unsuccessfully to link the $1 .9 billion would go to replenish
bill to unrelated measures . .
Pentagon funds depl~ted by peaceThe House and Senate - on keeping efforts in Bosnia and elsevotes of 348-74 and 78-21 -passed where.
the $8.6 billion ~mergency spending
One immediate effect would be
bill Thursday. The action caine after the availability of monty for Oood
lawmakers · stripped out' the 'extra victims to relocate their homes and
'pi'Oyisions that Republicans had for faimen 10 leplenish lost livestock. .
hoped to ram ll!rough with !he mustpass disaster relic~ measure.
, ~· [ianicu!arly from dis- :
Clinton, who had vetoed the bill uter·hil stateS, were ICIIItic. "The :
. Monday because of the cxlri provi· delivery has Mn lona Mel painful ·
'sions, quickly signed the slimmed but the bllby is a beauty," said ~e,:
down version Thursday night and Earl Pomeroy, D-~.0.
ptaised the Republican-controlled . They al~ raveled in the ne. 101111 •
Congress for its action.
surrender of the Republicans. s- , .
"When our people are in need, we · DeiiiOCrllic leader Tom Duc:ble o1 :
Americans come to their assistance as South Dak011 said he hopecllia cal- ·
one nation," Clinton said in a slate- . JeaauealladhMHidlhltntiJdllapolit- '
ment. "I applaud Congress for heed- 1ical pills wilh dlaster lid "jut ·
.ing my call to remember that funda- doeln't ........

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�CoirinJentary
The_D~y .Sentinel

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Patt2
Frlday,June13,1887

. F~,June13,1997
•

Group would c_
reate IRS oversi_
ght board

AccuWelllher"' forecast for

conditions

MICH.

ate, would consist of five memben sbould not •• rum the IRS over to a ing congressional report, tbe 'llcasury
from
the 'private sector and two hoard of outsiders," tbe vice presi· Department is releasing its own plan
'E.rtUBsfid in J!J48.
We've wriuen a great deal in administration officials.
dent Hid recently. Meanwhile, of action. Predictably, it suggests that
recent months about the failed mod·
1be board would have the power Deputy Treasury Secretary Lawrence the IRS can restructure itself just fine
111 Court Sbeel, Pomeroy, Ohio
emization
efforts
at
the
Internal
RevSummers has called the commis- without any interference from the pri614-912·2188 • Fax 912·2157
enue Service. 1be IRS has squan·
sion's plan "dangerously flawed" vate sector.
. and an "unacceptable risk to our
Even Summen admits that "the
dered billions of taxpayer dollars try·
nation's revenue stream."
IRS has a lo)lg way to go to bring
ing to revamp its antiquated comput·
I
We have a different idea of what customer service into line with what
er systems and resttucture its operaconstitutes an "unacceptable risk "to Americans have come to expect in
tions
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
the revenue $tream:
the private sector." Perhaps it's time
Now it looks like 50me meaning·
ful changes may be on the horizon.
., Continuing to rely on 1960s to bring in some private-sector outROBERT L WINGm
But the Clinton adminisb'ation, once to hire and fire the IRS commission· computer equipmeni. ·
siders with fresh ideas.
Publllher
an agent of change, is attempting to er, approve or disapprove a budget
•• Spending $4 billion in taxpay·
WHITE HOUSE WATCH •• See
' scuttle the refonn efforts and preserve submitted by the commissioner and er money to modernize the agency if you can figure this one out.
business as usual at the tax-collecting rule on other important agency issues. and ending up in nearly as bad a
Not long ago, President Clinton's
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
agency.
While
it
wouldn
'I
run
tbe
day-to-day
shape
as
when
tbe
project
began.
·lawyer,
Bob Bennett, was trying to
Controller
General M11J18981'
Some background: Early this year, operations of the agency, the bOard
··Sending out more than IS mil· get the Supreme Court to pos1pone
in response to growing public outcry would be, in the words of Portman, lion incorrect penalty notices to tax- Paula Jones' civil suit until after the
payers. Businesses often get tied up president leaves office. Scouring
71w Stnd•l ,_..,..,.-'""" ·"" 1
o1 ..,.,...
over IRS inefficiency, Congress ere- "clearly in charge."
Shllrl,_(3110-.laor_J_,. _ _
~,.,.
ated the National Commission on . This doesn't sit well with the in audits for years because the IRS through the legal archives, he came
1 ··-·
Resttuctunng
· Ihe IRS
·
admin'strat'o
however, wh'tc h screwed up.
up with the following defense: The
. , a b.tparttsan
1
1 n,
unn..,.,., /fdllol; n. ...,lltlol, 111 COutt St.,,.,_ 01t1o
group created to find ways to clean doesn't like the thought of ceding any
·· Customer servi~. that greets Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act,
L.~UTI~~/I;~D:':'•!'AX~,:to:,:t::•-:::::;n~.--------~------"' up the agency. The commission, led control over the IRS to a board whose balf of all callen with basy signals. which holds that members of the
by Sen. Bob Kerrey, D. Neb., and memben are drawn mainly froni the
By any reasonable measure, the armed services cannot be sued for
Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, will private sector. For years they've IRS is already "dangerously flawed" civil damages while in the service of
release its findings later this month. maintained that IRS officials are and in need of some major internal their country.
The president is the titular head of
As we reported in April, the com- capable of straightening things out. refonns. Over the past few years, IRS
mission is expected to call for the themselves. Their chief spokesman bureaucrats have been given the the armed forces, Bennett figured, so
jlppointrnent of an oversight board to on this issue is Mr. Reinventing opportunity to institute reforms them· why not try to convince the courts
By WALTER R. MEARS
supervise IRS operations. The seven- Government himself, Vice President selves, but each time they've come that Clinton should be shielded by a
AP Special Correspondent
up short.
·
law designed to protect active-duly
member panel, to be appointed by the AI Gore.
WASHINGTON- From a distance, especially a flood-ravaged distance, president and confinned by the Sen"We don't need to ·· and we
To blunt the effect of the upcom- · military personnel? Bennett quic~l~
nobody is looking good in the struggle over disaster relief funds. It is" an insid·
-=--;..;:..;··;;,· backpedaled after several commeners' Washington feud, another dent in the image of government.
taton pointed out the irony of a conCongressional Republicans appear to be losing the political argument,
fessed draft-dodger hiding behind a
after daring, and getting, Pres1dent Clinton's veto of the disaster aid bill by
soldier's shield. ·
tying it to GOP budget and census measures.
It appears the president's memo·
That's why it is takmg three months to send flood and other disaster vicry is even briefer than his jogging
VEP.~ IS YEARS
On\;ClltlNHNI ~ Jrl shorts. A year after the president
tims $5.6 billion in assistance that could have passed in days, probably unanIN THE AR.MY
18lltller56tl!aal com
tmously, but for the side issues.
.
.
.
declared himself to be active-duty
WITHOUT
A
SIN61.E
The way out always was inevttable- compromis~. Republican attempts
military, his admtnistration has
SEXUAL
to save face in retreat, and a settlement Clinton will sign.
become picky about promoting adul•
HARASSMENT
In the political infighting, each side accused the other uf playing cruel
terers in the armed forces, most
games with disaster aid, holding 11 hostage to their ends. But Clinton and
CHA~E
recently Gen. Joseph Ralston, a highthe Democrats had the stronger case, since it was the Republicans who tried
ly quali fted Air Force officer who
to wm policy pomts by putting them into the disaster appropriations bill.
was in line to become the ~xt chair·
That is a familiar tactic. The aim is to use hard-to-veto bills as the vehiman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
cles for legislation that otherw1se would be blocked. Democrats tried it when
This from a president who once
they controlled Congress and Republicans were in the White House.
confessed on national television that
But none of that makes any difference to a flooded-out homeowner in
he and Hillary had experienced some
the upper Midwest, promised relief, then seeing it snarled in a far-off feud
"problems" in their IJiarriage. We get
on points that don't mvolve his problems.
the sense he wasn't talking about
"They say we're all goofballs back here," Clinton's spokesman acknowl·
leaving the cap off the toothpaste.
edged.
,
If President Clinton can report for
"I think sometimes our little debates back herem Washington seem pretactive duty when he's tryin,to save
ty remote to people," Mike McCurry added.
•
his hide from a lawsuit, then why not
. "Thts mstitution, Washmgton. D.C.. is playing politics with disaster assis·
apply those same standards when it
tance, " complained Rep. John R. Thune, R-S.D.
comes to his checkered past?
A public optnion poll released Wednesday indicated the public was
inclined to blame Republicans rather than Democrats for an apparent delay
Jack Andef'llon and ·Jan Moller
in relief reaching the Upper Midwest. The CNN-USAToday survey of651 .
are writers for United Feature
adults showed 55 percent blamed Republicans and 25 percent blamed Clin· Syndicate, Inc.
ton for his veto.
~------------------~--------~------~--------------~
Republicans got snared on an issue that turned against them before, government shutdowns in budget deadlocks. like those of late 199.5 and early
" '
1996. Then, as now, they had defied Climon veto threats, figuring that
because his signature blocked funds to keep government agenc1es gotng, he'd
get the blame for the shutdowns. Instead, they got1t, as Clinton and his allies
successfully argued that GOP budge.!_ cuts would cripple vital programs.
find a way to end it. "In other words, titio~ from any other power source
cess.
That stand was a turning point in Clinton's comeback from the political By William A. Rustier
amend the Constitution.
Most
important
of
all,
the
except their· .fellow "journalists."
A great many Americans are thor·
doldrums.
·
.
we
go
charging
off
down
Before
They would reign supreme.
.
This year, Republicans sponsored a bill to prevent future shutdowns by oughly confused by "campaign Supreme Court has ruled that an indi·
that
road,
however,
let's
look
at
the
It
will
be
objected
that
eliminating
vtdual
has,
under
the
free
speech
proextending appropnations through the neKt budget year if new ones hadn't finance refonn." The best solution
consequences. Assume that there are campaign finance laws would simt'Jy
been passed. That meas~re became one of their amendments to the disaster may be to repeal the present laws on
two equally wealthy and opinionated result in more millionaires in office.
relief appropriation. So ~ida bar against the use of census sampling, essen· the subject and let everybody spend
men ·in a community. Mr. A favors ·That is to some eKtent ttue ··there are
whatever he wants to, subject only to
• tially polling techniques, to avoid undercounts in the 2000 census. That, too,
Jones for Congress; Mr. B supports quite a lot of them already. But even
full disclosure.
was politically driven, since the uncounted are centered in big city and minor·
Smith.
If the Fint Amendment is the very rich are often 'defeated by
visions
of
the
First
Amendment,
a
Why is so much money spent to
ity neighborhoods, lnrgely Democra_t•_c_.
· _
amended
to permit a law forbidding candidates with less .money but
right
to
spend
any
amount
of
his
own
elect government officials anyway?
each
of
them
to contribute more than wealthy supporters. (Michael Huff·
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and oolunmlst 1be salary and perks of a congress· money that he wishes expressing his.
$1,000
to
the
campaign of his ington, you will recall, spent $25 mil·
.. for The Associated Press, bas reported on WashlftiiOD and national pol·
man certainly don't justify it. Tile own opinion. Effons to limit the
itics for more than 30 years.
answer is, of course, that he partici- amount that anyone·can contribute to favorite, is that "fair"? Not if Mr. A. lion of his own money trying unsucpates in deciding the polic1es and a pan1cular campatgn, or the amount is a merchant and Mr. ll publishes a cessfully to defeat California senator
expenditures of the federal govern- of TV t1me available to candidates, newspaper. Mr. B will run editorials Dianne Feinstein, and Nelson Rock·
ment, which are huge and tun into the either risk similar unconstitutionali· endorsing Smith, and articles eKpos- efeller discovered that his vast for·
trillions of dollars. Almost everybody ty or are skirted by both parties. For ing the evil record of Jones, while Mr. tunc couldn't win him a presidential
benefits or suffers from these, so the example, the Democrats tend to look A fumes and Jones predictably loses. nomination, let alone the presidency.)
' If you think this example 1s farAnd if you object that this would
pressure to elect the "right" govern- kmdly on money limits ·• but not on
fetched,
consider the happy prospccl merely leave the winners deeply
ment officials is enormous and the limitmg the huge contributions of
money available to be spent is manpower regularly made to their such an amendment would open to indebted to their backers, remember
other
pen;ons,
who
are
not
supervised
the Graham family, whose wealth is that the best disinfectant is sunshine.
; Dear Editor,
campaigns by Big Labor.
tmpressive.
This week, June 9- 13, the Meigs or safely confined, who are not ster·
The result is that many election
That is probably why it was invested in the Washington Post and Beijing may, find the Clinton White
: County Humane Society joins the ilized, or who receive little attention cont~:sts are "unfair," in the sense that Democratic Party chairinan Roy Newsweek, or the Sulzbergcn, who House less ready to accept its conlfi·
• Humane Society of the United States and handling are those who often bite one candidate (usually the incum- Romer who recently made the most own the New York Times, or Rupert butions if we cut out ihe middlemen
' (HSUS) and the United States Postal humans. Although particular breeds bent) has more money to spend, on extreme proposal of all. Acknowl- Murdoch, who controls a whole like the Riitdys and John Huang.
· Service (USPS) in recognizing or dogs are often accused or being TV ads. etc., than the other. In recent edging that the present right to spend international empire of newspaperS
WUiiam A. Rusher is a Distin·
' National Dog Bite Prevention Week. most likely to bite, other characteris· decades a lot of thought has gone into one's own money on a political and TV stations. Their influence is guished Fellow of the Claremont
; Letter carriers with dogs attached to tics are better predictors of canine bit· ways to eliminate or reduce this ele- cause "is a constitutional right," already enonnous, but the proposed Institute for the Study of States•
~ tbeir ankles have been the subjects of ing behavior Dogs who have not ment of unfairness, but without sue- Romer bluntly said, "we've got to ameiKiment would eliminate comp,:- manship and Politi•al Philosophy.
I
: jokes and cartoons for years. But been spayed or neutered are more
• HSUS and the USPS know that there likely to bite. For this reason, The
: is nothing funny about dog bites to HSUS an~ The Meigs County
' the more than 4. 7 million victims Humane Society suggeslthatthe' first
' who are bitten each year. Most vic· step ~ou should take to prevent your
'
tims are children; of the 10 to 20 fatal dog from biting is to haye her/him By George R. Plagenz
"Gimme
tlie
wire-cutten,"
he
would·
.
children(" All time spent with a child because they want to.",.
: dog attacks each year, the majority of spayed or neutered. Proper socializaEYerybody (almost everybody?) is quality time"), it 's the quantity of
.
.
At work, "people have buddtes, say.
: victims arc less than 12 years of age. tion, supervtsion, humane training, agrees. that mothers should be at It me we spend thal counts.
When I would sometimes see him:
they carry on flirtations, their birthMost dog bite incidents can be and safe confinement are also impor· home wiih theil 2· and 3-year-olds
·backing
the Model A out of the dri··
days
are
celebrated."
We'
work,
in
As columnisl Dick Feagler said
: prevented through JlUblic education tant components of responsible pet during t!ie day.
other words, because we like it bet· veway, I would stop him and ask:
; am! responsible pet ownership. ownership and bite prevention.
But Katie isn't 2 or 3. She is 16
ter at work than at home.
where he was going. "Going to:
It is to everyone's best interest that
ld d
' N~tional Dog Bite Prevention Week
Another survey of 2SO children in Ruily.'s;"' be wo11ld say. "Want to :
: is an opportunity for am mal care and the letter carriers arc able to deliver yell{S'O an an lith-grader in high
school. Isn't she ,old enough to take the other morning in the Cleveland several U.S. cities concluded that the come along?"
: control agencies, humane societies, the mail in safety. Dodging untrained ' care
I'd jump in and we would drive to:
ofhenelfwhen she comes home . Plain~ "Kids want to know a tics between today's childre11 and
: post offices, public service agencies, dogs should not have to be a part of "'h )? D h
th h
,·
'I bl N 1 'labl to their parents are surprisingly weak. Rudy Kopecke's hardware and I'd:
Important that we num sc ~ . oes er mo er ave ~n, IS avat a e. o avw e
· vetennarians, dog tramers, educaton, their job. It is also
.
.
.to be. there.
drive them to- soccer practice ·or "Fewer children accompany their listen to my father an~ Rudy chew the ;
: physicians, and many others to work teach _everyone •n our communuy •• ·
Let's ask Katie wh· ( h th"1 k5 .
computer camp or gymnastics or parents on chores and errands," too fat, and my father would come home •
H
a .s e ~ 1 •
· together to address this significant • espectally our children •• how to
survey said.
with some II)-penny nails. Do boys :
er mother, a bank vtcc prestdent baton-twirling •• but just to .know
- and h1rgely preventable ·• public avoid being bitten by dogs. For more
Something
else
Feagler
the
today
know what 10-penny nails :
information, about dog bite preven· who~~ gone from:home from_7 every they're there, SOIJiewhere around the
· health problem.
.
columnist wrote brought back mem- are?
·
•
The HSUS, the UPS, and the lion·education contact 'The Humane . mornmg .until 6 m .tbe evenmg,. put , ho116C.
ories
of
my
own
b)inging
up.
As Feagler siud, "Did we think we:
"Kids wani parents around to
' Metgs County Humane Society all Saciety of the united States, 2100 L the quesuon to Kattc the other mght
"I
remem\ler
helping
my
father
do
were
inalf.ing ~~~C~~~ing(ul memories :
and .daught~r chatted.
respond to suclt non-quality issues as
agree that, m most cases. dog bites Street NW' Washington ' DC 200 37. as fiiOiher
"Do you mtnd commg home after ' 'Ma, I cut my finger,' 'Can I have a stuff," .Feagler said. "'Oimme the that would last 50 years? Of course:
are not caused by "bad dogs" but by
' . ;
Rita Lewis, 1school to an empty house?" the peanut butter and jelly sandwich?' or wrel)ch,' he would say. 'Gimme·the not. But we were."
irresponsible dog owners. Dogs who
pliers."'
Katie should have bee11 so lucky. ;
mother asked.
'Have you seen my baseball glove?'
have not been properly socialized to
We didn 'I go to Midas Muffler in
Meigs Couaty Humane Society
After a pause Katie replied, " I Such availability takes time."
Georae Plaaeaz Is a syndicated :
guess it would be nice if you were
It is the observations of people my boyhood days. My father was writer for Newspaper £nlerptbe :
'•
here."
like Feagler and research from other ,Midas and I was his assistan't. Association.
••
Her mother seemed surprised by sources that le&lt;l Newsweek magazine
•
were born in Meigs County. My the answer. "But, Katie, you know to devote eigbt paaes of a cover sto· Dear Editor,
•
great-grandparents
were
married
in
in t~e process of doing
I
that if you need me, I'll come home," ry on "1be Myth of Quality nme:
genealogical research on my great· Pomeroy in 1867.
she said. "You have my number at How We're Cheating Our'Kids."
If lhere are any Merrits, Davises the office."
i
'
~
grandfather, Barnum Davis Jr.
Appearing in llle bookstores at the By The Auocl8ted Preis
or
Hunters
who
are
descended
from
Today
is
Friday,
June
13,
the
I
64th
day
of
1997.
1bere
are
201
day~
left
.
He married Betsy Merrit in 1842
"Oh," answered Katie, "I don 't same time was "The nme Bind" by
these
people,
please
write
to
me.
:
and tbe records state three children.
need you. I just said it would be nice sociologilt Arlie Hocbschildo. 1be in the year.
1
'lbday's
Highlijht
in History:
In I867, he married Harriet Hunter,
sociolopst s Interviews with scm;es
1
, _ . llurcber if you were here."
On
JUIIII
I3,
1966,
the Supreme Coun iasued its lllldmartc Miranda VI. :
and had five children by her. One of
·Everybody (almost everybody?) is of women workers led her 10 con5163
Collep
Street
Arizona
decision,
rulin11
!Ita crimillllllllpecll must be Informed of their Con· ·
them was my grandfather.
beginning to see it's not the "quali- elude that American women "are not
Albaay
OH
45710
Records state that all three adults
ty" of the time we spend with our working because they have to but stilutiotiall riJhll prior 10 qiiCitloning by polieC.

~AH~R.

'Forget campaign finance ·reform
William A. Rusher

Letters to the editor

·Humane Society observing
; National Dog Bite Prevention Week

Making memories wi~h

you~

childr.en

Seeking relatives

Today in history

am

. '

'

)

•

,.

1be resignations of Robert Hudak,
scbool psychologist, Karen Wentz,
early childhood teacher, and Melissa
Johnson, substitute teacher aide, were
accepted. Yvonne Scally was
employed as school psychologist on
a one-year conlf\'Ct for the 1997-98
gr&amp;~~~:
school year. Connie Soulsby was
Carol Brewer, coordinator; Linda hired as a substitute teacher aide.
Haley,
bookkeeper;
Meryl
The board approved participation
Houdashelt. insttuctor; Lois lhle, in the Council of Governments
inslrUctor; John Dailey, instructional Southeastern Ohio Voluntary Educa- ·
aide; Avonell Evans, insttuctional tiona! Cooperative; Southeastern
aide; Susan King, inslrUctional aide; Ohio Special Education Regional
Shirley Mitch~ll. insttuctional aide; Resource Center; Tri-County Career
and Madeline "Pat" Neece, instruc· Development; Coalition of Rural and
tiona! aide.
Appalachian Schools; and the Coali·
The contracts will be effective tion for Equity and Adequacy of
from July I through June 30, 1998, • School Funding.
pending funding.
·
Textbook adoptions for health and
The board also approved continu- foreign language were approved.
ation of the ABLE JOBS program
Present were Jeff Harris, presiwith the Meigs County Department dent; Bob Barton, vice president;
of Human Services, the ABLE state Howard Caldwell; 1.0 . McCoy;
program
and
the
ABLE Jeanette Thomas; John D. Riebel Sr.,
expansion/pass-through program for superintendent; an~ Carole Gilkey,
Fiscal Year 1998, pending funding treasurer.
available.

IToledo I 74° I

• IColumbus !1a• I

W. VA.

•

'' '''

:Area will see partly cloudy
skies during the weekend

Failure of tax cut procedure
irks House GOP members

1

By The Associated Press

The showen and thunderstorms are mQving out of Ohio just in time fer
· the weekend, the National Weather Service said.
Sunny skies were forecast for Saturday with highs in the 70s. Party cloudy
but fair weather also is expected on Sunday.
The record-high temperature for this'date at\the Columbus weather sta·
· tion was 95 degrees in 1956 while the record low was 46 in 1903. Sunset
tonight Will be at 9:01 p.m. and sunrise Saturday at6:02 a.m.
'
Weather forecast:
_
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 60s. Light winds. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday... A mix of clouds and sunshine with a chance of showers. Highs
75 to 80. C!Jance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
. hs 75 to 80 .
I I dy. Htg
sunday...Partycou
Monday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers during the night. Lows m
the upper 50s. Highs 75 to 80.
·
.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy w1th a chance of showers and .thunderstorms. t
Lows around 60. Highs in the upper 70s.

·County Court cases settled ·
The following cases were resolved W.Va., passing bad checks, $25 plus
last week in the Meigs County Court costs, restitution ordered; Shane
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Engle, Middleport, passing b~d
Fined were: Wayne L. Adams, checks, $25 plus costs, restitution,
·Rutland, seat belt, $25 plus costs; five days ja1l suspended; Chnsti S.
Andy J. Foley, Syracuse, seat belt, Waugh, Middleport; passing bad
$15 plus costs; Ryan Ue Clonch, checks, $25 plus costs, restitution;
Pomeroy, seat be)t, $25 plus co~Js; Donna J. McCloud, Middlepon, seat'
Robert Boggs, Cool¥ille, seat belt, belt, $25 plus costs; Ronny ·L. Roush,
$25 plus costs; Kimberly R. Haggy, Racine,·speed, $·30 pius costs; Kelly
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; San- M. McKenzie, Pomeroy, seat belt,
dra A. Hood, Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Bren E. Newsome,
$25 plus costs; Kevin L. Tate, Ama- Middleport, speed, $50 plus costs;
zon, Ariz., speed, $30 plus costs;- Jonathan M. Perrin, Middlejwrt,
David B. Dillard, Pomeroy, seat belt, speed, $30 plus costs;. Elizabeth
$25 plus costs; Darrell T. Young, Downie, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
Middleport, seal belt, $25 p!us costs; costs; Marlo L. White, Middleport,
Eric P. Jones, Long Bottom, seat belt. speed, $30 plus costs; Connie S. Hal$25 plus costs; Christopher M. CoK, ley, Rutland, speed, $30 plus costs;
Robert W. Harrison II, Pomeroy,
Middlepon, speed, $30 plus costs;
Bobbie J. Harris, Pomeroy, seat belt, DUI. $850 plus costs, I0 days jail
$25 plus costs; Tommy R. Ottman, suspended to three days, 90-day OL
Long Bottom, scat belt, $25 plus suspension, jail and $550 suspended
costs;
upon completion of·residentialtreat·
Joseph L. Walters, Chcshtre, dri· ment program; Roger D. Barnhart,
ving under the influence, $800 plus Middleport, underage consumption,
costs, 6ne ytar operator's license sus· $190 P.lus costs, two years probation,
pension, 30 days jail suspended to I0 three days jail suspended; Robert R.
.days, two years probation. 90-day Smith, Racine, DUI. $500 plus costs,
vehicl4: immobilization; failure to two years probation; fiv~ days jail, I0
'control, costs only; Richie E. Blu- days house arrest.' one year OL susmenaur, Pomeroy, domestic violence, pension; ·Gary Jenkins, Pomeroy,
.$100 suspended, costs, 10 days jail reckless operation, $50 plus costs,
suspended to three days, two years $150 forfeiture; Todd W. Gayheart,
probation. restraining order issued; Langsville• littering, $50 plus costs.
Carolyn Ca]l, Pomeroy, passing bad two days jail; Johnny E. Donohue,
checks, seven counts, $25 plus costs Middleport, domestic violence, $200
on each, restitution, I0 days jail sus· plus costs, one year probation,
pended on each; Roslcq Cain, restraining order issued, 10 days jail
Pomeroy, domestic violence, costs, suspended to one day. .
I0 days jail suspended to two days,
•
two years probation, restraining order
issued; disorderly conduct, Costs;
CLEVELAND (AP) _One tick·
Brent Whaley. Shade, speed, $24 et matchi~g all five numbers 'in
plus costs; seat belt, $IS plus costs; Thunday night's Buckeye 5 drawing
is worth $100,000, the Ohio Lottery
Jamie E. Adanl~n.
said.
The
Sentinel
'The winning ticket was purchased
at
Bfoadview.
Beverage
(VSPS 113·HOJ
.. in Parma.

Lottery result$

Daily

Mtlllbtr: The Associllled Plri1, and the Ohio
~Asi&lt;ICIDiion.

POSTMASTEI1 Send address r;omclions to
The tlally S&lt;ntinel, Ill Court St. Pommy.
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'
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SINGLI! COP'I' RICE
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Sublcriben not desirinato PllY dte ,.mer may
mnit in ocfvance direct to The n.ily Sentinel
on 1 thret.li• or 12 momh buia. Credil will be

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ATaT ..................................~ •.37\
Bank 0118 ..............................45\
Bob Evana ............................15}..
Borg-Werner .........................51Ct..mplon .............................1874

Ctlarilt 8hpaJ...........................5%
~:J::Itlng., ........................33'1.
I Moi&amp;fl •••,...................30\
Ganrwtt .................................85'.4

Gooc:IYMr ..............................61\
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Ltd. ........................................11\

OVB .......................................38'.1.

Or. Valley.............,..................41

Paaplea .................................33\

Piobll-....period,
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RD-Sttlll .........;....................~
Star Bank ..............................4311

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ollbo iiUblaipllOII.

aWL SUBSCRJPTIONS
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Prelft Flnl ...................- .........17\

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Worth1ngton ..........................11\

-·-·- bJ

Stock reports 1re the 10:30

· e.m. auot1t prD¥Icled
of Gllllpolll.

........-...

AINNI

~
·
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The letter, also signed by 18 other House Republicans, said Ohio tax·
pay en would get $538 million if the
entire surplus is sent back. And it
Hinted that the signers might have
trouble voting for the $36.1 billion
budget if it includes the cap:
The Senate, with the support of
Gov. George Voinoviclr - also a
Republican - wants to spend part of
the money to help school districts
repair or replace rundown buildings
and purchase computer equipment
and textbooks.
Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron, said the
Legislature has to be mindful of the
Ohio Supreme Court's ruling in
March declaring the state's school
funding system unconstitutional.
"I think it's imponant that every
additional dollar we have goes into
school buildmg assistance and K-12
education,'' Ray said. He added that
it doesn't make sense to reduce tax·
es in the bhdget bill when it is very
possible .that the Leg1slature mtght
have to turn around and raise taxes to
pay for the ,new school funding system.
Johnson, the committee cha1rman,
tends to agree - though he si\d the
issue is negotiable.
··'I'm .committed to h~vmg taK
relief," he said.

Meigs announcements
Lodge to meet
The Shade River Lodge 453, special meeting, Wednesday, work in the
MM degree. Refreshments.
Shirts in
Camp T-shirts can be picked up at
the Southern High School office, 8
a.m. to 3 p.m.; Monday through Fri·
day.

Meigs EMS runs

Six units of Meigs Emergency'
Services responded to six calls for
assistance on Thul'$day.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II :24 a.m., to Beech Street, Earl
Hunter to Holzer Medical Center;
3:52 p.m., to Front Street, Alan
Wilson to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
I :44 a.m., to State Route 124, ful ·
ly involved auto fire.
POMEROY
9:31 a.m., to Osborne Street for a
structure fire, Bernice Goble was
treated but not transported;
7:04 p.m., to ~~ Main Street,
Jessica Anderson to HMC.
REEDSVILLE
8:04 p.m., to Forked Run State
Park, Michelle Kerns to CamdenClark Memorial Hospital.

' .......................41~
'
Ain Ele Power
Akzo ...........I..........................88~

permiuod In .,..

- b y cbaDalrJ ....

COLUMBUS (AP) -A group of
conservative House Republicans is
upset that an automatic tax cutmech·
anisln created by the Legislature two
years ago turned out to be not'quite
so automatic.
And Ohio taxpayers are being
shorted more than $250 million in the
process, the lawmakers said in a letter Thursday to Republicans representing the House in budget negoti'·
ations with the Senate.
''To instill discipline and fiscal
responsibility, and to gain the confidence of the voters
... the.Legislature
.
·
h
should keeps tis promtse. to I e tax·
payer~ and restor~ the. (mc~me t~
reducMn fund) to tts ongmal mtent,
Rep. Jtm Jordan, R-West Ltberty,
wrote to Reps. Tom Johnson and Joan
Lawrence.
Johnson, R-New Concord, and
Lawrence, R-Galena, are members of
the joint committee negotiating a
compromise between the House and
Senate spending plans for the two
years beginning July I.
At issue is a Senate move to cap
the income tax refund at roughly
$286 million. The Legislature creal·
ed the mechanism during the last
budget process to return automatically any surplus from unspent mon·
ey or unexpected re~enue to the tax·
payers.

BoD advisory
The Leading Creek Conservancy
Distnct had a water leak on Hiland
Road Thursday afternoon. All customen on Hiland Road are under a
boil advisory unttl further notice.
Immunization day
Immunization day at the Meigs
County Heath Department -scheduled for June 24 has been canceled.
The regular schedule will begin again
in July with the dates being 'July 8
and July 22, 9 a.m. to II a.m . and I
p.m. to 3 p.m. For more information
residents may call the Health Depart·
ment at 992-6626.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thunday admissions - Juanita
Ratliff, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 12 - Kimber·
ly Thompson, Grover Smith, Mrs.
Thomas Yates and son, Mrs. Aaron
Petrie and son, Howard Roush, Mrs.
Scott Campbell and son.
Birth - Mr. and Mn. William
Harvey, son, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)

FRI,

•••.

.

Stocks

George R. Plsgenz

I

House fire Injures occupant
A two-story Pomeroy frame bouse was damaged i11 a structure fire
around 9:30 a.m. Thunday.
Firefighten responding to tbe 651 Osborne St. residence-of Bernice
Goble found the fire that started in a bedroom of the house, igniting a mattress and bedding, according to Pomeroy Fire Department report. Cause
of the blaze was undetennined.
Smoke and fire damage were reported. In addition, a neighboring house
and ~ automobile received beat damage, according to the report. Goble
recetved bums on her feet and legs, the report said.
Fourteen Pomeroy firefighters and three Middleport firefighters
responded to the scene. Firefightcn left the scene around 10:44 a:m.

Penonnet matters were decided
when the Meigs County Educational
Service Center board met in regular
session on "nlursday evening.
1be board approved the hiring of
the follQwing staff memben in the
Adult Basic Literacy Education pro-

l&gt;n&gt;ld,.,.
,_,pub/JIW.
,_.,.,.,..,.,,.,.,,.,.,.
__ _,_,_,a/QIMIUN.
.,.,claylhM,._IItllfi,..,_Splfll(y,_",...,.,,;
•.,.,..,,,..__
or-_,,,

r----------'""-,..--------------------...;....-.:..·

Local News in Brief:

'

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

No one looks very good in
fight over disaster money

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Personne.l matters
decided by local ESC

OHIO Weather
Satunt~, June 14

By Jack Anclenon
lnd ... llloii.-

..2,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

a,

~~ .:..

:,
•
,•

OF MYSTERY'"''

ONE I!VI!NING SHOW 7:30

GROSSE POINTE
BLANK"

Opening Soon
.

K 9 DESIGNS

~

&lt;@t&gt;

@'

~

f£PC"

•

Professional Pd Groonaina
Boarding· • Training •.Supplies

,eg. "We treat your belt fr~rid like our bear friend"

~

tt

o8

(Continued from Page 1)
jurors: ••took mto the eyes of a cow·
ard and tell him you will have
courage. Tell him he is no patriot. He
is a traitor and he deserves to die."
McVe1gh's face flushed red and he
averted his narrowed eyes from hers,
looking off into the audience.
Outside court, bombing survivors
and victims' families were oulraged
by the defense summation, particularly .fillorney Richard Burr's claim
that "we all bear some responsibility for Oklahoma City" because of
injust1ces by the government."
"The Waco deal?" said Charles
Tomlin, whose grown son died in the
bombing. "They gave them 52 days
to come out or do something. My son
didn't even get 52 seconds to-come
out of the building that McVeigh
blew up."
Ms. Wilkinson dismissed the
Waco argument as "pathetic."
"Instead of doing what many
patnotic Americans did - question
their government, write to their con·
gressmen, protest the Department or
Just1cc - T1mothy McVeigh 'turned
around and k1ll and maimed hundreds
of innocent men, women, and children himself," she sa1d.
After nearly three hours of sum·
mattons, U.S. District Judge Richard
Matsch instructed jurors on death
penalty law. In a forceful, dramatic
voice, he told them they are "the con·
science of the community."
Around 12: 15 p.m., jurors walked
out the courtroom for the deliberation
room. None looked at McVeigh.

They deliberated .for · nearly hve
hours. ,
The jury's options are to sentence
McVetgh to death or life in pris.on
without parole, or to authorize the
judge to come up with any sentence
besides death. The jury's vote on any
of these must be unanimous. If the
jurors can't agree, the judge will sentence McVeigh to a penalty other ihan
death.

..,.,,au.!

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I 11!'*118l&gt;AYl
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M'I'IIIDS

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and Republicans supported an
amendment by Rep. J.D. Hayworth,
R-Ariz., to strike the Indian gaming
taK. They complained the proposal
was included without any public
hearings and said the idea of the fedj
eral govemmenl taxing sovereign
tribal governments created serious
constitutional questions.
"Do not think about revenue.
Think about history, think about fair·
ness," said Rep. Barbara Kennelly,
D-Conn., said.
Archer argued the Indian casino
taxes were legal and said the $4.5 bil·
lion industry's success was partly·due
to unfair tax ndvantages.
"You may win this amendment
tonight and it isn't a personal affront
to the chairman. But it is an affront '
to business people across the country
who pay taxes," Arc~er S8ld. · ,
Archer's defeat came after Indian
leaders nationwide mounted an
intense lobbying campaign that
flooded the fax machines and tele- ,
phone lines of committee members.
"It's so nice to win one,'' Thomas
C. Rodgers, a lobbyist representing
the Nattve American Ind1an Gaming
Association.

Jurors now deliberating

t@§&gt;

Clll for Appointment~

St Rt. 881
TUpPer. Plllna, Ohio ·

....,. • • £Jr

WASHINGTON (AP) - After
two days of marathori committee
deliberations, House Republicans
today sent a five-year, $85 billion tax
cut pl\(:kage to the floor, but without
any proposed new levies on Indian
gambling casinos.
By a party-line 22-16 vote early
this morning, the House Ways and
Means Committee approved legislation that promises sharp cuts in capital gains taxes, relief (rom estate taK·
es, a $500 per child tax credit and a
range of tax and savings incenttves
for higher education. House floor
action has not been scheduled.
Ways and Meaps Chairman Bill
Archer, R-Texas, and fellow Republicans fended off a series of attacks
and amendments from Democrats,
who wanted g~eater tax relief to the
working poor and middle class. An
alternative Democrat tax cut bill,
sponsored by Rep. Charles Rangel,
D-N.Y., lost by a 15-22 vote.
But Archer had a surpriSing setback when a half dozen Republicans
joined Democrats to defeat hts plan
to impose $1.9 billion in new taxes
over five years on Indian gambling
casinos and other businesses.
An unusual alliance of Democrats

AND
MIRA SORVINO,
USA KUDROW IN

~'*$~!$"~ •'*~~~~~($£!;&gt;~ . . ·

~

Tax reduction package
submitted for floor vote

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friday, June 13, 1997

Sports

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

The Daily Sentinel
'

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U.S. Open ends first-round play

Pege4

Montgomerie leads field by one stroke

Fnday,June13,1997 ·

AL teams win three of first
four inte~league encounte·rs
By BEN W~LKER

AP Blleball Writer
It took 126 years before baseball
broke its tradition and played interleague games. Judging by the early
results, It might take just as long
before tlic AL and NL break down
and change their ways.
From the moment Jose Vizcaino
bluffed a sacrifice btint in the first
inning, San Francisco showed it
was sticking to the tight, NL style at ·
.Texas. The Giants wound up winning the majors' interleague opener,
4-3 over the Rangers.
·
"If we're going to be pan of history, we might as well win it," Giants
manager Dusty Baker said.
Anaheim, however, wasn't worried about bunting. Instead, led by
home runs by Tony Phillips, Dave
. Hollins and Darin Erstad, the Angels
beat the San Diego Padres 8-4. ·
' 'It's a good thing for baseball,
hut unfortunately they played an
American League-style of game
tonight. And it was better than the
Cleveland, where the Brewers wo.n 6-2. Cirillo,
game we played," said John Flaher'who was successful in his bid, got home on Mark
Loretla's sacrifice fly. (AP)
.
. ty, who homered for the visiting
·
Padres.
At the Kingdome, fans got exact-

CIRILLO SCORES ~ Milwaukee's Jeff CirillO
(right) slides Into Clevitlend Clltcher Sandy Alomar In an attempt to
In the fourth Inning
of Thursday night's American League game In

.core

ly what they expected from the two
highesi-scoring teams in the big
leagues. Ken Griffey Jr. drove in
three runs and Seattle Mariners rallied past the Colorado Rockies. 1211.
" It will be interesting when these
two teams play at Coors Field," Colorado shortstop Walt Weiss said.
"That's a hall park that is a lot more
conducive to offense than ·this park
is."
In Oakland, the Athletics had
trouble hitting in their first look at
Hideo Nomo. But Nomo was wild,
and the I\ s beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 5-4.
" Personally, I don •t like it, but if ·
it's going to draw .back some (ans,
then I think it's necessary, because
the fans are the most important
thing to the game, that's for sure,"
said Matt Stairs, who homered off'
Nomo. "When you have a · nice
crowd at the ballpark rooting for you,
there's a a lot more emotion."
The top crowd of the night was a .
sellout in Texas, where 46,507
turned oui for the historic opener.
The smallest was in Anaheim,
though the crowd of 22, 164 wa.oi still
large.r than the Angels ' season average ofl9.857.
Today, all 28 teams are involved
in interleague play. highlighted by a
· matchup of the two clubs with the
best records in baseball: Baltimore at
Atlanta.
Mariners 12, Roc:kies 11
Trailing 6-0 in the second inoing
and 10-6 in the sixth, Seattle overtook Colorado on Jay Buhner 's .
three-run double in the seventh ..
Minus ·All-Star shortstop Alex ·
jodri,guez, out because of a bruised
chest, the Mariners still had enough
offense to overcome the middle of
the Rockies' order.
The Rockies' 4-5-6 hitters Andres Galarraga, Dante Bichcttc
and ·Vinny Castilla - combined to
go 10-for-1 S. Galarraga was 4-for-5
with a pair of doubles and Larry
Walker, who began the day batting

.410, got two of Colorado's 18 hits.
Giants 4, Rangers 3
San Francisco was the only NL
team to win on opening night, helped
by a" few former AL players.
Stan Javjer, who played nine seasons in the AL. hit the first homer in
interleague history. He also had a goahead double in the seventh inning
for the Giants and singled, too.
Mark Gardner. who pitched for
Kansas City in 1993, was ti)e winner
and Glenallen · Hill, formerly of
Toronto and Cleveland, hit a tying
sacrifice ny as the first DH in regular-season NL history.
Rod Beck earned his NL-Ieading
20th save, even though he got it
against an AL team. ·
Angels 8, Padres 4
Anaheim ·rapped 16 hits, with
every player in the lineup gelling at
least one ..
Jim Edmonds hit three singles and
drove in a run in the seventh that put .
the Angels ahead 5-4. Garret Anderson also had three hits for Anaheim.
Longtime AL s.tar Rickey Henderson , coveted by the Angels in
spring training, homered as San .
Diego's DH. Flaherty also homered
while batting ninth.
Several of the visiting pfa)icrs mainly ,Tony Gwynn and former
Angels first baseman Wally Joyner
- were cheered about as much us
Anaheim's players.
Athletics S, Dodgers 4
A crowd of 28.201, about double
what the A's have been drawing at
the Coliseum. saw ihc first regular-.
season meeting of the teams that
played in the 19H8 and 1974 World'
Series. ·

·

Nomo (6-6), with his unusual
delivery, struck out four of the first
live batters. He allowed only one hit
in 5 1-3 innings, hut lost a 2-1 lead
in the sixth by walking three and hitting a hatter.
Pinch-hiucrs Patrick Lennon and
George Williams delivered key hits
in the sixth for Oakland. Brcu Butler had an RBI grounder for Los
Angeles.

Southern girls' baske(ba/1
camp scheduled .tor Monday
The third annual Southern High
School girls' basketball camp for.
girls grades 3.9 will be held from .
Monday, June 16 to Friday, June 20
from 9 a.m. to noon at Southern
High School.
The camp will be highlighted by
numerous individual competitions
and general instruction. Southern
varsity coach Jenni Roush and assistants Alan Crisp and John Manuel
will conduct the camp with most of
, the girls coaching staff and fe~tured
HOCKING DIVISION CHAMPS- The Southern softball team post·
ed a school record 19-5 seuon and claimed the Tri·Valley Confer·
ence 's Hocking Division title with a 15-0 recl)rd and a Dlvl$lon Ill
sectional tournament title to gain 1 berth in the district. That marked
the second straight year that the Tornadoes won a sectional crown.
Southern also postacl a 37·1 0 record in the past two seasoos, a true

guest speakers.
Individual competitions include
free throw shooting contests, P-1-G
Tournament, 3-on-3 and Knock-Out.
For further information, call Roush
at 304-273-2161 or Manuel at 9492759.
Cost of the camp is $35, which
can he sent payable to Jcnni Roush,
1'.0. Box 902, Racifte, Ohio 45771.
All out-of-district students arc
welcome.

Yu-

Saturday's ~ames
Bosnm (Wnk~l1cld 2 -:~) m N.Y. Met ~

AL standings

ICIMI ~ - 41 . I : I~ p.m.

:r....

Yi. L .hi.

Baltif'llC"'I"'l ............... 42 19
New York .............. J6 27
Toronlll .................. 29 )I
O&lt;lroil.. .... .. ........ .. .. l&lt;J

Jl

Boston ....................2b 37

!:ill

~71

.47~
.41~

Colorado (8aih:y

.452
.444

S

r.~

. ~7

-

-~
. ~16

'· ~

2
9

.409·

Milw..... 6. CI.EVEI.ANI) l
San Francisco 4. Tou .\
Anftim 8, San Oie&amp;o 4
Ooldlllld l. Loo A"'""' 4
Seattlt: 11. Co~oraio II

Teu!i_

ALn. NL

2:15 p....

Cubs1MulhollruwJ J-~). 3:20p.m.

~~ELAND a~_ St.

Loui1, 2 : 1~ p.m.
MtiWMkee at Ctnc.aao Cubl. 2:20 p.m.
Minnaot•llf Houston, 2 : :\~ p.m.

N.Y . Yankees (Cone 1·~} M Florida

(Leiter~). 7:0S__p.m.

Kamas «;;or (Plnaloy l-41• Plnlbu&lt;&amp;ll
(F. Cordova 4-4). 7 : 3~ p.m.

San Fr.nc:i1e0 11 Anaheim, 4:05p.m.
Colomdo at 03kland. 4:05p.m.

Chicaao While So• (AI-worn: :\·6) AI
CLEVELAND. (Sci&gt;ouo&lt;k l-4~ 7:Jl p.m.
Delroit (Oiivara 4-4) al Montreal (C.

Perez 64l. 7:3~ p.m.

Los Anaekl 11 Statile. 4 : 3~ p.m.

N.Y. Yankee. 111 Aorido, 4.:35 p.m.

Boston 11 N.Y. Nets. 8:0S p.m.
San Oieao at Texu. 8 :0~ p.m.

·

Toront~ {W. Williams 1-6) nt Philldel·

r!&gt;i• (Sdoillillall-~1. 7 :J~ p.m.
Batlimono (Key 10.1) ol Aoloonlo (Mod-

NL standings

dol• 7·1), 7:40p.m.
·
Boatoa (Suppan 0-0) at N.Y. Meta

1·11

01

-mDMolon

I:.
.... . . . . ,. Jf
Florldo ...................37

So.

f.m.
MiiWIOtll (Radice -!1) II HOUIIOn

(Will 2·2). 8:05 p.m.

Sn Fra~Kisco (Ettes 1· 2) a( Te~at
(HiD._.), I:J! p.m.
.
Sao Diqo (F. V-•1-1)11 A.,_
Spri- 4-2), 10:0!1 p.m..

-(D.

Colorado (Wri_1ht •·3) •• S.aule

( - 9 - J ), IO:!Hp.IIL
.
Loo Aoploa (A-Io 3-S) ., Ootlond .
(KinoJ 1·7), IO:lS p.m.
·

~~ ~

26 .587
"'......, .. :............. 35 28 J!l6
NooJw Yort .............. 35 21 .~!16
Pilladolphio
. ...........ll 41 .m
c...,.. I l l -·
..................)2 3) .492
, . . . . . . ..............)! ll .492
St. I.Giit ................ :10 JJ, '.476
CLEVELAND ....... 26 )7 .41l
.

Chiclao ........... .-. ..... 2$ 39 .391

·'

4tl4

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.43K

M

N•Uonal Balkelhal All&lt;itduUon
~BA :

Fined t.1liL:Attn

Bull~

F l.lcnnili

Rudman SSO,OOO

Transactions
Baseball
1\mrrlun LcaR,ur
ANAHEIM ANGEtS: Sig ned I 8
Tim Adams. lB Ai.kml Lcs.gcu. .\8 O~car

Be1encou u . ~8 Hen Ti!lhorr . SS Mike
Cnndon. OF CIL'Iry Child. OF Jan)!!~ Nunley , OF Shtl1lon Phillip-Guide, RHP
Manhew Wise. RHP Er ne ~t ~mul d~n .
RHP Steven Fi~h . RHP Driugl:u Nickle.
RHP Auron:Poner. RHP R110ald Rick ~.
RHP Scot Shickls. LH-P. Jnscph G!ln~cmi ,
LHP Jaymie Bnne. UiP Ernest Miller. C
Casey Manin anil C Pctt.'f Quitllk.'t
CLEVELAND INDIAN S: Sip ncd
RHP Rohe.rt Pugmire . 28 Bri an Berte·
tieh.l. RHP Jonnttmn Turnbow, LHP Jnhn·

Iii
4~
6~
6~

20

A11thnny Mmer.

RHP Chns Enoch~ and ouosilliltd him lu
Southern Oreg~m of lhe North•est
l.e:~(l.u.:.

TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Siloed
RHP Eddy Reyu. RHP Chriltopher Reynolds •.RHP Mau Pruett, INF Erit lk·
navide~ al\d RHP lgno.liu5 Gonulez. Asiianed RHP Man White ·lo the Hudson
VoUey RencJadc:• of the New YOrk-Penn
Leaaue. AIJtJned 38 OouJ Johaaon and
OF Paul Wilder to the Princeton Devil
Rays of rhe _AppalochiAn Leaaue.
TEXAS IIANOERS: Ania"'d DH
Mickey Tc:lftet:on to Oklahoma City of the
American Anocialion on rehabilitation
aul3nment. Acti¥Rtd . 28 Mark
McLemore from 1he I~-day disabled lilt
Designated OF Mike Devereau• for as·
sianment.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: A.,.ed oo
terms wl _lh RHP Erie Lorenz and LHP

Tim Huff.

Notlonolt..o..,
CINCINNATI REDS: Sl&amp;ncd RHP
Scon WilliatMOn Dad RHP Wes)ey Slum.
bo.

HOUSTON ASTROS: Ploced RHP

I

5

6~

SJ4,950*

Ntck Damrel!r, 28 TndU Harding. 10
Ryan !"lnley nnd RHP Dnniel Alv 11rc~ .
Agreed 10 termJ with RHP Jmc1•h Culi.
RHP Patrick Mullt)y , RHP Andrew M..:·
~8

Shane Reynolds on 1he I ~- day disAbled
lisr rett'ODCilve 10 JuAI:l 10. Si&amp;ned LHP
Don Tbomat and RHP James Wallace Mel
aniaaed !hem to Auburn of the New
York·~nAicQiuc;

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LINES UP PUTT- Scotland's Colin Montgeimerie linn up a putt .
the U.S. Open Thursday In
Betheada, Md. Montgomerla·flnlshed the day at 5-under-par 65, ooe
stroke ah811d of the field. (AP)
.

on the 15th grHn in the first round of

NBA Finals to resume tonight

MJ's latest heroics
may fuel Bulls' repeat

. pJetc his second straight first-round events, had six birdies in his round keep," Mont1omerie said.
What would he most like to keep
collapse over the back nine at the ·of 66.
up for three more days? Fairways
Open, he slammed his club into the
"I sure hope it's the start of somebag.
thing good," Stricker said.
and greens. At the U.S. Open, that's ·
enough to put a smile on anyone'a :
He stormed past reporters as he
For most of the fll'11 fQUnd, Mont·
left the course. Later, in an interview gomerie could do no wr011g. He hit face.
with a poo.l reporter, he answered 3-wood on the fint two driving hOles
•
four of the last five questions, " I so well that he never bothered hitting
• Here are · the scores Thursday
don't know."
anything else from the tee on par'4s from the first round of the 97th U.S . •
It really wasn' t that difficult to and Ss .
Open on the 7.213-yard, par 35-35- ·
He hit 13 of 14 fairways. He 70 Congressional Country Club ·
,figure out.
"If you hit in the rough it's a missed only two greens in regulation, . course (a-amateur):
~
penalty. But if you keep it in the fair· and none of. his birdie putts was amr
liolrl !
Colin
M...,OIIl&lt;l'ie
3Hlo6l
way, you can score, " 'Sat'd · "',om longer than 25 feet.
Hal s.,..
33-J3o016 ·:
Lehman, who shot a 3-under-par 67
"This is possibly, 'in major golf, so.,. Sutcker ·
32-34oo66. r
and was tied with Mark McNulty.
the be~t round of golf I've ever put ~'::'~=~
~t~~
"Over the course of 72 holes, it's together," said Montgornerie, who Hidekl Kue
J5·J~ L
oi
g
to
happen
to
everybody
where
.
won
the
European
Grand
Pri~
last
o.,.
Sdoleyer
3!-33-61 ~
g 11
1
'ek
and
t
'
s
31-under
for
his
last
six
.
,~~.·.
~~-~
~:!"~
W
you have a couple of stretches where
&lt;
~ ~·
-~ ·
you're · going to be really strug- rounds.
Da•i•Oarl•
l.S-3,_70
· th'mg
The turning point came at No. 6, Clxia
Mile Briokey
l6-l4a70 •'
gling," Lehman said. "The b&amp;g
I'm}'
3!-35·70
is not to blow yourself out of the a par 4 that measures 475 yards with Hole Irwin
37-33•70
a
large
pond
guarding
the
front
pan
a-Joel
Kribel
ll-ll•70
tournament.''
Cl'lia Parry
33~11•70
Woods' pursuit of the second leg of the green. Montgomerie pulled his .....,. Miu
Jl-35•70
of the Grand Slam - he's trying to ball into the left rough, hacked out ~~:J;~~~ncn
~~~:~:
become the first player since Jack with a sand wedge and then hit an 8- Morlt Brooks
J!-J6.71
. Nicklaus·in 1972 to win the Masters iro" to one foot for a par.
Nick Price
!4-37•71
lS·36-71
. hoies Jatcr, he wasat 4 under. Thomas·Bjom
F1ve
and the U.S. Open in the same year
Vij•r s;n1h
J5-J6.7«
-got off to a dismal stan.
· · "If I had missed that par, which Bob Tway
.•6·J5•71
·.t.1
ld •
Scou Hocb
. ~3.5-=71
Two under par through 10 holes, was on the card •·l poss1u Y wou n t Fr"'klicklia:r
J7':W•71
· he took a double-bogey at the lith have birdied 7 and therefore not 9 . Morlt W~bo "
J6-J5•71
71
when his 9-iron found the rough and 10 and II and what .have you," · JOR
Mori.Oiazobol
J6-Jl•
Payne Stewllrt
36-)S=-71
beyond the green and his chip came he said. "So No. 6 was the most Emic Els
:14-J7•71
.gh
and
hot
·
and
rolled
back
important
par
I've
made
for
a
long
t.cn
Monioct
J6-J5•71
Out hl
Olin BrOwne
:W.~7•71
through th~ green.
time."
.
John Monc
Jl-3..71
Errantdrivesonthe 13th and 15th
The only lapse came on No. 17, · souaroApp~by
J6-J5•71
·
l..ee Wellwood
37-.\4=71
led to·two more bogeys, followed by when he hit· mto
a greens1'de bunker Fnonk
Nobilo
37.:w.71
the watery double at No. 18. It added and missed a 15-foot putt for par.
G&lt;Cj Tow..
J7-:W.71 •
up to a 40 on the back nine for a 4"The 7-iron at 17 I'd like to take f~~~~~~
~~:~;:;:
over 74.
·
back, but there's a lot I'd like to s«odc Adorn.•
J7-.14s7t ~
. A year ago at Oakland Hills,
'=;j
Woods was 3 under until playing the --....o----Sports briefs
':
last five hbles at 9 over for a 76.
'f&lt;ennis
inond - won in straight sets to ::-,
"I've had some disappointing ·
BOLOGNA, Italy (AP)- Frcnd advance to the quarterfinals of the )~
rounds lately, and this is one of
them," Woods said .. "I didn't play Open champion Gustavo Kuertcn
DFS Classic.
•;t
'
d JIIC obo o·1az o f spam
. 6 •4.
Other Wl;nncrs were, No. 6 ·:~•
well coming .down the stretch. And dcoeatc
obviously, it cost me."
· 6-2 to advance to the quancrlinals of Dominique Van Roost of Belgium; · •
Sutton, the 1983 PGAchampion, the Carisho clay-court toumamc.nt.
No. 7 Magdalena Malecva of Bul- :•
had the only bogey-free round.
Kucrten, the No. 8 seed from
garia and No. 8 Nata.,ha Zvcrcva o('j
Stricker, fourth on the money list last Brazil, next plays top seed Alberti\ · Belarus.
year but who has finished in the top Bersntegui of Spain. Bersatcgui beat
.
Football
·;..:
50 J·ust once this season in full -field compatriot Albert Portas6-3, 6-2 .
NASHVILLE, 'l:cnn. &lt;AI'} -;-;:-~
Tennis
· Both s1des s1gncd oil on the Oilers ,,
BIRMINGHAM. England (AP)
lease with . the AstrOdome, finully~q
-The top three sccds.-lrina Spirfreeing the NFL franchise to move Ill ,
lea, Nathalie Thuziat and Li~a RayTennessee.
· •

:

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Jordan lost the MVP award this
CHICAGO (AP) - Pany on. yeadn a close vote to Utah's Karl
That's what the Chicago Bulls want Malone and the debate on whether
the best man won has gone on
to do, celebrate another NBA title .
Play on. That's w~at the Utah throughout the finals.
Malone played poorly in Game 5,
Jazz are seeking, a chance to extend
getting in foul trouble, missing I0 of
the season to one 'final game. ·
The Bulls will be trying to close 17 shots and - in a colossal boneout their fifth championship of the head play - neglecting to foul
decade tonight in Game 6 o.f the Scouie Pippen in the closing seconds
NBA Finals. They lead .3:2 in the when the Jazz needed to stop the
mosi competitive of all their cham~ clock.
Malone said there will be no reaf)ionship matchups in the '90s.
On Wednesday Meigs picked up a
Meigs jumped out to a 3-1 lead
"We know it's a long way from son for the Jazz to play passively
win
by forfeit when Wellston failed
over," Bulls coach Phil Jackson . tonight and they must forget the lliSt after the second inning and sparked to show up for it$ game at Rock
said. "We still have one game to win loss, one in which they blew a 16- by the outstanding relief pitching Springs.
·
·
,
from Sco!l Oeorge Meigs defeated
.
·
411d it's ·not going to be an easy pointlead.
Meigs is now 2-1 overall and m
Glouster
6-3
in
Eighth
District
"If you can't get that kind of
thing."
the conference · and will travel to
Gairi'e' 7;' il neces5arY. would be effort at this level, and you lose and American Legion baseball action Pickerington for a twinbill Saturday.
played at the United Center on Sun- go home ... I think some guys should Thesday at Glouster.
George came in relief of Corey On Thesday, June 17, Meigs will
day.
·
say, 'Hey, maybe I don't belong in
Williams
with two runners on base play at Mason for a doubleheader at
"We face a tough liSsignment," this,' " Malone said.
. ' Jazz coiu:h Jerry Sloan said, adding
"If I come out playing aggressive, and no outs hi the third inning and 5:30p.m.
his team must play with·more emo- -then they'll (teammates) do the worked out pf ·trouble. The Meigs Inola• iiUIIII
Meigs
030-00 1-020=6-11 -0
tipn on a noor where the Bulls are 9- same .... I'm not going to t)lrn into a Marauder all-stater pitChed the final
Glouster
011-001-000=3-9-2
seven
innings,
striking
outl5
to
pick
1 in .the playoffs and were 39-2 in the bull in a china closet, but I'll come
Corey Williams, Scott George (3)
up
the
win.
Trimble
standout
Brady
regular season.
out a little bit more aggressive."
and Matt Dill
"There's no reason we can't
History doesn't favor the Jazz, ·Trace took the loss for Glouster.
Brady Trace, Jason Snyder (8) and
Meigs
had
II
hits
led
by
Chad
understand, after I 09 games or what- · making their first finals appearance.
Lance
Richards
Burtoll
with
a
double
and
two
sinever, that you've got to rebound and
The finals have been tied at two
gles,
Jeremiah
Bentley
and
Williams
\
execute," Sloan said.
games apiece 22 times, and the team
WP-George
each
added
two
singles.
Glouster
had
Should Chicago win tonight, .it's that won Game Shas gone on to win
LP-Trace
conceivably the last running of the the championship 17 times. In the nine hits led by Mike Drake with a
singles.·
double
and
two
current Bulls. Jackson, Michael Jor- other five cases, the t~am Jttuming
dan and Dennis Rodman are all with- home won the final two games
out contracts for next season.
(most recently Jlouston in 1994
• If Jackson doesn:t return, Jordan · against New York).
s~ys he won't, either. ROdman, who
"We have t""o games at home.
ljrew an NBA-record $50,000 line We think if we can go out and keep
Thursday for derogatory comments playing the same way we did the othGeorge finished his senior season
Meigs High School standout
about the Mormon Church, probably er night, our chances are very, very,
very good," Bulls guard Ron Harp- Scott George has been selected to with a 9-2 mark and a 2.01 earned
won't be back.
first team all-state and will take part run avemge. In 73 innings he struck
Rodman's been ineffective in the er said.
Chicago turned up the defense in in All-Ohio Series to be held this out 81, walked 25 and gave up 56 ·
series with just 13 points and 35
rebounds, while his endless antics the fourth quarter and played well weekend at Ohio State's Bill Davis hits. He gave up 51 runs, but only 21
Qnd boorish behavior have worn thin. against the Jazz's pick-and'-roll Stadium and Dublin Coffman High were earned. In his career on the
mound he had a 23-4 mark and a ·
Jordan comes off one of the most offense; forcing Malone to take shots School.
The
series
will
be
a
round
robin
17 ERA.
2.
memorable performances of his bril- a few feet from where he feels comformat
and
will
feature
games
on
fri·
At the plate, he batted .277 with
liant career: Playing with a stomach .fortable.
day
and
Saturday
along
with
a
banthree
home runs. He also set a
The Bulls also conlained John
virus that.left him dehydrated, faint
and nauseous, he summoned up the Stockton, holding him to 13 points quet on friday evening at the Holi· Meigs High,School record by being
day Inn on Lane Avenue. His first hit a pitch 16 times.
and five assists.
~trcngth to lead Chicago to a 90-88
Also from the area playing in the
"We need to continue handling game will be at .Dublin Coffman at
Clame 5 victory in Salt Lake City.
12:45
p.m.
and
then
his
team
wjll
series
is Athens catcher Jack Pepper.
He scored 38 points, IS in the their picks and rolls, hit our shots and
play
at
Ohio
~tate
at
5
p.m.
Four
allBulldog coiiCh Fred Gibson wa.•
final quarter, and hit the game-win- get more penetration," Bulls center
state
teams
from
·all
divisions
will.
also
selected as one of the coaches.
ning three-pointer, while looking Luc Longley said.
·
take
part
in
the
series.
like he might collapse during his 44minute stint . On Thursday, he
skipped practice and spent the day in
bed, although he was feeling much
better. ·
· "I think it will affect him. He's
got to get through a discovery day
and maybe he's going to be weak.
We'll still have to watch him closely," Jackson said.
·
.
"I recall him playing on a couple
very badly sprained ankles .and ..
with a couple of badly stramed
backs and necks before. But certamly nothing as dramatit as the finals,"
Bulls trainer Chip Schaefer said
Thursday. "I' ve never seen him
. DENNIS RODMAN
look quite that spent before."

ByRICKGANO

Bra.. Mer 117 c•ny

All Dog Food·is
· on Sale

of

Bra•• Nrw 1!7
PIIIIIE flrr~lr~

ASII'I tllrfrsltl Yll

From

June 16th thru June 22nd ·

.

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.

,Sume llll'deliltnvlflr·IIPt'dillflnandnlf ~IX'J(llrll ~HJU! ••~1 all'w IH'Ihllill. Tcml'llltlo'~ 11'Ct'mlll Slart Mnalk1urf llltlllldolll\!1)'
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Tom Peden

·. Country .·

M fo•,._., •••• ,_,llll..,.t•·l,_ '
s t .. -7 . .
7

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

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Meigs Legionnaires
defeat Glouster 6-3

SALE

ni~ Wheeler,. _LHP M ichae'l Hlip.hc ~ . .28

• OAKLAND ATHLE 1\ICS· St(l.nllLI

Detroit at Montrtal. 1 : ~!1 p.m.
Toronco-! Phil~phha, I: 3~ p.m.
Kaosu Cloy " p;"'burah. I Jl p.m.
·
Chkalo White Sox a1 CLEVELAND.

ALn.NL

. I':

.U

'Nally and

Baltimore at Allaara. 1:10 p.m.

Milwoukee (D'Alftcc 2-3) 1111 o.ktco

.,

~Cunnon~C , )·~) · at
~-1}, fU~ p.m.

Sundoy's games

Today'spmea

'

Phll;~\klphiu

San Francilt:O (Carlson 0-0l at f\na hcim (Watson ~-3). 10:05 p.m.

B~k1mm: ~

l - 4-J~ 7:40p.m.
CLEVELAND (Colon
l.ooia(Morrlt 4-J), I~

(WolcOII 2· 4), 4 :0~ p.m.

CSMI11nn

(tome AL "- NL;

Boston 9,

. ~.l~

l..ns An!!t!b .... .....H
Sim illl::t~-u .. . .. ... 1H

;u Oaklan..S

San Oie1o

Thursday's acorn

. ~6 .\

Chi~·n(!~l

N.Y. YunkeeJ {Wells 7·.l) nl Florida
(Fcrnnodez 6-6), 7 : 0~ p.m.
Kaatat City ~Bel..:her 7-6) m Pim ~
burlhH..ieber J-71. 7: 0~ p.m. .
l.'hiCIIJO While Sox (Darwin 2-:n at
CLEVELAND (MetL:br 3-!1), 7:0!1 p.m.
Dct"?il (Thomp_son 6-.() at Montreol
CP. Manmez 8-2), 7J~ p.m.
MirmeiOia (Robenson 6-31 at Houston
CKile 7~2 ,, 8:05 p.m.

- ~ ·:

Sart Fr.uM.:isco ........ .1fi 2K
Colomdo .... ........ ... J~ .\ 0

Lo 11i ~

INy&lt;O-n. W~p .m.

WHt~mDI¥W.

Seuuk ............ ,....... 3~ 29
Annheim ........ ........ :\4 29
Tuas ................... .. 32 ~0
011klnnll ................. 27 ~9

6 -:~l

Toronm {Person 1-4) at

\ 1•

:11 St.

.~ -~ ~

(Wen!-erl .~ -]}. 4 : 05p . m
Lo~ Angelr1 (R. Martinez 6-J) 01 Seat1~

:n .47~
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Milwaukee ............. 29
Chk;~go .................. 2M ,\4
MinntSCMa .............. U .1~

p.m

lAntly .Be..:s .~-2 ) , 1: I .~ ('l .m.
Milwaukee (Mer~~ 2-2) al
Cubs (Trach.\Cl J -~). oi :O.~ p.m.

1
It•,
· 1.1
11

.4M.l

1 : 1~

CLEVELAND (0g,Cit

6K9

Cenlral Di•Won
CLEVEl.AND ...... Jl 211 .m
KnM.u City ........... 29

,

Baltimore Clwtuuin;1 H· l ) ;1t Atlantn
·(Smuhz 6-~).

Euttrn Di¥111on ·

Basketball .

· w~s.t~rn Dl"lslon

ALn. NL

'.&lt;

BETHESDA, Md. (AP)- Colin
Montgomerie had a confident smile
as he walltcd down the fourth fairway, two ltcy factors that explain
why he is the leader after the ftnt.
round of the U.S. Open.
That he was in the fairway . is
supremely important at any u.s.
Open.
And the conditions at Congres-.
sional Country Club - the longest
course in U.S. Open history, with
rough so thick it could hide a base- ·
ball - rarely allow even the best
players to look like they might be
having fun.
The Scotsman who loves the U.S.
Open more_than any other major golf
championship because of its premium on accuracy finally played like it
Thursday. He shot a S-under-par 65 ,
for a one-stroke lead over Hal Sutton and Steve Stricker.
"I tend to drive the ball as straight
as anybody, and that is a great
advantage here," said Montgomerie,
who lost in a playoff to Emi~ Els fo1·
the '94 Open title. "This is a tournament where I've been very comfortable."
·
And it showed in the first round.
The U.S. Open may be the most
demanding mental test in golf, but
body language spoke volumes.
As soon liS the eyes of defending
champion Steve Jones caught up
with the night of his first drive, he
pumped his fist in relief.
Fred Couples, ·in a large group at
75 that included Greg Norman,
Davis Love III and Phil Mickelson,
grimaced as the ·bushy rough framing a bunker on the third fairway
· nearly snatched the club fr~ his
hand.
And then there was Tiger Woods.
When his 2-iron from the tee on No.
16 began its descent safely 'into the
fairway, he wearily bent down to
pick up his tee.
When he dunked his 7-iron into
the water on the par-3 18th to com-

.

;4::

,,

George selected to play
with all-stars Saturday .

credit to the seniors. In front are (L-R) Jenny Bird Sellers, Kim Sayre,
Regina Manuel, Ashll Davis, Kara King, Erica Arnott, Jsnnlfllr
g'Uer, Ashley McKinney, Trlsh Hillman, Renee Turley, Karl Caldwell;
Amber Thomas 11nd Cynthia Caldwell. The tat1m was coached by
Howle Caldwell and assistant Peta Sayre.

Scoreboard
B aseba ll

·By DOUG FI!FIGUSON

~---- ....... "'01.......

,.

-1)1-----1·---·-·. . . -

Aluminum block Late Models slated
to·race at Skyline Speedway tonight
I

Full-blown aluminum block Late
Mjldels re1um to Skyline Speedway
tonight under the UDTRA banner, a
national OIJ&amp;nization and reaional
btanch of the Hav-a·Tampa aeriCJ.
'l1le pointi championship pays
$1 5,000 to win and $2.000 for I Olh
place.
• Mani of the reJions' sws Ire
oapectld to return, includina the
Slndit and nine-time champion Bob
Adat!t• Jr., Butch McOill, Bill
OUiden, ltobby Hill and more.
Other lot:al drlwrs 1bdd Smith,

.

Scott. Wolfe, Chris Stotts, Steve
Roberts, George Adkins and many
other drivers will be on hand. tonnie Dant, Meigs County's only
Sprint Car driver, hilS been doing
well in the exciting sprint car divi·
sion.
Pour cluaes of cars; Sprints, Late
Models, Pure Stoclcl, and Four
Cyliadm run, beJinniq with WIIIJII·
Uflld 6 p.m.ltld l'llCina at 7:30p.m.
Racca haVe been over by II :30
each of tho pUt throe weeki.

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Friday, June 13, 1.817
Fnday,June13,1117,
•

White House 'firm' on holding !·
NATO expansion to 3 countries ~

HAPPY BIRTHDAY- President (:linton wlahed hla predecea·
hippy 73rd blrthdly and gave him a birth·
day cake Thursday during the 25th annlveraary meeting of The
Bullneaa Roundtable In washington. Clinton Ia seen above Introducing Bush to the or~nlzatlon. (Aj))

101', George Buah,left, 1

Senate slates hearings
on fund-raising for July

By RON FOURNIER
"working with our NATO allies to
Aaaocllltwd Preaa Writer
reach agreement." McCurry, noting
WASHINGlON Bucking the historic inftuence of the United
some NATO allies, President Clinton Sllites in NATO, said: "The United
will plish to limit the alliance's his- States position will prevail."
toric expansion to three new memThe Czech, Polish and Hungarian
bers - Poland, Hungary and the ambassadors were called to the State
Czech Republic. "The United States' Department to receive the 11ews from
poSition is ftnn," the White House Deputy Secretaty Strobe Talbott.
said Thursday.
Ambassadors from Romania and
Though the administration has Slovenia were due to meet with him
signalled the position for several later on.
weeks, the official announcement
In Warsaw, the Polish government .
threatens to pit the United States thanked Clinton but said European
against a majority of NATo allies security depends on bringing other
who want five new members. And former Soviet bloc countries into
some U.S. lawmakers want the NATO.
·
alliance expanded to all Eastern and .
"We are very happy that once
Central European countries.
again Pre.sident Clinton supported so
"The United States will formally clearly our aspirations to NA10,"
say today that of the candidate mem· said Antoni Styrezula, spokesman for
bers for admission to NA10, we will President Aleksimder Kwasniewski.
favor in the first round Pciland, the
He .added: "Poland thinks that
Czech Republic and Hungary," NA10 should embrace other East
White House press secretary Mike European countries and other counMcCurry said. Defense Secretary tries which are willing to join,
William Cohen was making Clinton's because this will increase European
case Thursday to his counterparts at . security. But it is up to NATO memlhe NATO.headquarters in Brussels. bers to make final decisions. "
Romania and Slovenia "are clearNATO deCisions are made by
ly. on the track" toward being NATO consensus of the 16 member counmembers, but "they will 'profit by tries, but McCurry left no room for
· having more time," McCurry said.
compromise: Asked if the United
Clinton mentioned the. two coun· States could be overruled, he said,
tries in a statement issued later Thurs- " That's not likely."
day. "The first new members should
Could foes · threaten to block
not and will not be the last," the pres· Poland, Hungary and the Czech
ident said.
Republic to force further expansion?
Clinton said he looked forward to

By JAMES ROWLEY
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
WASHINGlON- Even though Democrats blocked an attempt to com-·
pel testimony from 18 people, the Senate's chief campaign-finance investigator says hearings will begin next month with plenty of other witnesses.
The dispute over im111unity involved "only one facet of a many-faceted
By CAROLYN SKORNECK
"No one wants to have to sentence
investigation," said Sen .. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn.
Associated
Preas
Writer
a
juvenile
to a lengthy prison term,"
. The investigation is "much broader than that," Thompson told reporters
WASHINGlON
A.
juvenile
the
committee's
chairman, Sen. Orrin
Thursday night after Democrats withheld needed support to issue immuni·
crime
bill
'intended
to
hold
young
Hatch,
R-Utah,
a co-author, said
ty gran\s. "We will have no problems filling our time in July." ·
people
accountable
for
all
their
Thursday
as
the
panel
began work on
, Thompson said the' hearings would begin the week of July 8, in the ornate
heinous
and
incidental
.
crimes
the measure. "Bui if a juvenile has
Senate Caucus Room, scene of the Watergate hearings in the 1970s when
has
support
from
lawmakers
of
both
committed
a criine as heinous as Umt•
.Thompson was counsel to the Republicans.
but
faces
much
work
before
it
parties
committed
by the worst adu,lt crimi"For those who think that anyone can keep the lid on the facts over the ·
-reaches
the
Senate
flOQr.
nal,
we
must
do this to protect soci·
itext several months, they are mistaken," Thompson told reporters.
ety.,.
"I
think
it
is
a
Iough
and
smart
bill
He inade the comments ·after Democrats on the Senate Governmental
Miners committed 14 percent of
Affairs Committee blocked his attempt to grant immunity to the IS witnesses, ... that will strengthen juvenile justice
in
America,
a
system
that
is
in
a
state
all
violent crime in 1995, up from 10
including 15 monks and nuns ai a California Buddhist temple who gave monof
collapse,"
said
Sen.
Jeff
Sessions,
percent
in 1980, a recent Justice
ey after a fund-raiser April 29, 1996, attended by Vice President AI Gore.
R-Ala.,
chainnan
of
the
Judiciary
Department report showed, including
The monks and nuns who gave the Democratic Nati.onal Committee mon·
Committee's
youth
violence
panel
9
percent of murders, 15 percent of
~y and were later reimbursed for their donations could tell "who is responand
the
legislation's
co-author.
forcible
rapes, 20 pertent of robberies
~ible for orchestrating the money-laundering, who gave them the check, who
Among
the
proposals
in
the
$3
.6
and
13
percent
of aggravated assaults ..
la!ked to them about it," Thompson said. ·
trying
more
youths
as
billion
bill:
That actually reflected a 25 per·
· After detennining some donations might be illegal, the DNC pledged to
adults;
keeping
records
of
their
·cent
decrease from the year before, ·
return $74,050 of the$166,7500 raised at the event.
.
.
offenses;
imposing
sanctions
on
juvedropping
to 1989levels, according to
Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa., said the panel had evidence that 10 monks'or
for
their
earliest
crimes
with
niles
an
analysis
by Justice's Office of
nuns who gave $5,000 apiece to the DNC were reimbursed a day later by
gradually
increasing
sanctions
to
disJuvenile Justice and Delinquency
the temple.
The Washington Post, in today's editions, reported that the day after the suade them from future wrongdoing; Prevention, rc:leased Thurs~y.
Attorney General Janet Reno
fund-raiser, temple leaders scrambled-nJ-&lt;:OJ11Cl up with more money for the and loosening restrictions on incarcerating
juveniles
near
adults.
called
that ''by far the largest decline
DNC and ultimately repaid $58,000 to 12 people.
· The Post, quoting unidentified sources, said the te,mple's leaders were pres· .
sured 10 come up with political contributions by then-DNC fund-raiser John .
'p
.
Huang and Maria Hsia, a Huang associate and temple adviser.
ftl fi
Thompson warned Democrats that they risked being viewed by the Amer·
. lean public as obstructing the Senate's inquiry into fund,raising abuses by
COI.,UMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Muf- the death chamber.
· President Clinton's re-election effort. The inquiry has a Dec. 31 deadline.
fled comments were heard, then the
Elkins' body had.become swollen
Democrats are ready to support immunity "but only after the majority condemned killer asked, "Should I from spleen and liver problems,
takes action to ensure us this is truly a bipartisan investigation," said Sen. lean my head down a little bit?" as which made finding a vein difficult,
Carl Levin, D-Mich. "It is essential that the majority give us the vote we prison offici.als searched for a vein to . said his lawyer, Kevin Bell.
for subpoenas"to investigate alleged GOP wrongdoing.
Elkins, 41, was convicted of robpump in the lethal chemicals.
Thompson said the July hearings also may feature a parade of witnesses ·
They finally,found one in Michael bing and stabbing 59-year-old Patri'll(ho refuse to testify.
Eugene E)kins' neck, anilthe deadly cia Whitt eight ti!lles after she
) ro revive the immunity issue, "we have the option at public hearings of mix of drugs began flowing. He was stopped !(}help him and another man
Cll\ling in the ·Buddhist monks and nuns one at a time and ask them qiles· pronounced dead today at 12:58 who feigned car trouble along Interlions," Thompson said. "If they iake the Fifth, vote right there as to whether a.m.. nearly an hour after he entered state 95 near the Georgia state line.
to immunize them.
Thompson had sought to grant so-called "use immunity" that bars prosecutors from using the witness' congressional testimony as evidence against
them in a criminal trial. The chairman needed to pick up two of the panel's
DCmocrats to join nine Republicans to cast. a required two-thirds vote to grant
immunity.
, The seven Democrats also withheld support for giving immunity to Keshi
Zhan, an associate of Democratic fund-raiser Yan Lin " Charlie" Trie. Ms.
Zhan, a low-paid government clerk, gave $12,500 to the DNC and acted as
a hostess for Trie when he entertained businessmen.
'
Despite the support of Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Colin., Republicans were
u.nable to muster the II votes necessary to give immunity to two friends ol
~s. Zhan, The Justice Department had told the panel it has no interest in
prosecuting the women, said Senate aides, speaking anonymously.
But prosecutors have raised concerns about giving immunity to Zhan, who
aliended a Feb. 19, 1996, fund-raiser featuring President Clinton that netted
(With activation.
the DNC $1.1 million from Asian-Americans, said Senate aides.
SJOO.Ql withoYI.)
·
The panel has evi.4ence that she was reimbursed for a donation she gave
at the fund-raiser, which was organized by Huang, an aide said.
1

by Bob Hoeflich

Friends are planning a card shower for Mendal W; Jordan who will be
marking his 85th birthday. on June 23. Cards will reach Mendal at 27100
Rutherford Road., Albany, Ohio 45710.
_
.
And, remember, ~ane~ and Allen Downie will be honoring his mother,
Mrs. Dorothy Downte, Htg~ St., Pomeroy, with an open house this Saturday
from 2.1o 4 p.m. at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church: Dorothy will be
marking her 90th birthday on the day after the open house, Sunday, June 15.
Among Saturday's graduates at Ohio University will be Nicola Rene'
Beegle who will be graduating ~urn laude with a bachelor of arfS degree. Her
maJor ts psychology and her m~nor is social work.
.
· Nico~a is ~be daug~ter of the late Mark Beegle and ¥t"s· Cluisty Duncan,
who restdes m Knoxv1.lle, Tenn., and 1s the granddaughter of Paul and Eileen
Beegle of Letart Falls.
·

need

The·Community Calendar Is published as a free service to nou-prof·
it groups wlshln&amp; to an~tounce meetln1 and s~lal events. The calendar
is uot desigtled to promote sllies or tund railers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to nm a specific
.
n"mber or ,days. .
. FRIDA"
MIDDLEPORT -- Widows Fellowship, Ponderosa, Gallipolis, II a.m.
Friday.
.
.

SATIJRDAY
'
_
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern OAPSE 448, picnic, members and families,
Royal Oak Resort, Saturday ~ p.m. with meal at6:30 p.m. Meal, 'drinks and
table service provided. Take covered di~h. ·

lcOf .IIJ•ctJ•m
W',

\

J~

SALEM CENTER -· Star Grange 778 to host District 2 Ohio State
Grange talent contest, Saturday, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Chicken barbecue
and luncheon to be service at 12: 15 p.m.
BURLINGHAM-· Modern Woodmen of America, Camp 7230, will have
a family cookout June 14, 6:30p.m. at the Burlingham Modern Woodmen
·Hall. Fathers will be ·honored. Those attending are to take a covered dish.
Guests are welcome.
POMEROY -- Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR, to meet at 9:45 a.m. ·
Saturday, ai 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. tylembers may take guests . .
LONG BOTIOM: ,_ Hymn sing, Saturday, 7 p.m. Eastern Vessels at Mt.
Olive Community Church, Long Bottom.
·
SUNDAY

MORGANlOWN, W.Va. (AP)
-" The leader of the Mountaineer
Militia wanted to sabOtage a com·.
munications complex to weed out
uncommitted members of a clandes·
tine strike force, according to court
documents.
The "Special Operations Group".
al5o cQnsidered killing U.S. Sen. Jay
Rockefeller and Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan as .,.at of
a "holy war" agllinst the federal 1government, the documents said.
The revelations came Thursday in
FBI aflidaviiS filed in the case of sev. en men charged in a ploc to destroy
.the FBI's fingerprint complex . in
C!arUburg, 80 miles south of Pins-

.
bui:Jh.

l
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'

According to tbe documents,
"Commanding General" Floyd
"RIIy" Looker said the assassinations
would not be murder because the
~Hiia wa in a " holy war" against
aow:mment c:orruption.
Rockefeller, D- W.Va., and
Greenspan had no comment on the
\)

allegations. according to spokesmen.
· The discussions during a militia
training session in Lewis .County
Sept. 23, 1995, are contained in hundreds of pages of documents in U.S.
.
District Court io Wheeling. .
Larry Milrtz, an Ohi9 militiaman
not clwged in the bomb plot, indicated it even might be necessary to
targenbe families of Rockefeller and
Greenspan, the documents said.
"You must chop off their head,"
Martz said in reference to the need to
altack . top government leaders ,
according to the affidavit.
Martz is in jail in Ohio for\ssaull·
ing a state trooper and canying a con·
cealed weapon. AboUt 1,000 rounds
of ammunition were seized from his
truck during his arrest.
In all, seven men with militia ties
in West VilJ!inia, Ohio and hnnsyl·
vania were charged last October in a
plot to obtain explosives and aid in
.allack on the FBI center.
·
They were arrested Oct. II

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$4 9
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.

TIJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT •• The Meigs County Family and Children First Council, ·
special meeting. Tuesday; 9 a.m. at the Meigs County Department of Human
Services in Middleport. . ·
·

18 Monthsr

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MONDAY
LETART •• J..etart Township Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the office buildins.

Package
Minutes
.for
. .
Plus, Adivation is now $10!

lfcAdvertised p1ice req~ires anew.activilion and .minimum lt!VK! commitment (usuo~ 1,1 or l )"in),
upon c~edn app~oval. wrth the Rad~Shadt autho11zed eel~~'"""' servrnq your area.An acrNaiiOO fee
may be requned.like ~· home phonr, a month~ ,_, fe~ long-ili!Lln&lt;e f!!\ and charges for tlr·
_ tlme_Yoo .actual~ u~ Will be made. All these fees va.~ depending oolhe ~an. yoo selecr. lf you 1ermi·
nalo &lt;eMC! before CO!llpleoorr ofyour "''"'"'""' ""'" commnmen~ your carr~r may ~ a flat or
proraied term~natiOfl fee. If you lerm~a!! service IMI!rin 110 days of activatio~ to aW~d a 1300 charge ·
Ill Radiolhadt, you must return the c~lu lar phoile.

,

. CARPENTER .. Mt. Union Baptist Church, to observe 101 st anniversary, Sunday. l'otluck dinner following Sunday school9 to 1:30 a.m. Afternoon service to feature special . speaker and special singers including
"Friends of Jesus and Gabriel Quartet. Located near Carpenter.

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POMEROY.• Rev. Arius Hurst, pastor of the Forest Run Baptist Church,
will be guest minister Sunday, 10:45 a.m., at the Naomi Baptist Church.
Public welcome.

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Cellular with aU-day battery

WEDNESDAY
EAST MBIGS .. Eastern Local Board of Education, 7 p.m Wednesday, ·
Tuppers Plains Elementary Schoo!.
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Past Councilors' Club of Chester Council No. 323, Daughters of Ameri·
ca mel recently at the lodge hall. Hostesses were JoAn~ Ritchie, Opal Hollon and Erma Cleland.
.
Mary ·Jo Barringer, president, conducted the meeting. She read from
EiA:Jciel 13.
The pledge to the American Flag was given and the Lord's Prayer was
read in unison. ·
.
.
.
Members answered the roll ~all by telling something nice that happened
on Mother's Day.
· · ·
·
·
· Laura Mae Nice, secretary, and Opal ~ollon, treasurer: save their reports.
Reported sick were Ethel Orr and Elizabeth Hayes. Erma Cleland fell at
her home and injured her le~ hand...
.
· .
Members sang "Happy Btrth4aY to Gold1e Fredenck.
·
Gamel wenr conducted by Laura Mae Ni9C and Ella Osborne.
Also preSent were Marpret Ambelger, Opal Ejchinser, Pauline Ride110111', Marcia Keller, Thelma White, Mary K. Holler, and Delores Wolfe. · ··

............
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.....
Sentinel Classified•

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,

Chester Past Councilors meet

•
'

Hurryl Offer Ends 6/30/97

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Pomeroy UMW holds mother-daughter banquet :

------Community calendar--

You've got questions. We've got answers.®

Militia's documents reveal
possible assassination plots

readers who write: "I have been
;:
diagnosed with such-and·such conDR. GOTT
clition. What is it?" Why is it that
these patients ·cannot get the information tbey need from their own
•'
PETER
doctors? Of course, if they did, you
,·
would not be able to write such an
GOTT, M.D. •:•
interesting and educational colum~
0,
But I am curious about this phenomenon.
'l
DEAR READER: So am 1.
It seems reasonable . to expect
physicians to elaborate on diagnoses. Perhaps ·they do, and the
at that, rather than simply explainino'
readers you .ment ion . don't listen. that high blood pressure has caused"
But, I suspect, many practitioners h h
1
fail to provide in~onnatt' on about an 1 e earl II)USC e 10 stretch and be!\!\
with less vigor, leading to breath':
affliction once the diagnosis is lessness and other symptoms.
;
made.
I, for one, would like more physi'·"
There are complex reasons for cians to explain diagnoses in Wider;this, ranging from time restraints to standable terms, but _, as you point'
the fact that many doctors talk med· out __ if more of them did, 1 would:
icalese, in preference to plain Eng- n't receive the 2,500 letters a week
lish. For example, a physician may that rovide, as yours did, the basis
tell a patient that she has ''hypenen- for my column.
sive cardiomyopathy" and let it go
.:

Now, let's see. Was that 60 million dollars that !lie state "found" the other
day? That's a lot of money to be "lost". One wonders just what ·Jcind of. a
bookkeeping system is used--apparently, quite a flexib!eone ..Do keep smiling.
·

RadioShack.

l¢

Modern studies have proved that
EBV antibodies are no more common in patients with chronic fatigue
. syndrome than in normal, unfatigued people . Consequently, the
diagnosis of chronic EBV hu been
discarded by most authorities.
The diagnosis of chronic fatigue·
syndrome remains daunting -- and
largely unsatisfactory •• because so
many ailments can cause it: depres·
sion, hypothyroidism, Lyme disease,
and others.
'
Therefore, I . believe that your
f· d
1
·
nen must ook e1sew here to
explain her chronic tiredness; the
poor,· maligned EBV is probably not
· a factor. To help your friend obtain
more information, I suggest that she
write the Chronic Fatigue Immune
Dysfunction Syndrome Foundation,
965 Mission St., Suite 425, San
Francisco, CA 94103 ; or telephone
them at (415) 882-9986.
DEAR DR. GOTI: Your column
regularly features questions from

The Pomeroy ,United Methodist dle 'on the table. For ·the program tion in the teddy bear project. The Linda Faulk and Lori Starcher nnd:
Women held their mother-daughter . Downie portrayed a modern day ' program concluded with singing of her daughters, Cassie ·und Ca yla'
banquet at the church ~cently .Mth United .Methodist woman and Eve· "Blest Be the Tie that Binds", prayer Lee, Dorothy Downie and Janet
Marge Reuter, VICe president, giVIng lyn Clark a woman of the 18th cen· by Carpenter, and a poem, "Sweet Downie and Janet's daughter, Dchthe welcome.
tury. Her portrayal was of Grace Memories" by Wolfe.
bie Beegle ; Joanne Vaughan, Eli 7.alsabelle Wolfe had grace before Murray who raveled to John WcsRecogni zed and prese nted flow - beth and Sarah Lawrence. Oihcrs
the dinner. the program was pre· ley's group meetings to oversee ers were Helen Fis her, the oldest attending were Anie and Pau line .
sented by Alice Wamsley opening activities Of teaching Bible to new mother, and Dorothy Downie, sec. Reuter, Ruth and Peggy MoorC:,
with group singing of "How Great · ·Converts, feeding and clothing ihe ond oldest. The · youngesl mother Evelyn and Beli nda Clark. M u rg~
Thou Art.": She read "What Is a poor•. and raising money for the was Elizabeth Lawrence, .who Reuter and her sister. June Sayre.
Mot!)er." Other readings included poor.
attended with her daughter, Sarah.
I have no idea how many of you play the stock market.
.
Wamsley had a summer of the
However, I hope you're using discretion. The market seems to be a virtu- "Love to Live" by Leona Cleland.
Presented flowers were Heleo2
Helen
Fisher
and
Dorothy
Downie
recent
projects
of
the
church
al roller coaster ride every 'day. Scares me.
Alsq recognized were those with Fisher, Alice Struble, Dormhy"
the most family members present Downie, Polly Eichinger, Leon~
I lchow little about the stock market except the stories I've heard about the gave reflections of their early church women.
Leona Cleland, Ruth Moore, and including Polly Eichinger and her Cleland, Ruth Moore, Anie Rcutef,)
crash of '29 when people lost fortunes and some jumped out of windows to history.
Bernice Carpenter presented Downie knitted tiny caps for new Bonnie Kelley, Darla Staats, Judy Bernice Carpenter, Isabelle Wolfe.
· .their deaths as a result.
··
Isabelle Wolfe who read the scrip- boms and "premies", Fisher made a Eichinger, June Eichinger, Tami and June Sayre, and Marge Reuter. Thp::!
Perhaps, it's still .a good idea not to put all of your eggs in one basket.
.
lure, "you are the salt of the earth" quilt, as did Dorothy Downie and . Leslie Niben; and Alice Struble with · Dowers were provided by Joann ~&gt;"·
Meigs County's youngsters, those IS and under, will again have a blast and Eunice Jones, who responded by Joanne Vaughan who headed up the five family members, Janet Vaughan as her gift to the UMW.
Williamson, Darla and Kaylee
Saturday when the annual fishing derby of the Meigs County Fish and placing a bowl of salt on the worship project.
'·G
table.
Wolfe
then
spoke
of
the
light
Carpenter
reported
on
the
pledge
Kennedy, Sherrie and Catilin
Marge Reuter and Mynis Parker J
Games Association is held.
the di.rrict
narticina- Williamson:. Ann
with four. were hostesses.
The event is free and the boys and girls get a free lunch, not to mention of
a number of prizes that are to be awarded. Those attending are to take their
own poles and bait but should note Umt minnows are not allowed. Signs will
be placed on the Texas Road off Route 7 towards Chester so that they can
find the association's lake and farm where the derby will be staged

"My life for hers is a poor trade, er than my mother," Whitt said later. '
but it's alii could offer," Elkins said "We didn't get any satisfaction. For
in a final statement read by Bell at us, this is the closing chapter of a scv12:40 a.m.
. en-year nightmare."
Elkins also looked at· a message
Mrs. Whitt had met Elkins and ·
that Mrs. Whitt's son, Miles Whitt, Ralph Gamer earlier on the night of
displayed on a legal pad in the Wit- July 9, 1990, when they helped fix
ness box: "Mike, this was needless. her car, which had overheated 011
, She would have given you anything Interstate 95. She gave them $10 for
you needed."
their trouble.
"Elkins left this world a lot easi·

*
A $300° Value!

DEAR DR. GOTI': My friend
hu just been diagnosed with chronic fatisueJEpstein-Barr syndrome .
What is this and what can she do?
.·DEAR READER: The Epstein·
Barr viru8 causes mononucleosis,
usually a disease of young people,
marked by ·sore throat, swollen
glands and fatigue. The disorder is
diagnosed by a blood test that measures antibodies (protein fighters)
·against EBV.
Although complete recovery
1
·
from mono ·1s the rue,
many patients
retain antibodies against EBV for
Years. It's no surprise, then, when
these people .are older, become
fatigued (from some other cause),
and undergo blood tests that the
EBV test is positive.
In the past, this test was considered proof positive of an ongoing
EBV infection, sometimes called
"yuppie flu" or "chronic mono."
Unfonunately, this was not true.

Members of the Bethany United Methodist Church at Dorcas will be
entertaining with an open house this Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m·. as a farewell
gesture to the jtev. and Mrs. Kenny Baker.. The public is invited to attend the
event to join in saying goodbye to the Rev. Mr. Balcer who has been quite
active across Meigs County in his stay here.
•
Rev. l!aker will deliver his last sermon on Sunday, June 22, and.then will
be moving to Celina where he has been assigned.
And Saturday evening ·the entire Methodist Charge of Re.v. Baker will
hold .a picnic from 4:to 6 p.m., again honoring their pastor, so it looks like a
busy day for the Bakers . .

in juvenile violent crime" since the nile records when the offender reach- ·
government first reported crime es adulthood.
.
The grants would be used to build •
trends based on surveys of American .
households in 1973.
juvenile detention 'facilities, drug
The bill, like a previously passed testing of juvenile arrestees, criminal
House measure, reflects that states record-keeping and prevention
handle most crime and would, push cffons.
them to toughen their juvenile justice
The bill also would authorize
systems through $2.5 billion in incen" $100 million to build Boys Clubs and
ti ve grants for siates that '.'make rea- Girls Clubs and $1 billion for existsonable efforts'' to:
ing Justice Department juvenile grant _
• Prosecute as adults juveniles programs, including $250 million for
over 13 forfelonies.
state and local prosecutors.
• Impose graduated sanctions for .
Sen . Joseph Biden, D-Del., who ·
·
· wrote t~e 1994 crime law, noted that :
juvenile recidivists.
• Conduct drug tests on juveniles 39 million children soon will enter ·:
arrested on felony charges.
· the most crime-prone years when :
• Send to the FBI, and make avail· they become teen·agers. .
. . .. 1
able to law,enforcement,judicial and
"Even if we do everything right ...
school officials, fingerprints and pho- and the rate at which kids commit
tographs ofjuvenilcs arrested for seri· crimes does not rise at all, we will
'OUS crimes. The records must .be kept
.still have a 20 percent increase in
as long as adult conviction records juvenile murders by 2005," Biden
would be, which would end the com, said.
·
monplace practice of expungingjuve- ·

I

•

. I hope it's .• good day for you. Frlday, the 13th, in bygone days had some
bad connotauons to those of us who are 11Uperstiti0111. However, the concern
does seem tO be fading to tbe wayside. Maybe because a lot of us have
accepted the philosophy of whatever will be, will be--whether it is the 13th
and a Fnday or not.

'"!bat's not iikely," he repeated.
Clinton reached his decisiQD after '
''The United States' position.is firm." a Wednesday night meeting with '
. Aides said the administration key senators. Sen. Joseph Biden of
believes it has the necessary diplo- Delaware, senior Democrat on the •
malic strength and support in NA10 Senate Foreign Relations Commillce,
to hold the expan'sion to three !lations. supports Slovenia's, admission but
Holding out hope for Romania said the president still must make his ,
and Slovenia, McCurry said, "This case to the American people for any
should not be considered the last NA10 expansion.
·
round of admissions!'
.
"We've got to explain why it's :
That is one reason Clinton wants worth spending additional money," '
to ·limit expansion. The prospect of he said.
Romania and Slovenia remaining on
In his remarks to reporters while
the. brink of admission signals that .crossing the Atlantic, Cohen cited ,
NATO expansion is a continuing three main reasons for limiting the
strategy, Clinton aides believe.
Madrid invitations to three:
'
Clinton also factored in the cost of
• The smaller the initial expansion, .
adding four or five nations. U.S. tax- · the m\)re cohesiveness NA10 will :
payers will pay hundreds of millions retain. Many fear ihe poorer central ·
of dollars to add Poland, Hungary European nations will have dif!iculand the Czech Republic·. ·
ty modernizing their forces and mak- .
McCurry said U.S. diplomats .are ing them more compatible with
contacting Russia . and other a!Jies. NAlO's existing forces.
Moscow, the Cold War NATO foe,
• The bigger the expansion the '
opposes expansion to its eastern bor· higher the bills. The Clinton admin- "
ders.
istration has estimated that expansion ,
In Belgium, Cohen was attending would cost the United States 'about
his first NATO meetings as defense $150 million to $200 million a year ~
secretary. He ~ad a tough task: Mak· over I0 years, but it has not said if .
'ing Clinton's case for limited ex pan· · that estimate was based on an expansion.
'
sion of three or five ·countries.
• Concern that the initial expan"Smaller is better," he said in lin
sion not be perceivect as the last. "We
interview en route to Brussels.
NATO wants to expand eastward want to make sure while we are there "
to solidify the democratic reforms during the summit in Madrid that we
under way in former Soviet bloc signal very strongly that this the first •
nations. Critics say it dilutes NATO round, this is an open door" to
without ~ding to security.
NATO, Cohen said.

oo·r .substJ•tu"e
11

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

Beat of the Bend ...

Juvenile cr.ime bill faces revisions

V,.,.8 , calls hl•mself

Chronic fatigue syndrome .needs diagnosis ;

•

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7 •,

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w.ITOIICUP

e..Chdl Sown. t,z.ia

7' Jol Rultmln, t ,2241

I. Din Rcenda, I, lilt

...
.u............-

Pakea_N.....
·C:.... 4 'lraelui

&gt;;!;II."; FROM LAST WEEK
Wordl!u1on..

WINSTON CUP: Jell GMion doml·
noted ... lata~ of tnePooono

500._ .... __ of ......eon and moving Into a tie iMth Terry

.-s...w. 1,143

1ap0,., ~""'eo.

caq,t him br lip 141 ond,Worddone "" ... day- qlnO BUSCH IERII!I: a..c:n-.

-""'-""·
~willt&gt;t
1011on1hio-ond

but 111111Bg0d10 hold off Word and
Jell l!u1on, Bobby Halril6n, Dale
Jarrett, Jetl Green ana Denali Waltrip.
GordOn had trouble &amp;arty in the race

CIW'TIMAII'I'IIUCKKomy IIWin, a riling 011r In tho Fold

... hod .. pit"".~ lire.
almoolloslng a lap beioto re-r.g
once egoln.

-

-In
Wlnaton300.

""'* ""

Ho--

Dole-

lho-~

3. -

Motrltn (3}
SIK s1ralght top fives

4. Dele JoMtt {4}

/lrr)UIId at end ageJn

Grend
In of

1903.Aiallulc:h

· Belter end bel1er

- -

ON TH ESCHEDU LE

-··11'-2501111:-

-wm ..
- ""dltvolo. We've
alol of r.:w·thll ~
and alof o!IOCOI illl!fNI.
Pen o1- Cup 1101n0 ll .

"'"'
r. very coo'""""" 11111
lhare't olof ol -1111 win-

"""· 111\lnk moyt&gt;t IIIey CIOn1
wont ..... Ill winning

"""""'of

-ll\lngl.

goii&gt;OrodRacing - .... booing. I've

_,_,.t&gt;t_

_Iii alii, ond lhal'a ~ my

-

_,

(B. Labont1)

(T. ~

Of THEW
· Jeff Gordon vs. NASCAR fans

.h

_,be.

-and-· .

t&gt;tMirO ..him"" - he"-of "" ""'·
-boo

--Cup

1.11'f
linawn?

llve top fives.
WHO'S NOT:

2.

.

lri1"""'""wtlo-- a

ifliiCI '-""'"0 IIIII L11 ,. .

_-'
I
'
--'11
._, .1

'
o.' ,

"-""

.,_

AROUND THEGARAGE

....._

Valley _
.Lumb,r.&amp;
.
•·
.Supply Co.

Cori!&gt;Oflll, ~~~n :

.

OW NASC\R !1111, '.
We rocclved a roo of leiters •
complolnlni about the ,.onencd

555 Park St.
MiddleporJ:

Coat·Cola race. Here is whll

really happened that nisin:
, Around midnill)il, offt&lt;~alstold
everyone, includln&amp; the driv.rs
and pil crews. thtlat 12:4.5 a.m.,
there would be 20 m~ lops if
lttcrc wu no more ra.in. At the
time lhet ........ waa Puoed
arouncS; GordOn
not leadinJ.
Whal did happeo WISthd for
101ne reason 'IV broldcuters
decided not 10 rele~ tbat infor· _
mation to the viewcT1 until 12;45

992-6611

By BOMIE SHIVELEY
Davotlonlll Wrtlet'

CLASS REUNION
Harold and Betty Newell hosted a
potluck dinner Sunday following the
Chester Alumni banquet for her
class of 1952 at their home in
Chester.
Attending were Starling and Sandra Massar, Chester; Donald and
Wilma Spencer Marks, Belpre; Jim
and Dorothy Stout, Tuppers Plains;
Sheldon and Helen Bissell Garvarick, Lexington; Mary Spencer
DeGranl, Fountain, Colo.; Arthur
and Margaret QQivey, Sarasota, Fla.;

Mother asked if I had written a story today. I answere4
"Yes," and said that I needed to write one on Father's Day.
but didn't know what to write.
Thirty seconds later, I opened a drawer and lifted a
couple papers; Underneath lay a tattered envelope with
these words scrawled across the back, "I love you, as
· ever, Daddy." A large lump clogged my throat and t.e~ welled up in my
eyes. Daddy ... wentto _be with the Lord in 1982 ... seems like so long ago
. . - f n:ad the: note inside, "Hi there, Sweetie, Don't wOrry about me. I am
gaining ground every day so take 'care of yourself...everyone asks about
B:onnie." ·
. .
.·
: I had been in Sloan,ICellering Cancer Center in New York City in 1'}77.
aRd Daddy sent me the best message a daughter ever received- "llove you."
What a sweet me·mory of my cherished father. He was always an encourager.
'
· I :dOn't remember hi.m ever acting grumpy. He 'was a gentle, qui.et, peaceful
·
·
fanner who loved his children.
: After being widowed two years, Mother remarried.. What a traumatic
experience. I thought it \vas one of the worst days ofi my life. Actually, it
A legislative report by Ziba Mid19rned out .to be one of the best days--be~ause she mariied Charles.. He is a kiff on bunting was presented at the
cuddly, teddy-bear type man who likes to give and r. ceive a lot of love. recent meeting of Hemlock Grange
Although his mind is clouded now with Alzheimer's disease, I still see flick- · #2049.
ers of a big smile, and hear the chuckles when he's amused. He still likes
He reported on hearings 0 n the
h)JgS and kisses. Papa Charles wiH always hold a spec!al place in my heart. state level about the possibility of
. The Lord has been so good blessing me with two wonderful fathers. His allowing hunting orl Sunday for all
Word tells me of my .heavenly Father ·who is so precious to· me. I Corinthi- species. The position of the Grange
.aps 8:6: "...There is but one God, the Father, from whom are all things, and has always been opposed to Sunday
we exist for Him; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, by whom are all things and hunting, he noted.
we exist through Him." Both my earthly fathers belie.ved this truth. They · The meeting was opened by MasllVed through and for Christ JesuS and they taught me to, also.
- Romans 8:15 teaches," .. .We cry out, 'Abba! Father!' The Spirit himself
bear witness with our spirit that we are children of God." From the seventh
- century BC, we read from the Old Testament in Jeremiah 31:3, "The Lord
appeared ... saying, 'I have loved you with an everlasting love; Therefore r
Helen Blackston presented a prohave drawn you with loving kindness. "'
·.
· . gram on dangerous bug bites at a
:· Yes, today I found a note from long ago touching my heart with ames: recent meeting of the Rock Springs
s~ge of love from my Daddy.
Beller Health Club held at the home
He said; "Don't worry about me." I know I don'i have toQhe's with the of Phyllis Skinner.
. I.:ord. Daddy signed off, "As ever." My heavenly Father calls passionately
Frances Goeglein read "Mosquifrom eternity past, to the present, into eternity future, "I love you with an toes Cause; Virus" and "Beating Bad
eyerlasling love."
Breath; Phyllis Skinner read "La
· What better, lasting gift could a father give a child than to tell them about
their heavenly Father's love.
.
·
Heavenly Father, thank You for Your bountiful love that lasts throush the
ages. My prayer is thai every father will know you personally and then lead
his children to love You, too. Amen ·
·

opinion, TV did a diS&amp;Crviec ·,o

...

Betty Smalley Reid, Pataskala;
Martha Orr Lee, Racine, and Leland
Parker, Pomeroy.
·

There is no admission charge.
youths are planning to participate.
Open livestock judging contest
MASTER'S DEGREE
Lawrence Thom~s Haley of
starts at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 21.
The junior shows stan at 2 p.m. with Racine, formerly of Gallipolis,
BEEF SPECTACULAR
Limousin, Simmental, and Angus earned a master of ans degree in
Ohio Valley · Beef Spectacular breeds. AI 4 p.m. 4-HIFFA show- Bible exposition. The commenceWeekend is being held June 21 and manship activities begin.
ment ceremony was held 'at Pen22, at the Wood County 4-H CampOne of the highlights of this 5th sacola Christian College on May 8.
grounds, Butcher Bend Road Miner- Annual Youth Show is the 4HIPFA He was one of 650 to whom degrees
al Wells W.Va .
Heifer-Steer Review which starts at were granted.
The event provides an opportuni - 7 p.m.
Pensacola Christian College is a
ty for youths to see some of the best
On Sunday at _lO a.m. the Ohio · liberal arts college enrolling stulocally grown beef animals being Valley Limuusi n Association ,spon- dents from every state in the U.S. ·
shown. Several Meigs County sors an open class Limousin s!low.
and over· 40 foreign countries. ·

ler Rosalie Story, followed ·by lhe
presentation and pledge to the flag.
There were' 19 members present for
the potluck dinner which preceded.
the meeting.
The opening song was, "The ·
Beautiful Lesson We Learn in theGrange.". Members also sang "Bailie
Hymn ·of the Republic,"
Reported ill were Clarence Story,
. Edna Clark and Bernice Hawk.
.
.

.

Celebrating birthdays for the
month of June are Clarence Story, ·
Helen Quivey, Ziba Midkiff and Jim
Fry.
· The lecture -program began with
peninent facts about the month of ·
June, followed by readings: ''Herb
Foolery" by Nancy Wells; "Weedscaping" by Rosalie Story; "Gelling
her Kicks" by Ziha Midkiff; "On .
Wings of June" by Opal Grueser;

"Sowing Season" by Wallace Bradford; and "Fun in the Sun" by Bar~
bara Fry.
Members played a "name game"
and wrote poems. The program was
concluded with a poem ·called
"Hugs," read by lecturer pro-tem
Ethel Brandt.
' The closing song was "Parting
Hymn." The meeting was closed in
proper order. ·
.
.

.

Rock.Springs Health -Club hears about _bug bites
Crosse" and Encephalitis; Barbara treasurer, and Blackston, devotions. Grueser. June treats will be furFry, "Eastern Equine" and "licks
The Lord's Prayer and pledge to nished by Pry, hostess for the June
Spread Lyme Disease" and Dorothy the flag opened the meting. Poems · meeting wi II be Nancy Grueser with
Jeffers, '"Relapsing Fever."
read were "By and By", and "A Phyllis Skinner to have the program,
New officers elected were Bar- Brand New Day." Officers repons and Nancy Morris,.the contest.
Refreshments were served by the
bara Fry, president; Skinner. vice were given, and it was noted that
· presidenl; Nancy Mo_rris, secretary, . infinnary treats for May were _pro- hostess to those named and Dorothy ·
reporter and historian; Goeglein, vided by Phyllis . Skinner, Nancy .Jeffers.

Sae

Church choir present
program for,feUowsh.ip
A program by the Middleport Church of Christ adult choir under the
lijrectio_n of Amy Perrin highlighted a recent nieeilng of the Meigs County
Churches o( Christ Women's Fellowship held at the Middleport' Church.
: Linda Bates read scripture from Judges, II Samuel, I Chronicles and
Psalms, all relating to music, and the opening song was "Standing on the
~omises. "Sabra Ash had prayer.
'
- ·Allegra Will of Dexter Church had devotions. The theme was "Friends."
She read I Corinthians 13, and "What is a Friend," "Friends are a Garden of
Elowers," and "What is the Words of a Friend."
There was a discussion about how to raise money to support camp. This
discussion was tabled until a later date.
: It was suggested that members save their change and bring it to the next
meeting to increase the treasury. A motion was made to send the camp $50
to be used any way needed.
·
·
.
lt v.:as decided .to leave theistarting time of t)le:meeting at 7 p.m. the n\)xt
mi!eling will be June 26 at Rutland Chu[ch of Christ. Catherine. Russell, ·a
missionary in Mexico, will be the speaker. A suggestion was-made that each
one bring her a letter of encouragement for her effons in the mission field. ,
The closing song was "When We All Get to Heaven." Closing prayer was
offered by Emalene Pratt. ·
Refreshments were served by the hos! chun:h.. •

SALE

. '''$549
·l~
..' +
llo:l•••:
· ~·

'

..

...... ,,.....,

l ! _...,.'!'•·ii*-,.·. -- .:

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 ~ays fro.111 .the date of the
. event.
Weddings submiued after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news articles in the society section must be
· submitted within 60 days
occurrence. All birthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence .

i.m.ln NASCAR This Week's

scrapbook---'--__,_.·__.;,_.

_Report on hunting presented at Hemlock Grange

---News policy----

w•

its viewers.

----'-~-Society

~

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614-667-7388

'

Craw" lila . . .

~ EYimhlm llld ctfNI

hove,_ .loll Gordon
Into vlclory lane •
out ol.
- a poeelblt 1611m81 {count. lng The~ llld Buac:h
Cluh} ll1la )'MI. Who ...
bu\ tile Rainbow warn...?

..

••

''

at Darlington track
.,Pearson
......... leaves his mark'"'""""c..,-""""''·-

"\ )'Ill """ ...., al
IWICAII:
DurinQatiYo-yeor
pertoil, 11172-78, David

~-

keep,.,.

.A tribute to father

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

0...-

rooldo- "" llrll

3. 'MIG II tho
NASCNIIOur'ng- IICI?

Cui yOUJ events short and you
might U well a.t ticket prioea 10
comina - · ·

WI 'Itt IIV

• FROM THE ARCHIY.ES:

N&gt;
~a:

oor-1~
IWICAII 'IIIII
YGIWTum, 0/0 lito
Gullte, 21G1J-E. franklin BML, OUtonll, N.C. 210M ·

~ ol tho~ TIUCI&lt; s.tol?

between, finishes
Included a 3311111
Briolol ond laal place
· finishes II Sears Point ond Talladega.

"""ond
- - moklllfo mltetab10f«1hoy&lt;U1g-.

..

-··
~

*""

",............
_,..
-:

urioulliboull

-l'llc:IUWnO--

• Jel8my Mayfield haS

• Geotl Bodine had hla
IIMIOP-1 0 finlelt
IInCe Olllington. In

duc«&lt;, chMr vmen he mlk• an

-

WHO'S HOT- WHO'S NOT
!lUI togelher conaecu-

Each - •
- c.-roclng'o
molt
1;J dltYer
IMel I

RIJUOidlll going to put up I
milliOn doiWI, wa're cenalnly
going 10 110- A, and got

·perfoononoo ol tho driver
lliofro ouppor11ng. Rlglit nOw, I

WHO'S HOT:

~UD

11'1 golllng

1-

very-

r.g, tltelliiell'llllled"" tho

THE BOOB FROM FANS? ' In
one way I loti tiki I do illid In

-r

-end.'
• WHAT WILl. Y9U DO Dlfo
fEIIENTLV NOW'II!AT vou
COULD- THE -ION
. .LLJ()M-001' •p IIOHUI? .
'I'm
ond -.g ·
forMR!Io going 19 DoftlllQIOn.
woyol1oril """I dOfl~ w
We might octully dWigO ...
~ wu my-·
Willi
l
U t i n g - . - bl far
""'~'body 10 ~. bull "'llial ,.,._We_, plonnlig
...,..•.• a lot of 11na out there
far-- and !hare's no on~ o1 Dd1glon. we
111110011 ....
I've
. . *"YO '*"'"''I about ""
-CUp ............
got a lof ol taMI&gt;A 11\ore
Tlioi'S- ...... _
clieering lor me illid I know ~
h O I - - oo, buiW R.J.
bullhe_n_
looder. The- who ore boo-

.'

I DO VOU UNDERSTAND

•

.. ·0
.,
CLa;

driven were wil!iae.
- - mo&lt;orMiiryOf
lull .. rtvllly- ltW

....,, IICing •
oiJm.
111011, oo I gollniD walor alillng ·
and Ill alillng IIlii did """"
Oilier l l i l n g l - racing. I

•(8. ._..)

:c

wu over, 11111 tr1c:t wiu c:omina
in. the can were set up ud t~

cor to 1he - lowl. Thlre
wu a tine period wtlere I

-high.'

ItI

look at the whole picture .
1b me it looked likt the r1in

hewonareoord11 ·poiea.

· IIOpJJing from ono type ol , _

,

•

to chanp an event. they Mould

OronciNallonoldrlver~1892,

ita

'

614-992-6520

win? lfd!o - .
befln the 1a1t round &lt;i pit
I
WiiF' a b li'l'llllnnl pa would
hmOIDimd.
The next time NASCAR Wlnts

U.-.Id lim . . -

o..-..

••

Syracuse, OH

.........
... """""'
"" field """
'"""'Wily
... "' fmle.IMn
II'

..,. ,.
.
llveoln
N.C.
Protonged IIIUmp :-'~'"''~ '""I""' '~· ':i l RECORD!'1351Wii, 24 ' '
8• .JeNmy Moy1leld (llr1NniWd)
"""· 1s po101, e1 IIlii IIYM, a1
Two straight lop fiY86
lop 1011,- $12 mllon In
8. Dolo Earnhardt {8}
oomlngo. ·.
Not speaking
· · . I LAST RACE: Won tne ·
10. 8111 EIIIGCI (10k~~---·&gt;W:Ji·!:. ~-&amp;::c:'IMII
MU ~
Brake problema
·
IEIIC£ BURNOUT WITH JIAC.
.INQ AI A CHI.D'I'I wu

'"**·lnliOintl·

--

-.com-

II1CIUgh for hll 1011 10 reach 1he
pedlll olo go-kart
Ing IIIUih 10 race iil!lCk cars, he
- a cliomplon on both 1he
lJnleciS1olel Auto Club'a
Mldgll illid S1iV1ir CRI\WI dM-

. • CHILDREN: None
• CAR: No. 24 DuPont Chevio111 Mi&gt;nle Corio, owned by
. Rlc:lc Honclrlck
• HOMETOWN: Born In Vallojo,
Calf., ralaedln Plllaboro, Ind.,

(S)

· u

' ':/" iiiiilfaurton (I)

Gonion began '*"'"tJIICII

CWil • 11001'1 . . he Wll big

111111 a n d -

·

'"}

-

"'"""*"'"""'

ond IIIIMICiinlo
1he lop 20 of all-time
NASCAR

- rookie"'cup""--lo

Monla Dullon. Lut

MO&lt;talligaln
7 R 11y w.ll

ago, Gonion h8l illr8ody..., a

Iionl.

igl!ll.

e. Ricky -

1, Jo11 Gonion (1}
Another Clofd-0-Thon
-•(2)
2. •
••--, -·~

II tho

camp,- ... _
"'*"'Vol
tne aeucn It,-... Molar sr.-uNaY

Weekly ranking&amp; by NASCAR This Week - · ranking Ia In poronlhooea.

lolUi ~ jOUII!J

_lod_
11u1-

hiM
00 lraCit
t0 win -15 fl!*
tnt!""'
year.
· curront
"""-"'
Gordon dldn"l dominate lhe race,

•,

man.

• • ..llmiTt;' Hlnllly, l,141

2131 Karr St.

OW NASC\R This Week,
It looks to me like NASCAR
slioiolll put Jetf Oordoo on tho
lrldi, tell all the Olher drivers 10
lily home and awanl him by givil1&amp; hlm $1.25 million. That's
what ~ at this year'•
Coc:a-Colo 600.
A&gt; a fUI, I havo boon 10
dell)'ed evema, but I wouldn't _
dream of telving until alllapa are
over and the checbr1 wavina. I
lllycd up 10 wiildla 1&lt;1lcndlog.
I would have hated ro oompete
behind the wheel in a race 1 ' ·
would calla .. fix t
11ae weft faller QUI thll ""*

-on

. .. . ........ 1,213
ll Buectl ...., 1,234

Marine Service

112ADERS .ASK 11IE QUI!S110NS
-·· ........................ ,.................................... ..

NASCAR TNs Week
.
Perlioplllltine 10 """ ....
lng JrJII Gonion "Wonderboy.•
hlo porfarmonce durIng"'" 11187 .....,, maybe n·a
limo 10- collng him Super-

2. Jldl $p!'lglle, 1,)03
3. ~ llwk1, 1,211

10•

~t

· PROFILE

Jeff.Gordon

.,..........

1' Flch Blct.lt, 1,)43

, I. TtrTY Ll&amp;lonlt, 1,115$
2. Jlfl GoRion, 1,856
3. ~ Mattin, 1,104
... O..~Mw~t. 1,121
s. Jd a...ton. t,m
e.. 01111 Eemtwtll, 1,0117
7. ~ l..llborM. U02
8. Ricty F\dl, 1,581
8. Mldwl~. t ,D
10. Jeram, Maylllld, 1,487

LabCinte "" ... "'"" ,..._

'",..
...........
..........

Boats New &amp; Used
"Professional SeJVice
Guaranteed• ·

• AIICA""- Englno _,
.1 p.m•.• Sllurday • ESPN

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

tribute.
..1been wonckrina wbcn )'011 were
. NASCAR This Now O.•id ·Peai'IOii'l mastery wiU fin&amp;lly JOin&amp; 10 do this,.. ~nncd
be ~for the 1f1C1. The Pelnon PuriM, lookln&amp; fll 1nd tanned with
Tower. ovcr1ookif11 1M fourth Nm on his famed silver hair cut 11most lo the
"'lp.
.
the newly rtc:t~nfiprtd Dlrlinatan
Then 11c eoc serious lnd 111d. "1'hls
Raceway, will loom hiJ,h .lbove lhc '
1.366-rnUe tnc:k, its 7,800 Kill hiah mtan1 fi"'IO'C 10 me lhaft (tDi"' into tiM:

.........

v.._,..,..,. ...
--"'-·
the--.
1)01111110 ,10 - ·

MicNgon,&gt;JII'In o uenuy ·
c:p..-by11w

_ . . 1111-ti. . wl1h
"'"' . . , . ..... eight ot

andn•nuw.
PcartOn is Dtltift&amp;lon'sall-time
wlnntr with I0 victories. and he bcc:orna. the first driver 10 blve a pandlland •t the ltd named aftct him.

-

wlltl1ho - - , . , .
allo won • 19e8 race ln 1

FORI tlilded by HolmanMoocly.
Clllr-

bcewa)i prai1Mn1 Jim Humer
ukcd Pcuson whit M tMuJht or thr:

hall.offtmc."

1'1111 WIIH FlU)( M D - .

o,q

s..u dn&gt;v• ilic F e l l &amp; - -

Ciimolet ii0i1lially pllol&lt;d by _ ,
GoTdon ln the Pocono JQO.
AAd unlike.,. llnfoundclt
nnnon floatiAa around the NASCAR

.

.

IISUR$ Ulll Wll ncM bocaUH

ftobby

wanlcd to race hislndyCir.
Gordon. who w111ltd 10 drive lhc
lndQnopolis SOO ond Oxa-Colo 600
QO the IUTIII: dly, did not pi I dwK:e
'*'-I fllrtOUIIIIndy moved rhM
JIICC 10 Mondly. The ill-flied week-end CXII'ItliWCd when a fi~ bloke OUt

"'·

In-~
luvb.. d!o drm.
wl1ll """""'"and dil~0cWon milled the Miller 500 II
Dcwcr • well .. lbc Pocono 500
whileitwriil1 .. ftom hiltlwnL
'IIIOUal WIIH A '1': ntk- o

June swvan. .
.
A&lt;noalty, ilic ron""" ofWl""""
CUp driver-car owner Ocolf Bodlnt
be&amp;~n

falte:rina lJI Apil, but Jw.c ~

Onlr Ulnlinucd eiUUkoft.d lutk
and poix porr...,._, 'Bodine ·
flllly ... """ w~~~~ .. · "'""
r_Sundo,
".......,_

Afterllniollla&amp;l41111ntlie'_ ,
Sg 'wiJi
BoctiftlwaiC\'W\Ih in 1M • U0
_ _ ... _hofln-

MMe :50(ht

,._Mow

lolicd 33nl01- 29111 .. -llle, and . . (loot)" San
1\iim, 43nl (loot) OI'IWiodcp. .

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�Potftwoy • Mlddllpoi1, Ohio

Frldly, June 13, 1tl7•

Frldlf, June 13, 11117

Hit the decks, seal the cracks,
you've got nothing to do but relax!
By MIKE PULFER

BREANNA BI,ITCHER

Butcher· birth .·
announced · ·

The Cincinnati Enqulnll' ·
Deck maintenance - which professional
cleaners and deck product manufacturers .say
should he done at least every two years -.IS a
good do-it-yourself project if you have the time,
equipment and a few toned muscles.
Typic.al decks can be washed and scaled in a
day if you're using water-based products, three
days for those contllining oils.
But it's not as simple or as easy~ it looks.
~·I always try to hire real athlebc guys who
work out a lot," says Kevin Pong, owner of Deck
Clean USA, Monfort Heights. Obio. "And even
they usually have some trouble (with sore muscles) in the beginning."
The body fatigues easily when holding a 25pound sprayer in awkward positions, he says. Add
to that the forte from compressed liquids. "Most
homeowners wear out their anns and backs."
If you think you're tough enough, m&amp;rch into
your local tool rental store and order up a pressure
sprayer as strong as you are: at least 3,000 pounds
per square inc~ (psi), says Pong, preferably 3,200.
'(It'll cos! about $50 a day.)
"If you clean with less pressure, say I ,SOO psi,
you're doing more damage than you were by not
cleaning-it at all," he says. "All you're doing then
is forcing mold and mildew into the (wood)

gray.

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Dolley Ma •
aa
a-:
dlal'taMior .
..._.
•
CllouD
Pastor.
---~~~~~--~~~~~~:--------cxss~~n~.:-------~:;0:~~==~._--~~;;.;;---HOI)' l!lldlartlllllll
AMnr.or: Rev. 'l'bolnao lolcCioaa
Sunday Sehool- 9 un.
•
Soaclay Sdlool10:30 am.
Puror: Ooirla Neville
· Sunday School • 9:30 a.m,
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
8:30

paniculll'ly vulnerable to splilltainJ.

.

The dilemma, says Pong, is Ibis: The better the
If 1 power sprayer comes with an·wonment
· chemicals, the worse they ue on humans. 'lllll's of nozzles, ipore the 0-depee (straighl·abeld
why bis crew uses gloves, gogales and respirator concenlnted stream) tip, Pong suggests. "It can
face masks on the job. Nearby grass and plants cut your foot off."
·
should be covered with plastic before work
Instead, use a 20-degree or 25-degree tip, both
begins.
of which angle the direction of the spray and
It; you're still inlrigued 'with cleaning your own . Jessen the pressure on the w&lt;K\(1- and your feet.
·deck'; consider technique.
·· •
Although pressure-treated wood manufactur· .
While pressure must be strong enc;mgh to clear .ers and relailers traditionally have said cleaning
debris from the wood, you must be careful not to and sealing a deck is unnecessary during its first
damage die boards.
few years, many professionals recommend imme·
"I tell guys to walk straight up and down, diate maintenance. ·
· keeping the sprayer the same distance (about 6
"Some builders tell .their buyers to wait a
inches) from the wood," Pong says. "But first· year," Pong says. Some don't say anylhin11. But
·· timers can't seem to resist the pendulum swing," (deckS) really need to be sealed as soon as they go
which creates stronger pressure on the wood in up."
the center of the swing, Jess pressure at the ends.
If time's running out, or your body isn't up to
And, "If you stay in one spot too long, you'll the task, or you don't trust your technique, check
lighten or score the wood.'-' Ends of boards are out deck maintenance services.
·

Need a new deck?

., n
ol. a.tal
212 w. Malo St.
r-: NeD l'looldCoal
SuMaJ Scbllol - 9-.30 am.
Woratp. 10:30 am., 7 p.m.
Wednelclay Serviceo - 7 p.m.
•

f\ JHl',IOIIC
P11

Youlb Mlidateri 8iU Fnzler
Sunday School· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip- 8:15, 10:30 am., 7 p.m.
Wcdilelday Services ; 7 p.m.

Haptonstall;
celebrates ·
birthday

Kae Cltvdl ot Cllrlot

St., Middleport
__Sundaylldloot. 9:30·a.m.
I !a.m. and 7 p:ru.
odaoiiday 5el"'ico - 7 p.m.
Fne WID llopdai"Cbardl

Asb" Stree~ Middleport
. Putor: lea Hayman
Sunday Servico • 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednelday Se~ce-7:00 p.m.

gg!!aed Flnt llaplilt CII1Udo
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m.
• Flnt llopdal
..._,,
East Main St.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.
Jllnl SovliMnl Bapllat
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday Sc:llool - 9:30 am:
Wonhip - 10:45 i .m., 7:00p.m.
Wodnelday Services-7:00p.m.
Flnt llopllot Cburdl
Pulor: Mark Morrow
6111 and Palmer St, MiddlepOrt
Sunday Sdwol - 9:15 a.m.
Worship· 10:15 am., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Service· 7;00 p.m.

Anger of Naomi Wolf sweeps over into her new book

' Hnlllopdat
RadDe
Puror: Rev. Lawtence T. Haley
routh Pastor: Aaron Young
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
W011hip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serviou - 7:00p.m.

· Siller RioBIIopdat
Pastor: Bill Uule
Sunday School- llla.m.
WoJShip -111.~ .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m. ·
ML Ualoo Baptist
l'uiOr : Joe N. Say1t
Sunday Sehool-9:45 o.m.
Evening· 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servicos - 6:30p.m.
llelldebem Bapllot Cllun:h
Gltal Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pulor : l)anlel Berdine
.
Su0day School - 9:30a.m. .
Sunday Worship · l0:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wcdn&lt;sday Blbl~ Sludy- 6:00p.m.

000

Old Bethel Free WUIIIIIIdal Cbun:b
·
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E.. ning • 7:30p.m.
ThuJSday Services • 7:30
HUIIIdellopdat Chun:b
St. Rt. l43 juatoffRt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·.7 p.m.
Vldot')' llopdalladeloeDdaat
525 N. 2nd S1. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Kec.ce
Wonbip- 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Da.y-

Da.y·

·c a y

Happy Father'
Da.y

.rather
Day

Happy Father'

Filth llopdat Cburcll
Raii!Oad St., Muon
Sunday Sehoul - 10 a.m.
Wo111lnp- I 1a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Day

Forat Raa llopdat
Pastor : Ariua Hull
Sunday Sehoul • tO a.m.
WotShip - It 'am.

'

Tom
Schoonover

Bob
Jeffers

Love·,
Jake, Misty &amp; Zach

Tom
Myers

· Love•

Gloeckner

Joey .
Coates

Love,

Love,

Love,

Leigh, Andy and
Carrlt

David &amp; Joyce

Zach

•

. Roger, Sandra,
DOnna, Shl.-iey and
·.patty .

Erwin

Daddy
,

MLMOitabBapdat
Foullh &amp; Main St., Middieoon ·
Pastor: Rev. Gilbcll Crai~o Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
_ Worship • !0:45a.m.

Love,

CodeyAIIen

. Allllqaltjo Bai&gt;tllt
Sunday School • §:30 a.m.
Wonhip - t0:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30 p.m.

0

Happy rather'

Happy rather'

Happy ·Pather'

•J Wlllllde C11o1n:1o otCiuttl
33226 Olitdna'a Homo Rd.
Suaclay Scloool - 11 am.
Wonblp • 1llo.m., 6 p.m.
Wedoesday Serviceo • 7 p.m. ·

Putor.Al-

baby quilts

Happy . P~ther'

u.•

Mlcldloport Cllurdl tJIC~
~and MaiD

BRENNAN HAPTONSTALL

Rullaad Free WUIIIopllot ·
Salem St.
, _ , Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Sc:llool- tO a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

...•

Happy Pather'

Wonbip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Putor-Jeff~ty Wallac:o
!at and 3rd Sunday

Bearwllow JUdae Cllurdl ol. Cbrhl
·
Putcrr: Jack Cole~
Sunday School" ·9:!0 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 ·p.m.
. Wednesday SeiVicea. 6:30p.m.

ZIM Cllllrdl ot Cllrlot

Pomeroy, Harriaonville Rd. (Rl.143)
Pastor: Roser Watson
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp -·10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodaa4ay Servicoa - 7 p.m.

Tappen Plata Cburdl ofellrtat
lnat1Ul110ntal
Plllilr. Scot BIOWII
Worship Service • 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday Sehool· 10:15 a.m.
Bradbut')' Cburdl of Cbrlst
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

CJIIWIIC

SMnd llell1 Cllllollc: Cltvdl
161 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pallor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p,m.; Mut· 5:30p.m.
. . ·s.n. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m., .
Sun. Mut - 9:30a.m.

J:&gt;a.y;

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Bl'lllllonl Church tJICbrlst
Comer of Sl. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbul)' Rd.
Minister: Doua Shamblin
Youlb Minister: Bill Ambcraer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
· Wonhlp • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m. ·
H!dcDI')' HIUs Cb1U'CII ot Cbrilt
Evanaelist Joseph B. HookiM
Sunday Sehoul - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVices • 7 p.nt.
Uberty Cbrlstlaa Church

Dexte1
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Eveni"tl- 6:30p.m.
Thulsday Seryice - 6:30p.m.

Hemlock ·aron Church ·

' Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunda~ schooi·JO::!O a.m.
Worsbop - 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Reedtvllle Cbun:b ofCbrlst
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
-wonblp Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wcd~ay, 6~ p.m.

ChiiStiJn Union

Burl
Blevins
Love,-

Yanllla Blevlnt

Freeman
LOve,

Paul R.
Milner
Love;

o.anny
Haines

Clllrenoe J., Ron,

Coutbw,,N...

Love,
~I .. ..,.. Nllthln &amp;

Rick I Jim

&amp;nm

new.sir

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OAVIB-QUICKEL
AGENCY INC.

. IISUUIICI
._ _ .._

Albert'

Heath (MIIIdltport)
Paator: Vemapye ~ltivaa
Sunday School- 9:30 a. in.
Worship - t0:30 a.m.

PlaeG,...eBible H..._ Cb•rcb
• 112 mile off Rt. 325
Putot: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Suaday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 am., 7:30p.m.
Wedlielday Service • 7:30p.m.

H,..U Ru H.u- Cburdl
Sunday Sehoul· 9:30 a.m.
Worsliip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThuJSday Service - 7:30p.m.
Laurel CUifFne MetllooUol Cb!lrcb
Puror: feter T~tmblay
SUnday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneliday Service • 7:00p.m. .

Latter-D&lt;1y Samts
Reorpabtcd Cluorch of J.,.. Cbrltt
'
"'Latter Dey Sallllt
Ponland-Roclne Rd.
Branch President - Michael Duht
·Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - t0:30 a.m.
Wednesclay SeiVices • 7:30 p.m.

ChQII tJl Latter-Day Salat&amp;
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 01446· 7486
Sunday School 10:20-t I a.m.
Relief SOciery/PriesrhOOd I I :M-12:00 noon
Sacnment Servic:e 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st ThuJS. • 7 p.m.

SL Joba Lutbena Cburcll
Pine Grove
Rev. GeoraiWeiriclt
Worship - 9:00a.m.
SUnday School - 10:00 a.m.

SL PaaiiAiheraa Ch1U'CII
Comer Sycamo~e &amp; Second St., POmeroy ·
.
Rev. Georp Weirick
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonhlp - II a.m.

Un1ted Metl10dist

Hanfonl, W.Va. ·
PastOr: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School - I I a.m.
wo..hip - 9:30 o.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Ualted Metbodltt
Worsbip. 9:30a.m.. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;: 4th Sun}
Wednesday Servi_ce • 7:30 p.m.

c•-ualoa ·

Church of God
ML Morlllt Cbarcll of God
.
· . Raolne
Pastor: Rev. James ~elfield
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Eveni"tl- 7 p.m.
Wednelday SeiVices.- 7 p.m..
Rlltlaad Cllurdlof God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 a.m,
Worship - 11 am., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo - 7 p.m,
Syncuae Hnt Cllurcll tJl God
Apple and Second SIB.
.
Paitor: Rev. Dtvid RuiiCII
·sunday Sehoul and WoiShip-10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; SeiVices· 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Church of God of Pnphocy
OJ. Wbite Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Puror: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
· Wonbip • II a.m.
We~y Servicea - 7 p.m.

a-.

Con g re~pt 1o nal
.

Secuad A f.ynn, rome..,
· ,_,Rev.,Roland Wildman
Sunday oc:bool and wanhlp 10:25

Ep1scopal

:C;rt
Cllardl
t., Pontoroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Str~9tl

.:'' 0

. 1*1 FOR 8PRNa

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Harrltonvllle Commuaity Chun:h
Pastor: Theron Durham .
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday , 7 p.m.

Momlna Slllr
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
ThuJSday Servicea - 7:30 p.m.
Suttod
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsbip- 10:45 a.in. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

. ca••NG?

••If
or
. . . . . . . . . . Ill ... .

CMM M,., t

I

, CL.A111111D IICTIONI

East.letart
Putor. Brian Harkne&amp;S
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wo'!~- 9 a.m.
Wedn
y - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday service-6:30p.m..
M!ddloport c.,_ity Church
575 Peart St., Middlepoll

Middleport Pentecottat
• Third Ave.
Pl51or: Rev. Oark Baker

PaSior: Sam Ande~

~unday School-

10 a.m.
Even ina· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sendces - 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School tO a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Ra~IDt

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday sChool· 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

Fallh Valley Toberucle Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
1
· Pas10r: Rev. Emmett RaW!IOn
Sunday E.. ning 7 p.m.
Thulsday Service • 7 p.m.-

Cool•llle Ualted Metbodiot Parltb
. Pastor: Helen Kline
CoolviUe Church ·
Main &amp; Fifth St.
, Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
1
Worship- 9 a.m.
•
Tuesday Semces • 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mlulon·
· 1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday Sehool-10 a.m,
£\lening- 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Service • 7 p.m.
Haael Commaalty Chun:h
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
W0111hip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pres byte nan
Syratwe Flnt United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana R~inson
Sunday Sehoul - 10 a.m. ·
Worship - !I a.m.
Harrlooavllle Presbytertaa Church
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Preibytertoa

Sunday School - 9 a.m.Wolllhip - tO a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

D)'ot•llle Commualty Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. .
WoJShip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p:m.

Seveath·Day Adveutlll
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
· Pastor: Roy. Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath Sehoul - 2·p.m.
W0111hip - 3 p.m.

· Mone Chapel Chun.'b
Sunday oc:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - qa.m.
Wednesday Se1Vice - 7 p.m.

Jo PI
.
Putol: ~ Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m. ·

Mlddltport Cllurcb of tbe Naaareae
PIStOl: GJCgOI)' A. Cundiff · · .
. · SUnday School - 9:30a.m.
WoJShip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday SeiVices • 7 pcm.

LongBottom

ML Olive Commualty Churdl
Putor; Lawrence Bush
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m .
W~neday SeiVioe • 7 p.m. ·
Ualtcd Paldo.Cbun:b .
· Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wo1Ship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeJVice- 7 p.m.

.'

Roedsvlle Fellowship
Cblirch of tbe Na..,...
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday Sc:llool • 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea.- 7 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Hermoa Uaited B,.threo
In Cllrill Churth
Texas Communily off CR 82
Pastor: Raben Sandc11
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi.a:s • 7:30 p.m.
Edea Ualled Brethren ia·Cbrtst

2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124 · .
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday W0111hlp • 10:00 a.m. il: 7:00p.m·.
Wednesday SeiViocs • 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service. 7:30 p.m.

Full Goopei.IJPI33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Puror. Roy Hllllter
SUnday Sc:llool • 10 a.m.
Evenina 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp;. Thulllday - 7:30p.m.

Syncuae c•urdl of tho N11111nae
Pastor: Bill Stilts
Sunda)' Sdlool · 9:30am.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicoa - 7 p.m.

Sourh Bethel New Tntameat
Silver Ridge

. RAWUNGS·COATS

FISHER
. FUNERAL HOME
264 Soi.M 2nd

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

art_. • &amp;balto.'l .

Brogin·Warnitr
INSURANCE . .

.

· SERVICES~

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLAS$/FIED AD/

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Craw's Family Restaurant
'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

228 w, Main St.. Pomeroy

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
985-3308

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
.PHARMACY

Veterans
MemoJial
Hospital
115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy

w. Flll Doelots'
Prescriptions
'
. .

992·2955

.. 992-21o4

Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and SBrvloe Always"
EstabllahEid 1913

992-2121

OHIO

'

lJ

New Ute Vlc:tot')' Center
3773 Georges C10ek Road, Gallipolis, OH
. Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.&amp;. You.th 1 p.m.

Pastor: Roben Varu::e

~

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Clilloa Tabemade Cb•rdl
Clifton, W.Va. ·
Sunday Sehoul - 10 a.m.
Wo11hip - 7 p.m.
ThuJSday SeiVice - 7 p.m.

Pentecottal Aslembly
S1. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30 i .m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

1'llppen PJalu St. 1'1111
Pastor: ShtlllD Hauaman
Sunday SchoOl· 9 am.
Wonblp • 10 a.m.
Tueliday _Servicoa . 7:30p.m.

Cllurcb of J&lt;IUJ Cbrltt,
Apoot.olk:FIIth
1/4 mile put Fo~ Meigs oo New Uma Rd. ·
P.-: William Van Meter
. Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday·7:00 p.m.

Eadtlme HOUJO of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

Racine Pint Church tlltbo NoureD&lt;
Pastor: Scott Rose
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVices • 7 p.m.

992-5141

8482804

0

New Ume Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. M11Jaltl J. _Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

I

,,

o'

Pastor: Law~ence fq1tman
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Wedncliday Services -7 p.m.

The Believon' FetloWiblp Mlalstt')'

Cheatao
Pastor: Sharon Hautman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School ' 10 a.m.
Thulsday SeiViCU • 7 p.m.

........ S.rvlct Tt,chnlclan
214E.Main ~
BILL QUICKEL IKIRCIENIE HUT'ER REPAIR 992-5130 Pomeroy
·

Smith ·

Faith Full Goopel Cbun:b
Long llo1torn
Pastor: Steve Reed
Suoday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worsbip- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesdar- 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowsli1p BCIVico 7 p.m.

Faith Goopel Cb•rcll

Roodsrille
Putor: Rev. Charlet Mash
Worship- 9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sc:llool - 10:30 1.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m .
Filii Sunday of Month - 7:30 p.m... rvico

Rdok:111&amp; ure Cburdl
500N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon

Saowvllle
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Nazarene

LOa llottom
·Sunday ~ool - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Puror: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Bvenln&amp;- 7 p.m.

Hobooa Cbrlstlao Followlblp C Sunday service, 10:00 am., 7:00p.m, ·
Youth Fellowship S~nday, 7:00p.m.
. Wednesday servace, 7:00 p.m.

HocldaiJPOI'I O.rch
Grand SIJCet
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship ~ It a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.
Ton:hChan:h
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

'

Stl•omtllo Wonl of Faith

Solem Conta'
Pastor: Ron Fien:e
Sunday School - 9:IS a.m.
Wonhip. 10:15 a.m.

•

. I

CoiYOI')' Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVice -7:30p.m.

Qristlaa Fetlowablp Center
"Salem St., Rutland
Pallor: Robe~ E. Musser
·Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wollhip - t 1:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

l

•

· Faith Felowtblp Cl'llltlde for Cbrlst
Pastor: Rev. FJSnldin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Faith Cllapel Opea Bible Cbarch
923 S. third St., Middlepoll
Senior Putor Midlael Pangio
Resident Pastor Richard Vermillion
Sunday •IVico, 10 a.m.
Wednelclay service, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Met.. Coop&lt;"'tlve Putalo
·Jliortheoll Clutter
AI !'rod'
Pastor: Sharon Hausmu
Sunday School - 9:30 a,m.
WoJShip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Falnlew Bible Cbureh
lelart, W.Va. Rt.l
Past«: John Han
.
Sunday Scl&gt;ool - 9:30a.m.
.
Wollhip- 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

nJ;sot7

. Bethel Chardl
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m, .
Wolllhip - tO a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

ML Olive United M~lst
011124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Worsbip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thulsday SeiVices • 7 p.m.

Whlte'aCiuJMI Woateyu
Contvifie Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sc:llooi -9:30a.m.
WOrship- t0:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.

Service time: Sunday 6:1)9 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor. Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m.
· .
WoiSblp- 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th Sun)

Oar S.vlour Luthma Churdl
;
Walnut and Hemy Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
latrim puton: Rev. Raben Hupp
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
. Worship -11 a.m.

PoriJ..d flnt C.... tlltllo N-roae

. Appe Ute Ceoter
. 'Full-Gospel Cllur&lt;:h'
PastoJS Jobn &amp; PaUy Wade
603 Seoond Ave. Mason

Bethany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WOJShip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services,- tO a.m.

The Chun:h of Jnaa

Fnodom Gaopot Mlatloa
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Puror. Rev. Ropr Willford
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Worshlp-7 p.m.

47439 Reibel Rd., Cloea1or
Pastor: Rev. Muy McDaniel
.
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

RockS'tiap
Putor: Ke1th Rader
·sunday Sellool · 9:15a.m.
Wo11hip • tO a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.
Rutland
Sunday Sdwol - 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m.
Thulsday Services - 7 p.m.

a..rdl ..

llldlud Chrdl ellllo N....Putor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School - 9_:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviou • 7 p.m.

Humt Otttnd Mlalllrloo

•
P-oroy
Pas1or: Robcn B. Robinson
Suoday Sellool- 9:t5 _a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

, . . , .. .

'

Other Churclws

Purl Chapel.
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Womhip - 10 a.m.

I

Road
PutOr. Je'lr Smith
SUnday Selloot • 9:30 a.m.
Worship Servico 10:30 a.m.
,.
No Sunday or Wednelclay Niaht SeiVic:es

Pastor: Mart Mltaon
Worship - 10:30 p.m.
.Sunday Sdlool· 6 p.m.
Wednaday Services.- 7 p.m.

Mlaen•Uie
Pa51or: Cbiories Neville
Sunday Sellool - 9 a.m.
Wo15hip -10 a.m.

WeoleyiD Bible H.,._ Cbarcll
75 Pearl Sr., Mlddlopon.
Putor: Rev. John Neville ·
Chlld10n'a service • )0 a.m.
Worship - 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

ID
Kin~

these area merchants

Mill Work
Cabinet. Making ·
Syracuse

I

Leadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday lldlool- 9:30am.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetina- 7 p.m.

Hartlord Cburdl of Cllrill Ia

992-3978
"_\

a-otSiwea ~Ciouda .

PomtRIID
Pasloo Cllarles Mcville
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
· Wonhip - 9a.m.
Thullday SeiVICCI • 6:30 p.m.

.earw. ..... ,

Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
· Worship - It am., 6 p.m.
Wednet4aY. Services • 7 p.m.

Flotwoodll
Pastor: Keith Roder
Su!*y Sc:llool - 10 a.m.
Worship • II am.

. CaiYary P1JCrba Cllapel
llarrlomvUie Rood
Pastor: Rev. Vidor Rouah
Sunday Sehool 9:30a.m.
~£,- It o.m., 7:30p.m.
W
y Service • 7:30 p.m.

Wednaday Service • 7 p.m.

Qoolor
ellllo Orate
~~~-- '
.Pulor:a..n:lt
Rev. Herbcn

Sunday Sc:lloot - 10 a.m.
Woraloip • 9 a.m.

LutherJn

La,...vUle Cbrlstlaa Cluardl
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worsbip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ~rvice 7:30 p.m.

Grace
326 E.

Robe~-

lflllo N-MM

Wclnbip - 10:30 am. llld 6 p.m.
· Wedoerday Servicet • 7 p.m.

~~ado•

Ba .. tM c::::lllr*

31057 Stalo 325, Laapvtlo
Pulor: Dr. J.D. y ....
Sunday tcbool · 9:30am. ·
~:;:t"P- 10:30 a.m, &amp; 7 p.m.
w
y pnyir •rvico • 7 p.m.

"

RACINE PLANING MILL

'

Sunday Sehool • 9:45 a.m.
Wollblp • It am.
Wedaelday Servicoa • 7:30p.m.

_.,

Rutlaod Community Cblircll
Putor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Sun:,Evenl"tl • 7 p.m.
Wedn
y SeiViCCI • 7 p.m.

Rutlllld Cburdl of C1ni1t
SUnday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Trtalb Clnarcb

0)

(~)

•

CGihe -

*

'

UMWto make

Happy Father'

Rev. D. A.

C11li!rl; ,&gt;1 Cilll',l

Billie Jo Butcher of Pomeroy
announces the birth of her daughter,
Breanna Elizabeth Butcher, born
May 2 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
·
'
· Thl! Cincinnati Enquirer
She weighed 7 pound's, S ounces
· If you- or some previous owner -' have neglected your home's deck too long, you might
and was 20 inches long.
.
A party was held hononng Brenwant
to consider replacing it.
·
She is the granddaughter of
nan Jean Haptonstall on her second
The national average cost for a 16-by-20-foot deck is about $7,000, according to Remodeling
Randy and Robin Butcher . of
birthday, May 9.
magazine.
But a new deck could give you a chance to stan. over on regular maintcn1111ce.
Pomeroy and the great-granddaughThe party was held at MeDonOr skip it altogether.
.
..
ter of Alpha Butcher and the late
.
aid's
in Pomeroy. The · children
Crane Plastics, a Columbus, Ohio, manufacturer of vinyl siding and furniture components; has
Charles Butcher, Pomeroy, and ttie grain."
played
games, and had meals, cake
Bill Behrman, president of Deck Techs,
developed limberTech, a "maintenance-free" wood,plastic composite deck board ihat, the comgreat-granddaughter of Faye Wooten
and ice cream.
Finneytown, Ohio, says the same problem occurs
pany says, doesn't absorb moisture, rot, splinter, decay, warp, cup or bow. And it resists termites,
of Shade.
Those attending the party were
when using simple water .to pressure-wash the
too.
·
·
her
parents, Bill and Debbie Hapton_wood: Some chemical compound is recommendFor TimberTech information, contact Crane, P.O. Box 1047, Columbus, Ohio 43216-1047; I
stall;
her .paternal srandmother,
. ed for efficient cleaning.
(800) 3!l7-7180.
Lennie
Haptonstall; brother Garrett
Many experts recommend cleaning decks with
. Decks can be cleaned anytime
Haptonstall; Sammy Chefrel and his
household bleach diluted with water and sealing_
Spring is a popular time for deck maintenance. But as far as the wood is concerned, it doesn't
parents; Emma and Amy Perrin and
with oil-based products that offer protection from
make any difference when you clean or reseal it, says Bill Behrman, president of Deck Techs,
Carley
and Cayla Taylor and their
Plans for a work session on baby ultra-violet rays, which damage wood and tum it
Finneytown, Ohio.
mother.
quilts were made when the Rock
Springs United Methodist Women
met recently at the church.
The group also discussed plans
for its annual project of selling fruit
movement in "_Fire With Fire." Feminism is appeared this spring, is ~at kind. The Financial member of the religious left."
at the Meigs County Fair. It was By KAREN S. PETERSON
USATODAV
.
·
bei(lg marginalized, she said, thanks to the limes calls it smug and self-obsessed, replete
Anger fueled much of "The Beauty Myth."
noted that $50.had been spent on the
with
"whining
about
the
pains
of
adolesCence
The
anget that seeps in_to "Promiscuities" is
,
Having
a
2-year·old
daughter
has
only
infighting
of
feminists
and
their
insistence
on
Icthus lrip.' '
more subile. Her ·own parents were too per·
The meeting opened with reading made feminist author Naomi Wolf more radi- seeing women as victims. A better course as if it must be some (male) body's fault."
cal.
"I
feel
I
have
Jess.
time
to
waste.
I
want
the
would
be
"power
feminism,"
which
Jays
Wolf
shrug~
her
·shoulders.
That
is
the
missive,
she says. The only time she recalls
of Psalm 116 followed with prayer
claim
to
equality
"because
women
are
entipaper's
privilege.
that-they
set limits is when they learned she
world
to
be
all
better
for
her
generation
of
by Sharon Folmer. Do~othy Jeffers
tled."
·
women,"
says
Wolf,
34~.
She
seems
less
prickly,
less
defensive,
tluin
was
seeing
a man who was abusive -quite a
gave the purpose ani;! the group
Now, in "Promiscuities: The Secret Strug- in previous years. And she seemS more COM· confession for a feminist to make, she notes.
.Passionate, erudite and totally self-assured,
sang, "The Light of the World" and
.
the
fonner
Rhodes
scholar
usd
the
experigle
for Womanhood;'' Wolf combines a mild fortable now with what she said then: Women
She takes on parents in general. "I am
"Help Somebody Today."
ences
of
'her
own,
generatio!l
to
create
a
ro8d
confessional
about
her
own
sexual
awakening
·
"either
say
I've
committed
a
crime
or
changed
angry,"
she says, "at grown-ups who dO not
Pandora Collins had prayer for
map
for
the
next.
·
with
tales
of
friends
who
came
ofage
in
the
their
lives."
pay
attention
to teen-agers, who do not teach
the sick, Frances Goeglein gave the
Now married three years to David Shipley, them about their bodies and support and proHer own near-fatal bout with anorexia was "post-sexual revolution." Although sex was
secretary's report, and Hazel Ball,
a
speech
writer for the Clinton administration, tect them," who do not tell them how to wait
cel_
e
brated
her
girlfriends
agreed
30
lovers
·the.
catalyst
for
hci1991
best
seller,
"The
the treasurer's report. "The World
Wolf
chats
in a USA TODAY office. She is until they are ready. Even strong girls, she
Beauty
Myth."
The
controversial
book
iugued
would
be
appropriate
by
college
wbmen's
· Thank Offering" was . the program
topic used by Collins. She gave inen 'bold women to impossible standards of sexuality was devalued, and women felt. being interviewed here in order to honor a says, are still often unable to say, "I am in
family rule: no interviews at home. No talk of charge here."
scripture from 138 Psalm, and had beauty, driving ·women to starv8iion and plas- degraded, she says. ·
her husband - period - not .even how they
tic
surgery,
becauSe
they
fear
gains
women
As
usual,
she
finds
rather
cosmic
portents
Wolf hopes the bouk helps young women
·readings, "God's Guarantee" and
met.
·
have
made
fromboatdroom
to
bedroom.
for
her
peers
in
her
own
life.
Some
tales
''will
"take
charge of their own souls and become
"God's Bouquet" with prayer by VirWolf
is
the
progeny
of
Deborah
Wolf,
an
Wolf's book and research methods received resonate and some things won't" with readers,
Jbe agents of their own sexuality." Each l_ittle
ginia Wears.
.
·
she says, although she bears the same stories anthropologist and a psy"chptherapist and girl should grow up feeling "precious." not
Refreshments were served by mixed reviews. But the beautiful feminist ·
Collins with Norma Baker, the con- reviewers Jove to highlight her looks - was when lecturing in the heartland as well as on Leonard Wolf, a retired English professor and guilty.
the
East
Coast.
immediately
a
star.
author
of
the
new
"Dracula:
The
Connois·
tributing hostess. Also· attending
A review in England, where the book first seur's Guide." She refers to herself as "a
She then took the measure of the women's
were Ann Werry and Iris Collins.

.Happy Father'

The Dally Sentinel • Page .11

TIM!: FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
Clean out your basement or
attic with 1M help of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
FLORIST
Olde•• Floria1
fAST MAIII POMEROY, OHIO 45769

motr,tl'a Cou111y&amp;

614/992;2644
614/992-6298
SNOUFFER
FIRE • SAFETY
· SALES • SERVICE

992·7015

.

172 Nor1h Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

�°,.... o.uy
;Qeneral Motors, UAW extend
.talks beyond strike deadline
t~8Q812

DETROIT (AP) - Talks continued early this morning past a mid·
·.:right strilce deadline at a General
:;Moton Corp. pans plant in WiscontJin, as lhe United Auto Workers and
- management negotiated details of a
new contract. .
'
"We agreed to extend the deadline
through midnight as long as we're
continuing to make progress at the
bargaining table," Reg McGh~. a ·
spokesman for the United Auto
Workers in Detroit, said just before
the II :59 p.m. EDT deadline Tburs-

day.
The two sides would tontinue
talking lhroughout the night, but
McGhee would not say how much
progress had been made toward an
agreement. The deadline was to be
extended indefinitely, he said.
Workers at lhe plant - which produces the catalytic conveJ'\ers used in
most ofGM's cars and trucks built in
North America - were prepared ,to
strike if no contract was reached by
the deadline.
.
Delphi spokesman Ken Cameron

.;~ecorder posts recent land transfers
•,

: The following land transfers were L. Milhoan, Lebanon: ·
.. recorded recently in the office of
Deed, Robert E. and Mildred
' Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Bowen to Gary L. and Linda L. FreeHamilton:
mali, Chester;
. . Deed, Integrity and Associates to
Deed, Herman S. and Na~cy L.
, Larry and Judith L. Mora Bunger, Schul to D. Thomas and Billie Marie
• Chester parcel;
.·
.
. . Pilotti, Orange parcels;
· Judgment entry, Jacob Salser to
Easement,. Barbara Crow, Bar'City of Jackson, Chester, .344 acre bara Mathews and I. Carson Crow to
right of way;
· Steven L. Story, Bedford;
Deed, Norman L. and Emilee Lou
Deed, William H. and Della H.
· Merinar to James Wingrove, Orange Coleman to Thomas P. and 1anet K.
: tracts;
·
Groeneveld, Olive parcel;
Deed, Allen E. Jr. and Alice R.
. Deed, Mary Frances Baumgardner
Dill to Heidi D. Elberfeld and James to Phyllis Manley, Salisbury;
C. Ewing, Chester parcel;
Deed, Donald · W. Manuel to
Deed, Larry E. and Gloria K. King William Manuel Oyler, Letart, 4-112
to Nick A. and Gatha'D. King. Bed- acres;
. ford;
..
Deed. Frances E. and Raymond C.
Deed, Edward G. Sr. and Kathryn Reuter to Harry H. Walburn, MidMoore to Judith K. Webb and Kathy dleport parcel, .28 acre;
· ·
J. Cummings, Sutton Syracuse. ViiDeed; Alexander Competition Ri
.Jage parcel;
· ' to SCR Enterprises LTD. Columbia
Deed, Vaughn H. Chase to Face- myer Forest Products, Bedford
. parcels;
, :. Deed, Vaughn If. Chase Irrevoca. ·ble Trust to Facemyer Forest Products, Bedford parcels;
· Deed, James B. Arthurs to George
.J. and Willard L. Moore, Lebanon, I

parcel;
Deed, Gary and Donna Norris, C.
Roger and Nancy Hubbard to Jeffrey
L. and Tamara C. Hill, Sutton, one
•

acre;

Deed, Gary and Donna Norris, C.
Roger and Nancy Hubbard to John T.
and Vicki J. Northup, Sutton, 4 acres:
Deed, Michael Shay and Deborah
L. Faw to· Harry Yarbrough, Rutland
parcels; .
Deed, C~arlotte L. Conley to
Michael L. and Cindy L. Conley,
Lebanon lots;
Deed, Andrew N. and Delpha A.
Ki ser to Samuel E. and Elizabeth I.
Saunders, Letart, I acre;
· Deed, Harold L. and Bronwyn A.
Williams to Donald L. and Noell
Beth Stivers, Middlepon, 113 acre;
Deed, Roberta A. Ridenour to
John B. Ridenour, Chester parcels.

KOUNTRY KITCHEN

pr., furtiW lllllntiOOinllftleNIIelll411111,

C*tl, prior to Juno H,
1117, It (114) 112·2111 Ill
onlor to oneure t11et your
~· will be _ , . .........

7....

11)11, 11, 11;

.....

AT

J...c tta uard, Pr11ldtnt
lllelpCounty

Public Notice

Miles Covm SENIOR CEI'fi'Eil
TuesdllyaiUid Tbundaya
Serving from 5:00 • 5:45
DonatioD $4.00 ror meal
9 am • 9

Bring your dad in Sunday, and he gets
a "FREE" Turkey &amp; Dressing Dinner.
• Drink a Dessert extra

949·3409

Sincere thanks
to everyone
who helped In
. the search for
our dog, Mia.
She's glad to
be home. •
Thanks again,
Rick and
Carol n Collins

6:30P.M.
STAR BURST

$1800.00
$50.00 01 MORE
PER GAME

BEECHGROVE
ROAD

.

M.e lgaco.

F1lrground1
Sponaoi'ICI by
Mllgl Co. 4-H-Hol'll
Com mitt"

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

112 Ptlco Yard Sole: 8/141h. t•3,
Bohlnd llodlmero, Ill, Clotllao, .
Toro.. Ht.v IIMI, Dtoney, Homo
lnr.rlcr, Cor Sot~ Fopcom nno.

Don Geary,

o-r

-I

..

,

i

ESTIMATEES

:!

985 4 473

·

7/22/lfn

....:.=:,::::.:..~

....

AND MOREll

Delivery or Dine ln.

Wag111r Lilli
Pomeroy

Mor. th•n Jcnt •
p/ZZJI pl•ce.

Cell

992·9200

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows

Rooting, P1lntlng

Room Additions • Roofing

GuarantHd

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

\IMJrll•_..,

Uc. WV 011030

QINilltJ

· Frtt Eatlm1t11

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

.....,,1mo.

992·9057or
I

211 -

CELLULAR PHONES

992·105611111

'-----..;::.;.;:=~

Ho-rd L. Wrltelel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

360° Communications
'
.

Bi9 B8R
· d Fa briCaiiOR,
• •
Machine.&amp;Welding Shop

fer O•r S~e•l•l• ·

JC
CONSTRUaiON

Monday-Friday . 8:00 a .m.· 4:30 p.m.
. Saturday-8:00a.m. - 12 noon

Stop =:::pare

EXPRESS

BISS.ELL BUILDERS, INC~

Athens, Ohio

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ROBERT BISSELL - -~~
Complete Mechine Shop Service Fabrication

CONSTRUCTION

NOW OPEN
RT. 7 PIZZA.

~

Attorney At Law

(614) 592-5025

614·992·3470

$2.99 per min.
Must be 11! yrs.
Serv'U (619) 645·8434

614-992-3120

Attorney William S~franek

For more Info cell Pem
815 • •• or u.. 114f'2052
AuctiOIIHr:
Rhett llllhOIII

L.....,.,..__

111eon,wv

GaUipolll
&amp; VIcinity

Ext. 8789

Guttert1
Downapoutl

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

250 Condor Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Melal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 364-na-5861

113 W. 2ND SY.

OH.

POMEROY,

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
:Y17JIMITFN

RAY'S
TRANSMISSION

CONCRETE
SERVICES

(formerly ol Doon'•

Foundltlonl,
Drlvewaya,
1:11dewii!W, Ptltloa,
". · G•r•ai and
BaHment Floora.
Fr11 Eatlm1te1.
lnaurtd
SAYRE CONCRETE
'
SERVICES

Trone., Albeny)

0,••
..........

..II Ohio 41831
(614) 446-4759

123 Pleeunt Ridge ·
Pomeroy,OH

• Top • Trim • Removal
• .Stump Grinding
20 Yrs. El&lt;p. •
Ftlcl&lt; Johnoon

· Clll992-9045
tor1ll )'Our

101 Sluon Raid, lllclwoll, Ollie, AVON I All A1111 I Shlrloy
Friday a Sorurdo~. t·? Iliac. Speoro, 3tU.076-Iol2tl.
homo.
Abtt Avon Rop&lt;oMnUidvoo
2 Ftmlly Yard Slit: Rain 'Or nHdtd. Eorn mon11 lllr Chrlot·
Shlnt, Seturdey Juno 14th, tO mtl blllo II llomolll - - . HIOO·
A.ll. To s P.M. 2110 s- Routt tt2·835e or 304·812·2841, Ind.
141, Boby, Children I Adult Rep.
Clol1tt, Kltohln I Mile. ' - .
Auto Body Repair U1n NHdld,
3 Fomlly 'lllrd Silo: Soturdov t To Muot Have Experltneo, 814-441·
? 112 Milo Out Goorg'oo Crook 1195.
Roed, ln(llnt Girl Clorhoo, Cor
Stlt, Bobf SWing, loto Of Plua
.LUNG DEPT.
.
Size WomiM Clo.... (Now) uno Maturo Poroon Having Elptrl·
01 Nick Knockl, Gil Stove 1 onco In Mldlcaro And lnoursneo
Marti
Billing. Muot Bt Computor liter~
oto, P.,_lo..t And Rolilblo, M·
3 Family Yard Selo: Juno t 3rh, F Dar Shin, RHUmo To: P.O. B'o•
14th, 113 Sun \lallf1 DIM, to-?
33, Goltlpolo, OH 411131.
3 Fln!lly Yard Sale: Frldoy I Sot·
CAaETV OIIDIRTAICIRI
urday, e.? jAil Slzo Clorhll, Furnl· Earn •15 ·••• Per Hour • Comruro, Iliac. 23 Oowln Drive, Rod· mloolona. Extromoly High Cua·
n.,.
tamer Oamand, Na Ov•rnlghl
Travel. Immediate Openlngt.

38 Smlthal'o Avonuo, 12th, 13111,
14th, e.?

4 "-mlly: Rain, Shine. Serurdoy, .
Monday, Tutodly, 1114111, 111.8th,
8/17tll, Patriot Rood, Home lntlrl•
or, Coffll Tobit, Computor, Nlnllndo Ct.lr, Arlrl 1 a.m.. TOJI,
Ladlto 1 Mono
Cia'iiiln;ii:'A:u Slzll, Towilo,
Pool,.5 GillOn
Much Morol
5 Family: Lilt Houot on Lotr
PootEwlnglon. T. . ·SaL
llt2lh, 8/13ih, 8/14111. 8 To 5, 10

Candldatoa Must Bo Av.llobtt To
S1111 Pilei Training"-"' Now.
CALL W.Ul TOt.L FREE
1.aaa.432·7371
_ __:_:::..:::.:.=-C.motory llitl? Ill the tioat klpl
HCrtt In Amorlca. High commlaalono, bonuoeo, bentlito, leado,
heolth pluo 401 K. $500 fall otort
training bonus, call 614·g92·
~440.

Computer Unro Notdld. W&lt;irk
own houro. $20k 10 ·•50klyr I·
II00-348-7tee xt508.
·
Dotlvory Drlvoro Lltdo Caours
Hilda Exltnllon, Nile, Thea, Now Hiring Delivery Drivers.
Camping.
Hourly Wage • Cuh Convnlai9n
Paid Dally. Floxlblt SChodulao,
tl/141h, 5 HP Air Comprenor, Urilorm ProYidod, Apply At Gaii·
Wood Burner, Snow Blada, Lola pololocallon.

Of ~~ Cothea. And Taya, l&lt;tl·
lilT.....- Soloo.

Driver needed from Pt Plea•anl . ·
artL N11d1 COL wltlnke&lt; I hal

8/t41h, 9·2, DoWin Drlvo, Off 01 mat ondoroomont. 1·800·588·
Cora IIIII Road, (Rodney Side) 8122.
~:_ctolhoo, Adult , Clothll,
DRIVERSWAtrn;D

.ILL,.,.-••
Jilloklln . . . _

WNJ!!£:2:00 p.111.
ilii df1,biloN 1M ld

500 Milo Radlua • Homo Evory
Woektnd, Family lnouronco Pold
By Company (Dontal, Eye, PI•
ocrlptlon) 401 KRedremtnt Plan,
Flrot In • Firat Out Dlopat&lt;:h, Late
l.lodol Conv. Tr1cto1a Wltlt
Ftolbed Trallero Competltlvo Pay
• Porcon10ge 01 Groll.

lllo ,.,n, lundly
ldltlon. 2:00p.m.
Ftfdor.llond"' ldfflon
• 10:0o a.m. Sotunloy.
Debbie Drive Chapel, (Off Rouro
GAANT'IIIUCKINO, INC.
141, t .112 Mltoo From Willlo Fu5488 SR 13
·lllfll-)12th·14th,t-4.
OAKHLL,OHI045e5e
8DQ.28Z-Z183
Gareoa·Stlt: Rouio 7,
· Clipper Mmo FolloW Slgno,
Earn $1,000 WHklf Stuffing En·
Room Sullo, Lampo, Clolhtl,
volop01 At Home. Start Now. No
~cllntr_:,,~Foldll_.;.~'-~~~·_, -::--I . Experience. ftH Suppllol, lnlo .
June t31h, 14 th, e.? 11844 Rouro No Obligllion. Send LSASE To :
S88, Rodney, MIICII-uo, Etc, ACE, Dept 1351, Box 5137, Dil·
Windows, Ooora, Old Houoo mofldllar,CA817e5.
::..lltmalltlon;....;....:.;..:·_ _ _ _ _ _ Eaoy Work! Excellent Payl As·

1 ~embte Products at Home.

-

C.ll

Toll Froo 1-800·487·5588 EXT.
12170.

tranaml11lon nHCII.

Free

742.,()304

for

Now

Galli

HllpWintld

110

ee--.

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

614-992•5479

U1111 IIISd&amp;Oid Floorlog
1n 0ooc1 ~ Cllll14-24-

Ylrd Sale

70

Gravel, Sand,

1-900-656-2700

Mldclllpon, Oh. 457110 :
HolM Ph.

BANKRUPTCY .c an relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and · arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep •exempt' property for their personal use.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
hoUsehold goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

8 P.M.

Baked ch!cken, mashed potatoes,
gravy, green beans, coleslaw,
rolls, dessert; coHee or lea.
Sponsored by VFW Post 9053
Ladies Auxiliary
Tuppers Plains
Adults $5.00
Children under 12, $2.50

::o·=.

w.- '

'

Sit., June 7, 1887

CHICKEN
DINNER
SUNDAY, JUNE 15
12NOON

Quality Work tit ·.

'

AurA..;_,.Ap

. 10125/IMfn

2ND ANNUAL
TACK AUCTION

~

BcNI»SIIop

-

loor: BliCk And Cream. lone· • 7·
hllratl Corman S.....,._d Lilt
Soon 117117, llrown'o llorktt
Sloll Rut 110, ...... Col 814H.ll' 1 o Yw rn
-«8-7487, IU·448•4470, 814·
441tdtO. AIIIM~ ·
SERVICf S

lit. 1, Box 44-C

UP·TO·DATE
SPORTS

--

·

.. "

D. Gea.-,•s

C E L L U L A R O N E e.

'

Cht1ter, OHio

.

FREE ES1JMATE'S

992·2825

Middleport, OH

.

985·4422

I

-. .

ladle lllaell ~ealer .

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

.. .... .

Limestone,

304-n3-5822

GELS ELECTRONICS

DUMP TRUCK

HAULING ·

2l2tiO

.•

R. Lo HOLlON;·I
TRUCKING

WICKS

FAMILY DENTISTRY

1'ublic invited

Mon-Sun

Foun4: Ill oiiiO ..,.. SHS VI·
'*""·Ill • Q 11 IIIWIII

(UmtStoneLowR8tft)

Bari7B.B......,D.D.I.

Mulberry BeiPU. Pomeroy

and

RUTLAND
·POST 467

~ 11501 DENTAL CARE

EVENING MEAL

CDmmiiiiOnetl
ARA U11
,(e)
13, 1tc
11la Ohio D J biWIII of
ACTMTY: Fire Protaetlon
Nlbnl R u I I I, Dlvlllan
Fulllty • Equipment:
Public Notice
of . _ Mel lloclllliiiiAno
8cfplo Ftro DtpertnMnt C
w1n IIOid e public miii~III tit
CDBG Funtllng: $111,000
PUBLIC NOTICE
7:00 p.m. on June "· ttw,
Other Fulltla: $1,100 •
NOTICE II hereby given at tht Ohio AQrtou1t11r11
Scipio Fire~
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: thM on llturtloy, Juno 14, R-roh llld O.V.IDpment
1117, It 10:00 Lift., e puiiiiO Center, 17 lltlnclplpo llold,
Al'll LMI
1111
Will be hold It 211 Well .11to111011, Ohio; to d l ACTIVITY: Fire Pro-.on
ltreet, Pomeroy, the prob.. me rellted to
Feclllty • Equipment: · 1-nd
Ohio,
to
Mil for 01111 lho mlnll 1bllndoned llrior to
Recine Fire Dapwlmlnl
following eollllerll:
1177, loceletl fn' the
County 11 · eligible lor
CDIIO Fundl"'l: $30,000
I
I
I
4
.
•
U
I
C
K
~eokeon mining dlplrlot
$t80,000 ol Formule V.r
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
1
G14'FII'Y1EtmW371
wltlclt
lnoluclol till coUnllte
't7 CDBG IUIIIIIng, provldocl ArH LMI
111a ,.,mere Blnk elltl of Atlttnl, Gallla, JIIObon,
the County meote eppll• · ACTMT'I\ street lmproVoo levlnge
Compeny, Llwronce, Mtlgl, VInton
clblo requlremenll. On lily mente: Lebanon Townahlp
PocMroy, Ohio, reeervll 1 n.d
W lillington.
11, 1117, tho Coun.tJ
.CDIG Fulllllng: 125,000
till
rtaht
to
bid
It thle 1111, RopretontotiVel from 1111
conducted He flret public
NATIONAL OB~ECTIVE:
to withdrew 1M ebo¥1 Dlvtlllon wll IIIlO tiiiOUII I
hoerlng to Inform aHizene ArH LMI
colllttrel'
to 1e1o. •I number of ebendDDIII mlno
ebout the CDBG progrem,
ACTMT'I\ Hletorlc Pre· 'UI'ther, Theprior
prermere Blink lend reolemetlon proleato
how H may b• uutl, whet Hrvallon: Choeter Court· end Sevlnge Compeny propon_tl lor the tllotrtot.
ectlvHiu ere eligible, and houH
reHrv•• the right to rejoet Qlllltlone mey be cllreotocl
otlior Important progrem
CDBG Fundl"'l: 120.000
eny or 111 bldl eubmltt*l.
to Terry Van Oflll'lll of lho
requl-nta.
Other Funde: Chlltlr/·
prurthlr, till ebove DIYIIIOn ol Mlnee lnd
A· eocond public heerlng Shede Hlltorlcal Aleocll- colletorel will be eold In the rec11mitlon It (814) 2811wlll bo held on June. 23, tlon •12,000
oondHion It 11 ln. with no 10114.
1117 at 1:00 P.M. It the
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: expr•••
or lmpllotl (8) 13: 1TC
Molgl County Com· ...,.. LMI
ml~tlonere office, Melge
ACTMTY: Adnilnletrotlon
County CourthouN, Pomo- and Felr HoUII"'I
roy, Ohio to glvo clt1Dn1 en
·CDBG Fuiiiii"'I·PO,ooo
.opportunity to ,.,1_ end
CHI10111 ere .ancoureged
comment on the County'• to ettond thle meeting on
propoud CDBQ FY '87 Juno 23, 1117 to oxpreN
Formula proJect•.
tholr vi- end commentl
Buatl on the clllun Input on the county'a propoud
end locel offlclele' au••• . CDBG FY '17 Formule
mont of tho county'• n"!ll, . Appllcellon. Written com·
tho County 11 propoelng to mente will be ecceptatl unlft
underteh tho following · 1:00 P.M., Juno 23, 1117,
CDB~ actlvltlee lor Formule entl mey bo m1ll1d to tho
Veer t7:
Melge County Courthou11,
ACTIVITY: Flro Protection Pomeroy, Ohio 411761.
Facility • Equipment:
·u a participant will nHd
Cheetlr Fire Depertmont
euxlllery eldl (interproter,
CDBG Fundl"'l $30,000 . brellled or tepect moterlel,
Other Funde: $130,000 •
Locol Benk Loin Funtl•
ANNOUNCEMENTS
MOOSE LODGE
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: ·
FRIDAY
&amp; SATURDAY
AREA LMI
"HIT AND RUN BAND"
ACTIVITY: Public Rohebllliotlon Rutlellll Civic cantor
(The Uon Sleeps Tonight)
CDBG Fulltllng: $40,000
9 til1 A.M.
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:

.Card of Jhankl

Dally Specials

....al...,,.,_.......
m:

Oltler) tlue to • tiiNIIIIIty,
....... CIOIII8ct Cltottll Klool.

80

Found: 5 - Old ~ Kilo W.nled To Bur: ...... Fer 1...
ten, On Bob McCormick Road, BulcUiowtn. Ill Ill 1211.
114-441~1 100, 114· 245·7477
Alllforlhonl. .
• 0.... ...,.... 11..-·

BINGO

·acre~

Deed •. Ernest E. and Connie S.
Halley to William D. and Sharon S.
Stewart, Rutland lots; .
; ,· Deed, MaJ)ning and Gloria L,
Mllfcinko to same, Olive;
.
·: .Deed, Homer W. and Shirley Belt
to Christine Robinson, Lebanon,
.. J4.924 acres:
Right of way, Taylor Family Part·
nership to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Scipio;
Deed, James W. Clifford Jr. to
Faye F. Clifford, Bedford parcels;
.•. Deed, James C. Hensler and Vic,toria Dungee to Mikel P. and Bonnie

-···

10 Loatlnd

Public ffot!ct

_..tift Hlllanlng device,

also said late Thursday that talks we.re
continuing. He did not elaborate.
Public Notice
Union members gathered on side·
Ncmca 01' •cOIID
• walks outside the Delphi Energy &amp;
PUIILIC HEI".IG
Engine Management Systems plant
1'11a
..... County Coftl.
in the Milwaukee suburb of Oak mtlotonore
llltand to epply
Creek but no one answered tele- to 1M Ohio O.pal1ment of
phones listed for the UAW local.
Development, lor IUII41nt
the
FY '17
Dan Dolan, manager of media . Ufldlr
Community
O.veloplment
relations for the plant, said he heard Block Orante (CDBG) ImaM
the walkout deadline was exten\led Clll11 Progl'lm, 1 fatlorelty
24 hours. He did not know what IUIItltd progrem admlnlet·
ered I!Y t.h l S11t1. MeiDl
progress had been made in tal~

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

F~,June13,1117

Pomeroy elllddllpolt, Ohio

81 ltlnel

.I

SOLID VINYL
. REPLACEMEN,T WINDOWS

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
7.rA

,;..,

537 BRYAN PLACE

Llrnt11tone &amp; GI'IIVII

'MIDDLEPORT
1112·2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

Trailer &amp;

.• . Gar....

SeptlcSyaterda

,.

•Storm Dolrs

.

&amp;

Wlntlows
eR. . . Adtllllons

- .. -

i

-·

'349

GXBS Ridin&amp;" Mower

13-hp, 30-inch cutting width

'1799

·.

STX38 Lawn Tractor
13-hp
5-Speed gear

rngine.

'18.,,.

7••
,.,

&amp;COOUNG
319 S. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
Sales Sarvlce
Installation
American .Standard ·
Freedom
Heat Pump
(814) 992·7434

7.11'

Rn••
Ar.,.lal

. ,. ••cJn.t
Ani,.,.I

· Lillie things
,.,., Worlh A lot
•

'"

.
lhe ChusifieJ
St'lion!
•

In Memory

LX173 Lawn Tractor
15-hp, 38·, 44· or 48-inch cutting width

.,

MUIWAI'2999

Lawn(/ Garden Tractor

GTZ4l -Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor

·345

14-hp, 38- or 48-inch cutting width

I8-hp, 48- or 54-inch rnou.oer lUck

AIUMA1~3999 ~-

AIWWAI$7295

4ZS Lawn (I Qarclen T~or
.. 20-hp, 48-', 54· or t!O-inch mower lUck

MARARITY
whQ paiMCIIWIIY .
June13, 1891

Deere Sea10n is the pe~ect time tci ~ yc:iur John Deere dealer for big savings until June 30, 1997 on our tracton and mowen with special fmantine
options available. Plus, come see our full-line ofattachments and hand-held products. So visit your John
·
Deere dealer and save on all your lawn care needs.
Nothing Runs Like A Deere• .

'

'·

C~FlMICHAEL'SI
'

888 PINECREST DRIVE

"R-.nbr~IICI

II I

aoldl!l ohlln

otourJIMrll.

nme

·can

wipe out
1111ny w,.P. but
· It wiPII out never.
Tttt ' IIIIIIIOI'Iee ot
thole hippy cllyl,.
When ....... Ill

GALUPOUS

'*

.........

'

'

"l;

Pick Up Dl.carded
Appllanc•••

lllnyMellll.
114-IIH-4025

Consider: ·

.THE MAPLES

Clllhm-1

in Pomeroy, Ohio

Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.
Al-L PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
· Must meet HUD eligibility requirements .
~For further details call today ~

1!!:.1
1·614·992·7022
~
'::.='
.
.,.....,, .... '=
In Memory

Easy Bank Rnandng
Air CondltioiiiiS lnslallecJI2r' a month
Heat Pumps lnslciled 13a- amonth

In Memciry Of
"HENRY G.

Top1oil, Fill Dirt,
Sancl. No Mlnlnum.

mill you.-·

n111on•101111 wltltoUt

Saturday, June t4, ltm·.tpm.

Lo Coniine U.lllcoli -.ursnt
Oolllpolla F., WY
Waltrell needed. Apply Man thru

Somtlhlng far ovo•yono, !If 4·H Fri """'2·Spm. 304-4175-7115.

Pleature Riders at Syracuse

LPN part rime position available

Pt. Pleasant

for progrelli¥"1 Rtll!lbilltslion

Conttr ICFISNF. Eiporloncod

preferred, bur will con1lder the .
&amp; VIcinity
right candldato. Excollont bontllt
Moving Solo Slturdo~ 8· 14 8· 7 pod!Jgo tQr port time ompto1111.
101 E'nglloh Rd. Antiquo OIR Call 814·992·8808 or oond r•
Furn, LJR Furn, complete BIR. sumo to Rocillpringo Rohablllta·
Chlldron and Jr. clothing, 10dd~r tion Contor, 38759 Rocksprings
ctr btd, new oak china cabinet Rd.,~. OH 45788.
and buffot. 3tU·576-2223.

MECHANIC
Greenwood Motor UMI, one of

1111 nationo largootlamllr-ownod

lll morot freight carriers, II IC•
cepting applh;ationa for a 3rd

ahih (11 pm-7:308mJ p&lt;ovontativt

2 mi. off R1. 7
LHcllng CNik Rd.

Oi'lvtl, Um1110ne,

-

SalVIng Southlaatam OH &amp;WI/
.114 448 8411
1-ICJ0.872-1111117 1391 Slflord School Ad., Gallipolis, OH

maintenance mechanic . Mult
have exp in heavy engine repalt,
knowledge ol Cumins &amp; Mack
erlglnta a .plua. We offtr TOP

LINDA'S
PAINTING

PAr with compiehenohte'benollt
pkg to lncludo 401(k!. Apply 11
Routt 1 Box 4411 Goll polo F•ry
WV 25515. MIFNID.
MIDI·HOME HEALTH AOENC,,
OALLI.POLII OFFICE II CUR·
RENTL' LOOKING TO "IRE
THI FOLLOWING FULL·TIIII

A pod JHiil'll job on ·
any cloudy jlay, ·
"""""' il oeem

•Weed&amp;era

992•7074

ANNO UN CEME NTS

BENNEIT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

oChaln Sawl

"Ftltltlr'l Oily"

Four family yard aile· Satu&lt;day,

June 1&lt;4th, lam· 5pm. Two miles
norlh al Cheater on SA 7, rain

Pllrk.

WV0t0212

•Lawn Mowen~ ·

.

To Sj&gt;y lilt 8al8~ lti
.
rhe Closll(leds.

•

· •Small Engines

CARPENTER"
Born: Dtc. 28, 1913
Died
March 1,. 1998
.
·Dacl· $undly will be

You Don\ Ho•e To Loolc FIN

(Polfllll'lt IMIMd on llllfiiOved cndlt)
•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

IRBIILI

brlP'er.
Interior
BafOI'I e p.m.

. I

742·2925

POIIllONS:

leaveme..aga. ·
Art. I p.m.

HOIIIII£Al1M PSYCH AN

•l.lu• llovo 2 'ltllra Psych E.,. ·
• . _ H-'Exp. APluo.

814-118-4180

• Good Otginlallort

Ill

/CorlmJricaGn Slclllo

you ""'with ....

• RN u.On .... WV IOH

So pl...., "Qod"llll

YOUNG'S

lt,OOO IIIWARDII
, ........... .elon
.L aedinltotlle

"DIId" "Hippy Flthlr'l
Day" atc1 wiiOVI him,
incl mill him. But •
plll1 of Ill~ with

.:~
·
SERVIa
'

...... lllld .

utwlollatlof .

you "Did" """'you

............... din
.. ..........p • ...,

want IIWIIY· .
"Did", you may be
gone, llllt IIIII

.... ......... t..,o

ciiiiJUI*!t• Cuill

"I"' '"" •Lied"
, ......... - -

01 ......... uu

t.D. O•Cart

••••a•

"Ca ..... 1'111111('
jr

Alltllllol11 .

·OfllwGinigw

lotfi!UIIt.

ara1•n

Locll A1111

•dB. . Paaapa

. . . , llllllllbr

•

FREE

Maidie ao.. llr Coadlllall•

01 .............

Hlnlforll; .... . . . ,

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

Ohio

WVf023477

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?

And WI IIIIUI'I

Dltdh ti1ll to IH'Hk.but Ill In Vlln.
To hive and to low,
Inti then part,
11 the gi'HtMt aorrow

FARM AND .LAWN
614 446-2412

•

In Loving Memory
Of Our. Dear Mottter,
MARY PAULINE

AI'UIWAI••,,

110 Court St.

...

· •ORRISON's HEAnNG

14PZ WG!k-Behind Mower
5-hp. 21-inch cutting width

"FACTORY
DlllECT
PRICES"
Quality Window Systems

•. ·HouieSitel
Reaaon.ble R.,_
. J~N. ~·rt

•R=tWW.W5

At&lt;,.tl

26 YEARS IN BUSINESS •

..

.

'

••wrtor
•ex•alllo•'
#ldtilltil

RuUenci,OH

•Sm811Jobl
•Large Jobs

AnumeT•~

V.C. YOUNG•
IIIII II
Pomlloy, Ohio
~I
'

-

Ferwo~

.......,..... 1..-r
AlgiD MI.._.

(I'RU~TU)

,, 14) 742-1110

Expolltnco APlus.

II tn1orootld Pl11oo

. Alto COlMA I .. WOik

RIIIDFI,IIRIIII
llqielfenDIII

HCIIII HIALTH Ill
Hoolth ICrlllcll c...

• Good OlpriZIItlcn
ICortmlnlcllcn Sklto
• RN l.lc:lnoin WV IOH

o111a111w11 Plumbing
tfloolllll

McC!Imblr Rd.

-1-

•-

. . . . Dis
'-0.10119

J I D'o Auto Peril. lorylnt ulf'IMIIIcl: llully wllltt ,.,..,, 111.12 ,......,lclllltllno . . . 30+
_ , . . . . . , . , ......11 .
nNOII.

Q•• I.,. •. OM . .1

t-----=··=0='---

�••
Friday,June13,1897

Pllge 14 • The o.ty Sa:•llnel

Pomti oy ._ Middleport~ Ohio

. Friday, June 13, 1897

The Dally Sentinel• Pege15

NEA Cro••word Pufzle
PHJLLIP

ALDER

1111·11-111

N-

1988 cu-d 1••70 2br, 2 balh,
8xt2 dock, on ronlld lol. oxc.
cond., uklng $13,300 OBO.
304-075-8051 Leavo mouago.

Somoo,. To In Mclnl)'ro Park Dlolrlcl
11........134.

Mull Soli!

1997 doublewide S1445 down.
$22ilmo. Free delivery &amp; setup.
1-800-69t-en7.
111 Tomo Buyero E-Z Flnaming, 2
Or 3 Bedroom• Around $200
Monlh FrH Delivery I Set Up, 1·
800-251·5070.

-n

Pr..ontlon PDoltion • An Alcohol

And Olw Drug Counoollng IPI•
Agoncy Locobld In Golllo
And Jockion tountioo, Ia Seek·

lnft An ·Amblllouo Individual To
Fl A New Pr..onllon Pooltion.
Thlo Poroon Will Work Wllh All
Age G""'PI In TM CommunldoL
Qoallftclldono: Bacholoro Dagroa,
_ , Clrdlkld A Plut. Good
Communlcallono Skllll (Wrlnon
And Orol). R•oponolbillllu:
Awaranall Acllvldoo, Educo11on
Program1, Training Programa,
And -opmanl And lmplornanlallon 01 New Granl. Projocll.
Sand Rooumo By Juno 29, 1997
To: F. A. C. T.S.. 1770 Jackson
Pilla, 111-1. Ohio 45614 EOE, loll
FM.

PI-. Domino'• PIZza

Now '*lng .. pooli-

All real eslate adverllslng In .
lhis ,....paper Is subject Ill
lhe Federal Fair Houolng Acl
ol1988 which makes nIllegal
lo .. "any preferonco,
llmllatlon a&lt; discrimination
based on race, colOr, religion,
sale familial status or national
origin. or any Intention 10
mai&lt;e any ouch preference.
limitatiOn or discrtmlnatlon .~
'This ,_.paper will not .
knowingly accepl
advertisements fcir real estate
which Is In vlofallon ol the
law. 011 readers are hereby
Informed lhal all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
OppMunily t!aSIS.

RN, LPN of RT, Raoponolble For
Salllrlil Up lnfanl Apnea Monitor
'In Homao And Doing Monlhly
Homo VI IIIII. Thlo lo A Pari·Time
. Contract Pali[lon. Send Resume
REAL
T
Or Pick-Up Application At: Bowman·• Homee~~re. 70 Pine Street.
Galllpollo, OH 45831, Attention: 310 Homes for Sale
I.M&amp;
1 112 story house on I acre lor,
·salet Parson With Atleaat 2 4bedrooms, bath &amp; half, famil~
Yura Experience In Lumber I room, full basemanl. 2tar garage,
Hardware, full- Time Posit•on lot br traler. 304-895-3500.
Avallol&gt;l' Cal 814-448-2002.· For 1116 Sunsvt Drive, 814·448-8238
lnlormadorl
For Morelnb'ma.tion.
SALESPERSON
WANTED: 3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home
Yuar Ba Experienced In All With Garage &amp; Barn, Main·
Phaon 01 Rooldonlal Remodeling tenance Free, Located: Addison
And Roolng. five Yoars 01 Salea Township, 614-446-1792.
Experience Required. Qualified
Appliconll Call 61ol-446·•514 M· 704 Keesee Rd. Moroan Twp. 5
5. Reference And Reliable Vehi - Ac. MIL. 5 Rma.. Barh. Ready To
do Required.
Move lnlo. Eat In Kitchen, Oak
Ca.binals, Refrigerator, Elec .
Someone needed 10 repair barn Range. Fuel Oil Furnace. ax 12
.,.U14-1142738.
·
Smrage Building. Garden, Beaulilul Lawn, Shade Treoo. $36,000.
WANTED HYAC INSTALLEI!S
E1parlonco In HVAC lnollllallon G1C-245-56t1, 6tol-388-6783.
A Plus. EPA Refrigeration And

9 Room• &amp; Balh, On Swan Creek
RSES Cenlficadon 1\ Plus. Over- . Road,
Crown City, Shown By Aptime Required When Necessary.
polnlmonl,
Call 614·256-1595,
Vaca1fon, Health Insurance And
814-256·1154.
Gmolll Pollndal.
-'
AJHEHSJ!O!IioAQECO
· Cali 814-g85-4222 Or Sand ReFinanelngavail-lorHouaos
aume To:
and Mob&lt;le Homos. Now oruaecl
purchasos;Refinanelng;BIIIconWomer Haaung &amp; Cooi"V. Inc:.
P.Q Bo18
aolidalion: Land conlracll. No
Chaoler, OH 45720.
application fee; Ali...,ls ol crodt
Can todey lor alroa analysis!

170 Miscellaneous

In Golllpolla: RoniSI •3501Mo.,
Wllh Dapoolt, 2 Bedroomo, 2
Slot!c No Poll, QuaUftod Only,
814-31111121
.
baclraom homo, Harrl- Two campollol· ono wilh lull
- . Ill tltcllle, olr, HUD hookup. .,. lor boadng and "-""
_.vod, 1325 monlh plua utili· lfV, 8t4·1192-!U58.
dn, no amoklng, no polo, 814-

Now -

Naw-188714 Wid-.1 ·bam, te1191 74231133
doWn, S1381mo, wllh 1pproved
aadiL CaU 1·1100-eg1..777.
'Rio Grandt, No Poll, Dopool1,
114-3,.2540.
1887 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$995 down, I 195/mo. Onl~at Two bedroom hauae, nice and
~=Homes, NilrO, W)l.
4- . cllln, no lnolda pall, dapolil and
references required, 114· GGI21997 1~:.80 3 or 4 Bedroom.
$1,359 down, $229fmo. Free air,
skirting, &amp; delivery. Only at Oek·
WQOd Home• Nitro,WV. 304-7555885.

490

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile tiomoa
lllrting tl $210-$300, ....
I&amp;&lt; and lraoh lilt:ludod, 014-992·
2107.
2 Bedroom Mobile Hom•. You
Pay UtiMIIn, &amp; o.pooi~ In Porlar
Area~-. 114-311M1112. .

Dlullor Rlllol Program
We have $1000 10 $2000 per
home In disaster relief funds
available to help you purchase a
replacement home. Call1 -800 4€16· 7871 to set appointment for

3 Bedroom, Near ViniOn,
180.
SmoM Garden Spol Shown By Appoln~ Qnly, 814-388.1)458.

orr

Mobile Homo: Small 2 Badraoma,
Furnlohod, $235/Mo.. Walor &amp;
Trash Paid, g20 Fourlh Avenue,
Galllpollo, 014·446-31144 Allor 7
P.M.

For Lease

Prolnolonoi/Buolnooo buikllrlillor
oubl0011. Localad or 509 S. Third
Sli'Ot~ Mldd-~ Ohio. Excolltnl
for phyalcl1n office or real esraw.
1pace. Ample street parking.
Avai11ble Immediate!~. Contact
RL Ku/ll, 814·583-3375 collac:L

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bodroomo, Elocll'lc Hoa~ Cll)'
Wallr, Cil)' Schoolo, No Pall, 0..
pooll$200, $275/Mo., 814·44113907.

MERCHANDI SE:

510

HoUSehold

GOOdS
Appliance&amp;:
Reconditlonfd
Washers, Oryer1, Ranges, Retfi~
gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614·•48·
7795.

GOOD USED APPLII\NCES
Washer•, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine StrHI, Coll814·448·7398,
1-800-49a-34911.
Kllcher\ Carpel 118.50 Sale On All
Carpel In Slock &amp; Room Slzo
MoHohan Corell, 114-446-7444.

Refrigerator $75: Washer SD5;
FACTORY DIRECT.
Dryer $85; Eloclric Range $95;
NO MDOLE MAN.
RokigeraiDr 1150; Air Conditioner
SI\VE $1$1.
5,000 BTU $125; Skaggs Ar.·
440
Oakwood Homes io the only
Apartments
pllance, 71 Vine Strao~ Gallipol '
dearer in the trl-llate aroa 1har .
for Rent
814-446·7388, 1-888-8t8.()t28.
build• and sella the1r own :-:-::-:-:-:--:-----.-.-,....
homea. For factory d1rect prices, 1 and 2 bedroom apar1r1Wntl, fur- Three 5,000 BTU Window Air
shop OAKWOOD HOMES. Nl- nlohOd and unlurnlahod, oocuril)' CondidorMirB,61 ... 41H171.
TRO, WV. 304-755-5865.
dopooll required, no plio, 114·
9112-2218.
Used Air Conditioner &amp; Heat
First Time Buyerst E-Z Financing.
Unlll $150 SIDrm Door! $50 8t4·
2 or 3 bedroom, $200/mo. ~ree 1 Bedroom In Gallipollo, No Pats. 446-3301,814-446-3563.
delivery &amp; 111 up. 1-800-251· VeryNicol,6t4-446-7903.
5070.
Antiques
1 Bedroom Near Holzer Extra 530
For Sale: 14x70 Mobile Home On Nlco, Central Air, $289/Mo., +
'46 Acres MIL South 01 Eureka Ulfllties, Depoall Roq. 81.4·446- Buy or aell. Riverine Antiques,
With An Addilional Uobile Home 2957.
1124 E. Main S•eet. on Rt 124,
Hook Up And Largo Shop. Greal I -::-:-----=~-- Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
Hunring, $85,000 Ca/16t4-256- 1badroom aparlmon~ Mason WV. a.m. ID 8:00 Jl'.m., Sunday 1:00 10
6088.
·
Furnlahad Of' uilfurnished. Perfect 8:00 p.m. l14-g82-2528, Ru11
for construction worker. Call tor Moore owner.
IT'S BIG. 1997 4BR, 2BATH delall~ 304-773-51154.
DOUBLEWIDE . 1 1.9 49 DOWN, 2 Bedroom AparJmtnl, Cenlral 540 Mlscellaneous
$3t8/.MO. FREE DELIVERY &amp; Air, Gao Heal, WID Hook-Up
Merchandise
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304 • 755 • Close To Clalllpollo, 614·44610xto 8 Fl. Tail Chain Lenglh
2072.
5885.lin)lted Ollef.
Fanco. 814·388-8193.
large •election of Uled home. 2 2 Bedroom Apartm&amp;nl, Adjacent
or 3 badroomL Srardng al 13495. To Univerolly 01 Rio ·Grande
Quick delivery. Call 1•800 •837 • Campus, Available 011197 .. 8143238.
245-5858.
llmlrod Ollerl 1997 doublewide,
3br, 2balh, $1799 down; $2791
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homea, Nitro
WV. 30ol-755-5885.
New 1907 14x70 lhrte bedroom,
includes 8 montha FREE lot rent
Only $181.86 per _month with
S1050 down. Call 1·800·8373238.
Now Bonk Ropa'ol Onll 311 h,
owner financing availab e. 304·
755-7191 .
New li1llng 14170 2 Bedrooms,
Living Room, Family Room. Built
In Fireplace Valved ' 10 •800 · Soli
For $9•000 • 614-446-4934·
Rape's Only 2 Loll, Never Lived

FfM Dalivaey. &amp; Sal Up. 1-80().
;·~IJD0.~9;~~·~140216::;,;;;;14-;5=92;-4008~~d~ln,251-5070.
F

"'"'. ~""·'"''"!

30110.

2 Bedrooms. Cenlral Air, In ~alii ­
polio, On Ronled Lot, Ready To
Move Intel 8"·446-1409, Ahar
4P.M.

demils.

S40 Mllc:elllneous
Merchandise

2 Bedroom Aporunenl, $395/Mo.,
$tOO Depo~~ AU Utilltioa Paid, No
Pall, 814 446 3437.
2 Badrooma Across From Univorolty 01 Rio Grande, Wilh Fronl
Porch, Utilities Paid, 814-388·
111148
·
2bdrm. ap11., total electric, appliances furnllhecl, laundry room
lecllhlea. eloao 10 ochool In IOWn.
Appllcallono available al: VIllage
Groan ~li 849 01 call 614-882·
3711 EOH

------

~..;.·==
·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WesiWood Drive
from .$260 10 1334. Walk ro shop
&amp; movieo. Call 614· ..6·2568.
Equal Housing Oi&gt;Porlllnil)'.
Beech St Middleport 2br turnlohad apl, utilllies paid, daposil
&amp; raloranc:ao. 304-882·2586.

Repo'ol Only 2 left Never llvad
ln.
Free delivery laal up. 1·11()0-l Countr~tide Apartments : 2 Bed251 .5070_
roomo 1 1/2 Balh, CA, WID Hook·
Up, $340/Mo.; 2 Bedrooms, 2
330 Fanns for Sale
Balhl, CA, WtD Hook-Up, $450/
Mo., Dapooll Required, 513-5742539

::----:-:----=--

Downtown Gallipolis: Modern 1
Bedroom, All Elocule, Carpolld,
Cbmplote Kilchan, EleclilC Haal/
Air Condllioning, 814-448-0t311.
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath,
PaiS, Rolorenca And Dapo~t
qulred, 614-446-1519.
Fumlshed 1\parlmlln~ 1 Bedroom,
$295/Mo., Ul11i~n Paid, 93g Sacond Avenue, G~llipolis, 614·4463844, Allor 7 P.M.
Furnlohed 'EIIiclency $1951Mo ..
Ulillllao Paid, ·share Barh, 807
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, S14·
4~~38 U 1\fter 7 P.M.
Furnlohod Elliclency All Udllrlu
Paid, Share Bath, $t50/Mo .. g19
Sec;ond Avenue. Gallipolis, 614·
448-31145•
.
Graciou• iving. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparrmen11 at Village Manor and
Rlvoreido Aparlmenllln Mlddlopon. From $236-$304 . Call 014·
982·5084. Equat Houolng Opporamldo~ .
Nlco 3 Bedroom Unlurnlohed
Aparment, In Poinr Pleasant 61._
448-00.1. Alllr 8·P.M.
One bedroom apartment In PI
Pleasant Furnished. Ver~ clean
&amp; nk:e. No peto. 304-675-138e.

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, aewtr plpe1, windows, lintels. elc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814-2455121.
.

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming .

Commerlcal Rldgld Sewer And
Drain Cleaner With Attachments,
$800, 814·448-4782 Gallipolis,

Ohio.

Hand held SHr Cat acanner 100
channels, 11 band, twin Ju,bo.
$249 value, soil lor $t80. so• 075-4451 .

Hay &amp; Grain

Corn lor aalo, $3.00 por buohel,
.....1814-liD2-2447.

1986 Chevy With Topper, Low
Milos, $3,000, 1956 Chovy 1 Ton
Farm Racks !1850. 8tol-2-733.

Tobacco Baae For Lease: 818
Pounds, Be11 Offer. I!IU-441!17413.

t986 Ford F-150 80'11, fuel lnjaCIod, runo good. $2,000. 304-7735282.

Tobacco wahlf bod planll. 304895-3954.

1g59 Ford F-700, DSL Ef1illno 5
Sp·/2 Sp Double Frame 814-28e8392.

710 Autos for Sale

Boston Terrier &amp; Chinese Pug
Puppieo, Bolh AKC Registered
Show Ouality. VII Checked. ·Shoti
&amp; Wormed. Now Taking Oeposil
Or PaymoniL 014·368-9325.
Pels Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza.
6t4•441.0770.

You Pick, We Pick,
Mon. Wad, Fri; Sal
Sunday's,
Kerr Ro,ad,

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment

-.

SHOW TRUCK 1988 Dodge Hill
Ton 400 Engine, Muot So~l
$5,000,080 814-256-1722.
'

730 Vans &amp;'4·WDs

1984 Cutlasa Supreme V·6 Engine, With Automalic Transmlssian, Loaded, Has OUdaw 2 Rims
$2,400, 814-448-8384 After 5
P.M.
t964 Fior~. 4 Speed, 15,000
U1les on 1horr Block. Good
Shape, $1,200614·367-0333

I •

- THE BORN LOSER

..
1

..
•
_,,

1987 20' Citation mloutboird
170hp. Trailer &amp; accessories in·
eluded. Runs &amp; looks great.
$6,500.304-875-4221.'

1993 21' ... d1 c dd c b"
mirapotty, u
Y a
'"
Boat, porta
am.fm
til·
lilte radio, 4.3 VorleX 6cyl, In/
out board, tull canva1 cover .
$14,000 . 304-675-2t5t or 30• ·
67 5-835&amp;.

1987 Nlssan Uaxim_a, aUto, air,
$2,200 . 1985
Jolla. Sspd.
$900. 304-675- 1851 or 304 •675 .
6197.

vw

1987 Nl~&amp;an Maximum $4 ,500:
111e4 Ch.vy Cus10m van $4,000 .

304-895-3929.

1987 To~ota Supra 100K Ma·
roon, Excellent Condition, OBO
614-146·695t.
.
1G87 Trans Am, ·V-8, Auto, Air,
PS. Pll. PW, Ground Ellects, Cowl
lnduclion Hood. Louvers, Exc .
Cond. 814-245-55811.
1980 Cavalier RIS AIC, 87K
13.195: 1992 S.IO Auto. PiS, PtB.
SBK, $4,8SI5, Trade-Ins Welcome
Cook MoiOra 614-oi46-0t03.
t969. 2 Door Chavy Barone
$1500, Cali61ol-367·5055
1990 Chevy Cors•ca, black on
gray, cold air, rill, automatic,
88,000 actual miles. excellent
C~ndition, boOk value 1•800, Will
oall $3800, 814-992-6824.

u

"'

bit

.

5 Goltha ·blue

ltlgndlent

Noatrlll

7

woieternhemlaphere
eun.

120ua""'•
17 Fence
opening ~
19 Llcan11ous

8 Group of two
9 Actreu
Perlman

22 Soldiers
23 Prefix lor
plane
""'

24 Fishing aids
26 Swinging
-'ride
.
27 Fibber
. 28 Crafty
29 Mortar lray
31 Foretell
35 Scottish
-hillside
38 Natural

color

Friday, June 13, 1997

40 Contemplil\lc

By, Phillip Alder

42

person
Writer Rogera Sl. .
· Johna
.

43 Doctrine
44

First or

reverse

•

•

.45 llluleh-green
47 Film dlreclor
Bunuel
48' F8Udll

elave

. C 1997 by NEA, Inc.

l

1

49 Astronaut •
Slayton
50 Sa~lt - M~rle
.51 Ark. hours;

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II anyon~ lhinks I look sexy slripped in The Music •
lovprs, they must lhink Minnie Mouse is sexy." - Glenda Jackson.
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ENTBRA

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ANERV.

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I: '., politician
"Have you ever noticed," a
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asked a voter," that
_ .
those who are always neutral

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11VE COME TO OFFER .
'(Oil A FREE 006 ..

J.IE NEEDS A ~E.
AND VOU HEED IllS

COMFORTIN6

COMP~NION5141P.:

.:'11. PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

HE COMES FROM A

.· L.ON6 t.INE OF .
CIIAMPIQNS:.. 'fOU

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WANT A D,Oo?IIERE IS ·
.JUST TilE 006 FOR 't'OII!

,.

UNSCRAMBLE fOR
ANSWER

•

SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS
'

Auto Pens &amp;
Accessories

..

Budget Price Transmiuion•,
SIOrdng II 188.00 and Up, Ulld I
Rebuilt, All Typoo, Over 10,000

JFRIDAY

Tranaminlans, Ace••• Transfer

Caooo I Roar Endo, 114-2455677

Marrow • Giver- Cover- Entice - WEAR IT . .

r.

Our neighbor put a sign on his freshly painted btlnch:
Wet Paint! Watch It Or WEAR IT!"
·

·,

,,

.,
r

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheel&amp; &amp; radiators. D &amp; R Auto
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or t:
800·2T.J.93211.

,'

Two 235-75-R15 W.W.A. W.R.,
ver~ good condition, asking S75
par, 614-84a-2693 allor 5pm.

79o

campers a

..,,

Motor Homes

r

1974 lork camper, air, $1100.
brown oadcllo, $50, 8t4-llll2-3924
ot814-llll2·7881.

Home

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG
Uncondldonol lllellmo guaraniH.
Local referenc.. turnllhed. Et·
lablllhld 1975. Call (014) 4410870 Or 1-800-267·05ill. Rogtre

WallrprOOflnO.

77'85.

.

·.

C&amp;C Gtnoral Homo llalnlo,.nco· Pllinrlng, vinrl tiding,

111111,
-homo _. ond .....
""'

C8rptr11ry, - . . - - · ·

lrH eo•ma• coli Cha~ 114-992·

====~=::=:::~=~-

&lt;2E&gt;

'

you lack Joteranc: with family mem· .secret In Ihis case, heed your inner
~rs today, you migi!L miakc issues ~t voice.
-of situations that normally wouldn l ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
"'
faze you. Stay in character.
. Usually you're a rather forthright per•
LEO (July-23-Aug. 22) This might SDn.bulloday you mighl feel inclined
nol be one of your beuer days for ' to be an apple polisherfor someone
BERNICE
conceiving ingenious ideas. Before · ·you think can do you a favor.
. BEDEOSOL putting them into aclion, rev.iew them . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
. in totality.
. ·
·
Today you might not be as. allentive
VIRGO (A,ug. 23-Sept. 221 Do not · .as you should to special instructions
be pressured by fri~nds loday to m~e . you'll be given. Later, you may wish
'a commitment t for ~ ., future SOCial you would have been a be tier lislenSaturday,June 14. 1997
event thll you eilher'won't enjoy or cr.
I can'r comfOrtably alfQrd.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) .
., GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) If Today if you gel involved in a social
'JTiight not ha"e as light a pip on your you're 'involved in a competitive iame of chance with friends, don't
lp'edit cards today as you think, and _ e"enltoday. he either a pdul win- .· stan raising the stakes if you're on a · ..
tf!ere'~ a possibiliry you could chirp ner or a gmcioua loleJ'. Poor sports· ,losing streak. Things could get wme. · ·
spme lhi11gs you really can do with- IIUillship could tarnish your image.
ARIES (March 2tJApril 19) Do
qut. 'liyifiB to paiCil up a broken
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) , , not introduce new changes lo your
rgmance1 Tho Astto-Graph Match- .. · Thoush an ~uaintance may be a 1plans Ieday. Abide by your original
qlaker call help you undetsta11d whal fasll!r talbr than you, .it doesn't mean '· agreement, even if it's lost some of Its
do to Jitake the relationship work. · his or her ideas - superior. Do not luster.
·
I $2.15 to Malchmak.er, ·c/o dJia t be afraid to speak up. '
TAURUS (Aprii20.May 20)YDu
wsptper. P.O. Box 1758. M111111y
SAGmAIUUS (Nov. 23-Dec. will come up with some pretty imag- '
Swiiln, ~w York. N"( 10156. . 21) II may not prove wise today to \ inatin excuses'Joday when explainCANCER (June 21-July 22) lr' tell your friendl lbout somethins ing to a friend why you couldn't do
.• your i~ w~ you to keep :• favor he or she requested of you.

,·

-.

ASTRO-ORA1PH

.

,.

..

..

¥.

{

4ThoMWho
gattler bit by

10

6

L-...1.-.l--l,..-...L.-L-...1 you de~elop from step No. 3 below.

Now Interior, loll 01 Room, 2 GM .
Engines, 18.500, Ironton Marina,
614-534-23135.

Appliance Pllrll And Sanrlco: All
Nama lrando Ovor 25 Yaaro E•·
p•rlanct AN Wor- Guor,niHd,
French Cily llljllg, 114·441·

•

Europeen

.

42' Sunliner · Steel Hou1eboat,

760

"""'*'

1 South
tribe,.
2 Gravtl rldgH
·3 OIIHJS •

apple
36 Take care of
the billa
37 Medici~

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

24 Fl. Ponloon Boal Trailer, 40
HP Motor, AMtFM Casoetta With
4 Speakers, Boarding Ladder,
Pop Up Changing Room With
I'On-a.pony, 814-441-0708.

810

1111.
dtpOIII and · - ·· 01ol247-1292.

'.

1984 .Bandil Bau Boa I so HP
Mercury Garage Kepi, E1cellent
ConditiOn, $3,000, Between 2 P.M.
To 5 PM . 304·675-5131 .

1988 lroc V-8, 5 Speed, 64,000
Mileo, T-Topo, Black, 614-2451
9185.
•
t9 9 ba
·
86 u ru, loaded, all power,
aunrool, St.350. 30ol-675-3324.

3 NT

1

8t
.. A

Motorcycles

1985 Buick Century Station Wag·
on, S1, 100, 814·379-2568.
1988 Ford Tempo, one owner,
87,000 lCiual miles. loaded, excellent condition inarde/ aut;
S2195. 614·992·8824.
.

Ttf~

rtte

1995 Chovy 4x4 Sopd, ate, tlit,
cruiao. St6,000. 30H78-222:!. •

1988 Invade&lt;, 1r. open bow, 130 .
Mercrulse, stalnlead steel prop,
amtfm cau8ne stereo, cover, ga.
rage kept, excellent to new c:ondi·
tlon, 614·982·5124.
1988 Ranger 37~V 18' 12 -24V
Trolling Motor, 1SO XP Evinrude
Outboard, $9,800, 614·992·2nO.

hou...

29-'- HMw
30 1.111111

Pass
All pass

1t

As this is the only Friday the 13th
this year, il seems like a good
m~ment to ask you a vital quesljon.
Is urnie that hot water fr&lt;czes more
quickly 1than cold waler? ·
Today's deal contains te&lt;;hnical
poinls for both declarer and the
defense. How should the play go in
three no-trump?
·
That Soulh hand is too strong for
IT l&gt;lr&gt;ri'T OGGU,
a 16-18 no-trump. Aces are underTO AI'IYONi T~AT . '1'
valued at four points, and lhe fiv.ecard
suit is worth another point.
PVTTIN8
West Jed his fourth-highest spade.
1&gt;1.-t
Declarer ducked two rounds of
spades and won the third as East disON
carded a heart.
OVT$1Pf Ml6tfT ~"
South decided he ~ad to try to
keep
West off the lead while estabMISTAICE-1!
~
lishing his club suit. So, South played
6
· a heart to dummy's king and led a
c;,..,., ..~ ...T..-4
low club, winning with his ace when
East played low. After a diamond 10
.,.
the ace,· South· repeated the proceCU€. TO HE"-VY t-le:IWOZK. TWFIC., dure, leading dummy's secorill low ·
~-Jt: m~ TOCOONm 'ICO~&gt;J
club. If Easr had played the queen.
1\\IS Tit-'£!~~. 1&gt;6/&gt;UHJ\~ South would have lei him win the
trick. But when Easl played low
.again, South won wilh the king and
. played a lhird round ..When lhey split
' }-3 and East won wirh the queen.
•· South claimed nine tricks: one spade.
two hearts, two diamonds and four
clubs.
Easl missed a·chani:c to gel himself inlo the newspapers. On lhc rhird
round of spades, he could have dis:
1carded the club queen. (True, South
'can get home by winning rhe second
'I'M Net J\JS.T
spade trick, but in isolalio~ thai isn'l
LA'Te: ... 'I't1 OEAI&gt;.
the correct play.)
• Supposedly, it is, 1rue '!hat hoi
warer freezes quicker lhan cold if !he
water is in an open container, which
permits cvaporarion. For further
informalion,
log
on · to
hup://www.urbanlegends.com'lscience.

1&gt;00~ ~AN

1991 5-tO 4x4 4.3 V-6, AulD, 79K
Excellent Condlllon, NAOA,
$8,200, ~~1 $5,995, Cook Motors. 6tolt03
.

SEFWICf S

Throa baclroom apanmon1, Third
SlrHI. Raelno. t300irno. pluo ulll·

ANI&gt;

~roo~A:.;ve::::. .:;aft:;:er~6:;;;pffi:...- - - , - - I 750 . Boats &amp; Motors
t983 Olds Toronado, loaded, pw,
tor Sale
a1r, new t1rea, runs &amp; looks great.
$t,200. 304-773-5103.

57 LL.B.
58 VIeW
·
DOWN

really be true?

1995 Chaiy EXI Cab Z· 71, 350
BUID. 304-875-686 •.

740

-"'&lt;~

21 Tooll! doctor
23 Fl•j)onM
. 25 Additions to

Can that

ta.ooo. 81 "'44e-~782·

1982 Ford .,4 $2,000 ; 1968.
Camera, Rebuill Motor &amp; Trant- .1977 .Honda
750,
auto,
mission, $4,000 OBO; 1987 Har- 13.000mi.. 304·675-5880 leave
ley Davison Sportster S5,0QQ, rnessag~ilno answet.
814-388-8481, 614-992-~76.
1986 Suzuki OR 125 Dlrl Bike,
1982 Pontiac Gra"nde PriX, Needs Call614--256-1683.
Engine Works, $350; t985 Chevy
Euro Sperl Wagon, $1,000: 350 1992 Yamaha :200 Blaster 4
Engine From 1976 t.tonre carlo Wheeler 814-379-2282.
Engine Rebuild Kil, No Engine 1994 KS,wasakl KX125, Looks I
Block, $125, 814-245-5865.
Runs Good. Water Cooled , 614·
1983 Olds Cu~ass, V8, 4barrel, 448-o2n .
350 turbo trans. 69,000mi., go~
cond., very dependable, $ 1, 500 Honda Mini Trail 7Q $5QO, 8140BO. Can ba seen a1 2407 Man- 245-5 789-

Albright
eucr elan
14 Wlaln'e
52 ltrlllgtm
.axcl8mlllon
53 G-'1"""'
15 OveMue
54 Mlnuo
16 Elfoi'liJ
55 In the 11 Actre11
·
jlleallhyl
Andreas
56 mporljnt lime

Opening lead:.• 7

1992 Nluan Pick-Up, 5 Spood,
::':'':"'"-:"---:-....,.--""'"1 AMtFM Good Condlllon, Sporl)',

1893 Terry, 19', omo/1 vuck can
pull, 15500; tg73 Coachman 26"
oxcollonlcondlllon, 13500· 'e14:
1ga.8002.
'

Tara Townhoute Apartmentl.
Very Spoclouo, 2 Bedroomo, 2
Floorl, CA. 1 112 Balh, FuHy Cor·
plltd, Adull l'val &amp; Boby Pool,
Polio, Sltrt S340/Mo. No Poll,
L1011 Plua Sacurll)' o.poo11 A.
qulrod, 114·441·3411, 014·441·
0101.
'
.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Soulh We~l North East
2NT

!10~

o.-

34

•AK653

Pass
Pass

13:...

AnewertoPt.. la • .._...

;::r:"'

41 1:1upe
4
Vtnlon 44 F.nclng Clll,
• Ptkllllhlelt
.... 11 Alr-M
41WIIII-1

32GreaM
33Food..,ap ·

• K2

TRANSPORTATION

Featuring Hydro Ba1h . Don 1969 Chevolle SS, 396, aula
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd .. rrano, air cond. 304-675-11311.
814-446.0231 .
1873 Chevy Nova, - door, good
AKC German Shepherd Pups, parto car, $tOO, 614·992·3342 or
·White Champ Line, 8t4-388· 614-992-5608.
9194.
.::..::.::.--~-_..:. 1g79 Chrysler New Yorker by
AKC Rag Black lab puppy, $75 original owl\ar, make offer. 304·
w/papers. 304·8)5-215, wcrk ar 8'15-4658.
•
304·675-8359 homo.
1981 Chevy Caprice, $800. 304AKC . Reglslerod Rorr Weller 875-6574.
.
Pups, 6 .Weeks Old, tst Shots &amp;
Wormed, $300 Females:''$275 1'982 Delti ee ' diesel, needs in·
Males; 814-44H627.
jar:IOr pump. 304-675-4302.

Conc:ession trailer, se1 up tar cot·
ton candy, runnel cakes, nachos, tO~ OFF all farm lrOCIOr parto.
Sider's Equipment 304-875ctloo. 304-675-31180 aft., 5pm.
7421.
Concrera a Pl11stic S&amp;ptic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron t500 gallon Oelovele bulk lank;
Evans Enterprl•es. Jackson, OH 814·949·2033.
t-800-537-g528.
17 hp MIIIUbishl traCIOf, 4 wheel
Crah1man lawn mower 5.5 oold drive wllh 4' brush hog, coil 8t4·
22• cut, power gnr drive, usad 843-5350.
.
1\Vico. $200. 304-1;75-8t58.
•
1872 Lima Truck Ring $45,000:
Damaged owing 111, 814·985· 1888 Harr11 Pile Drlvhig Hammer;
3405.
•
.
1810 GMC Fuol Truck $2,750;
Electric $cooutr and Wheel- ·•a• Drum Sheepo Fool Roller
chalro. Newt Uood. Scooler Lilli, f3,250: 1980 101SO Office Troller
Por1ablo Rampo, Stairway Elava· •4.200; 1938 Jdhn Doaro A
tors, Bowman's Homacare 81~- S1.3DO: Mloc. SIMI Boamo t2 To
57 Fl. 814·843-2300, 8-4 P.M,;
446·7283
- 4 P.M. 614-643-2916.
Eqrclllr Glider, Llko New. $50,
400 c~~on aolar bulk lank, 614·
Phone: 014-146-l5211.
Grubb's Pi1no- tuning &amp; repaira.
Problemo7 Noad Tunod7 Call lho
piano Dr. 81ol-441-4525

640

•QJ'112
• QJ 9 6
.. Q 10 2

• A 3 2
• A 7 4

--Ohio.

Two 8M7 Wood Fluoh Gara~e
Dooro 150 Each: New 8x7 Wh11t
Ralood Pinel Model 530, $215,
Cal814-388-9265.

.. Q 8

Sllllda

,.

31

20 Stiller's pert-

Eaal
K 10 8 7 5 4
10 8
.
10 4
,J 9 7

..

Fruits &amp;
Bedo; 24.000 oil hooter: 200
580
brea~er bOx: table; chairs; iwing
Vegetables
with chains and apringa: ather
misc. 209 South Fourth, Middle· Srrawberrles, Pick Your Own, Call
Claude Wintera, 614·245-512t.

Cemetery Lots. Granite Bronze
Uemorials, Apple Grove Memori·
al Gardena. 304-576-2779.

+A8753
.. 8 4

n•s

:::::;..::~.::::::;:!:.---1

One Badroom Furnlohld All Util~
lloo Paid 258 Slalt S~aot, $2501
llo., 01"'446{1187.

RF NTAL S

8PECIALlii ...IIIIALII
'r Nl Cyclobor _ , , naado r•
Seara 3a• cut riding mower, io ,..,ad, •140: 2-row com culdva· ThrH 18g4 Plymoulh AcclalmJ,
h.p. , Tecumaeh, e•ctllanl contfi. tor, lnt.,nadonll, two bar qurck Nlco Caro, Choice: $5,gH: Two
1895 Chay. Corolcao Cholet
lion,
080; lull lilt ll'uck 1111111, g.c.. 8350: 014-742·2245.
$5,885; Ont 1995 Oldl Achall/11
ID- $45; now ponablo phont,
•• ... a1112 pr~.., m: lt4-t4a- Alllo Chtlmbaro CA lriCIDr wllh $5,995; One 1994 Dodge lnlropld
· mowor, comploltly robulll, now 15,885; ALL NICE CAllS WITH
2045• .
,..,.., "'*-114-882-1803.
. WARRANTY!
I&amp;D
AUTO
SPRING IPECIAL: Conlral Air
SALES, HWV. 110 N. 114o4Q·
Condllionoro: 2 Ton 11,185; 2 112 Wo mako hydrallllc hooo aoHm· 8805.
I
Ton $1,2115; 3 Ton $t,395; 3 112 blln. Sldor'o Equlpmonl 304Uplon UOid Cora Rt 02-3 Mlloo
Ton $1,585; 4 Ton $1.195; Prlcoa 07!H421.
Soulh ol Loon, WV. Flnancl"'l
Above Include Normal lnatallalnllalllt. ~511-10et.
:
dorl Full 5 Yaar Wan11nty. "II You 830
Llvestocll
Don'l Call Ua Wo Bolh Loot I"
Froo Eoumaloo l Add-On Heal 11 yr. old rtglatered Quarter 720 ll'ucks for Sale •
Pumpa Only Sliohty Higher. Call horae mare, great for oil·h or
Ua Todav. 1gg7 Ia Tho Twonly chlld'a •lklf9'1n&gt;l mar11, gonde &amp; 1974 Ford ont lon, 12' flal~e&lt;l.
n t to ride, uklng 390 tour apaed, runa goad,
Sovonlh v..r In Tho Healing 1 safe for anyo_
Cooling Buolnelll814·446-8301, $1500, 114·882-7139.
$1150. 814-247-4292
.:
1-1100-291-()01111.
3 'lllar Old B"ck &amp; 'while Slallion 1g83 lsuzu truck, 4cyl, Sop~.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon ·very Genllo Good Riding Horoo 110,000ml., $1,400. 304·578·
Upright, Ron Evan• Enterprlaes,
~·600~,70r~To~~=7
..~6~1ol-~~~-t~~~---1~88=~=·--------------­
1·800·537·8528.
Rog. black Anguo bull Ankony 1984 Ford Rangor, Low Mileage
Super ~VIe waterbed, 7 drawer 3w3:)_1 ,200. 2R8 8mos. &amp; hall- On Robuilt Engine, 5 Speed, Good
Shapo, Asking $1,400, 6t4-31Ddreuer With mirror 1nd ahelves, .,._,....-e75-8241.
2B36 . •
call 01ol-143-5350.

Purebred Siberian Husky puppies, 3 left, very nice, blue eyes,
19" Color T.V. Willi Buill In VCR, masks, wormed. 40% oil, S100
each, cal1814-992·5144.
~50. 81ol-441-o948.
For Sale: Dwarf And
4 Good 'lllar Wrangler RTS, 245 I Rabbits
Semi-Dwarf Moorly Maieo $6 And
75R 116 t3,000 Mil01, $150, 814- $8
Each, 614·386-9t23.
245-9851.
Registered Female Bichon Fnse
,.. heavy corrugated pipe. 10011.
to Months Old Spade 1\11 Sholl,
roll, S2Ug, PAINT PLUS HARD- Housebroken,
Very Friendly, 814·
WARE. 30ol-875-1084.
.
446·31154.
Are you buying new lurnilure? Two miniature Come pups, male,
Sell your uaecl lurnirure 111 1118
$125 ...... 814-742-2050.
mercy Thrift Shop. There lo a ·
need for coucf:les, breakfall:
570
Musical
dining room 1811. We alto
Instruments
baby beds, strollers./
· laypens,
toddler car aeat1 an walkers.
Call 814·992·3725 Tuesday thru Star Guitar, Cheshire, Ohio· less·
Salurday, 10am·4pm at 220
ons and Instruments- plana, guiMoin Strati, Pomeroy.
lar and druma, 614-367.0302.

Baata By
Rocky, Tony
Laweal Prices
lipolis.

.• J I
• K 6 53

~-

ACROSS
1 AetNa
ClllchltU

l!

\'i

l
J

'
'

�Tfllllll'l trove ·
from the
171hCenbly

SatiWday's /tfl}or
£eague Baseball

•

results

••
•

~

•Pqe81

•f'Mttll ttl On
,.,. C1

.•
-••
.
+

•••
•
...•

.•
•

~

.

.,•

•

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 15, 1997

c

Steubenville, the Grant Bridge in Ponsmouih and the
Tlrnt..sentlnel Stiff
.
Iront()n· Russell Bridge at Ironton.
POMEROY • The Ohio Department of Transporta.
The bridge was built in 1928, and has been closed
lion still plans to replace the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge, several times for major repairs. The state has earmarked
$25 million for replacement of the span, and has ~ired
.and expc~s to start ~nstruction in five ye~rs.
A pubhc. meeting a~ut the proposul wlil be held at . · Sverdrup and .~ociates of Columbus as a cons!llting
Wahama H1gh School 1n MaSon, W.Va. on Thursday firm on the proJect.
.
·
·
from 4 to 7 p.m. At that lime, ODOT and West Virginia
According to Nancy Pedigo of ODOT's Marietta
!Jivi~ion ofHi~hways officials will d~scuss how the pro· office, the firm has an 'international reputation for
JCCIIS progre~.mg, and answer questions and hear com·
excellence,' and was involved in consulting work on
ments from Citizens.
several large projects, including the I·77 project in West
. The P~meroy-Mason Bridge .is one of o~ly four Ohio Virginia. They arc currcndy doing the studies on the
RIVer bnd~es _ own~d by Oh1o. In adduion .to t~~ U.S. Route 33 expansion from Athens to Darwin.
Pomeroy br1dge, Oh10 owns the Fort Steuben Bndge m
The contract with Sverdrup places a maximum of

'

RES·.

Happy

.

. ,.

·Father'Day
Hey! .· -

4 C'apMM Chairs,
rear~PW,

PI, dlt, a:ulse;

aMIPM (' 11! lie,

8w.rg'

'

1

· mnolog~
·-

'
.
taltvrjlmiOl . '
'

wlurls
.. ~

· 1,i'

!t's Dad's Day

·

MaaiEm ctuaBtv_

·. -~-.:r
...
~~

.,

·AsiDw·AL '

'.

.

•

·•'
0

••
•

·•

~Chamber

of Commerce
schedules 'Lunch
WftW our legl.lators' ..,.

GALLIPOUS - The Gallia
County-Chamber of Commerce's
first "Lunch with Our Legislators"
has .)1een set for Monday, starting
atll :15 a.m. in the Gallipolis City
Park.
Co-sponsored by Ameritech,
chamber members and their guests
will have the opportu-nity-to meet
and interact with guests from the
I.Iegislati·ve branch of government.
Joining the event will be U,S.
Rep. Ted Strickland, State Sen.
Michael Shoemaker and State
Rep. John Carey. The luncheon is
to end at 1:30 p.m. with a ribbon·
cutting . ceremony dedicating the
renovated chamber offices at 16
State St.
Also in attendance will be rep·
resentatives from U.s: Sen. Mike
DeWine's office, the Governor's
Office of Appalachia, the _Economic Development Administra·
· lion, Community Development
• Block Grant ·program, · and the
· Ohio Department of Develop·
•. ·inent.
·; , · The legislators and representa·
tives are expected to be
. appr,~hed on such topics as
!lowntown development'and high·
. ways, industrial and economic
. (levelopment, health care, land use
planning, education and political
issues.

Good Morning
Paget

· 'Calendan
Clu•lf!cds
: , £onllgl

Slmy=
CINr

Detalll on
'

pageA2

Vol. 32 , No. 18
that ODOT is consider·
ing sites as far away as
Hobson · and Min·
crsyille. Pedigo said
that it is likely, howeV·
·cr, that the new bridge
will be -built In the
, vicinity of the existing
bridse, since the main
purpose of the span is
to connect the commu·
nities of Pomeroy and
Mason, W.Va .
Sverdrup and Asao·

ODOT schedules public hearing
on·proposed bridge replacement
By BRIAN J, REED.

.

.,....A1•

Low:$08

tmtt

I.

~

•

,.y

HI: 80s

•

•
•

~

AppHislooin
sfter bombing
Jury decides
·McVeigh must
with his life

C4&amp;5

DH

.Igaert

F.dlhlrie!s

M

Eoter1alnment

C8

Soorts

BJ.8

C 1997 Ohio V.IIFY Publdhlna Ol.

$1.2 In consulting
expenditures.
The firm will
conduct the envi·
ronmental, histori·
. cal and ecological
REPLACE.-ENT
will bt
'studies required to In 1828,
finalize the current IICt Ia plannad for Thuraday
stage of the
process. The study will take in an area three. miles upriv·
er and three miles downriver from the location of the ·
exiSiing bridge.
.
.No decision has been made -as to where the new
bridge will be located, although Pedigo said in January

~=;~~r;~E:it~~=:buHI
in January,
pro- ·elates,
has 24hired
months
from

for _sunshine

Area farmers
Cold, wet weatherfprces delays in.
spring planting

their hiring date to
.
complete their studies.
After those studies arc completed, certain groups, like
the Ohio Historical Society, will be allowed to comment
on the findings. The answering of these comments, Pedi· ·
go said, is often the most lime-consuming aspect 'Of tile
Conttnulcl on page 142

Ohio hospitals .lose
Medicaid money
under budget plan

By PAMELA BROGAN'
By KEVIN KELLY ..
Gannett Newa Strvlct
nmes·Sentlnel Staff
WASHINGTON- Federal Medicaid payments used
CADMUS - The word for southern
by Ohio hospitals to pay for the uninsured patients
Ohio agricultural producers whose grow·
would be reduced ''1;;7;:;;;::;:;-;::;;;;
ing season has been affected by spring's
by 20 percent or II'
unusual weather is: piay for lots of sun·
$796 million by
. shine. ·
2002 under a budget
Above-average rainfall coupled with
bill
by
the coolest May seen in decades bas
Hpuse
and
· caused problems.. Jor .· aio":~~~::~:n:~
"~Yriliting"o'il_n~~~~th~r to '.
key
tee late Thursday.
'Producers w•ttr"peppcrr ~~~:~:
sun, while others have st
cold
The action was
shock," explained Jennifer Byrnes, the
opposed by Rep.
Ohio State University Extension Service
Ted Strickland, D·
agricultural agent for Gallia County, 'In
· Ohio, a .member of
general, plant growth has been slower
the House Com·
because of the cold.'
merce Committee,
Temperatures have been on the rise
which approved the 11 ::!:.!.J:.:.::t..:..!.:.:.:~~~D8t.::.J
since the beginning of June, but the need
bill on a 29·17 vote. "
..
for c'onsistcnt sunshine and moderately
· "This is harmful to ihe hospitals of Ohio," Strickland
· drier conditions has beeome apparent, she
said. ' 1Many rural hospitals that provide care for poor
added;
people need these payments to survive."
·
. Sunlight and dryness are also important
Rep. Paul Gillmor, R.()hio, who. holds the No. 2 slot
for hay . P!oduction, which has been
on the committee, defended the plan and said it would
delayed by dampness. If hay is allowed to
"slow ~own the rate of growth of Medicaid."
stand for long before cutting, "it will be
Other Republicans said the reductions would be off·
lower in nutritional value, • Byrnes said.
set by another p,l!lll approved by the committee Ol) a 39·
Producer Lowell Jeffers, who has
7 vote to give the states $16 billion to provide health
fahnC\1 near Cadmus for over 30. years,
insurance .to uninsured children.
·felt that cold and rain have to a degree
But Mary Yost, spokeswoman for the Ohio Hospital
slowed down his operation.
Association, said the reductions will be painful even
"With !he way the weather is now, we
with the additional funding -for children.
should h~ve had the hay in and cut, but we
- Qalllll County Agrlculturtl
Agent Jennifer Byrntl
"I think our hospitals in Ohio are going to feel the
haven't even started on it,'' he said. "For
1011 111111plta lht took frqm 1 tobtcco
friday on lltnltl Role! In
pain from-this cut," Yost said. "The reality is that our
the last two years we have had awful wet
Townllhlp with producer I.Qwell Jtfftnl, who plintH tht tobtcco. D1mp.
hospitals arc providing care to people showing up on our
springs, and this year,_the second day after nta
chlUy concllt!onl hlvt contributed 110 1 alow 11111 for agrlcljltllrt lil the
doorstep. I think children should be a first priority, :but
I set tobacco, it was 38 degrees out here." lrtll.
·
·
·
that program doesn 'I address o.lder people, like young
But farmers who started their crop early have been faring bet~ problems ·getting corn in because of soggy fields, but t~e situa·
parents, who have healt~ concerns too.''
··
ter than 1996, when many were unable to get into their fields tion is muth improved over last year,' she noted.
In 1996, Ohio's 202 huspitals received $340 million
because of' excessive rainfall, Bymes said.
·
.
A dry season is critical to fight infection from diseases and
in federal Medicaid payments under the disproportionate
"Depending on the soil type, some pruducers experienced
Contlnuld on PIP, 142
Contlnulcl on page 142
-"

Multi~state · chase leads ·t o arrest of_
We·s t Vi·r ginia man
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme•Sentlnel Stiff
POMEROY • A 30 year-old Harmony,
W.Va. man is in the Ross Coul)ly Jail follow·
ing a police chase Friday -evening that stai1ed
in Jackso11 County, W.Va. lind took in some 30
miles of Meigs County roads.
· '·
According to the Meigs ~unty Sherift's
Department, Daniel S. Fisher led an unnamed
officer from the Raven~ood Department,
several Meigs COunty deputies oDd an Ohio
State Highway Patrol trooper on a 43-minute
chaSe, after the Ravenswood officer ·noticed
that Fisher was driving with stolen license
plates on his vehicle.
The officer had tried to stop Fisher on the
William S. Ritchie Bridge~ but Fisher failed to
pull over. The Meigs County Sherift's Depart·

menl was then notified, and the chase sot tires on a vehicle. Fisher traveled another half·
underway. Fisher turned left at the foot of the mile before his vehicle was completely disabled.
Moderate damage was reported to David·
bridge, heading toward Racine, and traveled on
·
son's
cruiser, and light to -moderate damage to .
State Routes 338 and 124, as well as Tanner's
· Run Road, Sycamore Grove Road, Portland Trussell's.
David · Moore, Prosecuting ".Attorney in
Road, Elige Hill Road, Nease Hollow Road,
Bashan Road and Apple Grove/Dorcas Road. Jackson County, W.Va. said that Fisher will be
· Deputies Scott·Trussell, Robert Beegle and charged witli a third offense of d~iving under
Ben Davidson, as well as Trooper Brian Pack the influence, 'a sceond offense of- driving
from the Ohio State' Highway Patrol pursued under a DUI suspension, ilttcmpted murder,
Fisher to·Apple Grove Doras Road and Mile assault on a police officer, battery on a police
Hill Road, where Fisher struck Davidson's officer, obstructing josticc, failure to yield to
. crui~r. which was parked a! the intersection - an officer's signal, possessing stolen license
· .'
awaiting Fisher's a"ival at the SCC!IC. .
· plates 'ild destruction of property.
Sheriff James Soulsby ·said that he-under·
. When F'IShcr backed up, he struck another
cruiser, driven by Trassell. He was finally stands that Fisher fired shots ill the
stopped when Pack, used a 'stop Slick,• a tire Ravenswood officer's cruiser, resulting in the
deflation device that uses spikes to puncture charges of .attempted murder and relalcd

counts of violence to an officer.
In Meigs . County; Fisher will be charged
with three counts of felonious assault, one
felony count of stolen license plates, a felony
count of fleeing, driving under the il\fluence,
no operator's license and fictitious tags.
There arc also WJI!Tants on file for a parole
violation;'DUI and no insurance, according to
the sheriff's departmen.t report.
Sheriff Soulsby commended the officers
wbo took part in the chase, saying they did an
'excellent jpb of keeping Fisher boxed in'
during the chase. Soulsby also said that the
officers' -attempts were aided greatly by calls
that were received at the sheriff's office from
residents along the chase route, who listened
to the incident on their scanners and called to
advise the dispatcher of Fisher's location.

Bea.r .-company~s 'Emily and Emmet' make it to television
f!tf CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.QVC Augusl16.
·
.
sold primarily
Tlrnt.Stntlntl Stiff
·
· Emily and Emmet arc 14-inch handcraft·
in Ohio and
MIDDLEPORT- The Ohio River Bear - ed fuUy jointed bears made .with acrylic fabwestern· penn·
Co. ·of Middle)l!lrt is one of 20 Ohio small . ric and dressed in green plaid outfits. They
sylvania. Then
businesses and entrepreneurs select¢ tq are two of many lllyles of bears created by
six re~scnta·
ihowcasc their pi'O\Iucts and services on the the Oh~o · River Bear Co, Seven ~undred ·
lives began sell·
QVC cable television program at the Obio bears are being prepared for the show.
ing them at var·
State Fair.
.
.
Starting as a one-person bome businesa in
ious gift mans
. Susan llaker, owner of the C91111*!Y· 1988, The Ohio River Bear Co. has grown
and
shows
which produces a variety of jointed ~ by Icapa and bounds · over the past nine
around
the
will be scllina . "Emily" and 'l!nmlol"(,llll ·years.
.
country.
The bears were first sold at aaft fairs and
Today they arc .
throuah odnllanme~\ at ncliby ahops. Then _
sold not only
-" independent manut~urer's represent&amp;·
all over the
tive became intercatcd in selling the bears United States, .but in JaJllln, Hong Kong.
tor. the oompany. That niarked the comp1· Enaland, Germany and Canada. Baker's
nt• elllry into thc ~~~~ bUIIIICII. · company has over 600 wholesale cuatomell!
For the first ~ llf_fCIII the bears Were and i1 now hand making about 25 dilferc111
0

'

I .
CHEVROLET• OLDSMOBILE • ·LEKUS •
'

.
'

t.
•

'
''

I

•

'

~ '

'

•

.

•'

f .

bear models in various sizes and styles.
The business started in the century old
brick house. of the B_akers on Fourth Street·
with Susan doins all the designing, sewing, .
costuming and selling.
Ai. the business grew, more and more of
the Baker home was used for producing ·
bears to fill orders. It became evident that
.the time had oomc to find larger quarters.
A building in mid-downtown ~iddleport
was rented for the business unul last year
when Baker purchased the former Meadows
buildina as a permanent home for her bear
business. .
.
.
Production of the bears takes place In the
rear pan of thc IUJC buildlna and a retail
lhop opc!llel in the front. To the retail bull·
cantlnUICI on page AI

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