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SUnday, June 11, ,..,

Porileroy • Mllklleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pl1nant, WY

I

Bulls win 4th
NBA·crown. in
past-6 years

ORV use growing concern in Ohio ·;
By CINDY JENKINS,
~ District FOtMIIIf'
GALLIPOUS- Muc controversy surrounds the Way1111 Narional Forest. Issues such as ·land acquisition,
off-road vehicle use (ORV), timber
management and ecosystem' mill•
• arecon· t 1onamea.ew,
agemen I .JUS
stantly being examined by the Forest
Service and other interested parties.
Having attended a trails task force
group for a year, along with several
f arums WI'th up 1o a dozen countY
commissions as well as state and federal Congressmen, I feel compelled to
· •
m.onn
others who may be·In tere sted ,
but are not in the position to get infor· I have 1earned bY atte nd.mg
mauon.
· the
all of these meeb•ngs concemmg
Wayne that it seems like the fewer the
· · · Thesc
facts, the stronger the opm1on.
emotionally,charged individuals usu-

CONSTRUCT PICNIC IADI•C:
recently constructed end donated a six foot
to the
Gallla County Children's Home. The chapter
been contacted by Executive Director, Deanna Cook, to repair an existing table
and after evaluating the condition of the table, voted to replace
It from chapter funds.

lilly do more harm to • fOI'CSt tlwt
good bec"lse they simply do not
know nature, eca!OJY,IRCS, wildlife,
etc. Iporance IS no excuse. For
instanCe, plantina bl~~ek walnut on a
ridge 10p due to iponnce of its silvies, is no different than driving a car
w1'thout pmovor
· 1ruct.1on a nd a
··r· •ns
license. Both can fail.· One should at
least be familiar with a sirullion
before one opines.
Off Road Vehicle use (ORV 1 is a
grow1' ng conce m m
· Oh'1o. The
Nationai.Forest Plan allows ORV use
on design~ted routes. Undesignated
rout es mus t be c1osed to prolect the
environment. .
.
0 1'1 and gas have 1ong been an
·
· Oh'10 on the W.ayne . The
1ssue
1n
problems with these has for the most
part , been so 1ved. But as one rea ds
this article, the National Forest is

involved in a lawsuit over coal and
mineral rights dealing with slrip-mining.
nmber management continues to
be an' issue on the Wayne National
forest. The forest plan called for timber harvesting 10 help meet some
reSOIII'Ce objectives. The plan also
calls for some areas of the National
Forest to be managed to provide
future old growth, large canopied foresl areas.
Several prop,osed timber sales
were appealed in FY '95. Industry and
· environmental groups have opposing
viewpoints on this issue.
It is the responsibility of the U.S.
Forest Service not only to manage for
multiple natural resources, but also to
conserve biological diversity and 10
restore and maintain ecosystems
native to Ohio.

Many ongoing studies in cooper-:
"'Uion with tile North Central Forest
EWxpeldlri!"eSent ~tatioPun,rdU. SU.n~!~~
1 be rv1ce,
ue 1 - · .,.
Ohio Department of Natural·
Resources, and Ohio Stale University will belp assist in. making natural ,
resou~·
decisions to·
·- manaument
.,.
ensure healthy and viable ecosystln\S
throughout the forest. .
. •
If you are interested In le~mg
more about the Wayne, your nauon-,
al forest, you are invited toMatlend
· tile••
"Communi ty of Interest eetmg on,
June 27, 1 P· m. until 10 P· m. at the:
Scenic Hills Senior Center, 187 S,:•
Spring St., Logan.
,
If you need further directions, or.
have questions or comments, call,'
Cindy Jenkins at 44 6-&amp;687 at~ G~-:lia Soil and Water Conservation
· DIS- •
trict.
;

BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Bugs
aren't necessarily bad news for fanners.
A female ladybird beetle, for
example, can wipe out hundreds of
destructive insects called aphids.
And, during her three-week development, each of her several hundred
eggs can take out additional numbers
of the pests. Moth eggs and caterpillars also fall prey to the ladybird, better known as the ladybug.
"They have an impact," says Ed
Bechinski. the University of Idaho's
extension integrated pest management specialist in Moscow. "In my
mind, ladybugs are absolutely the
·most common and abundant natural
insect enemy we have in Idaho."
Entomologist James B. Johnson
and graduate student Nadeer Youssef
are measuring just how big a bite
ladybugs are taking out of Idaho's
aphid population. They want to know
which of the state's 80 ladybird
species are preventing the most aphid
damage in specific crops.
"We know they eat a lot of aphids
.in a year when ladybugs are abundant, but how much good they do
varies a lot, depending on how well
· synchronized they are with the
aphids," Johnson says.
Once a week during the growing
season, wriles Marlene Fritz of the
University of Idaho, Youssef is running sweep nets across 12 fields of
grains, peas. lentils. rapese~d and
canola in northern Idaho. ·
He and Johpson will track the
abundance, diversity and density of
r ladybug species. monitor tlieir seasonal patterns and develop tile larvae
in the laboratory to detennine which

ones tum into which adults.
"The first thing we want to know
is which ones are the most important
predators of aphids," Johnson says.
"Then we can start to study them
with confidence that we're studying
an important species - not just one
that is conspicuous and distinctive."
One introduced species. the sevenspotted ladybug, has so swiftly
become a leading player in aphid
consumption in the Western states
that scientists say it has the potential
to significantly reshape the native
ladybug c9mmunity.
Eventually, Johnson hopes to
understand when and why Idaho's
native and introduced ladybugs move
from field to field and where they go
when they are not feeding on crop
aphids. Perhaps agricultural environments could be manipulated to
prolong the ladybugs' good work and
to tempt them to hole up nearby for .
the winter, he says.
In Buhl, Idaho, certified organic
producer Mike Heath plans io leave
strips in his cut hay fields this year to
encourage his ladybugs to stay close
to home. In 15 years, Heath says he
has had to spray for aphids only once .
in his alfalfa. That was the same year
the regi on's fields were blanketsprayed with malathion to co ntrol
grasshoppers, knocking out everything else,"inc\uding the ladybugs

Overall, Heath says, "I've had
pretty good luck with them. You can
wipe out an aphid population in no
- time once the l c~ybugs start 1]1Uiti- ·
plying."

Winter wheat forecast up
By ROBERT GREENE
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON - The Agricul·
ture Department slightly raised its
forecast Friday for the nation's winter wheat harvest but said the com
crop is likely to fall below initial projections made last month.
With harvesting under way, the
department said the winter wheat
crop should reach .1.37 billion
bushels; based.on June I conditions.
Though up 6 million bushels from
last month's forecast, the harvest
would still be the lowest since 1978.
Drought and insects have damaged crops in Kansas, Oklahoma and
Texas, while a cold winter and wet
spring have wreaked havoc in Illinois.- Indiana and Ohio. Favorable
weather will mean record yields in
Idaho and Oregon and a good harvest
.in Washington.
Despite the harsh weather, yields
in Texas, the first major state to be
harvested, were up 2 bushels from
last month, reaching 24 bushels an
acre. Nationwide, the yield forecast
was raised to 36.1 bushels an acre. up
0.2 bushels from last month.
Cuts in exports and seed use

caused the department to raise its esti. mate · of available supplies coming
into the harvest, despite higher food
use. The price forecast was
unchanged at $4.70 to $5.30 a bushel.
The long spell of wet weather in
the eastern Com Belt caused the
department to lower the projected
corn crop to 9.1 billion bushels, down
from last month's projection of 9.4
billion, but still 1.8 billion bushels
above last year's poor crop. The first
forecast based on field conditions will
come out in August.
Because high prices have forced
ethanol plants to curtail use of com,
the department raised the estimates of
supplies coming into the marketing
year that starts Sept. I. The 347 mil·
lion bushels represent a two-week
supply and are still the lowest carryover in 48 years.
The lower projected harvest also
means that supplies coming into the
1997 harvest will be 657 million
bushels, the second-lowest number
since 1976.
As a result, prices should average
$2.90 to $3.30 a bushel, 20 cents
from last month's
for the
1996-1997

MODEL AGS 2130
w1 38' high-vacuum Clllllng deck

McKibben wins
Promotion at KC·,
Reynolds, Arnold
are honored

Reynolds
CHESHIRE - Jennifer K. McKibben has been promoted from associate chemist to assislant chemist in
the chemical department at the Ohio
Valley Eleclric Corp.'s Kyger Creek
Plant, Plant Manager Ralph E.
Amburgey announc~d .'
McKibben joined OVEC in May
1995 as an associate chemist. She is
a graduate of the University of Rio
Grande with a 'bachelor of science
degree in chemistry. McKibben and
her husband, Michael, reside in
Pomeroy.
Stacie L. Arnold, assistant shift
operating engineer,· and James D.
Reynolds, maintenance supervisor at.
OVEC, recently received their ·
anniversary awards for 40 years service to the company.
.
Arnold joined OVEC on April 12,
1956, as a laborer in the_labor department. He transferred to tbC: operations
department in 1958 as an auxiliary ·
equipmept operator and advanced to
equipment operator in 1971.In 1977,
he was promo.ted to unit supervisor
and in 1990, lo assistant shift operating engineer. Arnold and his wife,
Marda, reside in Racine .
.
Reynolds began his career at
OVEC on April 12, 1956, as a laborer in the labor department. During the
following year, he transferred to the
maintenance department as a maintenance helper. He advanced through
the various maintenance mechanic
classifications and in 1994, was promoted to maintenance supervisor.
Reynolds and his wife, Carol, reside
in Pt. Pleasant,-W. Va. ·

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W/ 48" high..YICIIUm culling deck

Sale Price

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~ 69*

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Crop
experts in Virginia and Wisconsin are
the latest to show concern about
reductions in bee populations.'
Richard Fell, a bee expert with the
Virginia Cooperative Extension Service and Virginia Tech, said Virsinia
beekeepers have lost 40 percent to 90
percent of their hives. Fanners will
have difficulty getting bee colonies
for pollination, he said.
Nancy Israel of the Virginia State
Apple Board
this

Plck4:

.

5843

Super Lotto:
7-12-24-36-41-43
Kicker:
06$826

Clear tonight • .Low In
lOa . Tueeday, moatly
cloudy. High In upper aoe.

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47, N0•.36
~1 Section, 10 .....

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35AGan_nett Co.ll&amp;:eJF apar

~omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 17, 1996

Runoff .election
tentatively ·set for
June 30 in Russia

River Sweep participants

Air, 4.3 v:S Vortec engine,
auto. trans., locking
differential. loaded!

'

MOSCOW (AP)- Facing a crucial runoff election. Boris Yeltsin and
his Communist opponent vied today
for the ·support of a tough, fonner
general whose backing could decide
who will be the next president of
Russia.
Yeltsin met with aides to work out
how to woo Alexander Lebed, who
became the most wanted man in
Russian politics by finishing a stfong
third in Sunday's first round of vatmg.
Communist leader Gennady
Zyuganov offered Lebed the top job
in a future government, hinting the
former paratrooper and Afghan war
hero would suffer if he did not
accept.
Yeltsin was slightly ahead in
counting of ballots from Sunday's
·voting. But he and Zuganov eaeh got
only about a third of the voie from
angry anll worried Russians \Vho
have serious doubts about Yeltsin 's
reforms and Zyuganov's embrace of
the Soviet past.
·
With 89 pereent of the vote count·~·; 35 percent of voters were back-

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I

Show concern

S1le Price

Sale Price

783

•••

gd

would continue in the long run but
noted some analysts are saying grain
prices have shi (ted to a higher
plateau.
Nevertheless, the increases were
apparent in all areas of the five states,
which make up the Federal Reserve's
7th District. Indiana reported the
biggest increases, 6 percent during
the first quarti:r and 12 percent over
the previous 12 months.
Interest rates charged ·on farm
loans in the district contin.ued to trend
downward early this year. The average for fan:n operation and for loans
on feeder cattle was just over9.6 percent, the survey found - down onequarter point.in,three months and six·
tenths of a point in a year.
"An_unusually large share of the
bankers - 69 percent - felt that
farmland values would continue to
trend upward du1ing the next quarter," the survey said. "The remaining
31 percent of the bankers were
expecting land values to 'be stable."
The reported noted that during the
1970s boom years, the share of
bankers projecting rising land values
into the next quarter never exceeded
56 percent.' One reason for the optimism: "the astonishing strength in
crop and livestock exports in recent
months."

Pick 3:

Sports on Page 4

Upper
M
i~e!!!~!!in
~t~I~m~!c~
be'!o!ll!!:~nnarise
~
Which ladybug is
worst for pests?
WASHINGTON (AP)- The value of farmland in the Upper Midwest
is increasing at a pace unmatched
since 1980.
The Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago says land values rose 4.1
percent in the first quarter of the year
and more than 9 percent over the 12
months that-began in April 1995.
The first-quarter increase compared with a 1.3 percent average gain
during the previous two years. The
rise was the largest in a single quarter in 16 years.
The survey covers northern lllinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and
Wisconsill .
"The faster rise in land values no
doubt reflects several factors, includ·
. ing very high grain prices and strong
foreign markets for both grains and
pork," the bank said in its "AgLetter" report.
.
The bank WOllld not predict
.
'

Ohio Lottery

.'

Volunteers participating In the annual Ohio
River Sweep Saturday momlng cleaned •"-•
In Middleport, Racine and Reedavllle, In eddltlor! Pqg~~roy !ln~LS~.t:!-91-'~' b!!11!1J JfM.9ra~.rt.:._
- remove dabrla from the river bank In !Idle-,
port with 11elatance ,from Army Reserve

w.

Sergeant Tom Saxton of Parkeraburg, W.Va.
The river sweep Incorporates communltlea
from six states along the Ohio River and Ia
1!1.,~.~- lac:gt.ly, by 9.0r~"te sponaora lnc;ludlng Amirlcan 'Electric Power ind Ashland
Petroleum.

.

ing Yeltsin, whose democratic Commission re~ed.
A runoff was tentatively set for
reforms have also spawned crime and
June
30.
corruption. Zyuganov, who promises
A visibly satisfied Lebed told
a Russia with global might and the ·
Russian
Television his strong perforcontrolled economy of the Soviet era,
mance
was
a personal victory and
got 32 percent, the Central Election
that he wa,uld disclose soon· whether
Yeltsin could count on his · support .
Some Yeltsin aides suggested Lebed
could be the president's eventual successor.
.
The political novice voiced a
desire for a government job that
would "enable me 'to organize the
struggle with crime, to prevent
e&lt;treme' forces from plunging the
country into the depths of bloody
chaos."
. To win the·runoff, hath Yeltsin and
Zyuganov need the _backing of
Lebed's supporters, who gave him a
solid 14 percent of the vote, easily
outdistancing reformist economist .
Grigory Yavlinsky and ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky in the 1(}.
man race.
Yeltsin's strategists rcponedly
Continued on pa~e 3
BORIS YELTSIN

South keyto Dole win

·R iver Sweep volunteers find more
.'· trash than usual along the Ohio_
By The Asaoclated Prill
Volunteers from West Virginia,
Ohio and four other slates had a heavier task tl)an usual during the eighth
annual Ohio River Sweep cleanup
because of flooding earlier this year.
Organizers said the floods washed
up ·plenty of trash for volunteers from
West Virginia, Ohio. Pennsylvania,
Kentucky, Indiana and Dlinois to pick
up·along the river banks Saturday.
"They're finding a lot of larger
debris this year, items like bed frames
lawn furniwre, lawn tables, lawn
chairs. It looks like some of the high
waters carried a lot of the heavier
aebris downstream," sB.id Ben Borda,
~oordinatot in.Cabell County.
: Dawn Jackson, coordinator in
)Vood County. said cleaners found
pieces of a boat dock and part of a
bOat trailer.
• _"I think we're finding more litter
than anything else," she said.
: The event covered i,300 miles of

shoreline, including both sides of the
Ohio along with parts of tributaries
including the Monongahela, Allegheny, Beaver and Youghiogheny rivers.
Since its inception, the project has
helped remove 72,000 tons of debris
from the ban!&lt;s of the Ohio, and the
project continues to grow in scope
each year.
·
Estimates on volunteer turnout,
both locally and regionally, were not
immediately available. Last year,
more than 19,000 volunteers collected more than '13,000 tons of trash in
the six states.
Jackson said about 170 volunteers
took part Saturday in Wood County,
while Borda estimated turnout to be
about 200 in Cabell County. In Kentucky, about I 00 volunteers showed
up in Boyd and Greenup counties,
including Kenzie Jenkins, 7, and her
brother Evan; 4.
"My kids have been coming every
year since they were a year old," said
Scott Jenkins of Ashland, Ky. "It's a

big event for them."
In Catlettsburg, Ky., volunteers.
filled a dozen trash bags in about a
h~lf hour, primarily with styrofoam,
cans, bottles, shoes and'milk jugs.
"The grossest thing I found was
mud," said 7-year-old Steve Meeks .
In Golconda, Ill., 38 voiunteers
found items ranging from paper and
plastic containers tO' part of a tractor
th in might have washed away from a
flooded salvage yard, .said Arlin ·
Rhoads, 64, who organized the Pope
· County effort.
' ·
"I really noticed the trash is not
near as much as it was five, 10 years
ago," he said. "I think if we keep
doing this every year, as long as we
keep the factorieS' from dumping
chemical$ and sludge and using the
river for disposal, I think we can keep
the river in pretty good shape."
All 72 counties along the river
participated in the river sweep, along
with about two dozen corporate sponsors, organizers said.

·Ohio's top health official is caught in
middle of debate over health care rules
'· COLUMBUS (AP)-Ohio's top Plain Dealer. .
1\ealth official appears to be caught in
The most serious differences of
.,.t~e middle of a debate over qualitYopinion centered on the rules govassurance rules for health care.
erning newborn care, pediatric inten: Dr. Peter Somani, director of the sive care and cardiac services, he
~le health department, and his staff said.
~ave been writing rules that are supThe quality-assurance rules are
P.osed to provide minimum levels of especially important because one
care for the hundreds of thousands of year after they are adopted, state law
will allow virtually any hospital or
Patients each rear.
: The stale's medical community doctor to enter nine critical-care
-~nd several lawmakers are at odds,
areas that_previously had been·strict~owever, over how Jough the qualily regulated under'the Cenificate of
, ty of care standards should be and Need prQgram.
1
how far Health Department officials
The areas are solid-organ u:anss1iould be able to go to ensure they plants, bone marrow transplants, stem
are meL
cell harvesting and reinfusion, car!
the proposed rules were diac catheterization, open·heart
presented last week for public com- surgery, obstetric and newbom.care,
ment, criticism was so harsh that pediatric intensive care, operation of
Somani opted not to put them up for linear accelerators a~d i:obalt radiaa vote be'fol'!' a joint legislative com- tion therapy units, and gamma
mittee that must approve the rules.
knives.
.
~ "It's veey obvious 1har there are
"The legislature has ~we don't
substantial differences of opinion," want to prevent anyone~ m provid·
Somani said in an Interview pub- ing these services. We
t a free
lished !;unday in The (CI~veland) market," Somani said. "M mandate

Wben

is to ensure quality."
On one side are hospitals that
already provide certain services and
want stricter rules that would help
keep newcomers out. On the other,
those who have tried to enter a new.
market but been rebuf(ed by the
state's Certificate of Need regulations. They are angling for easier
access.
Ohio Hospital Association President James Castle said whether hospitals like or dislike a certain proposed rule is ''all in the eye of the
beholder. Not everyone is going to be.
happy."
Sttltc Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon,
said Friday that the deregulation of
Ohio's medical industry has been her
"greatest nighunare ....
"It really has started a medical
arms rae~." sald Drake, ch~irwoman
of the Health and Human Services
Committee. She said quality-assl!l'ance rules soon will be the onlv safe·
ty protections for Ohioans \:/
I

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ALL SMILES - Robin Dole, left, smiles as she leaves church
with her father, Republican presidential hopeful Bob Dole and his
wife Elizabeth Sunday. After church, Robin took them to an area
hotel for 1 Father's Day brunch. (AP)

By JUDY KEEN
and JUDI HASSON
USA TODAY
Bob Dole headed South last week
to shore up support in the one region
he'd like to be able to take for granted.'
"I really need your help," the
Republican presidential nominee told
a Louisville rally. "Kentucky is one
of .the most important battleground
states in this election ...
Dole says that in every state be
visits. But in Kentucky, as well as
Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and
North l:::arolina, where he visited last
week, the polls are telling Dole how
much he needs to rally support in
what should be GOP territo!)'.
The South may determine
. November's outcome: Twelve Southem states have 155 electoral votes,
more than half the 270 needed to win
the presidency. Dole's strategy for
beating President Clinton assumes he
Continued on page 3

Most Americans favor work, not welfare
By HOWARD GOLDBERG
Associated Preas Writer.
NEW YORK - About half of
Americans say they would pay more
taxes to help put welfare iecipients to
work, an Associated Press poll finds.
About seven in 10 favor a lifetime
limit on welfare payments of five
years to those able to work. Even single mothers should not remain on
welfare for more than two years if
they can work. say 65 percent, up
from 47 percent in an AP poll taken
less than three years ago~
This increasingly tough view of
welfare is tempered with some generosity: 48 percent favor an increase
in their own taxtls to pay for job pro,
grains for welfare recipients, compared with 49 percent who are
opposed. ·
Such a tax increase is not on the
agenda in thi9 election year, but "!elfare overhaul has become a presidential campaign issue. President
Clinton, elected on a promise "to end
welfare as we know it," has vetoed
two Republican plans he criticized as
stripping away a safety net from the
poor.
While agreement on a national
plan eludes them, Glinton rival Bob
Dole and congressional Republicans
all have praised Wisconsin's effort to
tum welfare into a work program.
There would be a two-year limit, or
five-year lifetime limit, for receiving
benefits_. But the state would help pay
for job training and placement, child.

~

care, health care and transportation .
An overwhelming majority in the
AP poll thinks government must
provide programs to help low-income
parents on welfare find or keep jobs.

Support is highest for job training, 76
percent; tax breaks to businesses
that create jobs in poor neighbor-·
hoods, 71 percent; and child care, 67
percent.

A ssoc iated Press Po l l

·q

Americans embrace work-not-welfare
a Do,.... thillk lhe_govtnurtlnlsh011l4 cut off a slagle mothu's wtf{~~n
• btntjils 4/ler two yean If she rofam to /IJke aft&gt;b, or do yoro tlolllltiY
w•lfan benefrJs should conlinrutiU lo11g IU she hils tltll4nn lo s"''PfJrl?
July 1993

June 1996
.Cut off

Continue

benefits

-bsnents
on
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If a wolfiiUI wltlt
• a tluldll on wel-

and'"'
anolh&lt;rl~~~'•
baby,
should""'

her ben•fils lncreas•, d•crtiUe or day the samt7
Increase

No answer a%

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Worold yofl'/aror '
• or opp~• 1111 In· · .
..
ctWUt "'you
own taus to fHl1forjob
,..,,..,.. to put wtlf~~n

Wollld you.favor
• or oppo11 aUf•·

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timtllmlt of
yean "" wel/lll't fMJ· .

ment1 to tl,or~ wlro art
ab/lto worlc7
Favor

Oppose . Favor

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No answerS%

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; No MSIIWif 4%

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Commental}'

OHIO vVeil ther
'l'atldly, JUDe 18

•

Aco:uWeahe,.e forecast for

The Daily Sentinel FDie muzzles Katsanos for his testimony:
'EstUI'isfrd in 1948

By Jeok Andlnlon
encllll*n' Bln:atlln

111 Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-llt2-Z1 58 • Fu: tl2-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
G.neral Mll\8gtl'

He is t.ck at his old job 11 the
based 011 his conversations with· Federal Deposit Iosurancc Corp.,
WASHINGTON - Some aovem- repOl'leu)."
which he temporarily left in 1989to
ment officials may face lepl trouble
Katsanos added: " (Logue-Kinder) handle the press frenzy swroundiag
for allegedly lyinJ about Whitewater.
the S&amp;L bailout. After six years of
But Sieve Katsanos' problem appears
Jack Anderson sorting through the debacle of lhe
to be that he told the truth.
1980!1, the KfC cloSed its doors last
Katsanos had a cameo role in the
Snd
year, which forced the FDIC to
Whitewater investigation as lhe for••'cha•/
B''ns••ln
absorb more than 2,300 former
mer chiefspokcstnan for the Resoluml1
v
''
IV
employees.
·
tion Trust Corp. The spotlight was
FDIC Chairman Ricki Helfer
thrown on this career civil .servant also instructed me to call Lisa Caputo made it known ttirough a top deputy
when he testified in August 1994 (Mrs. Clinton's press secretary) at lhe that Katsanos' splashy Whitewater
about Clinton administmtion efforts White House to di.scuss (Washington testimony would be a cosdy career
to undermine the independence of the Post reporter) Sue Schmidt's interest move. Althoug!l he earns $122.000 as
RTC, which was probing Ml!llison in Hillary Clinton. She gave me deputy din~Ctor of the FDIC's office
Guaranty Savings &amp; Loan. The Caputo's phone nulnber and said it of corporate communications -- and
Arkalisas thrift w~ owned by Jim would be good to keep her over lhe last decade has received
and Susan McDougal, recently con- informed."
numerous citations and cash awards
victed former business panners of · Katsanos, whose veracity was ·- Katsanos was given orders not to
Bill and Hillary Clinton.
never questioned, not only complied talk to the press about FDIC busi~,
Typical of Katsanos ' testimony butlaterconfessedtofearingreprisals and .if n~ssary, to refer calls to a
Was hl·s recollecu·on of an October 1'f he d'dn
1 ' I. When the Senate Bank- junior member of his office. He was
1993 call .from Treasury's ass1'stant mg
· c omm1ttee
·
be gan mvestigaung
·
· ·
· ped o f h1s
· staff and superalso stnp
secretary for public affairs, Joan Madison's collapse in 1994, Sen. visory (unctions.
Logue-Kinder, who "wanted a 'heads R~rt Bennett, R-Utah, began by
In lhe meantime, a new White
up' on reporters' queries·concerning telling Katsanos: "I'm going to make House-apptovc!d spokesman was '"v.
...
lhe Rose Law Fl·rm and Hillary Clt"n-· you the star ,.or a· little while."
en the job of communications direc·
ton, but s.uggested they not be idenN
early two years later, Katsanos is. tor.
tified in.the Early Bird (a daily sum- less a star than a marked man.
Katsanos has been assigned most;
r--:-~::-~-~-CD
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IS~ND..,

By

.!lr

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

IIIMY of stories Kalunoa 1111ticipeled

MARGARET LEHEW

·Controllw

Foreign companies
boost Ohio economy

ByPAULSOUHRADA
.
AaiOCIMecl Preu Writer
COLUMBUS~ While employing a fraction of Ohio's labor force,
foreign companies arc making !heir mark on lhe state's economy.
Foreign-owned corporations from at least 20 countries employ more
than lii ,OOOOhioans- of the 5.4 million with jobs -at 515 plants acro$s
the stale, according to a new repon released by the Ohio Department of Com- ·
rnerce:
11le depanrnent is recruiting foreign companies because lhey invest
heavily in new buildings and equipment and stick around for the long haul,
said Steve Kelley, senior economist.
"A large part ofP.e investment (in Ohio) has been in new assets,"
Kelley added.
'That's largely ~ause of the competitive nature of the U.S. mlr·
ket. said Roberto Garcia; an Ohio State University ·management professor
who specializes in international business.
. ·
·
" If you're going to set up an operation here, where the labor costs
are high, you have to bring lhe latest technology with you," Gareia said.
·
And that means the jobs created tend to be higher-paying and higher-skilled.
·
,
,
·
More than 80 percent of lhe foreign-owned companies in Ohio arc.
Japanese, British. German and Canadian; with Honda of Ainerica Manufacturing Inc. in Marysville topping the list with about I 0,000 workers. '
But even Sll)all companies, such as Basic Grain Products ·lnc. and .
Procomp USA Inc., from small countries -'- Barbados and Himgary, respectively -· have found a home in Ohio.
.
Basic Grain, which paclcages rice cakes under a number of national labels, was lured to Coldwater by an aggressive sales job from lOcal wid
state.oftieials, said Shirley Koesters, president. · ·
•
·
.
Th~ company, which has about 85 employees in the rural, western
Ohio community, may expand its operations the ~tate and also has a plant
in Vancouver, British Columbia.
, ·
.
· Garcia predicted that Ohio will continue to be on the expansion lists
of a.lot of foreign corpomtions.
.
·
Its main asset is itS location,.along Interstates 15 and 70, with easy
access to southern markets and the East Coast; he said. .
. , And as companies such as Honila expand, suppliers will move in
to serve lhem. · ·
·
· ·
· "One of the easiest things for Toreign:companies to do is to bring
'
By Nat Hentoff
those Arab nations that give both
i~ the suppliers that are already serving.them in lhe home countries,':he said.
·(~~heard the phmse "Tell it like political and financial suppon to the
Kelley,~aid 60 to 80 foreign companies have invested in Ohio in
it is". jn lhe 1960s from black civil atrocities tharremain a way of life in
each of the past two years.
·
rights travelers. Carrying on !hat. Mauritania and Sudan.'~
"We're becoming more g,lobal," he said.
legacy 30 years later is a young black
journalist, Sam Cotton, ·wbo ·lias been
NstHentoff
instrUmental in hying to bring the
news of the enslavement of blacks - in Sudan and Maurita~ia -- to both
Cotton has long been dismayed at
lhe black and ·white media in 'this the indifference of most blacks in
By The Auoclatecl Prn1
countiy.
CongreS. -- Donald Payne, 0-N.J.;
Today is Monday, June 17, the I 69th day of 1996. There are 197 days
Most Americans are still unaware, being one of the exceptions -- to the
left in the year.
however, that actual chattel slavery - undeniable grimly documented facts,
Today's Highlight in History:
Qn June 17, 1972, President Nixon's eventual downfall began with the - tbc buying ·and selling of human by an array of human rights organiarrest of five burglars inside Democmtic national headquarters in Washington .beings --did not end in the 19th cen- zations, that huge numbers of
tury. While "60 Minutes,·: "Night- African~ have, received life sentences
D.C.'s Watergate complex.
Qn this date:
line" and other adult television pro- by' their masters. Also, Cotton points
In 1775, .the Revolutionary War Battle of Bunker Hill took place near grams have told Cotton they are inter- out that "lhe one-time chairman of
ested in this dark story, Cotton lias• the Congressional Black Caucus, farBoston.
In 1789, the Third Estate in France declared itself a,national assembly, mainly been abl~ !o bring his videos mer representative Mervyn Dymally;
to some local stabons.
• 0-Calif.. recently testified before
and undertook to frame a constitution.
Recently, he went undercover in Congress that slavery no longer exists
· In 1856, in Philadelphia, the Republican Pany opened its first convenArab-dominated Ma~riUmia . and in Mauritani.a. Dymally is a lobbyist
tion.
b-:ought back VIdeos of mtervtews for tlie Ma~~r~tanian governme11t, paid
l~ 181!S, the Statue of Liberty arrived in New York City aboard lhe French
With escaped slaves. Cotton, a soft- $120,0()0 for his services."
ship "lsere."
"Where are our leaders?" Cotton
In 1928, Amelia Earhan embarked on a 1rans-Atlantic flight from New- spoken inlellectlfal, is braver ·than
most reponers I've known. Having said to me in a recent conversation.
foundland to Wales - the first by a woman.
In 1940, France asked Germany for terms of surrender in World War U. survived Mauritania, he has earned And they are absent not only in·Cimthe enmity in this countiy of the gress.
In 1944, the republic of Iceland was established.
·
.
Cotton is more encoumged by
In 1963, the U.S. Supreme Coun struck down rules requiring the recita- Nation of l~lam.
In an antcle he wrote thts month what he sees as a rising awareness of
tion of the Lord's Prayer or reading of Biblical verses in public schools.
for the !'few York Post, "The Silence slavery in Africa by blacks in Chicaon African Slavery," Cotton cited go, Milwaukee; Detroit and Atlanta.
"blacks of silence who refuse to Cotton's videos and articles have
acknowledge the reality of African been circulating, and he himself is on
slavery:" Among them, "Louis Far- the road-- like the freedom riders in
rakhan, locked in the embmce of the South decades ago.

J

Today in.history.

Berry's World

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JONES&amp;
SON.
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•IColumbusle1•

W.VA. .

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Soulheastem Ohio
Today... Mostly sunny. A chance of
· showers and thunderstorms this afternoon. High in the upper 80s to lower 90s. Light 11nd variable wind.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
· Tonight...Mostly clear. Low in
the mid 60s. Calm wind.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. A chance
of-showers and thunderstorms in the
afler~oon . . High in the upper 80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

Conlinued from page l
arranged a meeting at the Krelmin
loday between the president and
Lebed, wh.o could possibly be·offered
the defense ministry or a job as
deputy prime minister with conlrdl of
all security forces .
Yelstin aide Alexander Shokhin
suggested that Lebed could get a job

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vania Avenue is open to vehicular ·
He has· introduced a ,;;solution
traffic." He also said: "The only calling upon Bill Clinton to order'"'
thing that is preventing the terrqrist Pennsylvani~ Avenue reopened. He · 1.:
or extJ;emist from lll(junting an attack wrote an article for the Washington ""'
like in O~lahoma is the lack of Pon in which he thundered: ' "We -~ :
access."
must not allow fear to claim the vic, :0• 11 :
Oh pshaw, says Rod Grams, who tory. Dismantle the barricades, Mr. ~ l
clearly learned a lot about protecting President, and may the souls of the
~presidents during his years as a. patriots who founded this nation in •.,tee vee anchorman. The closed f~om's name take pity ori us·if we ,,;) .
avenue; he says, vo;n•,much bOthers ~on't." '.
.. .
. . :· . ... , .
tourists fiom MiD11es~ll!, w.ho do not
· •
·
.,, ·
like io see con'irete barricades.on lhe
And one daY, he stoqd ~fon;. the ·,..'
street in front of tile Executive Man- White Hbui!C ;in drizzling ·rajn and """~ 1
sion. He haS gra&amp;p¢ ~'mane(by"the · gestured at the barriers blockmg the ,..., 1
throat and wrestled it ~o the groun~, tm!fic. ~ttinc t.o use lhe experJi5e 1\e
I
and he ap~ determmed to ·hogbe gamed from hts years as a leevee · j
it before he lets it ~P·
· anchqrman, he thoughtfully aleited , 1
His home-state Minneapolis Star- . photographers and camemmen 5o ·~
Tribune is so impressed with Ills per- . this dramati~ moment could ~ pre- · · •
formance that it has compared "lhe served for h1story,
• ,1 1
strcet·ftghtin' senaior" to Broadway
.
,
,
•, 1
.1oe Nunath. "Now, we lJave Penn•
Ja.p• S~ Ia a ~lcattd
Jylvania Avenue Rod Grams," lhe wtltet for N4IWI(IIIper EnlerpNe ,. •, i
A'-...L...a...
.., •, .
newspaper reported.
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Neva R. Nicholson, 81 , New Lima Road, Rutland, died Friday, June 14,
1996 in Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus, following a brief illness.
Born Aug. II , 1914 in Meigs County, she was lhe daughler of the late
John E. and Estella Caster Radekin . She was a homemaker.
A 1931 graduate of Coltimbia High School, she was a member of the
Dexter'Church of Christ, the Star Garden Club, lhe Rutland Garden Club,
Harrisonville Chapter 255 of the Order of the Eastern Star, and Star Grange
Chapter 778.
Surviving are a son, Ronald E. Nicholson of Hilliard; a grandson·, John
Ray Nicholson ofColtlmbus; and two great-grandchildren: John Ray Nicholson, Jr. and Counney Brooke Nicholson, both of Columbus.She was prec:eded in death by her husband, James W. Nicholson, in 1977;
a brolher, George Alben Radekin; and a sister, Nellie R. Vale.
Services will be Wednesday, 2 p.m.•at.the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with Roger Watson officiating. Burial will follow in the White Oak •;
Cemetery, Harrisonville.
·
:
Friends may call the funeml home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Tues- :
day. Eastern Star services will be held at the funeral home Tuesday at 7:30 ,
p.m.
.
J
In lieu of flowers, the fam ily asks that donations be made to the Star •
Gmnge Building Fund, c/o Opal Dyer, 33325 Jessie Creek Road, Bidwell,
4561 4.

:..

--Local

WILKESVILLE - The seaiJ'h for a Jackson County man ended Saturday afternoon when his body turned up just south of Ponn 's Bridge in
Vinton County. .
·
Friends of Todd Grant, 25, Wellston, reponed on June 8 that he had
"specially create.d for him."
.- apparently drowned after attempting to swim across the water.
Zyuganov, who has long had his
The week-long search was hamP.,red by swollen creek conditions and
eye on Lel)ed, moved quickly to try
mudlfy waters. Water measured 5 to I 5 feet above normal on Friday.
to secure his support. Communist ally
Gallia County Sheriff James D. Taylor volunteered manual labor in the
Mikhail Lapshin, head of the Agrarsearch for the past couple days.
ian Party, said Zyuganov would offer
Vinton County Sheriff Don Peters contacted Taylor last week due to
the gruff ex-general the prime minhis knowledge in water activities .
.
.
ister's job in the event of a CommuThe body has been sent to the Fmnklin County Coroner's Office for
nfst victory in the runoff. . ·
an autopsy.

Am Ele Power ..... ._. ......._. .. 40 318
Akzo ...................,••••.•..•.•••• 59 518

Land transfers

County.
By The Associated Preas
DELAWARE - Donnie S. Holly,
Eight people - four of them
motorcyclists - died in weekend 39, of Delaware, when hi~1notorcy ­
1raffic accidents in Ohio, the State cle collided with a pickup truck on
Ohio 37 in Delaware County.
Highway Patrol said 'today: ··
ASHTABULA
Richard
The patrol counted fatalities from
Ziegler, 46, of Ashtabula, a motor6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
cyclist in' a one-vehicle accident on a
The dead:
state route in Ashtabula County.
SUNDAY
HAMILTON-MattA. Scfianey,
ELYRIA - Richard K . Jackson,
57, of Wellington, when his motor- 24, of Oxford, in a two-car accident
cycle collicted with a pickup truck oii on a Butler County road.
FRIDAY NIGHT
Ohio 18 in Lorain County.
ZANESVILLE - Brooklyn P.
WARREN - Pamela S. Vitko,
16, of Farmdale, when her car was Davis, 2, of Zanesville, when hit by
struck by a lrain at ·a crossing in a car on a Zanesville street.
HAMILTON ~ Shawn A.
Trumbull County.
Kennedy,
20, of Middletown, when
SATURDAY
FINDLAY - · Franklin Ferguson his motorcycle crashed on Ohio 4 in
·
Jr., 68, of Fostoria, a pedestrian Butler County.
struck by a car on I-75 in Hancock

Aehland 011 ..........._. .......... 39 318

The following land !ransfers were

ATAT .................................63 1/8

recorded between May 28 and June
3 in the office of Meigs County
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
Deed. Donald E. and Debra M.
Wood, Debra M. and Gregory S.
Woodward to Gregory S. and Debra
M. Woodward, Middleport parcel;
Deed, Kenneth Rhodes to Chad L.
and Randall L. Roberts, Letart lots;
Deelj, Frances Goegleim to Daniel
Goeglein, Kathy Fausnaugh, Amy
Lastin.ger, Salisbury parcels.

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Meigs EMS .logs
11 weekend calls

Bank Ontl ..............-. .......... 35 7/8
Bob Evana ......-....._. .. :...-...14 318

Borg·Y{IITMtr .....................40 112

Champion Ind. _....................... 18
Charming Shop ...........,..61t/16
City Holdlng ....-. ................ 23112
Feder11 Mogui ................... 1B 518

Gannt1H .............................70 1/8
Goodyaar TaR-......:..........48 518
K·mart ............._. ................ 14 1/8
Landa End .... .-.-.....-. ..........23 112
~lmltlld Inc ......-. ... -............21 7/8
Peoples Bancorp............ :......23
Ohio Valley Bank ..............32 112
One Valley .........................33 7/8
Prem Flnl ....... ,_........................14
RockweJI .........................:sa 1/B
floyal Duteh/S~II _.........152 318
Shonay'a.lnc...., ................111/8
Ster Bank .......................--.67 112
Wandv lnt'1. ........:: .........._•.191/4
Worthlngton Ind ............._.20 318
-·~·Stock raporta era the 10:30
a.m. quotae provided by Advast
of Gallipolis.

Reunion scheduled
The family reunion of Eiben and
Della Gillilan will be held Sunday
noon at the Kyger Creek Power
Plant club house. Those attending are
to take a covered dish.
Hollon family reuplon
The E.R. Hollon family reunion

wiU be held June 30 at Star Mill Park
in Racine with dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Bring articles for auction. Friends
welcome.
·
Hill reunion slated
The Hill reunion will be held Sunday with serving ati2 :30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park in Racine.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - Fred
Miller, Racine.
Sunday admissions - Thomas
Frye, Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - none.
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Avenue, Russell Robinson, VMH.
.
Holzer Medic11l Center
gency Medical Servicj: recorded II RACINE
5:01 p.m. Saturday: Yellow Bush
Dlschai'JieS June 14 - Mrs. calls for assistance Saturday and
Road,
Velll'la Winland, treated at the ·
Robert Kuhl and daughter, Henrietta Sunday including two lransfer calls.
.. ..... ._,_ ...
....
scene.
Howard, Arnold Knighi, Virginia Units responding included:
..
REEDSVILLE
,
Hughes.
· ' POMEROY
.
10:54 a.m. Saturday, Joseph A.
The Daily Sentinel
Births - Mr. and 'Mrs .. George
8:51 p.m. Saturday, South Second
(USPS 21 3-9Al
Hamilton, son, Gallipolis: Mr. and Avenue, Rachel Wilson, Pleasant Hammond, VMH.
RUTLAND
·
·
' I! · Mrs. Joseph Saunders, daughter, Gal- Valley Hospital;
. 2:24 ·p.m. Saturday, Rutland
Published eyery lftem(IOn. Monday lhrooiJh ' lipolis.
,
9:39 p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
Friday. II) C..Un S1.. Pomeroy, Ohio, ~y lhe. l '
Di h
J
15
'" ]
Oblo Valley PubHohlna eo-/Oanoe~ 1 ea.
.sc arges une
- ""a ter Rehabilitation Center, Thomas Frye, . Department Store, Colin Pierce, treated at the scene:
•
I'Om•nljr. Ohio. 4m9, Ph. 992-2ll6.'S.C:ond . Perry, Jerry Johnso'n, Harry HenVMH;
12:24
a.m
.
Sunday,
Hutton
Road,
' ' ' " - pild ''~.Ohio.
. dricks, Ida Radacker, Frances Long, · 12:26, a.m. Sunday, RRC, MarMatthew
McElroy,
O'Bieness
MemoM~MbtnThelutotltll&lt;dr..u, and . theOhio
Anna Welch, Mrs. Randall Beegle garet Riegel, Veterans Memorial HosNewtpaper Auocl!llon.
and son.
ri~l Hospital.
pital:
POSTMASTIIR: S.od ......,, correcuooo10
Discharges June lli - Jeremy
. 6:36 a.m. Sunday; RRC. Mary
The Dilly S..uncl, Ill Coun SL. Pomeroy.
Slayton, Mrs. Joseph Saunders and Durst, Holzer Medical Center:
Obio 45769.
daughter, Mrs. George Hamilton pnd
I 0:09 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry
SuJkaiPTION RATES
son .
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
., JyC.rrterorMolor.
Blrtha- Mr. and Mrs. Michael
446·4524
.
f1 ••
:".!i;:;::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i~ Abele, daughter, Wellston; Mr. and ·
I n.IIQAIH MIGHT TUUDAY
One Yeac ....... ,................ ........................$Hl4.00
Mrs.. Jerry Herdman, son, New
Haven, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.' Jon
SINGLE COPY PRICI
McKinniss, daughter, Wellston. ·
Dilly ....................................... ...........~. 35 c....
(Published With permission)
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S•btctiben not deslrina to pay the carr1et .,..Y ·
remit In ldv..oe cUrect to 'llte Dilly Sendnel
0111 ttwee.sht or 12 mondl ball. Cn!ditwill be

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Youth cited in CD. theft
A 17-year-old Meigs County youth was cited tojuvenile court on
a charge of petty tl\eft for the alleged theft of eight compact discs and
a compact disc case Saturday morning.
The items yvere stolen from a pickup truck belonging to Everett Cremeans parked at Riebel's Used Cars in Chester. Deputies were able
to retrieve the ilems after receiving a description of the suspect's car.

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Deputies of tbe Meigs County Sheriffs investigated·three incidents
over the weekend according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Saturday evening , Dale Sinith of Reedsville reported observing
someone slrike his fence; near Reed's Store with a vehicle before leaving the scene .
Alicia Zeigler of Reedsville reported the glass on ber 1982 Chevro. let Chevette was broken Sunday evening. She said she observed a subject running from the scene.
John Hess of Rudand reponed Saturday that sometime Friday someone entered the Believers Fellowship Church and stole a stereo system and speakers.
Soulsby urged anyone with information about the incidents to call
the sheriffs department at 992-337 I.

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Road closing slated

''

Happy Hollow Road (County Road 174) will be closed Tuesday,
from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m., for replacement of culvert pipes. according
to Robert Eason, Meigs County Engineer.
Area motorist are asked to avoid the area until the repairs are completed. ·
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--=======:::;:::-' •.;
ONE
LESS
THING

FOR YOU
• TO
JuGGLE
You've got a lot on your mind. You're building .
your world and your insurance needs are
real. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.
Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longtarm experience, communit,Y presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen . Jult do this one thing,
end leeve th• juggling IAct to us.

Your lllfleJ,11ndent ABelltl
Sel'tlilw Meip CoiUdy Sinee 1868

112-3381
lep&lt;Uefttlng the

Ohio Casualty
@.The
or.m .urComplllliu

.

Oroup

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WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

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Vandalism, theft probed

-Dow.-g
Clillls •••. •sser I••••
11181COINI8t..

Correction

In the Fri!lay edition of The D,aily. Sentinel. Meigs County Commu.wt.re holne c:aqiCr ll!1"rioe II avuilabk,
nity Improvement Corporation
MAILSIJISCRIPTtONS
trustee
Roscoe Mills was incorrectly
1-M&lt;rpc-,
identified as Roscoe Wise in a pho~o ·
1.1-·· ·~-···-························-· ········$27 .30
:16 ,..................................................... "3.82
caption
with the Thppers Plains !
'.2 ~o.'i··;·;·; :M;ipc;;;e/ 1115 ·~ 1; development site pun:hase story. ··
13-................................................. $29.~ ;
'The Daily Sentinel appologizc:s
26 ¥tWkt........... _ ....,..............................IS6.61
52 \MI!Ieb,.""':.......................................$109.72 ! . for the error in lhe story.
,,

An 18-year-old Reedsville man was cited after a one-car accident
on Little Forest Road n·ear Reedsville Saturday.
Brad Yoho lost conlrol of his 1984 Buick after turning ofT of Number 9 Road, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
The car then went into a ditch, receiving light damage.
He was cited on a charge of failure to maintain control of a motorvehicle.

Weekend wrecks kill 8

Stocks

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Man cited in accident

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A Pomeroy man narrowly avoided serious injury or death Saturday afternoon in a farm tractor accident at his farm on Eastman Ridge
Road in Bedford Township.
·
Pearl A. Smith, 39, was dis king Jl ,hill field with a 1968 John Deere
3020 when the tractor reared up qn 45 degree incline, rolling back onto
the disk pinning him underneath, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
·
Smith was pinned. for approximately 10 minutes and reported ·he
was able to free himself by wiggling and squirming in the soft dirt.
An nearby resident saw the overturned tractor and ale~ed the
Chesler Volunteer Fire Department and the Pomeroy Emergency Medical Service squad. Both units were canceled when Smith notified the
sheriffs office that he was out.
The lractor's landing on the disk is credited with saving his life.
He reponed he had gone up the incline three other times.
Smith was transponed ~y a private vehicle to Holzer Medical Center for examination.
·I
. . ·

Wellston man's body found

can carry nine of them.
GOP-led Congress .. Others find
Tl!at should be a good bet in the · Dole's views on issues like abortion
South, which has tilted toward · and gun control less emphatic than
Republicans over the past two they'd like.
decades. Richard Nixon built his
"The South is not locked up for
1974 campaign win on a "Southern anybody," said Merle Black, a politmaiegy" appealing to Southern vot- ical scientist at Atlanta's Emory Uniers' views on race and social issues. versity. "The South certainly leans to
Since then, GOP strength has grown, .the Republicans, but the candidates
winning elections all the way down have to excite the base."
(o state and county office level.
Clinton is ahead in all five SouthBut polls show Dole can't take the . ein states he woli in 1992.: Arkansas,
region's voters for granted. Many of Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana and
the conservative Democrats who Georgia. He also leads in Florida.
helped elect Ronald Reagan and
Clintmi strategists believe he can
George Bush are unhappy with the beat Dole in all those states and in
.
North Carolina, Elizabeth Dole's
horne state.

"

Man escapes injury in accident

Roy E. Rollins

South key...continued froin page 1

. )• e:. ..

....

Extended forecast
Wednesday...A chance of showers
apd thunderstorms. Lows in the lower and mid 60s. Highs in the lower to .
mid 80s.
Roy E ll.ollins, 94, Tuppers Plains, died this morning l.t his residence.
Thursday...A chance of showen Funeral arrangements will be announced later'by the White Funeral Home,
and thunderstorms. Lows in the low- Coolville.
er and mid 60s . Highs in the 80s.
'Friday... A chance of showers and ·
thunderstonns. Lows in the \60s.
Highs in the 80s.

Neva R. Nichols-on

Runoff election~ ..

The Chicago Defender, a .black children·are forcibly lsl~mil:ed, and,;, ,
daily newspaper, reflects a growing all are vulnerable ~o forced labor or• •
concern about African slave.ry. -- a outright sale into slavery."
.
~ ';
concern not yetevident in most of the
This month, National Public. '
white press. In a May editorial about Radio _: usually. penetrating in
Sudan, lhe Defeitder said:·
·
reporting -- ran a largely gentle, even I
"The London-based Amnesty lyrical, three-pan portrait of Minister 1:
International and New York-based Louis Farrakhan. The transcript of · ••
Human Rights · Watch both noted one section cites, in brackets, ''viP-~ ' !!
that the Muslim extremist govern- lin music comes up in the··,back-,: :,
ment of Sudan .., has systematically ground."
· •, :;
repressed its people by using such
The violinist is Louis Famikhan,:; ;
methods as arbilraty arrest, torture and he ~ays, "Music expands
and the killing of civilians.... In breast to tnclude the beauty ofbumalj.' ,•
some instances, supponers of the beings -- all human beings."
. , .; .~
government have ofld abducted
Well. not quite all." NPR did noH :;
their l/8black 3/8 opponents' chi!- mention Farrakhan's warm praise·of l :1
dren" who become theirslaves. "If the .enslavi~g rulers of Sudan.
:! :~
the allegations are 1rue," the Defend•
During his Saviour Day speecb.in· ~ •:
er continued, "this is another exam- Chicago earlier this year, Farrakhari : ;
pie of Black on Black ciime."
spoke of the black Christians and ani-;-. •
Yet another extensive report mists in the South of Sudan: ·
.i ~
.affirming )he truth of these charges .
"In the South, the people are very1• ;
has been released by World Vision, a very, very; very, very. dark. In· thdrJ :
reliefand development organizatio'l North, they look like YC!U qn,d me.~ l :~
that is part of a Christian partnership They speak Arabic." He didn't add;~::
with projects in more than IOOcotin- that those people who "look like you !~ : .
tries. The report, "Sudan: Cry, the · and me" go down South and takel:! :
Divide,d Countiy," tells of the black · black.slavcs.
''f •
people of the Nuba mountains who
Sam Cotton believes the truth will \;; :1'
are:
come out + if enough people, black · •
"Litemlly being 'cleansed' from and white, know what's going on.,
their land and, .if not killl'd, ·forcibly Maybe.
. ·
1~
moved to _'peace camps' where famNat Hentoff is 11 n11tion11lly •
ilies arc sepamted, women arc sub- renowned authority on lhe First,.;.!
jected to re~ted rape and abuse, Amendmentud the rest of lhe Bill.~·
of

".

Tyler Duncun McCI.ellan was stillborn Saturday, June 15, 1996, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was the son of Laura Sue Dartey and Brice McClellan. Wayne, W.Va.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by two brothers. Anthony and
Gregory ; a sister, Karissa; paternal grandparents, Ancil McClellan and Brenda Followay, East Lynn, W.Vq., and Bruce and Sandra Brumfield of Crown
City; maternal grandparents, Cecil and Jo Anna Morris of Gallipolis and
William Daney of Pomeroy ; and several aunts and uncles.
Services are 7:45p.m. Monday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Ho , with
Rev. Ron Lemley officiating. Burial will be Tuesday at the McClellan
ily Cemetery, Wayne, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeml home Mo
from 6-8 p.m.

Today's weather forecast

~.:~

a•-a.ts.

l

Tyler McClellan

_ - - ! - - _ . . . ; . . . __ _ _
,,

1:

.

Edna C. Lott, 92, Belpre, died Saturday, June IS, 1996, at the Arcadia
Nursing Home, Coolville.
Born near R-tsville, daughter of the late Z. Taylor and Mary Baker
Founds, she graduated from Olive-Orange High School, Tuppers Plains, and
received her teaching certificate from Ohio University in Athens. She taught
in Meigs County schools.
She is survived by her sister, Eunice Pullins of Belpre; two grandsons
and one great-grandson ; several ni~s and nephews.
She was preceded io death by her husband, Marion E. Lott; a son, Donald K. Watson; folir sisters-and three brothers.
·
Services will be held Tuesday, I p.m. at the Spencer Funeral Home in
Belpre with the Rev. Roben Sanders officiating. Burial will follow in Mt.
Zion Baptist Church Cemetery in Mineral Wells. W.Va.
Friends may call today from ·3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the ·fun eral home.

Ill&gt;.

·

.

••

Edna C. Lott

f

Road Warrior: Pennsylvania Ave. Rod .
· By Joeeph Spear
.
portion of the avenue in the wake of
One thing an old Washington vet- the April 1995 bombing of the federal
eran like me likes to see is a new guy office building in Oklahoma City. It
come to .town and seize an issue.
would be relatively easy, they said,
Rod Grams, lhe Republican Senator from Minnesota, has done this.
It's unfair to say he is totally new, as
he served a term in the House before for persons of ill intent to drive a
moving to the , Upper Chamber in vehicle loaded with explosive mate1994. Still, that's not inuch training rials right up to the front of the Execfor thC task he.has taken upon liim- utive Mansion and wreak ghastly
self.
·
damage upon the grounds and perRod Grams has become Mr. Penn- haps .to the venemble structure itself
sylvania Avenue.
. and possi~ly to .pi:ople who live iq lhe
ROd ·Grains has determined --· area, such as presidents and !heir
puttinc to use; no doubt, · all the wives and daughten.
.
luiowledge he accumulated in a nine~
Here are lhe exact words or Secret
year stint as a television anchorman Service.:_ Director Eljay Bowron
back in .the Twin Cities - that the before the House Government
Secret Service simply doc$ not know Reform and Oversight Subcommittee
what it is talkins about when it says , a few weeks ago: "If you open Pennthe two blocks of Pennsylvania sylvania Avenue, it's no' a matter of
.Avenue in front of the·White House if (a bornbinc) will occur. It's a mat- '
should remain closed · to vehiculu ter of when this will occur." He also
b11Hic.
.
sat'd: uvaou cant• protect· the White
The Secret Service shut down this· ·House from U j l f bolnb if Pennsyl·

I

ly menial work~ ilicludilll walking
press releases down to the reading
room and sc.ning a clip file. The
spectacle of releptinJ this sbt-fipre,
senior career executive - wbo r.eld-,
ed up to 300 press calls a day at the,
RTC -- hu ranlded agency veterans.
It's unp&lt;eeedented for the No. 2 com-i·
munications official to he muzzled!
and marginalized.
:
Katsanos learned of his fate from!
Leslie Woolley, one oflielfer's top!
deputies who oversees communica-;
lions. Woolley invited KatsiiiiOS t;•
her office for a get-acquainted chatl
late last year.
:
Mter some cordial small talk,!
according to sources; Woolley laid!
dowp the law.
:
"It's going to be better for you if:
your name doesn 't appear in the;
d 'f
1 1 "she
newspaper
an
I you ay ow,
10 ld Katsan0 s "E
ti (H 1~ )
me here thal
er '
·
sees. your name,
itvery
reminds
you were involved in the whole.
Wh'
" Sh f~ d
ttewa~er matter.
~ o ere
some adv1ce: "Stay out of stght, keep.
head d
d1 h
used
your
own an et er get
.
to you being around."
That may never happen. While- :
water w~ apparently a personaltmu•'•
rna for Helfer. .Her nomination to ,,
head the FDIC was held hostage to tio
Whitewater politic~ for .som~ It ::;
months by Sens. Alfonse D' Amato,
R-N.Y., and Lauch Faircloth, · R, ,:1
N.C., because of her friendship with
the Clintons. They argued that she 11
ViiS too clbse· to , the Clintons · to ·~
objectively handle any POl~. inves, i
tigati?n of Madison. Helfer reluc-.
tantly· recused herself from matters=.,
in~olving thC first fl\ffiily. · '"
'1
That recusal ha$ forced: H~Ifer to ,
avoid all contact with the White
'Ho.use. And that lack of interaction-~~·
has caused her to feel a "big loss,", ":
Woolley told Kats8J!OS.
·· ~
Woolley denies ·· ever raising: " '
Whitewater in that conversation. S~ :•1
said her aim was to dmw a distinction u i
between the FDIC and the politically tarnished RTC, with which Kai-: ~.
sanos had become associated in the-;:
media, She said Katsanos is allowe&lt;f~
to take press calls on leftover RTC
business.
·
.
'"~
. .Katsanos told us he "prefers t0 1i7
avoid reflecting on my current •;&lt;}
' "
dt
u tes.
·i':.."l_,
Jack Anderson and Mlcbllel•1 !!
.Blostein are writers for Uniled v•
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
·:m

·'Whe're are our leaders?,;_'

cOnditions and high tempenlures

•.

'

�•
llondey, Jurw17, 1186

The D8.ily Sen

POIMio,• lddllport, Ohio

Reds hand Expos 7·0 defeat

Scoreboard
:

H•••••· Teau, II: WolfJO..et)',
~ a.y. t6: R. M y t n , - - n .

In NL action,

-·-

NLieaders

AL•ndlngs

Padres lose and
Dodgers win to
tie for first place

t::'vart ..............

1
10

II~

21~

a.EVELAND .......43 24
Oli...o..................41 :IS

.621

641

K - Oty ........... JO 39

. 43~

IO'h
14

W11UtWilkTeua .....................41 17 .603
Seanle .................... :16 !0 .54.1
Calilomia............... 34 ll ·""
Olklllld ................. !0 38 .441

4
6~
II

I~
10~

S.turday'IICOI'tl
CLEVELAND 10. New Yort l
Tt:lU 13, BOlton 3
Ddroii 6, Minnnot~; -4
Milwa~kee ll. OatiiDCI 9

\

Blue Jays ·defeat
Angels; Rangers .
and Brewers lose.

Minnaota 4, .Detroit I
New Yort ~.CLEVELAND 4

Seattle 1, Otica&amp;o 6

BaltimD11! 13, Karuu 01y J

ToalcJ&gt;t'•lama

Ookland ((llouinard 0.2) 01 llenoii.IB.

WiWamo ().4~ 7 : 0~ p.m.

MiMelotl (Aldred 2..-) at New York
(Mendoza 1·2), 7 : 3~ p.m.

Tcus ""'lik 9-1) 11 Baltimore (Eric.kaon 3-J), 7:35p.m.
KDJUu Cily (Appier S-6) at Milwa11·
bo IMinutda 3-4). 8:0l p.m.
Oticqo (Fernandet 6-3) ,.r California
(Boskie 7·2), IO:OS p.m. •

Tuesday's 1ama .
Toronlo (Guzman 4-5) al Seaule (Wol·
eotl l-6), 6:3l 'p.m.
Oaklllnd (Wojciec:how•ki .5·4) at [)e.

1roit (Urbani 0.0), 7:05p.m.
·
Bosron (Sele 0.3) a1 CLEVELAND
(MI:Dowell 6-~). 7:0l p.m.
·
Mianesot1 (Radke 4-7) at New York
IR"'"' 4-3), 7:3l p.m.
Teaas (Oliver 5·2) ru Btalrimore (Mer.
cker 3·5), 7:35p.m.
Kanw Clry {Union 2~2) at Milwaukef
(Karl6-3), 8:05p.m. ·
Chicago {Baldwin 6·.1) at California

_,

....._.. .....

- .--

.-,..w-.,.,................

I,.

1

For

I

....

'-···

I

til••• flriherlnformatlon:

=~Oh. -~=--==
.
\

.

~· ·~·

.

-

~--·,··

.·

.

Transactions
Baseball

NL standings
:r-

· Eadtm Dlwision

:w.

Allanta ................, ..41
Montrenl ........ :.\ ..... 38
Florida ................... 33
New York .............. 29
Phil..telphil ...........29

I. b. . Gll

26
29
35
38
38

.612
S67
.485
.433
.433

J

8~

12
12

Centi'IIIDiwlsion
Houllon .................35
St. Louis ................33

3S

.500

-

34 .493
Clli08,10.................. 32 36 .471
Pi«abtqh ..............32 36 .471
CINCIN'NATJ ........26 ~15 .426 .

~

2
2
4~

Wester. DIYblon

Los Angcles ........... 37 32 .l36
San Oiego .............. 37 32 .l36
Colondo ................3~

~I

.

.530

S11.11 FranciiCo .... ~ ...33 :n

.SOO

~

,,.
2

· Saturday's scores
Los Angela 6, Atlanta 2
San Die1o 1. Chi~111o I
Colorodo 4, PhiiAdclpbio 2
Houllon 4, San Franciaco 3
Pi""'"'"" 12. Florida 8

I.

MaJorLtque
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Signed
RHP Edward Korner. Assigned OF Man- "
ny Vasquez and IF Luke Owensbragg to
Hudson Valley of the Ne"w York · Penn
Leaaue.
,

lftmerle~~n Lu1ue

CLEVELAND IN[)IANS :. Signed
LHP Greg Swindell. Desisnared OF
Wayne Kirby for auignment.
KANSAS CITY ROYAUi : Sem Of
Jon Nunnally 10 Omaha of the Americnn
Association. Called up RHP Brian Bevil
fromOmnha.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS : Sen!
RHP AI Reyes to Beloit or the Midwest
Leaaue on 11 rehabilition auignrnent.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Sen! C Mike
Durant to Sal! Lake Cily of the Pacific
Coasll.eague.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Recalled
IF Tony Batittn from Edmonton or the
PCL. Placed 28 Brem Gates on the .ISday disabled lisl.
NMion.~l

Ltape

CHICAGO CUBS: Waived RHP •
Doug Jones for 1he purpose of giving him
his unconditionnl release, Recalled I 8
Brnnl Brown from lowu· of ,lhe Arnericnn
· Auocialion. Purd:~ed lhc cuntroct of
RHP Kent Bonenfield -fmm Iowa Signed
CFQuinCy Caner.
.
NEW YORK METS: Annou~~ that
utP Bob MacDonald has cteared wai ven
ond ocapted .on o.uienment to Norfolk. or
the lnterniuional L.eague.

Mon...l6. CINCINNATI l

St. Louis 4, New Yoric 2

Suaday's SCGres
AoridA 4, Pitrsbur&amp;h 2
Los Anselel 3, Atlama 2

CINCINNATI7. Mon...l 0

Sl. Louis 5, New York 4

ChiClJio 8, Sin Dieao 4
Colorado I I, Philadelphia 3
San Francisco 8, Houdon 1

her front·row seat in the seventh center freld on a doubt, steal. Hal
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)
Ro10r inninJ. There wu no rea.:tion from Moms" single made it3-0.
Salkeld pitched a four-hitter for his the crowd as she walked down the
Larkin led off the fifth with t¥s
first career thutout and Reggie aisle, esconed by two employees.
ninth homer and Davis sinJied apin,
Sllllden had tine hits Sunday as the
After she settled in, a few fans endina Cormier's outin1. 4rlcin is 6walked
down to Schott's seat to get for-10 career offlhe left-hinder 8lkl
Cincinnati Reds ended their sixIIIRIC l01ins streak apinst Montre- autographs.
Sanders is 4-for-7.
al with a 7-0 win.
Cincinnati salvaged the. final
Sanders greeted reliever Barry
Salkeld (3-1) allowed two singles game of the series behind Salkeld, a Manuel , with a two-run home!\ his
and two doubles in 87-degree heat. fifth starter who has become adept at third, for a 6-0 lead. Owens added an
He walked one, hit a batter and pitching well after unusually long RBI single in the eighth.
struck out five in his first complete layoffs. Salkeld is 2-1 in his last four
Notes: Salkeld had never gone ·
111me in 22 major·league starts.
starts, made on 17, 14, six and six more than seven innings in his
The Reds scored three runs in the diys' rest.
career. ... The Expos were shanfirst
inning off Rheal Cormier (3·4),
Cormier has had most of his prob- handed for a third consecutive game.
MEL ALLEN
who struggled through his s!lonest lems in the first inning this season, David Segui and ClifT Floyd susouting since April II. Barry Larkin and the trend continued Sunday. The tained leg injuries in the series-openand Sande11, who was playing his left-bander has given up 15 runs in er Friday night and did not play
second game since returning from a the first innins this season and oppo- again. Sherman Obando, who stilrtdisabling rib cage injury, homered in nents are hiuing .400 (22-for-55) off ed in right, left the game in the eighth
a three-run fifth 10 end the Expos' him in the first.
after appearing to twist his ankle ....
four-game winning streak.
Cormier lasted only four-plus Fletcher's throwing error in the first
It was the first time the Reds have innings, failing to go six innings for ended a streak of 36 errorless innings
beaten the Expos since the season the first time in his last eight starts. by the Expos. They went 81 innings
GREENWICH. Conn. (AP) opener. Montreal is 6-2 against He allowed five runs on eight hits without an error from May 22 tp
The Voice of the Yankees has been
Cincinnati this season and 23-9 and three walks.
June I. ... The Reds introduced sevsilenced.
.
Eric Owens opened the first with eral more promotions Sunday in an
Mel Allen, whose lilting Alabama against the NL Central.
For the first time since stepping a single and scored on Eric Davis'
attempt to crea.te fan excitement.
drawl became one qf the great voic- .
Wednesday
as
the
Reds'
chief
two-out
single.
Sanders
followed
down
had opposed promotions, but
Schou
es of baseball broadcasting, died
with
a
single,
and
Davis
scored
when
executive,
owner
Marge
Schott
. no longer has say in day-to-day matSunday at home. He was 83. .
A family member, who asked not attended the game and went down to catcher Darrin Fletcher threw iQto ters.
to be identified, confirmed the death,
and said Allen had been ill for some
time with an undisclokd condition.
Allen had open heart surgery seven
years ago. ·
"Mel Allen meant as much to By TOM WITHERS
game that showcased the clubs' from the get go." Torre said. "We
Yankee tradiJion as legends like
almost took him out after the first
NEW YORK (AP)- The televi- varying styles.
.
Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio and Man- sion in New York manager Joe
The Indians hit the long ball , but inning. He struggled and didn't have
tle,". team owner George Steinbren- Tdrn;;s office was tuned in to the didn't execute in clutch situations, his besi stuff but he fought his wa~
ner said. "He was the voice of the U.S. Open. An appropriate selection, while the Yankees got solid pi,tching through it."
Yankees ."
.
.
After Cleveland pulled to 5-4 in
since his team had .just played par and played good defense. ·
A broadcaster for 58 years, Allen with the Cleveland Indians.
the
eighth on Omar Vizquel's RBI
"We know we can play on the
announced the World Series and All·
single,
Weueland canle on with run·
The Yankees managed a split of same field as them ," Torre said atier
Star game, college football games the four-game showdown series the Yankees beat the Indians for the ners at firsi and second, and struck
and boxing matches. But his fame between AL divisional leaders Sun- fifth time iri eight games this year. out Julio Francu to end the inning.
carne while doing Yankees games day as Andy Pettine pitched five "We know we have to. pitch to do }Vetleland earned his 18th save.
and, for 17 years, as the voice of the innings for his lith victory and Tino that..If you try to match bat for bat,
Torre called it Wetteland's "best
weekly syndicated show, "This Martinez drove in three runs as New we can't match up. But when we save of the season" and Pettitte was
Week in Baseball ."
York beat Cleveland 5-4.
pitch, it doesn't matter who we just as grateful.
"How about that?" Allen asked
"The bullpen did a terrific job,"
The two clubs, undoubtedly head- play."
so often, and it became his signature ed to the post-season; closed out their
Pettiue
said. "They have been pitchPettitte ( 11-3) joined Cleveland's
. phrase.
·
ing
unbelievably,
and I've been getfour:garne set before 51.180 fans, the Charles Nagy as the American
As a youngster, Allen yearned to biggest non-opening day regul~ League's only 11-game winners. ting' good run support."
make the Hall of Fame as a player, season crowd at Yankee Stadium m Bothered by tightness in his left arm
Martinez helped the Yankees
but he was cut from the University three years.
to a 5-0 lead ,!lgaiilsl Dennis
jump
early, he gave up siK hits and three
of Alabama team. ·
Martinez(S-4)
with a two-run single
They carne out on Father's Day to runs. However, he got superb relief
"As a kid, I woke up every day watch two of baseball's best teams help from Mariano Rivera and John in the first and an RBI base hit in the
for sports," Allen once said. "I was- baule. and they weren't disappoint- Wetteland to close out the Indians. · third. And, Bernie Williams, one of
n't good enough to win a baseball ed despite an eKhaustingly long
. "Pettitte was struggling right the AL's rising stars, went 4-for-5
letter in the tleld at Alabama, so I got
and drove in a run.
·
one by being student manager of the

Mel Allen
dies at 83

Yankees get by Indians 5-4

team .''

And he eventually would make
the Hall of Fame as an announcer,
the only one to cali baseball games
in seven decades.
Originally, Allen . intended to
become a lawyer, not a broadcaster.
He did get his law degree, but he _
never hung out his shingle.
Instead, he went to work in Birm·
ingham , Ala., broadcas'ting football
games - at a salary of just $5 a
game.

Gallipolis Legionnaires drop four games ..
•

The Gallipoljs Post 27 American
Legion baseball team lost all pf its
four week~nd games, which were
played in doubleheaders against
Mason County and Pickerington.
In Saturday's home twinbill
against Mason County, the guests
won 9-1 and 6-1.
In the first game, the West Virginians were led by Jason. King's 4for-4 hitting and Scott Yonker's 2-

for-4 effort. Gallipolis got its only hit
from Moose Clark ( 1-4). The second
game saw MC's Dale Johnson lead '
the guests' charge with a 2-for-3
showing at the plate. Gallipolis was
led by the 2•for-3 hitting of Bert
Craig and Eric Humphreys.
In Sunday's road games against
Pickerington, the hosts won 12-2 and
13-12.

Gallipolis was led by the 1-for-2
hitting pf Craig and Jason Dailey il)
the first game. In the second game,
Gallipolis was led oy 3-for-4 efforts
by Clark and Kevin Edwards and
Dailey's 2-for-4 hitting.
•
Gallipolis (1-6) is scheduled to be
the guest club of Athens Post 23 in'
Friday's allair at Rannow Field in
The Plains.

Today•s,.._
New York (Clark 6-6) a1 Pintburah
· (Lo:liu 0..0), J:OS p.m.

Florida (A.. Leiter tl·'&gt; at SalfFnlftcisco (0. Fernnndel 3·6), 4:0..~ p.m.
San Dieao ~BerJilUUI 3-6) 111 Adanta
(MIIddux S-l), 7.40 p.m.

Loi Anae~s (k . Mi:lrtine;r: 4· 1) 111
Clli""'o (Compbelll-0~ B:Ol p.m.
·
CINCINNATI (lllrVis 1-1)11 Houscon
(Reynolds 8·4), 8:01p.m.
Moatreal (Urbina 3-0) at Colorado
(Freeman 4-3). 9:01p.m.

-

•'

Tuesday'sgames ·
Los Ansetes (Valdes 7-4)'" Chi.,.o
(Telemaoo J-2), 2:20p.m.
Florida (Weathen 2-1) at San Fn:ancisco (M. Uircr 4-5), 3:3S p.m.

• Yourl'l\IE
Don't Mtss TV Times•••
Edition oi . Evei'Y \'feek

New York (Pen~ 1·0 a11'illsburf,h
(Srnilh 4-3~ 7:3l p.m.
San Diego (Hamihon S.)} at AtlantA
(OiawiDC 7-4), NO p.m.
Philodelphia (Femandu 3-4) ot St .
t.o.i• (Osborne !·3), 8:01p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 6-6) 111 Hbus·
ton (Kile 6-5~ 8 : 0~ p.f!'\.

Moatreal (Fo.ssero 6-S) at Colorado
(RekM 2:2). 9:0S p.m.

AL leaders
BAniNG : R. Alomar, Bahimore,
JIJ4: Mo Vau!hn, Boston, :364: E Mlll'linez. Seattle, J62; A. Rodriguez, Seanlt,

.357: Knoblauch, Minnesota, .H7;
Seitr.er. Milwaukee, .JH: Bon•- New
York, .3!17.
RUNS: Griffey, Seattle, 61; E. M11r~
tinez Seou\e, 61: Belle. CLEVELAND.
59; R.. Alomar, Baltimore, 57: Ptlillip.1.
Chicaao. 57; F. Thomal, Chi~aao, S6;
Bnody Andenon. Bokimon:, ~ .
RBI :· F. ThomAI, Chicaso. 70: Mo
Yauahn, 8o1ton, 67 : Belle, CLEVElAND. 66: Buhner. Seanle. 61: Griffey.
Seaule, 60; E. Marlinez.. Seaule, 60:

.

&gt;

treal, 21; Shefftekl, Aorida, 20; Bnawell,
Houston, J9; Hundley, New York, 18;
Bolds, San Franciaco, 18: McGriff, At·
Janta. 18.
STOLEN BASES: McRae, Chicago,
22; DeShields, l01 ADJCICI, 20 ; E.
Youna. ColoJado, 19; Morondini ,
Pbiladelphia. 19; L. Johnson, New York,
'19: R. Heodet.oD, Son Dieao . 17: B.L
Hunter, Houston, 16.
,
PITCHING (9 dec:isions): Smoltz, At
lanta. 13-1•.929, 2J6; Grace, Philadclpllia, 7-2:, .778, J.49; A~by, Snn Diego.
7-2, .178, 2.~8; Hamihon, San Diego, 8-3,
.727. 4.29: Neoale. Piusburgh. 8-3 . •727,
3.34: 8. JorM:J, New York, 6-3, .667. 4. ~6:
Reynolds, Hou11on, 8-4 .. 667, 3.92; ~.J.
Martinez. Momreal, 6-3, .667, J.l4; Ruz,
Coklrndo, &amp;.4, .667, 5.28.
STRIKEOUTS: Smolb., Atlanta, 125;
P.J. Moaninez.. Mont~al , 101; Nome, Los
Anaeles.. 98; Kilc, Houston, 92 ; Re~nolds,
Houston, 91 ; Stott~myre, St. Louts, 91;
FasRtO, Monc~al , 82.
SAVES: Todd Worrell. Los Anaelel,
20; J. Brantley, CINCINNATI. 16; BOlt~·
leo, Philodelphia. 15; Beck ..San Francts·
co, 1-~; Nen. Aorida, 14; To.Jonc~ . Houstoo, 13; Franco. New York. ll.

(IInley 8-'ll. IO:Ol p.m..

I

...........
....,_._
- .. u..._.

Kak.o, Atlanta. 21 ; H. Rodriau~ Mon-

Ooklaad tO, Mllwoukee 9
Toron1o 6. California 4

I

..
.

Sunday's scores

Boston 10. Tew 9

1

.

...... 19.
.
TRIPLES: L lolu!.,., New York. II :
Morandiai, Philadelphia, S; DeShields,
lol An&amp;elel, 5; Vizcaino, New Xork, 5;
Grissom. Adanla. ~;Finley, San DicJO, 4:
L Walker, Cokddo, 4; Burts, Colondo,
4: Devon White, Florida, 4.
HOME RUNS: Soil, Chita1o. 22;

K..,.. City7, Balli..,. 6 (16)
Seanle s.aucoao 6 (12)

.

Colorado, .139; Grate, Chic.,o, .3)8;
IAJ'ftll, HouiC* , .))7; Bichette. Col·
...... .337; Vizcaino. New Yort, .3M.
RUNS: BoiKIJ, S&amp;a Frutilco, 59:
Burb, Colondo, 58; Bigio, HouSIOft, 56;
Baa well, Hpu11o• , 'S; Biclleue, Col·
ondo, !li5 : Cifuddelanek. Moaueal. Sl:
Chipper Jones. Atlanta, S I: Sheffield,
Florido,H
RBI ; Baawcll. Hou11oa, 65 ; Mau
Willlanu. San FriiW:istO, 61 ; Oalarr.,a.
Col~o. 61 ; H. Rodriauez, M~real ,
60: B"heue, Colora.lo. 60: McGriff, AI·
1an1a. 60: Bondi, Sao Fnncloco, 56.
HITS: Gnodtlelonet. Montteal, 93; L.
Joknaon, New York, 92; Bichette, Cotondo, 91 : sum. C.londo, 81: McGriff,
Allanla, 86; Baa•ell, Hot~llon . U : D.
Bell, lloudon, 84.
DOUBLES: Baswell. Houston, 25:
LansiDJ, Montr~l , 21 ; Bichette, ~ol· ~
.....,, 21 : H. Rodriaueo, No...,., 19, o.
Bell. Hounon, 19: Gntce, Chicaao. 19:
Carreon, San Franeitco, 19: Burks. Cot.

Calir...;,7,T""""o~

In AL action,

\ •.

liA

M i l -............. 32 34 .411~
tdiDIIaDia ......... _, .. l2 34 ,..._,

Bulls beat Sonics
87-75 to capture
fourth ·NBA title

t•'!

2~ ~

C..Dt-

Jones wins U.S.
Open cr-own

.

BATTING: Plana, Los A.OJeiCI,

,3,14; E. You.., C.t.ndo• . 3!1: Bwkl.

29 . s~
- . ................... 29 38 .4)!
T..- .................. :11 40 .412
llerrDit .................... IB, 50 .26$

By MIKE FLAM •.
road losins streak.
Aaaoclated Pren Writer
Gluts 8, Astros 7
Seventy-four days later, the San
Left fielder Barry Bonds kept the
Diego Padres have company atop the game tied when he robbed Houston's
National League West.
. . Rick Wilkins of a home run in the
The Padres, who had been alone 7 · top of the ninth. Mark Carreon won
in first place since the first week of the game in the bottom of the inning
the season, dropped into a tic with when his pinch-hit single off Todd
Los Angeles after their 8-4loss to the Jones scored Robby thompson, who
host Chicago Cubs on Sunday. Saft doubled off Alvin Morman (1-1 ).
. Diego has lost 6 112 games in the
Bonds made a leaping catch
standings since June I.
against the wall to preserve the tie
While the Dodgers defeated when Wilkins hit a shot off Rich
Atlanta 3-2, San Diego lost for the DeLucia (3-2).
12th time in 14 games, one day after
Derek Bell had four hits and
halting an eight-game Josin11 streak. drove in three runs for Houston, but
· "I was hoping the game would was picked off after hilling a leadoff
get us back on track," Padres man- single in the ninth.
ager Bruce Bochy said Sunday. "We
Rockies 11, PhUUes 3
just got sloppy out there."
Host .Colorado pulled within a
The Padres' slump coincides with half-game of the Padres aljd Dodgers
the injury to first baseman Wally by winning its sixth straight as
HOW SWEET IT lSI -steve Jonee cradlll the lrophy attar win'
Joyner, who broke his left thumb Kevin Ritz shut down a depleted
nlng the U.S. Open Sunday In Bloomflald Hille, Mich. Joriee, one ~
breaking up a double play in a game Philadelphia lineup for seven
three goHertl to finish under par, shot a 2-under-jlllr 278 to get the
June 2 against the Philadelphia innings.
win. (AP)
Phillies. He was hitting .321 and
Ritz (8-4) won his .fifth straight
playing.solid defense at the time of decision and had an RBI double to
his injury, and is expected to miss 6- cap a three-run founh inning that
8 weeks.
helped the Rockies roll to their ninth
"He's a key part of our lineup, a win in II games.
key part of our d~fense," third baseVinny Castilla hit his fourth
man Ken Caminiti said after Joyner's homer in six games off Bobby
injury.
MU!IOZ (().2) as Colorado's home run
San Diego's futility is such that streak was extended to II games.
Sunday. So were Tom Watson, ColBy DOUG FERGUSON
Cubs starter Frank Castillo stopped
BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. in Montgomerie and Frank Nobilo:
Canlillab S, Mets 4
his seven-game losing streak and
One day after injuring his hip and (AP)- He didn't shoot a 63 on the Even Greg Norman made a typical
won for only the secon\1 time in 15 · hamstring banging into the right- final day, chip in for birdie from the . charge.
starts this season.
·field wall making a running catch, rough or hit a clutch 4-wood on the
All of them faltered over the linal
Castillo (2-9) allowed two hits in Brian Jordan doubled home two final hole: All Steve Jones had to five holes that are among the toughGOING TO THE HOOP- The Chicago Bulls' Michael Jordan goes
five innings. Terry Shumpert hit a runs as a pinch-hitter in the eighth offer was patience, perseverance, est closers. anywhere, even more
to the hoop and faces the defensive resistance offered by Seattle
solo homer and Ryne Sandberg had inning as host St. Louis rallied after and guts.
frightening with a U.S. Open at
forward Shawn Kemp during the second quarter of Game 6 of the
a two-run double for the Cubs, who wasting a 3-0 lead.
all
the
U.S.
Open
has
ever
That's
stake.
NBA Finals Sunday night in Chicago, where the Bulls' 87-75 victowon for the seventh time in nine
Doug
Henry
(2-2)
allowed
singles
demanded
of
its
champions.
Jones seemed to · be the most
ry eerned them their fourth title In six years. (AP)
games.
to McGee and Tom Pagnozzi in' the
"I don't care how much prepara- unlikely candidate to win the Open.
In other NL games Sunday, San 'eighth before Jordan doubled off tion and how many goals you set or He became the first winner since JerFrancisco beat Houston 8-7, Col- John Franco.
.
,
anything like that," Jones said. "That ry Pate in 1976 to have gone through
orado beat Philadelphia 11-3, St.
Mark Petkovsek (5-0) won would never guarantee a U.S. Open qualifying, clinching a spot after a
Louis beat,the New York Mets 5-4 despite allowing the go-ahead run in
championship. I think there is a lot playoff in the sectional. .
and Florida.beat Pittsburgh 4-2.
the top of the eighth.
of people who can attest to that. I just
And he missed nearly three years
Dodgers 3, Braves 2 ·
Marllas 4, Pirates 2
happened to be at the right place at on the PGA Tour while trying to
Los Angeles moved into a tie for
Devon White of visiting Florida the right time."
.
recover from a severe injury to his
'
first with its seventh win in 1.0 hit a home run estimated at456 feet.
And he brought the perfect game left ring finger that he suffered in a
games, but not before closer Todd The blast in the seventli inning off to an Oakland Hills Country Club . dirt bike accident in the desert in:'
Worrell made the Dodgers worry at Denny Neagle (8-3) ricocheted off that proved to be a grueling .test of November 1991.
Atlanta.
.the fifth-level facade in left field- golf.
Jones wondered whether he
He allowed two singles to begin the 13th·upper-deck'homer in Three
Hitting all but o.ne fairway and would even play again during that
had 19 points, blamed the Sonics' the ninth before the game was halt- Rivers Stadium's 26-year history
By JIM COUR
stumbling just ·once over the tlnal lapse in which he was limited to
CHICAGO (AP) - The nation "turnovers with being a major factor · ed for 34 minutes due to rain. When ·and the second this season.
five holes that doomed so many of spending time with his family, trying ,
knows all about Gary Payton, Shawn in their team's defeat. The Sonics play resumed, he allowed a run to
his challengers, Jones won the 96th
Kevin Brown (5-5) won his third
Kemp and the Seattle SuperSonics had a total of only 23 turnovers in score on a wild pitch but earned his in four decisions, lowering his major U.S. Open on Sunday with a 1- to stay in shape and going to Phoenix ,
Suns games .
'
now.
Games 4 and 5.
league-leading 20th save and league-leading ERA to 2.07 by lim•
under-par 69.
One of those who kept in touch :
It's not just the team that plays in
"We thought we could beat this Atlanta's seventh loss in 10 games. itjng Pittsburgh to one earned run in
His 278 was one of only three was Lehman, calling to make sure he : ·
the Key Arena near The Space Nee- team," Payton said. " But when you
Mike Piazza homered twice off seven innings.
scores under par, and it gave him a was doing OK and ielling !ones to •
dle any more. And it's not just turn the ball over this many tinies, .Jason Schmidt (2-3) and Tom CanThe !'irates had won seven of one-stroke victory over Tom Lehman keep his head up.
:
Cnother of the pretenders who are something we didn't do in our last diolli (5-5) snapped his five-game eight to erose. within two games of and Davis Love 'III, two players who
"Even the last couple of years :
looking up to the Chicago Bulls. The two ga'!'es in Seattle, you're not
had much more experience in pursuit when I came back out here, he just ;
Houston atop the Central.
going to do it." .
~onics are close. .
of their first major championship.
kept telling me to be patient," Jones ·
&lt; They gave the Bulls, who were . "We knew we had to win the
Love, the runner-up at The Mas- said.
:
being called the greatest NBA team rebounding ballle and the turnover
ters in 1995, bogeyed the 17th with
That worked to his advantage on ;
~fall time when they took a 3-0 lead baule," Hawkins said. "Those are
a bad swing and the 18th with a a course that requires nothing · le~s. •
ill tlie Finals, the sc.are of their lives. two big issues. When you lose those, ·
three-pull. Lehman, 'playing in the Playing in the final group with ;
: On Sunday night, the Sonics' time you're going to lose the basketball
final U.S. Open pairing for the sec- Lehman, whom he trailed by one :
l)ln out. After winning Games 4 and game against the Bulls and that's
ond year in a row, bogeyed the last stroke to start the day, Jones waded ;
Sin Seattle, they lost Game 6, 87-75. what happened tonight."
.
hole after hilling his drive into a fair- through eight straight pars on a front :
·~ They're convinced they'll be
The Sonics avoided being swept
way bunker.
.
nine that was the only realistic •
Qack ne~t season. Payton and Kemp and they kept from losing iri Seaule.
"I am a little bit closer than I was chance to make up ground.
·
'
iare still improvin'g and they ' re great They came to the United Center
last year and a lot more disappointWhen Lehman birdied Nos. 7 and ;
j)layers now.
hopeful they could win Game 6.
ed," said Love, considered the best 8, he was 4-under and led Jones by
: " We just dug too big a hole for
Jordan scored 22 points and PipAmerican player never to have won · two strokes.
l
~rselves in the series," Seattle prespen had 17. but they were a coma major.
"Several
times
out
there,
he
gave
·iOent Wally Walker said. "It took us bined . 12-for-36. What killed the By BEN WALKER
ror-10 flpit. ·
·
Lehman is also a candidate for me some words of inspiration from
.awhile to figure it out. But we don't Sonics were Rodman's 19 rebounds, AP Baaeball Writer
In &lt;liher games. Seattle stopped that label. This is the fourth time in the Bible to be courageous and be 4
\flink we're that far away. I think we Karl said.
The &lt;California Angels figured Chicago 7-6. Boston beat TeKas I(). three years he has been ·in the thick
strong, and I tried," Jones said.
I
eim win the championship next sea" I thought we did a pretty good their streak of comeback wins would 9, Oakland outlasted Milwaukee 10- of a major on Sunday.
He
birdied
No.
9,
a
di(licult
par!
Son."
~
job on Michael and Scouie in .the come 10 a close. What they want to 9, Minnesota downed Detroit 4-1
"I thought I played well enough 3, by hitting a 4-iron to wiihin 10 )
:: After losing in the opening round series, but Dennis really hurt us know is when Jim Abboll's slump and Baltimore routed Kansas City .to win," said Lehman, who shot a 71.
feet. He got another stroke closer
(it the playoffs the past two years, again," Karl said.
13-5.
.
will end.
"The bounces didn't go my way."
when a 4().foot puu he was trying to
cl&gt;ach George Karl's club had. a lot
Jordan, the league's MVP, was
· Red Sox 10, Rangers !I
Abboll lost again Sunday as the
It wasn't just Love and Lehman get close on No. I 0 found the bean ~·
10 prove this season. II did.
the series MVP, too. Karl disagreed. Angels fell to the Toronto Blue Jays
Reggie Jefferson hit a three-run that pursued Jones. Former U.S.
·, The Sonics won a franchise-best
"Dennis won two games all by 6-4. California had won seven in homer in the. ninth, lifting Boston Open champion Ernie Els was with- of the hole. Lehman bogeyed for a
two-shot swing.
64 games, swept two-time defending himself," Karl said, referring t9 row, rallying from behind each time. over Texas at Fenway Park.
in three shots of the lead at one point
a}lampion Houston in the West semi- Rodman 's 20-rebound Game 2 perBut even two home runs-by Tim
Mo Vaughn and Jose· Canseco,
ftnals, beat Utah for the Western formance. "We couldn't control Salmon could not save California. who each had four hits, opened the
Conference title an~ .pushel! the him.,
Joe Ca,rter and Ed Sprague hit two, ninth with singles off Mike Henne)lulls and Michael Jordan to six
Detlef Schrempf, who scored 23 run homers off Abbott, and the. man (O,S). After a wild pitch, Jefg)lmes.
· · ·
. points for Seattle, talked about what Angels did not recover.
ferson hit his sixth home run,
:• Jordan and Scottie Pippen won might have been.
Abbott dropped to i -10 ~ith a
Henneman has. blown five save
•
tfteir founh championship of the '90s
"We were so close, " he said, 7.67 ERA. He is winless in eight . opponunities. Despite an 8.06 ERA.
fOr Chicago. Payton and Kemp, "I've been waiting for this for II starts, going 0-6 in that span, after . he's tied for third in the league with
called chokers and losers after being years and this is very disappointing allowing eight hits and five runs in 18 saves.
eliminated by No. 8 seed Denver two · to have it end this way.
5 rtS innings.
·
Canseco hit his 21st homer•.douyears ago and by the Los Angeles
"If we could have won .this one,
Abboll also remained winless in bled and drove in four runs. Vaughn
l:akers last season, weren 't good anything could have happened in
13 home starts since the Angels re- doubled twice, and has reached base
.,
epough to beat Jordan, Pippen and Game 7."
acquired him in a trade with the in eight straight plate appearances.
!;)ennis itodman in Game 6.
In the finals for the first time Chicago White Sox last July 27.
Dave Valle and Damon Buford
Iflat Ill "Oil lrll..lnt"
It wasn't because they didn 'ttry. since ·1979, the Western Conference
"But I did feel (had better com- homered for the Rangers.
1
....... ltlrt .....,
:: After an 8-0 Bulls run in the third champions were the best oflhe rest. mand. a better slider, and threw some
Twins 4, Tigers I
~arter, the Sonics trailed by 17 By winning the last two games in good fastballs on the inside part of
••
IH 10111 t111orrow · Rick Aguilera rei:orded his first
· pomts.
·
Seattle, they showed they were close. the plate," he said. ,
win as a starter since 1989 as MinMore••• MUCH MDIII
• "When you lose, you try to learn
Nate McMillan, the inspirational
"This is just another aspect of nesota defeated Detroit.
fOfiMiti'GIIIndo...!·
"
...e~....,...........~ Pow.rH
lrMmll ComoustiOn
fCom your mistakes," Kemp said leader of the Sonics · two victories in life. Whether I'm 1-10 or I-SO, it · Asuilera (H), the Twins' career
.,
eqltlelltelwltellllemt•t.n Englnetof CWI - Truth arter his IS-point, 14-i'ebound per- Seattle, could play only 10 minutes doesn't define who you are," he said. saves ·teader, llad not lasted more
Tt~Cten- Fawm Ytheln Mall,. ;:- lndustiYI Equip-nent - Etc
t)Jrmance before· fouling out with because of an irritated sciatic nerve
Carter homered for the.third time · than three, innings in his first two
'/
celt !If pi ..,. .u.t•a•eel
•
4!39 to go and Chicago ahead 77-65. caused by a bulging disc in his back. in three games, hitting his 16th outings, and began·the game with a
Gul'lllfttd lOr S.llllcUon by
"ur.of·Youi'Car"
Q.,
MIMI
EICIIII ~i•• E,...,..r!
think I became a. much smarter Pain shot down his left leg lDd he home ruri in the first inning. Sprague 19.50 ERA. He'd also been on the
Thil t1 1M~ FrittiOI'I '' ~
tl
....
USill
..
...
P!ayer during the series. lthmk my wasn 't a factor.
hit his 17th home run for a S-1 le_ad disabled list twice with tendinitis in
lllitfiH• . I I ............... _
.... ..,... tnd lteya Within tnt ...,..,
d&amp;cisions became much beuer. I
"I ~ggravated it in the second in the sixth.
ca•-•r'.. ,......,.._., ._. .. ...., WIU. NOT "FLUIJH.OUT"t
•
his wrist.
tllink this series was really a turning quarter and the pain just kept geuing
Salmon and Chili Davis homered
Mllllllf-~--···"""·--·
Asaillst . Detroit, however, he
p(lint for me."
.
worse," McMillan said. "It's tough in the sixth, marking the ninth time pitched seven innings and allowed
• The Sonics baltled back wtth when you have to play that way."
this season that California has hit only four hits, including a home run
·'
nlne answered points. On a night
The hard-working Kemp was consecutive home runs.
by Chad Cunis. Asuilera struck out
Suglr Run Aahland Station K&amp;D Auto Repair .
wllen thl(y made 20 turnovers, the magnificent in defeat. When he was
J.T. Snow also homered for the seven and walked one.
Pomeroy, Oh. ~ • • • Pomeroy,,Oh. -11112-71187
·Bulls had 14 steals and a 51-35 charged with his sixth foul on Luc . Angels. Darin Erstad, the overall No.
1'bc! Twins prevented the Tise11
~ounding edge, the Sonics couldLongley, Kemp's ~earnmiltcs knew
Rutiand nre &amp; Sales
Dave Stull Engine Repair
I pick in the June 1995 draft, got his from completing their fi11t road
n:t get any closer.
· their chances of forcing a Wednes- first hit in the majors, singling in the sweep since September 1993 at Bal,.
••
.: Hersey Hawkins and Payton, who day night Game 7 were over.
fifth inning for California after an O-· ~ bmore.
Oh. -882-3122
·
.
,,
.

·1

l

•a· ·.............. ~ ...Ml6

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

~mJ '1Jtil~-

..:-------

waukee, as. ~
DOUBLES: E. Mllftlnez. Seanle, 36:

A. RodripCl, Seattle, 2! ; I. ltodriauez,
Texa1. 21 ; John Valemm, 8o1.1on, 20;
Greer. Texas, 19; Oates. Oakland, 19:
Carter, Toronto. 19.
TRWLES; J01e Valefttin, Milwaukee,

~ - Knoblauch·. Minneaota. S: Carter,
T~to, 3; Vlna, Milwaukee:. 4: Guillerl,
Chicqo, 4; 12 R lied with 3.
HOME RUNS: Belle; CLEVELAND.
·, 2$; Brady Andeuon; B~timore, 24; Mo
l
VauJhn, Bolton, 2~: Qpffey, Seanle, 23;
Buh..,, Seadle. 21: caiue&lt;o. Bos1011. 21 :
F. Thomat, Clliea&amp;o, 20.
,
STOLEN BASES: Loltoo, CLEYE·
' LAND. 3!1; T. Goodwin, KllftSII Cily. 27:
'- Vizqur:l Q.EVEI..AND, 11; LiiiiiCh, Mil·
t
wak.ee: 16; Knoblauch, h1innetota, 13; .
,Ni•on. Torot'lt(). 13: 0 , Lewl!· Chlcaao.

;

•

12.

PITCHJNO (9 de,ision,) : Nan .
c.lilorni~

7-2.

• .778, 3.11; Mullina. Balli more, 9-J, .730,
3.13; At ...... C~i&lt;8,IO, 8·3, .727, ..,, , .
r..,..J. Clli"'o. 7-3, .100. 3.to.
•

•
"
:

' STRIKEOUTS: Clemens, Boston ;
114: A. Pc:naudel. Chicqo, 92; Finley,
Califoniia, 90; Muulna, Baldmort, 86;
Appier, Kasu City, 85; Alvarez.. a.ica-

• p.ll;G...,..,T...,.o,74.
'
SAVES: Me~~, a.EYELANil. 22: R.
' ........... tblcaao. ~ Petci~~·· Call·
: lornla. 18: Wetteland, New York, 18:

•

'' .

•' ,.

••

..

1Jtimet,. ~~
~unball
.

Q.£VELAN01 11- 1. .917. l .Jl; Pavlik,
r ..... 9·1, .91l0, ~.OJ ; Pelline. New Yort.

11 -3, .7116. 4.)0; Bookie,

· ~nub~ ~~,·~ .

. \. a Tel•"'stc»n.
Are . 5 8 nd ·
Llstln8 , ._ 1,
.
s ItS,.
Feature : Week
Free ThiS
tnTbe .

Carter, Toronto, 60.
HITS: R. "'"""'· Balrimon:, 98: Mo
Vaulbn. ~on. 96: Molil~. MinnHOta,
92; £. Mllrtlne&amp;, Seanle, f9, F. lbomas,
Clli""'o, 87: Franco, CLEVI!LANO. 81:
Lofton, CLEVELAND, M ; Seilur, Mil·

r

..

taThe~
. mr~..~ ,. ~ •

\ .-.

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�Page I • The Deily SenUnei
. ....

Monday, June 17, 1181

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

The u.tty Se:dlnel• Pllge 7

•.
=!":.-'i.e:£*

:Neglectec! wife salvages decency by withhQiding sex : ·
Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: This ~euer is
~ the men who wonder why their
....hves don' t want sex very often. I'm
.:::Jiied of reading their complaints
""a1lout how ll)ey don't get enough
· and bow unresponsive we are. If
_ men who are griping are anything
like my husband, I can tell them.
. . . We don 't like you turning to us
· ,for sex on weekends, after ignoring

.

us for five days except 10 tell us
what you want'lo eat. We are tired of
watkins on egshells tryin1 to avoid
your wrath because we know too
well that you blow up at us over
nothing •· or, worse yet, over something that has nothing to do will) us.
Do you ever hug or hold us? If
you get clo~ enough to touch us, do
you grab a part of the anatomy that
may have been an erogenous zone in
another lifetime? We are not trying
to punish you by withholding sex .
We're just trying to salvage a shred
of decency. We are suffering, too.
We long to be kissed, caressed and
talked to as if you really care about
us.
And we are not interested in hearing about your fantasies. Here is

ours: YOQ have been nice to us all
day,IJ!d at nieht, you are holdin1 us
close and treating us tenderly, like
you did before we 101 married.
Remember? -· Lansins. Mich.
Dear Lansin1: Your letter is
going to be taped to a zillion bathroom mirrors and placed on a lot of
pillows tonight. Thank you for a
message that too many men need to
bear.
Dear Al\n Landers: I question
your encouragement of the 17 -ye~r­
old prudish nerd from Lons Beach
who decries girls· showing their
panties above their jeans. 1be two of
you seem·to want girls to confonn to
an ambiguous standard of behavior
that doesn't apply to boys. Boys
have long been displaying their

shorts above ' their jeans •• 10111
before Marky Mark
cultural
history with his pants-dropping ict.
Boys are presumably lhe vulaar
sex, 111d sirls are suppo~ to be
ladies. While this silly voaue of
underpants display by either sex is
tack:y, it doesn't call for strict new
rules and a lot of indignation. They
are merely children begging for
attention. They get the attention they
crave when you call them gross and
allow them to think they have
rocked the establishment. -William
Jennings, Los Angeles
Dear William Jennings: Bryan,
perhaps? Your eloquent letter makes
sense. However, didn't we at that
age also try our damdest to "rock
the establishment"?

m.se

"

-~tD~

ColleC-.' ...,_..;g"to. (IC.
Y .T.I . Coin Sllop. 151

If tcen·asm toc18y do nothins !ale ll.lliaJII, early in lhe monilia or , ·
worse lh'ln display a bit of under· 011 a IIIIlCh bour.
wear, we shouldn't complain.
Stay-at-home moms bave it euy.
Dear AM Landers: This is in Next time "A.C.T." wants to comresponse to ''A.C.T. in Houston," plain about how hard her job it. ~
the stay-at-holllll mom who com· should think about bow hard II
plained because her husbfnd w111ted would be to squeeze it all in after S
her to get an outside job. My queslion for her is this: Wbo does she p.1n. •• AlabWa
think does the cooking, tutorina.
Dear AI.: You spoke for • pat
sewing, laundry and bousek:eeping many women today, but instead of
in a home where both parents work? arguing amons yourselves, why
Does sbe think the Keebler elves don't you lean op the men to do
coine in and cook meals, wash more?
clO!hes 111d help with the homework?
No matter how many hours a day s-1 quetdons to Ann Landen,
a woman works outside the home, . c ....ton Syndkale, 5177 W. Cenall these chores still need to be done. tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
For working women, they are done Calif. 90045

·u•a•s

.' .

""Uffi.

·~·: Awards were presented to the fol-

; lowing students for diffe~nt achieve·
" rflents accomplished throughout the
, .y.ear:
Spelling bee trophies, Clay Russell, school winner, and Matthew
Williamson, runner-up.
· · President's education award,
' Mindy O'Dell.
· · Language arts awards: Grade one,
. Jennifer Smith; grade two, Brooke
•&lt;:)'Bryant and Christopher VanReeth;
,'g(ade Jhree, Gran( Arnold; grade
four, Tia Pratt and Stacey Pullins;
grade five, Jon B:alaf and Meghan
,, ijaynes; grade six, Mindy O'Dell .
·, . Math awards: grade one, Jennifer
'Smith; grade two, Brooke O'Bryant,
Christopher VanReeth, and Lula

Webb; grade three, Grant Arnold;
grade four, Nikki Butcher; grade
five, Ashley Fields, Jon Halar, and
Jason Rosier; grade six Mindy
O'Dell.
Science awards: grade three, Ross
Well; grade four, Ben Collins; grade
five, Jon Halar; grade six, Daisy
White.
Social studies awards: grade three,
Grant Arnold; grade four, Tia Pratt;
grade .· five, Jon Halar; grade six,
Mindy O'Dell.
Health awards: grade three, Grant
Arnold; grade four, Ben Collins;
. grade five, Jon Halar; grade six,
Mindy O'Dell.
Other a wards went to Marc Barr,
Jon Halar and Tony Martinez, fifth
graders, for 100 percent on the
U.S.A. Capital and Map test; ;
Matthew Williamson, grade six, ; I00
·percent on the Capital and Map of
Europe test; Christopher VanReeth,

,.

displaying one star were awarded to
Nathan McClure, Hannah Prat~ Cory
Wilson, grade one and Derrik Ran·
dolph, gr.ade four.
Hills Department Store sponsored
a "Miss School; Miss Out" program
for students who missed three days or ·
less of school. Certificates ·were
awarded to Kayla Diddle, Hadley
Everett, Bobbi Lee, Chelsea Manley,
Andy McAngus, Ha 0nah Pratt,
Alisha Barney, · Derek Brickles,
Travis Butcher, Brooke O'Bry,ant,
Sabrina Oldaker, Nathan Stotts,
Christopher Trader. Christopher VanReeth, Grant Arnold, Jeremy. Blackston, April Coppick, Nathan Brickles,
Ben Collins; Wesley Fields, Summer
Folmer, Stacy Pullins, Derrik Randolph, Jessica Roster, Joy Still, Jacob
White, lois Amodio, Jonathan Did. die, Jon Halar, C.J. Haye, Tony Martine.z, Heather Riffle, Cory VanReeth,

coordinator for the activity, Teachers
in the Workplace exposes classroom
educators to the technological
advancements affecting the lives of
their students.
.
"This program provides educators
with the perspective and understanding to continually grow as leaders in
their field of expertise," Taylor said.
After their stint with a local
employer, the teachers then return to
the classroom with a better under·
standing of the local workforce and
its needs. They are challenged to use
this information to help prepare students for the world of work. In addition to too actual shadowing experi·
ence, participants will auend a brief
orientation program and a follow-up
meeting.

Those from Meigs High partiCI·
paling in the program now are John
Bentley, Phi II ips Sporn Plant; A.
Girree Notter, Shell Chemical; and
Becky. Cotterill, Ohio University
College of Business Administration.
Others scheduled to participate in
the program in August are Sue
McGuire, Jim Sheets and Benny
Slawter.
' Goals of the program are to: I)
foster relationships between business/industryllabor and education;
2) acquaint educators with workplace
practices so they can better prepare
students; 3) acquaint area educators
with the high-tech business and

Mrs. Marian Durham hosted the tier this spring.
DOug and Sherri Shamblin of
annual Memorial Day reunion of her
North
Huntingdon, Pa., visited her
children and families.
parents,
Bobby and Bonnie Arnold.
Buddy Edwards · and mother, ·
Mrs.
Louise Eshelman who had .
Louise Eshelman. visited her daugh·
bladder
surgery
and removal of kidter, Nancy Price and l)jlsband, Mike
ney stones is recovering at home.
· ~.q'4 family at Otway.
·
Mrs. Larene Scott and son,
Mrs. Pam King recently had
Georg~.
NelsQnville, were Memorial
surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
· Mr. and Mrs . Franklin Townsend, Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Westerville, were weekend guests of Stanley.
Mr. Ed Marks and son, who lives
Mr. and Mrs, Duane Stanley. The
in
Pennsylvania, recently visited
Townsends lost their home to fire ear·
Buddy Edwards.
,'..' .'In ·an effort to provide our r~ader- .
ship With current news, the Gallipo·
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen·
line! will not acc~pt weddings after
61J'days from the date of the event.
"All club meetings and other news
c

' - Public Notice
'-.NOTICE TO IIIDDERII
- STATE OF OHIO
· c. DEPARTMENT OF
'·'TRANSPORTATION
" Columllllt, Oldo
• OfflCt ol Contnlclla
t...gll Copy Numller IN11
:WNir PRICE CONTRACT
Melling Dllt 5131/11
~ propottlt will bt
ti:¢'!11Pitd lrom 111 prt•
qlijlllfltd blddtrl II tht
Offlet of Conlr1clt, Room
t11 ·of""

Ohio Deplrtmtnl

T l'llntportlllon,
cdlurut, Ollto, unlll10:ao
L m.
Wtdn11ci1y, Junt 21,
1M lor 1m OOimtnla In:
0

'

Mtlgt County, Ohio for
lmprovlnl 11c11on MEG·
1244.71, lett Routt 124 In
Stltm Townthlp, by
repllclng prlllrtiiiCI box
bttmt 111d othtr rtltltd

-'·
"Tht

..,

..

'

•nit-In
.Oouble Hung
· ~nsulated

.. .

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
. Collllllbut, Olllo
Ofllce of Conlnlclt

~CopyNumiMriN10

alec . B.B. heal and 2 ciar rlttached garage. ASKING $44,900

PoMEROY· Union Terrace· 3.945+ acres ol nice building
~ts.' L ,. , ;. ,,
. .
, ASKIIG $1J,IOO
WE NEED umNOSIIF YOiiR READY TO SELL GIVE US
A CALLI WE HAVE PEOPLE FROM OUT OF STATE
LOOKiNG FOR HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTYII SO IF YOUR
READY
'io SELL, WE'RE
READY TO LIST YOUR
..
I
P.ROPERTYI

HENif( ~. CLELANP Jf'............~~ ........,.~...._ .._,81124211
SHERAI &amp;..; 'HART•.•• :..••••••••••- ....................... -~.742-2157

KATHLEE,.
M. CLE~D
..,••. -' • ..................-tlti:J.I111
•
'
•.
'1:
ft84_411aa

OFFICE...................................................

: CHILD'S

CQilc-.
"Tht dltt · 111

for
completion of lhlt work
e11t11 bt tt Itt kHIII In tht
bidding propottl. • Pllnt,
end Spectflcatlona ere on
flit In lht Dtplrtmtnt of
TrlntpOI'IIIIlon.
· JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(I) 10, 17; ZTC,

•

•

ao . .

-·······~

.. rl ~·••it ww.ws

.........

lhlltiO.uuu
·eStn Doan &amp;witdaws

Pous Chapel Cemetaty Tru Stees
Yeenno Set J110e 22, 7:00pm. a1
Potts Chapel Church. 304 -675-

-

992-3838

. 30W72-5881..

.

I1W4NI12G_,_

LDBUIK

WILDIII

II...CB

Ou1llty Work

Competitive Rates
Rea.:
614-992-2524
-Truck:

614-441·7558
511111 mo. pd.

5Kitllnt. 814-387· 1002.

. SCnttd
N•••

Subm~BY------------------~

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

I

SE~ro:

.
P.O. Box 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
The Daily Sentinel

~

· Tliur.-s.t. 1H

,.,.u;.
...1173

llinlloclt Grow Rd

..

BABY Sentinel .

'

~

I

Ohio

l!xt.. 1277 .

-P.,Minutl
Mull bt 11 ,....
TOUOit-T- Aaqu•ed

....

Sttv-u (111) 841 8'34

App11 cat1ons Bemg Accepted J ,.

8 Bob Tail&amp; Shorr Tail Kittens ,

maneni'a Pizza. Pleaaa01 Vllt\ey
Road, Near Buckeye Hjlls.

1 Kittens, 3·8 weeks old, 4·5

ATTENllON:

.

'

'

Applicant• Should Be 18 Or Older, Neal In App•rance, And
Available To Start Work Uis
Week . for PMsonal, ConlidiJI~al
ln18fview Cali Monda~ Onl~ fru448 -8795 $300 I W&amp;ek As " Per

Free Cats: Three Tabby Femakta.
Mole

Qno lobby Mole, One Gold
814-387·1028.

Free kiUens loa good home,7
weeki old, litter trained, 814~992·
5243.

Agreemem To Smrt.

man Shopl\efd /Hulil1 And Moll&gt;
er Ia Black And Tan. Very Cute
And Cuddly, 614-387·1026.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, '
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

'

ventory, 1·800-738·0168

.

""·

FOUND: Female · ~gte in Mason
area. 30H7:J.6148.

3722.

Found: female Boxer, Jacks Rd .

FREE ESTIMATES

Caii81H42·2401 D

949-2168
511&amp;'94 TFN

10.

Compurer Users Needed. Wdrk

Own Hours. 20K To $501&lt; tVr. 1 ·

Pomeroy. c:aH 814-992·9924 toll.

800-348-7188 X 1173.

LOST: Car keya

on June 2 a1

:J04.875-6480.

high

Drivers Needed : New Con tlac1
S18rling late June. For Points In
Eastern Half Of U.S. -Srarting ·Pay
Up To .29c ! Mile Plus VacariDn
Pa~. Etc. Paid EVery Week · AI ·
signed Conven tio nal Tracror s ·
Home Weekends·. Wills Cargo·,
Inc . Stoutsville. Ohio 614· 41lll 1377.

.

LOST: Female Boxer. brindle col·
or, last seen Thursday 816196 on

Midde 9 Mile Rd. Can
758·2820. REWARD!

70

coUecl 304-

Yard Sate

Eam up to $1000's weeld~ s~ffing
env&amp;lopes at tpme. Start now.-no
experienGe, free supplies. lfiiO'r·
marion, no obigali::ln, send SASE:

. Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnhy

Free E•timafel

992·2761or
992·3274 .

Buc:k Oept 77. 32c' q ; , E. CoOr.• 1008, Orlando, FL32803. .

1991 Schull t.tobite Home 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths. KiJc:hen, Dining
l.R .. Hutch, Heat Pump, AC ,
Porch, 112 Acre. Hilltop Drive,
Gallipolis, $25,000 Cash. Or

Easy Work! E:~~:c:ellent Payi ,A• !Iemble Products at Home. -Ci\.11.
Toll Free 1-800 -4 67 -5566 E~T
12170.

-. .

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to run.
Monday edition · 10:00

614-992-4025

H&amp;H ·

Pomeroy,

· TODD BISSELl
ss.oo- per hoar
Moralilg Hoar•

Mlddleporl
&amp; Vlclnhy

MANLEY'S

'Class A COL?

· • CMtr 1 YearTrr Experience?
• Sale Drivi~ Hisrory?

..
• •'\

• Statlfe Woril. History?
• Do "1bu Uve Within 75 Miles Of
Ri~?
• · •
••

.J ~

If The Answer Is YES, Brino. A
Current MVR And Apply Mondi(
Thru Friday8 A.M. -4 P.M . At
"

..

SHONEV'S DIS11ilaUTIOII . ·
CENTER .

Moving sale· Bradbury Rei . beside school, beginning Thursday.
Electric furnace, 8\ler~tning must

located Just 011 1· 17 At Fat~·

plain, WV

·go, 614-992-3187.

-. ~

(Exil 132)

I

EOE

Pt Plea~ot

Full -Time Cook IE •P9rienctd

&amp; Vlclnhy

Working In Full Service Kitchen.

-:=::.....,::-=--:-=.;...::-:~ I Abl e To Read &amp; Follow Recipes.
11 · 7 Shih. Wor·k Every Other
Weekend . Sode• ho Food SerV..

4-Family Mon. Tues &amp; Wed
across trom PDj)lar Heights. look

clo_r.:.;oign:.._"----- - - l

Yard Sale 2316 Jelferson Ave.

ice, Univers.i ty Of Rio Grande
614·245-5660 EOE.
r

PC user~ neep,
ed. $4'S,ooo inc'ome potential:
CaH 1~51 3-43-43 Ext B-9368.

·Salurdal. Monday-Wednesdev. HOME TYPIST.

11'221! .no. pd.

614-742-2193

OoVou Have:

• Monday, old Riverboat Inn near T
Middleport, bunk beds, Tupper WIIre, new clOtheS S 11ea, carpet I
vinyl remranra. kn of misc .

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

llarwlsiiW.

.... ,'

• 401(k) Retirement Plan?

day,edllion 1000..m: Sawrday.

New Location
Mlddleport, Ohio
WHh3 Beds to
Serve You Better.

·'

• Heallh Arid Denrallnsurance?- - ~
'Paid Vacations And Holidays?

All Yard Salet Muat Be Paid In
Advance. Oea&lt;Uine: 1 :ODpm lhe
day before the ad is to run, Sunday ed (1ion· 1:OOpm Friday, Man-

Summer Images

Phone 992·2489

32124 Happy Hollow Ad.
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bri&lt;:kles ·

a.m. Sat-

61~949·2096

,,,,

SAWMILL

·More Home Tme?
• Steadj Parched&lt;?

urday.

~

many metlla.

Are "1bu looki0g For:

Su~ edtlion - 2:00 p.m. Friday.

... •.

a

EXPERIENCED
TRUCK DRIVERS

Wilh $5,000 Down, B14·4at6·4455.

SUMMER
TUTORING

.._ .- ~

Found: ring, vicinity ol Rile Aiel,

school graduation. Key chain has
picture of guardian angel on it

Rooflag &amp;
Block Work

ln~flsl

Certified HVAC Service Tech,
E•periennd Only, 3-5 Year s,
Contact Jim Harmon, 1·800-fte-

$30,000. Owner Financed 11'4 lnt

bltterlel,llpPIIIInc:ee

. · t'

AVON S8 -$15 ! Hr. No MiniinUm
Ofder, No Door To Door, No In-

will children, 814·387·78-47.

..., mo.

. nEE

..

875-2022EXLO!I26H25.

While male Eskimo Spitz, good

Remodeling

HAULING

448-8195.

446·0377.

Gutlerl
Down1pou11
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
'

. '·

Summer Help. Needed, Scholar ships Available. Flexible Sch~ ­
ule, No Experience Necessary,
Call Monday For Interview, 814 -

ATTN: WOMEN tYEN . Earn -:t;x tra Income. Fle~Cible Hoursl S200 $500 Weekly. Call 1 Dar • ·4b7·

Ui)led' Puppiaa, Mother Silver "&amp;
Black German Shepherd, 814·

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

I :·•

STUDENTS:

Free Puppi11; ThrH UaJes And
Three Females. Fa1her It Ge(- .

'

,.

General Help No E•perlepce
Needed, Galla County Firm ~­
ing Enargalic: Individuals Ttf ''ill
Parmanen1 Full· TUne Posi~ots .

Beagle mia puppie1. I4Mtf1 wee!(a
old, 614-985-4120.
,

9-? lots ot teen girls clothes &amp;

•.mise:·

. 80 ·

HO.IIIPIOV.IT
Roofing, Room Addlllone
Siding, Con~. etc.
P.O. lox 220, Bklwet~ Oh.

Public Sale ilnd 'Aucllon

Rick Pear!9n Auction Company,

full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service .
Licensed
18S,Ohlo &amp; Well Virginia, so•·
7~51115 Or
173·5«7.

TFN

Need Direction?
•&amp;:.ow
Buetne,ss ·
F11111ly Matters
Allow Your
Penonel Plychlc to
A11111 You
1·0IJO..N88600

Giveaway

40 ·

H&amp;H
Ho••

8am-8pm

PO"!DEROSI
PRIMmVE
l CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On st. Rt. 331 W. 8 mllH
from llnentwoocl
8rklge, 1 milt from ·
Applt Grove, Ohio. . ·
Eltctrlc hook-up, dump
llltlont, non-portlible

Applicat ions 111e .now being ~ken
lor securil~ officers 1n th4t 'Pl.
Pleasan t area . Training &amp;, Dn1 ~
form s are prov1Cied. Contact Ad ·
vance Secur~ry 304-744 -.l'l91 .~ ~

5752.

Ho-rd L Wrlteeel

1·9G0-9U·8988
Ext. 7907
2.99/mln 18+
T.T. Phone. Req.
Serv·u·
(619).645·8434

Plck·up dliiCarded

All Kinds of Earlh Work

·,

hiking, Oahlng.

.
.
.
L---~-----~-------~

•

Utilities

Rlnt by WMk ,. month.

I

.

Backhoe
Strvlces ,
House Sites and

8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

NAME~S) &amp; AGE---....;.- - - : :

I
,I

Mplllft

Meet your
match

Bulld07.ing and

814-1192-2772

Mon-Fri B-5. 30&lt;·5211·072e.- t-:100

Commence Ave, Hunringlon~V.
25701
.

5224.

..

Trucking·
Umestone

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Wiler, lllrge lola,

I
I
I CITY&amp; S T A T E - - - - - - - - - - - 1

Improving Mellon MEG·7·
22.402, Still Routt 7, by
gredlng lftd p1vtng with

available for RN 'a, HHA'I. Qall

30 Announcements

Chiller, Ohio

Howard Excavatin

537 BRYAN PLACE

America's leading Home Hulth
Co. has an apaning for PEA ·
DIEM ~ PT Opponunitlll '1llao

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Call

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

nHded . Earn money lor Cl'\(,111 -

Free"'t(illens: Three Gold About 2
Monltls Old And One Pale Gold
About 8 Weeks Old 614-387 1026.

(LimeStoneLow Rltel)

Plastic Culver1· Dual wall and Regular 8" lhru 36"
4" S&amp;D . perf, . solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Fie. pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch JS pipe
112" &amp; 3/4'.' C. P.V.C. pipe
1 tn" thru 4'' Sch 40 pipe·
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's lhru 1.000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit .
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Oas plpe ·l" thru 2" - Fillings - Regulalors- Risers
Full assor1ment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittin~' &amp; Walcr fittings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp;. Water SIOragc tanks.

Avon · Represenlatiwn

mas bills at hOrnelat work. 1'- 800-

'

TUppera Plelna, Ohio 45783
114-115-3813 or &amp;1W67-6484

Able

1192·8358 or 304· B82·2e45. Ind .
Rep,

1-800-889-3943

WICKS

PRICE REDUCED. TO SII,OOO

POMEROY· owner want to selll Ranch style home 3
tiedrooms 1 112 baths, Jdtchen applianCes, wuhe.r and dlyer,

~~:::--~--------1

1-lorl~tn:
Mtlgt County, Olllo f~r

Masoo. WV

985.4422

FTH Estimates .

St. Rt. 7

..

. Free EISilmates
Guaranteed results

FAX 773-5881

Dirt• S.nd

I &amp; W PUSIICS Ill SU,..Y

The Baby Sentinel is a Speciitl Section filled ·with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
.
•
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the ,July 19th issue of The Daily
·•'
Sentinal.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size pi~ture plus a $6.00
charge for each photograph. (E~close payment with picture).

'

t.cieauy owned &amp; opera1ad

We will work within your budget

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Owner: Ronnie Jones
367-0266- 1-800-950-3359
••

AVON I All Areas I Shfrtey

woello old. ready 10 go. 30&lt;·675·

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

new

$200-$500 wkly In 't'OUr spare
time. No exp needed. Call. •ow,
open 1 dayo. (407)875-20~xl
052e H21
·0

814·3BB-!127S.

Lie. - 1111. Owner: Rlctt JQIInson

10 IIY

"' Potenr ial leadeJs Serioully In·
ratesrad In Investing Few HCiun
we.-kly In Pan -Time 8UI1Fl'1 ' .
614·.t48-1236.
."

(614) 992-2364

JONES' TREE SERVICE

high school into high-tech industry
and/or pursue advanced education at
the technical or college level.

make moneo;.

patented weight·lon prod\lc t
~7~SMB24~W~. '

742·2246

,
Residential - Commerttal
Rooting = Rubber - Shingles • Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks = Blllhrooms = Kitchens = Siding
35 YNIII EJtperlence
.

(614) 441 -1191
1-800-5 08 -8887
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

. ' ... ' ..
Real Estate Gene111l

'·

Wt!Qht &amp;

Spoon, 3Q4-875-1429.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

15 Yra.

Htlp Wllltld : '

949-3151

~ONSmUCTION

Help Wanted

'·

110

Resldenliel ~

B&amp;B ROOFING ·and

742·3212

Loc:JI iateiiHe company Ia aearcl'!lng for
satellite installers. Muat have depend•
able .work related transportation ~nd
toql •• Starting PaY will bl_trom $600 per
week; Interviews Will be held Wednesday
fro:rl 12~4 pm ,,A~ tl'!t. .$uper. 8 ,Motel
Meeting Room In Gallipolis, OH. Please
ask for Eric or Angle.
"'

'"

Steps ·SIIIra, Railings, PatiO FumHure, Firaplaoe

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

HELP WANTED

r-·.

ScRVICf.S

Pest,Control

Llmfttone • Gnwel

.Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

Public Notice

••m.to

TONY' S PORTABLE WELDING

Guaranteed Safety &amp;

Public Notice

v#ceiO.baclc
u. OhiO.a w..t Vlrglnl8·
Tall Frw 1......a72 15SSI
441 M11

....

Beside rt11J11IO the river.

..

If..,

""" , ., . • -

Industrial• Automotive
New R~dlators • Re-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

SR 338· Apple Grove· Approx. 1 Acre Frontl.ol Fenced In
with a 1984 ~331t: ·Mallard camper. Plci)IC Sheltei Jnd table.
12' x 12' lll!;lrage building. Drilled Well. All Set Up and walling.
ior you to enjoy;\hG S11111D81'11
ASKING $24,900

• Annuities are issued by InSurance
Companies and have substantial
penalties for early withdrawals.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

•

tJf

Racine, Ohio
_
Complete Commetdal &amp;

Ph. 773-8173
108 Pomero Street

'985 4473

'1••

[ t,1PLOYW

Authorized AOA Distributor
• Wlldog Supplies • lnduBirlill G8M8 • Mlldllne Shop
ServlcM • Steel Sales &amp; Flbrlcallon • Repeir Weldng
• Ah.mlnumiSteinless • Toot Dl'¥8fng • Ornamental

.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

0FFIC{992;:2259

3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Oblo 45710

Clll1·100 Ill 4100
Ext. 4193

"No Job Too urge or Too Small"

FREE ESTIMATES

110

Li¥tfy. 814-388 0303

The future IIIIIIIIOdayl

Hema, Planter ~.Trellises &amp; lola ot olh!lr stuflll

liNN EnS

· RemodeiiJig
Stop 6 COinl*"

'

614..fi984011 (t;Oiled)

lrlltOclt

for tmnn 1 11

101111 IISSEll
.CONSTRUCTION

THE DEADLINE BAS BEEN
EXTENDED FOR

SCOTT INSURANCE

l:tMI Pumpe,

""'~""

. ) I '

and love.

1-WA!jTED·S
•r•
10 people .who need 10 lose

and Manufactured Housing

tociiY

5·,

Wanled To Bu~ : Junll Aulai Whh
Or Whhout Uo1ors. Call ~rt)'

D&amp;T
. FuntiCII. All

Good oU

1102.

$3.1111 per min.
Mutlbt ~Y'S·
Serv-u (818)5 8434

-

''

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuilies of
All Kinds
Call for Information:

Wllii,~~:OAJfADOI

81JOCe88

"

SmaJI Splnn•• Pi1no. e•.r;

-.....

CIIJ
with ycu
window •lin for • frM
quoteI

•Complet•

Wonlod To Buy:

They have hilped
mllflons lind fortune,

(No Sunday Calls)

Limited Time Off,-

Zach Davis, Tom Gonzalez, Tiffany
Hall, and Marc Smith. Presented gift
certificates were Christopher Trader,
Stacy Pullins, Nathan Stotts, Summer
Folmer, Joy Still, and Tony Martinez.
The top winner of a radio/cassette
player was Bradley Ramsburg.
The Parmers Bank which is Salisbury Elemenlary's Partne{ in Education awarded !-shirts and McDonald gift certificates to the junior bank
tellers; Bobbie Burson, Mindy
O'Dell, Daisy White, John Witherell,
Zach Glaze, Matthew Williamson.
Citizenship certificates were presented to Faith Dye, Nathan
McClure, Sabrina Oldaker, Christo. pher VanReeth, Elsa Ohlinger, Joshua
Ramey, Nikki Butcher, Tia Prau, Ben
Collins, Ashley Fields, Marc Barr,
CJ. Haye, Jason Rosier, Daisy White,
Mattbew Williamson, Beth Russell, .
and Marc Smith.

11......-..MRT.

change your life.

CHEAPER RATES

l.!!r"'

, 11...-~

........ To ••, , AuiO' I • r.......
A/'lf ~.. 1"·--~.;or

Let a PSYCHIC

UCIII IYDUUUC IEPIII
&amp; UCHIIE SHOP, IIC.

p: ··-.. - . .

-

. :•New ~omes
•Garages

Ml 21112

614-992·7643

iASHAN ROAD' One noor frame home wi1h kitchen, living
room, 2 bedrooms, one bath. electriC heat pu(np with C.A.,
carpet and vinyl noorlng, front porch. sitting on a niCe tot.
·
ASKING $34,1110

dltt
for
PRICE CONTRACT
compltllon of lhlt work . lltlllnl Dill 1/31/11
.
thtll bt • Itt forth In tht
Stlltcl propo11te Will bt
bidding propo111. • Pltnt eectpltd from til Prt•
end S~IIICIIIOnl trt on qUIIIfltd ' blddtrt II iht
flit In tht Dtpartmtnt ol
Tnlnaport8tlon; .
~:::. ~'::.~:::
·• JERRYWRAY of
T I'IJIIIIOI'IIII,
DIRECTOR 01' Coluinbua, Ohio, 111111110:00
TRANSPORTATION . Lm.
(I) 10, 17; ZTC
Wtclnuday, June 21,

I.

!FREE ESTIIIATB)
. v.c~c:: 11
P-OOJ,Otllo

'PORTLAND' Vacant Ground, 4 tots, drilled well and septic.

.

Public Notice

Room Addition• • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.\1\0l I Till-:
BO'\D \1 \1&lt;1\LT'!

I

• ' • t

·ll•rtor a tx11r1or
hllllllll
Allo ColiC! I .. WOIIt

Raallo•

s19500 lnetllled

High Interest Yields
Available

.

articles m the society section must
be submitted within ~0 days of
occurrence. All birthdays must be
.submitted within 42 days of .the
occurrence.
All material submifted·for publication is subject to editing.

for applied learning; 5) help educators prepare students in Tech Prep
curriculum to move directly from

••

,,
~::::::"":·~-:
=~====:;;,~·~·;·~·~··
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

r

J. L 111D0C I, OWNER

l'ew Homn • Vlny' Siding New
Glrlg11 • Replacement Windows.

UYI-IIIICU
614-tll-4110

NEI{V()US

-Harrisonville news-

4·1----News policy

industry in the area through hands-on
experiences; 4) encourage educators
to redesign high school curriculum

•

olllctrlcll 1ft ....

YIIY M""'NI

·s ix·Meigs High Sch~ol teachers to become students in life-long learning
Several teachers in Washington,
· Morgan and Meigs Counties will be
"taking to the classroom this summer
:a5 students in an innovative program
to promote life-long learning.
. _' Eighteen local educators, six
from Meigs High School will partieipate in Teachers in the Workplace, a
-one-day or one-week long, voluntary
·jgb-shadowing experience ip Wash·
jngton, Morgan, and Monroe counties
'lmd Meigs Local.
· These educators will upgrade
their techni cal knowledge and/or
'~lO lls by observing, interacting and
assisting at 20 area business and
industry sites.
According to Judith Taylor, director of outreach programs at Washington State Community College and

...... a.

......... l.t ".....
fer ,...

Jon Kloes, Mick Childs and Randy and Mrs. Dick Fetty and Mr. and Mrs. Linda Midkiff Montgomery, Sher- Hurricane, W.Va.; Fr111k Girolami,
Becker announced a scholarship fund Dale Harrison. Sending greetings man Mills. Kathy Moore Cummins, loveland; Lori Grindley Warner,
had been established to honor the !ale were Daisy Blakeslee,' Dave and · Pat Mullen, Gene Powell, Nancy St. Grove City; Patti Jeffers VanMatre,
Dennis Boggs, a 1_971 graduate who Jeanne. Bowen and George Har· Clair Bums; Peggy Stol)'·Schwab, letart, W.Va.; Marianne Kloes Gat- .
was killed in an auto accident in graves.
Nancy Thompson · Hill, Becky ton, Bellville; Sharon McDaniel
1972. The scholarship committee
Local alumni and their guests Tripleit, Sherrie Turner Might, Kelp, Sumas, Wash.; Eric Pearch,
plans lo • he gin awarding scholar· attending were Don and Bernie Hen- Wilbur Ward, Donna Weber Jenkins, Athens; Phil Porter, New Marshfield;
ships by 1999. Those who would like . nessy Anderson, Tom Anderson, Lee Williams and Jane Wise.
Ellen Rice Brooker, New Philadelto contribute are asked to contact Dave Boyd, Mary BradbUry O'Brien,
Out-of-town alumni and guests phia; Franklin Rizer, Warren; Becky
Mick Childs, 992-6188 or Jon Kloes, Mifk and Twila Clatworthy Childs, were Martha Baker Stinnett, Green- Swindell Hunter. Athens; Juanita
992-3337.
LuAnn Frenc~ Evans, Jane Gilkey back, Tenn.; Randy Becker, San Terrell, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Morton
Attending the celebration were Hawley, Sharon Glaze Stewart, Antonio, .Texas; Mark Brogan, Titus, Barboursville, W.Va.; Rick
several former teachers including Chuck Hannahs, Debbie Harbrecht loudan, N.H.; Eddie Brown, lex- VanMatre, Greenfield; John Warner,
John and Joy Bentley, Kenny Eblin, Ellis, George Hawley, Bill Hensler, inston, Ky.; Stan Coates, North C11n·· Chesapeake; Bob Werry, Rodney;
Jack and Rita Slavin, Martha Green- Tom Hoffner, Becky Houdashelt ton; Bob Couch, Wadsworth; Debbie Jeanette Phillips Wildermuth~ Galaway, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ham Mr. Johnston, Ernie Jones, Jon Kloes, Crow Gilkey, Lancasler; Gary Ellis, loway.

All Colors· SRA.
year were presented to Shauna Clark,
Certificates were awarded to the · Brandon Pearson, Bradl.ey Ramsfollowing students for having an burg, Hollie Richard. Jennifer Smith,
honor roll yearly average: grade crne Charlie Eblin, Andy Games, Bobbi
·Shauna Oark, Faith Dye, Charles lee, Chelsea Manley, Andy MeAn·
Eblin, Andy Garnes, Bobbi lee, gus, Bradley Soulsby, Brook Watson,
Chelsea Manley, Andy McAngus, grade one; Derek Brickles, Ashton
James Morrison, Brandon Pearson, Bush, Travis Butcher, Matthew
Bradley Ramsburg, Honie Richard, Meadows, Brooke O'Bryant, Sabrina
Jennifer Smith, Bradley Soulsby, Oldaker, Christopher VanReeth,
Kristin Trader, Brook Watson, Caidin grade two, Gr1111 Arnold, April CopWilliamson, and Jackie Wilson; grade pick, Ross Well, grade three, Nikki
two Derek Brickles, Ashton Bush, Butcher, grade four, Jon Halar and
Travis Butcher, Matthew Meadows, Meghan Haynes, grade five, Mindy
Brooke O'Bryant, Sabrina Oldaker, O'Dell, grade six.
·
Becky Rader, and Christopher VanHonor roll badges displaying
Reeth; grade four Johnathon Bobb, three stars were awarded to Faith
Nikki Butcher, Ben Collins, Tia Pratt, Dye , James Morrison, Caitlin
Stacy Pullins, grade five Marc Barr, Williamson, grade one; Stacy Pullins,
Jonathan Diddle, Ashley Fields, grade four,
grade six ·Mindy O'D!lll and John Marc Barr, grade five. Badges disWitherell.
playing two stars were awarded to
Honor roll badges displaying four Amanda Smith, grade one. Badges
stars for being on the honor roll all

IISSELLIUILDIIS, INC.

•f'aalll • Utllao•

FREEESTlMAJES
J,la .......... ef

. Salisbury Elementary students recognized -during awards assembly
- Numerous awards were presented
at the annual awards assembly for
' ,;ll!l isbury elemenwy school students
·held recently in the school auditori·

ta.·s
CAlf ana em••a•1CII'I

.P ,IIInl6
- u 1011
- · · - •··

~~Meigs High School class celebrate~ . 25th a-lumni reunion

The Meigs High School class of in his registration.
: :.l971 celebrated its 25th class reunion
The reunion committee awarded a
;ar the MHS gymnasium · May 25, · Mossburg rifle to Ronald Burdeue of
. exactly 25 years to the time and date Point Pleasant. An Ohio River Bear
' 'that they walked down that memo- was won by Mary Bradbury O'Brien.
rable aisle to receive their diplomas. Each class member received a pro·
' ' ~ During the evening those attend- gram filled with memorabilia and
ing ·enjoyed remin iscing, visiting addresses prepared by Sue McGuire's
· .classmates, and listening to music senior computer accounting class at
1
from the era. A door prize of a Meigs Meigs High School .as well as a
. :class of '71 T-shirt was won by Ruth senior picture button prepared by
":··Ann Terrell Spaun. Sharon McDaniel Roger J!irch. AppreCiation was
·''Kelp, of Sumas, Wash. won a mug for ·extended to the reunion committee
- ·traveling.the farthest and Ernie Jones and to Fenton Taylor, Birch and
·: 6f Langsvilie was presented a Meigs McGuire.
During the evening class members
·hill for being the first alumni to send

5

Mna.O ";

•••

90

3114·
Wanted to Buv

Clean Late M.odei Can Or
Trucks, 19_90 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easl·
em AlrlnJe, Galipoio.

GENIUL

. COIIUCIOU

J I D's Auto Parrs. Bu~lno · sel-

Skiing • VInyl
Aluminum • Roofing
New•Rtpalr

vage vehid es. Selling parts. 304·

773-5033•

Paying Top Dollar For Junk Cars.
Trucks, &amp; Runni ng Vehicles To

Gutters a

0..., 814......8575.

DownipOUtl

Free Elllmltel

Top cfolltr· antiquaa, furni ture,
glUI, chino, CIOCIII, gold, 1~..,,

982-34107

coine, watchea, e111181. Oaby
-.81~74Cl .

11:111111-

\

••

•

Immediate Opening For Nurai!!.a.
Supenoisor. Cheshire Area. Home ·
Heallh Experience Requirvd7Medicare Reimbursement And
Nursing Supervisory Experie,.....
Prelarred. Posilion R&amp;quires Sell
Starter. Call Pioneer Heal!h AI 1.

80cH•2-4H1 . All! For Ruslj.

•

Immediate openings lor pan time

AN 'S and LPN'S; all oltilio . Com·
pedtive wages, ·diHeremial with experience, equal opportunity em- •
player. ~ onrac: t the Ohtctor of
Nursing, Pinecrest Care Cefuet....!i
170 Pinacre s1 Drive, Gallip~

Ohio, 45631 814-448-7112.

Immediate Open1n9.1 For

Pirt

Time RN'o And LPN 1, All Shl~~, ..
Compelltlve Wages Dllt.ron~iii ll
Wilh Experionco, EquofOppolo(')

turiiV Employ11. Contoc:t The llkt
rociDI' or lluroi,., Pintc:ro11 'c~rt •

a.,,..

Center, 170 Plnocre11 Drive,
llpoio, 0H C51131, 814-441-7112.

"

••••••

iiiHd 8 Lldin To Sell Avon, e{l.
,.&lt;148-3358:
-~ l r

�.•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..,_y, June 17, 1998

Pomeroy • Mlddllpot'., Ohio
•

NIA Cro••word Puzzle
PHfT,J.JP
ALDER
440

530

WiD ..... l_,o In Gottla Courl!y,

:;:::.::::,=::=.:::--:--::-----12
Bedroom Home Ltnd Contracl
WiU
Oualtty Chlldcare In To Oua hl•td Peisont 10'% Dawn

r.to., Plus Util ities, Usu111r .,PomtrO'/ Hours · M.T.W. 10.00 AKC Reg Bolton Ttrrlet Pup.
Somolhlr19 Availoblol S..n Voller a.m. 11 8:00 p.m. , Sundlly 1 :00 m ....,
Enollonl lllacMIIno Sho11 1
8:00p.m 11ol-1182-25211.
Ajlor'"""ll. 814-UCI-2957
Wormed, Now Taklno Dtpoalt,
Aalung S300 Eacf'l, 151 £ -448 ·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8270.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Prov~c~t

II you are looking 1or 1 CatHf In

tn! . healthcare

f1eld, are hatd

HO&amp;pllel, Colll14·441·8113,
More tnbrnw.rlon

For

Coun1ry hdme tn town- 1 3J4 acr·

ts tn Middlepor t. 01'110. Lovely
wQitung, conng and t.w • - ·
10...,. !of people we wiU P&lt;DYido Work Wantt&lt;l . Mow.ng, light 1~ Sc:hult' s SpeQaj Edttion 1'1'»W&lt;il' \if!UI 1,. oduCIIion yGU noed CanstruCtiOn, Painting, Y•rd b1le home, 1 112 batl'lt, carpet
iolbo a ·STNA. Comc&gt;of!M lai!IIY. WOik, Etc. Calf Dave AI 114-258 - throughout, plus many e111111
benetua, health Insura-nce and 13011.
614-992-1350. No S..ncloy colla.
tubton /aJmbursaman• available
FREE CENTRAL AIR : 16x80
to• full ·lime employeu. We enFIt lAr,CIAL
Commodore 3 Bedroom and
c ~Hage · tra l ned nurs1ng aula·
ta~s. tO apply 11

well Please call
P&amp;n ny Delong at 814 ·687·315e

21 o

Business
o r app l ~ m person ar ,t,rcad11
Opportunity
Nurs1ng Center, East Mam Street,
Cootv~le. OhM&gt; 45723 E.O.E.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
'
Par1-T1me Employment 5 Tot recommends tnat you do bust
Tei8Jillon4 ~les Cal B a - 1 -

6 PM 614-44Htl34.

Pan-nmt live-In Nanny Wanted
For 3 Yoor Old A I Woak Old
Good Pay, 1Aeferences Required,
614 256·1559
Part· T1me LPN 8 HOuri Mull Be
A.vallable For Call In 114· 4.C8·
4814
Postal &amp; Gov't Job1 121 tHr -t
Benefits, No Exp, Will Tra1n , For
Appl And Into 1-800-538-3040.

SCC IAL WORK POSITION . Program COord1nat0t Posmon Avail·
able In A Gommumty ResiderU1al

neu wilh people you know. and
NOT to send money throu9h the
m111l until you have 1nves!1gatad
!he ciHotl~

230

Protesstonat
Services

Program Fqr People W11h MRIOD
In Jackson County Requ i rements Bachelor'• Degree And
One ve,r Erperrence In A Hu man Servlc'as Fiafd; Prwiou• Experience W1th Personnel Super\M•on Preferred. Valid Driver'• licen se, Three Years Licensed
Dr!Ying E.1p8f1ence, Good Driving
Record And Adequate Automobile Insurance Coverage Re ~
QUire d Must Live Or Be Willing
To Relocate W1th.n 30 Mde1 Or
30 M1nu tes 01 Jackson liberal
Benefu W1thm 30 M1lea Or 30
Minutes Of Jackson Liberal Benefit Package Salary· $18 -22.0001
Veat All Applications Mutt Be
Post -Marked By 612 1196 Send
Resume To Cec:llia Baker, Buck·
eye Communrty Services, P 0
Bo• 604, Jackson , OH 45840.

Equal OppoiiUniY Employer.
SOC IAL WORK POSITION Pro·
gram Coordtnator Posit•on Avail·
able In A ~rqmuf'llty Reaidendal
Program For People With MRIOO
lr) Jackson Counly. Rttqulrements Bachelor's Degree And
One Year Experience In A Human Serv1c es F•eld; Previous Experience With Personnel Superv•SIOn Preferred Valid OnY&amp;r'l li·
ce nse, Tl'lree Years Ltcensed
Or111mg Exper•enc:e, Good Dnvmg
Reco rd An d Adequate Automo bi le Insurance Coverage Re quued Must Ltve Or Be W1lhng
To R'elocate W1th1n 30 Miles Or
30 Mmutes 01 Jacklon . liberal
Beneftt Wlthm 30 Ullea Ot 30
M1nutes Of Jackson. liberal Ban-

Dozer Work llcensed conrracror
ava•lable lor dnveways, ponds.
1aMscap1ng, ate Honest &amp; de·

i&gt;f1ndable 'NV 205542 304-675·
3984.

sex famllal statUs or national

origin, or any lnlenllon to

Soc1al Workers, Now H1ring $23 I
Hr + Benehts, On Tl'le Job Traln •ng To Apply In Your Area, t -800·
339 6150
So meone To Clean House, Refer·
ences Requ~red, Send Response
Ta CLA 100 Clo Gallipolis Da1ty
Tnbune. 825 Thtrd Avenue, Galli·

polos OH 45e31
Takmg Applications Bartender I
Wanren. Full· T1me . Apply In
Person At · Carl's Tavern, 856
Second Avenue, Gallipolis
The Veterans Serv1ce Commi sSion Will Be Accepting Appl1ca·
I tons Thru 27 June For The Potl·
11on 01 Temporary Secretary
Must Possess Good Commun1 ·
ca11on And Orga mzat• onal Sk1lls
Computer Erpeuence Preferred
In Accor dance With Sect1on
590I -07 Of The Oh io Revtsed
Code, The suceesslul candidate
Shall Be A Ve1eran Or. 11 A Quail·
lied Veteran lSI Not Avatlable,
The Spouse, Survtv1ng Spout•·
Chtld Or Parent Of A Veteran .
Appl1cat1ons And Complete Job
Oescrlptton May Be Obta~ned
Tl'lrough The Veteran• Service
Off•ce In The Gall1a County Court·
ho use The Galha County Veter·
ans Sennco Commt&amp;Sion Ia An

'"lonnad thaleH dwellingS
adwrtlsad In lhls newspaper
are available on an equal
"''P"rtunlly basis.

REAL ESTATE

31.0

Homes lor Sate

1 112 story, 4 br, lr, df, lr, basement &amp; sun porch, 136,000, call

614-992-4480
2-3 bedroom house. 501100 lot
located 1n Syracuse, apphances
mctuded. coU 6,4 992-5767 afler
4pm

58&lt;0.

GlenwC'orl 314acre wt3bedroom,
2bath,
d9 Brandvwtne mob•te
home Sell to• $24 ,895 cash or
owner hnanc"' for $29.000 . w1th

$4,000 down 304-562·5840

la1e 70 Model Mob1le Home
12•60 Includes New ElectriC Bo•.
.. Underp lnnmg , Wtndow Unn Au
Conchhoner &amp; Porch lflcluded for

$5 000 Call304-675-3000
Rabale o n New 1996 Norris

14&lt;70. 2BR , '2 Bath, Plush Carpel,
HOMES

SPECIAL New 1996 14180 Nor
ns w•th Glamour Batfl and Stereo
Includes Central Atr, Sk•rnng, De·
l1very and Set· up MOUNTAIN
STATE HOMES 3.14-675-1400

330 Farms tor Sale
Tobacco allotment ol1200 lbt,
Meigs Co. cal1614·992·5533

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BRUNER LAND
614-775-9173
Me1g1 County
Mmutes To
Athens, Near Albany, 5 Acres •
S7,500, 11 + Acres $8,500, N1ce
I 1 Acre BUilding S1te · $10,500
Galha County Gall•polls. 2 Miles
0u I NeighbOrhOOd Road, N1ce 22
Acres $28,000, 9 Acres $14,.500
Or 10 Ac res -$17 ,000 Towards
Huntt ngton, 3 M•les Ou t Teens
Run &amp; Chambers Ad s tO Ac:re s
$10,000, 5 Acres t12,000, 7 +
Acres With Pond $12,000, Nice
Level 8 Acres W11h Stream

$11,900

Call For Maps.&amp; Owner Fmanc·
mg Info 10% OFF Cas h Pur
cl'lasa
Lor, appro x 1/2acre , easy ac
cess fo rural wa ter &amp; b lack top
tOecl 304-773·5700
Lots lor rant Now takmg apphca·
t1ons, Country Lane Mobile Home
Park Gallipolis Ferr y WV 304

675·5421

l&gt;aaemenl, 61•·992-8389

$1 2,000, 614-25e-1559

5 Rooms, Balh , Clly, Forced Atr
Furnace, Central Air, Carpeted
Floors, Storm W1ndows, Doors,
V1nyl Sld1ng, lot ~6x150, Pr~ced

Frontage, 1 3 Ac re 10 u.n
From Garhpohs, Ser~ous Calls
ONy, 614·446 4053

Canage, newly remodeled, wlout
bu1ld1ng &amp; pnvacy lance, 1 floor
plan, good lor elderly or rental,
JeHerson Ave., $40,000 304-e7S.
7482
Georges Creek Road, Great
Ne!Qhbors, Conven1ent LocatiOn,
3 8f Ranch, Garage, Pool, Large
Fenced Yard, 614-440-3108, For

Appo~nlment

Green Townsh 1p ·Gaclllpol•s
Schools Rancfl Style ~ome 3
Bedrooms, 1 s Ba tl'ls. Family
Room, Nat Ga&amp; Heat, Cent .A1r,
New Vinyl W1ndows. VInyl Siding.
New Carpal. New Baths, 3
Minutes Ftom Galhpolls. $55,500

VAC ANCY: BEHAVIOR HANOI· House w1tf1 d'lree lots behtnd Auto

CAPPED INSTRUCTOR. Valid Zone 1n Pomeroy, S2700 OBO,
(e1416e7~163

A IV&amp;r

Scen1c ' Valley, Apple Grove
beaut1 1ul 2ac lois , pubhc wa1er.
C ~de

Bowen Jr , 304-576·2336

Secluded 55 Ac res , less Tha n
Mtle From Hol zer Hosp1tal
$12,500, F1nanc •ng A~ a il ab l e
614 388-9062. 614·446 7278

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Lanq Wanted . 20 Acres or more
1n Mason Co Call atter 4 30pm
304· 762·2035

41 o Houses tor Rent

BAHAMA CRUISE ! 5 daysr• •n-groundpool, 6149925087
nlghiS, Under bOoked! Moo! Selll
S2991Couple Ltm•••d n . ko!S 1- 320 Mobile Homes
ace 935-9999 ••• 6~9 110n - Sal
tor Sale
9am • 10pm

2515

rreroy no pets 614-992·5858

Unlurn1sl'led 2 bedroom house.
mce &amp; clean, no mside pets, de·
poSit requ~red , 814·992-3090

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

both, lotally remolded Coli 304·
~--~--~--~--1:::67~~==7~---------­

a

Body work on cars
truckt. reasonable rates, m1nor mechanrcal 1972 Homena Mobtle Home 2
repairs, o~ changes, call 614· 742. Bedrooms, 12.155, Reconc:ht1oned
2935 ask fur' K~. Rutland.
Thru-Oln, Some Furniture, S2,500,
::.:.:..:::.;_::.;_:=_;;,;,::.;_:_____ 1 After 6 P.M. 614·245·1516.
certified child da.yeare provider,
bab'(su tn my home, relerences avatlable. 814..g92-3537

wt•

HiiH 14170 Freedom With , 0 • 18
Factory .Add·On, Very Good Con-

::.:=:::;.,;;.;_;.:..;:.;_:____ I diiM&gt;n, $8,250,814-446-0034
Dan's Lawn Care Res1denual,
Churchet,
Cemetanes, Rea ·
sonable RaiOSI tl14·379-2847

a

General Matntenanca, Pa.nung,
Yard Work W1ndowa Washed
Gutters Cia-ned Light Hauling.
Commencal, Resktenllal, Steve·

614·388-jl429
Georges Portable Sewmdl, don't
haul your logs to !he m111 1us1 call

304-675-1057

-•

Proless•onal Tree Servtce, Stump
Rem o~al , Free Estimates! In·
surance, Btdwall , 01'110 6 , • -388·
9618, 61-i-367-7010
..
Sun Valley Nursery School
Chtldcare M·F Gam·5 30pm Agea
2 K. Young School" Age During
Summer 3 Day• per Weak M1ni·
room 61-i...t.t6-3657

The French Cily Child Coro Conrer, Hours· 6 A.U . · 1 P:M Mon·
day Thru Fn day. lnfanl•. Tod·
dl•r~. Prt-School, And School
Age Pfogranl For More ln.Jorma·
tion Contacc Lisa Coughenour,

614-446..&lt;167.

1979 Cla1rmom , two bedroom.

$5000. 61 4·992-4083

1982 Oakbrook 14170 3 Bed
rooms. V•nal U nderp~nn • ng, Stor·
age Bu•ld•ng. 5attel•t~ Good Con·
d111on, On large' Rented lot

$9,500, 614·245-9554

1986 Fleetwood 1411:72 3 Bad ·

La wns Mowed &amp; Trimm~. Have
Equrpment, Reasonable Rates,
Sen1or Citizen Oiacounl, For An

Esoma.,, 81oi-2•S.5755.

1977 Federal 3bedroom 304
675-1954

2 Bedroom i n Mason, washer &amp;

langsv~lt, 614· 742-2885

Trailer for renttn GallipOliS area
614-4146-8849
Two and tl'lree bedroom mob•le
l'lome s, srarnng a1 $240 ·S300,
sewer, water and trash mcluded,

1169. 614·441 ·1183.

se~

440

whirlpool lub, $11 ,000 304-5783190 or 304· 576-2964
Lim1ted Olferl 1996 doublew1de

3~r. 2balh, $1199 down, S275i
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro

wv 304-755-5885.

Apartments
for Ffent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmtnts. furnished and unfurniShed, securny
deposit required , no pelS, e•• -

992·2218.
2 Bedroom, furmthad apt, deposit

-•ocf. per! of utili"" peJd. 30ol-

Lmtad Ollar 0n11 $500 down on

875-8512

any new srngle w1de In stock.
delivery &amp;, ntup. Only ar

2bdrm. apts., total electric, appliances furnlahed, laundry room
tac:alilte, doH to achool In tcMn.
Application• IYatlable ' at: Village

Homes, Nilro, wv 30ol-

Grean Apll. Ioiii Or Clll 014-1823711.EOH.

Slill In Podtage, 34 112 r49, Tih In
Sashet, Insulated Glass, fusion Schnauzer pupp1es, AKC, salt 1
Wetd1no At The Mam Ftame And pepper, shots &amp; wormed, cl'lam
Sash Frame. S175 Each , 61-i · PKiJn ti00d l1ne, 114-6e7·54CM
•_ce_-4_5_••---,------IS•• weak old AKC Reg islered
Cocker Span1e1 pupptes; hve
All Natural Far Lou Product. week oJd AKC lab puppies, 6U-

Story/Clark luana, sgoo Bach

lrUmpe!l175 304-875-8515.
Fruhs &amp;
Vegetables

Blue Rtdge Spa wuh cover red- 580
wood Ira ..., steps, 8 1811, "'"

Strawbemes Taylor' s Berry
Patch, Open Lllon, Wed, Ffl. 9·8

Sal T•ll Noon, 61•·245-9047

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Twm R1vers Tower, now accepting
applicatiOns for 1br HUD subSid·
1zed apt lor elderly and handi-

$275; Bunk Bad $200 Complele,
Rl. 7 Bes1de Giovanni' s Pizza,

capped EOH 304·675-6679.

I 800-537-9528

Two bedroom furntshed aparl ·
ment, all ut1~fies paid, depoSit and
references requited call 61 4-992-

Country Sr~~ Red Che:cked Sofa
S125 An11que Oak Bed 1800,
614·446·9256_

886-8506 . •

Mob1le home lot In country ap·
prov 2 mles from Shell plant near
Oh10 nver S100mo 304-576
2683

614 ·992-2291 or &amp;14-992-639&gt;
or 304-773-6183

or fll4·9-49-2017.

One Gtbson host free refr~geraiOr.
almond, 5 yrs old, 16 8 cubic toot
freezer . one Kenmore. gold, frost
lr4Je, 19 2 cub1c loot. $250 e¥Ch
614 992·5533
.

Aeg1stered Quarter Horse Mare 8
Years Old $1 .300, 2 Western
Saddles. Angus Hatler' s Croll

Queen S•ze Orthoped•c Mattress
Set And Frame Ne~er Used Shll
In Ptasuc Cost $800 Setl $250,

614·775-2360

.

RCA Camcorder $275: Womens
10 Speed Mountam Bike t45,
Mens 12 Speed B•ke $30 eu -

441.0105

JIB Technologw. 372 S1a1e Rou1e
160, Gafllpol•. 81&lt;-4.1.()950,
Apphance1.
Reconditioned
Wasl'lera, Dryers, Ranges, Refngralors, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Maytag, 614 446·

Gtbson rel r~ gerator, good cond
S100 304·675-6986
•
Washen, dryert, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances , 76
V•ne Street, Call 614·4 .. 6-7398

HIOtJ.499·3499

'

Maytag dryer, while. electroniC
control, oood COndlhOrt , $95, 814·
985·3817, MJ~Urlta Miller, Baum
Additon , Pomeroy, Ohio.
SealS Upr~ght Fra.ter 30 Cu Ft.

Used Furruture 130 Bulav1llt P1ke,
Lampa, Desks. Chalfs, Beds, Enter tainment Cemers. Tables.
Ches11 , Typewrnart. 6U · U6·

Here~rd

Bull 304-675-6981

614-388-9t 94.

Three month old male Pygmy

goall, $100 OBO, (IH) 192-

TRANSPORTATION

71 o Autos for Sate

256-&amp;487

orwork,S500obo,814·985-,.. 18

••c.

8115-3287

11 . Oldsmobile ga, 74k, v g.,

S1750: '85 Do&lt;fgo 1100, , ••• Y.g '
$1350:11ol-948-3228.
New 88 Olda U2 l-Tops Grey
Stlvor, Ono Ow nor. 20,300 Miles
Full - · Gonoge Kep~ (814~
448-01011

AulD loans. Dealer w~l arrange h·
nancing even il you have been
turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equ1pmant Used Cars 304 458
1

Drag Race Cars 1959 Ang11a M•
nus Eng1ne, 1179 Monza Round
Tube .. L1nk Chan•s. 1970 Nova
Bact. Hall Cor AU Now. 11169 · 396

1817 Ford F25o 314 Ton, 351
Windsor 2 wheel Dnva, 814L446
211C5 or 30•-875-2385
1992 lsuzu ptckup, 4 cyl 5
speed. mea. 70.000 mrles. $5500,
maw constder parttal trade for a
414 or pontoon bOat, 614·992 ·

258• after 8pm,

1993 Chav1 S-10, 5 Speed, Ex·
lendod Cab, V-6, 36,000 Mtloa
SD,OOO, Days. I U -. .I -U23,
Nilj111' 814..41-0087
1993 Ford Ranger SPLASH,4111er.
puto, au, cauette, 38,000ml
Whne 1n calor $2,900 Call 304·

675-1802.

ler 5 PM . Or Dey&amp; 8-4. 304-576
4563

1993 S-10 Tahoe l.png Boo, •.3

OuaUty Houlthokt Furr'11l.1re And
AppliiiJIC8I. Glut Daols On

Cosh And Carrrl RENT-2-0WN
And Lay- Alao Available.

Free Del~ Wtlhin 25 Mile&amp;

Wh~rlpoOl Wesner S95: Small R•·

lngeralor S7,5, 8,000 BTU Air
ConditiOner $75, Hotpo1n1 Dryer

$95, Wa&amp;ho'r To Malth $95, G E.
Almond Retngeralor Newer Mod·

at, sgs, Green Relrigidaire Rafrigerallf', $150; Hotpolnl Range Har·
YOII Gold $95: Sltogga Appttanc ·
es, 78 V1ne Street. Gallipolis, 61 4·

·48-13118. 1-800-418-34~

SALESMAN
HE'S EVER
HAD!!

5:f

'89 Formula, low m1ltt, extra
clean, $7500, (81 -i) 992-5138.

I

•

Auto Parts &amp;

.THIS 15 JUNE! TI1E
SNOW 'IS ALL GONE!

1982 Camara 1 tops comu.late '
bod~ 30-i 6 75 5815 or 304·895- 1

3237

I-IOPIN6 "fOU
I.IAC'N'T NOTICED ..

Tandy Sensauon 48e SX. w1th ex·

uas, $700 080, 614-992-5827
WATER WELLS DRILLED
Fast Reasonable Serv1ce au.
886 731 1
Wl'lwlpoor c~thes dryet, sso, 614·

742 21 87

W•ll Do Lawn Care In Gallipolis
8tdWOII V1 n1on Area Ktng Wa

lnternattonal Log Truck Smgle
'89 Thunderbird SC, IWO doOr, 3 8 A•le, less Than 5,000 U11es On
lllre, V-8, ehte model turbO, PS, Engme, 614-446-1417
PB, AC. 5 speed. power 1e1t1 ISIQU 1092 Am1go 5 Speed, Black
and locka, "Great Car," $5200 52,000 M1les, Grear Shape•

neg .. 81•·992-7478 or u•-9•9- $7,500, 61•·367-01&amp;•. 814-866
28711.
5540LoavoMeuege

1975 lincoln 48,000 Actual
M1ies, A·1, Whne. Marroon tn•ior, Pnce Reduced. $3,900, See
Tom Kassel614.,.46-7787

730

vans &amp; 4-WDs

1e77 Jeep Wagoneer, V-8 Aura
Tr1ns, Oudre Trac, .c WO 4 dr,

1!J77 Corvene, New Engme, New 11:., PS. PB, 2nd Owner From NC
12.800.
4-441 -1199.
Transi'T'IIss•on New E•haust, And
~ewTaps , 61-i 446-1417
1979 Jeep Cherokee 4x4, excel·
lam ruM1ng, fatr body, Wlnth, reduced lor qu~c:k sale, $595, 614·

oeo..,

7.0Z·1t23.

Building
Supplies

Block, bnck, sewer p1pas, wtnd·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Wmtert,
R1o Grande. OH Catl 614-245·

5121
Metal Roofing &amp; S1d1ng Galvan·
12ed, Gai!Jalume. and Patnted AI·
hzer Farm Suppl1as 614·245-5193

1984 Chevy CUIIOml zed Van,
Dl8tel, Excellent Cond1t1on. 614·
319-2882.

1996 Mullang GT, 5 speed, AC,
$3000 . 1980 Dodge Omnl, au-

1Q85 Dodge Caravan, 4cyl ,
12,000 l~rm 30-'-675·1336 even·

tomauc, AC , $Htoo.,.8i4-812- lnga
;:.32::;4::2:...
· - - - - - - - - - 1 1 9 8 8 Chevy Convert ton Van Ex 1988 flfebird Y· l, 5 Speed, New

cellent Condman Fully Equtpped 1

Alit Bldg Spt: 30'iC'I5'r9', 1 -l!i&lt;B' Tires, 83,000 Mtloa, Super Nicol $5,900. 81 ... 41-8801, 614-38•1989 Boroua GT Loaded, '81•· 6834 •
245-55112. ________ 11918 Bronco XLT • WD, 6U:....:..:..:.;:::.
•1988 M..da 323 SE • Door, 5 •48-3583.
HolM Bk!ra 1 800-352-10.5

Shd1ng Door, 1 -3' Man Door,
Pamted Steel S1dmg, Galvalume
Steel Roof: $&amp;~444 Erected Iron

560

Pets for sate

Groom Shop ·Pet Groomlf19. Footunng HydrO Bath Don Sheets
can 614·-t..S-0231
l Femalt AKC RottWt!ler Pupptes
left, Pr~ce Reduced , 8 Weeks
Old , Excellent Quality Also For
Sale 7 Monlh Old Mate Ch1nMH
snarpai 614·379-2887

Speed, AWIFU Stereo Canene.

1890 Dodg&amp; Ram Van B-250 ,

~~ Clean, Nlco Car, IU-379-

72 ,000 Mtlea, SI,OOO, Can Bo
Seen AI !3alhpoha Daily Tribune,

1988 Pontiac Grand Am
T~res, B•uer~. Starte, Eno1ne,
Passlbly Locked Up, t1.000. 814·

825 Th1rd Avenue , Gallipolis
OhiO
\

367-7087 Aherl

11190 Chevy 271 Spor1•xc g• Ld!
Rtd Sporl Slot 28,000 M•los,
$22,500 080, 81•-387-5025

'

27!11.

~61-\:'(~T

.•

.

1996 Travel Trailer Van. Many
E.11rasl Includes
Shde· Out
$22,000 614 · 894 · 5321 Chesa -

114-992-3752 Of 814-182-3985

875-67111

AKC Regtstered Boxer pupp1es

1991 Coralca 4 Door, AulD, AIC,

740

MotorcycleS

5spd, 20mpg, sleeps 5 $2.600
304-875-2949

'"

Spri-.
1

\

...

. , 0

&gt; .,

'"

.,..' .

$250, (6t•l74l-1312

~ 1.

ME'&lt;, LOOK' THE VEAR&amp;001&lt;. IS OUT 1 AND
ONE 01' I'IY ORA.W·
IN(,S IS IN IT 1

·'
',

CtlEC.I&lt;. IT OUT 1 t'\'(
!&gt;KETC.H OF A SOC.C.EI'.
PLI'.VER FILLS UP 1\N

~

.. CIGssl(led Secuon.

AX NEG

.,

FBU

-

2

J x -c

HXNC

VCFHMCB

JXC

NB

FPG

,

XNC

ZKDEGCUP

GOJJOZNEW
GXGLMCI

FW

WKDB

YNWEMC .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION· ·one llag, one land, one heart, one hand, 1 One

'::!·:~:~'· s~\\oUlA~ £~s·
- , - - ' - - - •·- ldlted
CLAY • • PO&amp;LAN
~J'

O Rearrange
letrers of
four scromb1ed words

c,

..
. ,.

(F 'D~OPL

WDOM

YCMW W

..

Nation, evermore!" - Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr

......

WOII

-'
'' r
,.

'

..

the

be·

low to form four words

I

DUL .OYL

I' I' I I I

.'

-'

.. .

,---:-D_A_L_B_Y---,1~
I1111

..',
_::

"Have you ever noticed, my
fnend mused, "that happy
.
_ _ _ _
people don't think about being
,---:-----,--------......, happy because they are • - •
PY0 RT H
~- -·-to nottce?"

Q

''

Complete tho chucMio quoted

Harper - Latm - Crumb - Fetrsh - HEAL the HURT
"You should always forg1ve people 11 they have done
you wrong ," Granny told me "It wtll warm your heart
and HEAL the HURT "

I MONDAY

'.
if,

JUNE 17 ·I

..:TIIStJ 1f.l~rs U"~2 6LU!l1V~ YEARBoOK Nl1f!.. .ON &lt;WE tEVa, /NNOCENr..
(j{ AMni/ER, IIINTI~ AT tii/NeS
TIIAT 1t11Giff HAVE BEEN ... -~•
"f./AVE A NIC~

SUMMER, I
-TRACY'

:
..
'

·~

'
~

'

l

.rt
'·

Roofing &amp; gutters complete home
remodeling decks &amp; s1d1ng, 35
yean expenenca, B &amp; 8 Roof•ng
and ConstructiOn, 614 ·992 2364
or 1·800·d89-3943.

.;,

1~

'

ASTR0-0RAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Freeman's Heating And Cooling
Installation And Service. EPA '
Certified. ReStdennal, Conmetc1a1.

·Electrical and
Refrigeration

Free Ell•malea, 1 ·800-~1-0098,
614-44e.8308, wv 0029o05

D

FPG

'1

1•'

DRYWALL
•
r!
Hang, lirush, repatr.
Ce•lings lextured. plaster repa11
Call Tom 30.o4·875·•186 20 years •
e1penence
'

0015, wv 304-576-2398,

ADJU

'. ,

"

The Treasure You
Sovlnes You'll Find In the

7/

:

Ron's TV Serv1ce, spec1ahztng In
Zenith also serv1c1ng maar othet
brands House calls, r -800· 787 -

_..by--·"",..,_.

1'1'1 A. C.ELE6RITY I

C&amp;C General Home Ma1n- l
tenence - Pa1n11ng, vmyl s•dmg, ;
carpenlry, doors, Windows, baths, ,
mobile home repa~r and more For ~
tree est1mate call Cl'let, 6U -992- "

992..oz32.

by Luis Ca~poa

CetoOrlly Cipher_.,..,._,., lrom
Each litwf in the ciphef unctt for ai"'ItMr Today'• diA V ~ P

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIS

:-::----:::----:--:-::--- ;•

Ea,l't Home Maintenance, v•nyl
Siding, roofing, exterior and tnter1or painting, power washing, room
additions, Free Estimales, 111•-

.CEL.:SRITY CIPHER
_
OH

'

'-

"ARTWORK BY
(,INA t'\ALZONE."

ENTIRE P,to,6E ~

0870 Or 1·800-287 0576 Rogers \'

6323

.,

BIG NATE

Unc:ond1110nat hleume guaramee ~~
Local references furn1shed Es· '
tablished 1975 Call (6 U ) 446· ~

Apphance Parts And Service. All
Name Brands OYer 25 Years Ex·
pertenca All Work Guaranreed,
French C1ty Maytag, 61• · 440·
7795

&lt;·

.
.
•
•
~
•
• ,
by f,lllng •n the m1ping WOJdt
'-'--1-..L-L.-1-..L...J you develop from step No. 3 below.

Home
Improvements

Waterproollng

,

'

~--.,--.:16:.;_:T,-.,,,_::.,,7:-I

• .,

SERVICES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

,,

I

R't refngerator/ freezer, 2 door. · ,'
works electric or propane, ask1ng ,• 1:

620

I

5

·'
.•

what to do to make lhe relationship WOll&lt;
Ma~ $2 75 to Malchmaker, rio lhis newspaper , P 0 . Box 1758, Murray tltll
S1a110n, NeW York, NY 10156
CANCER (June 21-July 221 Leam from
your recent expertences today Do not
waste your money on somethmg you
vowed you would never buy again. even
Wlhe temptaliOn ts great
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Impediments will
seem less restrictive !oday it you keep
your mtnd on your
' !lbfactlve You can
IICCOfllplish lhis goa~ wi&lt;hin tho! next lew
days.

~

"ll
•(I

..,
..,.,
~.
'I'

62,000 Mile&amp;, S4,500, 080; 111113 IUD Harley Cu110m Salnoll
SuNiird • Door, Au•. NC low miltl, S1 s.ooo Strl- Rooldon~al 01 Cornmerciol Wlr- IV
AKC
Re;1stertd
German 28.000 M•le&amp;. II, 100 016: 18t4
lnqulrlll on11 ptoaao: •99• lng, Now Sorvlco Or Ropoirt. Li- ,;:,
Shepherd PuPfiiH, From Gormon Leboron Conv. GlC Au10 AIC, ouo
Plea corgo Uatltr, carp01, tn&amp;ldo censtd Electrician. Welsh Elec- q_..
tmportl, Call R1Y1rY18W Kennell, """• 28,000 Mill. ti,IIOO 080,
Hghtt, two motorcycle set•UPI,
I!IC 6U·U&amp;-tg5Q, Gallipolis,
814 .... 48-1042
814-371-27311.
Sl700; (114) 909-2722
Olio:
""·
•

El~f\T!

...___.......,,.__fi~FUL.

After playing in the Mor&lt;!ton Club
duplicate, I went to Brisbane Airport
and flew north lo Calms. This is a pic. turesque town inside the Tropic of
Capricorp, surrounded by rain forest.
I hoticed that many of the houses are
built on stilts. I soon aaw wby, as I had
arrived during the wet season. TWo typhoons dumped vast amounts of precipitation on lhe area, especially to
the north, where there wa8 dreadful
ftooCUng
_
My first day in Cairns was exces- .
sive. l gave a class in the morning, ran
the Saturday afternoon ~uplicate and
taught another ~lass itl the evening.
By the end I was tired, but those who
did all three segments seemed even
more bleary-eyed'
Th1s deal was solved correclly by
about hall the pairs.
In the bidding, North was right to
jump straight to three no-tnlmp The
heart ·king could be expected to bolster that suit, and five of a minor was
unlikely to make.
When West led the heart six against
three no-trump, East used the Rule of
Eleven. Subtractmg six from 11 told
'him that there were ftve hearts higher
than the six in the other three )lands
As East could see four of them, he
lme.w that declarer had only one high
heart. So, Easl played the heart jack
. at trick one. Here, tbis served two purposes: It told West that South had the
heart queen, and it unblocked the suit
After declarer took the losing dia-'
mond finesse at trick two, West
switched to a black sull When in with
the spade king, East returned the
heart 10, defeating the contract
Note that 11 East plays the heart
eight at trick one, the heart suit cannot be run.

Mm1 motor tiome , 1984 N1ssan
Mtrage. dual rear wheels, .ccyl . ••

Re..denuat or comm.,ctal wmng,
IWW MI'Vtee or repair• Maater U11111 lilt - l i d Z.l lloor- cen..d electrician. Ridenour
Electrical, WV000308, 304-fti75·
lng' lido Jlill. 304·1115o30115.
' ::17;,:88;:·; __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1111 Honda 200u. new Urea,
new ,.., fender, runs good, w1

N-lD lT~i5~Y~ ."~

I C£t' Tl'i. ~y.~,

J'A.'(LUC¥-- ...I

peake, OH

Heat Pumps, A1r Cond1t1onlng, If
You Don't Call Us We Barh loHI ,.,
1SUN) Geo Pritim~ 4door, vert
good condltkln, one owner, auta,
PI, pll, CrUIIO, ao. $3,875, 30•·

"\.,.. .....,~s
0 1tlll by NE.t. Ire

'•
:.'•

RSES CERTFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

81·-94~3028

.

,

THE BORN LOSI!:K ·

1996 Palmino Camper Trailer AI .
C, Heat, Retngerator, Stove, Sink, ~ 1
Awn1ng. M1crowave, 6U-446· •,,

840

$300 1Bcf1, one malo, $250, JHdy
June 15, accepting depoaita,

304-875-8005

l&gt;iPA,TMfNTl

814-251-1611 .

AKC mtm Pln&amp;eherl, 1Wa fllmalll.

AKC Registered Bolton Terrier
puppies, two males, one remale,
ready 10 go, can 814·049· 2•g5,

BANK·
-

1979 Cnat1Dn 21ft Sell contained ;
lfwler, awnmg, balh wlshower. •• •
tt~gerator, sto~e w1oven, e•c . '
c;ond. To many extras to 11a1 Call ..•
lor delalla. $3,950. 304-372·11480 7"

CtfeC.~

'

JOUN(fP,
wttY (,OVL.PN'T YOU.
l..fT IT BOVIIIC.e OVeiE
-""" TO YOU, &amp;.OAN

'

lerl&gt;ed $100, 614-388·9655

550

wf&amp;.L, If MY

•ng$3000 614·985-4194

7585

I,...,

I Sldriny

By Pbllllp Alder

~~·~A=c~c~es7.so~r=te=s~~ ~

$14,250, make oiler. 30•-675-

4 Drug 811CY-

,

I

614-245-5802

810

.•.

3 laaflow

The flight north

Ban Hunter Two Man Pontoon "
Boat With SwiVel Seats and Trol· .,
ley Mo10r S 400 614·2-iS.5512 or •·

Vonac V-8, Aura Trans, AC,
Trades Welcome! Cook Motors,
8 14-446-o 103

,,

2- -

,'

Bass boll, trailer, 40hp motor &amp;
acceuones $ 1, 500 304 -576 - \

760

,._en

GUY WAS
A NIIVOUS
WIICK

WORKlN'

19ea 21 Fl. Century Cuny Cab1n :
Martne Rad10, Good Cond111on,
$13,000 61.o4 -448· 1588 After

2e83

=.-.)

Opening lead: • 6

l HEAR THAT

720 Trucks tor Sale

4712

VIRA FURNITURE
..........3158

BEANIE BAGLEY SAYS PAW
IS TH' HARDEST

,.

P.M Or 61(-44H803 Oaybme.

)

14 Tt • 111. • a
teullbt
15 .... ...
lfrt..elttllllffll
17.....
01101
. ., . . .
41Tialne
,. a stuhufllx 11 ....., 11' l II
Dill an
II
, ..
21
lll!alillll"' ad
Zl .,.,. 14 .......
I'IIUIIc
II R I ' In e
24 aaattct•
..,
21 Alltlne Info
II ....,. 1 J*t
r7 Gilre In
21Nowti1MDOWN
31 Actor IIIMo
1 Ina-cult
aa llllllillll
. If' II

Vulnerable; East-West
Dealer: South
Saulll
West North East
!NT
Pass 3NT
All pass

BARNEY

..

..,tnll'IQS

4t

•AK

t8e4 Mercury Cougar KR 7. \18, · 1977 Starcrafl Trl Haul, EYinrude .,
32,000rni . lOaded,
cond 304· 85. s2:soo ltrm 304 -875 6336 •

Round Oak pedestal table WI
cl'lalfl axe cond , $300 304·675·

Upnght, Ron Evans Eruarl)flles.
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528

• 32
•QJJ098
• Q 43 2
t A 9 8 7

~~9~7=8~G~Ia~a=s~M~e=ll~«~.71•7.., 3=5~h7p~E~I- ·:
$1,700 080. 114-251-6340, 614· gtn eng1ne. needs cBrpot &amp; 1nter~- w

1993 Ford Ranoar )(lf AMI FM
Casaene, AC, 6, 4·388-0406, At.

2822

• J 10 8

+K4

'

-i Cyhnd«, 5 Speed; A1t, AMIFM
Clll81tt, 57,000 Mllea, Ask1ng·

'8-i Ford, Tempo, -i door automat•
1c, lelr rear tatl hght damage,
97.000 m11es, SSOO 080, 814 · 1994 Faro F150 XLT package,
949·2311 days or 614·94e-2644 5spd, low miles, book price
even1ngs.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

GoOds

Baby pigs lor sole, 61•·949-:!GOS

eA8765

U113 PlYmouth Sundance, Au · Ka..-a~aki Bayou 300.. .c Wheeter :
IOriiiOC, Air, Rotr Spoillf, &lt;16,000 &amp; Hrm&lt;fo Bush Hog, •2 Inch Cui, •
;
MKoa, Aaktng 15,300 080, 11•- $2,000 Both, 614-2.S.9019.
1
2511-8340, l1ol--7.
750 Boats &amp; Motors
11190 Do&lt;fgo St.dow ES, 2 Door,
tor Salt
,

Relngera!ors Stoves Washe rs
And Dryers . All Recond1t1oned
And Gauran teedl $100 And Up
Wdl Dehver 614·669·6441

New. SSOO, 614·388·9194.

Household

LlvestOf~,

40 head of bred I'T'IIxed beel c:owJ,
3 Appaloosa marea, due Ia foal

New Gas Furnaces, New Galvan.
•zed Duct Work. New Hood Fans,
614-379 -2720 AFTER 6 PM

State Man Garden Ttllar. l1ke

51 0

Asking $900. &amp;1•-388-9194

East
• K 54

• • a1 e

Honda , Hawk 400 Runt Grtal '

1974 Chateau Traveler camper, :
sleep' 5·8, good condmon. ask- •

630

eot

Saulll
-· Q J 10

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1000, 61H42-2078.

41149

MERCHANDISE

-~ l1 ......95ol5.

45S-15oll aheriOOpm

882-2195

Side, $300, 614·367·0241

----------'--1
Worlung couple wllh children
need n•ee. roomy, tenta! l'lome 1n
Pt Pleas\nt lmmedtatel)' Call

Aakine 18,500, Maintenance

JET

K•ng S1ze Waterbed 1Ra1ts, Tele·
phone Pius 6 Drawers On Each

2 Spaces With Volts, Cho1ce lo·
caliOn, Memory Gardens, e 14·

1183 M•llubilhi Ecfipoo, 5 Speed,
Red. Sum oat. AIf, 58,000 Miles,

eQJt065
• 54 3 2

• 7 6

Eltctrlc
Scooters
And
Wheelchatrs, New /Used, Van 1
Car Lift Installed, Statrghdes, lltt
Cha~rs . Call For Brochure, 614
446·7263

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. NiiW &amp; RebUilt In Stack
Cell Ron Evans, 1-800·537-0528.

'460 Space tor Rent

200 Yahama 4-Moto Call 304· •

Engone, 61•-842·2031

Farm Equipment

SQ\10S 00 ~SEu.ES

$225, 814-1192-5108

Very n•ee clean one bedroom furn.shed apartment m Mlddleporl.

Steep1ng rooms With cooking
Al so trailer. space on nver. All
hook-ups Call alter 2 .00 p m.,
364 -773-5651, UasonWV.

446·11253

1s 'B6S10W ·wsr
FAVOR6D 1-JATIOAJ '

Eleclrtc hospital beet no mattreu,

Fu Mach1ne Very Good Brand
$75. 2 Old Oil Pa•ntlrlgs, No Dam
age Otner Art, 614·245 9448

614-446 9580

Condition,

eK

EEK&amp;MEEK

Due 10 1Uness must sell complete
set of Ping Eye 2 Golf Clubs, like
new $180 Firm Ask fOf' Dave eu
245-5999

Noon lo 3pm EOUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY I AURA~ ECONOMIC AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

Rooms ror rent ~ week or month
S~,arung at $120/mo Galila Horel

Excellent

$10 ,gg9, 30•·175-1782 Loovo

1069.

1995 2 Horse Slant Load Gooseneck Horse Tratlar With Rear
Tack W•tn Dress~ng Room, 304·

.;6:.;.\:.'·;::~::2~2;,;1:;67~------l S100, 614 ..46-3114• Aller 7 PM
Two bedroom mobile home '"
M iddleport, no pett, eu .ge2-

-:~~--:.:;_-----1 Regiateted W01maraner pupptes

Concre1a &amp; Plasllc SeptiC Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
E\lans En!erpflses Jackson, OH

qu,ed, No PelS ln.,del 614·379- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Three bedroom mobile home'"

Dioc Changer All Almoll Brand Ooi:!G.
N..._l14-.... -8771.

610

Coun try Furnllure 30 .. ·675·6820
Rl 2 N, 6mrles Pt Pleasant WV
Tues-Sat9·6 Sun 11 ·5

2720 AFTER 6 PM

Tape Deck, JVC KD ·MK70 12 Payments Welcome, 61!1-318-

ProciOrvdle, 614·888·8373.

2 13 Bedroom Mob•le Homes In
Por ter Ar ea You Pay Ut11111es
ReferenceS! Depos •t Req 614
3 Bedroom House Trader l ocated
In R1o Grande. Reference s Re·

PuPt&gt;V Pall&lt;o Konntll, Boltdtng,
4-12 Inch K•cMtr Compo lillon S1ud S..vic:o Pupplot, Grooming,
Subwooftr&amp; JVC KS -RT801 Buy, ~til &amp; Trodt, All Broods.

388·9946

Furnished
Rooms

1804 Harle1 Dav1dson Sot1a1(
Custom Leu Than .._,000 M•l.....
lots 0~ E11tr111 614 - U6 ~ 1511, •

• A3 2

4C8·Ml8 _ _ _---;,.
\
.:.=.;.:.::..

Not Used, 10 Year Warranty,
1195, l1ving Room Su1tas From

450

1113 Chryllor LeBaron GTC low

De-17-M

!

Speed, Many New Patti, 11•·

Jack Austell tarrt.r puppltl, 10
lbl. fuM gnJWn. all colorl, S2!iOIM
two Shtlt1e m1nia1ure CoHill,
mllln, $12~ , 81.4-742-2050

One Bedroom Apartment $200/
Uo , 2 Bedroom Apartment $2951
Mo , With All Ulllittes Pa1d, Close
To Umversl!y Of R1o Grande, 61&lt;4·

:,61::4_:·99:::.2·:.2t::78;;----.---l

2149

387-5025.

am-fm .., ..,., 13,300 30ol-175·

1995 Yamaha Warrior 350cc E•~
ctllti'\J Cond1110n, t 3,ISO, 814 -t,

080 304-675-8888

..................
·=
.
.
.
,.........
-- ...... ...
('

1987 Shelby Charger 2.2 TurbO 5

Ferrera, 8 Weeks Old, 1 Male 2

Bo• Spnngs &amp; Mattress Set New,

New accepting apphcauons IDf
two bedroom apartments Apart·
menls have alt cond1t1onlng,
kitchen appltancas, fenced In
playground, laundry fac1hty, on
Site management and waler, sewer and trash pa1d by owners For
more mlormat1on plase call (e14)
245 9170, Monday-Thursday-from

Horltj Dovldoon Sl'f1JIIIer N"C
Mo!Dr, Trent I PliniS4,200, 8t ....

Brute 300 XL Knuekit Boom LOQ
loader Mounted On Tandem
Tratltr W1 8 Call Fotki1ft W1th
Bucket And log Forks. 8,.· 4-i8·
1.417,

Boots By Redw.ng, Chippewa,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowell
Pnces At Shoe Caie, GaltlpoiiS

Grandil

HJI1 Olds Cudatl Calala, sunroof, - dofrotL • crl, 5opd, K.

Mllea,

Power Shtll Cable Wtnch Husky

Bed hner for 1988 I up. full lilt
Chevy rruck, brand new, $75

..,,I!Jiftll- :i.:t..tar
#fll ..

12Frul.....

,•t
1DQ3 300 EX S1,100 080: 18~

304-115-1112l. . M='IIJI

Evoningt, 114-441·1803 Dar,.,.. ;·

One bedr.oom apartment •n M•d·
dleport, au utlltlles paid, $270/mo
plus S100 depoSit. Call 614·992·

2292

lllO.

1902 Suruk•· GSXR IOOW Low t
U iles, Good ConthiiOn, Extra'al l

Molugt.

new sears 6 Pa•d t•ooo. OciOb·
er 1995. was asktng $2700 now
$2200, 614·992·40.tl.o4

7806, 8om-5pm.

tl81 llu&amp;IOng LX Au-lie. 5 0,
Loooodl Low llile&amp;l et•-••1-

170 XL Frank'n Log Silidde&lt; Wllf1 Yotlnt Old, 814·3111·2882

Now accepting applications lor
one bedroom apartments Apph·
cat1ons can be picked up at Po·
meroy Chi! Apartments Oll•ce,
614 ·992·7772

7795

rooms. 2 8alf1s. Uull!y Room, 2 Air
COJ1dldoners, $12,000, 304-875·
1887 Clav'ton 14.170, 3br, ba th &amp;
112, newly remodeled bath w/8 J81

N1ce two bedroom apartment •n

dryer ac, no pelS 304 773 575 1

388·9162

Merchandt•

90::9:::
22::.__ _ _;....._ __
Looo We•ghl , Feel Beller, In- I ::
·2:;:•::
creiud Energy $1 A Day 814- 570
Musical
And Balh, No Kitchen $2001Mo , 446-1238.
lns1ruments
&amp;14·446·24n

41 Inch Magna\lox B1g Screen
1993 Uodel Color PIP $795, Sony
19 Inch Portable Wnh Remo1e
$79 95, General Ela&lt;;tnc 19 Inch
Portable Wt!h Remo te. $84 95 ;
ZeMh Console T. V Cable Ready,
$189 .95; Plua MISC T.V.'s, Sanyo
Dorm S1za Refrigerator, 159 95,

14r70 Homene 2 bedroom. tu•ury

160 Wanted To Do

lafayette Mall 2 Bedroom•. 2
Balhs, All Ut1l1tits included, s-251
Mo Oeposu Required: 12 Room

2 Bedrooms Available 1st Of July,

N1ce 2 or ~ bedroom house 1n Po

~,:,..,.~~~~::-:--::-~':':":~ 1 Wh1tes H1l Ad, Rutland, one bath,

tunlleS.

30" gold gas range, $90 , small
upnght lreezer, oklar model , runs
good, $100,614·985-4418

~24~5~~~~EE~0~·---------~~~=2~·~:::~~----------Three bedroom home In counlry

Grac1ou1 1rv1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apanments at Village Manor and
R•vers•d• Apartments m Middlepori From S232·t355 Call 614·
992·5084 Equal HouSJno Oppor ·

2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
TrMar AC, In GallipoliS , 61.o4 .o446
8849 For lnlormaoon
Large:Yard, S3601Mo . 614 446

540 Miscellaneous

7 Brand New All Vtnyl WtndOwa, 304-875-77..0.

RENTALS

One bedroom home 1n Pomeroy
W1!1 sell on land contract. 614·

170 MisCellaneous

614-446-9523

Valley V1ew Apartments, R1o

Lors For Sale Approx ~14 01 An
Acre, 141 2 Miles From Gaihpohs

.:"'
.:"':.:.::·900:.:.·.:_a_••_·44:.:::.6.:,. ::5:.:711::..---I
_

llepo~~

PM1e&lt;l&gt;)', no""'"· 81•-992-se~

OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL $2,000

STATE

814-«8-1519.

Furnished Apartment, Upstaln, 1
Bedroom, No Peta, Second Ave·
nue Gallipolis, All Utilities Paid,

__ ___

2· 3 bedrooms, buck , OR, new
Windows, carpet, complete new
k1tchen and bath, garage, lull

::_
Eq:ua::_:lO!&gt;::::por.=.:tu:::":::ty~E;;,m:;;ploye:=:::;r7-:-:=:~ I Fwm 814 446-7881 .
OhiO c.,-hflC811Dn Contacl· Supl.
Olf•ce By June 24. t99e Gallla •
JacMson - V.nton JVSO, PO. Box
157, R•o Grande, OH 45674 614·

Glenwood 31.4 acre w ~t n ~bed ·
room. 2 bath 89 Brandywme Mo
btlt Home Sell lor $24,995 00
cath, owner f1nance for $29,000

limllallon or dlscnmlnalkln. •

which Is In vlolallon of !he law.
OUr readers are hereby

q~rocf,

HOMES 30-.&amp;75-1400

make any such prelarence.

This ne~ai&gt;f1r will oot
tcnowtlngly accepc
am-erttsements tor real estate

Furntsnld 3 Room• &amp; Bath, Upstalfl, Ulihties Furni1hed, Clean.
No Pett, Refetence, Deposit Re·

chase of any multi SKIIOn home
L1m1ted T1me MOUNTAIN STATE

Pnce Bu ster 1996 3bedroom .
$825 down, $159fmo F ~~ee delivery &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Homes, N1tto WV 304·755-5885

, llmllallon or dlscnmlnalkln
basad on race, colcr, religiOn,

61H41-8235, 814....e~77.

FREE HEAT PUMP wnh the pur·

MOUNTAIN

10 advertise •any pntlerenee,

Furn1st'led 2 Bedroom A,.rwntnt,
Acrot~ FI'Om Park, AC, No P.ta.
Re ferencts, Deposit. 1350/Mo.,

HOMES

Xl4-675-1400

ofll Package. Salaty: $18 -22.000 I
Year. All Application• Uust Be
Post -Marked By 8121198. Send
Resume To Cecllta Baker, Suck·
eye Community Services, P.O
Box 604, Jackson ; OH 45040.
Equal Opportunl!y Emplo)'OI,

MOUNTAIN STATE
304-875-1@

Dishwasher, and Oalt Cabinets

All real es1a1e advertising In
this ne spaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hooslng ACI
ol1968 wl1lch makes II Illegal

Equal Hou"'"'' ()pQorllniY

14a:70 Commodore 3 bedroom.
Offer go.od thru June 15, 1Q96.

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
Down 304-562·
FURNACE Ia The Moll Elfoc10n1 Wnh $4,000..__

And lOWIIt EmlltlOOI Ouldoor
Wood Furnace On The Uarket
Cenlra l Boiler It Currently Looking For A Ouahly Dealer In Tl'llt
lmmediale Area For lnformauon
On Bec:ommg A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1·800· 2484681 Or Hl&amp;-782-257&amp;

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $2-4 4 to $31 5 Walk to sl'lop
&amp; mov1e1 Call t1 1• · US-25158

11 .... .:.. 111M

MC.._.IGI

I!

1 Bedroom. Super Nloo, Utll -11 :Z. E Main 811001, on AI. 12•. Wortoing SIDdt. 11ol-21&amp;-13111

My Home, loc:atld Ne1r Holzet &amp;14·256-e573For Apporumenr

·.

Antiques

Buy or Hll. Riverine Anrlquts , Auttrallan Shephtrdl Ou t Of

11 ........2711 .

M:NII'
1W'IId

U811118Y. Jure 18, 1~
New Interests will be developed In the
year a,..ad through a new friend. This
person wttt have a constructive influence
In many a,_ ol your life.
GEMINI (Mer 21.Jun• 20) You won't
have to keep others posted on your
progrea~ ~- because someone who,
cen, kelp a aec:rat J1llghl have IJr-'Y let
the cat out ollhe beg. Trying to ptttcll up
a broken romance? The Aatro-Graph
Metchmaker can help you underaland

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Instead of
resisting change today, look cloaely at
each sHuation to aee n yoiJ can find htdden benefils. You may find what you
seek.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Have fatlh in
your Initial assumptions today, because
they might be your best ones. Over-analyzing a problem will lead to lndecistve-

.,..._

.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) In your
commerolal dealings tD!IaY try not to be
too independent. Make sure to recruit
..,,_11 w110 wttt beck you up HYIMI, run

into lroubkl
SAGI1TARIU9 (Nov. 23-0ec. 211 Do not
bo alratd to lake a calculated risk today If
you have lhoroughly studted all of the
consequences. Whal scares others could •
make sense to you
CAPRICORN (0.:. 22..JIIn. 181 Try nol
to lose your sense of humor today Wyou
heYa to deal wllh an obnoxious indtvidual
You Will confuse him or her Hyou smtle
AQUARIUS 1.1en. :ZO.Feb. 18) Try to use
a laclful approach loday when directing
subordtnates, ~ally tf you have to
deal with eomeone who ha8 a!Wed wilh
you tacently.
PISCES (Fell. 20-MIIt'ch 201 Your Judg•
mant In financial matters today mighl be
more eound than your adviser's advice.
Do nol discount your own ideas.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 18) You can
retneve the funds you have hoped for.
However, tiOn'l buy any!lltng expenllve
unlll you have the money in your account.
TAURUS (Aprii:IO Mar 20) In career Ill·
uatlona today, ..ke care not to el(j)OH
your l!leal to lhe wrung ~- Hyou do,
the Credit that ahould gc 10 you mlQIII be
~by en ln!elloper.

·-

• ' \If

'

'

••

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 17,19116

Houston posts
. 5-4 win over
Cincinnati

~range honors
SChool to give Appalachian
deceased· member
county a wif]dow to the World
The charter was draped for Etta
Cullums when Hemlock Grange
2049 mel last week for a potluck dinner at the hall.
Masler Ziba Midkiff presided at
the Session which opened with "The
Beautiful Lessons We Learn in the
Grange." A certificate of merit was
presented to the grodp from the
National Grange in recognition of
accomplishments in 1995.
The birthdays of Midkiff, Vada
Haze
. !ton, and Helen Quivey were
noled, and reported ill were Hilber
and Helen Quivey, Bernice Hawk and
William Hart. The legislative agent
reponed on a program to purchase
medication at a better rate.

By NANCY NUSSBAUM
AMOCIIMd Pr. .1 Writer

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)One of the poorest counties in ·one
of the nation 's poorest Slales hopes
ils new middle and high school will
, become a "window to the world"
for students and Appalachian
craftspeople.
Calhoun County's $13.5 million
school, scheduled to open in the fall
of 1997, will offer traditi"onal classes for about 1.,000 students and will
have a computer center where
mountain artisans can marlcet their
crafts via the Internet and a lobby
"welcome center" where they can
exhibit their goods. ·
·County Schools Superintendent
John Hager hopes to help cottage
industries in basket-weaving,
clock-making,
knife-making,
woodworking and other crafts .
" We know that we have some of
the best crafts people in our county.
One of the problems with some of
those folks is that they haven 't been
able to marlcet their products," he
said.
He hopes to attract people like
Connie McColley. She and her husband, Tom, support their two children by selling hand-woven baskets
at craft shows and by teaching
weaving classes at their home iri
Chole. The baskets retail from $85
· to ,$4,800.
"My work is not traditional basketry. It's fine art and the market
for that is fairly limited,'' McColley
said. "I think being on the Internet ·
would open up my markets."
Though many colleges are tying
economic development to education, little is being done in elementary and secondary schools, said ·
DebHie Moore, director of administration for the Council of Educational Facility Planners International in Scottsdale, Ariz.
The 1,500-member group represents individuals and firms · who
design, maintain and equip schools.
Moore said she is unaw·are of
any other projects like Calhoun
County's. West Virginia is a lead~r
in linking economic development
. to its grammar and high schools,
she said.
"There are very few states that
have a stronger ... top-down view
of the importance of schools,"
Moore said.
Calhoun· County's school also
will inClude a nature trail that will
begin in the lobby, which will be
built with hardwoods from the area:
· Also, pioneer and American
Indian villages are to be built nearby to help students to learn about
the area's heritage. .
·
The school was designed with
help from about 100 students, pilr·
· ents, community leaders and educators brought in to brainstorm in
four groups by architects Steven
B inp;ler of New Orleans, and
a • ...ice and Pllftners Inc. of
. Charleston.
"Two· things they identified to
sustain · economic development
were arts and crafts; and ecotourism," said Craig Ellis, of the
. state Division of Tourism, who has
helped in the planning . .

I

It was requesled that iiems to be
made for contests be ready by the
July meeting.
Margaret Haning gave the literary
program using "June" as the theme. .
Readings Included "Upon My Word"
by Vada Hazelton, "Trucks Needed
Heifer Power" by Sara Cullums,
"How to Clean and other hints on
refrigerators, ovens, stoves by Nan- .
cy Wells, Sylvia Midkiff, and Muriel
Bradford. A tribute to fathers was given by Ann Lambert, and Ethel Brandt
had a reading·on June. ·
Bob Reed won a word power contest. Hazelton was named janitor for
July, with Ziba Midkiff to have the
lecture.

-

~··

,

.

.

..
.

TOURISM SCHOOL • Connie McColley. She and her hUsband, Tom, support their two children
by selling hand-woven.basketa et craft shows and by teechlng weaving classes It their home In
Chole. Calhoun County'• $13.5 million middle 1nd high school, scheduled to open In the fill of
1997, will offer iradltlonal cla11es for ebout1,0110 students and will have a computer center whera
mountain artlsens, like the McColley• can merkel their crafts via the Internet and a lobby "welcome center" where .they can exhibit their goods.

"Eco-tourism," he said, inspires County by creating a shop," Bin- · Caperton said.
conservation
and
promoles gler said.
Grants and donations are being
"watchable" wildlife - through
"AU or a sudden ... Calhoun sought to help cover about
tourism. Students willleam how to County has a window to the $300,000 in costs not paid for by
'promote the county's hunting, hik- world," he said.
the state School Building Authoriing and fishing .
.
Gov. Gaston Caperton brought . ty, which furids school construction
"It brings people to that envi- Dingler into the planning after and renovation. The extras include
ronment and gives them some way meeting him in New Orleans in the American Indian village and an
to make a living besides cutting 1994. Dingler, president ofConcor- expanded auditorium.
down trees," he said .
dia Architects, counts New
"Our difficulty or course, as
Dingler said students agreed Orlean's Aquarium of the Amen- with all creative ideas, is getting the
they could market the arts and ca's and Tulane University's money to get them ·in place," said
School of Business among his cred- . parent Kim Yessis of Grantsville .
crafts on the Internet.
"The community decided it its.
"All that takes money in a county
would be a. good idea to tum the
"We always use community where there is none."
lobby of this building into a muse- involvement in building our
Calhoun County, about .120
um. The kids decided it would be a schools, but t~is was a person that miles southwest of Pittsburgh, has
good idea for them to help market had perfecied 0 the system better few jobs for its nearly 7,900 resithe arts and crafts in Calhoun · than anybody in the country,"
dents.
·

aI
.

.

By JIM FREEMAI)I .·
· Sentinel News Staff

:':

Till: Southern Local School Distoct received a $46 I ,000 boost from
the state of Ohio in its quest to build
a new, district-wide K-8 elementary
· 'school building.
· The Controlling Board in charge
ofthe state's building assistance fund
'increased the state's share of the proposed building to $3,651,800, mean·ihg the state is now willing to pay
approximately 50 percent of the proposed building's cost in addition to
·:.. renovations 10 the e xisting high
school.
•
The announcement came at Mon·day night's meeting of the Southern
·Board of Education at the high school

in Racine.
'·
District residents, earlier asked to
· pay $4, I 80,000 of ihe project, will
now be asked to pay $3,719,000.
However, to get the; money, district
voters must first approve a 6. I -mill,
23-yeilr bond issue in an Aug. l5 special election.
'The total cost of the building pro, ject will remain at $7 .37 million.
Voters in the neighboring Eastern
Local School District approved a
similar issue in March that will fund
a new K-11 building· there.
·The state's decision will not
change the way the issue appears on
the ballot, according to district Superintendent James Lawrence.
"But the millage won't be as much
as what it says it will be!," he added.
"It makes the offer seem a linle
beUer," Lawrence said. ''That's more
the reason we need to pass this levy
on August 6.:"
·

Social Security Manager In Athena

If you're a Social Security beneficiary who plans to travel outside the
United States and its territories
{including Puerto Rico, the U.S. Vir·gin Islands, Guam, American Samoa,
and the 'Northern Mariana Islands)
during the summer, there are certain
things you should know.
If you're not now having your
check sent directly to your bank.
. now's the time 10 do it. There are a lot
of reasons why this is more convenient, but none ·more important than
~aving your funds available to you
even when you're not there to cash
your checks. More than half of Social

Security beneficiaries receive their
checks through "direct deposit." It is
the method of receivil)g checks recommended by Social Security for
convenience, safety, and speed.
Another important point is your
Medicare coverag,e. What happens if
you get sick? Generally, Medicare
does not pay for hospital or medical
services outside the U.S. However,
there are three exceptions.
Medicare will pay for your care in
a qualified Canadian or Mexican hospital if:
• You are in the United States
when an emergency occurs, and a
Canadian or Mexican hospital is
closer to, or substantially more acces-

Organizers called this year's event
the
biggest and most successful in the
LACONIA. N.H.- Many of the
200,000 bikers who jammed the rally's 73-year history. Some bikers
beachside strip over the weekend competed in hill climbs, races and
could recall motorcycle rallies of 30 stunts. But most were here to see and
years ago, when police used tear gas outf!ts might be outrageous, but 99
percent of them are great people,"
to clear the streets.
But this year, Laconia had open said ·vendor Chrissie Englade. She
arms for bikers in the record-break- sold leather vests, black T-shirts and
ing tl!rong, many of whom sported that staple of ')0-somethings :.
gray hair on their heads and Gold "relaxed-tit" jeans.
" Years ago it'was outlaws. Today,
Cards in their wallets.
Promoters estimate Laconia Bike it's anybody. but it's still exciting,"
Week, which ended Sunday, pumped . said Frankie Gulla, 44, a Boston
more than $65million into the state's upholstery worker who turned heads
economy. It's daunting testimony to with his 1988 Harley-Davidson limthe economic clout of the now most- ited-edition "full dresser" with gold
ly middle-aged rebels who some plating . and plenty or polished
chrome.
here are calling "The Mild Ones."
.

Lentes said Veterans Service Officer Max Cale asked for his advice on
the request.
.
Memorial Day funding for a local organization was among the topics disIn addition, the chapter is actively promoting preservation of the Buffirr·
cussed by ,the Meigs County Board of Commissioners at its regular meeting gton Island Battlefield in Pomeroy. which may be threatened by a proposed
Monday afternoon.
·
.. · gravel mining operation. Ashley said.
The board mel with Keith Ashley of Pomero)'. president of the Meigs
Ashley said he is urging people to wrile their legislators and other govCounty Chapter of the Sons of Union Veterans, who said the SUV chapt~r ernment representatives to save the battlefield. considered Ohio's only Civapplied for $300 in Memorial Day funding and was denied by the Veterans ' il war. ~attlefield. .
...... ;..,. .
.
Service Qffi!l!) c111e JQ..aO.,opin~y...l®5ecuting Anorney John R LeQleS., ,- · ,.CQ~ion Vi~e President[4riet ~owC'id S81dJheJ;~,;u~Jiftl'}d, h~the fpJL
..As iiieheir oi' the now-defunct Orand Army of the Republic. the SUV is · support 'Of the commissioners.
.
Commissioners'also met with Margaret Parker of the Meigs County Hisentitled to its Memorial Day funding, ~aid Ashley.
''We are the only SUV camp in Ohio denied funds," he sa~d. "We are not torical Society about the bahlefield. Parker presented the board with a bookhappy with the situation at all."
.
.
.
let entitled "The Dollars and Cents of Battlefield Preservation." ·
Lentes said, by statute, county commissioners arc fllowed to give monParlcer said the annual re-enactment of the Battle of Buffington lsland'will
ey to veterans groups to aid in 'celebrating Memorial Day. Locally, the com- be held July 26-28, with re-enactors setting'up camp on July 26.
Also. Pomeroy Councilman John Musser and John Anderson. village
mission gives $300 to six groups for that purpose with funding chan~l'd
administrator, met with commissioners on a proposed grant for a water
through the veterans service offi~e.
.
·
Lentes said Ashley wanted the money to buy Civil. War-era uniforms.
telemetry study in the village.
,
"That is really not the intent of the money ... to fund costull)es," Lentes
The grant, which was not approved for further consideration, was one·of
~;
.
.
16 Community Development Block Grant projects for 1996 submitted to the

· Sentinel News Staff

Offutt to
mark 90th
birthday

Cause of fugitive's d~ath
comes under investigation
DUBLIN, Calif. (AP) -; Alameda County authorities are not sure
what caused the death of West Virginia child killer and prison fugitive
Dale E. Bragg, who was found dead
this week in his California jail cell.
"It appears to be some kind of
lung problem, like pneumonia, That's
what the ·doctor told me," said .Sgt.
Jim Knudsen of the Alameda County Sheriff's.Department. · '
He said Bragg h~d seemed ill
recently but refused all offers of medical treatment.
, · Bragg, 4 I, of Charleston, W.Va.,
was found dead Sunday in the Santa
Rita Jail in Dublin, about 17 miles
southeast of Oakland, Knudsen said.
A:preliminary autopsy showed no
signs of trauma or foul play.
·
The inmate, who was hous~d
lj]one in a·cell, did not respond when

--Society scrapbook-

rofONDAY
Rt.rrLAND •• Revival will be
held through June 22 81 the Rutland
Free Will !:laptisl Church, 1 p.m. each
evening. Calvin Minnis, evangelist.
Special singing.

·.,

LETART FALLS •• Letart Town- WEDNESDAY
ship truslees will meet Monday, 7
LONG BOTI'OM -- Revival serp.m. at the township office building. . vices, Mt. Olive Community Church,
Long Bottom, June I 9-23, 7 p·.m.
RACINE -- Southern Local Boanl each evening. Gary L. Ba~kelder,
of Education special meeting Mon- . Bellville, will be the evangelist.· .
day, 7 p.m. at the high school.

.,

site (residential or non-residential), remodeling an old building to grading
and filling work, is to be performed. Development is limited in areas below
the base flood elevation. If you own property in an area outside of the
incorporated villa'ges or have any questions and need to apply for a permit,
the applications can be piGked up at the Meigs County Tax Map Office or
call614-992-?994, see or ask for Edward Werry, Meigs Coupty Flood Plain
Manager.

.I

a jailer tried to wake him for supper,
and medical personnel were called
and tried to revive him, Knudsen
said.
· Bragg walked away from the
Northern Regional Jail and Correctional Facility in Moundsville, W.Va.,
last August af\d was Gaptl!fed near
Oakland in November after he
allegedly shot a police officer in Hayward, about II miles southeast of
Oakland.
Bragg, who identified himself to
California authorities by the name
Bili Brown, faced attempled murder
charges. A pretrial hearing had been
scheduled for July 26 in Alameda
'
County Superior Court.
The shooting ·occurred after · a
woman in Hayward , ailed police,
saying she found a m~tn standing in
her kitchen. Officers found Bragg

according to Pat Holter, president of her of an Eastern planning committee for the project. ·
the Library Board of Trustees.
According to Albert Vargo ofVar:
The library project is now in t)je
The Meigs County Library Board
planning
phase,
as
officials
are
disand the Easlern Local School District
go, Cassady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs, the
hope to reach a joint agreem.ent on cussing proposed size, in square feet, Marietta architectural firm working
financial responsibilities for con- of the new facility ..
on the $7.3 million sehool project,
struction of a county branch library · Eastern Local officials have fund- schematic line drawings on the proin the new Eastern Elementary ing budgeted in the new school pro- ject must be completed by mid July.
School by the first part of August, ject to cover construction of a 2,100
"Once the library board and the
officials announced Monday d11ring a square foot library facility in the new school district come to a financial
construction and development meet- building. That funding will be com- agreement on the size of the library
bined with a share of funding from and its cost, we can move into the
ing.
the
County Library Board for con- next phase of the project: actulj]
The library. I!&gt; be located on the
front comer of the new 72,000 square struction of a 4,800 square foot design and planning," said Vargo.
foot central K-8 elementary school to library facility.
Eastern officials must submil
Dale Bragg
"The 4,800 square foot figure is building plans to the State Board of
be built adjacent to Eastern High .
School, will be a full service facility what we are shooting for right now. Education by the middle of Septemhiding in shrubs at an abandoned golf and community center.
,
, If we must downsize any, we could ber, according to school board mem: •
course nearby. The officer who was
Officials hope to incorporate still have the meeting rooms and pub- her Greg Bailey. The proposed start- :
shot was wearing a protective vest rooms into the new construction in lic restrooms in a 4, I 00 square foot up date for construction of the. new:
and was.not seriously injured. .
which community groups can meet, facility," said Richard Roberts, mem- school is the end of March 1997. :
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel New• Staff

Whit~water

DIPLOMAnC DUTY- Prnklent Clinton Mel FJnt l;edy Hllllry·

ROdMm Clinton 'WIIVId goodbye to f'!l IIIW Hlltiln Plllldlnt .....
~,

•/'

reports split along party lines

McCurry.
One topic being dealt with exlenWASHINGTON - With Senate .sively in both reports was be the mysWhilewater Committee Republicans terious reappearance of Mrs. Clinzeroing in on Hillary Rodham Clin- ton 's ~illing records.
In a !ast battle Monday, commit·
ton, the Senate panel's GOP and
Democratic members are ending a lee Republicans and the first lady's
yearlong investigation with sharply Whitewater lawyer focused on the
opposing final reports. ·
issue - with Mrs. Clinton saying she
The panel's Democratic report is recalled almost nothing about the
supportive of the first lady, acconiing documents. The FBI found her finto congressional sources familiar gerprints on them.
·
with the Democratic effort. The
The billing records, which surRepublicans conclude that the· ftrSt faced in the White House in January
lady w~ behiilil an effort to keep Jaw two years after Whitewater investienforcement officials away from the gators subpoenaed them, outline her
tiles of White House Deputy Coun- work for the Arkansas savings and
sel Vincent Foster following IUs,July loan at the cente~f the Whitewater
affair. They refer 10 well over a llozen
1 1993 suicide.
Both reports were being released previously undisclosed conversations
today, b~~ct some contents of the she had about Castle Grande, a fail~
Republican report were-leaked over , real estate development in Arkansas
the weekend.
owned by her Whitewaler partner.
1
The leaking is part of a "political
· In a terse two-page affidavit
vendetta"- an•altempiiO gel "polit- released Monday, the first lady did
ical mileage out of baseless charg~," not directly answer the committee's
said While HQIIse 'spokesinan Mike. questions about a telephone COI)verBy PETE YOST
.
Aeeocleted Preu Writer

b. b••d Arllllde an.I II'IWKIIItigll the Whn. Hclille MOnday. (AP)

commissioners.
"(Pomeroy) hasn't had a project funded since 1991 ," Musser said. "We
want to know if there is a problem."
"I thought it was a super project;" Howard said. "There is no problem.
We wanted to do Pomeroy."
Anderson said the project was also--reject~ for funding a year before.
"I was advised to resubmit it," he said. "We've been turned down twice."
"Ge.tting our 150-year-old water system ip order'is a priority," he-added.
,~~ In other bUsiness,. commissioners :
·
• Met ~ith Pat Holter of the Chester Courthouse Preservation Commitlee about the new group's constitution. Commissioners said they would review
the document.
• Awarded bills on 1995 CDBG projects in Syracuse, Rutland and Salisbury Township. The lowest bids were accepted on each.
,.,..
• Tabled a ,proposal on an elevator main~nance contract and approved purchase of a new computer for the fair housing office. •
• Met with County Engineer Robert Eason and Auditor Nancy Campbell
about a new law that took effect May 9 requiring the engineer and auditor
to establish standards for land deeds.
.(Continued on Page 3)

Library, Eastern Local boards
seek joint agreement on branch

'

'

Olflclale from Kokoelng Conetruct!On, FredrlcktOYJn, end the Ohio Department of T~"'"
portatlon mede final algnlng and trelflc control preparations for the opening of the 2.25 mlle
u.s. 3311-n Connector project between ·Rock Spring• end.Five Point• to trelflc this morning.
The r011d will carry two-wsy traffic from State Route 7 onto the westbound ramp at Five Points,
with four-Jane trelfic to begin near the Intersection of County Road 25 (Pomeroy Pike). All traffic Ia being directed onto the new road t~ ellow ellp rape Irs to be made to former SR .7 juet
aouth of Five Points.

: By JIM FREEMAN

Bissell White Offutt of Thppers
Plains, the sole survivor of triplets
born June 28, 1906, will marie her
90th birthday next week.
She has three children, Pauline
White Barr of Reedsville; Norma
Offutt Blake of Lotridge, and Foster
Thomas and Charies Yost.
ris or St. Augustine. Fla.; George and White, who died in a boating acciAttending were lawrence and Kitty Dallas of Agoura, Calif.; dent at Lorig llottom.
Barbara Eblin, Gut and Donna Mor- Bernard and Patricia Suchoza of
Friends are planning a card show- to her at Box 154, Tuppers Plains,
ris. Marty and Joe Struble, and lois McMurray. Pa.; June Opal Johnson of er for Mrs. Offutt. They may be sent 45783.
Hawley from Pomeroy; Manning Rutland; Paul Reibel of Reynoldsand June Kloes, Irene Bailey from burg; Mary lou Ihle of Racine; Bill
Middleport; Vernal and Betty Black- and Sue Thbbs .of Phoenix, Ariz.; and
wood from Minersville; Lee Wince of Wyllis and J'leanor Davis of New
Zanesville; Dick and Betty Ash of Haven, W.Va.
,Syracuse; Max and Pat Bowers of
HONOR ROLL
Decorations were in traditional
canied grade-point-averages between
Munroe Falls; Mac and Ann Cottrill PHS colors of purple and while.
3.50
and 3.99.
The following area students were
of Lancaster; Tom and Maxine Nornamed to tbe Washington Siate ComDEAN'S LIST
munity College, Marietta, president's
Jason
Taylor
of Pomeroy was
list and dean's list for the spring tenn.
Named to the president's list were: named to the dean's list for winter
Roxanna D. Rupe, Coolville, and quarter at the University -of Cincinsible from, the site of the emergency accessible from, the site of the emer- Sharon K. Riffle, Racine.
nati .
than the neatest U.S. hospital that can gency than the nearest {,J.S. hospital
Named to the dean's list were:
GRADUATION
provide the emergency services you that can provide the emergency ser- April S. 'Wilfong and William H.
Tara
Michelle
Gerlach of Middleneed.
vices you need. Finally, if you plan Smith of Coolville; Danette I. Jones
port
was
one
of
204 degree candi• You live in the Uniled States and to stay outside the country more than of long Bottom; Melissa l. Arnold
dates
to
graduate
at Marietta Cola Canadian or Mexican hospital is 30 days, other rules may apply. You of Pomeroy; Debra J. Tedford of
closer to, or substantially more acces- should call Social Security and ask Portland and Christina D. Maxey of lege's !59th commencement cere-.
mony on Sunday, May 12. Gerlach,
sible from, your home than the near- for a copy or the booklet, Your Reedsville.
est u.s. hospital that can provide the Social Securi.ty Checks While You
Students named to the president's who received a B.S. in sports medicare you neCd, regardless of whether Are Outside the United States (Pub- li'st maintained a· perfect 4.0 grade cine, is the daughter o( Mike and
an emergency exists, and without lication No. 05-10137).
· average while dean's list honorees Debbie Gerlach, 453 Grant Street.
regard to where the illness or injury
occurs.
ATTENTI,ON!
· • You are in Canada traveling by
the most direct route between AlasLandowners of property within in the base flood elevation (100 Year Flood)
ka and another state when an cmer·
are required to obtain a development permit before any type of work,
gency occurs, and a Canadian hospital is closer to, or substtntially more
construction of a new building, plaping a trailer or manufactured home on a

---Community calendar---

"It reassures us that the stale really is trying to help us get lhis new
building," he ad4ed.
The board also accepted the retirement of maintenance supervisor Joe
. Foreman, and approved the resigna, lions of Barbara Lawrence as high
school cheerleader advisor and AJan
Crisp as eighth grade boys basketball
coach.
The board approved Tom Smith
and Pat Newland as volunleer football coaching assislal!ts, and hired
Becky Dudding as junior high cheer·
leader advisor.
In addition, the board discussed
the need for new textbooks and
agreed to further di~uss the need at
the nexi board meeting set for July 8
at 7 p.m. at the higl) school.
Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill, Board President Susie
Grueser and board members Dave
Kucsma, Bob Collins,.C.T. Chapman
and Marty Morarity.

·commissioners studY dispute over funding request

"Their bikes are loud and their

Things to remember if you plan to travel this summer ·
By ED PETERSON

35 011111
A Gannett Co. Ne~atlp p1r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueaday, June 18,1996

Funding means
.state to pay half
·of erection costs

Pomeroy ·High School class of '49 meets for ·luncheon.
It was noted that Lawrence Napper died on Feb. 27. A note from his
widow, Dorothy Napper, was shared
with those present.
Dallas and others shared correspondence rfom Joan Riggs Johnson,
Anna Lee Mciver, Howard Allen,
Eddie Ball, · Walter Green, Rollin
McDaniels, Jack Seelig, Janet Gilbert
Moore, Dorothy Leonard Miley, Carmalita McBride Williams. Albert
Rusche!, George Vaughan, Eugene

e-

•

.S outhern ·K-8 school ....---Final_preparations-__,
-r eceives
·
state
boost
-

.

The Pomeroy High School class
6f 1949 met for a buffet luncheon at
'trinity Congregational Church in
Pomeroy on May 25.
.
; Dick Ash gave the blessing before
ihe lunch prepared by the Trinity
Church special projects committee:
The afternoon was spent reminiscing with friends. getting updates
on fellow classmate;, both home and
away, under the leadership of George
Dallas.

•

Vol,.,, NO. 37
i Secllon, iO Pllget.

IBiker festival sheds
its 'tough gUy' image
'

Buckeye s:
4-7-11-27-30

Partly cloudy tonight ,
chence of ltonne. Low• In
the eoe. Wedn. .day,
chence of etoime: High

..-r90.

l

•

9-8-2-6

.

Michael Leifheit of Pomeroy rep. resented Meigs High School recently at the Hugh O'Brian Youth Foundation Leadership Seminar held at
Denison University, Granville.
The seminar provides educational opportunities for developing leadMICHAEL LEIFHEiT
ership skills to prepare young people
for the future.
. Selection was based on scholastic !unities to listen to and interact with
achievement and leadership potential. prominent business and government
•The students were given the oppor- leaders.

'··

.Pick 3:
3-1-3
Pick 4:

Sportli on Page 5

Leifheit
attends
leadership
•
sem1nar.

By JOHN LARRABEE
USATODAY

Ohio Lottery

I

satjon she had about one aspect of
Castle Grande. Instead, she allowed
her lawyer. David Kendall, to discount the accusation of an Arkansas
savings and loan executive who says
Mrs: Clinton dismisSed his. warning
of. an improper loan transaction.

'
'
';

As for the discovery of her miss- :
ing law firm billing records in the :
· White Ho~sc personal residence, the :
first lady said: " I do not know how
the billing records came to be iden- : _
tifled ... at the White House, although .
I have read various media accounts."
Committee Republicans pressed :
Suggesting that savi)lgs and loan for more information, asking whether :
executive Don Denton made up the she knew how the records came to be :
story, Kendall pointed out that Den- in the White House book room, who ·
ton was granted immunity from pros- saw them and where the records had :
ecution several month~ ago in been since 1992. ·
exchange for. his CPOperation with
The draft Republican report con- •
Whitewaler prosecutors.
eludes that Clinton administration ;
officials tried to impede ·criminal :
"Mr. Denton's apparently mal- · investigations of the affair to protect :
Jeablerecollection did not 'recall' this the president and first lady.
conversation until months after the
The report · also points to Mrs. ,
discovery of the billing records," said Clinton as spearheading a White :
Kendall, who said he thinks t!l. call House effort to keep Foster's White :
was on a different topic.
House files away .from law enforce-· ;
Kendall dismissed the commit· melit officials in the days following :
tee's questions as a "~san public- his June 1993 suicide ..The tiles con- ,
ity gimmick" and add!!: ••It simply tained information on Whi1ewa1er ·
niakes no difference what informa- \ ~d the White House travel office frrtion we furnish you."
·
108S.
.

.

,..

•

~

,,

,, '

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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29664">
              <text>June 17, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6146">
      <name>founds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2416">
      <name>lott</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1916">
      <name>mcclellan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="599">
      <name>nicholson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5936">
      <name>radekin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="715">
      <name>rollins</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
