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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
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Reds 5-1

Pick 3:
2t4
Pick 4:
9124

&amp;porta on hge 4

Buc"eye 5:

humble

A chance ol ahciwera,
thunderstorm• tonight,
low In the lOa, Thurselay,
high In the 80s.

1-8-18-26-35

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· 'el. 41, NO. 44
•01117, Ohio 11111'-Y Publlehlng Compeny

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wtdneaclay, June18, 1997

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2 S,Ctlol•, 12 P8QH. ~­

A GMnett co. News~ rp .-

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OBES, food banks receive unexpected funds
By PAUL SOUHRADA
- !hat had been schCduled to close · assistant state budget directo.r.
Aiaoclllted Press Writer
in a cost-cutting move.
Altogether, the state is expected to
COLUMBUS - Lawmakers
The committee; acting on · a save $81.9 million over lhe two
worldng on thll state budget have request from Go~. George Voinovich, years because of the decline in the
spread some of lhe wealth created by added another $780,000 to reopen the number of welfare recipients.
lower-lhan-expected welfare spend- . OBI;S office in Elyria to serve Ford
Rep. Vernon Sykes, D-Akron,
ing and higher tax receip.ts to unem· Motor Co. employees who are said it was only right.that some of the
ployment offices and food banks.
expected to lose their jobs when lhe benefits .of lhe improving economy
The joint conference committee automaker shuts down its Avon Lake should filter down to the less fortunegotiating differences between the · plant.
nate.
House and Senate versions' of the
The committee also approved an
But Republicalis on the committee
$36.1 billion spending plan on Tues- amendment that would give $1 .5 mil- rejected an attempt by Sen. Judy
day gave tile Ohio Bureau of lion in ·each of the two years begin- Sheerer, D-Shaker Hejghts, t.o
Employment Services $5.5 million to · ning July .I to food banks around the increase lhe money going to the food
keep open 14 offices - which dis- "·,state. The money would come from banks by ano!her $4.5 million a
tribute unemployment benefits and the 11nuseil portion of the state's food year.
help out-of-work Ohioans find jobs .stamp program, said Paolo tleMatia,
Sheerer also lost a batile to strip,

lhe budget of a 'series or tax breaks for
businesses. She wanted lhe money to
· go instead to primary and secondary
education. .
"This is not a time when we
should be talking about business tax
cuts," she said. She noted !hat a task
force commissioned by Voinovich is
considering,tax increases to pay for
a new school funding system to
replace the one declared unconstitutional by lhe Ohio Supreme Court in
March.
House conservatives lost a proposal to block .state family planning
money from going to health clinics'
that provide abortion counseling.

The conference committee instead amount of spending on kinl!ergarten
opted for Senate language that through 12th-grade educaiion and at
stopped money from going to clinics public colleges and universities.
that mat;e abortion referrals.
· Sen. Roy Ray, R. Akron, said the
Committee members held off a tax cut will remain at the $285.7.mil- ·
decision on a House plan tO require lion figure proposed by.Voinovich.
the statewide computer library netHouse conservatives wanted to
work to block online pornography return about $538 million through a
from computer-savvy children. The tax-cut mechanism that is supposed
Senate, in its version of the budget, to automatically refund taxes when
wanted individual libraries to take revenues come in above projections.
steps to block obscene materials.
Committee members hoped to
Rep. Joan Lawrence,' R-Galcna. finish work on the budget plan by
said lawmakers were still tcying to Thursday, with votes ·tentatively
come to an.agreement.
scheduled in the House and Senate
Also still up for discussion: the next week. The current blidgct
size of an income tax refund and the expires June 30.
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Racine
·water rates
established

;spd, v6, power stfeting, 4 wheel andlock brakes, As IDw As...

1191·

4\lP, ah; AMJFM.-4 door,Asi.owAs•••

Racine Village Council took final
action Monday night on an ordinance
· establishing water rates in the village.
Council met in recessed session at
lhe municipal· building and gave a
third reading and final approval to the
ordinance. The rate for residential.
customers is now $12 for 4,000 gallons with an additional 30 cents. per
I00 gallons used over 4,000 gallons.
· The ordinance follows lhe recent·
installation of water meters in the vii-.
lage. .
In addition, council also approved
·Oie~piireliase 'of 'aPJ!i'til imlleiY:·;Qi.
·too~-efstone for ~illa~e chip al'lliqt .
proJeCfs, •' '
.
,
Letart· Township workers and
equipment will be' used with lhe vii·
!age paying for workers' wages,
materials and use of equipme~t. The
· Action VISTA Bloraglonall~m conference held
alleys, cemetery road and the walk·
J~!~u:;~~ EXERCISE • Foretter Ted King
at the Carpenter Inn.
cc
1
group
exercise
during
ihe
Rural
way at Star Mill Park will be chipped
and.scaled.
Council will also attempi to.make
.repairs at the boat launch since it was
•reportcd.lhat boaters are having prob·lcms at the upper edge of the ramp.
Council also approved the purchas~
:of paint for the fire department anneK
·so workers· can paint the building
Area:community members 'gath·
He said that stlch indicator pro·
before the July ·4 celebration,
David Spencer, SiKth Street, met · ered recently at the Carpenter Inn in jects which are occurring world wide, ·
with council requesting a copy of the rural Meigs County for a rural action · serve as alternatives to traditional
plans for the section of Broadway conference, "Bioregionalism· and economic indicators and measure
Street that was recenrly surveyed.
Appalachia Ohio."
progress toward regional sustainabil. He was told that !here are no plans
The conference was the third in a it\o.
.
· at this time.
·
. ' three part series dealing with the · "Sustilinability indicators are fun·
Jeff ThorntOn, county commis- · deveiopment of sustainable commu- damentallyditTerent from traditional
sioner and former mayor, had asked . nity indiclltors for Appalachia Ohio. economic indicators like · Gross
The first conference· which was DomeStic .Pruduct in lhat .lhey are
touncil to use ' the street to access
property he purchased from the held in November focused on basic grassroots driven.'
, IIIARK COHEN
Meigs County Public Library 8oard. . human needs while .the second. con- ·
'That is, !hey are select6d, monThe conference began with a pre·
Thc street had never been closed .ference held in February focused on itored, and reported on by the comsentation
by local resident Mark
and since it was a dead-end had not alternative economic strategies.
munity-at-large. Traditional economCohen,
renown
expert on bioregionbeen used, it was noted. The survey
Participants grappled with the ic indicators like Gross Domestic
alism.
Cohen
is
the· founder and
was done so council.would know the question: 'What can be measured to Product and unemployment rate do
exact location ·of the road. ·
gauge the health of the Appalachian not measure a community's true director of both lhe Belize AgroCouncil told Spencer !hey appre- . Ohio bioi'ejlion?" Some of the ideas health," Stlid cBstle.
· forestry Research Center in· Central
ciated ·him mowing lhe section, but raised during this small group exer"The ·indicators we've been devel- America and Tropical ConscNatiori
added that a village worker would do cise inclu~d species diversity, water oping thanks to the grassroots input Foundation in Athens. Mark's speech
the mowing if he chose not to con- quality, environmental literacy rate, from these three conferences Ifill focused on the importance of com·
tinue mowing it.
population srowth. and consumption helpAppal~hi,a Ohio become part of munity II)Cmbers developing a healthDiscussion was held on the need rates.
a· worldwide movement toward the ier relationship with their environfor a new mower. Mayor Scott Hill
Group facilitators included Ted use of altemati.ve measurements of merit.
. Following Cohen's presentation,
said he would check to see what the King, forester of the U. S. forest Ser· societal health Once these indicators
price is on the state bid purchase pro- vjce, Scott Miller of the Monday are fully developed, we will be able Ted King spoke on sustainable forest
gram . . ;
.
Creek Restoration Project. Chris to measure genuine progress wilhin management practices, one of the
A committee is to. report back in Anderson of Rural Action's Vinton the areas of human needs, economics, region's mostsalient issues. His pre1uly on the list of tr~e.s requiring County office, and Ci!lin Donahue of and the environ~J~ent," continued sentation underlined the need to bal·
. ance current demand of · forest
attention. Hill asked they be listed in Rur11l Action's Athens office.
·
Castle,
order by priority.
"The community input gathered · •According to lhe Rural Action reSources with lhe needs of future
In olher business, council;
from this series of confcreoccs serves VISTA coordinator, fully researched generations.
For more information on the
·•• Approved the purchase of a as the building blocks for Rural aDd m:voloped iDclicll,t!!fS will be
radio and dehumidifier.
&gt;
Action's projcct··"Sustainable Com- presented to the public for thc pur- researcll and development of sus•• Approved the request of Wayne munity indicators for Appalachia pose of gatJ!cring feedback from lhe tainable community indicators for
Lyons, Broadway Street, to pla,ce a · Ohio," said Rural Action VISTA \ community. This will occur ar a Appalachia Ohio, residents !lillY conculvert on Sixth Sircet so his lot will Chris Castle wbo serves as the pro- major conference to be held late lhis . tact Castle or Paul Logue of Rural
Cootinaed oa pqe 3 ·
ject coordinator.
fall.
·
Action at 614-767-4938.

House, Senate
work·on :· E-check
compromise
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - Sen, Gary
Suhadolnik and Rep. Tom Johnson ·
agree on one thing when it comes to
E-chcck. Both would like the issue to
gQ away.
.
"I can understand how all of' us
would like to get rid !)f tliis issue,"
. , JohnJI~. R-New-Concord,.silid.l\.lcsdQy .JlCfqrc • !~ttl House' v'otcd 'Uilanimou~(y· to ..rcjel:t Senate changes to
the controvcr,;ial auto cmis.•ions testing prograw.
"But more work n~cds LO be

M·e igs hosts rural
action conference

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IS Package, 5sp4 powu sttuiog, alnmlunm
wheeh; air, AM/FM ('398 lie, As low As...

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Tobacco ta.l ks. sna·g, walkout .h inted
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CHEVRD'fi • .8lDSMD.IlE •lEKUS
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• WASliiNGlPN (AP)- Tobacco Drug Administnition nicotine .regu(alks have hit lhc biaest impuse yet, · lations. ' .
.
as negotiators issue whllt may 'be a ·. ·":The tQbacco indus!TY must be
· ~nal ultimatur:n ~cmanding strict , , pu~ishc,d for, ~~ !'!isconduct. must,
· l!lvernment nacotme ' control and m11ntaln the1r hab1hty for the future
''punishment" of the cigarette indus- ... and nicotine lias to be regulaled by
~~y,
thc FDA," Moore said. "They will
Mississippi Attorney Gcnel'l!l sive us what we want, or we will go
~hael Moore said Tuesday 110 hid • to trial."
.
rei\4Md industry calla for procectioil
"They
to really and tna'lll!!at payjng punitive .d amipl to ly hun,"
FIQrida AIWIMY
sk~ lmokon and called "molt con- General Boll Buttcntorth,llllfY that
""liout" lhc fighi over Food and tobacco companies were even resist·

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ing calls 19 8dmit their products are industry then would be liable only for
dangerous•.
punitive damages in the future.
"It's nota cave.in," said one J!Cr·
One source said tobacco foes
· could walk awa~ from tlJc talks a 'son close to lhe talka. "It's a .ettJc.
early as today unless the litdustry inent for put conduct." .
On the FDA issue, cigarette-mak·
offers a viable counteroffer. .· .
ers
Were pullhing to make lhc agency
But privately, one aeJoliator' said
a faction still is pu'lhing a comPJO- win coti~onal pe!111iuion before
.mile: a lulilp-sum payment that is it COilld ever bu niC()tine. The FD.\.
pert of lhc esdnwed $300 biUiolllill- abo would bave to - t c:enain
tlemet~t. to .10 either to the 11ate1 or llli1dards sbowitiJ it hid .proof that
for some "IQod deed"suc:h a health even lowering nicotine levels would
care for ·uninsured children. Tbe bolp public health, llid one soun:e.

done."
Suhadolnik, R-Strongsvillc, would
like tllat work done as quickly as possible: " I want to get this thing out of
here."

Both men likely will be part of the
joint conference committee that will
sit down to work out a compromise
on the legislation to replace the
unpopular tests with a less-intrusive
tailpipe test in northeast Ohio and the
Cincinnati-Dayton area.
The E' chcck program, created
after 14 Ohio counJies foiled to meet
standards under the 1990 federal
Clean Air Act, ha' been criticized
since it began two years ago.
Motorists have complained about
damaged cars, long Jines at testing
centers and unnecessary repairs.
House members objected to the
Senate's removal of a tax credit that
would hove reimbursed motorists for
lhc cost of lhc test. And they said lhcy
w~re concerned about the cost of the
scaled-down program.

... When we voted for this, the
majority of us felt it was marginally
acceptable," said Rep. Ron Young, RPainesville.
.Particularly bothersome was an
amendment that lifted a requirement
that the Legislature .approve any
expansion of testing beyond the orig·
ina! 14 counties. Expansion would be
.\Ill ~!lll!t;. En.vjronm_e~tal. Pr~tcction
J"gcni;y. . ' .
.
,. i hta'l was' ''lila •much fpr Young,
who only jlrudgingly voted for the
original E·chcck legislation the
House approved in April .
."We n.ccd to tell these egotistical.
tailpipe snifling federal hureaucrms
to take their probes and get nut of the
state of Ohio." he said.
· · Suhadolnik said he. too, had a
problem with the amendment. But he
added that other House nhjections
were ha,ed on misunderstanding of
thc .hill's language.
Johnson said sending the hill back
for fun her work also would give the
state time to deal with proposed' new
clean air standards 'federal officials
arc expected to'issue in mid-July . .
One other hurdle still stands in the
way.
Gov. George Voinovich· has said
he ·would veto even the version the
Senate pa.scd last week. He believes •
the E-chcck program should remain
in place imtila viable, cost-effective
alternative is found.
. In the tcsts;vehicle.s ore placed on
rollers and run at various speeds
while lh,cir emissions arc analy1.ed for
·ozone panicles and other pollutants .

GOP bill·would end race .
and ·gender preferences
WASHINGTON- Congression- that clearly. But we will continue, :
al ·Republicans, who reject President respectfully, to disagree with them," :
Clinton's "mend it, don't end · it" he said.
view of affirmative action, are renewReferring to last year '.&lt; hill,
ing efforts to climin~tc race and gen· McCurry said, ... It was subjcet to a
der classifications from federal pro- veto threat and nu doubt, as we sec
grams. The White HouSe is threaten· the final version of this legislation, if
it is the same it will be so again."
ing a veto.
.
The bill McConnell and Rep .
A similar move stalled in the last
Congress. The issue, meanwhile, Charles Canady, R-Aa., arc sponsorcould prove tricky for a political par· ing would "Jlrohibit discrimination
ty that's trying to bring more'minori· and . preferential treatment" by ·the
. federal government on the basis of
ties oo board. ·
But with Clinton's recent call for race, color, national origin or sex . .
· a nation.! discussion . about racial
"Mr. President, preferences arc
issues, Republicans felt it was the ·wrong. Talk is cheap. Let's act. End
right time to reintroduce their bill.
it, don 't mend it," said &amp;cp. David
"Every time the government · Mcintosh, R-Ind., one of 46 Repubgrants a preference to one person lican· co-sponsors of the Civil Rights
based on ra&lt;:e or gender, it discrimi· Act ofl997.
nates against another based on race or
Under 'the bill, the federal gov- ·
gender," Sen. Mitch McConnell, R· cmment would be prohibited from
Ky., said at a news conference Tues· granting preferences in contracting,
day.
employment an.d other programs or
"Discrimination by any oth~r activities to people based on race,
·name is still discrimination," he said. color, national origin or sex.
. Presi'dential spokesman Mike " It also would prohibit the federal
McCurry . reiterated thC administra- government from requiring or
tion's opposition to eliminating affir· encouraging federal contraciors, submative action.
con.tractors and recipients of govern"We have not solved problems ment assistance to srant such prcferrelated to discrimination in the work- e~.
place and sometimes 011e wonders
'I1!e government runs more !han
whclher those who advocate abol· I SO .race- and ge!"dcr-based pro-ishing affirmative action understand grams, McConnell said.
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Wedneld8y, ,June 18, 1197

CotnnJentary
.The Daily .Sentinel

-2r.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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Excerpts from other.
Ohio newspapers .
By The Associated Press
.
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers: Akron Beacon Journal. June 16.
This newspaper has long opposed the death penalty.
We've been troubled by how arbitrarily it is applied in the criminal-justice.system. We have doubts that it deters crime. We still hold those views.
We also understand and respect the decision of 12 jurors in Denver to
sentence Timothy McVeigh to death. '
· ·
McVeigh committed the worse act of domestic terrorism in the nation 's
history when he set off a bomb that destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah federal
building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people.
It hardly takes a great leap to recognize that if the country has a death
penalty, few would seem more deserving to face execution.
The emotions at work were powerful. The testimony of friends and fam ily members in·both the trial and the penalty phase conveyed the ruins that
McVeigh left behind. The jurors, however, weren 't driven simply by .their
gut. They followed the law in handing down their sentence.

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The Columbus Dispatch, June IS
For several years, refonn of the· nation's welfare system has engaged Congress and state Legisl.atures as much as any other issue.
'Small wonder: Finally there has been almost unanimous agreement that
the old system just didn't work.
Fortunately, the Ohio House has moved swiftly this year on welfare, taking the high road throughout. All constituencies had their say during legislative hearings, and compromises were made on the tough issues.
The timing of this refonn is fortuitous. The statC:s welfare rolls continue to drop- with 495,000 Ohioans currenrly receiving benefits. the fewest
since 1979. Certainly the robust economy and low unemployment rate are
major reasons for this.

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The Lima News, June 14
.
There may be an explanation for why so many pundits and politicians
couldn't make a distinction between the cases of Gen. Joseph Ralston and
Lt. Kelly Flinn: They·are blinded by feminist ideology.
Ralston is the Air Force general who last week removed himself from
consideration to be chainnan of the Joint Chiefs of Staff after a decade-old
·affair came to light. Flinn was drummed-out of the Air Force after adultery
charges against her caused a firestonn .
To judge by the cries of liberal members of Congress and many in the
media, this situation typifies the military double -standard whereby women
are supposedly treated mon!· harshly than men.
But evidence shows the military prosecutes far mure .mcn than women
on adultery charges. And the Ralston and Flinn affairs were hardly alike.
Ralston 's action was wrong. Yet in no way did it jeopardize military order,
as Ainn's actions did. She recently was involved with the spouse of a woman
. in the military, so it had a direct bearing on discipline in the ranks. Flinn
compounded her problems by lying and defying orders to cut off the affair.
The Times-Leader of Martins Ferry, June 8
When it .comes to the Internal Revenue Service. being a big winner can
really mean you're a big loser.
·
A cas~ in point is Raymond Holcomb of Tonawanda, N.Y. The 25-yearold won a TV contest last year in which the prize was a concert in his back
yard by rock star John Mellencamp.
Then the IRS found out about it. The bureaucrats decided the prize was
- taxable income and valued the show at $11,700.
·The IRS and state tax offtcials sent him tax bills for $2,496.
Unfortunately. Holcomb doesn't have the money to pay the taxes. He has
- muscular dystrophy and can barely talk.
. Mellcncamp officials hope to work out a way to take care of the tax bill ..
And though we 're sure they've got the .money, we think the whole.thing is
- ridiculous . .
The Holsomb case points out how bureaucrats. tucked away anonymously
in their offices, make decisions which affect people's lives without havmg
the slightest idea with whom they're dealing.

Berry•s World .
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by NEA, lt!C.
"I rtJCbmmend that you reduce ·stress by NOT trying
to tJe MARTHA STEWART. •

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Kathryn Philson
W.VA.

!roday's weather.forecast
Ohio forecast
' Tonight. .. Partly cloudy with
j:Jatchy dense fog developing late.
Lows 60 to 6S.
··.. Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs
fro.m the upper 70s northeast to the ·
lllid 80s south.
: Extended forecast

Joseph Perkins

first quarter productiv.i ty
by- 2.6 percent
..increases
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Clarence Thomas. These were white
men who viewed thc.mselves as liberal-minded on matters·of race. They
probably even voted f6r Bill Clinton.
That's something that Alexis
Dixon can relate to. He labored four
years for a nonprolit organization,
raismg hundreds of thousands of
dollars In grants, while developing
several youth and adult assistance
programs.
Dixon decided to· resign after
receiving a mediocre performance
review from his liberai boss. Among
the areas in which the black professional was . found . waiuing was
"appearance." "I couldn't believe
what I was reading, '' says Dixon, "as
I sat there in my Arm ani suit. "
· Dtxon's former boss is the kind or
white liberal who shows up at Martin Luther King Day brcakfa.~ts , who
proclaims how "colorblind" they
arc , who likes Ln accuse white conservatives

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. Groups participating in the ninth
annual Ohio River Sweep Saturday
morning will meet at four Meigs
County locations.
In the Racine &amp;rea, volunteers will
meet at the 01' Ferry Landing Park
shelter house near the hoat ramp. ,'.t·
Pomeroy, the sweep will commence
~m the parking lot stage while volunteers in Middlepon will'rneet at the
River Sweep Banner at Dav~ Diles
Park.
.
·In those three villages, tlie sweep .

will take place from 9 a.m. LO 11:30
a.m. and volunteers should report by
8:45 a.m. wearing old clothes and
shoes. Waiver forms will need signed
and turned it.
ln addition, Meigs County sports·
men clubs and other groups are conducting a clean up from I~ Bellevil.le
Dam to Portland. Pan1c1pants w1ll
mc~t at 8_:30 a.m. at the Forked Run
Oh10 Rtver Boat Launch ncar
Reedsville.

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William A. Teaford
William ''Bill" A. Teaford, 60, Columbus, died Tuesday, June 17, 1997,
at Doctors Hospital West in Columbus.
A son of the late Homer and Josephine Nease Teaford, he was a retired
·truck driver, a member of Teamsters Local 413 and Refiners Transport. He.
worked many years for Armstrong Steel Erectors, Cunard Land Concrete
.Block Company and was served in the Navy Reserves.
He is survived by a son, William A. Jr. and Apryl Teaford; a daughter
and son-in-law, Dorice and Eddie Clark; two grandchildren; two sisters,
Josephine Howard of Cleveland Heights and Rose Kautz of Columbus;
brothers, Ferd Kirby and Roy Teaford of Columbus and Homer Teaford of
Arizonai several nieces and nephews; a companipn, Barbara Cunningham;
and his former wife, Sharon Thacker.
· He was preceded in death by a sister, Elizabeth Teaford, and by a mother- and father-in-law, Jesse and Leora Thacker.
Seryices will be held Friday, 10 a.m. at Jenry Spears Funeral Home, 2693
W. Broad St., Columbus, with Rev. Gene Landon officiating. Burial will
. follow in Forest.Lawn Cemetery. .
Friends may call today, 7-9 p.m., and Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at·the
funeral home.

Voinovich signs five /;Jills
COLUMBUS (AP) -A bill that
expands aggravated robbery to
include the taking of a law enforce·
ment officer's weapon was one of
five bills Gov. George Voinovich has
signed into law.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. EJ.
Thomas, R-Columbus, also increases the penalty for misting arrest
when the offender injures an officer
or threatens-l!ie officer with a dead- .
ly weapon. The bill becomes law in
9() days, Voinovich 's office said in a
news release Tuesday.
The other bills will: ·

- Let county clerks accept
checks, credit cards, wire transfers
and· other methods of payment for
tues due when someone buys a
motor vehicle.
- Allow the owner of a private
dock to low any boat found moored
there without the owner's pennission.
- Permit policyholder-owned
insurance companies to reorganize as
a holding company and issue stock to
raise money.
- Convey a parcel of stateowned land in Stark County to
Leonard Cooper.

LegaUzation of fireworks doubtful

Middlepprt Court news
Five cases were processed by
Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton in
Mayor's Coun on Tuesday evening.
Forfeiting bonds were CharlesW.
Bays, Jr., Gallipolis, $49, speed, and
J.P. Fisher, Middlepon, $60, stop sign
violation.
·

Meigs

Fined were: Edward M. Thac~er,
Middleport, $200 and costs, driving
under court suspension, $25 and
costs, running a red light; Judy M.
Wise, $23 and costs, speed; and Darlene K. Older, Pomeroy, $200 and
·costs, driving under FRA suspension.

annou~cements .·

Werry reunion
The Werry family reunion will be
held Saturday, 4 p.m. at the home of
Jim and Karen Werry, Court Street
Road, in the· Morning Star area near
Racine. All family and friends wei·
come. Rain or shine. Call 949-2746
for more information.

Open door meeting · ·

Syracuse Council
Syrocuse Council will meet in
continued session Thursday, 7 p.m. at
village hall.
Bible school set
Bible school will be held at the
Zion Church of Christ, Harrisonville
Road. 6 to 8 :30 p.m. continuing
through Friday.
·

State Sen. Michael C. Shoemaker
(D-Boumeville) will hold office
hours in Tuppers Plains Thursday, 56 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Volun-.
teer Fire Department. .

,.. --------JI!!!!!!.-

L

. . . . . . IIA'!IDa 8&amp;!'1-.

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

----------

.Coin club to meet
The Oh-Kan Coin Club will hold
its 111onthly meeting Monday, 8 p.m.
at the Middleport At;ts Council Building. New and prospective members
are welcome to attend. Refreshments.
For more information write to the·
Oh-Kan Coin Club, 100 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy OH 45769-1000.
. CCL to have picnk
· The Middleport Child Conservation League will have a family pic·
nic at 2 p.m. Sunday at the home of
Harold and Helen Blackston. New
officers will be installed.

Hospital news .

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

Racine water..

The

Sentinel

Are you 55 .or
older and
Looking for a
. job?

Stocks

S'Utlocribm AOt dah1"1 ., Pill' die carrier may
-"tlo 111- dhoct to Tho Dolly Setolnel
oaa-. lia ar 1 2 - - c..tltwill be

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Meigs EMS .Iogs 7 ~ails

or being "racists."

children. He is a fnnncr prosecutor
who sc•ved in Ronald Reagan's Justice Department. He· was elected
governor of. Massachusetts in 1!190
and promptly begim pushing for'tax
reductions. He trimmed the welfare
rolls and privati1.cd state programs. A
more resolute conservative would he
hard In find.
'"ell
•
,.., , al mos1.
He irritated more than a fe)&gt;l
fanatics when he left the Justice
Department as a protest to Attorney
General Ed Meese's ethical lapses.
He thinks the government has np
right to compel women to give binh
to unwanted children. He supportti
gay rights. He ~anctions the. medici~
nal use 0f mariJuana. And he mild~
the mistake, while running for ~
Senate last year, of not endoninf
Jesse Helms' stewardship oCfll!):iSII
aft'ain. "I am not one of those who
think foreign aid is evil," he said. '

Through May, consumer prices
hav.e been rising at a scant 1.3 percent
annual rate.
At the same time, work~r compensation per hour, wben adjusted for
inflation, rose at a 2.8 percent annual rate, the highest in five years and
much higher than the 0.3-percent gain
registered in the fourth quarter. ·
Hours worked rose at a4,2 percent
annual rate.
The growth of unii-labor costsa key ingredient in pressures on
product prices- accelerated a bit.
They rose at a 2.5 percent' annual rate
in the first quarter, compared with a
2.4 .percent ra1e in the fourth quarter.
· Sluggish productivity growth
since the I !nOs is viewed as the root
of many economic problems.. Though
it fluctuates from quarter to quarter,
it has averaged ahout I percent a year
for more than two decades.
__ By comparison, productivity
increases exceeded 3 percent a year
in the 1960s.

Memorial serviees for Kaihryn Philson, 91, Racine, who died April 9,
1997. at Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy, will
be held Saturday, I I a.m. at the Letart Falls Comctery Chapel in Letart Falls.
Born' Feb. I, 1906, in Racine, daughter of the late Frederick and Regina May Hayman Philson, she was a college professor in teaching and
research.
She graduated from Racine High School in 1923 and received a bachelor's degree from Ohio University in 1928; a master's degree from OU in
1929; a Ph.D. in household equipment and foods from Iowa State University in 19S3; taught at Auburn University from 1953 to I963; Virginia Tech
from 1963 to 1973, and received a WINE award for excellence in teaching
from Virginia Tech in 1971 prior to retiring in 1973.
She is survived by a sister and brother-in-law, .Mary Lou and Theron Johnson of Racine; two nephews; two nieces and cousins and several great-nieces
and great-nephews.
She was preceded in death by a brother, Ben H. Philson.
Father David DuPiantier will officiate at the memorial service and
arrangements are under direction of Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood,

COLUMBUS (AP) -More peo- priewy IIChools, such u electrOOics
.pic would be eligible to J*liciJIIIC in aod ca&amp;metology schools.
Ohio's prepaid college tuition pro- Expanding the use of credits
gram under the proposed two-year for hooks as weU as tuition and fees.
state budget blueprint.
Ms. Jenninas said she is hopeful d;le
"What we're trying to do is to. federal government might soon allow
open up the plan to more Ohioans," the credits to also be used for room
Barbara Jennings, executive director and board.
.- Allowing enrollment if either
..of the Ohio Tuition Trust AuthOrity,
.
the pufChaser or the beneficiary is an
said Tuesday. .
The program allows participants . Ohio resident: Currently, the program
to purchase for children tuition uniLS is open only to Ohio children. .
that may later be used at any public
· "I don't expect this to double our .
or private accredited school in or out numbers," Ms. Jennings said. "This
of Ohio. One hundred units equal the just opens it up ... as long as there is ·
average yearly cost for a state-sup- an Ohio connection ."
.
The language, added in the~
ported school in Ohio.
Ms. JenninllS said plan officials last month, was approved MQ!iday by
. had asked lawmakers working on~ the legislative committee worki111 out
state budget to alter the program to differences between the House end
take advantages of changes in fedcr- Senate versions of the $36.1 billion
al law - an9 to clarify state law budget package. •
·
· regarding' concerns raised by grandAbout . S9,000 students are
parents, divorced parenLS and other enrolled in the plan, which has assets
relatives who wanted to enroll a child of $250 million, Ms. Jennings said..
who lives outside of
The price of a tuition unit'- now at
Among the change
posed in $42- is adjusted each year to reHect
the budget:
the costs of college tuition.
- Credits could be used at pro:

Veterans Memorial
COLUMBUS (APJ- An attempt because of the legalitation ' issue.
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
by lawmakers to )egalize bottle rock- Voinovich said he is talking with lcs· None.
ets and firecrackers appears to be fiz- islative leaders about finding a'comTuEsDAY DISCHARGE· Juani·
zling.
.
promise.
ta Ratliff. ·
Gov. George Voinovi~h said Tues"My preference would be that we
· d~y that he opposes part of the fi!'"- would not legitimatize Class C fire .works safety bill that would legal1ze works," Voinovich said. "I'm not
some uplosives.
sure that's the bcsl public policy."
Ohio law currently allows the sale
Rep. John Carey, R- Wellston,
of Class C fireworks, but requires introduced the bill in response to the
buyers to take them out of state to fireworks store explOsion and fire last
usc. The new legislation would elim- )uly that killed nine people in Scot·
town, a village in his southern Ohjo
inate that requirement.
,
"I'm afraid that if wt do that, district.
The
bill
includes
stricter safety
we'll have mOfl' facilities selling fire.
.
rules
relating
to
the
sale-,
storage and
3:25 p.m., Mill Street, Middleport, works," Voinovich said. "We'll have
;. Units of the Meigs County Emcrmore kids and families with tragedies exhibition of fireworks. It would
aency Medical Service recorded sev- Kirsten Zornes, VMH;
require improvements it\ fireworks
on
their hand." · ·
·
R:04 p.m., Broadway Street, Midpn calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
stores,
such as wider aisles, and
The
fireworks
bill,
awaiting
a
dleport, Charles Young. tneated at the
sesponding included;
mandate
sprinkler systems.
vote in the ·senate, has been held up
scene;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:48 .p.m., state Route 143;
• 6:38 a.m., New Portland Road,
•
Pomeroy,
Florence Musser, treated at
·'Joseph Connolly, Veterans Mcmori~.
the scene; ··
·
;oallqued from page 1
al Hospital; .
·.
9:35
p.m
..
Barringer
Ridge
Road,
; 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy Parking Lot,
1 oseph Connolly, treated at the scene; Portland, Louise Anhurs, Jackson have a rear entrance. ·
road.
'r'
. . . . Oeneral.
-"Set July 7, 7 p.m. as the time for
-- Noted complaint's conce~ning
POMEROY ·
yard sale signs left on poles. The the public' hearing on the proposed
8:20 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road, signs eventually. fall from the poles 1998 village budget. The budget will
Daily
Danny Salyers, VMH.
into ditches and plug up the drains. If be available for viewing .at the may(IJSP!i2t~
residents do not stan removing tbcir or's office beginning June 19.
Publi1hed tvery afternoon, Monda, throu&amp;h
signs,
an ordinance may be enacted ·
Present were council members
Friday, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, b)' tho ·
requiring
a
deposit
for
posting
signs
Robert
Beegle. Henry Bentz, John
Ohio Volley PubUdlins c....,..y/Gannctt eo,.
Pumavy, Ohio 45769, 1'11. 992·2156. Se&lt;ood
'
in the village.
1
Dudding and Henry Lyons. Also pre·
Am Ele Power·...................41 118
...... paid .. Pomm&gt;y. Ohio.
-- Acknowledged a letter from sent were Clerk.Karen Lyons, street
Akzo .......~........................;.&amp;&amp; 718
Mtalber: The Auoc:iDied Prn~. ancltbc Ohio
AmrTech ........... _ ••••••.••• 88 7/8
Greg Taylor, Yellowbush Road, who .commissioner Glenn Rizer, firefightNewqla~ !~ AIIOCIMion.
Ashland Qll ..........!..................47
mel with council earlier concerning er David Nei~ler and board ~( pub.
ATIT
........................
.-\
.......
37
318
speeding .motorists on Yellowbush lic affairs members Bobbie Roy.
POSTMASTER; Send lddreu corrections IO
S.nk OM ..........................411112
Tho Dolly Sentinel, I I I Court St., ........y.
Road, lie thanked cO~!!£il .for the
. Council will next "¥'"' at 7 p.m . .
Bob Evan• ...................... 111116
0No45~69.
increased
poli~e
presence
on
the
.
on July 7 at the municipal building.
B~Wanter ............. .-....... 51 314
SUISCRtPTION RATBS
Chemplon .........................11718
...., c.m.r ... - Chlrm Shpa ......................s 3111
0oe Weet... ..................................., .......... $2.00
~=dlng ............................32
Ooe M-............................................... 58.70
lloglll ....... _ .........31 3M
O.Y..-............., ........................ ........SIOl.OO
O't nn.tt .,_,.......... ~ .............11111
SINGLB COPY PRICE
G~r ..........................11114
Dalbo .:.........................................,........ 35 CetiU
Km. ................. ~...~..,.. .......13111

But as McCluskey, Hancock,
Dixon and other black prof~ssionals
have discovered to their chagrin, the
white liberals who profess to
empathize with blacks, to support
equal treatment of blacks in the
workplace, often rail to live up tn
their high-sounding platitudes. And
that is why an inQrdinatc number of ·
black profesSionals in San· Diego
have seen their. pmmising careers
·derailed.
Joseph ·Perkins is a columnist
supervisor~ were not ' .. conscrva~
for the San Diego Union-Tribune
tivcs," were not adherents to the and a commentator rot MSNBC.
philosophies of Newt , Gingrich nr

"Words cannot properly express the
depth of feeling that I have concerning your betrayal of your principles
and all of us on the Chemical
Weapons Convention . ... I ~o longer
consider you a friend . A friend is
someone you can trust. I no longer
trust you." .
·
Whatever it is the zealots ingest,
Jesse Hcmsmusgup1.
1
1 1 't Hc has 1ately taken it upon himself to spike the
career of William Weld, the Rcpublican governor ofMa~sachusetts . Bill ,.
Clinton wants to appoint Weld
ambassador to Mexico. Helms, chair·
man of the Senate Foneign Relations
Committee, set his jaw and said no.
He will ?ot even penni! hearin 11s on
the nom malton.
Weld couldbe abrilliant star in the
GOP salaxy if the radicals would let
him. A Boston blue-blood, he attended Harvard, Oxford and Harvard
Law. He is a family man with five

.

: WASHINGfON (AP)- The prolluctivity of American workers, the
:key to bow fast living standards can
)isc, increased at the fastest rate in
more than three years during the first
three months of the year.
' Productivity grew at a seasonally
. adjusted annual rate of 2.6 percent in
the first quarter, double the 1.3 per·cent rate of the founh quarter, the
.Labor Department said today.
It was the best performance since
,an identical gain in the fou~h quarter of 1993 -and a considerable
lmprovement over the 2 percent estimate released last month.
The ' stellar first-quarter. productivity gain accompanied the fastest
economic growth rate in a decade, 5.8
percenl. Economists cite productivity improvements as an imponanL fac·
tor in keeping a lid on inflation. It
means businesses can raise wages
without increasing their prices
' because workers are producing more
in each. hour of work.
'

River Sweep set for ·Saturday

What motivates these -liverish pills?
potion of dope and pudding and w~sh
B_y .{Qseph Spur
Just to satisfy my curiosity, would it down with' hoozc and try to hitch a
the next mad,dog ideologue who ride on a comct.. Twcnty-fivc years
writes me a sit-on-this letter throw in ago, it was the Comet McGovern.
·a paragraph or two about what makes
you guys so 'sour?
I'm really intrigued. Is it some
kind of special pill, say extract of Now it's Comet Gcphardt.
gall? Or perhaps it is a daily glass of · 'Take the invective the Republican
garlic juice that backs up on you!My right has been hurling recently at Senguess is it's a special 'diet.
ate Majority Leader Trent Lou. Here
I'm talking ahout the thing, what- is .a guy who is rated I00 percent pure
ever it is, that makes you so dyspep- · by such pristine watchdogs as Lhe
tic that you can'teven stand each oth- American Conservative Union and
er. The stuff that make.s the young the Christian Coalition. but perfect is
Turks in the House, say, turn on riot enough for the tr~e sourballs.
S~aker Newt Gi~grich for allegedThey want saints who will die at docly being too nice .to the opposition.
trine's stake ere they strike a com·
Right wing. left wi~g. I'd like to promise.
t
hear from all, although 1 admit I'm
Lott supports a chemical weapons
currently more curious about what agreement, for e~ample, and sudmakes conservatives so choleric and denly he 's a sn~ke. "~ Trent." ·
self-destructive. I already know the wrote Paul Weynch of the Free Con.liberal regimen: They mix up a gress Foundation in a letter to Lou,

Friday.. .I:~air: Lows 60 to 65.
Highs in the 80s.
Saturday... Fair and warm. Lows
in the 60s. Highs in·the upper 80s
and lower 90s.
·
Sunday...A chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Lows in ttie 60s.
Highs 85 to 90.

•

Som.e unlikely.ene'mies of diversity
Two years ago, Hancock was
fired without warning . When he
arrived to work one morning, he was
presented with a two-page. singlespaced tcnnination letter that catlllogucd in detail every criticism . his
employer had about him over six
years of service.
Interestingly. the letter said nothing about his productivity. the business he was generating Tor the bank.
"They wouldn't attack with concrete
criteria, " he says, "so they attacked
with the subjective." · ·
·
They caricatured him as some sort
of threatening figure, even suggesting
he was prone to violence. They
labeled him ·a malcontent who got
along with neither his superiors or his
colleagues.
Yet, n mere matter of weeks before
he was fired, Hancock recalls, he
played a friendly round of golf with
both his immediate supervisor and
one of his co-workers.
·
Was Hancock the victim of an
institutional bias against black professionals'/ Again, I· do not know
enough about his fonnercmploycr to
reach an unequivocal conclusion.
But he docs appear to be part of a pattern in San Diego (hat, he says, "transcends any particular industry.''
,
What I lind most iro'nic about
McCluskey's and Hancock's cases is
that both their fonncr employers
viewed themselves as committed to
"diversity" in the workplace . Their

James Clinton Chevalier, 27, Reedsville, died Monday, June 16, 1997,
at Ohio State University H\)Spital in Cohunbus.
He was born Nov. 8, 1969, in Parkersblq, W.Va.. son of WiUiam and
AJicc Mays Chevalier of Reedsville.
He is survived by three sisten, Rena Chevalier and Rebecca Kille, both
of Reedsville, and Tina Chevalier of Middlepon; three brothers, Keith, Rick
lllld Colin .Chevalier, all of Reedsville; 12 nieces and 12 nephews.
Graveside services will be held Thursday, II a.m. at the Eden Cemetery
in Reedsville with the Rev. Roben Markley officiating. Amngements are
. by White Funeral Home, Coolville.

IND•

.

Joseph Spear

•I

•

Jack Anderson and ~an Molle,r
are writers for United Feature
Syndic:ate, Inc.

truly, refuse to sec racial bias when
By Joseph Perkins
Ken McCluskey is one of a hand- it rears itself. Not so, I respond .
However. I am not. as quick to
ful of black professionals working in .
the securities industry here in San draw the race card as some blacks. I
Diego. Last year, he not ·only made
his r.rm ·, "executive club: · which is .
reserved for the scant I0 percent of ~...:.....;;.:...;:..~.:,.:..:.,...:;_...:;_:...::.;;,:.:,:..=_
brokers who . meet their production do not believe that every time a black
goal, he also. made the firm's·: West person has a problem ·with a white
Coast sales division "winne&gt;S circle" person -- .in the classroom , in ihc
and was invited to attend the firm 's workplace, wherever -- that racism
coveted "national 'masters" trip.
must be involved. I am willing to give
By all accounts: McCluskey was whites the benefit of the doubt until
successful, handling more than 250 I see prima-facie evidence of bigotry
clients, generating millions of dollars on their part.
in busincss'for ·his brokerage house
Like the Texaco Controversy, in
and earning six-figur~s in salary and which the oil company 's executives
commission . Ycl. a little more than· a · were recorded making racist statemonth ago. McCluskey was uncere- ments. Or the Denny's dispute, in
moniously fired.
which the company was charged
His finn jettisoned him over a dis- with contemptuous treatment of black
pute with a client. And unlike other patrons. In hoth cases. there was hard
brokers who' ve had similar disputes evidence of racial bias.
with clients, M.:(luskcy was oiTcrcd
I don ' t knnw enough about
neither arbitration (to try to resolve McCiu kkey's former employer. one
the matt~r) or even an.opporu.inity to
of the nation's lending brokerage
resign rather than he fired.
houses, to conclude whether ht was
This disparity is attributable to one a victim of racism. But his terminaIactor. he says. His complexion . "If tion docs appear to be part of a patI had been white ," he says. "it tern here in San Diego. which rriay be
would never have happened ." sheer coincidence or may suggest a
McCluskey believes his bosses had a subtle hias against successful black
diff1cult time dealing with a black professionals by local employers.
achiever and were looking fm just the
For instance, Roy Hancock spent
right chani:e to get rid of him. "I am six years doing home · loans for a
the only su.:ccssful African-American major bank. During his best years. he
any of these guys ever managed," he did more than $20 mi Ilion worth of
loans. which was quite an achievesays.
I mention McCluskey's case ment as he was not assigned. to the
because some of my reailcrs think . more al'llucnl areas of town where
that black conservatives, like yours home prices were highest.

.James C. Chevalier

MICH.

By

••

Budget lnciudes expansion
of prepaid tuition program

~~faa-

and Jan MoHer

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-982·2156 • Fax 982·2157

The Deity SenUnet •,..... 3

Tllll'lllay, June 19

By Jack Anderson

gigolos skilled at seducing high-lev- Medical Services (OMS) soothingly general? Excuse me, while I find my
el West Gennan government secre- reassured its agents: " AIDS is 100 spem1acide •.or pack of Trojans?
The onslaught of AJDS around the taries and other officials. But reuni· percent preventable. Scientists who
Second, the CIA warned, "Avoid
~lobe has put something of a crimp lied Gennany's once-cavalier Cas- study the transmission of disease any intercourse with high-risk iridirn the style of the world 's best spies.
point out that the pattern of HIV dis- viduals or individuals from high-risk
Pillow talk cim be perilous.
semination has been well investigat- areas of the world." This practically
Spies risking life and limb for
Jack Anderson ed, and the virus relies entirely on makes Africa off-limits, and puts a
their country 's cause usually accept.
sexual contact, parenteral infusion, or damper on European amour as well.
and ·
the nonnal risks presented by gunon perinatal circumstances ."
. ll'lllso means spies should avoid getshots, poi son and other dangers with
So, the document continued, ting their infonnation from gay conJan Moller
equanimity. The best and bravest
''while an AiDS vaccine or a disease tacts, hemophiliacs or intravenous
shrugged these off as an acceptable
cure is not yet a reality. preventive drug users.
hazard of their trade.
sanovas seldom leave home without · measures are very effective." In this
Third, " Do not accept any transBut AIDS has been another mat- condoms these days.
message, sent to its spy stations· fusion of bl.ood or any blood product
ter altogether. "There has been a big
The CIA is no differ~nt. Top CIA around the globe, the CIA offered that has not been screened for
change," one top CIA official con- offi cials well know that some of its seven specific warnings designed to AIDS. " Obviously a bit difficult in
fided to our associate Dale Van Alta. agents still ge.t useful intelligence protect. its spies.
. . ·
Borneo or some other 'Third World
"Even Russia's most avid female infonnation the old-fashioned way,
First, they urged, " Do not panic- locale that daesn 't exactly have modagents are balking at having unpro- · by bedding their target's and listening . ipate in unprotected vaginal inter- em equipment in their medical ceotected sex with a.target."
to them brag. But without the evil course unless it is within a stable rei a- ters, much le55 know the test for .
J;'a[l of this has been the march of empire to combat: it's difficult to jus- · tionship,.otherwiseuse condoms and AIDS antibodies in blood.
·
Founh, '' Do not accept any treatdemocracy that has overtaken most of tify ordering an agent to risk a debii- spennacide. "
the countries with the most servile . itating, deadly disease in order to
Considering that spies who have ment involving a needle or' injection
spies. The KGB 's Mala Haris , once tease some new secret from the tar- the knack arc not discouraged from unless you are cenain the facility uses
successful at seducing foreign digni - get.
striking up a quickie relationship with sterile disposable needles." Again, a
taries, including Americans, generalIn fact, the CIA. has done the a foreign official who might have bit ioo much to be expected in many
ly don 't believe that stealing a trade opposite-- warned its agents abroad valuable infonnation-- this strikes us of the places in the world.
or technological secret is worth the about the hazards of AIDS . These as a bit on the impossib_le side. Can
Fifth, "Avo'id unprotected anal
ri sk of AIDS -- unless they dc spcr- warnings are internal, and even clas- you imagine the Mata·Hari now, try - intercourse."
atcly need a bonus.
sified sometimes. In one such warn- ing to wheedle infonnation from an
Sixth, " Be aware that or~ll- gcnital
East Germany once produced ing we have seen, the CIA's Office of lndonesiqn bure,auerat or a Brazilian contact carries a risk. of transmission ."
~----~~-----Seventh, "In a situation where a
potential sex partner may be infected , assume they arc. A test for HIV
. antibody may be negative because the.
partner has not yet developed the
antibody. In fact, there arc rare infecicd individuals who arc incapable of
making the antibody at any time."
l~
In other words. the CIA conclud1l{:
ed: "Know your partner."
Of cnu'rse, in the spy game that is
the whole idea-- to get to know your
•
pan ncr well . But asking them if they
have AIDS doesn't exactly follow
after asking ahout someone 's astrological sign . And it may tend to put
a damper on a moment of opportunity when the foreigner's tongue is just
being loosened.
·
In a final bit of jingoistic patter - and something of a new mission
statement : . the CIA's Office or
Medical Services chimed: "The task
is each of ours io halt the spread of
HIV infection and AIDS. The warnings are clear and must be widely disseminated.".

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wci1tl1et

·Spy game has changed in the age of AIDS

'IstidiBslid in 1948

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeMr-' Me~~~~ger .

Page2
Wedn11~, June 11, 1117 ·

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Vizquel's five-RBI effort
pushes Tribe past Reds
By KEN BERGER
significance to Anderson. He went to
CLEVELAND (AP)- When the Wright State in Dayton and used to
Cincinnau Reds play their National argue with his roommates about
League games, they hardly ever who's better -the Reds or Indians.
have to worry about the No. 9 hitter.
"It always came down to the fact
It's just the pitcher, and they usual- that unless they both made it to the
ly make him look foolish :
World Series, we'd never know,"
This was no National League Anderson said. "Aad here 1t was, the
game, and Omar Vizquel is no pitch- Reds against the Indians, and I had
er.
.
a hand in it."
Vizquel hit a three-run homer aad
So did Vizquel. A Gold Glove
drove m five runs, and Brian Ander- shortstop known for his defense, •
son got the team's first victory by a Vizquel snapped the Indians' 0-forleft-handed starter this season as the 15 drought with runners in scoring
Cleveland Indians beat Cincinnati 5- position witb a two-run single in the
I Tuesday mght, tying the "Battle of fourth. His three-run homer in the
Oh1o" at one game apiece.
sixth was only the 13th this month
. " Welcome to Long Ball Lane!" for the Indians, who once led the
V1zquel proclaimed, invoking the majors i!Jilners.
·
mckname of the left-field patio
Still, . .uel said he doesn't
where h1s three-run homer landed in think of himself as a clutch hitter.
the sixth inning.
•"! should have a lot more RB!s
The high drive off Reds starter than I have," he said.
John Smiley ended Cleveland's powPerhaps he would if the Indians
er slump and evened the first regu- played more games against NL
lar season series between the cross- teams. Vizquel is killing senior-cirstate nvals at 1- 1 heading into the cuit pitching. He drove in four runs,
final game today.
including a bases-loaded triple,
The 162nd consecutive sellout against the St. Lou1s Cardinals on
crowd at Jacobs F1eld showed up for Sunday.
the intcrleague game, bringing the
"It seems hke the National
two-day tota l to 85,862.
League pitchers challenge you more
The lnd1ans arc 3-2 in inter- with fastballs, and that's my style of
league games, while the Reds arc 2- hitting," Vizquel said.
3.
His two-run single was on a
The rivalry, a much calmer affmr change-up from Smiley. Vizqucl
than those going on 10 New York and slapped it through the hole in the left
Chicago thi s week, d1d have some side after Smiley struck out -Julio

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- The·Daily s ·e ntfuel
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Weclnllday, June 18, 1981 t

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Franco and Trenidad Hubbard with
runners at second and third.
"I punched out two guys, and the
guy sneaks one through the infield,"
Smiley said, seemingly in disbelief
that Cleveland's least powerful hitter beat him.
" When you give up five runs to
one guy. that puts you in a hole."
said Smiley (5-8), who came off the
disabled list and allowed five runs
and nine hilS ·in 5 1/3 innings in his
first stan since June I.
The Indians' usuallY. powerful
lineup has been dormant lately with
an injury to David Justice and Matt
Williams' extraordinary slump.
Williams was 0-for-4 with a walk,
stranding three runners in scoring
position, te extend the slide to 13for-93 (.140). He has two RBI. in 22
games.
Anderson (1-1) didn't need much
support in his second start th1s season. He allowed five hits in seven
innings with no walks and a careerhigh seven strikeouts.
.
"I should have made the team m
spring training and had a horrible
spring and didn't," said Anderson,
who has a 1.26 ERA in two starts.
" Up here, there's not much room for

BEATS TAG- 'Cleveland's Marquis Grissom
slides Into second base ahead of the tag by
Cincinnati shortstop Pokey Reese on a leadoff hit In the flrat Inning of Tuesday night's game In
0 lead w1th a 400-foot homer in the
fourth - the only mistake by Andcr-

error.''

· Cleveland's Marquis Grissom, in
the leadoff spot for the first time
since June 3, was 3-for-5 with three
singles and his II th stolen base.
Eduardo Perez gave the Reds Q 1-

Cleveland, where the Indians won 5·1. Grissom:
made It to second when the Reds' Mllte KellY
bobble the baseball in right field. {AP)
·

.

!XIendcd his hitting streak to a
Larkin's replacement, Pokey.
;areer-best 18 games with a double. . Reese, was shaken up diving lifr a
The hard-luck Reds, bothered by groundballm the sixth but stayed in
injuries all .season, played without the game. Reliever Hector Carra~cd
shortstop Barry Larkin, on the 15- was hit on h1s pitchmg hand by Alnday disabled list with a torn left calf mar's line drive in the seventh and
muscle.
'arne out. X-mys were ncgntJvc._

mn

The Indians stranded runners in
;coring position in the first nod th1rd.
Manny Ramirez led off the fourth
Nith a single and Sandy Alomar

.Dodgers top Angels 4-3; four of six·other front-runn~rs win
By The Associated Press
side.
feel ninth for the wm.
Todd Zelle was paymg attention,
"Then (against Zeilc) I broke
Percival's shaky outing, his secand it pa1d off.
down mentally on the pitch; threw a ond blown save in seven opportuniZelle was in the on-deck circle hard one, and he knew it was com- ties, spoiled a strong outing by
when Troy Percival threw a curve- in g."
Chuck Finley, who allowed just one
ball into the dirt for a wild pitch,
In the eighth inning, Zeile greet- run on five h1ts in seven innings.
allowing Wilton Guerrero to score ed reliever Mike James with a leadThe Angels scored on Jirn
from second base with the tying run off homer 'to close Los Angeles to 3- Edmonds' RBI double in the third
m the bottom of the mnth.
2.
and Garret Anderson's two-run dou"I'm thinking he's not going to
The Dodgers tied 11 in the ninth ble in the SIXth.
come back With the breakmg ball," when Guerrero led off with a single,
The game drew a crowd of
Ze1le sa1d. "Bes1des, he's a power moved up on pinch-hitter Brett But- 41,428, above the Dodgers' overage
pitcher and he throws 11 in the mid- ler's sacrifice, then scored from sec- of 37,129 this season, but consider90s. So I was Sitting on a fastball." ond on a Percival's two-out wild ably less than thei~ last home game,
That 's exactly was Percival threw. pitch.
"Beach Towel N1ght," which attractZe1le h1t h1s second solo homer in
That run was redemption for ·ed 52,873.
as many innings, givmg the Los Guerrero, who also h1l a solo homer
In other interleague games, it was
Angeles Dodgers a 4-3 v1ctory over in the fifth. When he got on in the Boston 12. Philadelphia 6; Florida 3,
the Anaheim Angels on Tuesday . mnth, he stood and watched h1s soft Detroit2; the New York Yankees 6,
night in their interleague matchup.
fly to left, ending up with a single the New York Mets 3; Baltimore 5,
"I threw a curve, gripped it too.... Jnstead of a double.
Montreal 4; Atlanta 8, Toronto 7;
tight and tried to bury th~ pit~h,"
"He got an opportunity to make Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3; MmnesoPerc1val (2-3) sa1d of the wild p1tch. up for his mistake, and he did," ta 13, Pittsburgh I; Houston I0,
"I ncede4 to keep it at least in the Dodgers manager Bill Russell said. .Kansas C1ty 2; the Chicago White
area code and I threw it six feet outDarren Hall (2-2) pitched a per- Sox 5, the Chicago Cubs 3; Texas 10,

Colorado 8 in II innings; Oakland
I 0, San Diego 3; and San Francisco
4, Seattle 3.
Athletics 10, Padres 3
At San Diego, Mark McGwirc hit
his first home run in five intcrleague
games, leading otT the second inning
with h1s 25th of the year. Rafael
Boutnigal hit a three-run double in
the eighth, Mark Bellhorn wenl 3for-4 with three runs scored, Matt
Stairs had three hits and two runs
scored and Geromm0 Bcrroa drove
in two runs for the winners.
Giants 4, Mariners 3
At San Francisco, Stan Jav1Cr's
two-run, pmch-hit home run was the
key blo\'1 as the Giants handed the
Manners' their first loss in live
mtcrlcague games. Ken· Grilli:y Jr
and Barry Bonds played to a virtual
draw in their ballyhooed matchup,
each singling and scoring a run in the
lirst regular-season game between
the Giants rind Mariners. Rod Bec1&lt;

worked the ninth for NL·lcuding
22nd save.
Rangers I 0, Rockies 8
At Denver, Juan Gonzalez had
five RBis, includmg a two-run
homer 10 the lith inning, to lift
Texas to victory. Rusty Greer drove
m three runs for the Rangers , and
Dan Patterson (5-3) pitched the final
two innings, working out of a twoon, one-out jam in the lOth. ·Colorado mllied from an 8-3 dclicit wllh
two runs in the e1ghth .on Vinny ,
Castilla's two-run homer and three
more in the ninth, including Ellis
Burks' two-run shot oil ace closer
John Weuclund.
...
Brewers 4, Cardinals 3
At Milwaukee, Jeff Cirillo led off
lhc Sixth with his sixth homer and the
Cardinals dclcnse fell apart as the
Brewers won despite St. Louis catcher Tom Lampkm 's sterling play on
hoth oiTcnse and defense. Lampkin
doubled and homered and thrJ w out

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two runners. Femamlo Valenzuela
(2-9), acquired from San Diego {&gt;n
Friday, had a throwing error nn a
·bunt that contt1buted to a four-run
rally. Then first btL&lt;cman John Ma~ry
bounced a relay past third base ,on
the same play.
'
' '
Astros 10, Royals 2
' •·
At Kansas City, Ramon Garcia (J·"
4) allowed one hit in five innings and'
Luis Gonzalez's bases-loaded single
keyed a six-run tifth inning for;
Houstun. Making just his thinl.starf
of the season, Garcia had a season: ·
high six strikeouts, and Gonzalez ·
stretched his hilling. streak to 2f '
games, the 'longest of the scastm ut
the NL.
White Sox 5, Cubs 3
The largest regular-season crowd·
at new Comiskey Park, 44,249,
watched D;IYe Martinez, an ex-Cub:'
hit a ' two-run first-inning homer.
Chns Snopck drove in two runs witQ.
(See BASEBALL on Page

st. '

.Davis beats cancer; coming treatments may sideline him for season ;··;
•

By DAVID GINSBURG
.
The 35-year-old outfielder was
BALTIMORE (AP) - Former eating solid food Tuesday and anucReds player Eric Davis has battled ipatcd bemg released from Johns
dozens of injuries during his major Hopkins Hospital as early as today.
league career. Now he faces his Withm the next few days he will
toughest task - returning from decide whether to undergo
colon cancer.
chemotherapy treatments to keep the
Dav1s had a cancerous tumor the disease in chccl\, an option I hat sursize of a baseball removed from his gcon Dr. Keith Lillcmoc strongly
colon last week. He IS expected to recommends.
make a complete recovery, although
· Lillemoe said all1hc'cancer in the
follow-up treatment could keep him colon was removed during the June
out of the Baltimore Orioles' lineup 13 operation. The tumor was cut
for the rest of the season.
away before L1llemoc sewed the
" We're taking a wait-and-see colon back together.
attitude," general manager Pal
"The surgery was very successGillick sa1d. "We think it will be a ful. The tumor was confined to the
minimum of ·six to eight weeks. colon. and we removed the cancerWe're hopeful he w1ll resume this ous~cgment,"Lillcmoc, a professor
season, but! would not say it's high- of surgery at Hop~ins, said Tuesday.
ly probable."
' "I'd say he has a favorable progno-

'

be'd been pl~ying with pain before
he actually said something," teammate Tony Tarasco sa1d. "A tumor m
the stomach even half the size of a
fist IS incredibly large." .
•
Although Davis had been with
Baltimorcfor only a few mont~s. his
outgoing personality made him v~ry
popular 10 the clubhouse. At least
two of the Orioles, Tarasco and
catcher Lenny Webster, arc. wearing
Davis' No. 24 on their caps. ''
"Upo~ · hearing · the news I was
very hurt. It just crushed me a little
bit," Webster said. "~ut we've got to
on as a ballclub. Wc:rc going to keep
Eric in our hearts and just do the best
we can without h1m."
Davis wa.&lt; Qriginally diagnosed
with an abdommal abscess, but prcsurgical X-raY,s revealed a mass thai
was ultin!atcly ,deterrni~ed. to be
cancer. The portion of the colon and
parts of the. intestine on either side
were taken put along with the tumor.

sis. We're very optimistic."
Davis, in a statement, sa1d, "lam
feeling well and lookmg forward to
making a •complete recovery . .. . 1
hope to he back on the play 10g field
as soon as I possibly can."
Davis sat out the 1995 season
with a herniated disk and has missed
hundreds of games with a variety of
aliments ranging from a knee injury
to exhausJion. He has never played.
more than 135 games in any of his
13 seasons 10 the majors.
Davis, who joined the Onoles as
a free agent this season, was p~t on
the d1sablcd hst May 31 . He last
played a game on May 25 and was
h1tting .302 with seven home runs
and 21 RB!s when he went 00 the
DL.
'
" It makes me wonder how long

Scoreboard
(R••dke 6- ~). I I!'I p m
Mutnrcul (C Pt:!rt:z 7-4) .11 llulltmmt.'!
IK&amp;:y 11 -IU O!'Ifl.m.
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Baseball
AL standings
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American Golf Hall of Fame, which
traces the game's history to the 15th
century when club shafts were
wooden instead of metal or graphite
and balls were feather-stuffed
leather:
· Fox learned the game at golf's
mecca, St. Andrews in Scotland,
where he bought a left-handed set of
clubs and decided io bring the game
home to his grandfather's 13,248ac!Jl estate. Oil. was discovered on
the property in 1869. ·
Fox laid O(!t Foxburg's first five
holes near his grandfather's mansion ·
and the game proved so popular with
friends and family that he built a new
course althe pre5ent location.

a sacrifice fly and his fifth homer,
while Doug Drabek and Roberto
Hernandez provided steady pitching.
Hernandez worked the ninth for his
14th save.
Orioles 5, Expos 4
Baltimore ended Montreal's 10game winning streak as Robeno Alamar had two RB!s and Tony Tarnsco homered. The Expos became the
IllS! NL team to lose an mterleaguc
game. The game was played .before
47,793, the fifth-largest regular-season crowd in the six-year history of

age than their worst-in-baseball 224.5 overnll record.
Marlins 3, Tigers 2
Bobby Bonilla's leadoff home run
in the ninth ipning. a 459-foot shot,
cleared the right field roof. Bonilla's
homer, his fifth of the season, was
just tbe 33rd to clear the roof at Tiger
Stadium, and the third this season.
The loss lcli the T1gcrs as the only
winless major league team in interleague play.

MIJjOr league baseball••• _&lt;c_on_tin_ued-'~-rom_P_:.ag:....e4.. :.:.&gt;...,.--,---.....-Camden Yards.
Red Sox 12, Phillies 6
At Boston, Darren Bragg had
three hits and four RB!s to g1vc the
long-t1mc World Series also-rans
four wins over the NL for the fin;t
time since 1918. The Red Sox took
two of three from tbe New York
Mets over the wcekead, then beat
Philadelphia in two , straight to
improve to 4-1 in interleague play
and move out of the AL East cellar.
The Philhcs have lost four of live
against the AL - a worse percent·

P.ICIENS
HARDWARE ·
, IASOII, W. VA.
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By DICK BRINSTER
NEW YORK (AP) - First; the
NHL hn the highway to travel a.&lt; a
truly continental league. Then. 11
drove deep into the Sunbelt.
Now. w1th the most ambitious
expansion smce it doubled in size
three decades ago, the league is
paving some new roads and re-open ing some old ones. ·
It did so Tuesday, when its expansion committee endorsed bids from
Atlanta, Minneapolis-St. Paul,
Columbus, Ohio, and Nashville.
Tenn.
·
The plan, which will expand the
NHL to 30 teams by 2000, still must
be approved by the full Board of
Governors on June 25. A threefourths majority of 26 is required,
but that is considered little more than
a formality.
"I am confident that the strength
of each of the recommended markets
and ownership groups will lead to a
successful conclusion of th1s
process," NHL com miss toner Gary
Bellman said.
As part of the expansion plan, the
league and the NHL Players As~i­
otion agreed to a lour-year extension
of the collective bargaining agreement through Sept. 15, 2004. That
also is subject to ratification by the
gpvernors and the union .
Nashville would begin play in the
1998-99 season. Atlanta would start
the following season, and the Twin
Cities and Columbus in. 2000. Each
franchise will cost $80 million.
Nashville and Columbus were the
first-lime cities to win endorsements. Atlanta and Minneapolis-St.
Paul are the reclamation projects.
"The expansion committee has
worked extremely hard over the past 12 months to formulate an
expansion plan that positions the
league for significant growth and stability as we head into the next century," Bellman said.
Limited for nearly a half-century
to New York, Boston, Montreal,
Toronto, Chicago and Detroit, the
NHL added Oakland, Los Angeles,
St. Louis, Minneapolis, PliL,burgh
and Philadelphia m 1987.
Piecemeal expansion followed
until the curly part of this decade,
when two Florida teams, lwo more
from California and one in Canada
were added . Franchise shifts also
brought hbckcy to Texas, Colomdo
and Arizona, putting tbe league in
every conceivable pan of the United States and most of Canada.
By adding four American cities,
the league continued a trend away
from its Canadian roots. Only s1x of
26tcams arc located north of the border, and in two recent franch1sc
shifts. the Quebec Nordiqucs became
.the Colorado Avalanche arid the
Winnipeg Jets moved to Phoenix.
The new franchise winners celebrated, believing they earned the
right.
"This has been a very long and.
at times, a very difficult process,"
·said Craig Leipold, majonly owner
of the Nashville team.
"It's like an engagement," smd

. su

I

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Robert Naegele, who led the Twin
C1ties' effort. "The fiance has 1hc ·
ring and we're waiting for the nmrriage to take place on June 25."
Columbus mayor Greg Lashulka
1mmedJa1ely warmed 10 the task of
promotion.
'
''Yes, the puck stops here," he
said.
Leipold and his partner, Gaylord
Entertainment Co . were adamant
that they start playing in 199M.They
are seeking a markeung edge over
the NFL's Tennessee Oilers, scheduled to play in their new Nashviflc
stadium in 1999 after two seasons in
Memphis.
Originally, there were II appli cations. But the NHL earlier chm•nated bids from two of three groups
in Houston, and one each from
Hampton Roads, Va., and Hamilton,
Ontano.
A group from Raleigh-Durham,
N.C.. also apphcd, but Withdrew
before the Hartford Whalers
announced they would play in the
Tar Hc~l Stale next season as the
Caroliria Hurncancs.
Minnesota and Atlanta each get "
second shot. ·
.. Atlanta did not fail, " a league
source said. " There was an uwncr-

ship problem there .
"They couldn't get local ownership there. bul they outdrew the
Hawks."
The Bloonungton-bascd Minnesota North Star&gt; moved Ul Dallas,
bccommg the Stars in 1993.
Atlanta and Minneapolis-St. Paul
Will become the IOth and lith metropolitan areas with franchises 1n all
four major sports leagues. The hock ey team will he the third Alhmta
franchise cmilrolled by the Turner
Broadcasting Systc'm.
The return of the NHL removes
the sling of the past-In Mmncsot u.
""Minnesota was a disaster, '' the
league source conceded. "But they
were in a terrible building in the suhurbs of Bl0omington.
"This is actually a new clly, in St.
Paul. where they have local ownership, a thnving downtown ;md a
mayor wtth a cnmmilmcnt In do all
the th;ngs to tap into the market. "
Atlanta Jnincd the league with the
New York Islanders m 1972-73 us
the Flames, but the franchise mo ved
to Calgary 10 1980.
The expansion is the second massivc.onc th1s decade. From 1991 -93.
San Jose, Ottawa, Tampa Bay, Florida and Anaheim entered.
Atlanta will hegin constructmg u
$213 million arena on the site ol the
Omni once that building has b~cn
demolished. St. Paul has arranged
financing litr a $no miii.JOn arena,
while a new ouilding 1s ahout 1o he
erected in the Ohio capital .
Losing out in lhe cx puns1on
sweepstakes were Houston und
Oklahoma City.
Modern urcnus played a purt in
the sclcctJnn process. s;uu New Jersey Devils owner John McMullen,
also a lormcr owner of the Houston
Astros.

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9:1 'IOYOfA PIMA w.t "·150,; ,....,

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Products
Dog &amp; Cat Food
Gates, F~ers, Head
Gates

Burr, I• for tla. IMit . .111~r

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92f01Dw.ti51111,672 .. , W.. .
92 CADILIC S. DI'IILII..,,I0$ ""·· 1o1oo
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95 IIMC 4XA'IICM 11.206"'·95 DODGI MM:UOO U.Wol.......
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IE WILL

'\VaJk~iDS·

· 'Yelcome ·

NOT I
,.

•
' "

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
retirement of one of the best wide
rece1vers in NFL history might have
called for ·a splashy media event.
Flashy was never wide receiver Art
Monk's style.
Announcing his retirement m11re
than a year after catching his final
pass, Monk planned to issue a simple press release and go fishing.
Friends and associates, however,
prevailed.
Instead of catching fish Tuesday,
the soft-spoken Monk attended an
press conference in a small public
relations firm office, where he talked
at length to three members of the
Washington med1a abOut his 16-year
career.
Monk, who failed to sign with an
NFL team last season, played 14 seasons with the Washington Redskins,
and one each with the New York Jets
in 1994 and the Philadelphia Eagles
in 1995.
"I had a good career, a great time
and it's time to move on and do other things ... the 39-year-old receiver
said. "I felt like I could have performed (last year). It was jusi the
opportunities weren't there. Things
just weren'tlhe same."
Monk is such an icon in Redskins
history that team president John
Kent Cooke plans to sign the veteran receiver to a one-day contract so
he can officially retire as a member
of the team.
"Nothing would delight us more
than for Art Monk to officially retire
as a Redskin," Cooke said. "We look
forward to signing Art one more time
so he can go into the Hall of Fame
as a Washington Redskin."
Monk said, " I'll always consider
myself a Redskin."
Monk, who set several NFL
records that have since been broken,
still has one- catching atlea&lt;t one
pass in 183 consecutive games. His
last reception came on Dec. 12. 1995
-a 36-yardcr from Rodney Peete in
a 20-14 loss to the Ch1cago Bears 111
Soldier Field.
, But he 'II always be rcmemhercd
as the player the ~cdskms went to in
critical situations. Monk helped
Washington to three Super Bowl
titles in four appearances and wa.&lt; a
three-time Pro Bowl player ( 198486).
.
"There was never a classier player in this franchise's history, or in
'league history, than Art Monk, ·•
Redskins general manager Charley
Casserly said.

i

Your Full Une Dutch
Standlrd Delller

Mil~

PHILA~IA PHIWES: Slptod

, FOXBURG, Pa. (AP)- Along gress hereby, recognizes that the
the banks of the Allegheny River,
golf co11rse of the Foxburg Country
about 55 miles north of Pittsburgh, Club ... is the oldest golf course in
sits the oldest golf course in Ameri- continuous USe in the United States."
ca. Or so says an act of Congress.
"It's quite a landmark. That's
. Other courses claim to be older why we do what we do to maintain
than the club in Foxburg and golf it. We are proud of it. It's beautiful,"
'l'JIS played in America at least as club president Jack Silvering said. ·
e.arly as 1779. A course in Vermont
flo~burg sits a few hundred feet
claims without solid documentation above the confluence of the Alleghe•
it began. a year before 1887, when ny and Clarion rivers. in Clarion
J95Cph MicJde Fox founded Foxburg County. Golfers playing the 2,.592Country Club.
·
yard, nine-hole course, a par 34 outBut none have their authenticity · ing, contend with more than 100
~ecided by Congress. A resolution
white oaks amid scenic views of rursponsored in 1971 by former U.S. _ al countryside and the river valley.
Rep. John Saylor, says, "the Con- The ,club also is home to the
_

'I

CINCIN111An REDS. Plocod SS .__
ry Llrtr.i1 Oft tlw IS.)' ....... lilt. Ac:.
11- UIP Jctlft Smiley lroto die tS..toy
dillltled 1111

...... Stori

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LHP a,_ ROiffin Irom lhe t ~..toy ,.,_
......... Optloood Jeff McC!IIIY 10 Col-

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The CPR ~~aJ~, is open to .all family ~~b~

_._

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f.

:(Both h~l.d -~~,fhe Third Floor Prenatll ·CI~ni) j

COLORADO ROCKt&amp;,t: Actlmed

CINCINNATI .....•. 21 oiO .412
C1li&lt;op ••••.•.... ...... 21 • t &lt;101

HI • Mi1111tt01o

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Sc:on
rrom c.......
or ... · · lional Poot
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Controllll-

T-.y'•P-

N.Y. r.wct (lltiocl 4-4) M N.Y Y (&lt;:-7-J), I:M p.m.
I
'
Florida (A Leiw 5-t) • Domolt (oti,.., 4-S), I :M~;,

l&gt;ICll.ll

I'

li11 retroacllve to

Despite other claims, Congress declares
Pennsylv~nia golt course America's oldest

Monk
announces
retirement

Due to the change in economic times, we ~ill
be closing our doors.

followed by

),

ltnlie Willi~~ms oa tbt 15-day diubled

. . . . Divillon

was losing badly in Clark County, Behring paid.
SEATTLE (AP) - After a year across the Columbil'ltiver from the
The propoal also included a $2S
of wonderin1 whether bill.ionaire home city of Allen's Portl111d Trail million sales taX deferral on conPaul Allen will buy the srrugglin1 Blaurs.
struction.
Seattle Selhawks. football f111s in the
Allen spent much of his campaign
But it was winning approval in
Pacific Northwest an!'still waiting.
most of the populous Puget Souad - and about $5 million dollars A proposal by 11\e Microsoft co- region, including King County (Seat- reassuring voters that the package
founder to tear down the 21-year-old tle), where it was up by more than included no general tax increases and
Kingdome aad replace it with an 5.5,000 votes.
would not affect public spending on
open-air stadium was ahead · by
"I think it's real clear once the schools or roads.
17,850 votes .Collowing Tuesday's people got an understanding of the
But critics, hampered by a small
statewide referendum.
package, they voted yes," Whitsitt budget, complained about ·the mesAllen has said he would buy the said. "I thiqk what hun us early on sage sent by tearing down the King-·
NFL team if taXpayers a~ to his was a lot of people voted three weeks dome, which is still saddled with a
$425 million plan to demolish the ago (by mail), before they had a $127 million debt - half of it for ·
aging Kingdome and build a more chance to understaad the package." roof repairs four years ago.
profitable stadium, e~hibition center
They attacked Allen for arranging
Stadium opponents, led by severand parking garage in its place. The al Seat~le activists and a state law- the deal so that the public pays for '
public's share of the cost would be maker, held out hope that their side most of the construction costs, but
$300 million.
would pr'evail. Even if it doesn't, Allen takes most of the profits.
But the outcome of Referendum they said their messag~ was
They •.accused him of using his
48 remained uncertain because most received.
immen!'e wealth to manipulate tbe
counties voted by mail only, which
' "It's an insane issue, this stadium political system for personal gain by
means ballots could continue arriv- madness, but we're for more impor- agreeing to reimburse the state for
ing for several days. It's impossible tant things," Seattle stock broker the $4.2 million cost of running the
to say how many ballots remain to be Chris Van Dyk said.
special election.
counted.
They also questione4 the wisdom "But we really understand that
AS of this morning, the measure this issue is about a lot more than sta- of building an outdoor stadium in
led with 699,239 votes, or 51 per- diums. It's about a lot more than bil- miny Seattle, and noted that larger
cent, to 681,389 votes. or 49 percent. lionaires. It's about a lot more than · cities such as San Fmncisco are
"I'm very optimistic at this voting or not voting. It's about how building new stadiums with greater
point," Allen told a cheering crowd we care about our communities and private investment and less public
l11te Tuesday at a rally in Seattle.
money.
what we bUild." ·
"We want to declare victory, but
Allen, whose only public appearAllen, .Gov. Gary Locke and the
there's still a lot of votes to be count- Legislature devised a plan for the ance·during the campaign was in one
ed," added Bob Whitsitt, liead of public to contribute its share through television ad, said through his advis.Allen's Football Northwest organi· lottery games, tax breaks, the King ers that the plan includes money to
zation. "It's such a close race that we County hotel taX and higher taxes on pay off the Kingdome debt. In addi$lill have to see how the final absen- stadium admissions aad parking.
tion, 70 percent of the seats in the
tee votes will be coming in."
new stadium would be under cover
Allen, one of the world's richest
If the statewide vote goes against people, agreed to guarantee a private and 10 percent would be offered at
him, Allen has said he will walk investment of $100 million, half of the league's lowest. prices.
away, and current owner Ken which he figu,red to recoup from the
The profit margin is necessary to
Behring will probably continue try- sale of personal seat licenses. He also build a winner out of a team that hasing to move the team from Seattle. swd he e~pected to pay $200 million
n't had a winning season since 1990,
they said.
The measure trailed in 31 of for the team, about double what
Washington's 39 counties. It also

'

r

Infant Child CPR
Sunday, June 2l
'J t 3 to 5 PM. ·

MINNESOTA lWtNS Waived RHP
Kevin Jarvia Recalled RHP LaTroy
HawWu rmm SaU Lake C_1~_ol the PCL,
NEW YORK Y ANKECS. Plao:ed OF

NL standings

'

NHL endorses bids
from Columbus
&amp; four other cities

By HUNTER T. GEORGE

INVENTORY LIQUIDATION

10

Kevin JEU'YII orr WIIIYCI'I rrom lhe

Early returns on referendum
to raze Kingd,ome favor ·A llen

J:30
'
. to 2:30PM

~.

ftCRMI l'wlftl

Oakland (Prlero ~ - 41 lU Anahtlm
&lt;Sprinaa 4-ll. 10 p.m;

:'! "

.

The Dally Sentinel• PIQe 5

'

Brothers &amp; Sisters Class

1'·
6

~"hROIT TIGERS· Cl~in,.d .HP

4.4). i!J5 p m

CLEVELAND l . CINCINNATI I
N.Y Yonkces6, N.Y. Mel• J
8aldmotc $, Monll'enl4
AtlamA I . Toronto 7
MitwtWkce 4. St Louis J
MinRCIOia 13. PinsburJ.h I
Houlton IO.ICaasal City 2

"74
Ul
.411,
42(,

I B Mo
VauJ,hft on Ihe I ~-day d11abled lilt. Pur\!hUed the contmL1 or OF Jetus Tav'"l
from Pawtucket or the latcrn11tlonal

IAL only)

~llr.jli.c.A •

''

Ban..n
A-~
. BOSTON
RED SOXt Ploo:&lt;d

Seattle {Johnson 10-1)-ut Tex:11 (Hill

:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Going Out Of Business

•

Thunday's pmes

10

(? ·

Wedn11[1ey, June 18, 1187

.'

Sunday, June 22

Transactions

,

4

presents

wt K;111n111 C1t y

(Murr.ay 1-I). IOJ~pm

J' ·

Botton 12. Plullldclphia6
Florida 3, ~roil 2
'

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(PHuk~ l -4).. K:~ J' m.
Ann .cim (Sprin~ 4·2) 111

tct CNo1006-6). 10., 'J' m,

Tuosday'slcllrts

Plnlllorp (

(Wall

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...HoCztll• 1T(a/t,rfiilu (Jr Jami
·7

Pfttshurgh (Licb.:r l-1) ttl 1-' Y, Met:~
Oont.-. II·~). 7·40 p m
lna Ana~ICs (Astncitl l ·~lnl Su11
l'ntm:isc.•o(l3ik.'l ll-2). 10·~ p.nl.

.

11

type or person who will lie ablC. to
battle through this. We arc all pulling
for him. Right now, baseball is secondary to getting h1s healil\ hac~. I.,
just want him to know 'thai we will·
be back in$ him."
·
·,
Davis played in two . All-Star'
games with the Reds and also hell&gt;cd'
them win the 1990 World Series, "
' ··
·

.

(NL ...y)

ChllUtto Wh1t~ Soil (Aivart:z 4·6), H.O'i

rm

19 29
. 36 :u
.U J~
29 39

Culnrudo (Bouley 7 - ~lut San
(Murray 1· 1),' cv.i p.m.

W1llmms l-6). 1)5 p m
·
St Lmus (Morns ,5. 1) ul Milwmtk'l.'l!&gt;
(O'Am1o.:n '-1). M0~ p m
Clucatw Cubs (MulhnllamJ 5-61 ,,,

l'
11

Before signing with Baltimore as
a free agent in December, Davis
spent nine seasons with the ~incinnnti Reds, including last year, and
also played for the Los Angeles
Dodgers and Detroit Tigers.
"Our thoughts and prayen; go out
to Eric and his family." loflllcr Reds
teammate Joe Oliver said. "He's the

Thursday's gllmH

os p m

CLEVELAND (0$c;a "i.t.), 7:0"i r m
Al lan1.1 (Smoltz 6-"i) ul Townlu (W

1~

.

Sun Fruni!IRCn
Coltll'udo
Lm Ans,clc~ . .
S,m IJ1!!gu

C INCINNATI (S~.;hlUirck 5·!'1) ,,,

9
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C~nlral

CLEVELAND
K.tru..IJ C11y
MdvrlMtkL'C.'
.
('hi.:u'o

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WHttm Dlvilllun •

S&amp;!llltle (Lowe 1-1) lll S:m Fr,uwm:ol
lGurd~~~:r 7-2) F~"i p m
Philadelphia (Sd·ulllng IV'\) al Bo~li \11

Gil

•

-----

'

••

,.

�Pomeroy•

Community
calendar·
Tile Commllllity Cllhadar is
published as a free senic:e to DOD•
proftt IJ'OUJIS wilblag to aJUIOUIICe
meetlnc and special eveats. The
calendar is not desiglletf to promote sales or fund raisers or any
type. Items are printed 115 space
permits and cannot be 1uaranteed
to run a specific number or days.
WEDNESDAY .
EAST MEIGS -- E!lstem local
Board of Education, 6:30 p.m
Wednesday, Tuppers Plains Elementary Sct10ol.
CHESTER -- Shade River lodge
453, special meeting, 7 p.m.
·wednesday. work in the MMdegree.
Refreshments.
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation. Mental Retardati on/Developmental Disability. Thursday, 7:30p.m. Carleton
SchooL Personnel committee meeting, 6:30p.m.
'

POMEROY -- Rock Springs Better Health Club, Thursday, I p.m.
home . of Phyllis Skinner. Nancy
Gruesw hostess.
TUPPERS PlAINS -- State Sen.
Michae l G. Shoemaker · (D- .
Bourneville ) will hold office hours
in Tuppers Plains Thursday, 5-6 p.m.
at the Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire
Department.
SATURDAY
RACINE-- Werry family reunion
Saturday. 4 p.m. at the home of Jim
and Karen Werry. Court Street Road,
in the Morning Star area. Call 9492746 for more information.
MIDDLEPORT -- Vacation Bible
School , · Middlepon Church of
Chris t, kickoff, Saturday, 9:30 a.m.
at Dave Diles Park, Middleport.
Bible school, June 23-27 9 a.m. to
noon.

MIDDLEPORT -- .Elizabeth
Chapel puppet ministry will be at
the Silver Run Baptist Church, at 7
p.m. Saturday.

Society
scrapbook

(SPECIAL)-- A drug that isexcitin~
researchers in 'the treatment of p;lin
has been fcinnulatedintoanew product known as" Arthur !tis," and is
being called a "Medical Mirac/e"by
some. in the treatment ofdebi Iitating
conditions such as arthritis. bursitis,
rheumatism. painful musi:le aches.
·oint aches, simple backache, bruises,
and more. Although the mechanism
of action is unclear, experiments indicatethatArthurltis, relieves pain
by' first selectively attracting. and
thendestroyingthemessengerchemical which carries pain 5ensations to
the brain. thus eliminating pain in
he affected area. Artllur ltll, is
availableimmediatelywithoutaprescrip!ion in an odorless, greaseless,
non-staining cream or ~w easy applicator liquid fonn. Art. .r ltll, is
guaranteed to work or your money .
back.

••-

.:=:=:-..=

FRUTH PHARMACY'
781 N. SECOND AVE.
112 lt11 .

Wldneedey, June 18, 1897 ·

Family
Medicine

Question: My children are
intrigued by .fireworks that are for
sale, but I'm reluctant to purchase
them because of safety issues. Am I
being overly cautious about this?
Answer: Your concern for your
children's safety is justified. All
states, except Nevada and Hawaii,
have laws restricting the sale, possession or use of fireworks. These
laws have been wrinen in an effort
to reduce the risk of injuries pnr
duced by them. ne magnitude of
this problem is reflected in hospital
emergency department statistics. In
the United States, there are ' about
12,000 emergency room visits each
year because of fireworks-related
injuries, and 80 percent of these
occur over the Independence Day
holiday.
Fireworks injuries typically
involvp burns and, less frequently,
wounds produced by flying frag ments or falls in the dark. The average age of those injured is 15 years,
and 75 percent are males. Another
statistic, perhaps, even better illustrates the general dangers of do-ityourself fireworks -- about. 45 percent of those.injured are bystanders ~
. not the person lighting the fuse.
I think it's clear that the safest
way to enjoy fireworks is to go to a ·
community fireworks display and let
the ,professionals do the work. However, if-- despite the very real risks
- you decide to set some off at your
home, there are a few things which
you sbould keep in mind.
The location you choose for your
fireworks shouh! be away from any
combustible materials, and the surface should be free of obstacles so
that your risk of tripping and falling
. in the dark is minimized. You should
always select light-colored clothing
to help prevent someone else from
accidentally running il!tO you, and
the material should be safe around
sparks. All fireworks require "fire"
so caution must he used to prevent
burns.
Here in Ohio the law is in the
process of change, and may soon
allow Roman candles, bottle .rockets
and similar items that are legal in
many ' other states. At the' current ·
time, ihough, only sparklers, smoke
bombs and snakes are legal in the

Beat
of the
Bend

•...•..••,......,

nOll HOURS

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Buckeye state. Be sure to check on
the laws in your state, as well as
local ordinances; before you try your
band at amateur fireworks.
The explosive force necessary to
make a "BANG" or to propel a rocket into the sky can cause serious
damage if it goes off while still in
someone's hand. An obvious method
for prevention of these inju~ics is to
never light ·any fireworks while it is
in your or someone else's hand. Put
the fireworks in a "proper holder or ·
on a solid surface. Light the fuse,
preferably with a long match, then
run-run-run.
Remember that skyrockets and ·
other fireworks go up into the air.
Fuses are unpredictable, and sometimes will set off the skyrocket in an
instant instead of allowing tbe usual ·
several second delay. If yo.u ·are
leaning over the rocket when this ·
happens, the rocket goes into you
instead of into the sky. Perhaps this
is, in 'part, the reason that boule .
rockets are responsible for 57 per-·
cent of fireworks injuries. When
lighting any fireworks, stand. to the
side of it and use a long match.
Firecrackers are a perennial
favorite because that "BANG" is
exciting, and it sure gets everyone's
attention. But firecrackers are not all
fun. Those which use a small
amount of powder will make a nice
bang ·and cause only a bum if they ·
go off ih the hand. larger firecrackers will blo\\' fingers to pie~es. If the
firecracker is lit on a gravel driveway, it will send gravel shrapnel flying when it goes off.
I like fireworks, and as a kid !.lit
my share of firecrackers, Roman
candles, skyrockets and sparklers.
But remember, ihe excitement of
fireworks should not overr~:~Ie sensible safety precautions. · Children
need training and supervision in
order to use low-powered fireworks
safely. And, never try major fireworks yourself -- they should
always be left to the professionals.
"FamDy Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Univenity College of OsteqP,~hic
Medicine, . Grosvenor · Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

·ayBOB
HOEFLICH

79

8 111·10 PM

Anumberofyou"Middleporters"

will remember Clara ~ranee, a resi-

298 SECOND Sl•.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHI TO UMII QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD IHRU SAIURDAY, JUII21, 1997

•

7up, ~ _
Dr. Pepper, ·~
.Crush Flavor~..:
•

-

211ter .

\

$279
Duncan .
Hines
·Cake Mixes

So many friehds and relatives
tprned out to help Mrs. Dorothy
Downie celebrate her 90th birthtlay
at a reception held ,by her son and
daughter-in-law, Allen and J~net
Downie, at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Saturday. ·
· Dorothy penned a great poem for
the occasion--so perfect for her.
it goes like this: ·

.

-

12 pk. 12 oz, cans

BUCKET BEEF ~UBE

Lb.

$ 79

.

..

Steak••••••••••••••••

..

18·18.5 oz.

...

.. ,,

"-llo·

oz.

•

~IH '

.

.

W.Va.

·~oz.

FURNITURE
Outstanding BarQelona barrel organ music box on 2
wheel cart all ste.nciled w/5 rolls, 6 songs on each
roll, Doctors buggy, fancy oak china buffet, fancy
depression c:hlna cabinet, oak 42" roll top desk', lg. 2
pc. Bu~ side board marble top w/claw and ball ~· 2
lg. 2 door mirrored armoires &amp; matching dresll8ftl, 2
pc. &amp;lep back cupboard, .flatwall cupboard,' oak
secretaty, ea~y primitive wardrobe, Viet. marbl8 top
table, Viet. table, Viet. rocker, oak ice cream table,
round oak table w/lg. claw feet, square oak table, 3
pc. mahogany BR auhe, 4 pe water falls BR suite,
oak wardrobe, .sellers oal&lt; kitchen cabin,., oak
dresser,. oak washstand, walnut drop leal table,
walnut wash stand, balloon back rOCker, early
vinegar pump, plus more.
GLASSWARE
Depression glass, etch glass bowl, duet ~gurlne, ,slag
glass rooster, general stark Jim Beam bottle, Virginia
Rose meat platter, green depression stemwara, nice
v - . Buffalo pottery meat platter, I.G. glass bowl,
several salts, I.G. fish candle holder&amp;, Bavaria
.Dresser lr!!-Y. hand painted nippon, I.G. · Cemlval
Mammy salt &amp; pepper shakers, Slit of stytil hOuse
china rose baroque, sat of Johano Haviland
Bavaria Germany China, Carnival glass berry· aet,
Dlnaheart green lady figurine; DonahhiiO atonejars &amp;
more. Old comic books one mana private collaetton
t 940'8 ll.ro CO\Iered, Buz Sawyer,Biondle, Blondle &amp;
Dagwood, Paper back comic books, 1950's,. Gene
Autry, Tex Ritter, Lassie, Maw Gil, Tarzan, Archie
Comics, Gabby Hayes, Buller Brown lrom GaiHpoll&amp;
DepJ utore, Hopalong Cueidy, Donald Duck, Plllly &amp;
Hedy, Sergeant ,PI'IIIIIon, Battle, ' Walt Olerify'a
Comics, Tweety &amp; Sylvester, The CIIOO l&lt;ld, W.
BaiUes, Wall Dllllly's Dave CrOCkett, Indian Fighter,
Joe Palooka, Dale Evans, Mazie In Jumping Jaok,
1977, Btondie. Guna out of 111 estate will be IOid at
11:30 a.m. Win. 1Tl0de197 12 gauge pump ahotgun,
Rem. ITlOdel &amp;111 22 rffle, modal . eo ~
Weaternllekl deluxe 20 gauge pump, II10dll 84,
Stevens 410 aholaun, II10dll E ML 22 Erma Wilke
22 auto W/JICOPI &amp; clip, . , . 220 A 410 lholgun,
e-x 12 gauge, &amp; black poWIIIr 45 plltcl.
AUCTIONEER NOTE: au.·Ill adv. deldtlne lhll it a .
l)elllallllllng II'ICn furniture IIIII coming ln ..

o'

White • 4 roll pak

•·

..
28 oz • .
' t

1

).

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES
14.2S15.25oz.

29

FRITO'S COR.N
CHIPS '
'
\

'

ft'C ·' ~

, Reg. '2.11 .

$ 49

Wisconsin

Tyson/Holly 1
Farms Boneless I
Breast Tenders

One FREE

Half Gallon,
U Assorted Varieties

Post

Fruity or II United Ultimate

Buy One Cet One 1
Cocoa " Yogurt, Sherbet
or Ice Cream
Of
E~ual er
1,
Pebbles
.
II
Lt11er Value . 11 Buy One Cet One Buy One Get
·

FREE

II

FREE
·

·II
umi one free Wlllllhls coupon. Good 11

f ()(I[JI f\rJI} ',f' f

One 'FREE

umn one free with this coupon.

1~ )~\1

i •liJP(HJ · 1,

16 Oz. Jar

.~o·· 1.:&gt;

one.

·

oz. pkg.

Assorted Varieties

McCormick Taco
Seasoning

81y Oat Ott One

FREE

I

LknH one tH wilh CX&gt;iJpOn.

"I think God's kept me here this
long,
I ('•)01 MJri DL( !,.[
I ")(l[JLAWJ ~PLCiiJ.L
FUt 1\l/'.tJIJ'-1 ~&lt; 11\l
"To .make me realize;
COUPON .: 1 r1 /
\:()tJP, It~· ,
(:(lLf'ON ,,.,'1
"That if I follow all Hi~ rules,
840z.Btl
111 Oz. Squeeze btl
I
I Oz. cup, Aleo.-..
".Eternal Life will be the prize".
11
cor-llrMted F•brk:
V.rlellft
Oh, and a .very nice surprise for
Smart
Beat
Fat
Free
Sollei ....
Dorothy on the day of the party. Her . I
Margarine
,Austin's rn•r: I
son, Chuck and his friend, Barbara
~avcrick, from YfAY up in New
One. Ott One
Hampshire, flew in to be on hand.
I ..
Others from out of town attending were Mr. and Mrs. John Maurer, ,
I
New Philadelphia, Ohio; Mrs, Allen
·~;;.-li
Maurer and Mrs. Barbara Leir,
Berea, Ohio; Mrs. Kenneth . Smith,
findlay; Mrs.' Raquel Smith, Wor3 Lb. Bag
'28 Oz. Size
thington; Mrs. ' Kirker Powell and
Fresh Baked
Mrs. Betty George, both of Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs. James
Lattl~ Top Apple Pie
Lochary,
_______...Amesville.

Buy One Itt Ont

FREE

Unilone---·

TCBYYogurt

Buy One Get
One FREE

Yellow Onions

So at 90, Dorothy Downie 1s
smiling. So yo'! keep smiling, too.

l•f 01t,
...._.____
_ let

011

Limit one tree with lhla ooupon.

""-!IN

llml

lJaltedV.UeyBeU
\'IIIIey lieU

·.81y One, Get One FREE

FREE

C:eataft O.ee•e 14 e.. ·

Free. Cash,Stop In Tht SICH't

U

13 oz. box

!

Buy One Get

12 oz.

FOODLA ND SPEC IAL
FOODLAND SPEC IAL
CO UP ON #144
COUPON # 143
•
EFFECTIVE 6 15 TO 6 21 97
I:: ~F EC TIVE 6 15 TO 6 21 97

'"A super, caring daughter-in-law,
"Two granddaughters, a greatgrandson;
"Plus a college graduation,
"I count ·my blessings, one, by

*l"

s.... t. .••.• 0.. . . . .

:;~-- O.~ealate Milk ~~

arNJI(... Oalp N . . 1i 0.. 11.11
8 •PWII Be•e lyle

•

lee a ta•

•

,.Hnl11*'

"

10 L.b. Bag,
U.s. #1.

cUI illi.AND SPECI.',L
r &lt; 1UP:JN t ' Ill

1 Buy

$200

.~

. Lb.

FOODLAND SPCC IAL
COUPON #173
EFFF CTIVF h t 5 TO 6 2 1 97

Buy One .Get One . · .
. FREE

I

Win.A Bankroll
This Week
Powell's Super
Value

Ground
.Chuck
.

~TH~U~I:~ ~ ~NE~;·r~:' !euv~'TH: !.AD ~o:.N~E: ;~: NAL~ON: ;PU;:E,:.F:, :RE; E:,;Il.Ee,; ,. M_.--':"""~

Russet
Potatoes

FREE

ForDitn'te

.

'':··

FREE

Superiors
Hot Dogs

~ertified

39

H
I.
I
I

3 L.bs. or more
U.S.D.A.
Inspected

.

Buy One Get One

.

L---------.. .------·------.1

Domino
Granulated·
Sugar

Wilshire Farm
. Sausage

. .

Must be 18 yrs or older.

I
I

5 L.b Bag

L-.------=::==:::!

'

•

161bs.

}{'

4

.,

..

•I

H ;, ~JO 1r'' (l td
utJPn N tt 11 n

FOOD LMJD SPECIA L

14 Oz. pkg. All Beef I I
Quaker Maid Sandwich 1 1

6 oz. pkg

, '1(

j

'

UMIT 12 PLEASE 38' ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

10.5 oz.

,

Champ Chunx
Bite Size.Do(
F'ood

.

~~.,~

1Phone ___~:-""'"-.,---T"--

Grill

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON (fD

"Life gave us then, a wonderful
gift, .
.
"Blessing us with two fine boys;
' 'It was a J)l:ivilege, to raise them
together,
·
"The ultimate of joys.

4.

.

,. .I.,

Maeon, W.VA.

'**

2/$1 °

0

UMIT 8 PLEASE. ADDITIONAL PURCHASE 5r

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearton Auction Co. 188
Rnldlnce: 3o4 77'3-6785 01 ·
.£!don c.. .773-5447 .
r.m.: Call 01 Chlc:k wilD 0.. of 111t11 ~ 111U11
ltltllr ol CNdlt.
.
Nat
' For AccicMIIII or U. ol Ptoplll)'

Bath Tissue

••

• Outdoor Gas

.:"."tt"': ____

"She expected the oest from me.

Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 ln. Mason,

Fourlrax 300-

' 99~·.~:.~·

!'I was to be honest, above all

STARKIST
TUNA

!Address-----

·. Pepsi
P.-oducts

..

"There came a marriage of-nearly
46 years,
.
·
"With a loving husband. given to
me;
."Sharing .struggles--but happiness too,
"He's not here now-- not meant to
be.

Orand Prize ,!Name ___________________ .,
Walt Disney
World Family ·!city
state
11acation for .· • --..,.... -----'!zip
four
1 '--"'---------

• 'Honda

Oil\ t'lllf ' llt ' t·

• Ohio Valley Bank
"Supei'bank" Services
• Greeting cards
Floral Sales
We ~capt credh cards

else,

Northern·

"""'-lop t

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift CertHicates
Carpet .Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets
(except Buckeye)
AEP Electric ·

"The strength of my mother's
,steadfastness,
"Has ·been a constant guid.e for
m~;

SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1997
10:00A.M.

.

.

way,
"From childhood up to now;
"I prefer to dwell
. . on the happy
times,,
"I 'believe God has shown me
how. ··

$
ANTIQUE·
AUCTION

'

ENTRY BLANK

WIN..•

tnagy
•.ll!\:v.e. come
. •things
.
. my
'

Beans .

AMSBARY SCHOLARSHIP - Eaetern High School graduate Kelly .
Qlborne Will preaented the Inaugural Ken Amabary Memorial :
Scholarship Monday by Jim Am1b1ry of Pomeroy. The acholarahlp
II ldmlnletered by the Meige Counly IKES Club of Chester and ill
· named In honor of Or. Ken Amablry, a noted Meige County spol1a·
man. Aleo ahown 18 IKES Secre1ary Gary Dill. All .Melga County
aenlore were eligible to receive the $500 acholarehlp..
'

REGISTER TO

"Ninety years is quite a time,
"Living it day by day;
"Looking back, one has to know,
"There was lots of help along the
way.

Showboa·l
Pork &amp;
15

Shannon Jenkins has been select- ston. She attends the Zion Church of
ed as a state finalist in the Miss Ohio Christ.
•
Teen America Pageant
Shannon hilS held the title of Miss
The three-day event will take Junior Teen Columbus, 1996 and
place June 21-023 at the Hyatt 'was there recently to participate in
Regency in Columbus. Judging will this year's pageant . She judged a
be based on personal interviews and dance competition, was involved in .
modeling of ~asual and formal wear. personal ipterviews, crowned her
. A senior at Meigs High School, s ucce~sor, and presented her with
Shannon is a varsity cheerleader and Oowers and a banner.
a member of the Marauder flag
Sbe is the. daughter of Tim and
coq!S. She is presently. employed at Diane Wamsley of Middleport, and
.. Vaughan's IGX and is a model for Steve.and Liz Jenkins of Letart. .
Countiyside Photography of Well·

"I'm having a ninetieth birtliday,
"Who could ever have guessed;·
"It's only because of God's mercy,
"That I am truly blessed.

c

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

dent of the commumty for many
years.
' . ·
. "
Well, Clara sold her home--on
Broad.way, as I recall--and moved to
Coral Gables, Fla., where she purchased property and is currently
residing.
Clara called through asking for
1\elp. She's d~cided that maybe
there's no place like Middleport,
after all, and she wants to return to
the community .. She needs to rent a
two bedroom home in Middleport so
she'll have someplace for her "stuff". ·
If anyone hilS a home available for
rent, I'll be glad to phone·Ciara and
she ~ an get in touch with you ..
Have xou located any "white elephants" about the house?
The Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital hopes so an.d
hopes that you will contribute those
items which you no longer want or
need to their annual white elephant
sale. Tbe ·sale is scheduled for 9
a.m., July II , in the parking lot by
the Meigs Medical Building. If
you've located any items just drop
them by the hospital lobby. Be sure
to leave you name with your donation so that it can be properly
acknowledged.

RC Cola
Products

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Jenkins to compete in
Miss Ohio Teen pageant

Ohio University
College of Osccopalhic Medicine

MISSIONARY SOCIETY
The B.H. Sanborn Missionary .
Society of the First Baptist Church
of Middleport held a luncheon at the
StowAway in Gallipolis recently and
then visited shutins at the Holzer_ '
Senior Care nursing home.
AUXILIARY MEETING
Lewis Manley Unit 263, American Legion, met recently at Dale's
Restaurant ..Gallipolis.
Annette Jphnson was hostess.
Annette Goggins· presided at the
· meeting which opened in ritualistic
form. The news bulletin from Eighth
District president Nancy Brown
announced the summer conference
held in Athens June 12.
. Margaret Bowles, Ella Dunsmore. and Annette Johnson were
appdinted to the nominating committee to report at the next meeting . .
A report of get well cards sent,
including one to Florence Richards,
who is ill in ·Columbus. was given
by Mrs: Bowles'. acting secretary.
Cards will be sent to Jack Carr,
Rebecca Caner, and Clarence Pierson. Poppy donations -rcre turned
in. The group sang America and had .
a prayedor peace. Lou~lla Patterson
will be hostess for the next meeting.

Pain maybe
eliminated· ·
for millions

Ohio

W.

l)

~~.~ ....

.

Jl
1

Buy

Steaks
011 Itt

COUPON lJ1hl

II
One II

· · FREE ·

11
II

Buy One Itt One .
FREE

I
I

Buy One Ott One
· FREE .

LJmll one tee wilh lhiS . . _ ,

I
8 Oz. Pkg.
I
Red Delicious Apples I Campbell's Mushrooms I
Buy One, let One FREE I Buy One Get One FREE I
3

' umn one free with coupon.

1

Umlt Olllll'ree.with !IN Coupon.

1

'BIG BEND

LAND

$1

11:/''E''rl'

IIIII .. the

.

1

Foodla nd Spec1al Cou pon

. *2".
~ Combo Crtalll8

40 Oz. F!lmlly

Quaker Maid
1
Size Pkg.
Cheese Steak or 1
Meatball Sandwich I Montala Tap Apple Pit

L---------------------~

REG. SEVEN 1JP

\'elvet Ice Cream Sara

I

Emlr8.

'

I~

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Phlo

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

Pomeroy • Mlckllilport, Ohio .

.eo

. I 1111

DIET COKE, SPRITE OR

,....

coca cola·
-_
classic

Jtr
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

Thesdaysaad Thursdays
Serving from 5:00 • 5:45

R. L. HOLlON .
-TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
,
SERVICE
• Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

304-773-5822

992-2825

985-4422
Chester,'Ohio

12~z.

cans
or
.
6-pk. 2o-oz. bottles

.. ' .

'

Regular or Homestyle

Two_12.packs per customer
at this price please.
White Supplies Last/

~--

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
· and arrange a fair
financial obligations
..
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 Bankruplcy contact:

.

Sat., June?, 1997
6 P.M.
'
Melga Co. -Fairground•
Spon1ored by
\'lela• Co. 4-H Horae ·
Commlltee
For more Info call Pam
1185 4488 or Lloa Mf.20112
Auction-:
Ah•lt MilhOan

··-·-·-·-·
-·-·
Kroger __
.

Juice

D•.CeaJ7's
BodJJ&amp;hop
Quality Work at
a Fair Prlcel
550 Pa9e St.
Middleport, Oh•.45760 .
Home Ph.

Attorney.William Safranek
. Attorney At Law
(614) 592·5025 ..
.

,_.,mo; ..

'

•New Homes

VII· .
Clothea. Toys, Boyo t 2' Bike
l.abr Morel
'
3 FantiY 'IWd Sale: 5155 6,,. M
il
Road, l'rlday &amp; Saturday, 9 To 5,
lagt II, Wamen a &amp; Chilcfrens

• Remodeling

$2.99 per min. ·
Must be t 8 yrs.

· Serv.u (619) 645·8434

INC~ ·

Tablea, Clothing, Tools, Fane,
Lata Of Miscl

ALL Yard S.ro. llulll
SiPold In Advonco.

DEAQL'tl: 2:00p.m.

•Garages
"Stop putting offthoae much needed
home improvementa." Call Today!

tho d~ ........... ad
la to run. Su!1(1ay
edKion •2:00 p.m.
Frldoy.llenday edKion
· 10:00 'l.m. Sllurday.
Huge tO Family Sale: lnoldo Friday &amp; Saturday. 9·5. SR. t80
North To 554 To Whito.Oak Road.
WalCh FOr Signs.
Spring Cleaning. Moving Salo 2

992·2753 .Free Estimates 99.2-5535

d

.. $ K-9 Desluns

Family: Nut'Sing Unibrma_ Gitll 10
· 12 biahet . Women• 12 u,
Johnaons Trailer Park lot 133
·22 10 Eascern Ave nue, Friday
20th. Sarurday 2111. D
·S.
4

Professlortal Pet Groom ng
· Boarding ~ Training- ·.Supplies
~·we

St.

211- '

Yard Salt: 1:00 Till 5:00, Thuro.
Fri Sa~ 73 Spruce Stroa~ Col!oo

• Decks .
• Roofing .
· • Siding

• Additions

1·900-656-2700
Ext.8789

(No Sunday Calls)

2 Fami~ : 81201h, 9·4, Rodney

Baby Clothes, Furniture, Bike s,

614·992-7643

.

Athens, Ohio

I

Tool' Iliac.

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

.

AEWAADillalo Sla~tt. lno
purrolo lloo collar, lloaon·
..... Coil uoo 1182-7277 Alit lor
Kd'for ....,.•tt2111111011l
70
YardSIIe

GallipOlis
&amp; VIcinity
t8th, tDth, 20111, &amp;-e. 81 Gartiold
Ohio,

Call614·843·5426

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

BISSELL BUILDERS,
Don Geary, Owner

10125190/ftn

12-pk.

FREE ESnMATES

614·992·3120

-2ND ANNUAL
TlCKlUCnON

M11on, 'Nil
25280

Narwtst Financial

11at11e l.llaeli. Dealer .

0"''

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• .New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

Rt. 1, Box 44-C

UnUL........, CDPMA

INGELS ELECTRONICS
Middleport,

CONSTRUCTION

FAMILY DENTISTRY

Donation $4.00 for meal
Tublic is invited

:: ...,;9;.;am;;;;;.-..;9~;;,;;;M;;;on;;.-.;;,Su;;;D;..!

LONQ~8

Ba1'17 B. Boudn, D~..S. ,

· Mulberry Heiabts, Pomeroy

614-742-3513

••

~ IISOI DEIITIL CARE

EVENING MEAL

Buyen of vintage toys,
sportseards. sports
memorabilia, tabac:co
. tins, cigar boxos, and
tabacco memorabilia.
Specializing in
.matchbox can.

.

1

Loet llld Found

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AlfYonl Batao Muu ·ao Paid In .
Ad'llnco. Dudllne; Uopm the
day before the ld .•• to run,
SundtJ l llondar adltlon·
1;00pm Friday.
Garage aale- Thru., Fri.. Sar.. 9·5,
Brodbul)l Church or CMII. rain or

treat your bes~fri.!nd like our best friend" ·

Rt. 681
.
.

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

(614) 667-3526

.

.

'Across from Tuppers Plains ElementarY School"

shine, lacs ot new items, beside
WMPO.

Umil one With

'c';~,:a;nd S10.00
ac
purchase.
Coui)OII&amp;ood June

Sun1hine or rain, garage &amp; yard
. tale, Monday-Friday, 10am-4pm,
38400 Slato Ad. t 2•. Pomeroy.

I

Easy Bank Finandng

I

-·-·-·Idaho·-·-··•
15- June 21. 1997.

JEFF WARNER .INSUUNCE

.

Kroger

113 W. 2ND ST.

•

•

'.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479 .

7/22/lfn

Dailey Ad· Racine
614-949-30110.
John Williams- Owner
· Ucensed Elecll'lclan
Worlt Guaranteed ·
t i Free Esllmatll!l Provktlog
· Quality Residential .

...
;: '

• 137 BRYAN

"" •

e

Llmeatone a, Gravet
Septic Systems
Trailer It
• House Sites

8:00 l.m.·3:3Q p.m.

-ReJIIacement Wlntlows
· ..llltl Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;

.

'

JoeN. Sayra

''

319 S. 2nd Ave.

Middleport
s&amp;lea Service

lnatalla_
tlon
American Stand!lrd ·
· Freedom
•
.
HaatPump

UmitoncWith

"FIRST OF THE SEASON"
WHOLE ALASKAN

16-&lt;&gt;Z,
pkg.

Pound ·

- Coupo~eoodJune

. . ..

15"- JUJM! 21. 1997.

Beef Patties

.

salmon

'

~~(;61;4);992;;,·7434;;;:=.

.1•-.-.-.-.-.-.
.•
. -100°/o Pure ·
•
I

SillleriJrite
-

coupon and s 10.00
additional purchase.

I
I

:r- NOW OPEN
'~ RT. 7 PIZZA
'

-w;~!::V"'

· Delivery or,Dine ln.
•
Afore th•n Just • ·

..

'

..

. EXPRESS
pizza pJ•c•. ·

•. ~., •P••
• 11I1
· :: _. C•II ,.,

Sayre Trucking Co.,

Court St.

·: ...· _,_,_2·_9_200....:--l.l0-''-:1

JC
CONSTRUOION

McCumber Rd.
Rutland, OH ·
•Small Jobs
•Large Jobs
. Re..onable Rilles

Lie. WV 011030
Roofing, Painting
Guaranteed
. Qtua11121
Wor.,.a.Uhlp
Free Estimate•
992·9057 or

WELDINI

Experlenc.cl

(614) 742·3800

992·1 056 11111

YOUNG'S
.CARPENTER SERVIa

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WI.CKS

«oom AcJdiUona

==:::blna
-New Ger1gea

HAULING
Limestone, . .

Gravel, Sand,
Fill Dirt

CPLRALPHM.
TRIPLEn,
killed In Cambodia 'ZT
yeare ago.today.
· Alwaye In our htlrta •

·:

949~2168 .
3117!WTFN

BIIB£LS
•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers

:~':~ :!::~.

ver And Gold Coin1, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Ancique Jevwelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Cullency,
Sterling, Etc. ~quisitiohs Jewelry

· M.T.S. Coin Shop, -151 Second
Avtnut, GaHipolis, 61 4-441-2842.

(fo~otO.n'•

005

Personals

..........

123 Plaaunt Rl•
Pomeroy,OH
Call 992-9045
-.tor au
tranamlulon naede.

$ 1,000 RIWARDII
For lnfonnellon
le•dl..., to the
...
arreat and
conviction·of
enrone Involved In ·
atNiint • property
line fence •t1 1927
Crose St., Reclne,O
. J;D. C•llerl
Cont•ct· Ron Miller
992-4025

.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
trtllkCI

·-

it 16f!llt

bril!hler.

lflterlor
B!lfore 6 p.m.
leave mesuge.
After 6 p.m.

EVIIItAo•l
. ...AtiiCIAN"
Perlloa, churchea &amp; achoola.-Pt.
Pleaaant; WV. 25550. 304·675·
1847.

WILL HAUL·
JUS,. GILL.

Smllh Buick Ponliac, 1QOO Eastem Aven.le, Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's AUto Paris. Buying salvage vehlclea: Selling parts. 304·
773-5033.

992·7074 .

Gravel, Llmeatona,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

ca._. . . . .).
-~------~=-..,

CONCR.ETE
SERVICES

. Foundations,
• Driveways,
S idewalks, Patloa,
Garage and
Baaement Fl OOra.
Free Eatlmatea.
· Insured .

SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES .
742-"""•

Wanted : Used Hardwood FlOoring
In Good Condition, CaJI 614·2.45·

5881.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

110

·
40 · · . Giveaway
t Ftmolo 10 ~ontha Old, Long
Hair. Gr~ Tobbv. 1 llalo, 7Yeall
Bloltk Long Hair Neutered, Good
With Chlldrtn. 6t+446-48SO.
3 Kitten• 7 Woaka Old 2 Calioo 1
Grey
&amp; White; 2 Malo CatJ t
'Alar Old
Black 1 Whito, 114·«6·

3479

Help Wanted
H$ DANCERS $$$
2 PDsitions available
Southlork Show Bar
Rt 2 Pt Pteaoan~ wv.
(304) 675-5955.
Callahor 6pm.
Wed thi1J Sat
AVON I All Areas I Shirley .
Speara. 304-e7S. ,.29.
.
Able Avon Aepreaentetivu

needed. Earn maney for Chrisl·
maa bill1 at home/at •rk. 1-800-

;;.3.Kllr.na
:.:.;·. .-------To Giveaway 614·379-

992-6358 or 304-882-2845, Ind.

~'----'-----

Babyalltor needed nlghta. Wed·
Sat,
tho 111 th(U 20th ol each
monlh. Apply in person 146 N.
Park Otivo.
Fuii·Time/Part·Time We Are Atcopling Application• By Appoint·

_21_34_' ~----.4 White a Yellow Klltona. 614·
..1·1_590.
.
a- Hound Qog. Atdbono. Notd
Cou"tr~ Home, To Good Home
Only. 6t..-1571.
Free Klutna &amp; Uother Cat, To
Good Home, 814-441..0120.
'

Rep.

m~tnl Only For Ded icated, De·

Pendable

E~loyer,

Outstanding

FmoiUntno, 8,._892-0053.
Benetitsl • oekly Salary, • in·
conllve Program&amp; ComprehenFrH Kitteno. Some Pert Persian, oiwe Benefit Package. • Paid Va·
614-985-4~~mo. pd.
cation After 1 Year or Conlinuout
..-....:=--.=:::-.---' B1•·256- 1311 ,e 1a.25B.e 1o7.
Sorvk:e. t -88&amp;-772·2•55.
FrH Pur,piH,
5 Wtakl Old, Pert HOME BUSINESS Cheap Start,
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , Norweo
an Elkhound And FrH Send SASE + ss To C. Rossetti
Klnona Somo With lllnon Pow a, P.O. 801 7•29. Canton. OH
Will Your Utilities
Put You
614·3N·9278.
'
... 705. .

In The ·Poor House?
Consider:

FIH Pupploa, It H46--132B. .

.

Friendlr Pen Chow Gorman PC uaora needed. $45,000 In·

-THE MAPLES
In Pomeroy; Ohio .
. 1
Rents are cqmputed accord 1n9 o your
· income.; Lovely apartments featuring
With all
· w1 all-tO-Wall "arpell'ng,
"'
.
appll'8nCeS
•, ' '
·

. .

HOME TYPISTS.

Shepherd Puppy Mix And Differ· c:ome patenlial. Call 1·800-513-

ont Colored Killona. lluot Find
Gooci-II14-44·IUIII.
Part a.nt~t Hound, port ~g~e.
.rtmolo, 1o~a. Old,- hla hid au
.-._,75-3141.
,;...;.;.;.;.._:;..;;;;,;;;:__ _ _
To Good Homo: 2 Block a Whito
Kltttna, Ftmol•, II W•tkl Old,
114 cca ZJUAtllrSP.W
.
. .
·Young Roddioh Blond• Fomolo

Gl'

~
&gt;13-43_E~•t_B-_
11388
...;...-.,.-- -

Housakoopor to core lor 2 oUght·
ty diaabled paople. tuu or port
omo.ut•-388-eeos.
HVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Needed... Aequ lremonto: RsEs ·
Certification in RelrigaroUon·And
Heat Pump Syl ltml, Experitnce
In HVAC AMulti Knowltdgallbto
In Manufactured Housing Hurtng

~:,::':.:':/1~ :_u~·~= =~~~~~.~t PJ':.~·: lg:::·:::.~
lA Nioo Pot. 11-7·7160 Alltr s netrallobllo Homo ~•ang a clg.

Must. be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements . - ·P.M. ·
80 ·. Lost and Found
For further ~tetalls call today
•
Found: PoOJ, Noor Al-on
1• 614• 992• 7022
-· - - \lllwnolllp Garage. c.. 11•·2•11'
·
..,...,,.,...
1H02

'

1

30 Announcements
Wanted To Buy: 3 Bedroom
Hoose Trailer, 614-446·1052.
SIOO r-rd tr largeot chtmoal·
• :~~:~~~g~ly ~.. llultin paldl, Equino• Do· Wanted To Buy: Barbie Dolls,
..,._._ 114-742·2541.
Clothes, And Accessorie1. 1859
ili.liiM
· 1979 (;aH Days 614-388 646&lt;.
Crowlord'a Fito llorkot Plua In
Wanted· older bicycle, 614·992·
20 Yrs. EICP. • Ins.' Owner: Ronnie Jones
Handoraon, WV. Froo apace In 3498.
.
.
.
I :;::::;::;;;;:;;PN;;;•~~~~--==== Juno.
304·675·
;:
5000. Coli for dtltlll.
.

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES P_AID

· FOR ATOT~L OF .
'
· $7.00 PER DAY.

· An~quet, tap prices paid, River·
lne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ruu Moore own~. 814·192·.

2526.
Buying Standing Pine, t Aero
Tmct
Ot Largor, 614-256-6038.
A Challenge? Try Tho Trivia
Game 1•100·3H-IIOO, EXT. Clean Late Model Ca11 Or
11071, $2.8g Por llln. llu..'' i1e 18 Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.

8434.

.

Trane., AJIIIIny) ·
.Now Opa for

·' YOUR MESSAGE
· CAN BE SEEN HERE

Martin, 6t4·892·74olt.

ANN OU NCE MENTS

Girl a Glrlo Glrti, Talk To Them
Ll'iell 1·1100.478·8585 EKL 9870,
$3.89/llln, 18+ SOtv·U 618·845-

A good pailrl jo!J 011
rmy clo,.,ly rlay,

742·292.5
""'- , • .,. ro..

vour

........••,,
l

.

UY'S
TUNSMISSION

'

send ~owers anywhere In the world. ·
'Call: 1-BOO..KROGERS In Roanob, Va.
or oslc at ony Kroger CuStomer $eryfce Desk.

Howard L.. Wrlteael
ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR .
'
Outiers
Down a pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting .
FREE ESTIMATES ·

In Memory .

"

Ktoge~ the·World's Largest Rorlst, can now

Otilo

2 mi. off Rt. 7
. Leading Creek Rd •

~

'·
'I
'·

·

fllnttna
Alao C1mcreta Work
(FREE esnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG IH
892-6215

In Loving Memory Of

..••
...

'

713-5785 Ot 304·773-54-47.
.
90 .wanted to Buy
Absolute Top Dollar: Ail u.s: Sll· ·

Anciques, furniture, glass, china,·
coins, toys, lamps, guns, cools,
esraret: Also •ppralsals, Osby ·

,Ta cal Pracal 802-854-7-4""'.

J-...;6_1..;..4-..;;.99.;;.,;2_-34;.....70~ ==Pomero=~~=,O=h::::~-=
- ~ ;=::Jif:o:~~.,.:".,.~-::;

,.

· SHverbrlte Salmon
·Steaks
....•. Lb.
. $2.99
.
Sllverbrlte Salmon
FRiets....... Lb. $3.99
.

WVf023477

POR,ULI

Top Soli,

-

"FAtTORY
DIRECT
PRit:ES''
Quality Window Systems

Reeeohable Rates

. MORRISON'S HEAnNG
&amp; (OOUNG

I

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full. tlma auctioneer, comple te
auction
service.
Licensed
t88,0hlo &amp; Weat Virginia, 304·

18POAT8 8COAE81 UPDATE
EVERY U IIIN Sporta Point
--------~~ Spreoda 5 S~J~r Sportl Pick. Ukl .

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

-~-=
· ~
- -- -===:
-_:, ~

'

ManyMeleiL

814-982-4025
Coll8•m·8 m

SOLJD
REl»LACEMENT WINDOWS

IAULIIII
UCIIItml

892·2772

Ole Carolina
iced Bacon

LoeaiArea
Pick Up DIIICard.cl
Appllencee &amp;

. • Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding ·

MIDDLEPORT

..

IPaymento based on approved qed~)
•Ftee 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat

FREE

PLACE

Windows
•R0011 Additions

. . laa-8443.

6H 448 9416
1-800-872-5967 1391 Safford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

SerVke

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Air CandHioners Installed 28 a monlh
Heat Pumps lnslalled 53811 amonth

Serving Southeastern OH &amp;WI/

·construction- Total and
. pillllal rewires on older
homes

24 HI

Lemley's Auction Service, L8alie
Lemley, Auctioneer. Household,
Estate, Farm Salu. Phone et.--

5 11

BENNETI'S MOBILE HOME
HEATIN.G &amp; COOLING

PlC~O-R_P_O-RAL~E!!!"L-E-CTR-IC-.

Service New

Public Saie
and Auction

80

~60° Communications

.'

At 614 • 446-8 41 8 v A.M. To 5
· ·Rll.
1.1 c.n1 ~na~~u~con 111 ,. _
Gatlpallal'tnyWV

Wlltren nttdtd. Apply lion thru

Frll-om'2·5prn.3CM-17!t1115.

,,

\

•
I

•

J
\

·•

�•

·,~1VIdnetdly;June18,1187

PQrM!'OY • Middleport, Ohio

AUEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

BBIDOS

NEA Croa!lword Puzzle

PHiLLIP

ALDER

ACAOII - ~~~=-1....._..,.
... .,... .
4 oav.·. wciftt 10 ........... lot

=··
Chen....... .

1~ =:~=:...

ahait
1J
·::
t4 ~
PwnovlaM
15
lnlonltallcMI
11......,110 . .,_.
17 Oppoltlll ol
10 F!Ot dar
. ecto
IZE~ ·
11 Rubber city
13 ..,._ Mel
20 Door opsnet ·· . Peggy

~·IOoll

Smol .... bldl-. with lui ....
men~

CABLE TV ORDERTAKERJ

Eom $15 -$18 Ptr Hour +'Comrnlnlona, Eatrlmtly High Cuotomor Dtmond, No Overnight

· Tmval. tmmediltt Openings.
Candidattl Mull Bt Allallablt To

noor Raolne, $300 manlh
pluo utllillH, no ptll, 114·840·

VIII Do Elllrior Pllnllng. Hou....
Tralltro, Trllltr &amp; Born Roofo.
FrM Eadmat... Davlcii14-24S..

O!i&amp;7.

Wlti
houl)unk or lfllh plc:toup- 304-876-5035.

Plld Tl8inlng
Pn1cJam
- ·
. SWt CALL
PIUIL TOI.l
FREE
Chr!ttiln non-smoking, exporl-

enced babyaitttr In my home.

210

304-1176-3903.

Eul

Two bedroom haute, nice and
doon, no lnlldt poll, dtpoait tnd

• 7

• 6

27 Rufel

• K 9 8 5
t ,K Q 19 7
• 10 9 8 3

• 10 7 6 2

25==.-~=
31
For

t96 5 43

34 TV'I

35 Mall

'

420 Mobile Homes
for'Rent

1..... 432-7371

Business

Now-10SI7 14 Wide-I blth,

Opportunity .

s-

down, $13itmo, with approved

creclt cal t-800-ID1-8n7.

lolobllt homo '"""" fa&lt; rent, up
10' 11d0'&amp;, "0 per lllOIIIh, war.r,
_,and traon lncludod, 114·
11112·2117.
Tiallor Lot For Rtnt, Addlaon
Pika, 114-441-'1134.

12x85, 2 bodroom uallor,' e milt
out 143, no P"ll, 814-002-3743
blloreDpm.

2 &amp; 3 bodroom mobllt homes
N..,._10SI7 14 Wide· I bltll, $8VIII starting 11 $260·$300, - · · wadown, $139/mo. wi1h approvad "'' and trllh Included, 114·892·
I-:---Ca.l_t__-800-111--:--1~-1.;,777,_,
. _· - -, 2187.
1987 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom, 2 Bedroom Mobile Homo, You
SUS down, $1851mo. Only at
Udlldea. &amp; Depoal~ In Portor
Oak- Homto. Nitro. WV. 304- Area $2501110., 814-388-0112.
755-5885.
2 Bodroom Trailer For Rtt1t; 8
rg97 14180 3 or 4 Bedroom, Milta Down 21 Gllllpollt, 12251
~===·=.,...----llactory direct High profit poten- $1,358 down, S22Dimo. Free air, Mo.... Dapollt, Roferencos Re·
OOHT REA!) THJSI
d!'J: aolosEor construction. (303) oklrting, delivery. Only at Oak· qulred,ll4-...._172. '814· 2!541Unloas you want to Loose 7- 3200 n 7050·
Homo&amp; Nltro,WV. 304-755- 11251.
Weight &amp; Fool G10at CAll NOWI 230
ProfesSJo.n&amp;l
2 rnlln oullldt Rudond on 13041 562.()373.
·
1D07 dioublowldo $1445 down, Umo Rd., 2 br, lltaleloctrlc, 114$22tllmo. Free delivery 4 aotup. 742-21103.
'Driver needed from Pt Pleasant
araa. Noedo .CDL wlt&amp;nker &amp; haz HARTS MASONARY • Block,
3 Bedroom Trallor • 2
.
mat endoraemanl. 1· 800·598· brk:k &amp; •tone work. 30 1•ra
8122.
perienca, reasonable ratea. 304- 1997 Flutwood 14•52, ·2 Bed· For Rant In Patriot,
895-35gl oft• o:oopm. no job to rooms, 1 Bath, Washer ID(yer,l.na.;.,;..;::________
CA. $18,900, &amp;14-387· 0518 or . DRIVERS WANTED
&amp;mal or ID BIG. WV-0212!18
614-992·5428.
3 Bedroom, •• ol...-lc, ~SOimO.
$250 domage depoet~ muot atgn
500 Mile Radius • Home Every Llvlnaaton'a baaement waterconrttct. 304-876-40118.
Weekend, Family Insurance Paid prooflng, all basement repalra tot Time Buyers E -Z Finalncing,
By Company IDentll, E~e. Pre- done, f{tl eatlmatea, lifetime Ot 3 Bedrooms Around $200
ac:rlption) 401KRedrement Plan, guarantee. 10yr1 on lob txperl- Month FrH Doli""Y &amp; Sat Up. 1· Mobile Homo; Small 2 Becttoomo,
800-251-5070.
Furnlohod, 1235/Mo., Water •
First In • First Out Dls""tch, La» .,.._ 304-ll76-21o45.
Traah Paid, 020 Fourth AvtnM,
Model C~mv. Tractors With
Flatbed Trailers Competitive Pay Rlcli Walker Painting, residen - 2 Bedrooms, Central Air, In Galli· Gallipolis, 814-448-3844 Ahtr 7
tial, commercial, auto, frH eatl· ~olla. On Rented lo~ Read~ To P.M.
·
-Ptrcenr.go OJ Groso.
mateo, 814-742-2707.,. 814·D•9·
~';: lntol 014-448- 1409, Afr.r
Computer Uoert Needed. Work
awn hours. S20k to $5Dkl~r 1·
800-348-7188 xiSOI. ·
Dellvory Drlvore lltue Caesars
Now Hiring Delivery Drivero.
Hourly Wlgo • Cllh Convnlsslon
Pald Dally. Flexible Schedules,
Uniform Provided, Apply At Gall~
pollal.oc:ation

l 1kt New Graco Toddlor Btd
Wltn lhttro11 &amp; Bedding; Baby
Btd Wilh Motlfeaa Uaod Chain
link Ftnct With Poll &amp; Gott,
Cll1814-002·5477.

a

Services·

South

GRANT TRUCKING, INC.

4

5488SRV3
OAK HILL, OHIO 46851 .
fl00.282-2113
'

D-llotlel Ploa..m
Wo have $1000 to UOOO per
home in dlaauer relief funds
ovailabfo )o holp you purchatt a

Etrn $1,000 Weekly StuHing Envelope• At Home, Start Now. No
Experience. Free SUpplies, Info.
No Obligation. Send lSASE To :
ACE, Dept 1351, So• 5137, Dia·
monel Bar, CA 91765.
Experitrlced B.E.38l Cable Tool
llrlll•l Sotvico R~ Operator for oi
&amp; gas work, In southeast Ohio,
lang term steady wark, send resume &amp; references to P.O. Box
288, Athens, Oh 45701 .

Need Someone To Harvest Jiay,
Call for Datallt: Aloo AKC Gbld·
en Retriever Stud Service, 81'·

3711-2839.

.

Part-Time Cook needed in child
development cenler. 20 hours per
week. Duties include planning
breakfut, lunch and afternoon
snack, diNelop manu, maintain lnventorr, submitting load ardara,
cleaning and aanldzlng kitchen,
maintaining monthlr records.
Mull have high lchoo diplomo 01
equivalent, Two years previous
experience •• a cook preferred.
Position available Jul~ I . Send
letter of interest and resume be·
foro deadllna of .kino 28 ID l'tlyllla
Maaon, PHR, director of Human
Resources, University ol Rio
Grande, P.O. Bo• f27, Rio
Grandt, Ohio 45674. EEOIAA

440

replacement home. Call 1·800·

walf· v-a.

'

~~E=..·c:~~1~i

r,1FRCHAND ISE

Houeehold

510

. I Goods

720

lg84 ' ford Ranger. low lollltt~M

FACTORY DIRECT.
All real estate actvertlslng in
this f'IOWI!l8per is fubjecl to
ina Federal Fair HO&lt;Jslng Act
at 1968 which makes it lttegat
to advertise ·any preference,
llmnaiiOn or discrimination

Shape,

2836.

1;.:.::;____ _

~~-

based on race, color, rSiigion.
sax familial status or national
origin, Qr any Intention to
make any such preference,
!Imitation or &lt;iscriminaUon.•
Thls newspaper wHI not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation of the

law Our reaclers are hereby
Informed tbat all Qweltlngs
advertised In this newspaper

2 or 3 bedroom, $200/ma. Free

dell.very &amp; sot up. 1·800·251·
5070.
For Sale: 48 Acres Mil South Of
Eureka With Great Hunting,
W10 ll!obllo Home With An Ad·

ditional MObile Home Hook Up
And

Shop. $65,000 Call

are availab~ on an equal
opportunity basis.

Flral Ave. Rear, Gall1polis, 8 U·
+16·2561

1bedroom apartment. Ma10n WV.
Furrllohad or unfurnlahod. Portect
tor c:onstruclion worker. Call fat
-UL 304-713-505ol.
2bdrm. apll., total eloclflc, appliances furnished, laundry room
lacllltloo. olooo to school In town.
Application&amp; available at: Village .
Groen AptL t49 or call 814-9923711.EOH.

Beach St. Middleport. 2br fur·
niahed apt, udlltleo ""id, dopoolt
&amp; roloronc•-304-882-2568..
'

E~or.

PI P~nt • Domino'• Plzu
Now. hiring lor delivery, must be ·

furnished etficlencr
,~ ... •• utilitin paid,
Please call
more lnforma-

rNer 18yrt old. ~-875-5858.

Salel Person With Allaast 2
Yean Experience In lumber &amp;
Hardware, full-Time Position

'

814-370-

1080 Ford F-~0. DSL EngiM 6
Sp 12 Sp DOUDIO Framt 114-2118-

8302.
A Load, eu-44.1·

LivestOCk

630

14 Cronbrad Btof Cow&amp;, Dut 10
Calvt In 8 weeki. Call Andy
Adami Dairy 814-3711-274&lt;1
2 Now adult wootorn uddlos.

.

eo·

1902 Nlaaan Pick-Up. 5 Speed,
AMIFM Good Condition, Sport~/
j

. ,.

Throe · 5,000 BTU Window Air
Conditionoro.814-446-1171 .
Used Air Conditioner &amp; Heat
Units $150 Storm Doors S50 614·
448-3301, 814-4&lt;18-358:1.
USED FURNITURE 130 Bulavllle
Pika, Bab~ Bed, Book Shelves,
Hldo-o-bod CouchH, bodt, mat·
trann, toblo/chalrt. 814·4414782. HRS 10·4. We buy utld
fumlrute.
•

Antiques·
Buy or oell. Riverine Andquea,
1124 E. Main StrH~ on RLI24,
Pomaro~. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
o.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
8:00 p.m. 814-892-2528, Run
Moore.-.

540 MlsceHaneous
Merchah'dlse
1 Wood Spllnor: 1 Com ShoHor: 1

Flat ·Aiuminum Bottom Boat &amp;
Electric Motor; 3 Fuel Tank• 215
Gallon &amp; Steel From01; I Horl·
zontal Fuel Tank 300 Gallon&amp;
With Pump On Stool. Slldt; 2 Iron
Kottlos Largo Phone: 814·388·
11840, Attar 5 ~M.

AKC Gorman Shepherd Pupo,
While Champ llna, 614-3889194.
·
AKC malo Trl Sholtlo, lyr old,
axe. quallt~. $175 080: 814•367·
0028.
AKC R 1
R
eg llorod
lilt Wellor
Pupo, 6 Wotko Old, 111 ShOll 4
Wormed. $300 Femaloa: $275
Matts; 814 4tB 8827.
Baby Hedge Hogs. 304· 875·
5111 .
Full-Blooded Dalmatian Puppies,
Wormed, S75 Each. 814-38811122.
Pots Plus. Silver Bridge Plaza.
814-441 -0770.
Pureb&lt;od Siberian Husky pup-

pies. 3 left, very nice, blue eyes,

maoks, wormed, 40% off, $100

each, cal 614"992"5144·

Rabblll For Sale: Dwarf And
Stmi-DWarf Mosdy Maloa SO And
$8 Each, 614-388-9123.
J~=:::..::.:..::_=.:::=-__,
Roady 711: Rogiotored Aullralian
Shepherd Puppies, $150, Taking
Deposito. 814 388 8388

__

,rD Ul(£ TO 1\i\Vt: f-.
CI'()(.()L~\

'110 Autos for Sale

Antiquo Car Tiro, Flroatono 4 Ply
Size: 475 -500 -19 Spoked

1964 Bandit Bas~ lloJt SQ. HP
Mercury Garage Kept, Excellent
Condition, $3,000, Bt_, 2 P.M.
To 5 ~M. 304-87!&gt;5131.

Wheeia, Excellent Condition,
Used Mobile Homo 10•50 Good
For Storogo $600 080 .. 814-448·
7127.

Two miniature Collie pups, male,
Are you buying new furnitUre? ' $125 each, 814-742·2050.
Soli ~our usad furnltuta 11 the llomoro~

11 a rtal
breakfast and 570

Thrift ShOp. There

need lor couchea,
dining room)aets. We also bur
baby beda, ltrollen. playpena,
toddler car Hata and walkers.

Call 614-gg2·3725 Tuuday thru
Saturday. 10om-4pm at 220 Eall
Main sv.ee~ Pornoror.

2 bedroom
Manor and
In Middle·
Call 814·

Oppor-

814·

Musical

Kurzwoll K-1000 keyboird wl
case. Kimball Spinet plano, both
In '"" good corod. 304-876-7133.

11188 loMtdor, t7, open

bow,

130

Mercrulse, a1ainle11 atHI prop,
amlfm cassene at.,-eo.·cover, a•·

Hondl CIVIc 4 Doors, Auto,

rego kept, oxcoltenr to ,_ condl·
lion, 614·992·5124.

$525, 114-3711-2845.

SR,

1988· Rang•r 37:iV 18' 12 · 2AV
Trolling Motor, ISO XP Evlnrude
Ou-d, $0,600, 814-992.-2770.

760

1088 Subaru, loadod,. 111 power,
IUnnoof, $,1,350. 304-1175-3324.

Budgtl Price Transmissions.
Starting .. $99.00 and Up. UNCI I
Rebuilt, All Typos,' Over 10,000
Transnriasions, Ac:cen Trarisler
C~••• &amp; Roar Ends, 814-245·

4&lt;18-4122Afltr7~M.

1017 ·For~ Gl Tempo; 1,000
Milot, AC, Crulao, Runo Groatl
·~.500. 114-4&lt;18-94&lt;11.

Elec:tric Scooter and Wheel ·
chairs, NOW/ Uaod, Scooter lihs,
Portable Rampo, Stolrino~ Elavatora, Bowman's Homecare 614·

-

StiOwblrrln. Pick Vbur Own, Cal
ClaudeWontorl, 814-245-5121.

wa

1111 Dodge Convertlon Van,
Good COndition. Original Mll11.

tllD-273-0320.

790

aw..

•lmmtd.tt.nc~yman worf1, wood·

Wanted pointing llallora, llnglt
ltory hoUHI. lnoldt I OUt Raf·
lltnCOI I OltilltjiMI. 304·185·

.11.

guru,

Mountain

5 Prefix for

43 Glkll on Ice

perk

clove hitch

8 Mother of Mlle.
9 Salveo

Mlu-

syllollll

11 Granny or

-

Hofland

ltm .,._., 111ft

wagon, 84 ltale CIPIIOIIY, -'/.
good condition. PIOO, i14·00 •

1072.

.

NO!' Hoillltlll tiiiMer

. c:ond.ID4-fti.Oil

'

mi-. •••

w.- ..........._
biles. Sidor's Equlp-t 304·
876-7•"1
...
.
ltC •

""

West .North
!NT

4.
Pass

21

28 Noah'o boat '
21 Antelopes :
28 Farm aound

.....

East
Pass

29 Empty

Pass

30 Look over

Pass

32 Dry
33 Long-necked
blrd
•
Lanco -

41

Sometimes .. after tWO or lhrce
glasses of wine -- I think I should
give sland-up comedy a try. In lhe
morning, sanity returns to its throne
and I go back to my compittcr.
This deal ,night be called a com·
edy of errors, uceptl think someone
•• J forget who · - thought of lhattitle
first.
.Againsl six spades, West led the
diamond king. South won wilh dum·
my 's· ace. played a spade to his ace,
and tried a heart to dummy 's jack.
When that finesse worked. declarer
discarded his diamond loser on· the
heart ace and made his slam.
How many etrors can you spol
during lhe bidding and play'!
Thi:re were three. The first was
North's raise to four spades. With
such a good hand for play in spades.
he should have made an advance cuebid of four diamonds. This shows a
maximum no-trump. usually fourcard trump support, and the diamond
ace; simultaneously il denies tile
club ace. Squlh's slam bid was debal·
able as the opponents might have had
tw o immediate red-suit . winne~s .
Technically, he should cue-bid five ·
clubs.
In the play, ifthc heart finesse had
lost, declarer wpuld have been one
down immediately. Declarer should
have taken a ruffing lincsse, 'leading
·a heart 10 dummy 's ace and conlinu·
ing wilh the heart queen. lfEasl cov·
ers wilh the king. declarer 111fl:•. plays
a club lo dummy 's king and discards
. a minor-suit loser on 1hc heart jack.
Here: though, when East plays low,
South throws his remaining dia·
mond. Wesl is welcome 10 lhc trick,
but dcclarer"s club loser disappears
on lhe established

48 ,tlctor Chanay
48 Polnlod
50 Yank
51 Wordo at ·
under·
llondlng

53 Hawaiian
~+-+-I

•. -

Home '
fiMENT

'ii .

.

\lncor)dltioNI lifetime guaiamee.•
looal'-'l tfortncoa furnlahad .. Eatablilhtd 1171. Call (Ot.t) ue!!!_70 .~ 1-800-217.0578. 11..... '
...torproG~ng.
' ' .
.

·-.

foaat

· 55 Comlco guy
Andy -

;

56 Concerning •
(2 Wdl.)

57. Char

1

5D JFK alght .
81 Sttult - Marla

C~LEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb~ Clt)her-cryp~og rams are created lrom .quol~tioos by famous people . past 11nd prut;n!

. Eactllettertn the cipn.!' stands lor a nother roc:tay's clue: J equals M

,• 'as

0

X E K

B S MT I

SLCO

aE

RO
•\

0 W L F 0 A

W ·F

WOEWUO
XE K f·

A

D E F
AET'B

F• O

a

M Z

S L B

' LUNLXZ

LJ .

EBSOF
A f' OLJ

U M TAL

FETZBLAB .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Macbeth and Lady Macbeth sta nd out as t he
supreme type of all that a host and h ostess should no! be ." M a&gt;t
Beerbohm.
·
'fiiAT DAiLY
PUULII

S~l\.c{l~-~~trstt

~-----

ldild

letters, of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

klw

I

~a larm

~y

ClAY

WOlD
lUll

I . POLlAN

be-

'·

·,.

four simple words.

0 s DI L T

MA E s u

•

the

I
'·
•.

'1.

. I.__...__1...L-1-'-l~­
3

,...I_D_U_N_O_W__,I ;..',

.

I~

I

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CUQHNE

Is

I.

1 admire my sister because
she laughs at her own mistakes
but - · - at ~ - - -.

I

1---.1=-.:;..,16.,;:..,.:1,;..7...;,1;....=..,.1--l Q

r r 1j r I' ·I' I' 1

~~~rs~~~~E~ETTERS
D~~~~tRMBLE FOR I I
•

_.
'.

Compleoe oh e chuckle quooed

;.,
· -L-J.:....J-.J.'--..1--__,J
b y f,Ji ing in the missing words
·L.
you develop from step No. 3. below.

I IAT I I I I I

__
.

'

~·

Ml'Eif'AQOFI«!

Wettest

44 Aquatic bird

_

1113 T~rry, 18', snw.U lruc•IFcan
pull, I550Q; 1873 CoiChman, 28',
eacellont -conditlon, t3600 · il14- •

;

'

,

..

,.

·.

Legume • Mange ~ Vixen - United . MIND off MINE

111112 25' Mtfliord, 814-m:iaG.

~ l

.

Puppy nol. .

24 Chew

.

carilpers &amp;

Unclon

(PM!.)

.I'm glad to listen to other peoples troubles, it helps
. ,me to keep ~y M!ND off MINE .
~~~~--__:__;,
____;,
,;;,;;;;;;

Motor Homes·;

••ecm:

19

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

SE 'I'! If'[ •;

P r a - Trot Strvlct,
Rernowaf, Free Ettlmatasf In·
our~~nco, - · Ohio. o 14-381-.814-387-7010. .

THE NORTH STAR 15
ALWA'f5 OVER MINNEAPOLIS..

1g• Camper, aloopa 6, llalhroom,
stove &amp; rtlrlgerator, •700, e1•·
002-3892.
'
.
~

-7283

ho,,

THE LAST TIME WE WENT
• SOMEPLACE, HE TOLD US

Two 235-75:RIS W.W.A .W.R.,
vary good condition, asking $85
• • lt4-D40-2111G.
.
.·

1000 Chevy Corsica, black on
groy, . cold air, tilt, automatic,
18,000 actual mllta, exc:ellent
condldon, book value $4800, wiA
... $31110, 114-8DUI24.

. :.

.. llip. 304-ll15-e825 Aclc.

4 Elfqlllftl

42Singlng

7Rocky

New g11 tanka, 1 ton lrwck

.

Signs Mod,.,Rtfurblshed. Metal
tool• painted,, lawns rnow•d,

'

ag.oln

Smoll otrongly

wheeto &amp; rediitora. D &amp; il Auto ·
Rlpi.Y. WV. 304-372·3033 or 1:

81Q

RfrJTAIS

IS ALWAVS OVER .
HOLL'!'WOOD SO JUST
FOLLOW THE 'MOON ..

Full line of auto body panels,
P41lnta and auppllu, oloo glan,
fight aaaomllfV. Oxygen and acatylent llnlil filed and tlchangod.
814-742-2792.
''

Srrewbtrrlts, 'tl&gt;u Pick.
Pick. IDDO lincoln Coni..,llll, ,!lignaStrlt&amp;, o,.,.fn 10u~ ·1
Optnad: 8-8 Mon, Wed, Frl; Sot .
8-Noon,
Clotld Sunday'o, •· 11.000 lllln, All Powlr /Auto
Ta~lofl Btny Patch, 'KMf RDod, Haat•. Good Co~dltion, ... 500;
1002 Cadillac S.dan Deville,
I14-24HCiol7.
White Out/Slut Int. All Powoi,
58,000, Mill. Ellctllent Condition,
F'Af1r.1 SlJPPLifc~
112.500, Calf 814·448-1761, or
814-448...70.
1\ I IVES fOCK

11183 forll 2000 traeiOr, liVe powor, 3 Pl. now retlttor, rtllulft ..,.
101, bruah
piOW't, clltc,
$4,200, 814•g 2' 2143 or 114· '
D!l2-83731fllt5.
.

REMEM8ER,TIIE MOON

5877

tH 4118151.

580

Fruns&amp;
Vegetables

l WROTE TO SPIKE SO
1-lE'LL 8E E)(PECTIN6 VOO

Auto Pans &amp;

4 Good Year Wrangler RTS. 2451
75R 116 13,000 Milo, $150, 814·
l!&lt;l!i-41851 .

Booti By Rodwing, Chippewa.

Concrete &amp; Pt11dc Stp1ki Tanks,
300 .Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1-8C»531·0$28.

, ,3 littr ve . ......

1888 Pontiac 1000. 48K. Aut'o,
AC , Doctor Forbldl Owner To
Drive Who ·11 Do'. Mull Stlll814·

Baby bod; hi9h chair, otrollor, car
-~ ...ng. 304·815-4548.

Cemeterr loti. Granite Bronze
Memorials. Apple Groiie Memori·
II~ 304-178·2770.

O~ck,

Accessories
,.

·
S11r Guitar, Chelhlro, Ohio· loso-' 114-251 'W. ,
ons and instruments· piano, gui·
1tllll, '.i Door Cllevy Beretta
tar and drums. .14-317-0302.
11600, ~ 814-317-1056

Rocky. Tony Lama. Guaranteed
L - Prieta At Shot COlo, Gal·
llpofio.

..

h1

1017 Toyota Supra lOOK Ma·
roon, Erctllent Condition, 080

Instruments

~""

1
20' Citation In/outboard
170hp. Trailer &amp; acceuorleo In·
eluded. Runs &amp;· looks · grear.
$8,600•.304-G75-4221 .

1g52 Pontiac Grandt Prix, Heads
Engine Works $350; 1815 Chov~
Euro Sport wagon, $1,000: 350
Engine From 1D~8 MonJe Carlo
Engine Rebuild Kit, No Englno
-.$125,114-245-5885.
.

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

·-........................-

r;.

BIG NATE

crvl..,., Am FO! CaoiOite,.ancl Ski
Aootuory. 814-258-8393 .

Treat "Hot Spott. • Kill Fleas,
Ticks, Mosquitos &amp; Flleo On
Conract Without Internal Poison•. Ask J D NORTH PRO·
DUCE 614·446-1933 About
HAPPY JACK KENNEL DIP. ·

f1~~W£Noll&gt;

ror Sale

4" heavy corrugated pipe, I OOft.
roU, $21 .09. PAINT PLUS HARD·
WARE. 304-875-4084.
All Sizes Guaranteed, 614· 886·
7531.

f.!\\ IT\-.liTI\ 'r

750 ' Boals &amp; Motors

1994 Marade 18 Foot Open. Bow.

Air Conditioner&amp; Re-COnditioned

TO

89 S-10 Blazer . 5, SP, 2 door,
82,000 milot, $7,800 or take over
Payman11L .(614J-31!1-2 t 34

.

1882 Ford 4x4 $2,000; 1988
Comoro, ·Rebuilt Motor &amp; Tranomllllon, $4,000 080; 1987 Harley Davloon Sportotor $5,000,
8t4o38&amp;-8481, 814-002-8978.

1983

""'y t 1-W.€. "'FOO( AA· N·H~\ !YOU CI+IT

1995 Toyoll Tacomo 4•4- 24,100
min tl2,600. 304-175-3200. ·

1g53 Buick Spoc:lal$5,500 Firm.

~ .. Good

Cl 19t7

(N(£, fW.:£')

'84 Dodge Charger, 4 cylinder, 5
opttd,runagood,bodygood,M
rust, cherry red Color, 4 good
tirea·llncf ilumnum rima, priced 10
.... $685, 614-742-2370.

814-4&lt;18-0217.

,-------=,...,

Pitc£0fY~

TRANSPOR fATION

W/Sun

$20,000 minimum. Applicants
ahall be a resident of the Village
Corporallon llmlls within 111
months ot hit or her appointment
at Chief. The applicant lhall be
required 10 pa11 a phrslcal ex·
amination, given by a licensed
phyaician. showing that he or ol\o
meets the phralcal requirameniS
necessary to perform the duties
of Chief of Pbllce.

'·

'THE BORN LOSER

The Village of Pomeroy Is ac·
cepting applications lor the posi·

and knowledge or the position;

'.
•

Information.

lion of Chief of Pollee. All interest·

3 Orawt rlclgtJ '

8

By Phillip, Alder ·

tgeg lnt Conv. tractor 385 Cum;
min&amp; 15spd, Jake brake, air ride,
&amp;looper, now drl.. tiroo. Call
· :
wteklnds 3&gt;4-175-2284.

Available, Cell 614-446-2002, For

ad appllcanta should subml their
resume and atatemenl of qualifi ·
cations to tho VIllage Offices by
June 30, 1997. Salary ihali be
commensurate with eaperience

40 Mlglclan'• 1'1111

10 ·0ecorate

moron?

couoln

BC-NEABRIDGE
Wednesday, June 18, 1997

J

''

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drive
from $280 to t334. Walk to ohop
&amp; movlu. Call 114-448· 2588.
·
Equal Houling Opportunity.

RE AL ESTATE

Al~lrlfl$1,400,

depotll required, no pets, 114-·

NO IIIDOLE MAN.
1 Bedroom Near fiolzor Eatra
.
SAVE SSSS.
Nice, Central Air, $288/Mo., +
Dakwood Homes Is tho only Udlltioo, Dopoolt Req. 814-446·
dealer in the tri-state area that 2957.
builds and sella their awn I;;;;..;.;.;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
homes. For factory dlrecJ prices, 1 Bedroom unlurnl1had Apart·
1 ~'·"' ...O~AKWOOD HOMES, Nl· ment Range, RefrigeraiDr, Dlspo. 304-755-5885.
sal. Garage provided. Water,
Sowago, Garbage Pal~. Dopoolt
Firat Time Buyers I E-Z Financing. and roforoncoo R~ulrtd, 130

• A K J ,10 5 4 2

Onion's

Goo4

On RtliuHI Engint, 5 Spttd,

1 and 2 bldloom- furniahed and unlumlshad, aacuri"'

1 Bedroom In Glllipoll&amp;, No Pets,
Very Nlct, 814-418-7003.

1 Family 1111111blr

35 Hocllclfb plltl 2

The errors
weren't funny

'fiucks for Sale . :

304·875-50-40.

details.

DOWN

36 Malee a acari
38 Judge
'

- - 3().1.!58-1080.

for Rent

488·7871 to sot appointment for

(Sp,)

. Opening lead: • K

Upton U&amp;od Carl At. 12· 3 Mil••
South of loon, WV. Finane!.,

Apll'lnl8nts .

992 ·2218.

.

South

· Pass
Pass

For ·Bale Or Trade: 1014 Chi.;
Cole~llty
Auto, Air,

2

21158.

for two

•

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Ij~~~~~~~~~~

•x- 1~gl-8777.

Iron~

37 Wu cognizant
ol

• A7 4

"-Y

e.

• QJ 2
• 3
• 8 2

INOTICEI

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
racommandt that vou do bull ·
Mil wltll people you know, and
NOT"' sand money throu~ 1l1o
mall until you ha. . lnveatogatod
lht offollng.
StHf building dealarthlf. avail·
ablo In open mafilol Doatrs buy

J&amp; 8c:1100f OI'Q.

Weod

30DO.

FINANCIAL

14 c:on.-

22 lnMtfl child
23 NlclawM for

J
• K6 5
t A

2517.

retertnctl rt"Uirtd, 814·882·

· Sll&amp;l

• Q9 8 3
• AQ J 4

'
Grubb'o Plano· tuning &amp; .~,..
~bltmo? NNd Tunod? Colt lht
plono Dr. 81-525

P.O. Box·
Murray Hill Station, personal interest. Be sure to respond
in a manner thai enhances its paten·
New York, NY 10156.
. •
lial.
·
cAN~ER (June Zl·luly 22l·Fol·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
low your.ills!incts in yqur financial
.Fresh avenues· for personal acquisi·
·,
dealings
loday.
O!J
n01
take
any
l
'
·unnecessary .r isks, but do ·behave tion can be found at this time. You
BERNICE
may_ )Nan I 10 re-expl_o!_e channels
boldly within reasonable bounds.
BE:DE OSOL
LEO (July 23 -Au~ . 22) Disasso- that ha~e not produced for you preciate yourself fro111 ncgalive thinkers viously. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
today. lnslc,n\1, seck comp,anionship
lnfluenlial
friends born under your
with people '~ qu believe are lucky.
sign could be quite lucky for you
Some of it may rub off on you.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Ben· today, provided thai everyone
Thursday. June 19, 1997
· eficial conditions•arc stirring at this involved !las strong feelings about the
Benefits could.develop for you in lime where your work is concerned. task at hand.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) !'Co- .
1he year ahead through C!)nt;lcts Anticipation and alerlncss will help
pie y(!u' ve helped 'in the past are the
you'll make in clubs.and social Oflll· you spot opponunitics .
·nizations. Take 81) ~~~;tive role in
LIBRA {S~pl. 23-0ct. 23) Lady ones you Shoyld go to today if you
these groups. ·
'
· Luck will be looking kindly upon ' need'soiileotypc of assistance in fulGEMINI (May 21-June 20) This ' ' your endeavors·~oday, This could be filling your ambitions.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be
is a good day lo dissect a problem especially true in.areas where you can
optimistic about your cause if you're
thai's been frustrating you lately. express your creativity.
Take it apart a piece at a time and you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your promoting something meaningful for
should find an intrinsic clue to what material prospects tie quite encour· yourself and others today. Your mindmakes il lick. Know where to look for aging in this cycle. Watch for devel· set will determine .lhe outcome.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
romance and you 'II find it. The opmcnts that could enhance your
Today.
you're better equipped than
Astro-Orapb Mlltl:hmaker instantly financial position and well-being.
reveals which siJIIfl are romantically · SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. usual to help yourself and ochers soi-t
perfect for you. Mailin&amp; $2.75 to 21) You might receive some Jood out critical affairs in advantagcou¥
Matchmaker, c/o this ~wspaper, news today reaanlina an imponant ways. Use your gifts with di~K:retion .

'
ASTRO~GR;APH

liw(CCI

..

__, .....

�Ohio _Lottery

Recti claim

..••

Plck3:
027

bragging ·.
rights 5-2

•~

•••
,.
•

Plck4:
3851
Super Lotto:

4-9-17-33-37-44
Kicker:
963262

· Sparta on Page 4

•

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Cle•r tonight, low In
the eoa. Frld•y aunny,
hlghnewtO•

'

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~

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~

C1117, Ohio W*v

~

•••

Pu!llllhlrlll Compeny

2 SectiDM, 12 PJIIIH, 3 5 A o.nnen eo.

Ne••.,..,..-

Po_meroyoMiddleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 19, 1997

r

.•

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.••"'•"
.•.•
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.....

Eastern ~ Loca-l School ·Boa·rd reviews grievances

~

· By BRIAN J. REED
The lights now on the field pose Local Education Association, were
: Sentinel Newa Stllff
a safety ~. according to Well. reviewed. ioe Bailey, chairman of the
Personnel, proficiency testing and Several ofjthe light poles are leaning, association's grievance committee,
the purchase of equipment and texi- and Smith said that at least one of the . discussed the grievances with the
books were discussed wheh the East- polesnas be,gun to rot from the bot- board.
• The grievances relate to language
ern Local School I;loard met in regu- tom.
lar SCMion on Wednesday. The equip"We're 'afraid one of those poles is negotiated in the teachers' master
ment purchase includes replacement going to come down on a_crowd," contract regarding supplemental contracts for golf coach, seventh grade
. of f9Qtball field lights at cost or' ·· Board Prcsi~nt John Rice said:
· $48,000.
"Xou can't put a price on safety," boys' basketball coach and advisor 10
. National An Honor SQCiety. "The_
: The lights and related equipment, said board member Greg Bailey
three positions, which are paid
· to be purchased .from C&amp;H Electric Grievance! reviewed
: and Musco, will be paid from the
Three grievances, filed on behalf $1,530, $_1,105, and $Sill respec· : board's general fund.
of staff m~mbers 'by the Eastern tively, in accordance with the con-

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from.ldoor &amp;
4 door mo,lels in
stock.·Various·
. equipment and

wlorsl

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Reiay for Life celebration and
fun-draiser scheduled July 12

·Ohio Senate passes
te.rmlnal ·iUnes$· bill

Low-lying areas
flooded around
southern -Ohio

)

Reading·and r.idi

Lawmakers f·i'nd extra money for child care

VoinoYich;
other. lawmakers ,oppose English-only bill
. ,

.•...

...i·

COLUMBUS (AP)- ~ ·laW·

lisl[t the sta~'J!ifficilllanguage. Bul print all jNbliF documents in Engli,sh.
the proposal probably IVllnlt be more .
Some agenciei, however, could
give written instruction in other Ia_nsuccessful !hit year;
thc House on Wednesllay passed . , guages. ~re was some ~oncem .
the English-only biU, Jiut opposition 1aboutllllkinj sure.that apnctcS such
l'roin Gov. George Yolilovi4:1und oth- 1as the ,1110101' .vehtc!e burea_u could
erlawmakentlblywillstopitfrom ·sive instrucllons m Enghsh and
proceoding.
.
Spanisb.
.
Obio would bloome the 2Adutate · ' .''This cloeuot mean that English
10 have m~lq~Ub.oaly taw if the Iiiii il beaer then any other tan pap il r trd
tilt •JII!Id- thai would be rldielllous," uid Rep:
ins II fi~~e . ~ -....
, 0ecqe 'nlrwtllepr, the biD's 1p011. the bill, wtileh pu~ tbe House 101'.

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Stronger

By BRIAN J. REED
ing Lab has been on-site every day
Sentinel Newa Stllff
doing compaction studies on the soil
. Superintendent Deryl Well report- . on which.!he new consolidated eleCOLUMBUS (AP) -An organi- .
:ed to the Eastern Local School Board mentary building is being built. The
zation
representing the state's. busi- ,
· on the progress of the l!istrict's build- compaction performance of the soil
ness leaders says creating a world.: ing program when the board met in has been deemed satisfactory in all
class education system should be one
:regular monthly session on Wednes- areas exC4lPI for three small spots ncar
of the state's top priorities.
:day evening. The meeting was held the rear !/fthe new structure.
The Ohio B1,1siness Roundtable
· in the cafeteria of Tuppers Plains EleWell said that additional soil will
said
Wednesday there is a need for
: mentary School, due to asbestos be moved to the site for those three
higher academic _standards and school
: abatement at Eastern High School.
areas. ,
.
funding reforin that is linked to
That asbestos abatement is on
The gym bleachers in the hi~h
improve&lt;! student pei'fQrmanee.
: schedule, Well said. The board autho- si:hooll)ave been removed and demo·
"Education bas been and will
: rizcd the removal or floor tile in the !ilion on:~tbe gym noor will begin
continue
to be our highest priority,"
: building, which bas been damllgelf by either ThUrsday or Friday. The new
said Jolin Ong, chairman of the
:the abii!Cment work. Replac~ent of · bleachetlilare noi expected ·to arrivii
roundtable and the B.F. Goodrich Co.
the tile is in th!: gen~ral contract; and.·. ~(ltil ~r t7i with'dcHivecy guaror-of
ciii!Ceiaurvlvoi's
and
victims.
The
lumlThe group's ec!ucation improve'J.'!'~Jlt!!.o(.t~ pld ttle !)ow will sa.ve antC'edcTy'''ttianksgivlng. He noted
will
Hilt
du~ a epeclalaervice at the
narlea
ment
agenda is b8sed ori their comttme and posstbly money, Well.satd. that the first home basketball game
'
Reilly
fbr
LHe
on
July
12:
ponents
for a successful school sysWell said that the light fixtures may hav~ to he moved to another.
tem.
They
.incl_uclc high academic
· have been · rcinoved, although tlie location· if the arrival of the bleach·
standards, school accountability, parcrews lutd difficulty removing sam~ ers comes too late for it~stallation .
ent involvement and technology.
ofthe40year-old fixtures. Those fix- --the new:gym noor will be completThe roundtable, a nonpartisan
tures will be reconditioned and · ed by Ailgusi IS.
.
group
of 80 business cKecutives,
. reused once the renovation .is comCrews will begin cutti~gthe front
also
endorsed
the education
·
driveway ·riext week to make deliv!
. pleted, WeU said.
improvement plan Jli'Oposcd by the
. The building will loo~ drab during cries of material easier.
'
.
group
called Building EKcellent
the upcoming school year, Well said,
In conjunction with the building
Schools
for Today &amp; the 21st Ccntu·
since students and faculty will spend program ~ \toe board authorized Well
to the-winning relay team. -.
Relay for Life, a combination of · local ACS branch.
.
ry
a
coalition
of business, educamosl of the new school year with no to apprdve change orders under celebration and fundraiser for the
Near the end of the event, a canteams from any walk of life are
ceilings, temporary lighting and tile· $5,000, after c'ons~tlting with the Meigs County branch C&gt;f the Ameri- encouraged to panicipate: grocery dlelight luminary ceremony will be tion and community leaders.
The BEST plan suggests more
less lloors, Well said.
board's grqunds and buildings. com- can Cancer Society, has been set for stores, hospitals, the health depart- held to honor survivors and to
money
and more accountability for
Well reported that Columbus Test- mittee.
. July 12 from 4to II p.m. at the Rock rnent, banks, senior citizens, bikers' remember those who have lost the schools. The report prepared by recI
Springs Fairgrounds.
organizations, churches apd youth battle with cancer. The luminaries · ommends raising art additional $3.5
li is designed to reach into the groups, and families. One team mem- will be sold at the Pomeroy branch of hill ion annually for public schools.
community io bring together friends, · ber at a time walks, jogs ·or runs Peoples Bank for $5. Each will have The additional money would. come
neighbors, work associates and fam- · around the track_for 30 minutes . the cancer survivor or victim's name mainly from 'increases in sales and
ilies to celebrate those who have sur- While the relay is going on, a com- on it; rtames will also be printed on in.come taxes .
vived cancer and 10 remember those munity pany and family atmosphere the program for the event, if desired.
.- Moore noted that for ever)' $1.000
who have nbt.
will pieviil in the area where die
. fl
.
raised,
SO cancer patients can be
COLUMBUS (AP)-The Senate drugs undcir,.l conditions set ·by the
Every 24l!ours, 3,400 Americans walkers are. There will be free live
helped
with
panial reimbun;cmcnt for
on Wednesday passed a ·House bill · State Mediqtl Board.
ate diagnosed with cani:er. It is the entertainment, games, activities for
cancer
and
pain-fighting_ medicathat would allow doctors to prescribe .
It goes to Elov..George Voinovich second-leading cause of death, not · children arid food for sale.
'narcotics and other drugs to patients for his consideration.
only in America, but also loca)ly in
A scavenger hunt, organized by tions.
Volunteers arc al·so needed to help
The Senl!J,e also passed a bill that Meigs County.
.whose pain is so great that they do.
the wlllking team from The Daily
SCI
up for thC event, and talented parnot respond to other medication. It woul\1 · perrmt, to~nships and _ot~r
Clr-{CINNATI CAP) - It was
The Relay for J..ife ,will involve a Sentinel, _Will also be held. ·
ticipants
who can sing, read poems or beyond soggy.
-wasdesignedtohelp.peoplt;withter- government \bodtes 10 pubhsh, a . teain of runners/walkers competlns
.
Each team member is asked to
. notice Qr compl(ltion of financial against each other 10 raise the most donate $10 toward the local society . prose readings, face painters, and ' Rain- as it has frequently done
ininal illoessej.
, The bill also would give some pro- audits, ratheftlh.an publish reports on money and travel the ' most miles . as a registration fee, and will receive pcole lo help with childrcns~ games tbc past two weeks - pounded
.tection to doctors who prescribe the the audits. It lij)w goes to the Hous¢. ·around a trai:lr:: The event usually a ltelay for Life t·shirt and a gift bag, are also being sought.
alr.cady saturated ground on Wcdnes. Donations of prizes arc also . day, Oooding low-lying rqads .. storm
lasts overnight. but ~eigs County's containing coupons and other surfirst relay·will be .somewhat shorter, .prise gifts. A trophy or plaque will go encouraged, Moore said .
sewers and creeks in southern Ohio
and northern Kentucky.
according 10 Ferman Moore of the
The water overwhelmed drains
along Interstate 75, reaching nearly I
foot deep in one area and backing up
morning
rush-hour traffic. It caused
COLUMBUS (AP) - After in subsidized daycare will increase to · outside day care center or to reim- similar problems elsewhere ncar
months of saying no to Democrats' 80,000 a month by mid-1999, he 'Said .. burse employees.
- An expansion of the .state Cincinnati and in northef!l Kentucky.
· pleas for more money for subsidized That's up from 58.000 ~month now.
The Duck Cree~ ovcrfiowed and
child care. Republicans had a change Spending under the proposal will rise child-care tax credit for Ohioans closed Red Bank Road, an artery in
of heart and added more .than $49 from $198 million to $247 .2 million who. earn less than $20.000 a year. the suburban village of Fairfax .
the change would provide a state
million 10 the state ~udgi=t to fund the in the second year of the budget.
· "It came up in five minutes," Pat
Some of the increase was already credit equal to the federal tax credit Dunigan, owner of Red Bank Dis- .
program. ,
, "Things change," Sen.,Roy Ray, include.d in the budget plan, but sev· for daycare. Currently, the Ohio crcd· . count Tires, said ofthc creek. "It was
. R-Akron, said Wednesday after the era! new provisions were added, it is worth 35 percent of the federal so quick. It y;as dry, then the body
credit.
·
·
.
joint House-Senate conference com- including:
- Simpler certification require' shop was under 4 feet of water.
-Additional child care services
ml~ adopted the pill),_
"We felt we had to lfte responsi- for kindergirteners through 13-year- ment for in-home daycare centers.
The committee's two Democrats
bility aild take care of sonic of these olds 10 deal with the ~blem of unsupraised
the plan, though hath said
pervised "latchkey' children .
daycare issues."
- Tax incentives for companies · their pany ought to get some of the
The number of cllildren enrolled
to build on-site daycare, subsidize an . credit.

.I

CHEVROifl • OJ.bSMOBilE

by Board member Rick Sanders,
who said that, although he. felt that
board negotiated in good faith, "it's
there in black and white."
- A vote on the motion was made
with the votes cast as follows: John
Rice, abstain; Sanders, no; Jim Smith,
no; and Bailey, yes.
The grievances will now go to
arbitration.
· Proficienf'Y'\tsts
Clayton Butler, high school principal, shared preliminary results from
Continued oa page 3

Group says

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.-

''If a person works h8111 as a volunteer and the board agrees to pay
them, they should be paid," ·Bailey
said. "Do you have a tentative agreement to the contrary?"
Board member Greg Bailey made
a motion to accept the grievance, and,
in effect, pay the grievants, saying "I
' don't understand how, if you appoint
these positions as volunteers, you can
go back and make them paid positions after the fact. A'volunteer is-a
volunteer."
·
A second to the motion was made

builping .
~project on schedule

~

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''

tracts, were filled as volunteer posi-·
lions just prior to the 1'996-1997
school year: When the board and
ELEA negotiated their master contract for the school year in February,
I997, whicb is effective through the
1997-1998 school year,tbe p&lt;isitions
were listed as paid ~sitions . The
master contract was retroactive to the
beginning of the school year.
The grievants now feel that they
should be paid for their work in their
respective areas, since the contract
cites them as paid positions.

•

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Vandalism act
proves costly
for 19-year-old .

cAMBRIOGE cAP&gt; - A 19.
. year-old convicted of vandalizing a
The bill would haye "no effect on . civil war monument has learned his
whaftanguige~ou choose to speak, lesion, but be has been ordered to
~ad or write in your own lives,'' st.:d make sure everyone knows ahout it.
Terwilleger, R-Maineville.
Charles Koteles was sentenced
SupporterS contend tllat using one Tuesday to stand in front of the monlanguage will uni~y _Am~ri~ans ~nd umcnt for a week with a sign that
save money by ebmmatmg pnntmg says "I vandalized the civil war moncosts for other languages.
·
ument, -I'm SOI'fY."
Opponents called the proposal · GuernseyCountyCommonPleas
divisive and offensive.
Judse David Ellwood also sentenced
"this sends the message that if Koteles to six months of detention at
you cion 't speak the Enslish Janauage the Eutem Obio Corrections Facilithen that's noucceptable," liid Rep. ty and~ bows of community
Charleta Tlvues, D-Columbus.
vice, inclucliq I'NIOrina the monumeat.

ser- ' .

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