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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Roc;kles fall
to Cincinnati

Pick 3:
·6-o-7
Pick 4:
4-0-0-9
Buckeye 5:
.9-13-15-28-35

by three runs
Sports on Page. 4

&lt;:;,
with •
Lows
In
the
60a.Thunday, chance of
showers. Hlghlln the 701 •

•

ent1ne
\1&gt;1. 48, NO. 88

.2 Soctiono, 12 P-•· 35 cento
A Ganlllll Co. Nowopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 20, 1-997

C111V7, Onlo v.ney Publishing eomp.ny

Fed decides to let economic good times roll
By iiARTIN CRUTSINGER
"Things look pretty good right· now. The question is how long will that
last," said David Wyss, chief economist at DR!-McGraw Hill inc:
AP Economics Writer
While a sizzling economy has pushed the unemployment rate down to a
WASHINGTON -The Jiederal Reserve voted Tuesday to leave shonterm interest rates uncha~ed. deciding there.was no need to dampen the cur- low of 4.8 percent, inflation so far has been a no-show. Prices at the wholesale level have fallen for an unprecedented seven straight months and con·
rent good times by raising borrowing cos.ts for millions of Americans.
The central bank's decision, which c.ame after 3-1/2 hours of closed-door · sumer prices so far this year are rising at an annual rate of just 1.5 percent,
discussions, had been widely anticipated given recent comments about the less than half last year's gain.
Analysts said it is only a matter of time before wage and price pressures
"exceptional" economy from Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.
After nudging up rates a tiny quaner point at its March ·meeting, the cen- begin to emerge.
"The Fed has to be pre-emptive. They will stan to tighten later this year,"
tral bank has l!een content to leave policy unchanged at its subsequent meet·
said Lyle Gramley, a fanner Fed·governor who is now an economist at the
, ings in May, July and Tuesday.
Economists warned that this favorable string could be coming to an end. Mongage Bankers Association.
Fed watchers note that Greenspan himself called the economy"s current
They worry that wage pressures may finally stan to be emerging now that
unemployment has fallen to a 24-year low.

Committee examines local
role in state's bicentennial

UPS looks
to rebuild
customer
confidence

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Steff
A discussion on local panicipation
in Ohio's bicentennial highlighted an
initial meeting-of the Meigs CountyOhio Bicentennial Committee held at
the Meigs Museum Monday. '
Margaret Parker, who was
appoint~ earlier this year by the
Meigs County Commissioners as
bicentennial chairman, reponed to
committee members on activities of ·
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission.
Earlier this month she had met
with Stephen C. George, Ohio Bicen-

package~.

"I W&gt;\5 buddies with all the drivers," said Matt Weyandt of Dover
(Del.) Leasing .Co. "We'll have a
good laugh ahout this now that it's

over..,

The tentative agreement would
combine · pan-time slots to · create
I0,000 new full-time jobs, limit subcontracting and increase UPS' contributions to ' the union's multiemployer pension and health plans.
The union's 50-member national
bargaining committee and officials
from more than 200 Teamsters locals
unanimously endorsed the contract
Tuesday night, sending it to members ·
for a ratification vote and authorizing
a return to work.
"I'm really happy. My headaches
have gone away," said Michael
Estlick, co-founder of Electro
Mechanical Technologies Inc., a
Cleveland company that laid off half
its staff because it couldn't get pans
delivered.
UPS also said it lost money, at
least $600 million in revenues
. although the figure was partly offset
by reduced labor costs. Company
officials estimated permanent.volume
losses at 5 percent or more, and
wam,ed that such a loss could trigger
more than 15,000 layoffs.
"It's hun us a great deal," UPS
chairman James Kelly said. "It will
take a year or two to determine the

Southeast coordinator, to d_iscuss

from the county commissioners and

what assistance might be available to
the county.
·
Parker defined at Monday"s meeting the role of the committee as the
coordinating group whose responsibility will be to keep the people out
in the county advised of what is avail·
able in the way of grant money from
the state, how it can be spcnt,what it
requires in the way pf matching dol-

$6,000 from a variety of other
sources. Contributions arc still being
accepting on the required matching
dollars for that project.
Parker reponed that currently, the
local historical society is working on
the wording for the mar~crs since that
mus1 be approved by rhc Ohio Historical Society.
During the discussion on markers,

DISCARDED - Signs used by United Parcel service strikers·
lie on the ground as Teamsters, In the background, got ready to
end the 15-day strike at the UPS distribution center In Fort Worth,
Texas. UPS said It expected workers to begin returning to their .
jobs and planned to make all of Its pre-l!trlke services available
to customers today. (AP)
impact this strike-has had on UPS and
its employees."
He said some customers had told
UPS they would cancel business or
reduce future reliance on the delivery
giant.
"But it is now time to (ook ahead
together," Kelly said. :·we will tum
our attention to the task of winning
back the confidence of our customers -:- and their business."

The Teamsters dismissed the lnyoff threat as a scare tactic. "We
believe they'll get all the business
back again," said Vince Las ita, secretary-treasurer of Local I 00 in
Cincinnati.

In addition, John David Sharp was
Personnel matters dominated ed .to discussing contiatt negotiations
, )lir'ed as a substitute ·teacher for ·the
Tuesday night's meeting of the Meigs was held in executive session.
The board approved a disability .1997-98 school year, and Sandra HoiLocal Board of Education.
The board met at the Ohio Edu- ·retirement for Bever]y Gaul, effective &lt;iamb was hired as a vocational Busication Association Office in Athens June I, and accepted'the resignation ness Office Education (BOE) teacher
mainly to meet with a mediator of Jeff Skinner as a social studies on a 1-ycar contract, dfcctivc immcassisting in contract negotiations teacher, effective immediately. Also, diately. The board also approved the
between the board and members of the boar~ accepted the resignation of creation of a three-hour cook position
the Meigs Local Teacher&lt; Associa- Rick Edwards as Occupational Work . at Harrisonville Elementary School.
Adjustment (OWA) teacher at the
Roger Collerill was hired as a regtion.
(Continued on Page 3) ,
That ponion of the meeting devot· high school.

UPS, which normally ships 12
million items a day, was vinually
crippled when 185,000 Teamsters
went on strike with the suppon of the
Work on the OMEGA hydroeleccompany's 2,000 unionized pilots.
Greg Smith, an analyst with The tric power project in Belleville,
Colography Group in Marietta, said W.Va.. has ceased, and the company
UPS· large-volume discounts, its his. charged with building the plant has
tory and its sop~isticated computer filed for Chapter II bankruptcy.
connections with customers should
The project, once estimated at
allow' it to regain most of its business. $153 million, is designed to serve
And per&lt;onal touches made by electricity customers in 42 nonhero
striking workers like Ron Monroe Ohio communities, via lines that
should help.
·
will extend, in Meigs County, from
"All during the strike. I've been Reedsville to a Rutland substation.
out seeing my customers," said Mon·
The project is owned by American
roe.

.Work ceases ori hydroelectr:ic project
Municipal Power-Ohio Inc. There
was no answer at the company 's
offices in Belleville this morning, and
calls 10 AMP-Ohio's office in West·
ervillc were unreturned.
All construction on the project has
taken place on the West Virginia side ,
of the Ohio River, at the Belleville
Locks and Dam.
Atkin~on Construction Co., a contracting firm based in San Francisco
building the plant, filed for Chapter
II bankruptcy protection last week,

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and several paychecks issued by the :
company bounced, according to the :
· Associaacd

Pres~.

According lo the San Francisco
Chronicle, the company is owed $57
million dollars
from
two completed
'
.
.
con!ilrucuon proJects- one m south·
ern California and one in lndoncsin.
Chapter II bankruptcy allows
corporation!\ to cOntinue operating
while reorganizing. merging with
another company, or taking other
measures to ·raisc assets.

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Athens County coping
·with flooding aftermath ·

Officials tackle emergence
of Ohio's large-scale farms

,.

it JN3S reported that there is enough ;
money now for the Ambrose Bierce :
marker to he placed on State Route 7 ·
at Eagle Ridge Road. The final
amount. came from the 175th
Anniversary of Meigs County Com-mittee's treasur~. That commillee
raised more than adequate funds for
the county's observance and is now :·
using the remainder for special projects which require matching funds. :
Parker emphasized. the importance of having organizations work
through the committee when they
plan events, oi decide to mark a loea-.
lion so that duplication of effons can :
be avoided.
.•
The next meeting was set for 4:45 •
p.m. on Monday, Sept. 15 at the
museum. At that time ofliccrs will be
elected.
Comminec members attending ·
·and the organizations or businesses they represent were Margaret Parker, :
the Rev. William Middleswarth, :
Karen Werry, and Joyce Davis, His- •
torical Society and 175th Meigs
(Continued on Page 3)

Meigs Local Board OKs res·ignations .

.

, ' COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's
laws have not kept pace with changes
in agriculture - panicularly the
~mergence of large-scale corporate
egg farms, Agriculture Director Fred
Dailey said Tuesday.
"Companies like AgriGcneral arc
imponant to Ohio but they need additional oversight," Dailey said,
Dailey has asked Sen. Karen Gillmar to draft legislation that would
deal with the issue of "megafarms."
Representatives from several state
agencie&gt;, livestock trade associations and the Ohio Fann Bureau Fell. oration met with Gillmor aides on
Tuesday to begin working out the
details.
Gillmor, R-Oid Fort, plans to
introduce the legislation in September.
The meeting came a day after officials from the Occupational Safety &amp;
Health Administration ·announced
fines totaling more than S I million
against AgriGeneral Co. L.P., one of
the country's largest egg producers.

Iars. and what is appropriate in pro-

gramming and ohservances.
She spoke of the Longenbcrger
contribution of $100,000 io the state
committee, which is to be used for
historical markers. That funding, she
noted, requires matching dollars.
As for the markers to be placed
along the route of the Civil War soldiers from where they entered at
Langsville to Ponland, Parker rep&lt;lned those are being paid for through
other sources,
She said the funding for the markers came through a grant from the
tennial Commission executive direc- state tourism office of $1 0.000 and
tor, and Nicola Pickens Moreuei, some.local dollars, including $5,000

By DAN SEWELL
AP Buslnesi Writer
ATLANTA- With a disruptive
strike over at United Parcel Service,
the company that bills itself as :'the
tightest ship in · the shipping business" has set out to right its coursemending morale and winning back
customers.
, A tentative settlement with the
Teamsters union took workers off
picket lines they' formed Aug. 4 and
could send them back to·work as early as today.
Some customers ~aid they were
eager to see familiar faces in the
brown 1 delivery trucks picking up

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performance "exceptional" in his midyearrepon to Congress last month. •
Those remarks were all Wall Street needed to send stocks soaring. Even
with momentary swoons such as Friday's 247-point plunge, investors remain
generally optimistic.
Analysts snid the Fed is also watching a recept dip in the value of the dollar against the German mark and examining the seulement reached by Unit·
ed Parcel Service to end the nation's biggest strike in two decades.
The dollar's strength over the past two years has been a key factor hdp-.
ing to keep inflation restrained by making impons cheaper and keeping pressure on do,!llestic producers who have to compete against those imports.
And while worker anxiety over layoffs and global competition may help
keep wage pressures at bay despite tight labor markets, analysts said the ISday UPS strike could spell an end to the calm.

OSHA said a five-month investigation into AgriGeneral's Croton fann
uncovered potentially life-threatening
conditions at the facilities and nearby company provided migrant housing.
AgriGeneral employs 310 people
and produces about 4.5 million eggs
.daily at the 7,000-acre farm in Croton , about30 miles cast of Columbus, .
and hilS estimated annual sales of $85
million. It also operates an egg farm
in nonhwestem Ohio and has three
more under construction or in the
planning stage.
Eventually, the company's facilities will house about 20 million
chickens. ·
Despite its size, AgriGeneral still
operates under state regulations written for family run operations.
All farms - including AgriGener~l - are exempt from tbe state
building code, and state law prohibits ·
zoning codes that restrict agriculture.
Dailey is recommending new
rules for megafarms

SPONSORSHIP ANNOUNCED- Farmers
&amp; Savings Co.
has been named the sole corporate sponaor of Delta Queen Day,
Sept. 1. A $2,000 donation from the bank will pay for promotional costa, banners, and land1ceplng Improvements. The stem·
wheeler will dock In Pomeroy on Labor Day, and a full slate of
events for the locel public and boat passengers Is being planned.
Presenting the check to John Musser, center, representing the
Pomeroy Merchants AIIOCistlon, were left, Paul Reed, president
of Farmers Bank, and Paul Kloes, chalnnan end CEO.

By The Associated Press
Floodwaters were receding Tuesday along much of the Hocking River in
southeast Ohio, but a handful of families remained out of their homes in
Athens County.
_
The Ooodwaters were still rising in parts of Athens County. More than a
dozen residents were out of their homes in the village of Chauncey. The water
was eKpcctcd to crest by late Tuesday.
Travel on the main roads in and out of Chauncey was cut off, and an emcrgen&lt;y shelter was s~t up at the elementary school.
Athens County Commissioners declared a slate of emergency on Tuesday.
·
Heavy rain during the weekend caused the nooding in southeast Ohio.
As much as 4 inches of rain fell in Athens County.
Authorities in Hocking, Morgan and Perry counties said on Tuesday that
several dozen families had gone back to their homes. Most were people who
left their homes on Sunday.
"We had a lot of spontaneous evacuations - people who were smart
enough to get out of trailers," said Ted Jacobson, Athens County emergency
management director.
Jacobson said an additiona l 30 people were evacuated by authorities.
In Muskingum County, s~veral adults were rescued Sunday from the Licking River ncar Zanesville after they tied together inner t.ubes and went for a
ride on the rain-swollen stream.
.. Dave Lacy, Zanesville assistant fire thief, said the raft swamped when it
went through a rapids. Two people ~warn to shore, and the rest -..:ere rescued
by firefighters.
Meanwhile, the National Weather Service said Tuesday that it was a small
tornado that ripped the roof off Central Middle School in Wadswonh

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�Commentary

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OHIO Weather

Wtclnlldly, Augll8t 20, 1H7

By Jack Ander8on
and Jan Mailer

forms. But to accurarely count !he
population one-by-one is an impos·
sible task. In some Ca&amp;e$, enumera·

er than census figures show.
Urban residents -- particularly .
While much of official Washingminorities and !he poor .. tend to
111 Coun StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
ton has been seized by a bipartisan
vote mostly for Democrats. Which
614-992·21541 • FIX 992·2157
spirit this summer, !he nonnaliy
helps explain why Democrats like
quiet Census Bureau has become a
Clinton are so eager to use statisti~;~~l
lightning rnd in a heated political
sampling in !he census. More Amerbattle.
jcans in the inner-cities means more
Look for !his issue to heat up
sealS
in !he House when congres·A Gannett Co. Newspaper.
even·more when Congress returns to
sional districts are reapponioned
business after the August recess.
after !he census.
ROBERT L WINGETT
That's because conuol of Congress
The old system works just fine
Publlaher
may rest. in part on who wins thos •
for R~publicans .' who are doing
partisan tug-of-war.
everylhing they can to make sure !he
First, tbe background:
costly, inaccurate one-by-one headMoller and Anderton
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
Earlier this summer, as Congress
counting system stays intact. A
Genel'lll M·aMger
Controller'
was debating the details of an emer- tors were reduced to asking mail Republican staffer working on the
gency aid bill for the Oood-stricken carriers for information about hous- issue told our reporter Walt Barron
Midwest, Republicans tacked on a ing units whose inhabitants failed to that the GOP is "pretty sure" that
seemingly innocuous amendment. respond 10 the census.
/.
statistical sampling would cost !he
The amendment would have forbidStatistical sampli~g would help party at least a couple of seats.
den the use of "statistical sampling" alleviate this problem, experts say,
The Census Bureau estimates
when the census is conducted in the and save money at !he same time. !hat 6 million .people were counted
year 2000.
Doing detailed, accurate counts of twice in 1990, while 10 million were
President Clinton vetoed the specific locations -- and then extrap- missed all together. The total cost of
measure, refusing to sogn the relief olating those results over a larger the census was $2.6 billion.
bill unul the census provision was area .. would give far more accurate
But GOP lawmakers argue that
dropped . Eventually Clinton · pre- data than the current process.
statistical sampling isn't what our
vailed, to the dismay of congressionThe most difficult populations to founding fathers had in mind when
By JOHN McCARTHY
al
Republicans
who
thought
!hey
count,
experts say, are inner-city res- they devised the decennial census.
Associated Press Writer
could
use
the
aid
package
to
settle
a
odents.
Some believe the true popu- "Every American has a constitutionCOLUMBUS - New rules designed to put welfare recipients into the
vital
politocal
score.
lations
of
our. largest cities are high- al right to be counted -- not
work force will be a boon to merchant~ trying to lind employees in a healthy
But
the
s!ory
doesn't
end
here.
oconomy. the head of a trade group·says.
That's especially true in central Ohio, where two new malls have opened Republicans are planning hearings
recently and a third, huge project is under construction, said John Mahaney, on the ossue in the fall. And they 've
threatened that if they can't get stachairman of the Ohio Council of Retail Merchants.
tostical
sampling removed by leg·
Compounding the problem for companies ·is central Ohio's low unemployment rate. which in July ranged from 2.3 percent in Franklin and Madi- islative fiat, they may tal&lt;e their case
IOn counties 10 3.9 percent in Union County in !he seven-county C9lumbus all the way to the Supreme Court.
So why all the fuss?
metropolitan area.
In one word: Politics.
"Any time you get around 2 percent, that's considered full employment,"
The
1990 Census was the most
Mahaney said Friday. "I am told that developing something in Columbus is
costly
in
history. Yet, according to
virtually impossible."
post-mortem
investigations by the
The council is watching closely how the Department of Human Services
Census
Bureau.
the data it produced
implements its Workforce Development Program. he said. Last week. the
proved
highly
unreliable.
Only 65
state Controlling Board approved a $1.69 million contract between !he
percent
of
the
questionnaires
sent
department and Andersen Consulting of Columbus to design a work traini~g
out
by
the
bureau
were
returned.
program for welfare recipients.
Under changes tbe Legislature approved this year, recipients will be That left a lot of people unaccounted
required to work up to 30 hours a week to get benefits. Those benefits will for.
To solve !his problem, !he bureau
be cut off to most recipients after three years, but they will be able to reaphired
hundreds of thousands of
ply for two 'more years after a two-year wait.
"enumerators"
to go knocking on
"This changes the culture qf our business," said Isaac Palmer, contract
manager for human services. ·•we have to show them, train them to be a doors to gather information from
people who neglected to fill out the
voable part of the work force."
Most of the jobs available or soon to open in central Ohio are either in !he
retail or distribution sectors, Mahaney said.
"One out of five people now work in retailing," he said. " Assuming we
keep a competitive tax ·base, we're going to be a big distribution state and
those are good jobs."
and resources its 700 or siJ investi· EEOC saying !hat he had been laid
By. Joseph Perkins
Mahaney said retailers and wholesalers have no qualms about training or
My recent column on !he Equal gators devote to questionable or off " because he was Mexican." And
accepting welfare recipients into the work force.
Employment Opportunity Commis- downright frivolous cases mean that his complaint named not only his
"Once they get this geared up, I'd be more than pleased to put our peo- sion -- "virtually unKnown to the meritorious cases receive less atten- former company, but also Zero, with
ple together with human services. It's in our interest and it will save us tax public" but "one of the most power- tion, and are resolved much more whom he had absolutely no contact
m'?ney."
·
ful indepen- slowly. than !hey olherwise would.
whatsoever:
dent bodies in
Indeed, the EEOC os currently
So Zero's human resources dorecall of govern- facing a backlog of more than tor wrote a letter to the EEOC
ment" •• gen- I00,000 cases, double the I 990 fig- informing the agency of the circumerated a· sur- ure . It's not because the nation's stances. But, two years later, the
prising number employers are discriminating twice EEOC continues to pursue the comof letters.
as much as they used'to. It's because plaint. No matter what documents
Several
the commission somply doesn't have Zero provides, proving that the
were
from 11s priorities straight.
aggrieved worker was never on the
Yes, it goes after tbe bad actors company's payroll. the EEOC
employers
Perkins
who've actually out there. But it's just as likely to go demands further proof. ,
had run-ms with after innocent parties. And my letAnd Zero's experience is by no
the agency. Others were from read- ters and clippings attest to that;
means an aberratton."A letter from a
ers who either sent along chppings
An executive for Zero Corp., for manager for the restaurant chaon
or referred me to news items that onstance, wntes. "I have been fight- Hooters reminded me that the EEOC
reveal the absurd lengths to which ing with the San Diego EEOC since charged the Atlanta_-based corporathe EEOC has often gone in recent Junc of 1995 about a person who tion with sc• discrimination two
years to root out discrimination never ever worked for my compa- 'years ago because. of its policy of
hiring only female waitresses to
wherever it appears .. at least, in the ny. "
commtssior,'s view-- to rear itself.
As it happens, Zero purchased serve patrons.
Now I don't want anyone to get the machinery and assets of a com·
Of course, most of the predomime wrong·. I believe the EEOC has pany that laod off its entire work· nantly male clientele who patronize
an important mission. When force, dosed its doors and went out H,ooters do so not because of ots bufemployers discriminate on the basis of business. Zero eventually hired falo wings and selection of beers,
of race. color. sex, age, national ori- some of the defunct company's for· but because of ots stable of bu•om
gin or disability, then the govern- mer employees to work in·one of its young waitresses in short shorts and
ment ought to bring the full weight faclOrics.
tank tops. Apparently. it did not
of the law against them.
But one of the former employees occur to the EEOC that male waiters
But the five-member commission of the out-of-business company ·was would look decidedly unattractive in
ought to understand that the EEOC not picked up by Zero. So he nted a such ensembles.
The EEOC actually rclca&lt;ed an
ts in a zero-sum situation. The lime discrimination- complaint w·ith the
'E.staHufwl in 1948

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State prepares training
."plan for welfare -recipients

Bar-ry's -w orld

By OeWAYNE WICKHAM

By The Associated Press

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Today is Wednesday, Aug. 20. the 232.tf day of 1997. There arc
133 .days left on the year_
.if.
Today's Highlight ip History: •
On Aug. 20, 1968, the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact nations hcgan
inva~ Czechoslovakia to crush the .. Prague Spring" liberali zation drive
of Ale•ander Dubee!&lt; 's regime.
On this date:
In 1833. BenJamin Hamson, the 23rd president of the United States, was
born in North Bend, Ohio.
In 1866. President Andrew Johnson formally declared the Civil War over,
even though the fighting had stopped months earlier.
In 1914, German forces occupoed Brussels. Belgium. during World War
I.
In 1918, Britain opened its offensive on the Western front during World
War I.
In 1920, pioneering American radio station 8MK in Detroit (later WWJ)
began daily broadcaSting.
In 1940, British Prime· Minister Winston Churchill paod tribute to the
Royal Air Force, saying, " Never ioo the field of human conn oct was so much
owed by so many to so few."
Jn 1953, the Soviet Union publicly acknowledged it had tested a hydrogcn.homb.
· Frene h notong
· · on
· MorocIn 1955. hundreds of peop Ie were killed·tn 'anttco and Algeria. ·
In 1964, President Johnson signed a nearly $I· billion anti-poveny measure.
In 1977 the United States launched Voyager 2, an unmanned spacecraft
carrying a 2-inch copper phonogra!lh record-containing greetings in dozens
uf languages, samples of music and sounds of nature.

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WASHINGTON - Emmanuel
Constant os gettong aw·ay woth murder.
The former head of FRAPH. the
death squad that raped, tortured and
murdered hundreds of supporters of
Jean Bertrand-Arostide, Haiti's first
democraticall y elected president,
has been given refuge in the United
States.
Last week. the Immigration aud
Naturalization Service granted ConJilant a six-month stay of a deporta·
lion order that would send him back
ro Haiti where an outstanding arrest
warrant awaits his return.
Constant slipped into this country
three years ago on a six- month
tourist visa. He has stayed here with
the help of the State Department, ·
which argues that Haiti's legal system can't provide Constant a fair
trial So instead, the terrorist who
commanded the mob of drunken,
gun-toting men that chased the USS
Harlan County from the Pan-auPrince harbor in 1993, now Jives
freely in New York City.
That's outrageous.
The Organization of American
States, the Unoted Natoons and
Amnesty International all say that
under
Constant's , leadershifl\
FRAPH committed !he most heinous
crimes, including assassinations and
the rapes of children as young as tn.

criminal code,

persons who
committed war
crimes .
or
crimes against
humanity anywhere in the
world can be
tried for these

Wickham
offe nses in Canada.
Back in June when , it appeared
that Cambodja might hand over
mass murderer Pol Pot to intema·
uonal authorities, Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright asked Canada to
use this Jaw to try him there. So why
not as!&lt; our neighbors to the north to
give Constant .the fair trial State
Department officials say he can't get
in Haiti?
Canada has a vested interest in
the outcome of his case.
Canadian troops are part of the
small U.N. military force in Haitisoldiers who.have been sent there to
shore up that nation's fragile democracy that FRAPH tried to put asun·

'

.
-•

...

..
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'tri

Hamburger advisory
issued to consumers

Clarence Potts Jr.
Clannce Potts Jr., 73, Middleport, died 1\te$doty,Aug. 19, 1997m Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
He w.S born Feb. 20, 1924 in Cheshire, son of !he late Clarence Sr. ·and
Chote Fruicr PotU. He was a farmer and attended !he Ash Street Freewill

guessed." wrote Rep: J. Dennis
Hasten, R-m., in a recent editorial
denouncing statistical sampling.
So !he party that despises big
government wants to spend an additional $400 million than is needed,
just to avoid statistical sampling.
They want to hire as many people as
it takes to count everybody. Never
mood that !he National Academy of
Sciences, !he General Accounting
Office and a host of experts all agree
that statistical sampling would be
more accurate.
If Congress and the Census
Bureau don't settle this issue in time
(or officials to properly plan for the
census (a "dress rehearsal," scheduled for ne•t year, is already in
doubt), consequences could be disastrous. Throwing together a census
at the last monute could result in a
total cost of S12 billion -- .or more
than four times what the last tnsus

Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife, Aotence PotU; a brolher, Ralph Potts of Indianapolis, Ind.; a brother-in-law, Ira Nicholas of Zanesville; a stepson, J.'f'..
McCutcheon br Blue Rock; two steppddaughters and two stepgrandsons;
and four nephews. ·
He was preceded in death by a ~. Marvin Potts.
.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in !he Middleport Chapel of !he Fosher
Funeral Home, with burial following in Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call Thursday, I I a.m. at !he funeral home, prior to !he funeral.

,,,,,
•leotumbull74"

I·

Ronald E. Reynolds

Ahealth alen about hamburger suspected to be contaminated with E. coli
bacteria has been issued by !he Meigs County Health Department. ·
Keilh Little, R.S., dimctor of environmental heallh, saod that the U.S.
Department of Agriculture has announced a voluntary recall of Hudson Food
fioun hamburger.
·
.
.
.
·
The suspected hamburger may be contaminated woth E. colo bactena and
was distributed in 33 states. including Ohio in June and !uly.
The. recall affects lhree types of Hudson products:
. .
.
Alllhree-pound packages of "Hudson Beef Patties, IndiVIdually Quocl&lt;
Frozen" with 156A7 printed on the bottom of the bag; all three-pound pacKages of "Hudson Beef Patties, Individually Quick Frozen" with !he cost I 56B7
printed on the bottom of the bag; and all IS-pound boxes of "Hudson 60114 Pound Beef Patties, uncooked indivodually Quick Frozen" woth the cost
I 55B7 printed near the bar code on !he side panel of the boit.
Consumers are urged to return the products to the store where they bought
!hem for a refund( or throw them away.
Consumers with question about the recall can call the USDA toll free at
1-800-535-4555.

Meigs announcements

Ronald lidward Reynolds, 71; State Route 124, Pomeroy, died at his home
on 1\tesday, Aug. 19, 1997.
spent S14,743.28 at the Junior Fair
Born in Warren on July 30, 1926, he was the son of the late Theodore and Outagt planned
Bernice Montgomery Reynolds. He had owned and operated !he Syt;j~cuse
The l..eading Creek C::onservancy Livestock Sale. held Friday evening
Dairy Bar for I7 years.
District will repair the water line at the Meigs 'County Faor, ·and FarmHe wa5 a graduate of Cottland High School and attended Youngstown Uni- across Thomas Fork Creek on Meigs ers Bani&lt; &amp; Savings Co. spent •
versity. He was a member of the Ewings Chapter. Sons of !he American Rev- County Road. 5 damaged by past $11.408.75. The figures published in ·
olution, and !he Meigs County Historical Society, and was affiliated with the Ooods. During the repairs,. all cus- the Sunday Times-Sentonel did not
Minersville United Melhodist Church.
tomers east of Hysell Run Road will reflect animals resold , or a number of
Vll Allocllftd A'-. B~
•
He is survived by his wife, Rae Reynolds; four sons and dallghtelli-in- be without water service from . underweight animals that were not
included in the sale .
law: Gary (Yvonne) Reynolds of Sydney, Australia, John T. (Cheryl) Reynolds approxomately 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Staff at the fair board office were
of Maple Heights, Lawrence Richard (Connie) Millard of l..exington, Ohio,
Affected areas will be Hysell Run,
and Mitchel (Rita) Millard of Louisville, Ky.; a daughter and son-in-Jaw, State Route 124 east of Hysell Run, not available to con finn totals prior
Supulne and Dr. Hassan Masri of Arkansas, a daughter, Kalherine Reynolds, Bailey Run. Bradbury Road, Nease to the Times-Sentinel deadline on
Htlbs10n, Texas; I7 grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Kenneth (Barbara) Vaugh- Road, Middleport Hill, Bone Hollow, Saturday.
By The Associated Prell
an of Conneaut; a sister-in-law, Dorothy Reynolds of Palatka. Fla.; and three Rutland Street, Dead Man's Curve,
Another trough of low pressure will bring more rain to all _but !he soulh- nieces and a nephew.
Unoon Avenue, Union Terrace, SR Willner announced
-west comer of Ohio on Thursday, the National Weather Servtce saJd.
Janie Fitch of Long Bottom was
He was also preceded in dealh by lhree brothers, James, Theodore and 143 from SR 7 to Smith Run Road,
That will follow a brief respite from !he rain tonight.
the
winner of a Longaberge( basket,
Orris Reynolds; and two sisters, 1beatis Daley and Elizabelh Biser.
Ball Run. Wolfe Pen, Highland Road,
Temperatures on Thursday will he generally in !he 70s.
Services will be I p.m. Friday in !he Ewing Funeral Home, with the Rev. Laurel Cliff Road, Qoeglein Road, given away at the Meigs County
Forecasters said !he showers are likely to continue on Friday but drier con- Wesley Thatcher and the Rev. Chad Emerick officiating. Friends may call Willow Creek Road and Broderick Counil on Aging's boolh at the Meigs
dotions are expected to return for the weekend.
County Fair. The basket was donal· ·
at the funeral home on Thursday from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
Hollow Road.
The recoril-high temperature for this date at !he Columbus weather staAfter repairs are made and water ed by Crystal Whitlatch. .
tion was 101 degrees in 1983 while the record low was 50 m 1977. Sunset
service is restored, all customers
tonight will be at 8:22 p.m. and sunrise Thursday al6:49 a.m.
should boil water until further notice. Carey reception
Weather forecut:
A recep1ion for 94th District State
William E. "Eddie" Varian Sr., 56, Clifton, W.Va., die~\..sday, Aug. 19, ·Reunion planned
Tonight. .. Mostly doudy wilh a chance of showers. Lows in !he lower 60s. 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
Rep.
John Carey. R-Wellston, woth
The Silver Run 'Grade School
West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
,
·
special
guest, 4th District State Rep. ·
BomApril25, 1941 in Clifton, son of !he late Charles G. and Eva V. Stew- reunion will be held on the school
Thursday ...Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs in the upper art Varian, he was a truck driver for Valley Inc., Millwood, W.Va, and a mem- ground "flat" on Aug. 31 from lto4 and Randy Gardner, majority leader ·
70s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
·
.
. .
ber of tbe Loyal Order of.the Moose Lodge 73 I of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
p.m Those attending arc to take lawn of the Ohio House of RepresentaThursday noght...Mostly cloudy wilh a chance of showers. Lows on the
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Dreama Gail Varian: a chairs and memorabilia. Light lun- tives, will be held Thursday, 7 p.m.
upper 50s.
son, William E. Varian Jr.; lhree brothers, Charles A. Varian Sr., Harry T. Var- cheon tind entertainment will be pro- at the Meigs County Senior Citizens ..
Extended forecut:
Center in Pomeroy. Tickets are $10 a ..
ian. Sr., and Franklin !). Varian; and lhree sisters, Rose Dill, Pearl Jean Var- vided.
Friday...Panly cloudy. A-chance of showers. Highs in the mid 70s.
person and checks should be made· ·
ian and Lora V. Anderson.
Purehases confirmed
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in !he upper 50s and.hoghs near 80.
Surviving are his wife, Jerry Varian of Vinton; four daughters and two
Home National Bank of R;lcine payable. to Citizens for Carey.
Sunday...Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 50s and hoghs on the upper 70s. sQns-in-law. Brenda Gail Board of Letart, W.Va., Carrie Robin and Johnnie
S. Board, and Lorrie Michelle Varian, all of Clifton, and Melissa Faye and
Brian A. Fetty of l..etart; a stepson, Kenneth Carpenter ofVinton: three grandMIDDLEPORT
Units of the Meigs County Emerchildren; four sisters, Joanna L. Council of Langsville,lda L. Council of Ben12:50 a.m. Tuesday, volunteer lire
ton, Ky., Laura M. Clark of Kirldand, Ill., and Caroll Lee of Columbus; gency Medical Service recorded 18 ·
and several nieces and nephews.
·
calls for assistance Mond~y and department and Central Dispatch
Services will be I p.m. Friday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, Tuesday. Units responding included: squad to Custer Street, smoke ndur at
Mildred Milburn residence.
run
amok
with
the
shots
called
by
an
CENTRAL DISPATCH
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)- An
W.Va., with Pastor Jerry Scott officiating. Burial will be in the Clifton Hill
•
POMEROY
informant
seel&lt;ing
to
live
out
a
fan4;4 I a.m. Monday, Johnson Road,
FBI informant whose integrity was
Cemetery. Friends may call at !he funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Thursday.
·;;,
8:03p.m.
Monday. Pomeroy ~ike.
Pomeroy, Rtck Colburn, refused
attacked during a grueling cross- tasy life.
Penny
Klein.
VMH;
He
later
pleaded
guilty
to
selling
treatment;
examinalion suggested his lies were
9:17
a.m.
Monday. VFD and ·
blueprint copies for SSO,OOO to what
8:21 a.m. Monday, East Main
!he result of low self-esteem.
squad
to
Condor
Street, structure fire,
Street, Pomeroy, Fred Beaver. treatOkey Marshall Richards Jr. is a he thought was a terrorist organizaDamage was confined ·tO the attic the structure and furnishings.
no
injuries
reported,
Middleport VFD
key prosecution witness in the feder· tion capable of blowing up !he FBI's of !he Darlene Curry home on Spring
The cause has not been deter- ed at the scene;
assisted.
2;03 p.m. Monday, State Route
al trial of Clarksburg firefighter Criminal Justice Information Ser- Avenue when fire struck the two-sto- mined, said ZirKle, who gave no estiRACINE
124,
Racine, Effie Black, treated at
James·Rogers. Roge~ is charged with vil;es division.
.
mate
of
the
damages.
ry structure Ttiesday morning.
5:44
p.m.
Monday, Third Street,
the scene;
· Rogers, 4 I, of Jane Lew, is
conspiracy and providing material
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle
2:30p.m. Monday, Mulberry and Patrick Snider, treated at the scene;
resources to a terrorist organization. accused of making photograph.copies said !hat !he fire started in a stairway
Second streets, Pomeroy. Carl Casto.
8:10p.m, Monday. Southert\ High
It is the first test of the I994 anti-ter- of the blueprints at the Clarksburg Jea\ling to the attic and spread
Gen. James V. Hartinger (Retired) Veterans Memorial Hospital:
fire hall and giving them to Looker. upward. There was smoke and water
SchOQI practice field, Ryan Hill,
rorism law.
3:55p.m. Monday, North Second VMH.Richarils said 1\tesday that low He contends he had no idea Looker damage on bolh floors of the house. is in Middleport to sign copies of his
Avenue,
Moddleport, Paul Stein melT.,'
book
"General
Jim
Hartinger
RUTLAND
.
self..esteem may have contributed 10 intended to sell them.
On !he scene for two hours were
On Tuesday, Zimmerman sought bolh !he Pomeroy and Middleport fire from One Stripe to Four Stars." He treated at the scene, Middleport squad
3:03 p.m. Monday, state Route ·
his tall tales about being a Navy
SEAL. Vietnam veteran and secret to convince jurors just how manipu- departments. Pomeroy had I 2" fire- was at the Middleport library this assisted;
124. Fred Neace, VMH;
6:44p.m.
Monday,
SR
7,
Tuppers
morning
and
will
be
!here
again
.9;05 p.m. Tuesday, College Road; :
lative
Richards
can
be.
government operative.
fighters there and ~iddleport, five.
Plains. Shirley Jones , Camden-Clark Desiree Dingess, Holzer Mcdocal ~
He has come out of hiding twice
Richards admitted he convinced a The tire chief said the family was not Thursday from 10 to I I a.m.
The book, which went on sale ear- Memorial Hospital;
to testify against a member of the psychologist that he was a Vietnam sure whether !here was insurance on
Center.
2:17 p.m. Tuesday, Lincoln
lier
this summer, details personal recMountaineer Militia Rogers' charges veteran suffering from post-trauma!·
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
. ollections of his early life in Middle- . Heoghts, Pomeroy. Clyda Michaels,
12:01 p.m. Monday, a~tomobile
stem from an alleged plot to attack ic stress disorder. He said he could Accident reported
port, his education and sports activi- Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pomeroy fire at state routes 692 and 68 I, no
not tell the psychologist the trulh
tha FBI complex in Clarksburg.
No injuries were reported follow - ties in !he Middleport schools, and his squad assisted;
Attorney Gary Zimmerman about being abused as a child.
injuries reported .
'ing a three-car accident at the
4:27p.m. Tuesday, SR 7, Tuppers
His father, Okey Marshall Pomeroy/Mason bridge on Tuesday military career, which spanned· five
SYRACUSE
sought to discredit Richards and to
Plains, Wilma Tillis, St. Joseph's
Richards Sr. of Clarksburg, later disdecades.
1:52 p.m. Tuesday, SR 124, Ron ~
portray him as seeking to profit.
,
Hospital, Tuppers Plains squad assist- Reynolds, VMH.
Richards has heen paid $46,000, puted the allegations of abuse, "As evening.
•
According to !he Pomeroy Pol ice
ed;
•
not including e•penses, since July far as I'm concerned I don't feel he Department, Gerald Rought, 62,
I0:27p.m. Tuesday, Collins Road.
1995, an FBI agent testified. The was abused as a child," he said.
Pomeroy,
was
pulling
out
of
!he parkPomeroy
.. Howard Searles, VMH.
Richards insisted his motive was
inf.,rmant admitted owing thousands
ing lot at !he Pool People and .was
Pomeroy
squad assisted.
of (lollars in chilo support, hack ta•· to protect Americans when he joined suuck by a 1987 Lincoln driven by
the militia and began reporting to the
cs 1nd court judgments.
(Continued from Psge 1)
Dennis Full&lt;, 51. Thornville.
It w~not the first time his credi- FBI two months after the Oklahoma
Rought's 1986 Ford then struck a ular full -time bus driver for the
City bombong.
bility has been attacked.
car
driven by George Baker, 50, upcoming school year on a 1-year
.. When I saw a firelighter in
Richards was on the hot seat
Pomeroy. who had sto~ped in traffic contract, and hired Dee Willis as a
when Militia Commander Floyd Oklahoma City with a baby dangling to allow Rought to leave !he lot.
substitute bus driver. The board also
Looker was tried for conspiracy to from his arms, I decided I was going
The following land transfers were
There
were
no
citations.
approved a medical leave of absence recorded recently in the office of
to join 1he militia and see what it was
make bombs two weeks ago.
for bus driver Cynthia McMollin.
Looker, 57, of Stonewood, was all about," Richards testified.
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
•
In other business, a resolution was
Also Tuesday, jurors heard tape
convocted despite attempts by t~e
approved authorizing the emergency Hamilton:
defense to portray an investigation recordings in which Rogers talked
(Continued from Page 1)
Deed, Beneficial Mortgage Co. to
aboijl the FBI center's security. He County Anniversary Committee; Pat· replacement of !he roof at Middleport Dennis and Lilly .Harris. Orange;
also said he could probably recruit 10 ty Cook, Meigs County Genealogical Elementary School.
Deed, Robert E. and Nina J.
education presentations Sanders to Thomas T. and Deedrah
The
Sentinel people if it C'ame down to blowing it Society; Rita Lewis, Meogs Cou~ty wereDrivers'
made by AAA and MGM Dri· Simmons. Ohve, I acre:
up.
Retired Teachers; Brenda Memtt,
tUSPSlll•HI)
ve-Right,
businesses vying for the
Deed. Ouida F. Chase to Stephen
Riverbend Arts Council; Jane Frymy-•
district's
drivers'
education program E. and Donna Jenkins, Middleport
Puttlishet.l every afternoon. Monday lhrou&amp;h
er, Hemlock Grange; Joe 'Young, contract, with no action following.
Fritby, Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohlo, by lhe
pareels; ·
O~lo Valley PuN1sln1g Company/OMinetl Co.,
Feeney-Bennett ·Posl, American
Student/faculty handbooks wef!l
Po,tneroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 99l-21S6. Second
Deed, Don A. Stephenson to
Legion; . the Re,~: Gle~ McCiu~g,
Am Ele Power .......................43.,_
clus posll&amp;t paid at romeroy. Ohio.
approved.
Shirley
A. Stephenson, Sutton, 1.15
Meigs County t:-4jmstenal AssoctaAkza .....................................~jPresent were Superintendent Boll acres.
Mlftlbn": The 1\liOCiatcd Prell, 1nd 1M Oflio
AmrTech ........:......................" ts
tion; Becky Edw~, Chester/Shade Buckley, Treasurer Cindy RhoneI\ICMP;IJJCT ~ialion.
Aahland 011 ....: ....................50"1.
Historical Association; Chri.•ty Eblin,
mus and board members John Hood.
ATAT ........................................40
P¥'J'MAS'I'ERI Send addms oomctiolls to
Meigs County Public Library; and
11w: Oa•ly ScMntel, Ill Court St .. Pomeroy.
Bank One .............................57'1.
Chadene _Ha&lt;nich. The D'!i_ly Sen- Scott Walton, Larry Rupe, Randy
Ohio4S769.
Bob EYIIna ...........................111\
Humphreys and Roger Abbott.
tinel.
Borg-Warner
........................
53'/oo
.· '
SUBSCRtmON RATIS

cost.

That's a steep price -to settle a
political feud -- even one where the
stakes are so high.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
.,_

Rainy conditions slated
to continue until Friday

William E. Varian Sr.

Squads log 18 runs in two days

FBI informant's crftlibility
assailed .in new militia trial

80-page report which suggested that
Hooters should be forced to pay mil·
lions of dollars in back wages to
men who had been denied the
opportunity to be Hooter guys. After
much public ridicule, the EEOC
.finally dropped ots jihad against the
restaurant chain last year.
Then there's the lener from a
reader who called my attention to an
item appearing in the monthly
newslcner of the Washington-based
Competitive Enterprise Institute. It
seems that the EEOC recently filed a
_claim against Federal E•prcss for a
company policy that, according to
the agency, violated the Amcncans
With Disahilities Act.
.
So how dod the overnight deliv-.
cry company doscriminatc against
lhc disabled'! By rcfusong to hire drivcrs who don't have sight in both
eyes. Apparently, the EEOC docsn 't
thonk that gond vision should be a
prerequisite for individuals who
drive for a living.
The dosquieting thing about these
three discrimination cases is that the
EEOC bothered to pursue them in
the first place. For while !he commission was wasting untold time
and tax dollars going after Zero
, Corp., Hoo1ers and Federal Express,
the· cases of real disc'rimination victims were going unattended.

Damage contained in house fire

Signing planned

Meigs Local

Land transfers

Keeping Constant here, &lt;ritics
say, is their way of keeping him
quiet. Government officials can put
a damper on thos kond of thonking by
askong Canada to try Constant. And
Canada
can protect its growing
der. While the U.N. mission is
onterests
in Haito by agreeing to do
expected to end in November, the
investment Canada has made in . so.
Haiti's future could be threatened . Twoce in recent weeks Bill Clio·
quickly by what remains of FRAPH. . ton has watched "Air Foo::e One," .a
By helping to bring Constant to jus- movoe. on who~h .an Amencan presoticc, Canada will send a message 10 dent govcs a storrong speech ~bout hos
his murderous comrades that they refusal. to Kowtow to terronsts any•
cannot operate with impunity alter where tn the W?rld: The film ought
the Unoted Nation's wilhdrawal.
to be requored voewmg for hos secreThat's important.
tary of state •. whose dep~ment is
Under Constant's command now consoderong Constpnt s apphcaFRAPH had few constraints. It oper: tion for political asylu.m.
ated in !he vacuum created by the
No country !hat ~oves refug~ to
coup that ousted Aristide and the Constant can be con~odered a seroous
international community's slow opponent of terronsm. f'lo natoon
respons~ to the massive human that offers hom asylum can complaon .
rights violatoons that followed. Our- _about others .that harbor terronsts
ing thos time, Constant was both an wothout evokong more than a few
agent provocateur for Haitian coup sntckcrs.
.
.
leaders and !he Central Intelligence
. If Constant ':"~nts t~ fight extradoAgehcy, on whose payroll he is said tton b~ck to Ham that s hos ~ght. But
to have remained until a U.S. inva- he should do ot from a pnson cell
sion force returned Aristide to power · re~erved for.th?se ':"ho have violated
in October 1994.
thos country s ommograuon laws, not
Since Constant's arrival in this as a free man.
country. the State Department has
Emmanu_el Constant should be
rebuffed all efforts to have him brought to JUSioce, not. gove~ a safe
returned to Haiti to stand trial harbor by a nation that on both film
fueling speculation that some of the and re.al life prodes itself in saying it
dirty deeds he did in Haili were at doesn t brook hos kmd.
,,
the behest of American officials.

Committee

Canada has a vested interest in the outcome of
his case.
·
If it's a fair trial the State Department wants for this lowlife, why not
ask Canada to prosecute Constant.
Under
the
Canadian

...

,

..

' . J l t ;)'

. .~

lllai.

Haitian terrorist shoul,d be brought to justice
Gannett News Service

I

'

Aa:uWeaW forecut for

EEOC squanders its ·l imited resources

Today in history

.

Tbunday, Aua.ll

Polls ready for fight over Census sampling

The Daily Sentinel

The Deily Sentinel • Page 3

Wedneeday, Auguat 20, 1

'

..

Daily

Stocks

••••••••••••
COUPON

· BfCHrln' 01' Mteor RMk
One Weelr. ................................ ......... • $2.111
One Month ........................... ···· .............SH.7U
OM Yc..- ......... .. ... _.......................... 1104.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dii~Y ............................................... 3S Ce•tl.

I

Subscr1bcrt 1101 dnirin1 lo PlY !he earner ~)'
rcntll in ad~ana: direcl to The Dally SentuMI
on ,, thm. six or 12mo~th bUll. Cttdil will be
alvin arrier each wed•.
No· .ubscrlption by mail permil1c4 in areas

w..rc 1t0me carrier ~eJVIce i• n-aillbk:.
Pu~ilher n:ltMI tht: riJtliiO lldjull flits dur-

1 in1

11M:

su.btcriplto• period. Svblcriptlon

111tc

ch1oga m1y be il'llplemented by ctl•nalnl the

dur,IIOO of the M.lbleriptton.

•

.

MAILSUBSCRimONS
t-M.tpCoootr
13 Weeks ............................................. $27.30

26l!V«" ......... .....................................153.112
52l!V«u .................•.............•.•.............ltll!l.~

c....,
t3 w.eu ....•...•............................,......
Rlllei-Mtlp

1:1925

u w.eu ...............................................156.611

s2w..u............................................. :1109.71

·'

Champion ...............................19

c~ Shp• ...·~···~···············......e
CitY Holding ............................ 31
Federalllogul.......................35'1..
Gannett ................................100}
Goodyur ..............................62 Ia
Kmart ....................................13'1.
Lands End ............................28'/.
Ltd .........................................22'1..

Oak Hill Flnl ......................... .20~

OVB ...................................... .36~

OM Vslley .................·............43~
Peopl• .................................3~
Prwm Flni ..-........................ ~!.J .,
RockWIIII ..... ~........................e1 't.

RD--Stleii •••••._....................... &amp;3'Shonty'a ................................
Star Bar* ...............................45.

5'r

w:=•a . . .-.. . . . . . . . . . . . 23\

Wo

-·-·-

"'JJIO1••••oooo•••••••,••••.. •••11'

Stock report• •• th1 10:30
a.m. quotas provided by Adwlt
ol GaHlpolla.

FREE HEARING TESTS

will be given In Melgs/Gallla Counties by

~...,·

HEARING AID CENTER

�•
•

VVednalday,Augult20,1997

The Daily Se11tin~!

Sports
HRs by Nunnally &amp; Greene
help Reds down Rockies 6·3
, r.

..

SEATTLB (AP) - The Cleveland lndi10s wm rolling nothing but
sevens.
David Justice hit his first grand
slam in almost seven years Tuesday
~ight and John Smiley pitched seven strong innings as the Indians
defeated the Seattle Mariners 7-5.
The Indians have won seven of
their last nine.
For Justice, who has si• homers
and 19 RBis in his last 13 games, it
was his first slam since connecting
on Sept. 25, 1990, at Cincinnati as an

. I

Colorado ................ 60 65
San Dh::&amp;o ..... ~.'..... ~«J 65

'
I -.
I

I.-

a.tem DI•Won
l! L l&lt;l.

BuJtimorc ...............78 44
New York.. ............ 73 30
8olton ......... 1 ........ :6l 63

.6J9
..S9]
.o\96
.484

Toronto ..................60 64
IJetroit ................... }iK 66

.m

CHtral D1""'CLEVELAND .......65 57 .HJ
Milwaukee ............61 63 .492
OIIJ.:Illo..................61 . &amp;4 .48H
ICnniDI City ...........~2 70 .-426
Minnesota ..............~! B .411

wfttcm Division
Anllheim ............. 69 -~ s·n
Scanlc .................... w 56 .sn
Tuas ..................... 60 66 · .-476
OnldMd ................. ~ 7~ .400

Florida 8. Cllicago Cubs I
PinabiJrah 5. San Die!U :\
St. louis 12, Montre~l5

llll
17 \
19

Colorado {CDJiillo 9-10) a1 CINCIN·
NATI (White 1.0). 12::\:'i p m.
Chkn&amp;o Cvb1 ('fup;mi 2-l) a1 Floril.iol

~

~ ·~ ~

B
1.111

-'
9~~

IY

r Hem&lt;~ndtz 6-0J. 7:m p.m
b Francisct~ (Rueter 9- ~) &lt;~I PhHadelphia (St:hilling IJ-10), 1.]5 p.m
San Diego (A~hby 6-1!) at Pillsbur'h
ISchmidt?-6). 7 :.~~ p.m.
St. Louis (Qsbome 2-S) ~ Monri't!ut
IMartinez 1+61. 7 : .1.~ p.m.
Los AnJeles (R . M:-al'li~z6-J)at N.Y.
Mc11 (Junes (.\. 7t, 7:40p.m. •
Adan111 (G!Avine '10-6) al H{lu · · ~n
(Reynolds 6-71. K:OS p.m.

Thursday's gimes
St . loui1 (Aybar 0 -2 ) u1 Montr ~a l
(Jahnson 0.1 ), I :JS. p.m
San D1cgu (Hilchcod K- 7) :11 Pill I·
""J.h (Cordu\'o 9-6), 7: .~5 p.m.
tlJ Angeles (Cattdioni 9-41 al N.Y.
M s (lkal 10--61. 7:40'P.m.
Colorado (B;~iley 9-M) Ul H11111h1n
(Holl 7-9), H :iJ~ p.m.

Today's games
16 · 7~

p.m.

Basketball

111 Dc:twit

DH : Bo.~ton (W1lkdidd 7-14 omd Surpllll 6-1J at Oat.lnntl (Hayne8 1-2 ouul
~uisa2.:~J . 6:JS p.m.
OH: N.Y. Y1tnl:~s (Gooden 6:4 untl
lmbu .1-2) ot Al\llh&amp;:im (Hill 6-9 01nd urnletitlcd) ..7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Person 5-K) 011 Chicu!o Whit~
Soli. (litlldwin IH;\),8:05 p.m.
R~&amp;himore (Key IJ-7) ul Kansa~ City
(Ru.K:h 5-tU, K:05 p.m.
Milwa.kn (Finric _\-4) at Teu~

WNBA standings
'·
Y.aster'n Ce»~ftrtl'k-c
:rra
»: .. l&lt;l.
A·Huuston ....... ....... JK K .&amp;J2

CLEVELAND (Nugy 12-M) ut Sennle

(Johnsoo 16-4). 10:.1:' p.m.

.:.u6-7).l : l~p. m.

D.."WnJil .(ThllfnfJ5l'n t 1-1,1) ill Milwa.u·
kt (Eidr'Cd 11 · 121. K:05 r .m.
,
Ballim.~ CKrivdi•, ·O) ill Kmlllils Ci1y
t~ptlle&lt;7·10). "'"~ p.m
N.Y. Yunlu.-.:-11 (Pt."nille 14.7) ut 1\u.
hl:im,(Walwn 10-7). 10:05 r.m,
CLEVELAND (Cokm 2-~1 011 &amp;•o111l~
(M{lyt:r 12-4). 10: 0~ r.m. •·

NL standings

.'

Euttrn Diwllien

»:

L l&lt;l.
.611

. ~31

4

51 .540
Montnml.. .............. 61 62 .496
Phi1Uiphia ........... 45 11 .369

9

1-*'·..10

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Wendy Palmer scored 19 points
Tuesday night to lead Utah to an 81·
75 victory over the New York Lib·
erty, ending the Starzz's six-game
losing streak.
It was Utah's seco~d straight win
over Liberty, who have lost five of
six overall. New York ( 16-9). Which
had been · in first place in the
WNBA's Eastern Conference since
starting the season . with a seven·
game winning streak,"fell to second
place on Sunday.
Rebecca Lobo scored 27 points
for New York and she and Palmer

"

.f ·

CLEVELAND ... . Ll

11

.'i20

.&amp;'

:; ::

-

.

I

.lflel

-1

U1ah . .......... ....7 191 .lflt)
a~lincbcd plotynrr hcnh

6'

lfl

OF Duu,_ l'Neill, und OF B ·a n Bl:~ir
from Tubft ,f the Ten~ l.za
:md INF

Ry;m G1K\!\' mm llwl011e of he Aori·
'-"• Stutt' lea.,: a uptioned
pl:tyc:n•
b.1ek It' IIK:ir re ~-....."'!~!'
Nationlil Lc•a•·
LO/i ANGELES IX)l&gt;G£RS: Traded
RHP Ptdru Astu.o:illltJ dM: (.'olor.klo ~o.:k ·
ie1 for 18 Eric Young. Ploteec.l OF Todd
Htllkmdswurth un &amp;he: 1~-tby tlisabk:.J lht
Rcc:1lled INF Junn Camu from Alhu q•~e~u.: or the: PO..
PI'ITSBURGH PIRATES: Pur~:huciol
th~ conlrncl 11r LHP Jdr Wullacc rrnm
Camlillil uf the Snu1hcm l..eattiJC. OesiJ·
ru11N RHfJ Puul WR&amp;Ik.T fOf Wlll&amp;nnll:nt .

Basketball
N•liGMIIdk•IW AUOEbllon
CH!\RLOTI"E HORNETS: Signed G
D1lbtl)' Phii!J lo o ~vrn-yc01r cumwct.
Waiwd G Ricky Pierce. Rl.!noun~;etl lit~:
ri,:hts 111 F Motlik RoK .
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIE..IIii: 1\gh!al
111 lrn'nl with (J A1111tmio Do11ids.

TuHday'!i scores
Ut01h HI. Ntw Yurk 7~
HllUS IOII 71. {1t:lllt1CII! ft\1

Tonight's games
Phucni11111 ~IILTUnlr'ntu, 10 fl.lll.
Nt.-w Yurk atlA!!i AIIJ!,ek's ~ 10:.\~}1) . 111 .

Thursd•y's games ·
CI.EVELANIJ at Hotul""· ~UtiJUU.
Chnrluuc iu Ut;ah..ll:.lO p.m

N111._..ul 1-'oott.UIA..ut
NFL: .1\IIIMIUIICcd the: I)WQCI'I ;IJltKIIvt:d
lluul Allen's fJ{IIrc:ln""-' of the ~..uk Sc-...
h;1wks . SuspcntL'd MinrM:Int:. Viking.• 1.0
Arli~ Ulmer fur tuur rci!ular-5~:utun .
~·m~

,

ARIZONA CAkOINAU: Pla~.-N IJT
krry Orate. OT Eric Jnnu~et1 :md CR
Uell ML~ 011 injure4 reserve. Waived
QB Chtld M;Jy. WR S!Cvic A~m. WK
Krv1n JcW'l.ilm, PK ScUll BcnUey. fB Ryan
Chri1h1phcuun. CD AnthonJ l'ohb~ . .P
Man 'Ptyton. OL Allen UeGrw~ffenr.=iiJ .
UL lanct;: Scull, LB Jmrt:ll lrun11. LB
hbrcc: llus Mo~telln. LB Rury Wilfurk. S
Kevin JnckM~II. I1T l..Oinu Mill1. 1&gt;1' Bc:n
Williams , 01 ~ Mom1h.' Wonlhuk . I&gt;E

Brt"nl Bum511!in and J)[ l&gt;arriu.~ f·dd..Y.
BALnMORt: RAVENS: Waiwd WR
Rohli!rl Halllutd DT Rnb&amp;:n Willker .
Claiml'd a Jerolue Daniel ~ C!(( w:~ivcn
rrum the Miami DnJ[IIIins
BUI-'PALO DILI.S; W:11ivetJ QB Jim
Ballar'd unt.l Wit Ouit OtoUlllc)'.
C!\ROUN!\ PANTHERS : Waiv,•d
IJ~ Ru)' AJI:IICW . (.'l&lt;~im~J NT William

Transactions
llaHball
Anwrkan Ln~•e-

ANAHEIM 1\NGELS . Tmtlt&gt;d .Hl
Oeor~;c: Aria1 hi lhc SiUI Oie1u, l 101dn·~ II!
cum p!ct~ rhe !\u~u~l 1.' 11:ule fnr OF

R~

CINCINN/\11 ........ 55 jft" .441
CltiCDJO ................. ~ 76 J97

10
16'~ ·

Wnlun DftWon
San Fmmoik!u ........ 71 !lib . ~!'9
1..o1 An~b ...........6K ~7 .:'144

2

Ht::lllk:ntiJII.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Re..::dled
LHP Tttm a:OJdh;m• fmm Nouhvillc ,,f tilL'
American Au.ucilllinn anti 5L.'ftt him back
111 No1~wiUc: 011ft~r 1hc lint ~:an..: Ttll·~l..y.
Activated RHP JastiR Berc from lhe I:\...lu)' disabl~tl li~t . Olllinn~t.f LHP t.llk c
Sirolt.a In Nash•ille.
.OETROIT TIGERS : 1\&amp;:tiv:llcd OF
Melvin Nieve:s_fmm lhc 15-d;ly llianblctl

ARRIVES AT SECOND- The ClnelnNitl Redl' ond baae!Mn Nelli Peru In the first Inning of
Chrla StynH (right) geta to MCORd ahnd of the T-d.tly night's Natl011111 I.Ngile conteat In
throw from Colorado catcher Jeff Reed to aac- Cincinnati, where the Reds won 6-3. (AP)

•

Meigs County Humane Society

THRIFT SHOPPE
Middleport, Ohio
Open every Wednesday through Saturday

BAG SALE
August 22 and 23

Attention Elementary Teachers- FREE
Educational material will be available at Thrift
. Shoppe on August 21st thru August 23rd.

and exterior.

.
•'·

League," said Smiley, whose only bats well for about three weeks
previous AL experience during a 12- now," Seattle manager Lou Piniella
year career came with the Minneso- said. "I am not worried about the hitta "!Wins in 1992.
ting but I am concerned."
- Manny Ramirez and Matt
Ramirez hit his 21st homer in the
Williams added homers for the Indi- first inning off rookie Ken Cloude
ans, who were opening ·an eight- ( 1-2). The right-bander hurt himself,
game West Coast trip. ·
walking four in 4 1/3 innings.
Russ Davis hit a pair of two-run
Pitching on three days' rest,
homers for the Mariners.
Cloude took a three-hitter into the
Alex Rodriguez also homered . fifth, but loadCll the bases on a sinfor the Mariners, who have losl sev- gle and two walks. One out later, Jusen of II.
tice hit his second career slam and
"We haven 't been swinging the 25th homer to chase the rookie.

"Good hitters look for a mistake
and that pitch was a mistake,"
Cloude said.
The Mariners got two runs back
in the fifth on Davis' Jwo-run homer,
his 18th, and closed to 7-5 on his
two-out shot in the ninth off Paul
Shuey. .
Jose Mesa came on and got the
final out for his seventh save.
Williams homered oiT Bobby
Ayala in the eighth, his 27th, and JimThome added a~ RBI single in the .

ninth.
"Rodriguez hit his 18th homer in ·.•
the eighth off Shuey.
Notes: With a walk in the first .,
inning Jim 11lomc incrtlsed his •
AL-Ieading total to 11"1.... Jus.tice's
25 homers this season ore the most
for him since he clubbed 40 in 1993
with Atlanta .... The Mariners bave·
remained enor-frec for a season-high
six consecuJive games . ... Seattle is
1-42 this season when trailing after
eight innings.

Dodgers top Mets 4-2; Braves,,
Pirates ·&amp; Cardinals -also win
p

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
·The New York Mets are having a
hard time escaping losses and Eric
Young.
Young, traded from Colorado to
Los Angeles a day ealier, got three
hits and stole a base, drove in a run
and scored one Tuesday night as the
Dodgers beat New York 4-2.
.Young's performance helped sead

the Mets to their fourth straight loss.
They lost three in a row at Colorado
over the weekend as Young went 3for-8 with two runs in his final three
games with the Rockies.
Critics said Young couldn't hil
outside of Coon; Field, and his .219
road average away from Denver's
thin air last year did nothing to dispel the notion.
However, hitting in New·York the

Carr off w~vtr&amp; from the Citdnnati Oen-

snls..

past two scawns ha&lt;n ' t been a problem for the second baseman. He "s
bauinB .412 (21 -for-51) in Shea Stadium since the start of the 1996 season.

" lt"s a good feeling to come in
and contribute the lirst night," Young
said. "This is a great beginning. It
prohahly removed a lot of doubt, if
there was any."
(See NL on Page S)

CHICAOO DEARS : Waived (JB
Mark Bunerfiekl. T Tnfa Jcf(l!rsnn. OT
Mike MiiiM aA&amp;I FB Shawn WashinJ.tnn.
Reached an injury aculemcnl with CB

Owayne'Jus.:ph.

DALLAS COWBOYS : Waived G
Shane Hannah . 'Reached injury Iettie·
mcn11 wilh WR Kcilh Jackson mid WR
OmuDhtoo.
DENVER BRONCOS: Wnivt-tl 08
Jan\:11 Elli1. Pla..'t.'d OL M:atl Lqtsia on iajui"CCIMC:nc.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: W:UY\.&gt;d G
Lintlsny Ktlllf'l', G Gill')' Orowo. OT Mo~r·
cu~ Sr-:un. FIJ l::mury Smith :md UE
Ttu•y Uunit;h; unL.I OE W;1her Scun .
Pb..'l-d l.B Anllllmy HickJ nn injLI~'tl reSI.'fVe .

JACKSONVILLE 'i1 JAGUARS :
Wui\'eiol RB Rundy Jurdan. RO Dnvid
·nmm115on. WR Oul A"lu~w . WR Jmne~
Kidd, Wf( Kendrick DulluN. LB hmle
Baisk1. lB Oanu Cnurdl. 1.8 Jun H~.
CO R1d,Y: Bell. TE lsw~~.: Cunis. S luhn
FiJIIILY. ()8 Uu11.:e Fund•·rbur\. OL O.ri'
OIIIIUIIIn l, P Pal O ' Neill, S Darrell
Srudstill, LB AI Walluc.: otnll DE Jn5e

W~ile.

KANSAS CITY (.'HII!FS: Waiv.:d RR .
H Smi1h. CJfl Steve Manlt~:wll . l&gt;T D-Jvid
Borrn;~rll . S f:dt.li\: &lt;:ude . T Wcnd;•ll
G:rint•a . Wk l~m· Senhh. LD Jam~s
lhlrlt~u . UE 8rym1 Odir;lff&amp;:arci.J. RU
k'll!ll' HoJftl.,._andOT llilly l.y•m.
NEW 1-.:Nlii.ANU PATRIOTS :
Wuivell Ul Mun1y Bmwn: WR Hll!lon .
Grt~hnm , WR Ra~ l.uc01~. 01. Curti~
Mt·Oec. OL Ju:UII Pt111i.'l', UL Jm;h T:IVcs,
UL Jermainc Miles. Ill Thc:ro111: M~: ­
Qua:n. lll kidiOiltl Alv:roldn. LB J~
William~ . l.O Chrh Win~ . 00: Ja11nlll
Parl.L'f ;uk.l OH Alii.. lao,:kl'llft
NEW YUH I( GlfiNTS: W;Uv..:d t:'U
Kmy IUackwcll .. WR Jul111 W&lt;~~hin¥hm
nntJ G J:lmic Sumner. Pl:~~;ctl S Typail .
M~:Mullcn un inj11n:J rt.:Jicrvl•
•
OAKI.ANIJ RAII)ERS : WOIIVCtl WR
Kc-uyun lhn11~cnmh. HB nc:rrick Clark.
WR O~nllhlh ('uulk•r, QIJ Jasnn l&gt;av1~.
KJI Ri.:kr l~i••~- UT·Taaw 1:uumui. WR
Kl'llnY (mk:l'. G-T Jeff Ky~ur . S L:1m;1r )
l.yneu. I&gt;T G:.hncl Olatlipu. T[ Rohcrt
ftt,~enuicl. Ill: Shatnny S:lr(l.~llnl. TE
Kl'ltu)' ~mith. CJII TtM.kl Studer. Ul flotrutl
Wallno.~ :md 0 J1••y Wylil'.' Ani111UIII.'\.'d
I lie reliri.'1IM:nll!l T Huhcrt 1...-nkin.,. rt.K:.:d

.

LU Adri11n It!' a 1111 i11jun.'IJ re:w:rvc.
I1HII.Ail ~ I.JIHII\ ~1\GU:..'i : Waived
S IJ..Yal Bnykin, WR Oial!cu Durb, CH
Hymn CnJICn, T JL-d llcVric~. UE Juhn
IJ11ff, 1:8 l.01rt)' June~ . LB While MIV·
:th.-.11. lJf MK:b.ll'l SunmiJII llnll WR FmJ.
liW: St1!.wnnn. Pl~t~.'l.'d T Rich1..tl C•JOfiCJ.
CR ltt.Jnc r;"u ;mtl RB Cure)' W:•lkl-"1' clQ
injVft.'tl rek"Nc.
PI1TSHUkGH STI!l:I.ERS: Plotccd
"w'K l01hinc 1\rnuli.lun inJur&amp;:d reserve .
Wotiv&amp;:d RR 8nhhy Philhps. CO l&gt;ar,YI
Pmlcr , l'H ltorrun Mii\:JI, OL h11111a
Clt1,1hn1 , Ut Ernc.:r!inn Mart.in. Ut Man
Sturm, 1.11 (K:rnhJ Filurd1. Lll 1\ndy J;~­
~uh!i . 1.11 Pa.tric:k Scull. Ul Ky:111 M1.{'ny.
IJI. Cmey M~ayficld . WK (lfm* G.adst1c..'fl . TE l&gt;.J Jmac~ . WR J:1y KCJ.rney. F
Davit! Mc&lt;-:!11111 . OU Kirlc Pnintcr, 011
('.:.Jri..: S:imud a.nd k -P Scan Nc:Jii
ST. t:.UUIS NAMS : Plac:ctl l' Ryan
Tuder 1111 ti)e IJI•y~icully · uni{blc-ltl-JlCr·
forn11i~1. Wulw._'f.l \Vk Omllll'IIIM:l-r. DL
Tym11e William.~. Ill. 'I'm)' Wibnn. t.:B
lll\.'11 WallcNitl.'dl Mid 1Yf&lt;-1ud {hhurnc.
SI\N l)fE(I{) t'HI\KGI ~ KS : Waived
W,R 1\nclr..· Cnk.•m:m. I'IOII.'Ctl (.' IJ Julmny
ll1111111a.~ a111l T l1ult1 Puumck 1111 i11jurctl
Tt'.k'fV~·

OUR ANNUAL

Back to School SALE
NOW IN PROGRES.S!!!

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(Excludes Football &amp; Volleyball)

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219 N. Second Ave.

NL games

The Historic

ROOM

... ~~ 8o.ai td &amp;iddfPlo.a~ to cfio;

MASON,
W.VA.

The game was played before a
crowd of 8,234 at the Delta Center.
Comels 77, Sting 69
At·Houston, Cynthia Cooper, the
WNBA's leading scorer, had 31
points and Janeth An:ain added 20
Tuesday night as the Houston
Comets strengthened their Eastern
Conference lead with a TI-69 victo-

Pomeroy
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* Check out our: School gym bags, Nike T-shirts, ball caps,
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HARDWARE

Head finished with II points for
Utah, while Kym Hampton had 12
for the Liberty. ·
The Liberty 's leading scorer,
Sophia Wilherspoon, was held to
eight points on 2-for--15 shooting,
including missing all seven attempts
from three-poinl range .
The Liberty finished 4-for-22 ·
from three-point range ( 18%).

SHOE .PLACE

992-5627

Middleport

ry over the Charloue Sting.
The Comets ( 18-8) won for the
seventh time in eight games and
boos1ed their lead to I 112 games
over New York , which lost to Utah
81-75 on Tuesday night
Charlotte (13-12) led 40-33 at
halftime and used a suffocating zo~e
defense 10 stay within striking distance in the second half.
But Cooper's three-pointer with
2:52 remaining put Houston up 69-

•

64 and her quick feed to Tina
Thompson resulted in another threepointer at the I :59 marl&lt; as the
Comets went ahead·72-65.
·
Thompson finished with 16
points, while Wanda Guyton had 10
rebounds for Houston. Cooper
entered the game with a 22.4 scoring · ·
average.
,.,
Vicky Bullett '\POfed 24 points
and Rhonda Mapp.'added 15 points
and seve~ rebounds for the Sting.

..
.

.

..,,
·.

·-

·-·
- ~·
.~~

._
,....... .

--.
. . ..

•

•••
'

...•

.

.•'

••
••

·'

two months!

•
••
,
•"

.•

'

••
'•

Meigs Junior·Golf League ends season

All Chlldrens athletic shoes
(to size 6)
All Shoes In our SALE

each had nine rebounds. Lobo had
five blocked shots and was 3-for-4
from three-point range.Utah (7-19).took a 37-35 balftime
lead as Greta Koss scored 10 points
and Palmer added nine. Koss finished with a season-high 12 points.
The lead changed hands six times
in the second half before Utah wen I
on top for good at 54-53 on Dena
Head 's 16: foot jumper with 10:14
left.
.
The Starzz, who led by seven
points twice, scored their final II
points of the game from the free
throw line.

Meigs senior golf teams
defeat Athens twice

."

Semi-gloss acrylic
latex for basement
floors, patios,
walks, steps,
porches-Interior

Atlanta rookie.
"I've been up with the bases
loaded a whole lot of times," said
Justice, who has 185 can:er homers.
"I just never rut a home run until
today."
Smiley (2-2) allowed seven hits,
struck out three and walked one.
The left-hander was making his
fourth start for Cleveland since coming over in a July 31 trade with
Cincinnati.
"I'm still getting my feet back on
the ground iri t~e American

(Con tinued from Page 4)
••• ~==-.:.:.:~.;:,_'-Eric Karros hit a tiebreaking
'"Thank God they're not going to
home run with two ou1s in the call off the season tomorrow," Mets
eighth and lsmael Valdes (S-10) manager Bobby Valentine said.
pitched seven stro~g innings.
" We've got a chance to get right
A two-run si ngle by pitcher Bri- back in it.'"
·
an Bohanon was all .the Mets could
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
manage in their eighth defeat in II Atlanta 4, Houston 3; Pittsburgh 5,
gaines
San Diego 3; Florida 8, Chicago I;
· Karros hit his 25th home run , San Francisco 9, Philadelphia 5; and
connecting for a solo shot oiT Brian St. Louis 12,. Montreal 5.
The Meigs Marauder golf teams followed by Tommy Roush's 46, ·. Bohanon (3·2) that put the Dodgers
llraves 4, Astruo 3
swept a varsity and reserve golf Jared Warner's 49, Carson MidkitT ahead 3-2. Karros had nol"homered
At Houston, John Smoltz (12-10)
match against Athens held on Mon· and Jason Frecker added 55's and
in 86 at-bats since July 25- prior struck out a season-high II in eight
day at "the Alhens Country Club.
J .R. Scarberry added a 56.
to that drought,- he had honiered innings and Jeff Blauser hit a two'
In the varsity match the MaraudThe Marauders have a full schedeight times in 86 at-bats.
run homer as Atlanta hande~ Mike
ers slipped past the Bulldogs 172- ule the rest of the week. Meigs had
"In that si tuation - two outs, Hampton his first loss since June 27.
175. Steve McCullough of Meigs a TVC match at the Meigs County
nobody on - I'm up there to drive
Mark Wohlers allowed the Astros
and Ryan Korner of Athens were co- Golf Course Tuesday and will trav- a ball.) don't do us any good by hi I· to put runners on second and third in
match medalist with scores of.41. el to the Greenbrier Country Club. to
ting a single," Karros said.
the ninth before slriking out Craig
Other Meigs scores include Clay play Greenbrier East and Nicholas
While the Dodgers remained two Biggio for his 30th save.
Crow"s 42, Mick Barr's 44, Dave County today. On Thursday, Meigs games behind San Francisco in the
The Braves, only 20-19 since the
Anderson's 45, Zach Meadows' 46 will play in an Ohio Division match
NL West, they moved past the Mets All-Star break, handed Hampton
and ·Sean O'Brien's 55 :
at Franklin.County and play in the 24
in the wild-c ard chase. Los Angeles (10-8) his first loss in eight deci- ·
lri the reserve match, Meigs post- team Parkersburg C_ountry Club Inviis 4 In games behind Florida for the . sions.
ed a 194-229 victory. Josh Price, tational on Friday.
fourlh pJ.ayoiT spot, while New York
Pirates 5, PadRS 3
who carded a 44 to lead Meigs, was
is now five back.
Keith Osik 's two-run, two-out
double finished off Pittsburgh's
three-run sixth, and Jon Lieber (812) won at home for the first time
since June 30.
·
Jose Guillen had a pair of runscoring singles as the Pirates scored
all but one of their fi"ve runs against
San Diego starter Pele Smith (4-4)
with two outs.
The Pirates won their fifth in seven games. They had losl four in a
row to the Padres, including a three·
game sweep in San Diego on July
22-24.
Marlins 8, Cubs I
At Miami. Bobby Bonilla followed two bases-loaded walks wilh
a grand slam in the fifth, and Alex
Fernandez pilched a four-hitter.
Fernandez (16-8) walked one and
struck out seven in his fifth complele
game. He has won his last six s.tarts
and is 3-0 against the Cubs this season.
Chicago rookie right-hander Jere·
mi Gonzalez (9-6), took a no-hiller
into the fifth before Charles Johnson
single with one out. After Gonzalez
walked in two runs, reliever Ramon
Talis came in gave up Bonilla's seventh career slam.
Giants 9, PhiUies 5
Jaynee
Davis,
Brandl
Thomas,
Brandon
RamsAt
Philadelphia.
Shawn Estes
JUNIOR GOLF LEAGUE WINNERS -The fol·
burg,
Brandon
Bumgardner
and
Jeremy
Roush.
(
16-4)
heal
the
Phillics
for the third
lowing won awards in the Meigs Junior Golf
time this season, and Bill Mueller hit
"League. In front are (L·R) Josh Price, Joe ComeU, Not present when the plclure was taken was
•
a bases-clearing triple.
Tyler Little and Andy Davia. Behind them are Adam _Thomas and Ty Autt. ·
Estes allowed live runs and seven hits in six,plus innings. He
improved Jo 8-0 in I 0 starts followPar and birdie awards wenl to · Medali sls were Patrick Johnson, ing Giants losses. Mark Lewis added
The Meigs Junior Golf League
ended play on Aug. 2 with a scram- J~remy Roush·, Zach Meadows, Jeremy Roush ,-Andy -Davis, Zach a two-run homer and San Frandsen
scored live runs in the fifth
ble aJ the Meigs County Golf Brandon Ramshurg and Garren Karr. Meadows and Jaynce Davis.
Course .
Taking lirst place in the scramble
was the team ofZach Meadows, C.J.
Haye, Brandon Ramsburg and
Angela Wilson. Coming in·seco_nd
place was the teaR) ol Carson Midkiff, Brice Hill, Chad Nelson, and
Whilney Karr in third place was Eric
Smith. Chad Unrine and Emily H1ll .
The fourth place_team was Jeremy
Roush, Adam Cheval~tr, Jason
Young and Brandi Thomas.

H.ick~y

Cenll'lll Dirilion
Houston ..... .... .... M ~9 .:'2K

~:~~l!~!~.::::::::~::Jj

1'

. ~:!0

llll

A11anfn ................... 77 49

Fbida ................... 72 52
~York ............. 67

.!'WI)

S:~~:romtl!nln ...........9

Thunday'spmes

Iaa

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12

Wnlrrn Conln'P1'11'1t
Pfloenia .............. .. J.\ 12 .520
lmA.In: . . . ·.... 12 13 .4Htl

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TEXAS RANGERS: Ren.llcd RHP
Wih011 Hcredi" from Oltlllhoma City of
tbr Amrri c;m Anndntion. DeslJnotd
RHP TIUiyon Srvnzc for ausipmcnl . 1\Jn.
ch.aled I cuntrOICt~ ur .c Frank Ch3rlts.

FtNttbaJI
lil

Char-lone ... ............. J.\

NcwYnrlr.. ....... 10 ·

(Clift. I-n K : J~ p.m.

Towntu cHentp.-n J.l.7) a(Chicar.u
Whik Sullo (Dnii!H Y·KJ. 2:05p.m.
.
81J51on (Gordon fl.-9) ;II (M;Iund (Pri .

TWINS: Plnt.'l!d SS Pat
Meare1 on lhe 15 -day disabled lill
l'drooM.iivc lo Au&amp;. II . R~1Ued .18 Todd
Walt.er fre)m Sail Lake of the Pa.:ifi.:
COOJI Lca&amp;w. SiJ~~t:d SS Mi~.:h.~l Cuddy-

ubled lilt.

Todoy'spmes

21

Tuesday's scom

{Siftder• 4.10), I :0~

MINNF..~OTA

YORK 'V ANKEES : Placed
RHP 0:1\lid Cone oa !he 15-doly disabled
list rdmDL:Iivc- tu Aug. IH. Al1iwated RHP
Brian Boehnnger from !he: 15-dby dis-

CINCINNATI6, Colorado 3
Silll Frtlfl\:isco 9, PtliiOOelphia 5
Allanl:t.4, Houstoa J

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lbl.

"-NEW

Lus "'ncek:s4. N.'r'. Mets 2

DH : Toronlu 6. Oli~;a~ White Stu ~ :
Chil:llflln While So-' 5, Turontn ;\
DH : Baltimore 12. Kan~n• City 9:
Koow Cily 9. Bahilf'l&lt;lft 2
~roil H, MiMCsota 2
Milwaukee II, Tex.u 2
.
CLEVEI.AND 7. Scaulc.,lll
Anllhicm 12. ~ . Y . Yanka!S 4
Bollonat Oaki4JMI. pt'KI .. r;un
Minnesoln tRodkc

1'0 .
10

Tuesday's scores

AL standings

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.480
.480

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Starzz get by Liberty 81-75; Comets notch 77-69 win over Sting

Scoreboard
Baseball

The Dally Sentinel• . . . 5

Tribe tops Mariners 7-5 to .get ·seventh win in nine outings
.'

Herd don't
expect to be
one-man show

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

i.

Wldnlld!f, August 20,1897

The Reds have struggled all sea- the time this year."
CINCINNATI (AP) - Since
"That's never happened before," .
Jack McKeon took over as the son because of their weak offense,
Cincinnati Reds ' manager, the club which has the lowest batting average the 22-year-old pitcher said. "When
has traded John Smiley and put in the National League. The Rockies I'm at my best, usually I get out of
starters Dave Burba and . Pete lead the league in hiJ(ing, ~omers and jams. l've struggled the whole year."
defense, but are last in pitching.
Schourek on the disabled list.
Greene's two-run homer off Cur·
Their game Tuesc)ay was decided tis Leskanic pushed it to 6-3 in the
Despite the pitching .setbacks and .
sixth, and the Reds' bullpen mana brutal schedule, the,Reds are hold- by a pair of Reds homers.
ing their own under McKeon,
Greene's single off Jamey Wright aged to hang on.
improving his chances of staying on (6-9) tied the game 3-3 in the fourth.
Mike Morgan (5-I 0) gave up six
as more than just an interim replace- Wright, who hilS won only two hits and three runs over 5 f /3 innings
ment for Ray Knight.
games since May, then showed the to get his second consecutive victoThe Reds used homers from Jon inconsistency that has troubled him ry after five straight losses. JasQII
Bates' pinch two-run double off
Nunnally and Willie Greene to beat all season.
the Colorado Rockies 6-3 in the rain
He gave up a single to Pokey Stan Belinda cut it to 6-5 in the
Tuesday night, their'seventh victory Reese in the fifth, but picked him off eighth, but Jeff Shaw got ihe final
for the · second out. After Nunnally four outs for his 25th save in 30
in 10 games.
The come-from-behind victory had trouble getting around on a fast- chances.
The first pitch was delayed for 40
left Cincinnati 12-12 under McKeon, baU, Wright shook off the sign from
who took over a team that was 13 catcher Jeff Reed am! decided to try minutes and the game was p!a)·ed
through a steady rain. Three batters
a change-up.
g~mes under .500.
"Who cares?" McKeon said.
He should have thrown another were hit by pitches: Colorado's!
"It's nice, but the ultimate goal is to fastball. Nunnally hit the slower Dante Bichette and Cincinnati's Joe
keep winning and do the best you pitch into the second deck in right Oliver twice.
Colorado's Larry Walker went 0field for his fourth homer and a 4-3
can."
·
·•
for-5,
dropping his average four
· Neither team lias won enough to lead that the Reds would never
points
to
.376.
stay in contention through August. relinquish.
·
.
Notes:
Cincinna_ti was the only
Colorado lost fot only the fourth
Nunnally is trying to impress
NL
team
tbat
Wright had not faced.
time in 12 games Tuesday, but McKeon to win more playing time
.:'-Bates' double came in his first atremained tied with San Diego for last 311d a niche in the club's future.
. in the NL West. The Reds.are fourth
" I hope he likes my style," Nun· bat since he 'w,as called up Monday.
in the NL Central .
nally said. "I just play hard. I get ... Vinny Castilla had a pair of doubumps and bruises, but it doesn't bles, extending his hitting streak to
eight games. ... Reds closer Jeff
matter."
Wright also had problems .in t!te Brantley was moved 'to the 61H1ay
first inning, when he retired the first disabled list. Brantley, coming back
1wo baners and wound up giving up from shoulder surgery, will not pitch
HUNTINGlON, W.Va. (AP)- a two-run triple to Reggie Sanders, again this season .... Kent Merckcr
will have a cortisone injection in his
Wide receiver Randy Moss is Mar- who was in an 0-for-15 slump.
lower
back Wednesday. Mercker has
"He
gets
the
first
two
guys
on
shall's most dangerous scoring
been
bothered
lately by a bulging
seven
pitches
and
then
he
gives
up
weapon, but other players expect to
disc.
He'
ll
probably
have to miss his
·
two
runs,"
manager
Don
Baylor
get into the offepsive attack this sea11
next
scheduled
start
over the weeksaid.
lt's
concentration
or
not
being
son.
end
....
Chris
Stynes
singled in his
able
to
finish
.
He'll
get
guys
0-2
and
"They said I may catch 50 or 60
first
at-bat,
extending
his hitting
balls this year," said tight end John not be able to finish them off. That's
streak
to·
a
career-high
10
games.
been his (problem) the majority of
White

•
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The scramble was followed by a
pizza parry where the league stand·
ings were announced and 1roph1es
were awarded. The first place team
in the 8-12 age group was the team
of' Jeremy Roush and Brandon
Ramsburg. Second place went Jo
Jaynec Davis and Brandi Thomas
and third place Ty Ault and Brandon
Bumgardner.
In the 13- 16 age group, the team
of Josh Price and Adam Thomas
look home top honors . Second plac~
went to Andy Davis and N1ck Del· .
!weller with third place honon; to Joe
Cornell and Tyler Little.

Meigs football .
field work sess1on
.set for tonight
A work ~tssion will be held today
at Bob Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
Anyone i·nterested in working are
asked to be at the football field at 6
p.m. and they are asked to bring
wrenches and socket sets.

QUEEN

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Plus, ·choose between a
FREE TeleTACT• or
a FREE Tote phone.

)

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Sign up for our residential lang-dlsl nee
service, and get J60 long-distance IRialltea
free for one ,ear.

Monday, September Ist, 1997 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
,
Activities will Include . ·
·
•
•
·•
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Tours of the Delta Queen
Calliope Concert
Delta Queen Band Concert
Walking Tours of.Pomeroy
Flower Show

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•

Ice Cream Social
Arts &amp; Craft Show
Merchant Sidewalk Sales
Costumed Guides
Quilt Show

Join Us For All The Fun
Parking will be available at Bob Roberts Footb~ll
Field and the Municipal Lot, Behind Pomeroy Fire
Dept. with shuttle service provided, the upper .&amp;
.lower Riverfront Parking lots will be closed to traffic~

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Cellular. paging and long dist•.,ce, right down the st-t."'

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For information. call: .

••
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1051 East State Street. Athens, OH (614) 592-4911

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:"

..:~
,..._. r.ol- nl rom'M'! ~

,s
1, ~
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(lftll! IWI'Ctllnaltf ' ' " Mft pn(j lil'lgl! ~lor IOU! c.lsp!Pd.,.._
...,...-.c:l~l~ ~~~ • .....,~ ........ ..,.._*&lt;!,~~

»'r1r l'f!.lnc1oon!- F!W-~~ ~

f!d'lllll

Jl...,....' l!'lOIIIh b

1llri0Mtwo Ofllr ~ ~ 1), 19!11

DELTA QUEEN DAY IS SPONSORED BY FARMERS BANK

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360° Communications

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VWednesday,August20,1997

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page&amp;
Wednelday, August 20, 1997

.Elderly parents still- driving in Florida without taking updated test
Ann
Landers

um. t.c. Anfdes li..c~

Srlllkatt llld CJCIIOft

· s,.....

Dear AIUI Landen: This is in
RsPonse to "On Needles and Pins in .
West Palm Beach," whose elderly
pwents were able to renew their driver's licenses .without taking tests.
Yes. that is what goes on in Florida.
'Ibis state has 40,000 registered driV~!S over the age of 90. I have no
ijea how many of those are active,
I'I'Cquenl drivers, but most 90-yearolds I know have trouble getting

around their own kitchens, let alone
navigating through the type of traffic
we have in metropolitan areas today.
I personally know a woman in
her 80s who recently had a mild
stroke. She has serious heatt disease
. and wears a pacemaker. She also drives. Not . long ago, in Hollywood,
Aa., an 89-year-old woman stopped
her car on the track of an oncoming
train. She's dead. I have seen older
folks do incredibly dangerous
things, such as come to a sudden
stop on the exil ramp of an interState. Most of these people are quick
to tell you they have never had an
accident, but the real question is
"How many accidents have tbey
CAUSED?"

And it's not only tbe old folks. nation and quick response time. It is
The Aorida Highway Patrol esti- not a game, and it is not a right.
mates that in Dade County, 3.0 per- Please help us get the word out, Ann.
cent of drivers on the road at any I've just about •• Had II in Florida
given time are driving with either
Dear Had It: You have written a
suspended licenses or no license at powerful letter that is sure to get the
all. Aorida does not require mechan- · attention of not only 'Floridians but
ical inspections, which means any people all over the United States and
and all kinds of junk are allowed on Canada who are concerned about
the road. Add to this mix rubber- elderly drivers. If your letter doesn't
necking tourists and cell-phone "get the word out," I don't know
addicts, and it's no wonder our what will. Thanks on behalf of all
insurance rates are insane.
the people whose eyes you've
As the population continues to opened today.
age, we are going to nave to step up
Dear Ann Landen: Nine years
to the plate and insist that drivers be ago, I was in an abusive relationroad-tested on a regular basis. Dri- ship. I ·was still a teenager when I
ving is a physical skill that requires moved in with this man. We had two
good sight, hearing. muscle coordi- children. I thought that he loved me

and that I could change him, but I
was wrong. When I realized how
dangerous the situation was for me
and my children, !left
I could not have done it without
your help, Ann. You printed the
phone number of the domestic violence hotline, and I called it Those
wonderful people told me where to
go for help and counseling. If it
weren't for you, I probably wouldn't
he here today. It's been a long, hard
road, but! now know I'll make it
· Please run that number again for
those who didn't see it but need to.
Thanks for everything. The women
and children you have helped will be
forever In your debt . •. Healthy in
Portland, Ore.

Dear Portland: Thanks for letting me know I helped.' Your letter
was a real day-brightener. The
National Domestic Violence Hotline
is 1-8()().799-SAFE (TDD: 1-8()().
787-3224). And P.S. : This number
will also provide help for men who
are battered by women. And there
are more of them out there than most
people think.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Cre·
ators Syndicate, 5177 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

Community calendar

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The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to DOD·
profit aroupa wishlna to announce
meeting and special events. The
calmdar is no1 desiped to promote
sales or rund raisers of uy type.
Items are priDted as space permits
and CIIJlllot be guaruteed to run a
spedlk number of days.
WEDNESDAY ·
RACINE ·· . Evangelist John

~·

.,

Elswick will be speaking at the Fellowship Church, Racine, 7 p.m
Wednesday.
THURSDAY
· DANVILLE ·· The Vision Trio
from Hobe Sound, Fla. will present
a concert of sacred music at the
Danville Holi'ness Church on Thursday, 7 p.m. The church is located on
State Route 325 in Danville. For
more information residents may call

informaiion call lvars Balkits, 7674938.
DEXTER ·· Homecoming at the
Old Dexter Church, Saturday at noon.
Covered dish· dinner, singing in the
afternoon.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER ·· Rev. Clyde Henderson .will be speaking at the Carpenter.Baptist Church, SR 143, Sunday. lll:JO a.m. service.

742-2485.
SATIJRDAY
ATIIENS .. Poetry quilt performances, The Ridges Auditorium,
Athens. Bill Renz performs "That
Which is Woven" 7:30 p.m. Gerry
Chorba directs "For the Struggle of
Wings" at8:30 p.m. Series sponsored
by Rural Action with support from
the Ohio Arts Council. For more

.'
KROGER 2%, 1%, 1/2%, 3.25%, SKIM.

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by Bob Hoeflich

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POWELL'S

·was

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PlU4011
umlt cwo piOmpercustomtt With c~ :rna IOcflriOMI $10.00 DUf'ChiJit. .
COCIQCHI gooc~

rtwouvtt .sacun1ar. AUo. 21.

1997.

,

Deluxe .
Ice1/2-Golon
Cream

Buy One
Get One
RECOGNIZED • Gladys• and Franklin Parker were recognized
at the Parker reunion and glvan a gift for having been married
tha longest.

CALJFORNIA

·Rell, Ripe

· Song to open the meeting was
"Jesus is All the World to Me" with
Allegra Will · giving the opening
prayer, and Janet Bolin, devotions on
"Diary of a Bible."
Ann Lambert conducted the meeting with Ida Murphy giving the secretary's report. Pat Arnold reported
that bowls ·and pans are needed for
the kitchen at the camp. Officers will
plan progr'!llls for the coming year.
Tina Hoskins suggested inviting
young mothers to the meeting as a
step toward increasing atten~~

Coca Cola
Products
12 pic. 12 oz.,•••

Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·IO PM.
298 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUAIITRIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 23, 1997

Pepsi
&amp; Mt.Dew
Products
211ter•

c

7up, Dr.
Pepper, Crus
Flavors, Mug
Root Beer
12 pk. 12 oz. cans

$249

FAMILY

.Por k cho~s......... $1 69 .___S_o'""'!f-t_
LB.

_,..

·&amp; Gentle .
Bath Tissue
4 roll pk.

79c
·Trend
Laundry
Detergent

sible."
AuonedY..-.,In&gt;glr

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STORE HOURS

Debbie Alkire, a senior at Rio
Grande College, who is supported by
the Women's Fellowship of the Meigs
County Churches · of Christ was
speaker when the group met recent·
ly at the Zion Church.
She thanked the group for assistance and told of some of classes she
is taking in her maior of psyc~ology.
She plans to be a Christian clinical
psychologist. She said her philosophy
is that '"'with God all things are pos-

'

: • ,Kimberly Dawn Crites, daughter • of Middleport. Their dresses were
~of Linda Crites and Richard Hennan, white with fushia trim.
·
Pomeroy, and Mark Allen Haley, Jr.,
Steven Darst of Middleport was
lllll1 of Rex l¥1!1 Brenda t;!arst of Syrabest man and ushers were Tony Darst
11115C. and Mark and SheJrY Haley of of Mason: J. C. Albright of West
·'Pomeroy, were married on June 7, at Columbia, W. Va.
.
., ~he Freewill Baptist Church, Mid- . For her daughter's weddtng, Mrs.
: :dlepon.
.
- Crite~ wo~e an off-white ensemble
• The 2 p.m. ceremony was per- With f~h1a and cream .flowers. The
fotmed by San Anderson following a grooms mother was tn · Itght pmk
p..ogram of music by Donna Mead- satm and both mothe~s wore fushaa
tl)lo'S. A fushia and white color scheme
rose and wh.'te carnation c.orsages.
carried out in the church decoA ~epuo_n was .held m the ~el­
·rations. on the candelabra, and the lowshtp hall tmmedtately followmg
pew bows.
the wedding. The fushia and white
•
Given in marriage by Richard color scheme ' was earned out wath
Herman the bride wore a formal streamers, balloons and table appotnt·
y;~ich g~wn with details of peals ~nd · ~nts as well as the three tiered wedsequins and earned a bouquet of dmg cake.
luihia and white roses. She had a
The couple took a wedding trip to
pearl necklace and earrings: .
. Mynle Beach, S.C. They reside at
·Angelica Knapp of Mtddlepon 104 Peacock Ave.• Pomeroy.
.
' wi. the maid of honor. She wore a · The bride is , startmg nurstng
flliihia dress and carried a fushia and · school in September at Hocking Colwhite bouquet of flowers. Aower lege. She works at Darst Private Car:"
,;~s were Mian Herman of Pomeroy, Home in Pomcro~. The groom ts
aJid Nicole Haley and Natsha Knapp employed at Albnte Floor Care m
·•
Pomeroy.

Chase reunion beld
The descendants of James and
Flora Chase held their 50th family
reunion on Aug. 10 at Pike Lake.
Fifty-one attended the dinner with
Wendell Jeffers giving the blessing.
Trail walking, swimming, boating,
picture taking and fellowship were
enjoyed by the group.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Alkire recent
church speaker

Milk

;United in marriage

ociety
scrapbook

There are many facets of the on Sept. 13 in
Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock annual fall
to be staged at
Sale which we hear little about.
Racine.
Sometimes during the sale, the bid
on steers totals less than a $1 a pound
Your friend, Rose Sisson of
and this is a disappointment to the
Pomeroy,
was ending a nice summer
young people who ~ave worked all
DofAmeets
visit
with
her son and daughter-inyear in readying their animals for the
Chester Council 323, Daughter~
law.
Fred
and
Alice
Sisson
in
Galion
sale. Not to worry, Rutland Bouled
America, met at the lodge hall
·
Gas in such cases contributes enough when she had an accident.
recently with Esther Smith, councilor,·
Rose
was
carrying
her
luggage
money to that each youngster
presiding.
down
the
stairs
at
the
Sisson
home
receives a minimum of $l 'a pound.
Goldie Frederick read scripture
when
it
got
in
the
way.
She
tripped
'Ibis year, the contribution amounted
from
Eccl. 3 and pledges to the Chrisand
fell
down
the
stairs.
She
injured
to hundreds of dollars and the young
tian and American flags were given.
an
elbow
and
a
knee
and
has
been
People certainly feel better as a result
Reported ill was Elizabeth Hayes.
undergoing treatment in Galion but is
of the company's generosity.
It was noted that she has been moved
doing
fine
and
is
expected
to
be
· Also every year at the junior fair,
to her home here any day from the hospital to the Western Hills
there are animals which cannot be returned
Convalescent Center in Parkersburg,
now.
sold. They are either underweight or
W.Va.
o:verweight again bringing about disDeath of Carl Ritchie was reportOf
course,
you
haven't
seen
appointed young people. Again, not
. ed. Erma Cleland thanked the memMartha
and
Jack
Greenaway
at
their
to worry. Racine Home National
haunts in Meigs County recem- bers for visiting the funeral home.
'Bank purchases all of these animals. old
ly.
.
The marriage of GretaL. Riffle lo l
After spending a week at the fair
Christopher Davis was announced.
That's
because
they
sailed
on
the
living with their animals and workBalloting was held for a candidate.
ing on exhibits and displays, young QE2 and l~nd~ in South Hampton
on
Aug.
6.
They
had
a
beautiful
people are really weary. They've also
Discuss state session
done the midway and the rides . So crossing and were met in Belfasl by
The state session being held this
Greenaway[
and
Anderson
relatives
this year, to give them a change of
week at New Philadelphia was dispace The Farmers Bank donated upon leaving England. They love Ire- cussed when the Past Councilors
land and are visiting in numerOus
money so that a dance could be held
Club met recently at the home of Jean
to give the young people that change. locations there. They are schedufed to Frederick.
·
return on the QE2 on Aug. 24 and
The money made it possible to, hire will be back in Pomeroy by Sept I.
Eight members attended from
Rockin' Reggie to come in to conduct
By the way, th~ir friend · Abbie Chester Council. Helen Wolf was
the dance and spin the planers.
Slr)ltton is caring for their beloved ·cat pianist for the session, and Jo Ann
And Bob Graham of the ,Rock in their absence.
Baum Ritchie, junior past state coun- .
Springs Road is a firm believer in the
cilor will finish her state office this
volunteer emergency medical service.
We have a new computer at our year. Jean Welsh is the. staie repreLast year he donated an animal to one
house.
I naturally am at an age to dis- sentative from Chester Council.
of the emergency units for use in a
like anything new. The new computKathryn Baum was pianist for the
. fund raising project and again this
er I hate with a passion. I say give it meeting, Ice cream bars were served
year he donated an 1100 pound grain back to 1he Indians, but they proba- by Erma Cleland. Attending were
fed beef animal to the Racine Emerbly wouldn't want it either. Pass me those named and JoAnn Ritchie, Ella
gency Squad for a similar project
a tranquilizer and do keep smiling.
Osborne, Julie Rose, Charles Carr,
Winner of the steer will be announced
Everett Gran~ Laura Mae Nice, Mary
K. Holter, Mary Jo Barringer, Marcia
Keller, Thelma White, Opal Hollon,
Betty Young, and Opal Eichinger.

FAT~iliiiiiiiTE.
MR. AND MRS.
MARK ALLEN HALEY

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Saturday, August 23, 19&amp;7

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Wednnday, August20, 1997

Australian supermodel
Macpherson
expecting
.
.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

.
SYDNEY. Australia (AP)- Elle
A11..ANTA (AP) - Jeff Foxwor- worthy Sbow" (ABC had nixed his save the president from such embar·
Macpherson rnay be thinking about thy doesn't worry about losing out on
a year earlier), he moved back rassing moments.
• modeling maternity wear for the prime time. He still has the Punch show
to Atlanta.
"After every pause the president
next few months.
Line.
"And I was only homesick for the would look to the door and see if
Conll'l\IY to earlier denials, rumors
After his television show was last seven yean and five months ," he there was a finger wagging,"
· that the Australian supermodel is canceled by two networks in two said.
Baldrige said Monday during a benpregnant are true, Australian Associ· years, the comedian made his first
John C. Wolf, D.O.
efit
for the Women's Resource Cenated Press reported today, quoting her trip in years back to the north Atlanta
NARRAGANSETI, R.I. (AP) Associate Professor
ter
of
South County. "These are the
brother, Brendan Gow.
club where he got his start.
One of Letitia Baldrige's jobs as sidelines of the White House people
of Family Medicine
The 33-year-old model, who
'
"NBC called aod said, 'You 're Jackie Kennedy's chief of staff was don't often know."
l'..L.:...;.I...-------...,.----.......
~ appeared in the movies "Sirens" and canceled.' I said, 'Thank · you very to wa~ her fin~Zer at the oresident.
Baldrige, whose latest book is
" Batman and Robin, " is a few much. God bless you. We're goin'
John F. Kennedy would some- "MORE THAN MANNERS! Raismonths pregnant by her millionaire home! "' Foxworthy said Monday times jump up during classical COJI·
. ing Today's · Kids To Have ·Kind
English
boyfriend Atkie Busson, night at the Punch Line.
Question: My husband has devel- to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni. certs and applaud before the music Manners &amp; Good Hearts," also said
oped a bald spot on the side of his venity College of Osteopathic Gow said.Foxworthy, famous for his " You was ovc:r because he was fooled by a
"She's very, very happy and it will might be a redneck .... " jokes, had pause ·written into the piece, the eli- Jaequeline Kennedy thought state
head. Our family doctor said that it is Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
he a very welcome addition to the lived i~ Los Angeles for 7 1/2 years. queue expen said. Her job was to dinners were too stuffy after she and
alopecia and that there is nothing that Ohlo45701.
JFK moved into the White House.
family," he said.
After NBC canceled "The Jeff Fox- staod where JFK could see her and
can he done for it. The bald spot is so
conspicuous that my husbaod is
considering shaving the rest of his
head. He thinks being totally bald
BUCKEYE, BIG BEND,
would be less troubling for him. What
Prices Good Thru
FOODLAND SPEC IAL COUPON •1BG
causes alopecia and is it untreatable?
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO VALLEY, .
EFFEC TI VE 8 17 TO 8 23 97
Answer - Alopecia is actually
TWIN RIVERS
only a term that describes a bald spot
1
10 lb. bag, U. S.l1
1
rather than being an illness. Therefore, any condition that causes a loss
I .
of hair can be correctly diagnosed as
alopecia. As y·ou might logically
assume, the treatment options for
alopecia depend upon the specific
cause. The accurate diagnosis and
.
treatment of skin conditions can be
quite complicated, and that is why
there is an entire medical specialty
I
I
area, dermatology, dedicated to it. 1
I
Limk one free With coupon. Good only at Foodand
I
Your family doctor believes the
cause 'oft~ alopecia is a condition
·OUDL:U,[I ::.P!:::.IAL COUPf)r, 111~q
for
which there is no effective treat·
FOODLMJD ~Pf..CIAL COUP~m ttl 0
.,-,~;nDL:.rJ[) SPEC ;&gt;.L_ r_;~__,upryi .&lt;:h
~:JU 'LMj[ SPECif,~Cr)IIPQtJ ,,.,2
,·
EfF[CTiV[B '7TORnq·
~f-f(CTI\.[ fl1~ TO rl21 C!?
ment. However, if it were my head
Ef~ECTIV:: t: 1 .·TO fi i'lY~
[FFrCTlVF H t ,·TO A;&gt; I(,;
with the bald spot, I'd get an opinion
a oz. jar
32 oz. jar
24 oz. b11
1
32 oz.
48 oz. can
1
from a dermatologist before I reached
Marzetll Slaw
Mt. Olive Hamburger
Foodland Pancake
Foodland
Foodland
for the razor. Let me explain a few of
Dressing
0111 Chips
Waffle Syrup
1
Grape Jelly
Tomato Juice
1
the things the dermatologist will
need to consider.
BUY ONE OET ONE
OME OIT ONE
BUY ONE on ONE
BUY ONE OET ONE
BUY ONE OET ONE
Certain information can provide
1
leads on possible causes of alopecia
in a particular case. This information
includes the size, shape and location
FOODLNJD SPECI~L COUPWJ =' "&gt;8
FCCDLt.~.n SPECIAL :OLPQrJ u1~1;_
of the hair loss as well as a descrir1-J~EC"I',I[ 817..--0 8 2J t,,
£:fFECTIVE 'i I • TC 8 .!J { •
tion of its initial appearance and how
:
o
o!"Y't;1":1
T T~
it has changed since then . The char·
40 oz. family acter of the skin and the nature of the
Mountain Top
skin and hair at the border of the
· Apple Pie
t6 oz. loaf,""' ... """"
lesion are also important in estabNew York
Bre11d
lishing the diagnosis.
·
ONE
OETONE
' The most common form of alopeBUY ONE on ONE
cia is called male pattern baldness. I
think almost everyone is familiar
with this condition. I know I just need
FOOfll MJD SPECIAL COUPON tr168
FOOOLANO SPECIAL COUP UN !;f1..,1
FUCIULMW CP[(It.l COI1Prl'• nl ;~
io look in the mirror to he reminded
F-Cl00Lr&gt;IHJ :--Pl(l,ll r~•UPIIrJ .71 ,;
EFFECTivE B 1i TO 8 2 .llJ1
EFFECT!\. E. 8 1 'TU e 23 97
E~"[CTI'.'l H' 'T,,
[:&gt;:::[CTI'.'t: b ' l TO
l '•
of it. I'm sure your husband has
100 Cl pl&lt;g
.. '
• • ,'......-; T':'I
I
250 ct. pi&lt;g
II
.
U.S.DA CHOICE
I
I
another condition causing his alope28 oz. plcg.11810f18d cta.
Homebest Aspirin
Boneless Bottom
~==n
Banquet Family
Infection of the scalp with one of
II
Tablets
II ~ Round Roasts
1
.1
Balls
Entrees
sevel'al different types of fungus
BUY
ONE
00
ONE
causes inOammatiOR of the scalp and
BUY oNE on ONE
BUY oNE en ONE
BUY
ONE
BUY oNE on oNE
hair loss, a form of alopecia called
Tinea capitis. Bacterial infection of
the scalp can also produce a similar
__
...
appearing area of alopecia.
f 00()[ JHJO SPE':IAL C()UPO~J tr15 ~
FOOOLAND SPFCIAL CJUPCN n'55
FOUDLJ'.diD :.flE':Il&gt;l. CCUPO~J &gt;~1 &lt;':l
&gt;'O:JnU&gt;rJr) ',P[C .:..L COUPO~J 1~6
. Even infection by syphilis, long
FFFECfi )E 8 I' TO ij.! I 91
EFFECTIVE 817 TO B 2J Y?
E_FI[CiiVc"I-' I'T()t 2111
U'Fl.=:Tiy(, 1')0i·L1'1,'
after the original genital infection,
m· .
. -:
, .
can cause it. Fonunately. all of these
causes 'are quite treatable with appropriate medications.
. .
Conditions· that affect the enttre
body, not just the scalp. may also
cause alopecia. Low thyroid levels
and iron deficiency anemia • two
common examples - are easily tested
for and relatively easy to treat. Unfor·
~vuULA'U SI-'!::_U..._L COUPOrJ t:!-18
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON nl6'
FOOD LAND SPECIAl COUPON :rt66
l rrt ~.,.,r 11 · T06 .''"1 .. -.
FOODLD.r,D '-&gt;P!::_Cii\L C::U~1 Pm~ n1s::.
tunately, there are other more serious
E• FE.C''I','E 8 '7 ~0 8 21 '17
E&gt;'FECTI'.E B 17 ~0 8 23 9-,
EFI ~CTI,'l fl II TO 8 ?l ...
conditions that can cause alopecia,
I~
50
ct.
pl&lt;g.
II
a.s-s
oz
ptcg
Asst.
Varieties
II
24
ct.
pl&lt;g.
alb31b. bog
too. Scleroderma. discoid lupus erythematosus and a number of canaers
• : ; ; Glad-Lock
I
El Paso
II Homebeat Sinus or.Sinus
are good examples of these.
Sandwich Bags
Burritos
Allergy Caplets
My best guess is that your husband has the condition alopecia arcaBUY ONE on OIIE
BUY ONE on ONE
BUY ONE on ONE
BUY OliE on ONE
BUY OIIE lET ONE
ta. The exact cause of this form of
hair loss is still unclear, but new
research suggests that it is an autoimmune disorder. In the past there was
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPOtJ ~182
FOOOL.".'lD PF:""I/ol COUPGri ~:1{13
FOOD! MW ~P[(I;\L CUur'CJ'j 11168
no effective treatment available for
EFFEC TIVE 8 , 1 TO b ,'3 J7
EFr[::'TI'.-'l tl 1 ·TO!-&lt; n '17
U'::E:CTII,-E r; ,~TO An q1
this malady, just as your family doc·
tor said. However, today is a brighter
day. Research has give us new
options. Topical medication directed
at an underlying autoimmune ellOio~y shows great success, part.icularly
in those who have suffered·wuh 11 for
less than one year.
I'd recomlnend that your husband
sec a dermatologist. He or she will
examine your husband and probably
remove a small sample of skin for
. '.
study in the laboratory. This will provide important information and help
.
..
determine ihe correct diagnosis. Then
6oz.
you can decide if the razor is actual ly the best treatment!
20oz.loaf
"Family Medicine" is a ~y
column, To submit questioll$, write

Family
Medicine

EASTMAN'S

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United Valley Bell

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NEW YORK (AP)- Time magazine said it regrets the w~at­
ed Richard Jewell and he agreed not
to sue.
In its Aug. 25 ISSue, Tome
acknowledged some statements in
two stories about Jewell after last
year's Olympic bombing '"may have.
been inaccurate or incomplete," and
expressed its regret.
Jewell agreed to drop threats to
sue the magazine. Time spokeswoman Diane Pearson said Tuesday.
No monetary payment was involved
in the settlement, she said.
Law enforcement sources identi· ·
fred the former security guard as a
suspect i'n the July 1996 Atlanu
bombing that killed one person and
injured Ill. The government dropped
him as a suspect nearly three months
later.
He previously settled with NBC
and CNN and has libel suits pending
against the.Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the New York Post and Walt
Disney Co.'s WABC-AM radoo sta·
tion in New York.
\

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Heiners
Asst. Varieties
Iron Kids
Pepsi
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24

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1/2 gal.

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Milk
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1997. USDA Food

Twin Pops or
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2

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·chicken ot
the Sea

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haveiiHnlllllled

tn the action
fermtl'8 ean- l
Company, Ptalntlll,
A. Bopr, otal,

ThiiiCIIon Ilea

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YOU ·GET
ALL THIS!

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You Pay Only

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object of the Complaint Camplalnt.
-nda ludg- against
Dated lhle 11 day of ~uly.
the Detandllnt, Jamoa A. 1997.
Boyer, on 111 Becond Clllllll'
·Lany s......,...,
In the aum of S17,845.52,
Clerlt of Courltl
plue lnloNIII at a rate of {1) 11, 23, 30;
ta.ea
per dar from March (8) 8,13, 20; eTC
30, 1187; on Ill Fourth 1;,::~.::.;:.:.:.,::_ _ __
Claim In the eum of
Public Notice
S11,531.01, plua lnltrlll at· 1-.....!::.:!!:::!:.=:::::=--• rata of $US I * day from
PUBLIC NOTICE
March 30, 1187, In onlor ID On Sllurday, Auguet 23,
forecloM upon mortg-an 18117 11 10:00 a.m. Die Home
upon reel locetld at Nail-l Bank witt olhr lor
122
Union
A-, aatelllpubllcaucUononlle
l'ofnel:vy, Ohio, which II · bank parking lot the
more tully deacrlbed In : followh 111 ..t~clu:
deed raconled In Volume ' 1183 Eagle Summit, Serial
317, Pag.o SOt, Melga ' IJE3C"41CtPU0131149
County Delli Aeoorda, and , 1811
IIUIU, Serial
212 Fifth &amp;-.Middleport, I IJAABL01121 IIDI712
Ohio, which 11 more flolly : 1887 lludll Pickup, Serlel
CIHortlllelln deed .-rdlld ' 1.1112UF3111H0100112 .
In Volume 320, Page 357, 1111 DodgiBhlldow, Serial
llelga County Dud l183eBHE2HIM78783
R-rda; and of IIIII
1817 Chryattr Lteeron,

on ukl property, If any, be

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Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanks Installed
New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors

614·742·2566

Pomeroy, Ohio
WV10234n

HIOD·291-ADO

Public Notice

that the mortgagee ba
lorecloalld and that the
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of 11e1p County, Ohio. The· rolla! demanded In the

and Marton AOKh, whole
tall knOwn l d d r - - ·
Union
~. :
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3215 I'Nr*lln ~.Point
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, pn11nt add,... unknown.
I You ,,. hereby notltled

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ro: Raeer s. Roecll, · lut known llddrMMI are
122
Union
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A Olvlalon on Nichols Mefal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773-5881

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. . ....... ... . ... _.··- ·- .

-·title

mal'8halled and the root

and -the
property qu!Nd
aold In
toractoaure action ·and ott
amounta due Platntlfl be
paid from procnda of the

.....

You are required to
anewer the Complaint
wlthtn twontr·elght (211
day• attor the ,..,
pubttmlon of IIIII NC11CI,
which will be publlahad
·once nch - k tor alx (II
IUCCIQIIve -ke. 'flll tall
publtca11on will be made on
the 20th dey ol Augulll,
1997, and the twenty..tght ·
(281 daya lor anewer will
com- On thet data. In
the of your failure to
·a nawer or . othtrwlll
roapond 11 raqueattd by
the Ohio Rulli ol ' Civil
Procoduro, judgement by
default will be rendered

s.tal
11C38Ht58E8FN20tl514
11112 Chivy Pick,., Serial
11 OCDC14H2CF3411415
1183 Ford Fteota, Serial

IKNJP1lltllt7Ptl1111457
111 1, 1, 13, t 5, 20, 22; 8TC "

Little lhings
11re Worlh Alol·
in

~ CIIUsifittJ Section!

he said.
' Dennis laos, 51. the paper's editor, was shot dead when he tried to
intervene as Drega chased after Bun·
nell, who had Ocd· inro the parking
lot.
Drega then jumped back into the
stolen cruiser and raced a0ross the
Connecticut River into Bloomfield,
Vt .• •where witnesses saw him open
fire on New Hampshire Fish and
Game Officer Wayne Saunders, striking him in the arm. Saunders' badge
stopped the other bullet.
·
· "There were shots, lots of them,
and they were l~ud," said Antho~y
De Banville, who runs a store on
Bloomfield.
SaunderS, 28, was hospitalized
and listed in · fair condition early
today,
· Drega abandoned the shot-up
cruiser in Brunswick. Vt., a few miles
south.
·
By then, scores of heavily armed
officers closed in on Drega. who shot
and wounded four men before he
took a fatal bullet. said lames Walton,
Vermont commissioner of public
safety.
"It wa.&lt; a firefight. He was on a
ridge and in the woods. Whenever he
presented himself enough of a target
to get a round off, I'm sure they did,"
Walton said.
Border Patrol agent John Pfeifer.
33, of Derby, Vt., was shot in the
chest and hospitalized in critical condition. New Hampshire trooper Jef·
frey Caulder, 32, was shot in the leg
and fellow trooper Robert Hasse, 38,
was cut on a foot by shrapnel.
. Police believe officers shot and
killed Drega, bul it won't be clear
~ntil an autopsy is perforined.
Sometime before the wild threehour rampage, authorities believe
Drega torched his home in Columbia,
located just south of Colebrook. Bun-

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

• swl1'9

CELLULAR PHONES

.'

~60" Communications

Bank Rnandng
Air Conditioners lnslallad 128" amoolh
Heal Pumps lnslallad 138" a monlh

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

· (Pavmc&gt;nll baaed on appn!\'ed credit)

•Free 5 Year Parts warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat . .

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

(Lime StoneLow Rill!&amp;)

1

e14 u&amp; 941 a
1-8Q0.87H917 t391 Sallord Sctlool Rd.,
, OH

WICKS .
HAULING .
Llmest011e, ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

doctors, ihenpists, home
heakh ~rvices. Also thank

you to our friends and

614·992·3470

neighbors for their support .
and praycrs.,Thallk you Co
all those who sent food,
Dowers and cards during the
illness and death of our
lOved one.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

R.·L. ·
TRUCKING ·

20 Yos. Exp: ·Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

Free Estimate•

Wife, Ina Teafonl,

Howard L. Wrlteael

DUM~ TRUCK

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

SERVICE
Limestone • a ·raveT
Dlf;t • Sand

Gutters
. Downlpollll
Gutter cteanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
·

Novelties

985·4422

Spe~ DesiiiJIS

Chester, Ohio

4

M

•

,

..

. .

...

·

~ -~

DREHEL'S
SAW CHAIN

1-614·742·2925

50% OFF
Cleanlnt

CHEVALIER'S

Advertising
P.O. lo1 215
33051 5I 33 P--r, OH

OIIOVAWT

_.

HOT PRESSURE (LWIING

·

House • Mobile Homes •
Privacy Fences • Patio
Decks, Driveways • Farm II.
Heavy Equipment • Remove

DRIHELS
. •Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 ml:oH Rt. ,7
Leading Creek Rd.

unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore the clean
natural look

We con WIISh anything
Free Estimate

3351 HappyHollowAoad
Mlddloport; Ohio 45769
· Hom••· Additions,
Roofing, Siding,
Pole Barn•.
Otckt, Painting

CSJ/ Us For A Free Estimare

114-742-3Deo
114-742-3324

•New Homes
·Garages
•Complete
·Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

'·

· , 985·4473
J.,..,....-----:7~.::/22/lln::.::::..~

MANLEY'S
.HOME IMPROVEMENT
.Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
· Oh 45614

. (614) 388-9865

742·2925

.~:;;;;::;~-~·-~---· ....J...,..&amp;~l5~1r=:IN':"::G-::1-.

·INSULATION
' 537 BRYAN PLACE

. UULIIII
. 'atllftl..

Limestone a Gl'IIYel
; . Septic Syste!'Aa
.
' Trailer a I ·
··•.. House Sltea .

MIDDLEPORT .
992.zn 2

a:oo a.m.-3:30 p.m.
•Replatemenl W'llidows
•Bull. Gart~~is

. •Siorm Doors &amp;

j . Windows

Sa~ Trucklnt Co. .· ·•- Atltlili011s
614-742·2138
'[ .
.
7!Z7lr7Vn

. .. . - - -

E haus f•

D. lhraJ7'S

Bod,
Shop
11y W rk

• X

Brakes • Shocks
.Struts· Tune·ups

0 at
Qual
8 Felr ~rlc:el
Page St.
MlddleHpoomert,0Phh.• 45780

sso

614-992-3120

Don Geary, Owner
.._

' ~m

AddiUona

oflaw Garages
•E~cal

'

l Plumbing

•Roofing
ofn18rlor &amp; Ettertor ·
.PalnUng
..
. Also Concrel8 Work'
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill ,'
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

1-

$2,000 REWARD!!

"WeS•wTou
· Monqo"

Reuonable Rllfet
k~ N. Sayre

YOUNG'S
·tARPENTER SERVIa

Residen1ial ' ·Commercial

r---K~I~N~G'::':S':---, r·,..;...FR~-;:::;r:- ~~;.;;;;;:;;;-.;A-~-·;_,
.. r---C-U_ST_O_M_..,
Homelmprove11ents

COMSTRUCTION

Wearabl~

"'!9oi-4'P9-"'!2~1~68;;;,"";;;;'_,.,~~·,, L-.:.;(6;.;,14.;:1:.;9;.;,9;;;.2-4..;,2.;.7_9_

-

1.

.ROBERT BISSELL

!

· Serving SouthMstem OH &amp; VN

POMEROY, OH.

614·992~5479

·~=~~~~ . ·--·

11oe family of Harold
Teaford wish to thonk his

daughter, Carrie Hull and
grandchildren, Carrie, Darci
and ler

o'tf\11\

G!\f\6\"?
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Call 614·843·5426

nell had served as Columbia's town
selectwoman from 1990 until early
1995
had a long history of con-· •!:....,.
·
flict with town officials. In the early
1970s, the town took him to coun ..
over a wning violation because he
refused to fi~ish a house, which was
covered with tar paper, former selectman Kenneth Parkhurst said.
One night in 1991, Drega showed .
up ~t the town hall and began rum- 10 in .......... $10.00
maging through property files. Bun- 12 in., ........ $11.00
nell called state police, who handcuffed and removed him, Parkhurst 14 in .......... $12.00
said.
16 in .......... $14.00
" We had to bar him out of the
place," Parkhurst said. "We had to 20 in .......... $16.00
keep a cop on duty just for our own
safety for a while."
.
·The same year, neighbor Gary
Phillips said, Bunnell went to Drega's
house to serve him with court papers
and Drega greeted her and a police
AI carpet· Upholst•ry
officer with a gun.
By Tuesday evening, Bunnell's
frienp Bill Whitaker was driVing by
the supennarket on his way to work.
"I couldn 't. figure 'out. what was
STEAM CLEANING
happening. I thought maybe it was a
mock disaster drill," he said. "When
Carpet- Upholstery
I got to work, the TV was on, I could
614-992.0077
not'believe it."
Middle ort Oh

~ega

(614) 367·0266
1-800·950·3359

Card of Thanks

Loner's deadly spree shatters
tranquility of New EnQJind town
By RANDI GOLDBERG .
Associated Preu Writer ·
COLEBROOK, !&gt;{.H. - When
Judge Vickie Bunnell saw the armed
man who pulled up in a patrol car Was
not an officer, she ran out the back of
her office. She knew him- she had
filed a restraining order against him, .
even 1lcscribed him as a "time
bomb."
Bunnell ran through the office of ·
The News and Sentinel, screaming,
"It's Dregal He's ~ot a gun!" said
Kenn Stransky, a reporter who knew
the 44-year-old lawyer and pan-time
judge.
"He shot her in the back. She died
instantly," Stransky said.
·Carl Drega,67, also killed two
state troopers and o newspaper editor
who struggled with him. Tuesday,
then wounded four other officers
before he was killed in a 45-minutc
gun battle with police.
The rural quiet of this northern
New Hampshire town of 2.400 began
disintegrating about 2:45 p.m. when
· two state troopers stopped Drega 's
red pickup for a traffic violation out·
side a supermarket.
·
.
Within minutes, state troopers
Scoll Phillips, 32. of Colebrook, and
Leslie Lord, 45, of Pittsburg, were
dead . Drega, wearing a bulletproof
vest, shot them both with an assault
rifle.
. He hopped into a police cruiser for
the short drive to the building that
housed the weekly newspaper and
Bunnell's law office.
Bunnell's troubles with. Drega
dated to at Je.St 1991, when, as a
selectwoman in Drega's hometown
of Columbia, she had him removed in
handcuffs from the town hall over a
zoning dispute. After one confrontation, Bunnell obtained a restraining
order l.gainst Drega, Stransky said.
"She said he was a time bomb,"

COHSTRUCTIOH

LEWIS TIRE

.

, ~742

"

2792
11/f/07 pd.

L-----~~~-~· L-----------~

For Information
le~dlng to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property lltie
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron L. Miller

992-4025
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personels

Live Gltlal C1ll Nowl 1-lii00·255-

07CO· ext. 2\162. S3.80 per min.
Mutt be 18yr1. Serv-U BHHI45-

1434 . •

MEET NEW PEOPLE Tho Fun
Way Today, HI00-2116-111135, En
1714, $2.00 Por lAin. Mull Ba 18
Y10 Serv-U 810-645-8434.

..

�Wednesday, August 20, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednelclly, Auguet 20, 167

The Dally Sentinel • .,.... 11 :

BIUDOII: ·

UNCLe SNUFFY CLAIMS
THAR'S .HOSTS AN'
•otLINS IN THese

PHILLIP
ALDER

OL' WOODS!!

.. Cui (lite II!Wn)

ACROSS

--

47 DacMhuncla

1 Ceiubr'ldgl

50~~'.

4'1Wiof110111
• Slftt lalltlt:

12 ~tN~n~ao• .net

14~

==.:::..

EMPLOYr.1ENT
SERVICES

11110 ·111110Corl for $1001K

210

" - 111- of uHCi 'hOiilo. 2

Bu..,.u
Opportunity

Conn Trombone Used 1 Year

or
3- 111artn0
11 13485.
O.iok
clolivorr.
CaU 1-100·837·
3ZII.

cO.

OHIO VALL£=ISHINO

11187 14170 ..... ...
recommen~• that rau do bual· lndud11
1 m0nlha FREE lol - .
.... wllh poopil rou Mow, and Onlr 1111.01 per monlh with
NOT to montr dVough tho
down. Call t-100·837·
mal undl you have lnv111iga1ed 11050
3ZII.
thlollorlng.

lfitrtng apollllcanlol

Modern 2 Bedroom Aparltnent,

Bu~nou

S - For Ronl: 1000
Sq. FL for Olfic:o Or SO., SL "'
33. - Hovan, W.VA., ., .._

114 441 0380.

I wll bu.J anr Elltoa "' now 011·
mond Klngl. If rou hovo oartlo 11
oell, Ill mo Mow. CaH 114·a.III30N:

21113.

co.nVenlence Store For lease,

AI Equ~ SL R1. 33.
New Haven W.VA., 114-tii-

A!IPA~.

:IJI13.

230

Prof&amp;SSIO!III
Services

FARrJ SU PPLIF S
&amp; LIVESTO CK

HARTS MASONARY •. Block.
brick I atono work. 30 Ylltl II·
~·· reuonable r11teL 30._
a95-35g1 anar 8:oopm. no.Job 10
sm11 or" BIG. W'l-021201
U••• Needed. Work
HuakriShepherd mix pupa 10 Computer
own houtl. UDk ra I5Dklyr 1·
pd home, 111 - • old, very 800-3471.11501.

-.114-848-3111.

OWn HrL, 120K To 150K /Yr. 1·
To A Oood Homo Prolorablr In 800-3471• X1173.
Country, FuH Bloodld Miniature
Oomlno't Pizza Now Acc"ltlno
C!&gt;lio.l1~148.
Appllcotiona At Oattlpotla Po· Wooden pallets. You comt and rnlfOI, A«*t In-n.
get Fruth Pharmacy Wtrehouae Full Tlmt Floral 0811gner Mutl
In P1 PllooanL
Provloua E-lonott. Send
R11umt And Rtflltncll . To:
.80 LOit and Found
C!J&lt; 422, c/o O.llpolll Dolly Trib'Found- female Baann hound. une, 125 Third Avonuo, Galllpollo,
OH 46131.
For1111r1 porking lo~ Pomor·
or. -r lrioncly.I1&lt;H82·58N.
HELP WANTED: EXPERIENCED
Found: F-'o BHgto On Jotin- BOOKK~EPER • Thii!..Poaldon
Entailo eo...,... BaH11 Bookl •
-Riclllo-.11.._21111.
AP/AR, Payroll, Job Coating, Tax
Found: wllho lomalo dog, Long Work, And Mort For A Growlni
Boaom VIcinity, II not loll. noldl Conslruction Company. Two
............ 11-71.
Ytara On Thl Job E•perlenct .
.......... - l h -

And Raferenc11 ReQuired. QualiCllihull· fied AppNcanll May Colil14-of48·

'*0.
"TIZ", - · ~~~~vi­
cinity, 114-8112-31175. .

4514 For Morolnlorn'etlon.

Home Buslneu S.A.S.E. $1.00
· LOST: Gray Moarlng boal cover .
Only, S.P.F. Int. P.O. Box
In .... of Old'Town Form on B2H. 347358, 5an FranciiCO, CA
REWAROI Call ~75-8595.
a.l134.

70

Yard Sale

,....,nee,

410 Houses for Rent

-oron raca, COlor, rollQion,

5 Room Hou•, Furnished No

Smoking, No Peta, Centrally La·
calld, 81 .......11511.
.

sex familial sratus or national
origin, or any lr&lt;"'*"" to
make ..., suel1 pre1erence,
tlmlta1ion or dilcrlmlnalion."

House In Pomlt'Oy· for 1111 or

rtnt.I14-0112-:IIQO.
One bedroom hou11 In Mason,
atove &amp; refrlgttator furnished,
S225 month plua dopolil, no pall,
3()4.773-5804afllr5.

This nowspapar wiN 1101
k...,..;ngty acc:ept
advertts&amp;menls for real ettate
wh6ch is In violaUon of the
. law. OU&lt; readers ore hereby
lnfonned that all ~lingo

1-~--------

Sodudod 4 112 aC..... thfoo badroom. In
NC, " " - ga-

Cllol,.,

rtQI, oqulppad kitchen, depolll
and r1ferenc11 required. Call
114-8112· 7833a,.. 8:00pm.

REA L ESTATE

Small 2br, Camp Conlor 1r11,
3812.

St75Jmo. + deposit. 304-1175-

310 Homes for Sale
4 Badroom Spik 1-' With IADO

Sq. fL Including Full BINmlnl
With 2 Car Garage, Oao Hoi~ 2
Millo From Gallpob On Bulovll
Pike, on 1 112 ,... Flit lol.
Sohoolt, 1115,000 Or Boat Ollar,
·e14- ua C390.
·

Cl"

FOR SAI,E BY OWNER

2 SIOI)\ 2 Batl1l, 2 Or 3 Badnlom

Homo, For Sale Nice Size Lol,
Maoon,-WV, 3P4·773·5018, Call
Only Balwean 8 A.M. To 7 P.M.
PillI I
FOR SALE BY OWNER:

441·5532. Equol OppotiUnity Employer.

Big Yard Sale: Mens, Wanwns,
&amp;or• Clothlt, Toyo, HouHWVat,"
Toal .. Something For EverloMI
Thura. Frl, Augu11 2tat, 2nd,
3314 0orogoa c - Road.

Thurldav. Augual 2111. I·S. 1587
Paerlol Aoad, Across Frqm Poal
Ollct, n.trigtfaiDr. Iron Bids. ~
"'""' 5o11111hing For E _ .

Pomeroy,

Part· Time posilion available
Sales &amp; Clerical Duties Retail
Furniture Store. Apply Tope' a
F.urnllure, 151 Second ·Avenue,
Gallipolis., 10 a.m. tJU 1 p.m. No
Phone Colla

Plaasanl Valltr Nurolng &amp; Reha·
bllltatlon Center Ia tooklng br an
Admlaalon Coordinator. Mull be

lloanlld nurN or llconoad 10oial

worker, with a minimum ol live

yeara experience In long lerm

Middleport

cart. Exparlonoo In ~killaci!IUII·
aouto, rehabiUtation and aoulo
• VICin"y
care Ia preferrad.·Send resuN tiD
All Yanl Salol llult Ba Paid In Poraonnol at PloaNnl Valier
Adt'-o. Doodtlno: t:DOpm 1111 Hoopital 2520 Valier Dr., Pl.

run,~j-~Sf:~t'N'l~·~1 ~:· r:·~AAif.~OE~.~
25 550

dar
hloro
ad lo odlllon·
to
tundor
I tho
llondar
1:DOpon Frldor.

t 11 Vinton Court. In Galllpal!l. 1

Floor Plan. 3 Bedroom&amp;, 1 car

Garage, Lot 80d0, Call 814-371-2720 For ppo1" 1m1n1 0 n1y AI •
IMIP.M. "

Thrae bedroom, two bath, on
large corner lot. located 33184

New Lima Rd., Rutland. 135,000
080, Q~1-357-215 4. evenings
0 ,.~

Rood, $58,000 Phone 1114)448·
D280 Bofore 5 p.m. Or 1814)448·
811112 Allor s p.m
Two Bedroom Houao, Cloao to
Golllpoli~. naw aiding. Now WindAll Kit&lt;hon. Wil Tlka or
Trade In 135,000. Phone: 814~

387·0403

320 Mobile Homes
for Slit
•FAJILY DREAM HOUSE'
Hugo 4br, 2 belli homo, foilturlng
all new see through fltepiiCI.

&amp;tate ollho art IIOUrlty IYIIIfn,
12,415/down. $3o41.M per month.
Only at:
· OlkWood HOIMa

NI,.,,WY

301-7ea.ua
a.L.().V\~O·IJ.TI

$46Downonlllact~aec:·

-Down

lion.
on....., nuill1Ktlont.2-3or4111droornmode1a awaillble.O.kwood u - -,
nun-

Nil!O, WV. 304-755-51185.

12185 2 BetlrDoma; 2 111111. Now
Furnace, Air Condillaner, I Hot
Wat.- Heater, Good Refrlgeracor

I Slovo, Carpotld, With Awning
I Underpinning, ,.. Good Condl·
tion, Call After e P.M. 114·3871671.
i112 12185 Uborty, 211&lt;, 1bo, lttlr
cond., must be moved. $3,500.
Will move locally. 304-175-3000
from 1-5.
1187 Storing 14170, 3br, 2bo, all
elooolo, ranga, relriglflllr, diah-

.,..lljlnl

.

washer, porch I underpinning.

Care Givw For Eldlriy Poraon In
Their Home 5 Days IWetk, 24

Mllquoo, top priooa paid, Rl..,. Houri!Oay,11'-388-g7B3.
lnt Anllqutl, Pomeror. Ohio,
Ru11 Uaort owner, CIU·Ii2· Child Care In mr home ChloNre
.. {114) 317-71Mi
25211.
Clttn Lalt Model Cart Or Elp&amp;rionood c:orpontry ond """"
Truoka, 1110 llodelo Or Nowar, dtllng. Inside 1nd outaldt,
Smith Buk:k PonUao, 1100 Eall· dooill. vinYl aiding, add-&lt;~n a&lt;fdl.

304-571-2201

1111 Clayton 14x70, 3br, tba,
heat pump. 8.:10 front parch.

good oond .. l12,goo. 304·175·
3000 hom 8-5.
·
1el4 14x80 1 Bedrooms, 2 tull
Baths, D~kt, C Air.

Extras.

Muat Movol114·441·0155, 114441-211ll.
tlont, cablner rthlclng or newly Now·tllll7 ,. Wld• .......
. 11111
1 _ , ..,
rebuilt Atferenc:ei·Frtt Eau..

om .....,...., Olliiloi•

Ill·

~~oill. Selling par11: 304·

Non·Wdrklng Wlaher, Otyera,
SIDVH, RtftlgllltOfl, ffHJfil,

Air CondiUonora, Color T.V. '1,
VCR'~ AIID Jilnk Carl, 114-2511·
1231.
Wantld To Buy Uaad Mobile
Homo. Col 11.....,.8-0175 « 30417H815
Wanted: Straight Truell With
Knuddo Boom To Movt Plna
Logo.ll4-l1514172.

-

Jil1 S11111304-ll'!i-1272

down, I 13~/ma, with approved
trldll. Ctiii1-IOO-e814777.

Cloo(GII Porllbll Sewrt111, .....,, 1187 doublowldo 11445 .down,
MUI rour logo Ia h mlljua( cal · 1 2Q/mo. Fru dollvor• &amp; lltup.
2
-5-11157.
•
·
HIOII-IIII.1 47n.
'
::Z::V":"'F:" .\':.\"m~.:r: 1111 Fteatwood. 14X52. 2 BR.
et&lt;l-381- Llwl-(8 141-·5421
1u,.,...,
- . 8143117·70!0.
2 Bldroom Mobile Homo 12xl0
WII Baby~lln My Homo. AQIII · !!;122; 1, 14-441·5172. Or 114;
1
And Up. Raloroncaa Available, ·~
114-3118-00011.
Doubl- r•po novor livid·in,
WIM Mill Junk or IIUh - · $35l mu1t loll, no r111000lblo altar roplc:lqllood.-.75-5035.
-.lld.304-7ss.mt.

-·Ohio.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

• -1531
1371 • 11·
··

Furnished

R
1
I ,~....,.,-,....,..oom--::--.,­

AI.., Or Monlhlr RIIH.

Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; Olanew.

WllkiY

Construcdon Workl,. Welcome

81.......,8122, 01~~·5107.

For Slit or Ronc 14170 SUitatilo
lot 1 child, no lnlldo poll, Applewv. 304-518-2890.
2 I 3 bedrOom mobile homes

Twenty Seventh Year In The
Hoalng 'CooHng Bu-1 814448 1301, 1.fi00-2SI1.(1QQ8.

MERCHANDISE

s1 o

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Galton
Uprlgn~ Ron Evano EnlorpriNS.

--Ohio.

Household

Goods

Warm Warning Wood Slave,

Very Good Condition. 1250, 814·
gratota. 10 Dar Ou:a:i~n_t!!'l 448 08§8 AlWI4:3Q.
French City Maylog, 114·441·

ms.

Dlntlll 111 w/c:hlna cabinet wl
buffet, go-cart, pOol table. 30"-

1-800-0811~.

Color T.V., Waohor, Dryer, Fllleri-

Three bedroom mobil home for, gerator, Freezer, Air CompttSIOf,
ron~

no·pell. 814-0112·511511.

Two bedroom uaUtr, air. larga

Two bedroom, total electric, on
Noow Lima Rd., e1H42·2803.

440

Apartments

for Rent
1 ind 2 bedroom -ononll, lur·

nllhad and unlurnllhed. aacurlty

depoaif requirld, no pau, 814·
882-2218.
1 bedroom apartment in Mlddlapar~ all ulllitloa paid, $270 par
~~r~ ~li~ oaU 114·

1-800-537-11521.

, Oryora,

$210·$300, loWer, ,...., and
875-4115.
-lnducilcl, 114-8112·21117.
OOOD USED APPLIANCES
Batutilul River Vlow Ill KIN'uga, Watherl, dryers, refrlger8tort,
2 Bed~oom1, Unfurnished, Air
Skaggs Appliances, 71
CondiUonld, No Poll, Dopoalt, rangeL
Referenctl, foattr'l UobUt Vlna SUII~ Coli 814·448·73Q8,

HomoAtrl!,11~1..()181.

Full IIZI ltUcf&lt; MIPPII 145: now
porllblo phone, wiN 11H al 112
prioo, 12!1; 114-848-3145.

LivestOCk

Four Month Old 8fown and White
Colt Stallion, wlllllld - 11111 .,,
$300; Chicktnl lor ·1111 $2.00 po,
lay'nhlto-11114)256-1233

640

Hay 1 Grlln

Allalfa hay rolla In bxrn, F1om
Sleeping room• wilh cooking. Sido 11r aldo rofrlgorarar, gao 115.
Storoga &amp; dellvorr avaK·
Alia trailer apace on riwer. All aravo, troozor, chain' oaw, TV, · abll. Morgan Forma Rt 35• 304•
137·2011. .
.hook-ups. Call after 2:00p.m., ctyar. -.75--.
304-7n5851,-Yfll
.
Sldo Br Sldo FlllrigMIDt Ftllllt, Hor 1,000 1111. Round Balli, 115
Avaoodo. Good Condition, 1-150. Each. lt4-388-ll142.
460 Space for Rent
114-25&amp;-1W.-o5P.M.
For Rent Trllller Lata. THtll Run
IUIIIIER IALE: Central Air Squari bolll of hay; Timothy I
Road. County Water, I1251Mo., Contlltionotl:
Ful 5 y- Wonart- Orchard gra11 mix. 304·182·
114-245-5838.
ty. "'I 111u Dorl'l Cal Ul We Bolh
II 0 bll ~
1
11 b1 •·
e ,.,me 1 te an a e .,.t- Lo11r Fru Eodmaloal Add-On
TRANSPORTATION
wHn Athena and Pomeroy. can Hill Pumpe only Slldlty Hlghor.
81,4-38~7.
Call Ul Today. 1807 II Tho

14170 3br, Camp Conlor: 12501

.... +dlpoak ~5-3812.

630

King&amp; Mottl LOWtll Rltll In
Town, Nowl_y Romodolod HBO,

114-251-1238.
Potly'a- I Uood Fumbu,.
2101 Jelloroon.AIIa.
Open 8:30 • 5:00 Mon-SttL

30+4175-SOFA 17832)

RefrlgeraiOr Frail Free. $125; Re-

lrlgerator Side Br Side 3 Doora,
Almond Was 1250 Cui To $175;
Dryer $95; Wuher SQS; Heavy

Duty waahlf SQS; Flange 30 Inch
Almand $150; Range 30 Inch

St25 Cut To $86; Washer Liko
Now $205; 1 Yoor Warranty, Orr·
ar Like Now $205 1 Year warran-

Sllapo, 1800, Phone 1'14·381·
1733.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1867 Camaro, 454 auto, $3,000.

304-516·3169 slier 5pm.

owo. llnltlo. ate. tiaude Wlntero,
Rio Grande, OH Call 114·245·
5121.

560

Pets tor Sale

112 Auanlian Shaphard. 112 Col·
lio pupploa, ewka, l25ea. 304·
882·2!88.

1fl,OOO,

- Pli1l. - - ·
114·••1·2311 dora. 114·g•a21144

••

-

f8QO Rid Toyoll Pk:fi-Up Startdard, 4 ap. good enid. lUIS.
I·Amt-'-111;..1_4)4;._11-_2117_~.- ·- 1011211uzu
ho,
75,000 mlloo, 17000 080, 3047n5434.
1·1-:11113:-:'-J~•..;.P_,.,:cOrand-~C"'h"'",..-,""..-•-,U....,.1114, VI, loldld, 12,00Drnl..
I ,s;;.t4..:,,ooo=·.:.:-=':..:J6.:..:333=7.;__ _

-·air,-

E·Mail', FandE BobTOAOLCOM

. THE BORN LOSER
L1 FE 1:&gt;

1br, all utilltiM paid excepl elec·
trlc, Gallipolis Ferry area. •2501
•
mo. • depoail. 304·875~1371 o·r

Sporting
Goods

730

I

'15 loyall INc:k. Blind cab, 414,
~11tod wooden bod, OOOd WOtk
INc:k. S800 080,11'-742-l!O!iO.

~·:-~-·~~':'-::'---:-1 •1NI
Aavo van 4.3 now ongino,

.111111 11-10 ... ve ..... 1111 e..
ooliont Condition, NAOA 11,750
Sol Prl..: IUifl, Cook MoiOro,"
______
•1_1_4 _44_1 ~0_1 oa.

1

111115 Hoi1da PuiPOfl, Low Millo.
115 1100 114 111 83311
• •
1888 Blazer LT 4 Door&amp;, Two
Tono Pllnl-loathor L.oMad.
121,500,114-245-11008.

8 14-256-1412.

=•8'..':'.::0.

5

ce-r

e --aboul

....·'

oymplame
10 Youre and

11.21 IAIIor org.

-·

11 ~or

24F-

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..
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· ~·

9 -wtlllcokl
ttllilc1ld

mine

7 Aclor Ed-

18QO Horter Ultra Ciullo With ·
Matching Pull .Blhlnd Tralltr,
114•500• 14-448-854&amp;.
Vttmaha PW&amp;O Good Shape
$700,114·245-11851 AI!MI P.M.

A STUPID KID OVT
WHO WA~TS TO PLA'(.

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33 Formal

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41 .... , . •• d ·.,;-.
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53 Wonleof

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

57 Faot .....

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by Lula C1mpos

Celebflly Ciphtr crypiOgf'lml are creatad from qUOUitions by fwnou~ PIIOPf, Pill lftd ~
e.ct~ J.intf 1r1 1M dphttr aarG b aoothlf. Todty'l clw:C _,.,. K

'ZVAAH

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XBVESKE.
PREVIOUS SOLUTIO~ : "Robert M"chum was a legend, b u t - hell to worfi .
at beinQ a legend. He jusliived it." - Charles Cl1ari1plln.

........

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t-::-,..,-- r--r-l-,,...; ~

"Without adversity: the old
gent told the young man,
r--::-:-:--=--::-:--:-:---. "people would never find out
.

·

. · ~

I
Il--r,5:-.-,-.,.,-r,6:-..,--t. . e
T HE N1

ASK VOUR D06 IF
l-IE WANTS TO COME
. OUT AND PLAI(..

w

that they are really ••••• -."

Comploto tho chuckle quoted
• ....;..L.--I
b, f,lling in 1he mi 11ing - •
1..-L.-'-·-'-·- L
, you develop from step Nb. 3 below.

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~ THESi SQUARES
A

V

... _.
:. . ...
,,,,1
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,,

.

......
1/ ... ~

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

~"J

,,

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWEIIS

'IDu 'H be fJooting on a cloud with
the buys
find rn the
dossl(ltds.

1:-:::::-::-~~~=-:-:::-:-.:-::-:~

,ou·n

ROBOTMAN
N.L RIGII\,1•\/ii~Y.
\.ET'~ 1/oC\\! ..

R!Ail'/ A~T? HARO l'.ll:E' lE1"'S \lO ~00 ~llll\11 W"ii-'T
~let 'ER OllER! H(;IW!;·W... \l.\G:\ff · ~~·R"E IM.KI~E. IISO\JT"
R.l!Oilf,R 10 ~E&lt;SRE!i.S ... C&lt;l\'11N'
~eo\IT r ~"1FT ~10 ~18' SiEAOY
AS SHE IOOES...

OR ~RE 'IOU JUI&gt;\
Sl'WTII'!(l ~ LOT Of

1018SER1S~ 1 ~oPINe

TeE \IIINP Wil\. SHIFT

1gag Hyundal Excel, 45 mll'lf New gaa tanks, 1 ton truck
galton, runa ureal, It, 185, 814~ wheels I racliltara. D 1 A Auto.

~N~ ~\OW

US S~CK

10 SHoRE?

York, NY 10156.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Your
besl pro~abililies for success today
· could come from a joint endeavor. A
slrong ally and a little luck will put
BERNICE
you in the win colul!ln .
.BE[)E OSOL
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) An
associalc could be of considerahle
help to you personally 10day. It is a
friend with c!out who has done sev·
era! favors for you in the. pas!.
Thursday, Aug. 21. 1997
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
In a situatio'1 wl)ere your vmcc you're dctemlincd to see :.m impor·
had carried lillie weight previously. 1an1 mauer lhrough toils conclusion
you will be eleva led to a posilio~ of . today. you ' II get the results you
power in the year ahead. Be asserttve, desire . Do not deviate.
bu1 not a bully.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Partner· 21 )It will be more gra1ifying for you
ship arrangemenls could yteld far 10 assist others inslead of jusc serving
grealer re1Ums today than your mde· your own interesls or ambicions.
pendent operations'. Align w11h mdt· Render aid where needed.
:
vtduals whose talenls compltment . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) :
yours. Know where . 10 look for ' Conditions continue 10 be favorable i
romance and you'll find it The ·· for your financial dealings. You may :
Astto-Graph Malchmaker inslanlly find a new channel that will expand :
reveals which signs are romanttcally whal you already have going.
perfeel for you. Mail $2.751o Match·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D--Feb. 19) .
maker, c/o chis newspaper: P.O. Box Thai good news for which you' ve
1758, Murray Hill Slatton, New been hoping might arrive loday. It

ASTRO-GRAPH

·-·hot

n•'-

4~

13 TfPeol

.._ .....

3NT

Channel 32 of the cable lelevision
neiwork in Sao Paulo. Brazil, is dedicated 24 hours a day' to the slate of
lraffic on 1he Rodovia Presidenle
· Caslelo Branco Highway. 11 runs out
of Sao Paulo loward whal lhe locals ·
call the interior, and regularly has
traffic jams 15 miles in lenglh!
Today's deal ·was declared by
anolher Brazilian Branco, Marcelo.
He is one of lhe eighl players co have
won lhe World Open Pairs, Bennuda
Bowl and Team Olympiad titles.
Here, he was winning the tim of
these, in 1978, with Gabino Cincra.
A drawback of five-card majors is
lhat occasionally one has to open one
club with only lhree cards in lhe suit.
This "fear" influences players'lhink·
ing more than it should because il
happens less lhan 20 percenl of lhc
time. Here, WeSI shied away from 1hc
· · ~illing club lead, going instead with
his longest suit. Declarer w0n wilh
the spade king and encered dummy
wilh a heart.
Normally, pne would play this diamond suic by running lhe jack on the
firsl round. However,lhac is only cor·
reel when dummy is replete wilh
enlries. Here, if Easl had begun wilh
A·Q·x of diamonds, he could win lhc
first or second diamond Irick and
re1Urn a heart, removing dummy's
remaining entry while the diamonds
were blocked. So, Branco called for
the diamond jack (lo tempi a cover),
bul when Easl played low, he pul up
the king. (East was marked with 1hc
ace from his opening bid.)
, When thai held the trick, Branco
played a second diamond and won II
. tricks: fo,ur spades, 1wo hcans and
five diamonds. Thai was worth 18 out
of 19 malchpoinls.

750 Boats irs Moton
for Sale
1986 Dodge Colt 1700 O.B.O.

11'-448.0231.

42 Clothing fabriC
44 Oonua of ollvto

PEANUTS

An·-

I:--'---=--=----

TKE. OC~IG!olt--.TED
~IVE.R.!

44 1 11 511

11183 Mercury Grand Marqula, 1:::_:;~;;:..;~:;;..;;;;:~--­

new engine. 1275.304-875-1843.

Matt

I

vans I 4-WDI

prico negotiable, oaill14·882· 740
Motorcydes
5518, leave me11age, .will caU 1":":::'::";"::::::"~~~~~~
l(oc:k.
1887 LT 500 Suzuki Quad Ra&lt;:w
1184 Oldl Citrra, 84,000 mliel, ~:=~r, All Now 12,400, 814-

Featurlogr Hydro Balh. Don
Sheats. ·373 Georges Creek Rd.

Now, 1t'-3ilfi.G"2.

r'M. \flf. Oi'IE
! Wf\0.'5 ~TIJC..K E'£1NC?
AND

Q4 Ford Ranger, low mlloo, navy
blue, anYin1. &amp;'C. 114-11112-7811.

111124824.
Riplor. wv. 3q•·372·3133 or 1·
AKC Reglatered Lab Pu ppitl,
13211
11&amp;8
Pontiac
Grand-Am.
304·
1:100-:=:273-~.::
=;::;·;....__::--Proven Hunling Stock Champion
304.075-3812.
875-1501.
790
campers 1
Bloodline
Yellow
J
Black
1250.
2 B1 d room Apartment At Rl o Bfownlng Cro111bow, Oulvlt 4132 114-&amp;13-2288.
Tasca
Scope,
Artowa
1
lkoaO.
1
ago
Chovr
Lumina,
3.1
L;
cold
·Motor
Homes
Grande, AU Urilltlea Furnished
$300/Mo. PlUIOII&gt;Oii~ 814-3111- hoada lnciUdld 11g0, .814-381· AKC Roglaterad White German olr, aulonUo. tunllm • - ono 1-:-:==~.,-.,-.,.-,.-,.-....,...
excellent tnlida and out· 1g77 201L t.tldu triMI tfailll, air.
1143, Ewringa.
Shepherd Pupplu, $100, OBO owner,
aide, et4.ae2-8824.
awning, aletpl I, 13.500 firm.
-8 1'-3I!IHI 1a..
304-875-«35 aher 5pm.
2bdrm. apll., total electric:, ap~ 530
Antiques
19110 Coroioa high mingo, runt 1-:-:--:---...:.:;____
pliances lurnithld, laun~t)' room
Dog kanne I 10 x 10 1 e 121g· 85 · &amp;
looks goad. 12,000. 304·882· 1885 Motor Home 24' ChwvJ
lttoiitioo, Close 11 IOhoot in •-·
Oak Bid. 814 111 Q?ljA
I'IO,.Pllo30H7$,1084.
3382.
Chuote Alklng 111,500; 1881
Applicat•ons availabl .. at: VIllage
Greeh Apta. 1411 or call 814·11112- Buy or 111t. Riverine Antlquoo, Golden AetriiYtr Pupplea, 5 1Sti0 Plwom9utH Acclain, ctuite, Buicf&lt; Rogal Alking U.ooo. 814·
1124 E. Mxln StrM~ on R1. 124, ·weds Old, I 75, 4 Females, t
44Ht81AI!MI.
3711 . EOH.
cokl air, lilt. IUR roof, IUIO. Gt'Hl
Pomeray. Houta: U.T.W. 1a:po Malo, 814-3811-D213.
lhlpo, $111115,114-lll2.e824.
Furnlahod EHioioncy Shara Ba~ a.m. 11 1:00 f""'· S.nday 1:oo 11
SERVICES
HAPPY JACKS SKit It! ••
$1St5JMo.; U~Hiiet Paid, 807 S.C.. 1:00 p.m. 114-812·2521, Ruu
1
De
1
Oldomobllo
18
3800
V·l
and Avonuo,' Gallipoli~ 814·448- IIQolw-.
Chec:kl oontohing,
Automatic, 4 Doara, Loade'- 1-::::-::-----:-----spots and irritllad lkln wilhout
38«, After 7 P.ll.
•.ooo
Miiii.11'-38IH30"810
Home
540 Miscellaneous
slllOid~ Promote• hilling lnd
Improvements
Furnlohld EHidonc1 2 Rooma 1
htJr ~ ondool and calli
Merchandise
111111 Pontiac S.ra.ird LE, 12,400, f----:-::;;::::::::;;--Bath, $22Wo., Udiitltl Pold, 1211
Available 0.T.C JD NOR1H
814 UB 3437.
fBASEMENT
Foi.lrlh Avenue. Gillipotla, 014~ 15.2 Cu. Fl. Upright Froazor
· PROOUCEI14-441·11133.
WATERPROOFIN&lt;I
4 - . Allof7 P.M.
Croabr 8 Yeara Warranty Ulld
and female mlnialurt collies 1StQ5 Cavalier 2 Door Coupe, Untondlllonal Ufttlme guarantH.
Very Lkdo 8350; S1111oman RidFurnllhld Aportmlnl, 1 ~ Ing
IShaltltl),
lull grown, $400, 8-14· Whitt, Loaded, 12,000 Milll, Local rellrenc:la lurnr1hed. EsLawn Mowor, 42 Inch Ou~
$U!il, 814-251-18n.
11bliohld 1875. CaH 1114) 441131 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 12.'11. H.P.I300.114-378-:1484. 1
742·20!il.
12QS/Mo., Ullltln Plld, 1'4-44&amp;1895 Saturn SC2, Auramatlc:, Air, 0870 Or 1-800.287·0571. Rogora
31144. Allor 7 P.M.
4 Sell Of Amerlctn Racing Miniature Collie tShtltil), male Cruioe, AIIIFM Caollttl, Trunk ~ling.
·
puppy lor Nil, 1125, 114·7•2· Rolouo, 112,000 Col- 5 P.ll.
I·Aoo:-r.:.tmon--tFo::-'-r'-Rini--IHiw--H-IY-11\- · WhHII, 1 v..r Old, Paid 1100, . 2050.
Alklng 1275, 114-:B-1215.
(Serioua Inquiries Only I) 114· I·A_,-p-pl-ll-no-o-:Par~ti_And...__Serv
__lco_:_AII_
WVA. One n.....~
p•-1
-room.
·-~
114Name Brandt Over 25 Yeara E1·
Anique Dolt Bld,II4-441-Ul151. . Puu puppy female, 3moa. old, 4411-40 5·
8118-.2113.
83 .Buick Electra, bodr good, perlonoo All Wor~ Ouarantlld,
1200.
Apartment Air Rent: 322 Third, Are you buying now lurnlturo? AKC Reg. Boston Ttnier pup· many- par11.1375 or boat oft- French Cllr llartag, 814·448·
Avanuo, 114-251-1903.
· Soli your uood 1um111n 10 ,_Po- pies, 11t atlotl &amp; wormed, very ar, 81'-11112·7271.
77115.
meroy nwut: Shop. nw. 11 a f'llll amaiL 1200. 81+11112-4 11111.
BEAUTIFUL APAATMENTS AT nood for broaklnt and dining
A Nted A Car? No Cradlr, Bad C&amp;C General Home Main·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON room till. Wo alao buy baby Rogialerod Arabian Golding 14 Clldl~ Banknlpll:r? Wa Can Help tononco- Painting, vinyl olding;
814- R•·Etlablllh Creditl Must t.lake carpentry, doo11, windows, bllht, •
ESTATES, 52 Willwood Drlva lllml. good ulld IDyl. Mull bo in Yoara Old GenUa, 11,000,
.
lrom 1280 Ia $334. Walt ra lhop 11ooilont COI1dltlon. Good ....,oh tse-1877.
$150 Week Take Homo, 15'11 moblaltOmo ropolr and more. For
&amp; movloo. Call 114·441·2518. '"" Clwia.,.. glhl. Cal 114-811}·
Down On Caoh Or Troda To lrH o~imota call CM~ 814·992·
570
MusiCal
Ouoily For Thla Bank Financing. 8323.
ECIUII Houllng~t~nty.
~s~u~';"'-~
No Crldll Turn Downsl814·441·
lnlti'Uments
Convanlonllo PVH, 2bldroorn, ~
11101.
840 ElaetriCII lfld
klll:hon, bath, LFL No PilL 13001 1.;;:=.:::..---:-:-:-=.,---:-FOR SALE:
CARS FOR $1001 Truck~ boat1, I:;::;:::'::':'R~af~r..:lg:.ll_".:.lt.:.IO.:.n,.:....,.,_
mo.l300dopoiiL_.7S-5781.
Adanll 50,000 BTU ntlurai Qll
. CONSOLE PIANO
10 151111 8
4·whetlart, maiOr hornet, furn'- Reaidlndal or, commercial wiring,
Furnlohld Apvtmtn1, Ont Bid· '
-'
avo Ruponolblo Party Wanlld To turt, tfecltonlca. campulttl etc. new llf'YIGI or repafta. Ma~ lJ.
Mau
Low
Mon111y
Plymanll
On
room, Uplllliro, All Utiltltl Pold, ·Konmort - - · oboul3yrl. old.
by FBl IRS, DEA. Available your c:enHd electrician. Ridenour
Plano. Soo Locally, Call: 1-IOIJ. area
No Pall, 854 Soc:ond Avo., Galli- 150. Drror 125. Call 304·175- 2BU211.
now. Call 1·800·513·4343 Electrical, WV000301. '304·875·
.
Ell S-0381
1781.
po11, &amp;14-4411-1523
I;321;:.;.:S.::.--------

520

t--.

1,000 miles. 2S manlh WIIITIIr1lJ• .

2 Blac:k /Tan Male Mini excallent condition, call 1114.742·
Daohthund AMC Regiatorod
2187 allor 5pm.
$.175, 080114-388-11Q4.
1888 BMW K75. Mint Condition,
2 fomole Jacf&lt; Ru11ell'a Puppl01. $3,500, 814·286-11215.
$250,00 aooh. Call: 1814)·441·
0553
18118 ChiVr Caprice llllion WIQ·
A Groom Shop ·Pal Grooming. oil, good body, new tires &amp; parts.

Shephard ·Puppies, Available

,.

KIGf.\1-.11-.Y ...

4-.
.

'•

1171 Cadillac Coupa, Excellont -.oond.II,000.30U75-3t1g,

8181.
1871 Plrmoulh Duater Race car,
uo Soc: 118 IIlio - 01 Elua~
&amp;14·448-4848, 304·875-1702
Evr.ings.
1178 Dodga St. Regia 4 Dooro.
318 V-8, Good Condition, $1,000,
8M·38fl.!l265.

Block. brick. sewer pipes, wlnd·

YOU~
~OtJSt\111' A~ES
DfPA~TtlltNT.

A RliPt CL.f,IC 11'1

/

l&gt;EPT.

1881 Chovr Convoralon Van,
older model oar; 11 H4g·3005, 350 V-8, Loadad, 14,800 OBO,
asUorTom.
114·441-8280 Ak• 5 P.M.I14-

TY.I300. 30+4175-1272.

Building
Supplies

'#If WANT TO GOMPI..AIN AJOUT

COMPLAINt

lookl good. lnldo "" good lui llzo

Condilion, $1,800·080, 814-258-

550

vi•.

-

Luowtourtur

.

. By Phillip Alder

710 Autos for sale
1111 a., s.•o 4&gt;4, good_.
·ae Ford Escort GT, ru9• and l·d-:tlon.~-:11~4-8112--4~73-7_.-~~­

Zenith C•nturJ II cona~l• color

.

---.

2 Conatrucllon
bMm (2wda.)
3-Garr

One road,
one station

me F350, 410, PS, aura, long

1888 Rlngar 373V 18' 12 ·24V
AMC Mini Daohohundo, I Wooko 1887 ford Tempo Lookl 1 Runa Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evlnruclt
t)', Skaggs Appliancea, 70 VIne Old, Had Sholl I Wormed, 12SO, Good 11,200, Call After 8 P.M. Ou1board, 11.1100,114-0112·2770.
814-4411--37Q7.
Street, Galllpolia, 514·4.4&amp;:7318, 81"381H11a.l.
;;.._....:...;,...;_---...,..- 760 Auto Plwts &amp;
1-1188·81fi.0128..
AI&lt;C Pomeranian Pupa, Sholl &amp;
1888 Buick caniUrr. 4 door.'auAccessories
Wormad, 81...-8253.
1 bedroom lurnllhld aparlmanlln Sot Of Wooden Bunk Bode. With
kJmalic:. "ul11, lilt, elac:tric wind- ~~:::""::~~:::':~~~~~
~~~~ 814-8112·217&amp;
t.tattraasu, Bottom: Full Size, AKC Rogi111r1d Airedale Pup- ows and seals, body eJcellant, Full line or auto bodf panels. ·
plea 1200 Black I llln Reedy J\1. kept In garage. runt -perfect. r.int• and aupplie1, •Ito glat'
Top:Twil,$110,114 4112124.
ght auomlllr. Oxygen and a. .
1 Bedroom Near HoiHr Exlra
ter August 25, 1Q07, 814·388~ 100'11 dependable, St850 080,
make moan offer, 814-742·2370 tyteno llnkllllld and a10hangacl.
Nice, Central Air, $288/Mo., + dinotll ... with
8812.
UaUiliea. Depoair Req. No Pars. china hull:h &amp; llrVIng bullol. -r
or 814-3811-11241.
I1'-742·27V2.
814-448·3157.
good oondldon; '11550, 114·W2· AKC
Registered
German
35&amp;4.

1 TIME ONLY!

7112.

450

Two Oldtoom Haute tn aes1 c:la.
Roleronco, ond Dopo~t No Poll
1114) 3N-2400

,yord, depoll~ col 814·g85-4372
Three Bedrooms, One Bath, Ont and l•w rrMiag8.

Cat Garage, On Bulavllle Pike

Mower, 1,050 Hours. 81 4·2513-

--··•·11·

Debonlh-

35 Bllllcalldng
27 Wyiii-

Opening lead: • 4

Machino 1111 Ford XLT Aulomallc, A~.
on ula 302 Engine, Runo Good, Lookl
now. Sidoti Equipment. 304-1175- Good, 13,500 Firm, 114·182·
7421.
5135.
Muoio Far8uaon 10 t 0 4 WD 1·1:::11110:-:-cford::-,-,S.::-per--:Co:-:-b-::XL:-:T:-:Larla-:--~
Tractor Compact. With BaiiJ 1 SIC bed. aula. alt, erviN. IWO

RUJIALS

are available on an equal
opporlunily balls.

Ohio 45631·15e2 Or Fa• To 8141-

Hl73 lnternalianal Plck~Up 314
Ton, Runs Good BadJ In Good

Pass

34-.
40

Dealer: East
Soulb West North
INT

=.-l· .

17-Moran
18HirmH
50
20 BlbyiiMr
dlractlon
23 .....ay
51 ,.,... ollerrllr
240ui'OIsa~
2B Booltatore
_.ion
31-FirrDW
DOWN
32 - In ClnclnNII
11hfcef

311VIew

Vulnerable: East-West

1---------

this • •uoteet Ia
1l1o Federal Fair H&lt;Uing M.
01 1968 whiCh makll n1111011
to ad\leftiSe "any ...

• 8 2

11 Q J 4 2
+. A 3
•AQJ54

11 7 6 5
t K 7 6
• K 3 2

Gold uaod .farm Wagon On 1·5.~~':'::-::'"-:-:---:::--::::­
Rubbor $225; 450 Cuo Dozer 1W GIIC Slarra pldcup, PS, PB,
Good Condition, 111,500, 114· 5 opaed, V·8, 110ellon1 condilion,
245-54311.
814·11112-8833.

All real ntate adv8rtlltng tn

' East

South
&amp;AKqJ

240 dillel, IXC lhlpa. 18,500. ohanlcala, 13885 080, 114-11112·
304-516-2571.
31111.
Ford - a n d 5ll brulh hog. II I·1-:I~II:-::Cu_a_ra_m-:'30::-"w~tu""'u::-llty-:-bld-:-,
good oond .. new painl I now . 2wd, 454 wloomploto olllrtl 427.
pona on VOCII1'. 12,150. 304-875- AIJO ...,.,._.. r - onc1, aulD, pe,
5473. .
pb, 15,000. 304-875-3000 lrorn ..

enca. 304-875-2145.

adY8ftisedlnthis-

Please Send RMume' To Holzer
Clinic; Human Relatians Departmont: 90 Jacf&lt;aon Pike, Gallipofi~

South of Leon, WV. Fit~anclng
-304-458-101111.

WhHI bill, 10" lttel bed With
1e&amp;S MatMY Ferguson tractor IOolbo•a. radials, uceltlntme-

livin~ston't basement water·
procllng, all ba1ement repaira
done, tree 111imasea, IUtllrne
guerantH. 1Oyra on job tlpert-

GallipoliS
• VIcinity

J I 0'1 AuiO Partl. Buying

610 Fann Equipment

Compular Users Needed. Work

OUII- _.7fi.62112.

Wesl
• 10 7 6 4 3
• 10 9 8
• Q 2
, . 10 8 7

Ju•t At·. 720 ll'Ucks for Sale
-··Form llorkiL sw.
ljouto 110, A t E - 3 - . 'U Chevrolet 112 . ton pldcup
Norlh Of Holui 11oafi111, Call For 1tuck, undercoaled V·l, air. au·
E111t1 Orders, 11 ... 441· 1St04 Or 1omatlc, radio, clock. caaHlle,
A,_ 7 P.U. eu ue n•
bodinor, allding r11r glaoa, blue
Sweet corn, peppers and to· lntlfiDr. IIIVtr, A·OM condition,
matoat, 1Dam-1 Will lama Farm, 10,000. $1Kl00,11'-742·2117.
Slr&amp;ouu, Ohio, 114·182·3185 1CI72 Ton 4 Wheel Drive, Good
day&amp; or 81'-11112·511111 """'*'gg.
Rubber, Runa Good, 114·251·
1574.

2813.

lit\ Col Allofl,l1~1-18511.

tJI09854
• 9 6

Frolh Canning -

Co"""""'ol Bullcllng For Sale Or
Louo, 4000 Sq. FL, SL RL 33.
Now Hovan. WVA. 114·1817 Week Old Blonde Female kit-

container. Marlhall Adams,
Atloml Rd.,~ .... Olio.

seC:·.

......

• 9 5
11 A K 3

.,

EEK&amp;MEEK

51HIYin8 no

Uatutra
15 OlylftPIO """"
11 Flcldllng
!ill a..a-Ot~
=ra(for

N

Good Condition, Call Afltr a' P.M.
Trucb, 4&gt;4'o, EIO.
11Hote-4231.
1-IIXH22-2730. x :111cn.
: = h i Piano, ChMPI114· I·CII-IV'f..;..;M;,;o;.;nza;;;;;.D&lt;a;;;.;.g;;,C;.;ar..;,;,;,Joa;;.;....•·-..,Choa~~ 5:13 Do,., Power Olitlo
580·
Fruns 1
Tranamluion, 377 o.l.d. SmlR
lea
8loolt Rolff Motor Runl l.!iO 1.W
Vagetlb
llilo, o.L te,SOO OBO, Turn Kay,
Conning toRIIIOOI for loio; oliO 1·'-1 4-_2;..4~5-IIG~S:-7~
· -::---~::-"
hoi and grun pappara. Bring Up10n Ulld Cora RL 12-3 111111

.....,.

11401-....

'·

pertains w a matter· that could
enhance your material securily and
well-being.
PISCES (Feh. 20-March 20) You
will have a lot more conttol over
loclay's .events lhan you ll!ink. You
mighl have 10 pull the sttings from
behind lhe scenes when orchestrating
plans.
·
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Today you might receive something
subslanlial for which you have
Y4'arned . h could fulfill your expec·
talions in an une,;pccted manner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
significant objeclive is now achievable, but first you musl lei persons
who are in positions 10 help know
whac you expecl from lhem.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)Anew
developmenl that has commanded
your interests could have grealer
polentiallhan you suspect Reassess
i1 and all Of i1's ramificacions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You .
could be mosl lucky today in an
arrangement where change will play
a major role. Flow with cvenls as they
unfold wilhoul making aherations. ..

IWEDNESDAY

Pagoda • Wedge · World· Comply- LEAD to GOOD .
·· Granny always told us that certain activity can lead to
· evil but inactivity would never LEAD to GOOD! .
·

AUGUST20 I

......

...
. i· ~

·"

•·.

·, ., L

......

�Ohio Lottery
Colorado
turns tables
on Cincinnati

Super Lotto: •
1-5-8-11-22-36
Kicker:
4-8-8-5-2-0
Pick 3:
7-1·2
Pick 4:
7-5-3-9

Sports on Page 5

•

a1
lib!. 48, NO. 89
C1te7, Ohio 118lley Publishing COml)llny

Chane• of ahowera
tonight, Iowa In the mid
50.. Frldey, pertly cloudy,
highs ln. the lower 70s .

entine

..

2 Soctlona, 12 Pogea, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio, Thursday, August
. 21 , 1997 ·

A Gennen Co. Newal)llper

·convicted rapist gets ov~r 30 years behind bars .
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said ·Barney made life for his vic- '
By JIM FREEMAN
tim into "a living hell" and added that "we need to send a message that thiS
Sentinel News Staff
.
.
A rapist who abused his victim over a period of years must in remm for-. 'kind of behavior will not be tolerated."
Attorney S.teve Story asked for a more lenient sentence, noting that the
feit many years of his own life.
.
Convicted rapist Darrell Barney, 42, received a stem moral lecture along charges against his client were uncorroborated by evidence.
"Anyone can be accused," he said.
with a 32-year prison term during his sentencing Wednesday afternoon in
Kne~&gt;e disagreed, condemning Barney's behavior.
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
"It disgusted the coun to hear the kind of conduct that you carried on,"
Visiting Judge Randall Knece of Pickaway County sentenced Barney to
four consecutive prison terms of eight-to-12 years each while damning the he said. "Sollie people think you own a child like you own a car or a dog .. .
you robbed her of her childhood.
·
.
behavior that landed Barney in court in the first place.
"It came down to your word against hers; that's not unusual in incest casHarney, formerly of Shade, repeatedly had seK with a minor female rei·
ative from .1993to 1996 and was found guilty in May of four counts ofrape, es like this. These things don't happen on the corner of Main Street," he said.
Knece also commended the jury and attorneys for both sides. "The jury
eight counts of seKual battery and four counts of felonious sexual penetraspent
a great ~eal oftime ... making the determination they made. This was
tion.
During sentencing, Barney's victim said the incidents began years before, one of the cleanest ... fairest cases I have ever heard."
Knece continued, again directing his comments to Barney who remained
when she was in the third grad,e and the family was not living in Meigs CouneKpressionless
during the proceeding: "You took advantage of a ybung girl.
ty. Now 18 years old, she asked Knece to impose the muimum sentence posyou
have
to
repay
with several years of what remains of your life.'
.
sible.

Before he passed sentence, Knece told Barney the four prison terms would
be consecutive, to be served one after another.
'
"Anything less would demean the sentence," he said.
· The sentence followed a pre-sentence investigation ordered ell{lier and
Lentes and Story agreed the 16 counts. for purposes of sentencing, should
be merged with the four,rape counts.
·
Kncce also classifierl Barney as a "sexual predator" which, under a new
Ohio law. will' require him to register with law enforcement officials every
90 days for the remainder of his life following release from prison. In addition, local law enforcement officials will have to notify Barney's adjacent
neighbors and nearby schools and other facilities that a seKual predator is
living in their midst.
,
•.
He will also have to submit a photograph, fingerprints and a DNA sample to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification.
_
Immediately after the sentencing. a male family member was lectured oy
the judge for .shouting out 10 Barney in the courtroom, "I hope you rot in
hell."
:..

,...;--A first for Pomeroy-- Pomeroy.·merchants make
plans for Delta Queen stop
I
•

night for another planning session. · some arts and crafts exhibits, ana
Musser al'so comme nded the mer- refreshment hooths on the parking
chants for painting curbing and doing lot.
Potpourri ~ags wi II be prepared as
other work to improve the appearance
of the village in anticipation of the favors , and the gazebos will be decorated. it was reported.
visit of Delta Queen.
In other business, !he Merchant•
Susan Clark. the association's
president, reported that greeters, a Association noted 'that Wesley
group consisting of village officials Thoene: who created the Victorian
and merchants. wi.ll be attired in thorned holiday display for the minipark as a scout project, will receive
in revitalization projects in town. is black an~ white ensembles.
his Eagle Scout award Aug. 31 at 2
heading up a committee to welcome
The men. she said, will wear p.m. at Heath United Methodist
and entertain the visitors.
white shirts:.black pallts and red ties, Church. His mother, Nancy Thoene,
In anticipation of motorists com- while the women will have matching secretary, invited the lricmhers. ,
ing inio Pomeroy to hear the calliope red and black plaid vests to be worn
A letter was read from lhe Allen
concert, tour the sternwheeler and with white blouses and black slacks Bros. Circus asking about sponsorjoin in other activities, Musser said or skirts. She noted that The Fabric ship for a show on ·Sept. 5 . in
arrangements have been made for Shop is making the vests and any Pomeroy for a percentage of advance
cars to .park behind the fire sJation or women interested in ordering one and gate ticket proceeds.
" the former junior htgh school build· should go in for measurements before
The merchants decided not to
ing, 'and travel by van downtown.
5 p.()l. Monday.
, .
sponsor the show since it falls on a
The Delta Queen will docki.t·tha 'Pomeroy
on Sept. 1 - • first for Pomeroy- and the
He reported that four welcome
Mike Stroth reported on brochures home football game night and their
nurty 170 passengers are expected to come aahore.·.Realdentl will be given the opportunity ,
banners have been secured and that he's preparing for distribution 'to the involvement in other fall activities.
to tour the sternwheeler, which will be at the ~. . from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
new r.ed and blue Hags arc being visitors that show a mnp of the vi llage
It w.as voted to purchase an
made to adorn the period lamps and a listing of various business~s. inscribed rock for the··Pomeroy Fire
along the promenade. Attempts are Ann Chapman is preparing histories ·Department in appreciation for
also being made to get six staie flags on the various buildings to be placed cleanup work downtown.
for use along the river.
in the store front windows.
Approval was also given to buy·
Carol Layh of the tourism bureau
Plans call for a walking tour of the ing a pump and accessory equipment
in Marietta. a city that has hosted vis· village. an icc cream social on Lynn ·· to be used in cleaning the awnings.
its of the Delta Quech many times, is Street hosted by Trinity Church. an . . Clark asked for assistance with the
at least 5 percent of i~ business, but offering her expertise in the planning,
ATI..ANTA (AP}- For thousands business.
show and herb -displays .in the duck derby at the Sternwheel Fostr·
''All of our jobs depend on our has .said it won't be able to properly said Musser. She was in Pomeroy last art
of United Parcel Service workers, the
minipark. an antique i\UtO display. val.
end of their strike didn't mean a volume level," UPS spokesman Rick measure lost business until next
Warlick said. "Certainly as we go week.
return to work.
UPS' daily volume fell during the
As the delivery giant slowly began back to work. a.• our volume picks up •. '
recovering Wednesday from the 15- we will add workers. Any business- strike to I 0 percent of its nonnal 12
day Teamsters walkout, the company es that have gone away as a result of million parcels lind packages. The
company expected a quick, large
told some workers they were laid off. the strike may mean fewer jobs."
UPS
has
estimated
the
strike
cost
surge as customers shipped packages
at least temporarily. because of lost
that had piled up during the strike.
Some 185,000 Teamsters struck
the company, and UPS has said more I
than 15,000 jobs could be cut because
of permanently lost business. The
company did not release figures
Wednesday on the number of workBy The Aaaoclated Pre•• .
ers back on the job.
Residents in the Athens County village of Chauncey have returned to
Thiny-five percent of 4,671 worktheir homes but other parts of the southeastern Ohio county were still .in
ers in UPS' mid-South offices were
danger from rising floodwaters.
laid off Wednesday, said Doug
More than a dozen Chauncey residents returned home Wednesday, said
Ashcraft, a manager in Little Rock,
Te9 Jacobson, director of the county emergency management agency. They
Ark.
were forced to leave Tuesday after rising waters Hooded the town and sur"To the degree that our customers
rounding roads. •
come
back will dictate whether those
The storms dumped up to siK inches of rain in some parts of the coun- ·
jobs
come
back," Ashcraft said.
ty since Saturday, Jacobson said.
·
About
1.200
pan-time workers
· "The water is a moving problem," he said. "Tile water is down in the
were
laid
off
in
Massachusetts
and
northern parts of the county, but we may end up with people out of their
Rhode Island. In Oregon and southhomes in the eastern pan of the county." ·
west Washington, 684 workers 'Preliminary assessments indicate the storm caused damage to at least
257
of them full-timers- were laid
430 homes and 20 businesses in Athens, Hocking and Perry counties.
off
Wednesday.
A handful of Atlanta
Athens County Commissioners declared a state of emergency TuesBOOK SIGNING - Retired U.S. Air Force many accomplishment!' Include serving aa
drivers
were
also
turned away.
day. Gov. George Voinovich declared states of emergency in Hocking and
Gen.
and Middleport native James V. Hartinger commander-In-chief of the North American
In
Charlotte,
N.C
..
only
a
small
Perry counties Tuesday.
.
Is
visiting
his hometown to sign copies of his Aerospace Defense Command· (NORAD) and
number
of
the
800
UPS
employees
. Jacobson also said many farmers lost their corn crops, which were
"General
Jim Hartinger - from One first commander of the Air Force Space Combook,
-were called hack to ~.Qrk. Rows of
almost ready for harvest.
.
Stripe
to
Four
Stars."
The book concerns his mand. He Is now retired and living In Colorado
"A lot of folks farm com, and it was close to being harvestable," he' idle trucks were parkeitTn the expanyouth
In
Middleport
and
his career In the Air Springs, Colo. Above, he signed a copy of his
sive parking lot.
said. ''They lost the corn because it rotted or washed ·away. It was bad
Force,
which
spanned
five
decades, three wars book which belongs to the Middleport Library,
"There's not enough work for
timing because noi1T]ally there's fl(\odS in the spring when little is plantand
ranks
from
private
to
sergeant
to general. while library clerk Peggy Carpenter observed.
..
them," supervisor Norman Bellow
ed .
Known as the "Father of Space Command," his
said.
By CHARLENE HOEfUCH
Sentinel News Staff1
Entertainment and activities for
the 170 people on board the Delta
Queen when it docks ,at the Pomeroy
levee on Labor Day were planned
during Wednesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy Merchant!f Association.
John Musser.. president of
Pomeroy Village Council and active

·~ L

Business dropoff causes UPS
to tell some to stay off the job

Athens County residents
assess flooding's impact

Health officials pledge action against .Ohio-based egg manufacturer
·;

COLUMBUS (AP) - State
health officials promise to take AgriGeneral Co. L.P. to court if the egg
processor does not fix housing problems uncovered by inspectors last
year.
.
"We've given them two chances,"
Randy Hertzer, spokesman for the
Ohio Department of Health, said
, Wednesday. "There will be no third.
If they do not follow through, we will
go to court."
The Occupational Safety &amp; Health
Administration announced fines this

•

J

week totaling more than $1 million
against AgriGeneral, one of the country's largest egg producers. OSHA
said a five-month investigation into
AgriGeneral 's Croton farm uncovered potentially life-threatening conditions at the facilities and nearby
migrant housing.
OSHA conducted its own inspections following a tip from the state
health department.
The department, which is responsible for inspecting Ohio's 142
migrant camps, in October investi-

gated conditions at two houses near
AgriGeneral's LaRue egg farm in
northwest Ohio and at eight houses
near.the company's Croton farm east
of Columbus.
· Inspectors found 183 violations at
the Croton.homes and 60 in LaRue.
At one · house, inspectors found
dead bees "l-inch thick'' in light fiKtures. At another house, raw sewage
was visible in a back yard.
Hertzer said the department did
not immediately seek a coun order to
stop the company from housing

workers because AgriGeneral
promised to make-improvements and
get the proper state permits.
"We wanted them to act q~ickly,"
he e~plained . "But we also understood that as long as they were mak·
ing substanti al improvements.... you
allow them to go on·."
. In May, the company infonned the
department it would no longer offer
worker housing.
But a surprise visit in June by
OSHA and health department inspec-·
tors found workers still living in the

Croton houses -some of which had
raw sewage in the basement and
drinking water contaminated with
coliform bacteria.
On Aug. 8, the company again
applied for a li~ense to use up. to five
homes near the Croton facility as
worker housing .. Health inspectors
reported that the LaRue houses no
longer qualified as migrant labor
camps because they were occupied
by fewer than five workers.
AgriGeneral -President Duke
Goranites said in a written statement

that the company is continuing to
work with the health department to
resolve the housing issue.
Henzer conceded the department
has no 'way of knowing whether the
company will upgrade the housing
this time .
"We don't know that for sure," he
said. "But we'll be going back regularly to make sure they're making'
progress."
Hertzer said state law makes quick'
actio~ difficult..
'

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