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                  <text>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
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Buckeye s:
4-7-11-27-30

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

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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.

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.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.

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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."
·
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�.: COmmentary

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TUII~J,Jun111,1111

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bers were lmSied in· Florida and
clwged "!'itb ptouina to ao to Walt
WASHINGTON - De..- Mr. l&gt;isuey World discuised as Disney
~sident ~
c~rs and kill black tourists.
' Seven months qo, when I met They called their scheme the "ultiwith you in the White House we • mate crime of chaos."
spent a lot of time tallting about Ibis
In May, Fleet Finan&lt;;ial Group,
nation's deeply roOted racial prob- Inc., the nation's third IIIJCSt mort. lems. You were frank and, 1 think. sage company, quietly settled a racist
plot of anolber sort; After being_
since~e in whll you sajd about "black
pain and white fears."
accl.l&amp;ed by !be Justice Department of
Since then the rot thai's eatins chargins. black and Hispanic cusaway 11 our national fabric has tomers higher mongage rates than
become more apparent - .and more whites with the same credit profiles,
corrosive. Tile horrible wave of black · Fleet agreed to pay almost $4 million
church burnings is the most chilling in compensation.
Earlier-l'm talking about 1996,
evidence of this decay. But it's not the
not 1896 -' the operators of two
only proof.
Last week, two white gang mem- Louisiana night clubs finally agreed

o........ a.mo.

111 Cowl St., Pom..-oy, Ohio

Acao~ rocecu~ forcllyti..ccoadiliolls and

to stop refus,ng admission and service to blacks.
·
Like the churth burnings. these
aren 't isolated incidents but rather
part of a disturbing national trend.
Inausingly the racists among us
think they can aet away with acts of
violence and bigotry. They no longer
seek !be cover of darkness or hide
behind white sheets. · The nation's
shifting political landscape is all the
pr'otection many of them need.
· The only way to bridge the gap
that divides ~ along the color line,
you said during our meeting, "is for
people to really get to the point where
they can stand in other people's
shoes." At the time, you said YOI.I
weren't ready to talk about how to

Dole talking himself
back into the middle ·
of abortion maelstrom

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IMendeld 183" I•

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IND.

..
W. VA.

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' By The AMoelated Preas
Showers and thunderstorms will
·. prOduce heavy rains ;~Cross parts of ·
• Ohio 'tnday.
· An area of low pressure across the
· Grell Lakes will push slowly, east,
• while a front remains nearly station. ary across the northern part of the
.. state.
Showers and lh4nderstorms will
· occur in the north, with scattered
thunderstorms south. Some rains will
· be heavy, creating. the potential for
flooding in the north. Highs today
·I will be 75 to 80 nonhwest to 0car 90
· south.
Scattered sbowers and thUnder' storms will linger tonight. mainly early. Lows will be from 65 to 70.
The threat of thunderstorms will
return Wednesday, especially in the
afternoon. A mix of clouds and· sunShii)C i§in store with highs mainly in

stand~bys _ __

SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) From the federal courthouse to the
. county jail, preparations were under
· way for .an expected indictm~nt of
.. Unabomber. · suspect Theodore
Kaczynski in the city where two jleople were ldlled by package bombs
blarped on the elusive serial bomber.
New surveillance cameras were
.installed Monday at the courthouse
and an arniored' car was brought in,
&gt;presumably to transi'Drt Kaczynski
.from the jail to the courthouSe and
'back after he is.u:ansfe.rred to the city
·from Montana.
Local media rep6rted that police
and traffic engineers were .making
arrangements for handling the crowds
.and traffic problems that a trial might
cause.
An indictment of Kaczynski was
~xpccted to be handed up here sometime today, a federal' source has told
.1be Associatlld Press, charging the
formcr,math professor ·with crimes
,related to the 18-year bombing spree.
Three. deaths and 23 injuries have
been blamed on thF Unabomber.
The counhouse is just a few miles
·from the parking lot where the first
llnabomher victim died and a few
blocks from the lobbyists' office
where the last victim died.
Hugh Scrutton, 3~; was killed by
bomb · found near his computer
tental store in December 1985. In
April 1995, a package bomb killed
California Forestry Association President Gilbert P Murray, 47.
' Advenising ·executive 'Thomas
f'Aosser, ~0. was killed in his Nonh
Caldwell, N.J., home in December
1994 when he opened a packa!le
b\)mb. The case could ev~ntually be

a

.. Berry's World

11

WAA"t'
\AJHE.N \NE f\&gt;\.1,..

!~;~~~~

Philadelp~ia

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The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ZJ3.910)

Ohio Vattey Publilhl"'l eo._,y1G111neti eo..
........,_, 'Ohio 45769, I'll. 992-2t!l6. Second
claa poocoae poid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

Am Ele Power ' " ""'-''"""·---40'1.

Auoci.Uon.

~R: ~address comctions to
Th•o Daily S..dnd. 111 Coon St.. Pomeroy.
01lio 45769. .
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. SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ly~or-R-

g:
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OneY-.....................................,........ $104.00
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Subocriben n« de$lri• 10 poy lhe carrier ,..Y
remit Ia advlftCC direct to The Daily SeDdnel
0111a three. lis. or 12 mondt baia. Crodil wiD be

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No •btcrlpdoo by mail pennlnod ia ....,
w11ere home Cllri« IIIVklt 11 availllble.

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MAILSUB8CRlPTIONS
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announcements
Thursday, 7 p.m. in the basement of
the Catholic Church, Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy.
Legion to meet
Racine Post 602, American
Legion, will meet Thursday, business
meeting at 6:30p.m. with dinner to
follow. ·

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(Continued from Pege1)
:
The new Jaw also requiRsasurvey be conducted on any land split, Eason
noccd. The IWO &amp;lbd !be bo.d 10 COIIIider .. u.ae. iD the land COIIYC)'aftce
fee to fund the Mtic;p..j .sded e~ srs 10 • two offiCeS.
:
• Paid weekly biU. of$193,117.99, cOIIIistin&amp; of 233 entries.
;
~sent~ Howard. Commissioner Robert Hartenbach and Cleric Gtoria Kloes. Abient was Commission President Fred Hoffman.
'

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Local News in B. rief: ~

. man faces assault charges
Racine

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CbarJes of felonious assault were flied this mornins against a Racine ~

man for his role in an alleged assault that sent an Alfred 'man io a ,

Columbus area hospital with serious head injuries.
;
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, James Lucas, j
Cherry Ridge, filed an assault complain! against James Wickline , ~:
Racine, after' Wickline a,llegedly struck Lucas in the head during a r.
domestic dispute around 4 p.m. Monday. ~
Lucas was transponed by Meigs County Emergency Medical ~er- :
vices from the scene of the assault, Apple Grove-Dorcas Road, to Vet- ;
erans Memorial Hospital for treatment. Lucas was later transferred to ::
Grant Medical Center by squad, where·he was listed in fair condition :·
this morning, according to a hospital spokesman.
::

Pomeroy accidents _investigated

•••

Pomeroy police investigated two accidents Saturday, issuing ci1a- ;
lions to one driver, ac&lt;;_ording to Pomeroy village police chief Gerald ;
Rought.
•
The first accident occurred 11 1:03 p.m. on East Main Street at the •
Pomeroy Food Shop.
.
·
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According to reports, Crystal Arnold, 17, Pomeroy, left a 1986 Plymouth running in the parking lot while she went into the store for some •
items. The car jumped out of gear, rolling bac~ into East Main Str)let •
where it was struck by a 1984 Buick Century, driven by Teresa •
Ohlinger, 34, Long Bottom. Ohlinger's vehiCle then pushed Arnold's ,
vehicle into the gas pumps, where it came to a stop.
·
Arnold was cited by police for condition when motor-vehicle left
unattended.
The second accident occurred at 7: lOp.m. on Lasley Street. Accord- :
ing to reports, Harry Pickens, 46, Pomeroy was driving a 1986 Chevy
S- 10 on Lasley Street when he struck a parked 1994 Chevy Corsica.
owned by Bobby Foster, Pomeroy, while he attempted to back up on •
the street:
No citations were issued in the accident.

Pomeroy woman cited

:-

A Pomeroy woman was cited in a orie-car accident Saturday ':
evening on South Second Avenue in Middleport, according to Capt. '
Bruce Swift of the Middleport Police Depanment.
According to reports, the accident occurred at 8:15p.m. when Eliz- '•
abeth Gloeckner, 30, was pulling from a driveway in a 1995 Ford F-. ''
I 50 with a 1972 travel trailer in tow. She misjudged the tum and struck. .'
a window air conditioner in a neighboring residence owned by O'Dell .;'
Blake.
Damage to the trailer was light, while damage to the air conditioner
and a window in the residence was moderate.
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She was .cited for driving while under court suspension.

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·Housing starts off in May

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WASHINGTON (AP) '-Housing and thus reflect lower rates earlier in
starts fell 4.7 percent in May after the year.
. . .
four months of steadily rising mortThe National Association '(jf
gage rates. Construction declined in Home Builders reported Monday lis
every region except the South.
National Housing Index slipped two
The Commerce Department said points to 61 in June,' reflecting "sonl~
today that construction of new homes settling 'in the' market after sevcll{l
at)d apanments totaled 1.43 million at months of increased activity which
·a seasonally · adjusted annual rate, resulted from rising interest rates and
down from a revised !.51. million in recovery from a bitter winter." ;..
April. The April rate initially was
Applications for building permit~.
estimated to be 1.52 million.
often a barometer of future activity,
Many analysts had predicted a dropped 1.9 pereentto a 1.43 millili~
drop only til the 1.48 million level :
rate, the first .decline in four months .
· The construction rate was t~e . Still, while many analysts expect
lowest since December, when it alsQ starts to fall from recent peaks, they
predict new construction·will remain
was 1.43 million.
"Upcoming reports should indi- above the 1.35 million pace last year.
cate a signifjcant decline in starts, as For the first five months of the yea.i
higher mongage rates lake their. toll starts w~re 13.5 percent above those
, .•
on this interest rate-sensitive sector of of the same period in 1995. ·
the economy," economist Marilyn
Construction of single- famiiy
Schaja of Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jen- . homes, about 80 percent of totl\1
·reue Securities Corp: advised the ·starts, fell 5.9 percent to a 1.13 milcompany's clients in advance of the lion rate, lowest since last Novelli=
her's 1.13 million pace. The drop was
report.
.
Thirty .. year, fixed-rate mortgages the largest since a 12 percent declirre
averaged 8.09 percent in May, more in January· 1995.
·v
.than a full percen1age poi'lt above the
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R
egionally,
starts
rose
0.9
percent
7.03 percent average in January,
in the South, to a 659,000 rate.
"
accordi~g surveys by the Federal
Home · an Mortgage Corp. They
reached .39 percent last week, highest in m re than a year.
Analysts say that for every I per-

MRIDDBoanl
The Meigs . Count)! Board of
MRIDD will hold its regular June
meeting tonight at 7:30 at Carl~ton centage point increase in rates l
School in Syracuse.
2SO,OOO to 300,000 families are
priced out of the market.
For instance, the monthly payment
on a $100,000 mortgage with a 7 percent interest rate is $665, whi.le the
Francis Eskew, Veterans Memorial
payment on the same loan with an 8
Center~
percent rate is $734 - a difference
6:20 p.m., Flatwoods Road, Ron
of$69.
Miller, VMH;
Still, sales of new homes remained
9:5 I p.m., Old Forest Road, Sarah
above 700,000 at an annual rate in
Boyles, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
April-for the fourth straight month,
RACINE
the
first such four-month string since
3:46p.m., Fifth and Vine streets,
the period enckd December 1993.
Jim Lucas, VMH.
However, analysts point out that
' . TUPPERS PLAINS
the
new home sales measure is based
7:41a.m., Albaugh Addition, Roy
on
contract signings, which often
,
Veterans M1101orial ·
Rollins, dead upon arrival.
occur
weeks before the actual closing
Monday admissions ~ Kevin
Hetzer, Reedsville,
Monday discharges - none.
·Holzer Medical Center
Discharges J.une 17 - Betty
Carter, Mrs. Jon McKinniss and
daughter, Kessley Carnes, Lee Blain,
Eslie Folmer, Mts. Jeny Herdman
and son, Cody Huselt. Mrs. Michael
Abele and son.
(Published with pennlosion) -

EMS units record 8 ·calls ·

Stocks

•Mt•e.,r: The AssOciated Prns. and the Ohio

wi~w ~

M~igs

line .management ' at George Washington University. said today that fir·
ing Broderick is the wrong-move,
"The FAA is doing the worst pos·
sible thing in the world right now, firing ·a long-term public servant.
They're going to lull people into
thinking this was caused by a person,
which it was not."
Hinson today defended the FAA's
. handling of the ValuJet investigation.
"We have to present a case that
would stand up in coun. We have
done that," he told NBC. He said the
FAA lacked docume!ltation to ground
the airline when he said a month ago
the carrier was safe. But, he conced- ·
ed~"There's some culpability here at
the agenH."
Hinson said he is confi.dent other
.discount airlines' are safe. "There is
riot a single new carrier now or historically that has grown" ·as rapidly
as ValuJet, he said.
But aviation consultant John
Nance told ABC he believes that the
FAA is unable to properly police the
new stlirtup airlines. ·
"I don't think we can have much
confidence that the FAA can pcilice ·
an airline thai does not have in its culture the idea that it's going to be
safe," Nance said.
The FAA found "several serious
deficiencies in ValuJet's operations"
folldWing im intensive 30-day i\lspection, Hinson said Monday, about six
hours before the midnight suspension
of flights took effect.
ValuJet called the FAA action
"grossly unfair" and said it hoped to
be back in operation within 30 &lt;lays.
ValuJct ~sident l!.ewis Jordan said
the airlin.e would provide full refunds
for ticket holders.
The airline, which serves 31 cities
in 19 states, canceled all of today 's
flights,
along with many on Monday
.
night.
·
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In forting Valulet out of the skies,
Hinson cited ''system-wide deficien- ·
cies" 'in the fast~ growing airline's
maintenance program and "multiple
shortcomings" in its quality control
over outside contractors

According to an FBI affidavit
released last week, DNA tests of saliva found on two letters - one sent
by the · Unabomber and one by Book sale slated
The Friends of the Library will
Kaczynski to his family- showed a
hold a book sale June 26-29, 10 a.m.
genetic link.
to
4 p.m, outside of the Pomeroy
An FBI ·investigation in the two
Meigs
County Public Library. Rain
months before Kaczynski's arrest
also found common phrases an!l mis.. will cancel.
spellings between his writings and
documents authorities say were · Dust control p!anned
Dust control will be put down in
penned by the Unabomber, the affi·Letart
Township as weather permits, :
davit said.
· ·
In the subsequent seareh, Justice the trustees announced
Department sources have said ihat ..
items found in the cabin included the AA meeting set
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
original copy of the Unabomher's
35,000-word, anti-technology mani- have ·an open discussion meeting
festo, . a typewriter used for the manifesto, bombs and bomb parts, detonators and even the 9-digit identifiUnits of the Meigs County Emer.cation number used by the bomber.
gency Medical Service recorded eight
At the Sacramento County Jail,
calls for assistance Monday, includKaczynski would be held apart from
ing two transfer calls. Unit&amp; respondthe general prison population, shering included:
iff's spokeswoman Sharon Telles
.
POMEROY
said·
4:28 a.m., Union Avenue, Mary
"He'll have more amenities here
Crossan,
Holzer Medical Cente,r;
than ~e did in his cabin/' she said.
II :28 a.m.,. West Main Street,

Pllbllthed .,..,. altemaon. Mondly throuah

1 NnwlpiiJel'

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f\i&lt;ior, Ill CoUrt St. Po...,.y, Ohio, by lhe

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WASHINGToN (AP)- ValuJet
hlllted operations today under pressure from the same government officials who declared the. airline safe
afte~ · a Valulet plane crashed five
weeks ago in th~ Florida Everglades.
The Federal Aviation Administration, accused of negligently failing to
spot ValuJet's shortcomings earlier,
was forcing its top safely official into
the 80s.
retirement as part of a larger shake.Wea~er forec~t:
Tonight. .. Showers and thunder- up. '
. On Wall Street, ValuJet stock lost
storms likely northeast and east.
half
of its value in the opening 30
Partly tp mostly. cloudy elsewhere
minutes
of trading, the first response
with a chance of showers and thunby investors to the grounding. Vatuderstorms. Lows 6S to 70.
Jet
plunged SS.a share with more than
Wednesday...Showers and thun4
million
shares changing hands in
derstorms likely northeast. Partly to
the
early
going
to stand II $5 a share
.mostly cloudy with a chance of thunderstorms elsewhere. Highs 80 to 85 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
The agency planned to announce
nonh and 85 to 90 south.
changes
thai include the retirement of
· Extended forecast:
Anthony
J. Broderick, longtime assoThursday... A chance of showers
ciate
administrator
for regulation and
and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower and mid 60s. Highs upper 70s to certification.
Broderick's job, perbaps the most
lower 80s.
powerful
in the agency, combines
Friday...A chance of showers ani!
authority
to
certify airlines and airthunderstorms. Lows 60 to 6S. Highs ·
craft
and
safe
to fly and to regulate
in the lower and mid 80s·.
Saturday... Fair. Lows 60 to 65 . the operation of airlines. The certification and regulation aspects are
Highs.in the 80s.
considered likely to be separated after
Broderick's departure. : · •
FAA Administrator David Hinson,
interviewed 'o.n morning television
talk shows, declined comffillnt on the
reported shakeup.
But government souices speaking
combined into the expected Sacra- on condition of anonymity confmned
mento indictment.
that agency officials told the White
Kaczynski, 54, has been held · House in a meeting Monday that
without bond in a Helena, Mont., jail Broderick would leave, White House
since his April 3 arrest. He has not .Chief. of Staff Leon .Panetta and
'been charged in the Unabombef c~. adviser George Stephanopoulos
only with possession of bomb-mak- attended the meeting,.;~! which the
jn_g materials that investigators said agency plans were approved.
they found in his remote mountain
Two sources familiar with the
cabin .
The ummg of the expected meeting said the decision for Bredindictment was · not immediately erick to depart had been made before
Clear. It also was unclear when the meeting and the White House
Kaczynski might be brought to Sacra- officialS' were satisfied with the
mento. The sourte, speaking on con- actions of Hinson and Transportation
dition of anonymity, said K;aczynski Secretary Federico Pena.
Darryl Jenkins, who teaches aircould be transferred by the endofthe

.Authorities gear for activity
from Unabomber indictment

Inappropriate ·___~---___,;_··

Today in history .....

-FAA reverses past stance; .
ValuJet operations halted

:Threat of -thunaerstorms
~ to persist through Friday

WELFARE REFOWA
5\STEMPID
THSTOVOU?

Missio~:

Roy E. Rollins, 94. of Tuppers Plai111,died MoDday, Jw;e 17, J996at his
rpidellce.
Born Sept. 9, 1901 in Leon, W.Va., he was !be 10D of the llleJIICkson M.
• and Flo Rena Flowen Rollins. He was a lelired conduclor for !be New Yortc
C~ntnd Railrold. llld was a member of !be B of RT.
-· He is s~~n~ived by a two daughters and a son-in-law, M.ry Scarberry of
1Uppers Plains, and Glenda and LOren Benedum of Reedsville; two sons and
a dallghter-in-law: R. Orville Rolljns of Buck Harbour, Maine, and D. Denver and Doris Rollins of Chilli~; and IS grandcbildrep, 27 great-grandchildren and six'areat-great grandchildren. ·
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Ellie Merlie Rollins. in 1990;
three 48ughten, Eunice Herdman, Rena Rollins and Doris Rollins; and by.
grandchildren, four brothers and one sister.
• three
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the White-Blower Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Lloyd Grimm officiating. Burial will follow in the
Meigs Co\lllly Memory Gardens. Friends may call 11 the funeral home from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m: Wednesday.

make this happen. But now you
must. Because if you don't act soon •

IHARW
RECoGNIZE YOU...

Take new look at .old

an

Roy E.

MICH.

to bring us together, you'll 'have to
614-992-2156 • Fax: 892·2157
'share !be blllll)e for tearins us apart.
And just whll is it that I think you
should do?
·
Convene a White House conference: on race relations. Calltogethet:.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
a broad cross section of the ~rican
people to talk about solutions to our
ROBERT L WINGETT
troubled racial state. Use this meetPublisher
ing as a jumping off point for a yearlong series of gatherings across the
country that pull ·more people into
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
Generll Manager
this discussion - and results in a
Controller
national compi!Ct on -race. Tile key
here is to get people talking to, not
yelling at, o;,ach other .across· the colLMfln to fiNo Mlhot . . a I 'c Qm&amp; l?Jey ahoultle. ,.,, than 8 . . . .. All t.aln
or barrier.
. . ~to editing end_,., • . , . _ Md I~ ttwa Mdlsf ; hueiNII'Itllor. NO UNignfd ""-w ... l&gt;e , . _ ' - - , _ l&gt;e In flOOd Back In 1903, W.E.B. Du Bois
.. I , , .....,Jiati»'IOIIM'da&amp;
predicted that "the problem of the
twentieth C'tntury is !be prciblem of
the color-line."Tile goal of !be White
· House conference: I propose "fould be
to ensure that 11 doe911't become the
problem of the 21st century.
There life a lol of rational ~le
-' black and white - whO$\: voices
have not been heard on the raco problem. We need to get them invqlved in
WIS'CONSIN'S ·
the search for solutions.
The big question, you ~ld me in
By WALTER R. MEARS
o.ir
meeting, "is wllether we~re going
AP Special Correspondent
to
treat
each other as if we're a-com.
WASHIN.G TON- Whether Republicans use a preamble, a plank or even·
munity
or ... whether we're going to
: a postscript to acknowledge room for party dissenters to their anti-abortion
be a winner-take-all society." Well,
' orthodoxy, it isn't going to make any real difference. There's no prospect of
it's
time you give the American peo: a constitutional amendment to ban abortion.
.
ple
a ch:jnce to answer. I think if you
! No platform declaration is going to change that.
'
•
do
- if you convene this White
So the argument ovefhow and where to put the "declaration of tolerance"
House conference on race relations
; Bob Dole wants in the 1996 GOP platform is one of form and symbolism,
the voices of reason will shout
: ·rather like the dOCtrinal dehates of medieval theologians.
down
the voices or hate. Rational
: That makes. it all the more baffling that having charted a way out of the
people
will demand an end to irra· abonion dispute fo~ now, Dole talked himself back into the middle of it. As
tional behavior. And the nation will
; the nominee-to-be, he said it was his decision to put language recognizing
stave off its self-destruction.
i differing GOP viewsin the anti-abortion plank, not in a more general stateIf you don't, if you abdicate your
i ment prefacing the platform.
•
leadership
in this time of crisis, the
·;
While that sounds like a fine-print distinction, this is an issue on which
societal
rot
that racism breeds will
j almost any words are fighting words to one side or the other. That wa$ Dole's ·
spread. And the tribalism that turned
~ dilemma. He·is opposed to abortion, promised to keep the plaiform call for
Northern Ireland and Bosnia into
; a constitutional amendment to-undo the 1974 Supreme Court ruling that legal.
killing
fields will one day soon
: ized it, but wants also to reach out for the women's vote, which accounts for ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
threaten
this nation's very existence.
! a big share of President Clinton's lead in the public opinion polls.
: Dole seemed to have managed a major step past GOP strife on the issue
: with his statement 10 days ago, promising no retreat on the platform call for
• an amendment, but calling also for a declaration of tolerance toward Rep!IIJC
: licans who disagree and support abortion rights.
' · "This is not compromise, it is civility," he said at the time. Dole told House
Republicans Monday in one of his congressional farewells that he'd spent
"That's a wide spread by his.toriGreen is manager and co-managearnings, which some investment
By JIM LAWLESS
his life in the party trying to bring people together.
cal
standards," Green said, and when
er
of
several
lnvista
investmerit
experts
consider
on
the
high
side.
"And I hope I made a big step forward last week in reaching out to every- ·The Del Moines Register
the
disparity corrects, she expects a
Actually, the general martcet has a funds, including a utility stock fund,
The better values in the.stock marbody on the abortion issue," he said. Not that he satisfied everybody: Gov.
)&gt;ete .Wilson of California said it wasn't enough to accept other views. He ket today may be in places that have way to go to be raied "high,". said a fund of middle-sized company rally in utility stoi:ks with ''aggresbeen left unattended, such as tradi- Green, who handles many a lump- stocks, and an account balanced with sive" management, such as
-,vants the abortion plank erased from the platform.
sum investment as vice president and stocks and bonds that has a five-year MidAmerican Energy of Des M9ines
· That isn't going to happen, either. Not with the nominee and a delegate tional blue chips and utilities.
Stock prices are . a mite high, portfolio manager at lnvista Capital 1 a¥e!"llge at~nual net retl'm ·of l5.S7 . and ClNergy, which serves Ohio and
majority opposed to it. Under the rules. it would take majorities of six state
Indiana.
c 1
•
·'
delegations at the San Diego convention even to raise the issue on the floor. espeeially in the Nasdaq marlcet, Management Inc., a unit ofThC-Prin- . percent, beating a benchmark index
Both stocks arc in her ponfolios,
where 10 percent. of the stocks are cipal Financial Group of Des Moines. by 2 percentage points.
Pole's settlement seemed to preclude that.
she
said.
Green
has
a
portfolio
manager's
Going
back
to
a
stretch
in
time
· Until he undid it by saying in a CNN interview Monday that he wanted selling at 70 times theirearnings or
affection
for
blue-chip
stocks
such
as
·
Problems
remain for some utilithe dissent line to be pan to be written into the abonion plank itself, not made more, financial analyst Catherine A. ( 19S8 to 1972) ·when the economy ·
Bristol-Myers,
especially
when
she
ties,
however,
including Niagara
pl'f1' of the preamble, where it would apply to other disputed issue~ as well. Green told a business and profes- was similar to today's slow and can add them to her ponfolios at
Mohawk Power, an electric and nat. He'd been vague about that in the iriitial statement, although aides had sic;mru breakfast group in Des Moines. steady economic growth with low prices she deems reasonable.
ural gas utility in New Yortc that is
Iowa,
last
week.
inflation,
the
average
high
for
pricesaid he meant for the recognition of differing views to be in the preface.
'B'llt
'
s
he
goes
out
on
the
conve~~
trying
to work around contracts to .
For her money, there is ·little log- earnings ratios was 18,7, Green said.
: Indeed, he'd said at one point that he didn't care where it was attached
tiona!
wisdo!ll
limb
somewhat
with
purchase
electricity at high rates, and
The S&amp;P 500 index, up almost 8.5
ic in paying 70 times earnings for a .
to the platform. "What's the difference?" he'd said in one TV interview.
her call for selected·utility stocks, a Pacific Gas &amp; Electric, a high-cost
. Rep. Henry Hyde of Dlinois, the platform chairman; had thought it was stock \"'hen.you can still buy proven percent this year, would have to rise group frequendy found in the "under- producer that st:rves northern Caliprofitability
in
a
qualitY
company
like
about
9
oercent
more
to
reach
past
to go in the preamble, where he wanted it, so that the recognition of differpeaks, so by historical standards the weighted" part of portfolio man- fornia.
ing views would apply to other issues as welL That would cover term lim- Bristol-Myers Squibb that is selling
for less than '16 time· estimated market is not all that high, sh!l said. agers' holdings.
its, which the platform likely will endorse and which he opposes.
While investment pros fret about
Jim LawJeas cannot IIIIIWer mail
Still, it may be wise to bide your
• But in his Monday interview, Dole said he wanted the abortion plank· to 1996 earnings. ·
time when it comes to large amounts lost monopolies in the industry. she Individually but be wiD answer
.
Studies
indicate
that
investors'
include the tolerance language, saying it was his decision and not negotiable.
potential return· is lower when they of money, Green indicated. You could contends "utilities are learning how selec!H Investment quatloos In
That was praised by abonion rights supporters, denounced by conserVIIive
this column. Write to him at The
buy stocks that are selling at high dollar-cost-average your way irtto the to compete."
activists who vowed a convention battle to keep it separate.
·
Meanwhile,
retreating
utility
stock
Det Moine!! Register, P.O. Box 957,
prices in relation to 12-month earn- market with regular ·purchases of
That would produce single~issue strife Dole doegn't want. And it would ings, Green said.
·stocks, she suggested in an interview. prices are giving rise to 6 percent Det Mol-, Iowa, 50304. Readers
not alter the basic difference between candidates on the issue. Clinton supUsing Standard &amp; Poor's 500 . "This may not be the (market) top, average utility dividend yields, com- are reminded that brokerages may
pons abonion rights. Dole opposes abonion except in cases of rape or incest, index companies as a benchmartc, the but there is potential for surprise on pared with around 2 P.,rcent for tlie have investments In the stoclcJ they
or to protect the life of the mother.
.
recommend. '
·
general market.
stock marlcet is selling 11 17.2 times the downside as well,': she added.
Dole had tried earlier to t11m the issue against Clinton, focusing on•his
veto of a bill to ban cenain late-term abonions. Instead, it is again argument among Republicans.
.
.
·
.
"I'm trying to bring people together," Dole said amid the revived GOP
dispute. "That's what I do ~st."
He 'II need to try again.
. .: (EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter .R. Mears, vice president and coll!mactual European locations. The TV ing the kid if he liked gladiator the "Mission: Impossible" sequel for
By lan Shoales
scale. Simultaneously, they could
llllst for The Associa!H Press, bas rePQrted on Washington and nationI'm one of 'several million who show, though it supposedly sennhe movies in u Airplane."
m
politics for more than 30 years.)
.
-- And, of course, he was Jim approach Tom Cruise disguised a5 .
shelled out a chunk of iheir dispos- team to either grim vaguely Eastern
•
able income to attend the recent European police states or gnm vague- Phelps 9n the inconuptible "Mission: studio execs and offer him five g.Zil:
•
•
lion dollars for the sequel, plu~
blockbuster, :'Mission: Impossible." ly Caribbean police states, all looked Impossible."
points.
pretty
much
the
same
-drab
buildTh~se are enough accomplish·~------------~------------~ (If yQU haven't yet seen the movie •.
The ensuing lawsuits should tie up
·stop reading this now; I will be ingson a studio's back lot, to be pre- ments for two lifetimes. But now
,
revealing its major plot twist -- be cise. More mysteriously, the petty Peter Graves huddles angrily in his everybody for years. ·
In the meantime, Peter Graves anc!
despots of these Backlotslovakias all compound, a bitter broken man. Jim
warned!!!)
· The nick has much to recommend spoke English with the same gu(\ur- Pbclps ,betray his team? That's like Barbara Bain can spend their golden
it. For instance; you'll recall that in al accent. "We" was always .. vee," !!lying FOx Mulder is behind alien years in Backlotslovakia, wiretappinli
so~
the late lamented television series, "have" was "haff/' uif W8$ ..eef," abductions, Mary Richards is a con- . Nazis, disguising themselves as cor:
there was always the threat that "the and "luff" was just a trick. Many niving back-stabber, and Eddie rupt prime ministers and thCir mis~
:
AAm~
tresses, and proving to the world lhal
·
secretary" would "disavow"•knowl- were the tyrants' hearts broken by Haskell is a nice kid.
:
edgc of their actions should any of Bll,rbara Bain.
These damn movie people think luff can conquer all after alt.
That's what l'd. .do. if I we~ Jitq
In ·the movie, the foreigners were they can trash any value they please,
the lmpossiblers be caught or killed.
Ol}f Of ec&gt;Sfll\~"!
'
.
.
, ,, · l
I always wondered two things: (A) all French and spoke English with and get away with it. I think Peter Phelps.
(To receive a complimentary Ia~
Who was this secretary? An overly genuine French accents. I'm glad Graves should asse111ble The Team ·
powerful administrative assistant, or they spent the extra money for this for one lasi mission and teach ihese Shoales newsletter, call 1-800!989-!
DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408j
shadowy Cabinet member? (B) What . slice of realism (though luff in the movie weasels a thing or two.
happens when you get disavowed? movie remllined an illusion).
Being mastelli of disguise, they Broad St., Nevada City, CA 959S9.) .
lan Shoa1es is a syn41catC!I
B!lt the movie does make a severe could easily pose as Tom Cruise and
Nobody evh got disaV"owed on the
writer
(or Newspaper Enierpr:Jse!
error
in
judgment.
It
makes
Jim
.
TV show, not in any rerun that·! ever
his "people." Then th~y could
saw.
"Good Morning Mr. Phelps" Phelps approach studio execs offering to do Association.
~
Well, the movie reveals the (Jon Voight) the arch-villain of the
I
process at last! (Though who "the piece. ,
)
I won't go into the shadow this
secretary" is remains a mys\111)'.) 1be
mysteriou·s feds for whom Tom slur casts on righteous ·fictitious
I
.
Cruise · works disavow him early ·in coven organizations cv~rywhere. But
the movie, forcing him to blow up'·an did any of the monsters in Hollywood
.' .. ' ;., . ' I
aquarium with chewing gum. In des- take the feelings .of Peter. (1V's Jfln By The AIIOClated .P~· , . . . .
TQday is Tuesday; June 18, the 170th day of 1996: There arc 196 day~ I
peration, he must then ·hire seal;&gt;. P~lps) Graves into account? The
left
in the ye¥·
.
·
. : ~~~.' · }
Impossible ,Missionaries to break guy should be enjoying the fruits of
One
huixli-ed
year$
ago,
oh
June
18,
1896,
delega""s
to
the
~pUblican
;
into the Pentagon to steal a compu!- his semi-retirement, hosting A&amp;E's
er disk, which·contains something or "Biography," and resting on his lau- National Convention in St Louis nominated William McKinley fOI' presi- ~
dent, and Garret A, Hoban for vice )~resident.
.•
~
other that everybody seems to want. rels. Instead, his laurels are ashes,
Look at his accomplishments.
This theft in n1111 causes the mysteri?on.
forces entered
!IS 'the British
-- He's Jim (1V's Matt Dillon)
ous feds to frame Tom Cruise's mom
during the Revolutionary War:
, :
Artless' brother. .
and dad for !!rug-smuggling. .
•
In
1812,
the.
l)nited
States
declared
war
against
Britain:
~
•
,
•••
·
-He
played
Bobby
Diamond's
So there you have it. Disavowal is
~
•••
In
ISIS,
Napoleon
Bonaparte
met
his
Wllerloo
as
British
aild
PrUssian
a cross between excommunication foster father on "Fury."
.• '
· . ··
,.
. 1,
--He was !be German spy in "Sia- troops defcillcd tbe French in Belgium.
and extqrtion. It's good to have that ·
In 1873, suffragist Susan B. Andlony was fined $1QO for attemptina to
Jas 17."
. '
detail cleared up.
vote
In 'the 1872 presidential election (however, the Qne was never paid). !
-- He.was the pilot who kept ask- .
Also, the movie takes place in
•
•
t
~
""
. ,

.!1 .

•

.

lly DeWAYNE WICkHAM

'

Commissioners study•••

W.rn hy, JUDe 19

The Daily Senti~el 'Black pain, white fears'--~-• j--

The o.Hy Sentinel• hge 3

Pqnwoy • Middleport, Ohio

••

.

'Esftl{,lisfwl in 1.!J48

•

;, Tu••diiJ,.June18, 1118

Hospital news ·

Akzo ............._._ ...........................59~
Ashbmd on
..........- ................39~
..
'
.t11111
AT&amp;T ..........
_,,,,..__ ,,.......-....v.:JI•
Banll C&gt;llt •••••- •••••- ....- ....- ••..36~
Bob Evallll...- .........,...................14{&gt;
'Borg..
..39~
Champion Ind.................- .......~11

waner.....- .................

CbarmiD&amp; Sh..,."_,..._ .."_.•7~.

.n;a

City Holdtq...- ..............._,_•

Ji'ecltnl M.,.W."----·-----lBo
GJUUtett ....--~: ...........- .......69~

Goodyear
T&amp;R_:..
--·------48~
K-mart. ____
·
••-13~

MEIGS COUNTY RE-AL ESTATE OWNERS
TAl. BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
1.995 COLLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAlES,
ALSO FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.
·CLOSING DATE IS JUNE 28, 1996
TUIL.R .IAI DEADLINE IS JULY 31, 1996

Lands EM ........ oori~ ......... - ••- ..:tJ'.II
Umlleclln&lt;.-----..21'1.
~les Bartcorp-........................"23
Obto Valley Bank ---··-"'...32%
0.. VlllleY-·-" ''"""_........34'4

Pnm nili-~----·-----""13%
Rockwell _..;____ . ~
Royel Dliteb/SheU ""-·'"'-154

Shooey••IDc.. ..- ....··-·-·....-11\

.

sw- Bank--·---·....------''»&lt;
·---~'~

w....,.__

Worthl.....
' ..•
-.I

•••

I

HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY JREASURER

""_m

Stock,.., .. .ft tile 1•.30 1.111.
quote• pro•lclecl by Aclve1t o
G·p~ll

. ....

.• '

.. '

· ~"

•

0

\ •

1o

•

''

..

�Tueeday,June11,1996

Sports ·

The Daily Sentin~l.

Pomeroy • Mlddlepor"., Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Pep 5

••
•

•
•

Tueedey,June11,1111

,

•

In other NL action,

Braves defeat Padres 9-3;
Expos and Giants alsQ win
•

•
By TOM WITHERS

Meta 7, Plntn li (10)
Jeff Conine in the ninth.
Losing pitcher AI Leiter (8-6)
At
Piusburgh.
Lance
Johnson
AP SIJO'W,.Wdl,.Greg Mllddux didn't change his homered among his three hits, stole gave up just thm~ hits in seven
windup, his delivery, orms tactics. two bases and scored the winning innings.
'
All he needed was a new target.
''Ex)IOI 5, Rockiel3
run after New York had blown a sixAt Denver, Shane Andrews
Maddux, pitching to backup run lead:
catcher Eddie Perez for the first time
· Jeff Kent also homered as the homered twice and Ugueth Urbina
this season after working exclusive- Mets opened a 6-0 lead in the second won his fourth strljight decision .as
ly with Javy Lopez. picked up his inning before ·offsetting a Pirates Montrul ended,Colorado's six-game
. first win in a month as the Atlanta comeback, keyed by Mark Johnson's ,winning streak.
Braves defeated the San Diego 1wo-run pinch-hit homer and CharAndrews went 3-for-4 and drove
Padres 9-3.
lie Hayes' two-run triple in a five-"run in four runs for the Expos. who have
Maddux (6-5) had two losses and seventh.
won five of their last six. He hit his
:;&gt;
! ·.,..,,q.\•..
three
no
decisions
since
his
last
vicninth
and lOth homers of the season
Pittsburgh's
bullpen
had
pitched
•,"A"•
tory
on
May
17.
But
the
four-time
and
had
his third three-hit game in
seven
scoreless
innings
before
John-.
Cy Young Award winner had ljllle son, who went 3-for-5. singled with his last fivt; games.
trouble with the slumping Padres, two outs in the lOth and stole secUrbina (4-0) gave up five hits
walking
none
and
striking
out
eight.
over
6 1/3 innings. Mel Rojas
ond.
The
single
came
off
Pirates
ARRIVES AT THIRD- Clnclnlllltl'a Eric Davis
ond. Inning of Monday nlghfs National League
"
I
felt
good,"
Maddux
said.
"I'm
pitched
the final I 213 innings for his
reliever
Francisco
Cordova
(2-4),
(right) arrives et third base ahead of the late tag
game In Houaton, where 1ha Astros won 5-4. (AP)
pleased
with
the
way
I
threw.
I
locatlOth
save.
.
who
struck
out
four
of
the
first
five
by Houston third beaaman Seen Berry In the seced .down well, but in and out could hillers he faced.
Marvin Freeman (4-4) lost for the
have been beuer."
Dave Mlicki (2-3) pitched a first time since May 9, allowing sevLast season, Maddux pitched scoreless ninth and John Franco fin- en hits and five runs ·in seven
only to Charlie 0' Brien, who is now ished up for his 14th save.
innings.
with Toronto. This year, with Lopez
Andres Galarraga and Dante
Giants I, Marlins 0
behind the plate, Maddux has strugAt San Francisco, Osvaldo Fer- Bichette homered for the Rockies.
·HOUSTON (AP)- Jeff Bagwell Cincinnati manager Ray Knighi was
. Dod11ers-Cubs game
Reliever Jeff Shaw (2-3) found gled. Although Maddux hasn't pub- nandez gave up two hits in 7 '1/'J
had been quiet at the plate through still worried when Bagwell came up that out in the seventh. He threw two licly knocked Lopez, he did give the innings and Barry Bonds hit his 19th
. postponod
six innings. With the game on the in the seventh with two on and the . sliders down and away for stri~es catcher several long looks during his · home run .
At Chicago, lhe Dodge~ jul)lped
line in the seventh, he wolce up.
Reds ahead 4-3.
· against Bagwell, then tried to run it start last week in New York.
Fernandez (4-6), who was 0-5 in to a 5-0 lead before the game was·
Bagwell struclc out- and loolced
"He's one of the two guys I fear in on him for the third strike.
So, Atlanta manager Bobby COli his last eight starts, got his first win · postponed after I 1/3 innings. . .
badly doing it - in his only two pre- most in baseball, " Knight said. . "It was a fastball !just tried to get sat Lopez and gave Perez his 15th since April 2 I. Rod Beck got the
The game was to be . made up
~ious official at~bats Monday night
" Him and Freddie McGriff."
start
this
season.
today
as part of ~ doubleheader.
final
four
outs
for
his
16th
save.
in on him, but the ball' ran back out
Knight had good reason to fear over the plate," Shaw said. "He's
"He did a good job tonight,M despite allowing a one-out double to
Bagwell. The Astros first baseman dangerous. Sometimes you can run Maddux ·said. ''He really did, ·for
hit a two-run double to left center it in on him, and he's so strong he never catching me before. I noticed
that lifted Houston to a 5-4 victory . can adjust his swing and hit it any- a huge improvement the last three
over Cincinnati.
innings ...
way. Other times, he'lljust crush it."
Astros manager Terry Collins
Perez said the secret to catching
Bagwell might have done lhe
In the Modified Division. Tim
. Iii Saturday's racing action at
was glad.to see Bagwell in that. sit- same damage in the fifth, but John baseba!l's best pitcher is actually Kanawha Valley Dragway in South-. Casto of Mason. W.Va., took lhe win
The. University of Rio Grande uation as well.
Cangelosi and Craig Biggio pulled quite simple.
• side, W.Va., the track had a special in his 1974 Mustang. Calvin Sey"You always want him up there off a surprise double steal• to leave
"Greg threw good, " Perez ·said. Five Second Shoot-out for cars or mour of Wellston finshed second in
will hold girls' basketball camp ses"He's easy to catch- stick out the dmgsters running the 1/8-mile course -his '86 Monte Carlo. Jason Hall Qr
. sions throughout June and July at with lhe game on the line," Collins first base vacant and allow Knight to
said.
"He
loves
those
type
of
situa· Lyne Center.
put Bagwell on intentionally. The mitt and the ball's there."
Pomeroy took third in his 1968
in (ive seconds or quicker:
The PBdres, who entered Monday
· Here is the schedule of sessions. . lions. That's why he's such a great · double steal surprised even Collins.
The winner in that division was Camara.
·
tied for the NL West lead with Los Mark Bowman of Flatwoods, Ky. in
· June 30-July 3: High School player."
In the Street Division, Vernon
Angeles, lost forthe 13th time in 15 his '95 Spitzer dragster. Todd Betts · Clogg of Proctorville took the win in
Bagwell, hitting .3 37 with a
t
t
Girls' Individual Camp
league-leading 26 doubles, admitted
games.
: July 4-6: Varsity Team Camp
of Huntington, W.Va., took second in his 1972 Demon with Ray McCoy of
"That was bad," Padres manag- his '92 Dragster. Mike Stowers of Mason, W.Va., finishing second in
· · July 20: One-day Team Shoot-out he was happy to have the chance.
"You relish getting a chance to hit
er Bruce. Bochy s,aid. "We keep Huntington, W.Va. and Teddy Mar- his 1978 Ranchero. Jeff Johnson of
· July 21-24: Junior High Girls'
with men on base any time. Espe- . .
thinking it's going to get better, but tin of Charleston, W.Va. wei'e'semi- Reedsville and Allen Waugh of
·
:Individual Camp
· July 25-27: Varsity Team Camp · cially after not getting it done in the
. The Milwaukee Brewers will we played as ugly a ballgame as you finalists.
Glenwood, W.Va., were semifinal: Players will be housed in resi- fir~l inning.~· he said.
conduct a tryout camp for players 15 · can play."
In the Pro Division, it was Mark ists.
Ryan Klesko doubled and hit his Hornbuckle of Flatwoods taking
yence halls on the URG campus.
That's when Bagwell struck out to 22 years old on Wednesday, June
In the Junior Dragster DiviSion,
Meals will be provided through the with two men on facing starter 26 at 9 a.m. at Dublin High School. 22nd homer for the Braves, who won first in his 1994 Lumina. Richie Aaron Carper of Spencer, W.Va. took
Kevin Jarvis.
·
campus cafeteria.
Registration will be conducted at for just the fourth time in II games. Brown of Dunbar. W.Va. took sec- the win. Ciji Casto of Mason, W.Va;.
"
I
don
't
know
if
there
is
any
one
8
30
Chipper Jones hit a two-run dou- ond in his 1977 Arrow. Gary Paschen took sei:ond. T.J. Snodgrass of Gal·
.' For more information, call Red. h
: a.m.
:women head coach David Smalley at . key to beaung im, " Jarvis said.
American Legion players must ble to highlight a four-run third of Belpre finished third in his 1971 lipolis and Stowers were semilinai~
245-7491. Residents outside the "You just have to make quality ·. have written permission from their inning off Sean Bergman (3-7) that Nova.
ists.
local dialing area may call 1-800- pitches every time and hope he Legion coach or post commander in gave Maddux a 5-0 lead.
Elsewhere in the National
~82-7201, extension 7491.
-g~esses wrong."
order to participate.
League. it was New York 7. Pittsburgh 6 in 10 innings: San FrancisTo offer story suggestions,
co I: Florida 0: Montreal5, Colorado
3: and Los Angeles at Chicago was
report late-breaking news and
postponed by rain.
.offer news tips
~·

~

.-

..

Astros slip past Reds 5-4

Rio Grande girls'
basketball camp
dates announced

'

JUNIOR HIGH MARAUDERS - The Meigs
, Junior high track 1eam recently completed a auccaasfulseaaon. In front are (L-R) Stephene Burdette, Bethany McMillin and Allaol) Hayes. In 1he ·
second row are Abby Harria, Beatrice Morgan,
.

Casto among KVD victors :.

rJ~eigs

Baseball

AL standings
Easltm Dlflid•

.w
New Vcd............... 38

Iwn .

J.

ra.

2.8
Balli mort ............... 36 29
Boston ... ................ 29 38
Toronlo .................. 28 40

.!i76
.554
.433
.412

Delroit .................... l8 .51

.261

llll
I~

9'h
II

21 'h .

Ctntr•l Di•ilien
CLEVELAND .......4J 24 .642
Chicago .................. 41

26

.612

2

Milwaukft ............. 3J :W
Minne.soro .............. 33 14

.493
.493

10
10

40

.429

Kamas City ........... ~

14~

Western IIP"'on

Tcxas .................-... :41

27 .60)

Senrtle .................. 36
California ............... 35

JO
33
)8

Ooldond ..... .. .......... )!

.545
.515

.449

4
6

10~

rain)

Milwaukee 9, Kan1u Cily 4
California 9. Chicago I (IJ&gt;

]onlght's games
Toron1o (Gutman 4-S) 111 Seaule (Wolcou ~-6}, 6:JS p.m.
_Oakland (Wojcica:how11U S-4) 111 De·
trq1t (Gohr4-8), 7:0S p.m.
Boston (Sele 2-4) at CLEVELAND
(McDowell 6-l). l :Ol p.m.
Minnesolo (R;~dke .t.7) al New York
(Rogen 4-3), 7JS p.m.
·.
Texa.s (O liver ~-2) at Bllkimore (Mer~
cker J-5), 7:35 p.m.
K.ans:a Cily {Unron 2-2) a1 Milwaukee
(K¥16-n 8:05p.m.
Chicago (Baldwin 6-1) Ill California
(Finley 8-4), 10:05 p.m.

Wednesday's games
MinnesorD. (Robertson 2-8) 111 New
Yod&gt; (Gooden 6·4). I :OS p.m.
·
· Oakland ~asdin J-1) a1 Delroil (Oohr
4-8). 1: 15

r.m.

(Thompson 3·6), 3:05p.m.

New York (lsrin~housen 3-8) at Pins·

burgb (Ruebel 1-0) •. 7 : 3~ p.m.
Aorida (Burkett 4-7) al San Francisco
(VIlALandinghllm 4-8}, 10:35 p.m.

Transactions
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS :
Signed OF Jerry Proctor.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Signed
OF Paul Wikkr, LHP John Kaufnum aqd
RHP Mithoel Brown.

~

J

)6 .478

9~

38

12

Nol"""'l .......

Ealltm DMtlon

AtiMta .,.................42
Monn-eal ................39
Flori&amp; .. .. ........,...... ))
Nc;w York .............. 30

26 .618
.29 .S74

.441
Philaclelphia ........... 29 38 ' .433

12~

Houuon ................. 36 35 .Sffl
St. Loui1 ............... J3 34 .493

I

c...... ot.-.

Chicqo ......·............ J2 36 .471
Pi111burgh .............. 12 31 .464.
CINCINNATI ........26 36 .419
WlllemDivllloA
.Lot "".......:........ 37 .12 .lJ6
su Di&lt;ao .............. 37 Jl .$29
Colonodo ................3S 32 .lU
~--100
:14 33 .5ffl

2'1-t
~

5.1

~

I
l

'I'D~

Basketball Auoclation
ATLANJA HAWKS : Named Bill
Hanzlik llSsistant coach.

~

CINCINNATI RED'S: Slancd (IF
Jeremy Sk.ceru and lNF W)'lie Caq»beej.
HOUSTON ASTROS: AcliYOied C
Tony Euaebio from the .l,·day diuble:d
li•t Optioned OF J~UPe~ MoUton lo Tuc·
son of the PCL.
'
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES: Phud
INF Knin Jordal on the IS-dlay disabled
liar. Releued OF Mrrrlt Whilen nnd LHP
Dave ~iper. Siaoed OF Ben Jenkim and
LHP Keilh Shockley ucl aadlftOd rhem 10
Manins¥ille of die Appalachian Leaaue.
SiJncd lB Mike Tmi aad mianed him to
S.a¥ia of the New York-PtM l.eape.

..DEADLINE
.

BEEN

.

EXTENDED

.The Light
To

By

Dave
Grate·
of
Rutland
Furniture

•••

***

** *·

***

.

It takes more brains to
make out the income tax
form that it does to make

~ayOf the 91

***

means Blades cannol be tried again
on the same charge.
"The judge recogn~ed that it
·should never have gone to the jury,"
said defense attorney Fred Haddad.
"She's going to get crucified for this,
let's face it. She's going to get massacred.''

Brian and Charles Blades were
the only ones in the room at the time
of the shooting, and Brian insisted it
was an accident.
Assistant state attorney Peter
Magrino said he was" shocked and
disappointed by the judge's intervention, but is confident an appeals
court will reinstate the verdict.
· "I' II take the conscience of the
community, and I'll rely on their
judgment," he said.
1
Seahawlcs coach Dennis Erickson
said he was "extremely happy" for
Brian.

IPARENTS'NAME----------.----1

ICWLD'S.NAME(S) &amp; A G E - - - - - - - : 1

I

7 SHOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSIS

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124,1"'-f. oL

'

742-2211

\

Submlttad B Y - - - - - - - - - 1

.

The Dally Sentinel
•
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P.O. Box 729 • ,Pomeroy, Obto 45769
. BABY Sentinel

years.

..

BUCKEYE HOME HEALTH

,.
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lwo-angler teams par- .Smith and Edwin Smith, $50.
qcipating, Benton Phillips of Rutland
ljlld Keith Jones of Pomeroy won the
first place prize of $350 with eight
fish weighing 46 pounds.
' Randy Hawley of Pomeroy and
'troy Banks of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
•
won second place with eight fish
'1'\'eighing 35.4 pounds ($250). Scot. ly "Joe". and Kathryn Hill of Red
'
House, W.Va., took third place of . ·
$150 with eight ·fish weighing 30.6
pounds.
Jon and Angela MacKnight of
Mason won· $125 with their founh ,
place catch of eight fis~ weighirig 1
·. ·Wfiere tlle 'Patient Comes First
27.6 pounds. Mik.e Casey of Bidwell
and Larry Casey of Kanauga placed
Dedicated to providing you with
fifth with five fish weighing 27.2
pounds and a $1 00 prize.
.the highest quality
in the
The largest fish , worth $250, was
safety and comfort .of your bome for
caught by the M!ke · ~asey-Larry •
Casey team and weighed 17.6
more than 25
pounds. Phillips and Keith Jones
became the first-place father/son
team aQd nened a $SO prize.
I : I I I l l .. p \ 111 1"1 ' 1 I \I
Other winqers were: white
bass/striper/hybrid - Steve Lyons
'
116 W. MAIN ST. • POMEROY, OHIO 45769
and Bob Roush; $SO; saugerlwalleye
(tie) - •Thomas Sneddon and Jim .
___
3n
__
-•_3_1,__________
Stewart, Tith 'lUcker aod Lanry Legg,

l

L-~~~--~c~6t-4~&gt;~--2--7~-·.s_o_R_I_-~

'

l_j,l

·We need mo~e space to make
some room for new inv·enlfor:r,
/f/.'V so we're slashing floor sa1np11e
&amp;...-::L
.
prices to clear them uun

BIG through
--~· ..·,June 291
Odds &amp; End1 • One Of A Kinds • Closeouts • Discpnfinued
All Factory New • All Items Suh;ect To Prior Sale:
Compare · SALI
At

· A banquet honoring the 1996
Meigs state semifinalist baseball
team will be held Friday at6 :30 p.m.
at the Meigs County Golf Course.
The banquet is open to players
and parents from this year's team ~nd
also all members of the 1976 team
are · asked to attend . Besides this
year's 'team, the 1976 team is the
only other Meigs Marauder baseball
team to reached the state tournaments.
Meat will be provided and all
people attending are ask to take a
covered dish.

care

I

. L-------------~---~
SEND
- TO:

Banquet to honor
state semifinalists
set for Fridav

The Choice Is Buckeye

I ,
,
I ··
I CJn:'.&amp; STATE-·-:-,~~~~'--:---,------1

l

HE'S FREE - Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Brian
Blades, wi1h hla daughter at his
side and another unidentified
child In the other arm, speaks to
reporters shortly after getting
the naws of . Judge Susan
Lebow's throwing out his
manslaughter conviction Monday. (AP)

Quafity J-lome Care,

r-~---------~--~--,
•

OR

When It Comes To

theinco~

What history teaches us
is that people have never
learned anything from it ·

Rufland Furalfure's

.want him," he said.
·
The directed verdict of acquittal

A pair of Meigs Countians placed $25 each: white drum/perch - Dan
first in the sixth annual Bend Area ' Brown and Larry Babbitt, $50: tur~ARE Red Man/Budweiser Catfi~h ·tl~. Bill Morris and Todd Johnson,
Tournament in Mason, W.Va. Satur- · $25: anything goes (skipjack), Leroy

The ~aby Sentinel is a Special Section rilled .with photographs of,
local kids, ages newbom to 4 years old. ·
.
The Baby Sentinel Will appear in the July 19th issue of The Daily
Senlinal.
·· '
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a $6.00
charge for each photograph. (Enclose payment with picture).

Al~ys be sincere, even

you don't mean it

••

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

tnar, Shawn White, Jeff BroWn, Ryan i&gt;ratt, RyanWell, Adam Thomas, Adam Grimm, Mark Bratton:
Chris Jeffers and Josh Hooten. In the back row
are John Hill, Shane Leach, Justin Roush, Cory
Stewart and Zach Meadows.

dash, and Adam Thoma$ in the 800- Thomas in the 1.600-meter run' and sixth-places finishers were Stacey in nieter d.,sh. Bethany McMillan carne
meter run, and the 4 x 400-meter · John Hill in the 400-meter dash.
the 800-meter run; Meadows in the in third place in the 1,600-meter run
relay team of John Hill, Josh Hooten,
Fourth-place fipishers were Ryan i)igh jump and Brant Dixon in the and fifth in the 800-meter dash. Tara
Ryan Well and Shane Leach.
Well in the 800-meter run. Fifth- ·discus.
·
Gray came in fifth in the 100-meter
Second-place fini shes went to place finishers included Michael
In the girls' division, Ashley dash. The 4 x 200-meter relay' team
Justin.Roush in the I 00-meter dash, Stacey in the I ,600-meter run. The · Thomas came in third in 'the I 00- came in fourth place.
•
200-meter dash and the high jump, lr"""'!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"i"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!"'J

Lord's. It is a tragedy, a tragedy I'll
have to deal with the rest of my life.
I do ha~e faith in ihe man above, and
I'm going to keep serving him,"
Blades told ·~nle's KING-TV as he
left the counhouse.
Bennie •Blades said the family
· was elated and thankful the case was
over. "God shows up just when you

t.ocals win various prizes
i1n, Mason catfish tourney

Fifty years from now,
history students will
yawning over the
we're worrying . about
today.
wh

Miller.
Taking home first.place finishes
for coach Rick Blaettnar's Marauders were Zach Meadows in the ·liDmeter hurdles and 200-meter hurdles, Josh Hooten in the 400-meter

•

Popcorn: Dad's old jokes

BI!SI! ball
Major Le:que Butbilll

li J. lt:l.

NL standings

...

San Diego (Tewksbury !'i-J) 111 At·
lnnta (Smolll D-1). I :10 p.m.
_Philadelphia (Schilling 2-1) at St.
Lou1s (Andy Benes l-8). l:JS p.m.
Los Angeles (Astocio J-S) at Chic1110
(Tr~Kh~el S-4), 2 : ~0 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Por'tu&amp;ol 1 -~) 111
Houaon (Hampton S-3), 2:lS p.m.
Momreal (M.utinez 6·3) :11 Colorado

A.,trkan Lape
BALTIMORE ORIOLES, Recoiled
OF Mnrk Smith from Roc:hc~ler of the lntemalionnl L.eogue. Optioned OF Jeffrey
Hwnmonds to Roche11er. ·
CAllffiRNIA ANGELS: Ploe&lt;d INF
Jack Howell on the 15-day di Jabled list;
rtlrO.llctive to Junt 16. Added C Pot Borders to the 2~ · man roster. Traded RHP
Ken Edenfield to the New York Yankees
(or a player to be named.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Optioned
OF Joe NuaRAII)' to Ornahn of !he Ameri·
can AssocittiOR. Recalled RHP Brian
8e¥il from Omtltta. ·~
NEW YORK YANKEES: Auianed
RHP Ktn Edenfteld 10 Columbus of lbe
lmenw:iona.l t..eaaue.

Kansa1 City (Gubicza 4-10) ul Milwaukee (Bones 5-8), 2:05 p.m.
Chicago (Alvarez 8~)) at Cnlifornia
(Grimsley 4· 5), 4:05p.m.
Boston {Gordon 5-2) at CLEVElAND
(Htnhiser 6-4), 7:JS p.m.
Tens _(Will 6-5) at BQitimore {Muuina 9·3). 7.Js p.m.
Toronto (Hanson 6· 9) ot Se11ttle
(Hitchcock 5-J), 10:35 p.m.

lam

(Rcg2-2), 9:0l J&gt;m.

Wednesday's games

. Monday's ""ores

Ooldnnd 8, Deuoil4 (10)
Minnesota6, New York 3
Texas I. Baltimore I ($~innings, lie.

'

Basketball
Nadon.~l

Today's games
DH: Lot Angelea (Martinez 4-1 and .
Valdes 7-4) at Chicago ('Tclemaco 3-2 and
Campbc:lll-0 or Bullinp 3-~). I :JS p:m.
Florida {Weathers 2·1) 1\1 SM Francis~ (M. Leiter 4-3). 3:35p.m.
New York (Person 1-1) at Pillsburgh
(Smith 4-J), 7:J!'i p.m.
San Dieao (Hamihon 8-:\) at Allamn
(Giavine 7-4), 1:40 p.m.
·
Philadelphia (Fernandez 3-4) 111 St.
Louis (Osborne s .:~) . 8:05p.m.
.CINCINNATI (Smiley 6-6) 111 Hous·
ton (Kile &amp;-S). 8:0S p.m.
Monlreal (Fauero 6-5) ot Colorado

.
: FORT LAUDERDALE, Ji'la.
{AP) - Seattle Seahawks receiver
lJripn Blades' pra~ers were
4nswered. "' ~ ..
'
"I know I got a good God," he
told his brother, Detroit Lions safelY Bennie Blades. "I know i'm
Foitig to be a free man."
• Brian Blades' confident comlnen!S came Friday after a guilty ver~ict left him facing a possible 10year prison sentence for mans laughfer in the shooting death of his
~ousin . .
• Three days later, Broward Circuit
Judge Susan Lebow erased the deci&amp;ion, ruling in effect .that the case
was too weak to even reach the sixmember jury.
• Prosecutors simply hadn't proved
1)le NFL star acted recklessly or negligently in a struggle for control of
1\is . 38-~aliber handgun, which fired ·
qfatal shot into'the chin of his cousin
. ~nd best friend Charles Blades, the
judge ruled.
: When the shock of the judge's
r';~~ling wore off Monday, Brian
8lades raised his left hand in the air
in a "praise God" gesture as he was
~ugged by relatives.
: "The victory is not mine. i.t's the

992-2156

Monday's scores
New York 7, PillsburJh 6 (10)
San Fmncisco I, f1onda 0
Atl:una 9, San Diego 3
Houslon 5, CINCINNATI4
Montreul3, Colorodo 3
Los Angeles at Chicli&amp;o. ppd., rain

I!IY CATHERINE WILSON

The Sentinel News Hotline

Scoreboard

'

Judge throws out Blades'
:manslaughter conviction

camp slated
fOr June 26

dette, Wesley Thoene; Mike Williamson, Michael
Stacy, Brant Dixon, Ty Gonzalez, Jesae Thomas,
Joseph McCall, Derek Johnaon, C.D. Ellis and
.Ben)l Call. I~ 1he third row are coach Rick Blaet-

junior.high boys' track team claims TVC championship

The Meigs junior high boys track
1eam recently won the TVC cham,pionships at Alexander High School.
Meigs won the event over junior
high teams from Federal Hocking,
.Alexander, Wellston, Vinton and

Brewers ' ryou

Ashley Thomas, Amanda Neece, Tiffany Quails,
Meghan Avis, Tara Gray, Whitney Thoflllls, Gwen
Porter, Michelle Cundiff and Stephanie Leigh. In
tha third row are .Brldget Johnson, BaVllrly Bur-

1Ja1ck110n Loveseat with Soulhwestern Cover. Nice I
Broyhill Loveseat with Floral Pattern Cover. Elegant!
Imperial Occasional Chair .i n Mauve, Brown or Blue
Quality Dinette includes 4 Choirs with Padded Seats and a
30"x46" Tobie with a Protected Laminate Top
Lana Recliners. Six to Choose From
Imperial Queen Set of Bedding, 20 Year Limited Worranty
Restonic Full Size Set of Bedding. Full 15 Year Warranty
Lamps, 50% OFF Complete Inventory. As Low As
Broyhill CoHee and End Tables. Set of Three
Glider Rockers, All Sizes and Colors. As Low As
Bruards Sofa and Chair in Bulterscotch Plaid
Bruards Chaise Lounger. Ultimate Comfort
Two Matc:hing Burgundy Choirs wit~ Wood Trim. Both lor
Hampton House Swivel Rocker in Brown Velvet
Broyhill Lovesaat in Blue Floral with Quilling
3-Pc. Jackson Living Room Suite includes Sofa, Loveseot and Chair
La-Z-Boy Reclining Sofa in Burgundy or Green
.
Frigidaire Gallery Dishwasher. Undarcounter Deluxe with an

AddiHoqal$50 Ma.ll-fn FactOry Rehotef ·
Maytag Au.i omatic Washer. White Only. Cash and Carry
Banchcraft Queen Size Hide-A-Bed Solo in Blue
Jimson five Drawer Chest of Drawers
Rex Oak Table with 6 Chairs in Solid.Oak. Small Blemish on Laaf
Riverside Curios. 72" Tall with Light
Caldwell Gun Cabinel. Holds Six Guns
DMI Drop Ud Desk .
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frigidaire 24 Cu •.Ft. Top Moun! Refrigerator
Gloss Shelves
with

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MAIN$TREET

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Service Hotline 742-2212
c:::;;iiiil(]

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�• Page •• The Deily 881111...

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Histori.cal train rides :
·- offered at Nelso.nville ;

Cucumbers... the
pod that refreshes

Tho HackinJ Valley Sceaic: Jbilway llepia ila 24411 ~of p-ovicling ·
hiiiOric nin ride&amp; in IOIIII»UUcr11
Ohio from the Nelsonville depor,
Train scbcdules fclr 1996 are
weelcends Saturday and Sundeya,
rain or shine, depcting fronr the
depot on US Rt. 33 lad Hoelting
Parlcwty Drive. Thins will openle ill
June a112 and 2:30p.m. In July and
August the trains wiU move from the
station 111 noon, 2:30 and 4:I 5 p.m.;
i n September at 12 and 2:30 p.m.
New fall foliage lrllim for Oc!ober
will depart at l2, 2:30 and 3:13 p.ni.
Trains will run in ·November the
fmt two weekends at I p.m. Special
· holiday Santa Trains arc 'scheduled
for the first three weekends in

By VALERIE HELMBR!CK
- folks who poke II'OWid caves
The Wlllnlftgton Pleas J_,..
looking for spores - found eviThe story goes thai Mose~ had dence that cucumbers were around
one big regret when he left EaYJII for thousands of.yean before there
by way of the Red Sea: He fOI)Ot to was fonnal agriculture. Early
pack cucumber seeds.
Asians offcn:d them as IJIPUSe·
At the time, both the Israelites ment to the gods, and ancient
and Egyptians ate cucumbers a1 Greeks mi ~ed tho pulp with honey
nearly every meal - mostly raw and snow for important feas ts.
slices dipped in saltwaJer - and Romans served them routinely, and
believed eating three. a day was Emperor Tiberius is reputed to have
protection from deadly insects and eaten 10 a day.
vipers.
·
(This was after the Romans stole
In the absence of deadly insects the cuc umber plant from the
and vipers from your garden, Greeks in the wars with King
cucumbers will most probably only Pyrrhus of Epirus. Of course, the
afford protection against hunger Greeks had stolen the cucumber
and dehydration. (Once peeled, from the Persians, who'd pinched it
they have almost no nutritional from the Babylonians, who probavalue and are the vegetable equiva- bly brought it as a tourist souvenir
lent of soda pop, minus the calories from India.)
and tooth decay, of course.)
The fussy F~nch only used
But because they're 96 percent cucumbers as a natural pesticide for
water, cucumbers arc ideally suited many years. They found that
to tl!e dog days of summer, when cucumber
plants
·protected
heat and humidity leave us feelins. ,. ~vines from bolls, borers and
parched and wasted.
.
· cutworms, · Finally, the fearless
The refreshing qualitie~: · of Charlemagne iri¢ eating a cucumcucumbers weren't lost on cultures ber and· established thein not as a
in the Middle Eas~ where ciiCuin- salad but as a demit. ·
bets found their way from northern ~
'WaS'·in the days .when peo,lndia centuries ago. Food historians
pie
ate
cucumbers
'
.
. skin and.all.. The

MILITARY NEWS
. Thomas Liter· •
Thomas Brian Liter, son of Mr.
Richard E. Liter of Long Bottom and
Ms. Pamela Abels of Pomeroy, has
e"fllisted in the Air Force's Delayed •
Enlistment: Program, according to
MSgr Ted Corbin, Air Fm:e recruiter,
. PllfkFrsburg, W.Va. · .
Airman Liter is scheduled for
enlistment in the regular Air Force in
September, 1996. Upon gradllation
from the Air Force's six-week hasic ·
training course near San Antonio,
Texas, Ainnan Liter is scheduled to
receive technical training in the
Mechanical .career field.

'

Cucum~er recipes with Meditteranean

genesis perfect hr cooling body and sQul
My first encounter with the
mixture of cucumbers and yogurt
,, came more than 15 years ago in
Athens on a beasdy hot August
day.
.
In 100-plus-degree weather,
my friend· and J had trekked up
the Acropolis to gaze at the
Parthenon. We descended in
search of a cool restaurant that
served anything with icc. Instead
of ice, we discovered the restorative qualities of tzatzki. I've been
a fan since.
The combination of' cucumbers and yogurt is popular
throughout India and the Middle
East, but. everyone has a different
name for it. Mixed with mint, it's
· a condiment called raita in India.

. r

TZATZKI

2 cup~ plain yogurt
2 large cucumbers, peeled,
seeded and coarsely grated

.'
I tablespoon garlic, minced ·"
REFRESHING COKES - Once peeled, cucumbers have almost
,no nutritional value e~d are.tha vegatllble equivalent of eodl,pop,
I tablespoon white vinegar .
2 tablespoons olive oil
··' ·. minus the calories and tooth decay, or course. But bacauM
Salt and·peppcno taste
they're 96 P&amp;rcent water, they are ldelllly aulted to tha'dog daY* of.
Put yogurt in a cheesecloth• · summer, when heat and humiditY leave us feeling parched and
lined sieve over a bowl. Draln
Wilted•.
several hours or overnight in the
.mod~rn · conim~rcial · cucumber It's also important to remember that
refrigerator. Peel, seed and grate
often gets peeled because the skin the amount of wax on a cu~umber
cucumbers. Drain well. Add garis coated in an edible wax that seals is only a. drop or two that's, mixed
lie, vinegar, oil, salt and pepper to
in moisture, inhibits mold and pro- with water to coat the frujt evenly.
tects against bruising. The wax is
Many varieties of "burpless"
.cucumbers and mix well. Add
yogun and blend. Serve with
an FDA-sanctioned natural co~ting (really, seedless) cucumbers come
pita, toast, crackers or bread.
of either the Brazilian palm carnau- · swathed in plastic wrap instead of
KHEERA RAITA
ba, the desert plant candellia or·the . wax coating. These cukes, from
(From Yamuna Devi's "Lord
I!CCretion of the lac bug of India and your local farmers who don't wax ·
Krishna's Cuisine: The Art of
Pakistan. There's also a fruit coat- · their vegetables, arc the best choice
Indian Vegetarian Cooking."
ing that's made of the same sub- for those squeamish about commerDutton, $29.95).
·
stance used for ice cream filler.
cial wruiing.
2 cucumbers, peeled, seeded •
This might sound unappetizipg,
· Throughout the winter, most ·
and coarsely shredded
, but consumers need to remember cucumbers In local markets come
one-half tablespoon salt
.
that most vegetables - including from either Florida or Mexico. In
I and one-half cups plam
"cukes" - · have their own natural summer, the supply is increasingly
. yogurt
.
· waxy coating ·that gets washed local. Delaware producers alone, .
away while being prepared for mar- provide 6 million to 7 million
one-fourth .teaspoon cayenne
pepper or papnka .
.
ket. What is used as a rcplacell)ent pQIInds on average.
2 tablespoons fresh mmt, fineis not digestible, which means it .
Regardless of where your
goes through the body without cucumbers come .from - the marContinued on page 10 . ,
breaking do.wn or being absor~.
Continued)on page 7

,1

.

"•A
. fro. m
. .students
.
. .rece"IVe degrees
.'' rea

· :·· The following Meigs County stu, dents were among those who
received associate and bachelors
:degrees from the Unive!"ity of Rio
. Grande at the end of Spong Quarter,
' 1996.
Receiving masters of ~ucation.. ·!!egrees m classroom teachmg wete
• Barbara F. Beegle, Racine; Marjorie
•Ann Fetty, Pomeroy; Nora Sue
-McGuire, Langsville; Kelly Dawn
Rt~er. Racme; S.cott Dale Wolfe,
. .
.
·
. ~acine.
. . Others recetvmg degrees were: ·
Bachelors of ,Social Work: Bren.da Day CUrfman, Racine; Theresa ·
. Lyn Lavender, Syracuse;· Bachelors

. of Science in Education.: Christi
Anne Collins, Syracuse; Bachelors of
Science in Mathematics and Natural
Science: Teresa Fay Manuel, Racine;
Bachelors of Sc1ence m Busmess
Management: Mandie Diane.Grueser,
Reedsv.ille; Vic~i Lynn .Smit~.
U!ngsvtlle: Assoctate of Appbed Setence in Early ChildhoOd Developf!lent : Crystal Gale .Donohue,
Pomeroy..
.
.
.
Assoc1ate of Applied Busmess m
· Business 'Management: ~tephen Keith Carson, Long Bottom; Cathy Jo
Hanning, Middleport; Amy l\llarie
Searls, Middleport; Angela K. Swift,
•

•

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Med.icine

Question: I have been going to a
;!foetor for a lump under my chin now
for about three years. Literally, it has
~n a pain in the neck. I have recently developed another lump further
$!own my neck, so 1went back to the
doctor. He thinks it is a swollen gland
t~at is a consequence of my chronic·
sinus problem. l.have a feeling that I
am not going to the right doctor.
What kind of a doctor would one go
tO for constant swollen glands?
. Answer: A "Jump" below the chin
ean be caused by several different
~Coblems. A swollen lymph gland can
pear as a Jump, just as your doclor
ggested. My concern is that a
ollen lymJ!h gland shouldn't stay
der and swollen for three years.
This problem certainly needs more
evaluation, particularly now that
!here is a second lump. :
• Lymph nodes - also called lymph
g)ands; or s~metimes simply "glands"
• are part of the body's defense system. They can become enlarged in
response to an infection or other challenges to the immune system. Most
of us have had swollen "glands" in
the neck when suffering from a sort
ihroa~ particplarly a strcp throat; If
everything is working normally, the
swelling goes down in a few days as .
yilur body's defense ,system over-

E

comes the infection. Your three-year
bout of swelling is unusual and
makes further investigation · aJipropriate.
·
Chronic infectious illnesses, like
tuberculosis, can cause a lymph node
to be swollen for extended periods.
Other serious con.ditions, such as
AIDS, can also produce similar
symptoms. 'JYpically though, most
individuals with these ailments have
more than one swollen lymph node,
and tl!ey have other symptoms as
well. Another possible cause would
be cancer of the lymph system. Your
history.doesn't lit 'the typical picture
for this maltidy either.
·
rm suspicious that the "lump"
may be from a cause other than your
lymph glands. Swelling in one of the
salivary glands - the glands that
make "spit" - can produce the symptoms you describe. Perhaps that is the
cause. You may also have chronic
infectionlin a congenital abnonnality called a branchial cleft cyst. Your
"lump" could even be a problem with
the thyroid gland.
• You obviously are not satisfied
with .the quality of advice you have
received from your doctor. Certainly
you should see another doctor! You
boug!lt the advice-- that doesn't mean
you need to believe it

•

:;; .--~u.~.~~~~~-....
•

We
Mature
Dr,lvers, Ho•
Owners And
MoblleHo•e
Owners Special
Savings.

. . .3013..._

MH011FAlC

window 112M for a~

Mabile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

••

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

..

Pomeroy, Ohio

1·800-291 ·5 600

. '

tUPSHOOT

I

EvefJWMntsday

$:3-. ,~...
Rllfa.eh•Ct•
111WII
·~ ...

•

!

·

101111 IIS$1L~ 1 •
. COIOIUCTIOI ,
•New Homes

.,_

'

'

Ul 1411
.•

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
Industrial• Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
· A/C.CondensereJHose Assembly•

tTRUCKIN8

985 4473

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
(614) 441-1191
1-800-508-8887
• Top • Trim • Removal
. • Stump Grinding
15 Yrs.

a!fl';

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean E:rpeMnce
• lmured
.
-

. _.,

PUBUC NOTICE

.,. open for lnopecllon 111
the olllce ol the Twp. Cllr1!
1ft t 0:00 a.m., the Home June 111 lhru June 29
rlatlonal Bank will offer lor betwMn 4 and 4:30 p.m.
$Ia at public auction on the PubHc Hurlng and regular
dank Parking Lot lhe lol· melltlng will .,. held 111 ~
1
June 211.-1!17
p.m. ,I~uHdlng,
•
·'
. ._
t't:s09~hevrolet 814 PI~ .•TWp.
!
Serial
.'
A Roiiberry, CIWII: ·
I t1GCCT14R3K2102354' .Dorothy
. 3o34l V.ller Belle Ail
:The terms ol the aall are
Racine, Ohio ot6771
ceeh. Home National Benk
(614) 843-M74
r6aerves the right to bid at (6) 18 1TC
tt\e sale and or 10 remove
af,y or all itema !rom the

'

."

a Ia atany time.

( ) 18, 20, 21, 24, 26, 28 6tc

I.'

.

J!r

,_

I
I

';

'

I

I &amp; WPW11CS UD SIPPI.I

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
6141111-3813 ar 114-667-il484
Pla,tic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8"thru 36"
4" S&amp;:D- perf.• solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flu pipe
4" &amp;: 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I Ill" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
..
314" &amp;: I" 2QO p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll'&lt;)
314" U.L. apprpved Conduit
8" Oravclcss Leach pipe
(las pipe I" thru 2" - Fittings -.Regula1ors· Risers
Full assortmcnl ofP.V.C. &amp; Flex filling&lt; &amp; Water linings
Full line or Cistern. Septic &amp; Water sto!"'gc tanks.
'

.

.

.

Right-to-Read -and-Math-Week • C.J: Estep; hest reading sfudents,
fonsored by Barbara Mathews
Bradley Ramsburg, Alisha Barney,
~nd Ed Bartels held recently at SalAshley Graham, Derrik Randolph,
bury Elementary carried out an .Jon Halar, and Marc Smith; best malh
merican Indian theme.
'•students, Jennifer Smith, Amber Will,
Students were awarded prizes .in . •.Grant Arnold, Nikki Butcher,
e following areas: badges. Jennifer .\ ·.)leghan Haynes, and Mindy O'Dell;
~mith, Brooke O'Bryant, , qi'ant'1 and problem solving, 1,3randon Pear- .

'.
.'

Crow

l

f~~TI~~d ~~~::.~: ;?:;h:stopher

0

-

•

Nl~"r C~AllS ·

f)NJ..Y 7.•75% Al11l"'

~
+l

VanReeth, Elsa .

-

·1~

1 , , • .r~

. :· · ;,. . .·

WI CIS
HAULING .
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

All Ohio
I

! ' I, • •

·,

~

.'

•

~\·'
I'·, ' '\ '
•' ' ¥

~ADDEN

!' l

I
)

'I I

''

,.

I

.

6~~ES

such~

lfiSurance Services
21.4 EAST MAIN
POMER.OY

992-6687
Auto-(}u,llen lrulll'flnee
Life Home Car Business

...,

LOan S,lr .4 1...,:.., OOINO ON NOW!!

I '

61 ~

.
•.

"'

Wrenches,
Sockets,
~pe
Wrenches, Dehotnert 1 Vi111,

Cor Rompa, Clevioeo, Log qhltno,

Binders Hammers, Pl·t th'f ol)s,
Shovel, ·Sledge Hammon, Ralloo ,
Circular Saw, Electric Orilli,
' ir
Toots, Screw Jacks, Hand S s.
Chain Saw New, Bolts, V
11.

'·

Grease Guns, Cross Cut S w,
Hand Grinders, Chisels, Puric.a.
Creeper, Cable Cutlers. Tubl!l,
Tool Boxes, Wheat Cradle,. 'A(ea.
Splining Mans, Gr8sa Seed~rs,
Guns, Old Irons, Foot -.zOis.
Canr Hooks, Hand Sprayefl,~ir
· Compressor, Elecrric MOtor, ~n­
ote Shovel Plow And Oouljle ,
SpadeS, Steel Traps, Air TabN .
Bee Smokers. Electric HedQelrin·
mtfl, VankH Drill.s, Bull CJarrps,
Oil Cans, Blacksmith Tools, ~w

l

Bona, let Tongs, Oil Lampo. .

L1rge Yard Sale: June 20th, 2;11, .

A.n-

Localed 7382 &amp;Iaviiie Pike,
llqu... Old Tools, Sock-.\s,
Wrenches, Hand Tools, &amp; Farm
·Ratated Items.
;

.992·2761 or
992·3274
tl4l1

mo~

'

?; variery of household item !I, new

rypewriler, sewing machines, tb.
dog kennel, Gotd Ridge Ad.. The&lt; .
ma Sanks Harpet reSidence.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

auction

•Rooting

•••••

llcensM:t

Clean La te Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newef
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easl:

ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Res.:

614-992-2524

J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buying sa!·
vage vehicles. Selling paris . 30,.

Truck:

773-5033.

ll/ll/1

'

.
Paying Top Dollar For Junk Cari,
Trucks , a Runn ing Veh ic les )'CI
Dave, 614-446-9575 .

614-441-7558
mo. pd.

·

Top dollar· antiques, h,u nilur e,
gla ss. ch ina, clocks. gold, ti lvef,

Howard Excavatin

coms , watches •. es1a1es.
Mafltn, 614·992-7441 .

TruckingUmastone
Bulldo7.ing and
Backhoe
'Services
Houae Sitas and
Utilities

Os~

,

Tap Prices Paid: Ofd U.S. Co•n'd.
Silver, Gold. D•amonds, All Q!h
Coll&amp;ctibles. Paperwetgh)s, El'-.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 SatanG
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614·•46·2842.1
Wanted To Buy: Auto ' s &amp; True'~{ ·
Any Condition, 614 -388 ·9062, Or
614-446-PARt
n;
Wanted To Buy : Good Used
Small Spinnet Piano, 614 -24§t

All Kinds of Earth Work

9102.

992-3838

Wanred To Buy: Junk Autos Wil~

Or Wilhout Motors. Call Lanx

liYelj. 614·388·9303.

I' I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
~-

110

Help Wanted

·

. $-WANTED·S

'1

J

tO people who need to lole
wolghl &amp; moke mo~ey. to lry new.
patented weight -loss product ~

304-773-5083 241YSiday.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~..... .

service.

301·
Wanted to Buy !

90

•New Homes

.

"

773-5785 Or 304-m-5447.

Cullom • X 7 •• Alia altaHng

.

Public Sale
and Auction

•&amp;&amp;,Ohio &amp; West Virginia,

SIIITII'S ·
COISTIUCTIOI
•Remodeling

80

Rick Pearson Auction Compaft,
lull ttme auctio.n eer, complelie

the
Ads

•Sicf!ng

••

4-Famlly Mon . Tues 1 Wed
acrou lrom Pcptar Heights . loOII.
tor signs.
~

SAVE sTEPs!

·Addition•
•NewGaregee

I

Moving sale- stanmg Thursday -

Quality Work
Competitive Rates

-

vinyl refTYNints, leu of misc.

go, 814·992·3187.

"'"-

11411 mo.

ware, new dothes l11ea. carpet &amp;
Moving sale· Bradbur~ Rd. beaide school, beginning Thursday.
Electric lurnace, everything mus1

Mull .,. 18 yrs.
Touch-T-llequlred
Serv-u 1619) 645-8434

..•.•.

Ml~dleport,

Middleport, bunk beds, Tupper-

. LOYII

SERVICE

'New Location

Monday, old Ri\lerboal Inn near T

Buainess ·
Family Matters
Allow Your
Personal Paychlc to
Al\&amp;lst You
1-11()0.988-8600
Ext. 1277
$3.1111 Per lllnu11

Call

•4

day edilion 1000a.m. Sarur&lt;lay. •

Need Direc,Jon?

$5.00• per hour
Morning Hours

·'•'

All Yard Sales Muat Be Paid&lt;lln
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before lhe ad is 10 run, Sunday edllion· 1:00pm Friday, Mon.'

_, .........

LIIBISK
WILIIII

Summer Images

Pomeroy,

. Thur.-sat 11).5
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeror, Ohio
1192-7573

~

lots Of Everything!

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

SUMMER
TUTORING
TODD BISSELL

Wednesday 19th, 1st House
tore Jumbo On 141 , Boo•s.
Clothes, Unte Tykes Workah4P.
Washer, Dryer, &amp; Mounta•n C.r.

Everlasf11p

-

.,._, .....

v

Free Eetimotea

~a~~~~e:O:!~
&amp;EllUL

.'

.

......._ ...
32t24 Happy HOllow Rd.

742 2193
y MIKE
;: ··':
. ·. !figJJly'irldttsirial nations
Ger- reading levels are still below nationTFN
SA TODAY
many, France and Hong Kong par- .· al'goals.
~======~
U.S. students finished second only 1 ticipated; Japan did noL
"Thomas Jefferson would be f
1 thosc...tn.-Finland-irt 1t survey ·of
'The ··study divides couniries into · pleased, but he would expect more
r ading ability among 32 'i'luniries, three tiei:J. Nations in the same tier and so do ~e." Riley said. "We have
t9e go:vemmc!t!'·~porttd Mlilillay.' ; performed more or less equally well. a long way to go."
.I "The )leiforfuance 'bf O.S. stu- Finland stood alone in the top tier A 1992 study by the National . COIITUCIORS
&lt;lfnts is welcoqt~ ,g0Qd news iq Ji!c.. for both age grolips. Among fourth- AsSessment of Education Progress
Siding • Vinyl
flee '-f the blll' 1\ews ·.4bolit the graders, the USA and Sweden made ' found that few~r than 6 percent of Aluminum • Roofing
a hievementof American students in UP. thC second tier, and· 15 nations U.S. students perform at an advanced
Maw • Repair
o her . i nternational comparisons," jolbed the USA in the seco.ld tier for (eliding level.
Outtel'l&amp;
s ys i\le repq,R from 'the National ninth-graders.
,
Dowrispouta
nter' for Edliltlltion Statistics.
Education Secretary Richard Riley .
Claialfieda
Ftw
EatlmatM
'rhe..report-cxaminea rcaulu.of a welcomed themulta, but w~ thai
912-3807
1 2 international study of reading while U.S. studenll may outperform
9~2-2156
a ility ·in. fourth- and ninth-graders. those· in other nations, American

"

.

Roofing &amp;
Block Work

•-.J,.....,.

MGM

~ER~

Toots, Harness Ri\leter. l ame,ll.
Corn Jobber, Ueal Hoollil, May
Knivea, D iamond Eye Pi~s .

Gtranllllis

.

614-949~2096

:I

I' ~
Ohlinger Jessica Rosier, Tim Hub('
( ; '
,,.
'
bard, and Justin Hosi::har.
' '' '•
.,
Estimation day winners were
'
'
Caitlin Williamson, Sabrina Oldaker,
I'
, "I'
April Coppick, Joshua Rathburn,
Shawna Manley, and Marc Smith.
The winner of the slogan contest was ·
Plck~pd~·nled
.
Jon Halar and the decorate-a-door batteries, ..,pji;nceli a

, .S. stuq~nts .finish 2nd in reading test

••

f.

·Sc•tM

H&amp;H
Home
Remodeling

Low Riles)

Ir ~

· · · ,Seedtpg ts ,a cmch ..·Shce the or sauce that's watered down and
cucumber-In half lengthwtse and use sometimes bitter.

j

largo: 611 g1h , 201h, 21t~ loaited
7382 BuiiYilo Pilla, An1iqun, j)ld

.••,•.

'

. ..

~:~st was won by the sixth grade

'

urday.

FUGUNT
F.IELDS

TFN

1

er a hot: ~fOvJ ,thip.' tiflle· of yclll',

\

• APR based 011 minimum loan amOlSI~ of
$12,000;00 for a tam of 60 months. Monthly
pe)'lllcnt amount would be $241.89, with a total
finan"" dlarae ofS2,SI3.40. Offer &amp;YIIilable for
a limited time, 50 hurry in today, during our

~1 ....

Ohio
With 3 Beds to
1 or your garden - they have a most ol these rec~pes· call for ~aw the point of a spoon to scrape out the ~======~:· · Serve You BeHer.
r~storative quality that is ideal for cucumbe
. rs . . S~edmg and salttng seeds.
H&amp;H'
s mmer. They are also . the best cucumbers lSD t mandatory - I
For salting, lightly dust the sliced
12-$20.00
unterpoint for the .bite. of fiery . know many : e!lc:ellent c~ks .who cucumber with salt, weigh it down
s·JUIMILL
16-$25.00
c ilies or the sting of a pungent never do etther - but getbng nd of in a bowl with a heavy object and .
ft,
Phone 992·2489
ion
the seeds is a blessi'ng for those with · allow it to drain for ahout half an ·
IIID'1 ""'· pd.
Be;;ausCifO'V of'.u ~: Wll!)l tc)· Sli!?d sensitiv.~ dig~stive ~acts. .
. hour. This will help avoid a dressing
rorto61e

+

f)N

Gutters
Downspouts .
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94&amp;-2168

i...------.
(Ume Stone-

,
367-0266-1-800-950.3359
FrH Estimates
Lebllnon Twp. budget will .L.--.:.::;.:::.::::,:::::.:;;,::..--._~--...1

Right-to-Read and Math-Week celebrated ·

llil'I,I~S

match

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

i

:Saturday, June 29, 1996,

(We've got tpe lowest rates around!)

Howard L. Wrlt111I

.

~

'

Meet your

1·90G-988·8988
Ext. 7907
2.99/mln 18+
T.T. Phone Req.
SerY·u
(619) 645·8434

JONES'.TREE SERVICE

Public Notice

,
'

Itt.

Uc.- Ins. OWner: Rid&lt; Johnson

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinitY

the day befofl the ad is to O.m.
S..nday edition . 2:00 1&gt;m. Fri~.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. ! 1-

PONDEROSI
PA1MmVE
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On St Rt. 338 w. 8 mllee
lromRavenewBrldge, 1 mllllrom
Apple Grove, Ohio.
. Elec1rlc hook-up. dump
station., non-portable
waler, large loll, . .
hiking, llehlng.
Rent by - k or month.
· 304-372-5688 or
614-247-2120 ...... -

985-4422
. Chester, Ohio

·'

Be Pai11n
Mvanco. DEADliNE: 2:00 ~. m .

Wltttlaws
..lliltl Gca11u
-5... hon ~ WildDWS
ol0011 Adtltlais .

. Dirt •$and

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Sales Mutl

...,.._1

Umestone • Gravel

. Gallipolis, Ohio 45831

Public Notice

70

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992-2772
8:30 A.M.•3:30 P.M.

1-80N89-3943

t

lolt Union CtmJJSround a(aa.
letlrl, 3 doga. 1 tan pupPr_, 1
8eag5e, terrier mix, all m~•· C.JII
304·882-21114 .. 81 ..44e.eeeo!

537 BRYAN PLACE

R.L. HOLLON

742•3212

Mother-daughter banquet helcf:··~

.

(614) 992·2364

Mojoon

to:-

J&amp;l SIDING &amp;
INSULATION .

Roofing- Rubber- Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete RemodeiiOg
Decks - Bathrooms - Kllchans - Siding
35 YN/11 Experl-

'

L

· .Free Estimaiaa
Guaranteed results

Residential - Commercial

l

LOST: Female Boxer, ·brincna .~ol­
or, lilt ' " " Thursdlj e1Stel on
lot- 9 lotio Ad. Cll .......
751-21!20. REWARIJJ

Lacally owned &amp; opel1ll8d

CONS'rRUCTION

FREE ESnMATE$

985·4198

'

1~7

FOUND: Fomo'* l!ollgl&lt;l in

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

Remodeling
Stop t. (:oinplre

~od

Lost tnd Found1

1100, 304-7'13-1148.

949-3151
742-2246

B&amp;B ROOFING and

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

•Gar9s
•Complete

Carpenter &amp;
. P.-lnt Work

Tal

""""" ,_., • ..,-,a ro beck" up
''""" s.E. 01t1o a weet VIrginia

60

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commarollll &amp;
Residential Service

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too Smtl/1"
We will wortc within your budget
Ph. 773-1173
.
FAX 7n11111
108 Pome Street
Mason, WV

IE

qt.~CMI

,.

.

.

T.V. Anranna With Tower, PtH
ToAemow, e1 ...44f..1121.
~

D&amp;T
Pest Control

Authorized AQA Di8tr1bulor
• Welclng Supjllllle • lnduetrial a - • Machine Shop
Servicee • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welcing
• AlumlnuiTVStalnte. • TOOl Dressing • Ornamental ·
Stepa-Stalrs, Ralings, PallO FumHure, Fireplace
Items, Planter ha~. Trellllls &amp; Iota of other etuflll

IWV010212

Lim/lid' 11me Offer • ·
can todlly with your

,

Wllh~M, .814-387· JIA7 .

Air Carlllllonlrl.l:leal Pumpe,
II All equlptMnt In etactl
fiDr IIMI1 Mlllni'IIIIIDII.
Few Eatlmlt11

•Tilt-In
.Pouble Hung
.. nsulated

Old, LJnor

Whilo moJo Eokimo Spil:l ,

f!lll

POMEROY -- Alzheimers alljl
POMEROY -- .Eagles Auxiliary related disorders suppott group~
2171 ~ill meet Tuesday, ~30 p.m. ing Wednesday, 1-3 p.m. at the Meias
Membership cards may be picked up County Senior Citizens Center in
at the meeting.
Pomeroy. ·Brenda Roush from Leo:,;
Cnaise and Thlvel will be the guc$t
WEDNESDAY
speaker.
LONG BOTI'OM -- Revival ser'
. -,,.
vices, Mt. Olive Community Church, THURSDAY
.
Long Bottom, June 19-23, 7 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS -· The Roc~ •
each evening. Gary L. Backelder, Springs Better Health Club will meet":
Bellville, will be the evangelisL
Thursday, I p.m; at the Rock Springi ;
United Methodist O.urch.
·; .

Our Blatlstlcs show that mature
drivers and home . oivners have
fewer and less cosUy losses than
other age groups. So it's only lair
to charge you lass lor your
insurance. Insure your home and
car wRh us and save even more
with our . special mu~l-pollcy
discounts.

Kinono: e ' 10

Sefy.g (6t9} 645-8434

MLWB

~

•

WHI\t
r-. t14·25e·11!1D.

· Ext. 4183
$3.99 per min.
r.\111 bt 18 yrs.

~

'

-·14--

Collit Ill ...

1 kittens, .3-8 weeka old , •-5
- · old • ...., .. go. 304-t7S.
5224.

C.II1-90NI&amp;-4800

2IIIS BASHAM RD.
Racine, Ohio 411'1'1

(No Sunday Calls)
- ...

.

'' ---ion"!

They have hlltped
lind lollune,
and lolle.
The futule starts todey1
mlllion8
sum I

WILIIL~JoAJ:rDOI

614-992-7643 .

The annual mother-daughter ban- Roush and her three granddaushtell';"•
quet of the Reorganized Church of Sheri Roush, Denise Roush and Emt::"~
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints was ly Duhl; Juanilli Wells and daugh!Ct :
held at Twiggy's Kountry Kitchen in Tammi Causey; Golda Radcliffe
Racme on May 2 I.
daughter Janice Danner and grant•
_Jpann ·Proffitt PR;II!'nted the pro- daughter Ashley DeMoss, LIICyTay;;~
gram: Juanita Wells' gave grace · lor and daughter Jocelyn Bailey a~
before the dinner.
• .
granddaughter Kelli Bailey; Joanp' ;
After the program, games ' were Proffitt and daughter Karen Iober$~~
playedandtheeldestandyoungcst andgranddaughterChrista,formerl)'~
guests ,were awarded prizes, the !&gt;fCanton; Odessa Proffitt and arand'-::i
tory Technology,· Letitia Anne eldest being Lucy Taylor and the daughter, Andrea Tedford, Beu:. '
Holsinger, Reedsville; Karen E. youngest Christa lnherst. Prizes also Proffitt of Florida, Maxine Sellers- •
Shuler, Long Bottom.
went to several game winners.
· and Dorothy Spencer.
·
The dinner was attended by Dah
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...__ _ _ _ _ __ : • - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - . . . . ,

•

Let a PSYCHIC
change your life.

CHEAPER RATES

end Manufactured Hou•lng

e're .not

••• 2112

UCIIIIYDiAUUC IIPAII
&amp; UCIIIE SHOP, IIC.

/feW Homel • VInyl Sl~lng New

·. :

R"_10 G ran de

Middleport; · Associate ~f Applied
Business in Accounting: Lorri Ami
Burnem, Langsville; Associate of
, Applied Science in Nursing: Sharla
Kay Cooper, Middleport; Kristen
1
Ayne Wright, Pomeroy.
Associa!e of Applied Business in ,
Office ·Technology, Gretchen Lore)
·Blaine, Pomeroy; Kathy Jo Evans,
Pomeroy ; Adria Charlene Frecker
Pomeroy; Ass6ciate of Applied Sci:
ence in Electronics: James Arnold
Gheen, . Middlepon; Associate of
Applied Science in Medical Labora-/

J. E. DIDDLI. OWttiR

IISSELLIUILDEIS, INC.
O•reg• • Replacement Windows.
Room Additions • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Liter is a I 995 graduate of Eastern High School, Reedsville .
DEAN'S LIST'
Pomeroy resident Heidi Ferguson
has been named to the dean's list for
the spring semester a1 Capital University, Columbus.
In order to Jllllled to the dean's list, .
a ,studint milst have achieved a grade
poini average of 3.4 or above.
. Capital University offers deg~
through five colleges: Arts and Sciences, Nursing, Music, Law School,
and Graduate School of Admillistfa·tion. The school also offers Adylt
Degree Program centers in Cle~­
land, Dayton, '8nd Columbus.

GIVIIllll)'

1 1&lt; IIIII fOil -

1111111111,

-Community calendar .l.

.

•

:!~~.'~al .. ,:

J'lecemhw. Cers lnllfa!ID 1.-d to
bep paaenprs- U. cool weather durin1 fallllld wiqter IIIOIIIhs.
...._,... wiD be trc 111 f to 9c:ial on-boeld JWntlion of....,_ during lniJI rides ov« a '*llllr)' old rail
line that fealllrelan open air'* durina llllllllllCI' and fall foJi.lae .-mlhs.
A stop is lll8de a1 Robbins Croaing,
a living history villqe 011 the campUs
of Hockina Colleae. .
'
Tho Hocking Valley Sc:enic Rail.
way is listed In The Nllional Regl,$ter of Hilloric:al PIICCI, ~ing
railway history in sou~tem Ohip.
For More Information residents
may CQ~~tact Eunice Ballin! Aria
Code (513) 335-0382.
'

TIIESDAY

111

1111

-Society scrapbook,

This

By.VALERIE HELMBAECK
The Wll!nlngton Nen-.Joumal

,...~C-rTiu

wkly in yo,u r spaiiJ
exp needed .. Call now!•
7 daiS. 14071815· 2022 Ext '
H2t
~·

005:-:"--:.,-Pft-.,.rs-..,Qn-81_8~-:1AI/UN
::

-if.

• I All A10at I Shlrlljl l

,SJI!gle Whl1t
-king tln- 1 ~~~~~8~~14~~~·~---21
Qiil whlto .,.,., ago 50-80, aond ATTN : WOilEN/MEN. Eotn
Photo I pho"" 1111- 10 : 80~ oncome Fl01 lbl 0 • 0 1 1 1
CW· 17 CIO Ploln1 PJ. . unt Rot·
'
200,.
1 " "'
lt1tr 200 Main St P1. Ploau~r ::~~~~ H7:z:.•r•1 4 0~l

WV.25SI!O

••11'1'

.

1

.

•

'

.

�••

•

•

:Pave •• The.,.., .........

Tueedlly, June 11, 11_18

T..-,, June 11, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge I

..'ALLE\'OOP
·~
••

.....,.,......_

.

PHILLIP

ALDER

AVON S8 ·S15 /Hr. No Minimum

Ofdet, No Door To 0o0f, No In·
wntory, t -100-736·0188 lnc:Uslal
'"~'·

Certif ied HVAC Service Tech,
Experienced Only, 3-5 Years.
Corna,t; Jtm Harmon, 1·800·9283722.

Leiding Home Hullh Computer Users Needed. Wo rk
haa an openi nv for PER · Own Hours. 20K To ISOK /Yr 1·
800-3e7186 X 1113.

M-PT Opponun tUII also
1 blo lor RN 's. HHI.-s . Call
t.lorl ·Ffl 8·5. 304·529·0726. 1400
Commence Ave. Hun110gton WV.

VACANCY: BEHAVIOR HANOI·
CAPPED INSTRUCTOR. Valid
Ohio Certifica tion. Canllc:l: Sup!,
Office By June 2•. 11iUM. Gallia •
Jac:kson · Vinlon JVSO, P.O. Box
157, Rio Grande, OH 45874. 814·
245-5334. EEO.

2~701

Applications

are now beang taktn

hn security offic:en in 1he Pt.
Pleasant area. Training &amp; unt·
forms are provided. Con1ac1 Ad·
vance Security 304·74ol·4391 .

180

Do

Ally odd jobs. Painting, e~rpentry,
repalts, lawn work. ttc. 304-e75·
7112.

ATTN : WOMEN /MEN. Earn E•·
ua Income. F..xi~ Hours! $200 ·
'S'SOO Weekly. can 7 Da11 407·
875-2022 EICl. 0526 H25.
uema1 Hygtemat ror estaD11shid
practice in Athens, Ohto. Must be
friend!~, quality oriented and a
roam player. Send reaumea to:
R.l. Spero, DDS. 715 W. Union
91reet. A -s. Ohk&gt; 45701 .

Body work on cars I trucks, reasonable rates. minor mechanical
repairs, oa chanoes, call 614-742·
2935 ask lor Mip. Ru;and
Cerutled child davcare provider.
will babysil •n l'fiY home, relereoc ·
es 8\la llable, 614-992-3537.

Dr iven Needed . New Contra' t
&amp;aarling Late June; For Points In
Eastern Half Of U.S. -Srarting Pa~
... p To .29e: /Mile Plus Vacation
Pa~. Etc. Pa•d Ever~ Week -As·
s1gne d Conwenttonal Tractors ·
Home Weekends. Wills Cargo,
In c Stou tSVIlle, Ohio 814· 474·

Dan's Lawn Care. Reaidentlal,
Churches, &amp; Cemeteries, Rea·
oonablo Aa10sl814-371-2847.
General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Wtndow s Washed
Gunen Cleaned Light Hauling,
Coinmerlcal, Residential, Steve:
814·388-042!1.

1 77,
Earn up to $1000's weeki~ SD.Iffing
envetopes at home. Start now, no
e ~eperienc:e , free supplies. lhlor·
m&amp;llon, no obligation, send 'SASE :
Buck Oepv 77, 3208-C, E Colol"'lal
Or, .:308, QflandQ. FL32S03.

ElliS)' Work! Excellent Pay t AA·
semble Products at Home . Call
Toll FroA 1· 800 · 487· 5566 EXT.
12110.

wanted To

Georges Ponable Sawmill, don 't
haul your logs to the min just call
304·675-1957.
ProtGISIOfl&amp;l Tree SeniiCA, Srump
Removal , Free Estimates! Insurance, Bidwell , Ohio. 614-388·
9648. 614-367-7010.

I·::.:.:.:..;..;_::.;...:..;.:.;.._ _ __

EXPERIENCED
TRUCK DRIVERS
Are You laMing For :
• More Home Time?
• Sloacfy Pa~Chod&lt;?
• 401 (k) Rebrement Ptan?
• Heatth And Dental Insurance?
• Paid Vacalions And Holidays?

Sun Val ley Nurser~ School.
Childcare t.A -F 6am· 5:30pm Ages
2·k, Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Oays per Week Mini·
mum e14~-48 - 3657 .
The French City Child Cate Center, Hours: 8 A.M. ·1 P.M. Monda~ Thru Friday, Infants, Tod·
Ctlers, Pre. School, And Sc:hool
Age p,ogram. For More Information Con1ac1 Lisa Coughenour,

Do You Have:
'Class A COL?
• Over 1 Vear TIT E•perience?
• Safe Driving History?
• Srable Work Histo,y?
• Do You Live ·WJthin 75 M1les 01
flllpley?

If The Answe r Is YES, Bring A
Currenl r.AVA And Apply Monday
Thru Friday 8 A.M. -4 PM. At
SHONEY'S DiSTAIBUnON
CENTER
Located Just Off 1· 77 AI Fair plain, WV
•(Exil 132)
EOE

6 14-M6·4~ 6 7

Wtll Mow lawns In Gallia County,
614·446·2761

AulD
Zone in Pomeroy, •2700 080,

1 Bedroom, Super Nice, t2Ht

(t14)117-G113.
ona bedroom homo ;, Pomeroy.
Will aell on lind contrect, 814·

Mo.. Plua Ulilltiao. Uoually
SOmellllno A1111Hatllel Sun Volley
Af;wtntnta. lt4-44&amp;-2157.

112·58511.

2

Three bedroom home in ~untry,

requdd, 1*1 of ujtitles patd. 304·

WhiOI Hil Rd., Rulland. one "'"·
in-ground pool, 814- 992·5087.

320

- m,

7

1

furn ished. 1aundr1 room
ck&gt;H to school 1n town.
available.,, Vinago
, .. a or call IU·i92·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1970 Schula 12•85 Wilh 12•11

Improve- ~~~~~~~~~~:

A.dd1110n.
ManyToNew
menlo.
Priced
Sell I $2.000 .
ISI.t·-'~6 -3 16.t , Ser1ous Inquiries

Please.
1917 1070 Freedom With 10118
Factory Add-On, Very Gaod Con·
dttion, 18,250, 814.,.46-8034.
1977 Federal 3bedroom . 304 -

.675-1954
1979 Cla irmont , two bedroom ,
$5000. 814-992·4013
1986 Fleetwood 14x72 3 Bed ·
tOOms, 2 Baths. Ut11tty Room, 2 A1r
Condlliontrs, $12.000. 304-675·
1169, 614·441 · 1183.

Wil l Provide Qual ity Chlldcara In
t.Ay Home, LocatBd N,e ar Holzer
Hospital, Call 81 ~-4148~81 13, For
t.toralnformation.

.Late 70 Model Mobile Home
12•60 Includes: New Electric Box,
Underpin ning, Wmdow Umt Air
Conditioner &amp; Porch Included lor
Work Wanted: Mowing, light $5,000. ~·" 304-875·3000.
Conatruc:tian, Painting, Yard Limited Offer! 1996 doublewide,
Work, Etc. Call Dave AI 8 14-256· 3br, 2battl , 11799 down . 12751
1309.
fnonth . Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes , Nitta
FINANCIAL
W\1. 304·755-5885.

Furnished 2 Bedroom Aparunent,
Acroll From Park, AC, No Peta,
Reference&amp;, Deposit, $3501Mo ..
614-.t46-8235, Blo&amp;-4-46-0577.
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Up·
statts, Utili ties Fufmshed, Clean ,
No Pets, Rtterence. Deposit Rt·
qu~red, 6 14 446-1519.
Furn1shed Apanmem , Upstairs , 1
Bedroom, No Pets, Second Ave·
nue GallipoliS. All Ulllities Pa1d,
Depo~~S14-441 ·9523.

Twm R1vers Tower, now acceptlflQ
appltcauona for 1br. HUD sub111d·
ized apt for elderly and handicapped. EOH 304.e7S.6879.
Valley View Apanmems. Rio
Grande.
Now accapung appl1cauons for
two bedroom apartments. Apart·
ments have a•r condu ion tng ,
kitchen appliances, fenced in
playground, laundry facility, on
sHe management and water, sew·
er, and traSh pa i d~ owners. For
more mforma lion plase call (6 14)
245·9170. Monday-Thursday hom
Noon to 3pm. EQUAL HOUSING
· OPPORTUNITY &amp; RURAL ECO·
NOt.IIC AND COt.IMUNITY DE ·
VELOPMENT.
Very nice clean · one bedroom furnished apattment in Middleport,
814·992·2178.

'450

Furnished

If you are looking lor a career in

Rooms

the healthcare l ield. are hard
work ing, cam-.g and have a destre
to care lor people we Will provide
you with the educatton you ~
10 be a STNA. Compemive salary,
benefits, health insurance and
' -...., '""- reimbursement avatlable
t1me employees We encourage ua i ned nursing assis·
mnts to apply u welt Please call
Pannv Delong at 614 -e67· 3158
or apply in person al Arcadia
NurSing Center, East Ma1n Street,
Coolville. Ohio 45723. E O.E

Rooms for rant · week or month.
Starting at $12011Tl0. Gal ila Hotel.
6t4 -44&amp;9580
Steep1ng rooms w1th cooktng
Also tra iler space on nver All
hook -u ps. Ca ll alter 2.00 p m ,
Xl4· 773-5651 , Mason WV

460

8,14 ~

Part Ti me EmPloyment 5 To 9

886·8508.

All real o&amp;talll advalllslng in
tNs r•npaper II subfecl to
!he FodeiBI Fair Housing Act
of 1968 torl1lch moko&amp;lllllegal
to advantsa "any preference,

llmilallon or dlacdmlna!lon
based on race. color. religion,

Real Estate
Wanted

Land Wanted : 20 Acres or more
in Ma acn Co Call after 4·30pm.
304·712·2035.
'

470

4'112.

530

AntiqueS

1995 Craftsmen Riding Lawn
Mowor, 20 HP. 52" Cut. Koehler
t.lagnum EIIQ1110, E1ce!lenl Condi11 ..251!-1224.
'

tio"·

41 - 12 Inch Kicker Competlrian
Sub10ootors JVC KS · RT808
Tape Dec&lt; . JVC KD -MK70 12
D•sc Changer All "lmo11 Brand
New, 814-446--8778

Rocllnora 125 Both . 814- 258·

1332 Allar I

~lol

any IUCh preference,

Lose Weight, Feel Better, In·
creased Energy $1 A Oay 614·
448· 1238.
Btue Ridge Spa with cover, red ·
wood frame/ ateps, 8 jets, like
noW, lOili Plid 14000. Oclob·
er H~95, was asking S2700 , now
$2200, 814-112·4044.

e.

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. Guaranteed Lowest
PriCol At Shoe COle, Gallipolo.

Bo• Springs I Mattress Set New,
Not Uud, 10 Year Warranty,
S195; Living Room Suites From
$275; Burlk Bad S280 Complete;
At. 7 Beside Giovanni's Pizza,
Proc:K&gt;rvila. 814·"'-8373.

410

Houses for Rent

Due to illness must sell comple18
sot ot Plr1g Eye 2 Golf Clubs, tikt
naw S160 Fitm Ask for Dave 614·
245-589!1
Electric
Scooters
And
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van 1
Car L1h Installed, Statrghdes. l1fl
Chaira, C•ll For Brochure, e 14•41·7283.

JET
AERATION t.IC&gt;TORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebulll In .Stoclt
COli Ron Evant. 1·800·537·9528

er's Wood Floors With Ramp&amp;,
R&amp;B Trailer Sole' 814-448-8588.

New Gas Furnaces, New Galvanized Duct Work. Now Hood Fans.
61 ..371-2720 AFTER 8 ~M .

New RCA 18 Inch Satellite Dtsh,
Compl01e, ..50.114-245-9737.

One Gtblon ffOit free tefrigerator,

almond, 5 yrs. okl, 16.8 cubic toot
freezer : one Kenmore, gold, frost
tree, 19.2 cubic loot, $250 eacl'l,
814·002·5533.
Queen Size Orthopedic Manress
S.t And Frame. Never Used Still
In PlasliC Col! $800. Sell $250,
&amp;14·

ns-2380.

Goods

.lr1tonnad ""''lhla
all ..
-~
ll&lt;!vertiledln
_,

Bfe available on an equal
llpiiOIIunl!y basis.

REAL ESTATE

2 Bedrooms A~ta1lable t st 01 July,
Large Yard, $360/Mo. , 614· C46·
2515.
Nke 2 p r 3- bedroom house in ~­
moray. no polS. 614·992·5858. ·

Unturniahed 2 bedroom house,
n1ce &amp; clean, no inside pets , de·
pos11 r&amp;qutred, 614·992&lt;»90.

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

310

Homes for Sale

1 112 story, 4 br., tr., dr., lr., bas~
ment &amp; sun parch. $38.000, call
614·992-4ol80.

2 Bedroom 1n Mason. wu her &amp;
dryer, ac, no pelS. 304· 773-5751 .
2 Bedroom Mobile Home No Pets.
$22&amp;Mo , $135 DepoSit, 814-446·
38t7.
2 13 Bedroom Mobile Homes In
Porlet Area . You J;'ay Utilities,
References/ Deposit Req. 8, 4·
388-9162.

2-3 bedroom•, brtck, DR , new
wtndows, carpet, complete new
kitchen and bath , garage, full
basement, 814·882-6389.
5 Rooma. Ba*,
C1'ty. Force• Air
111
u
Furnac:e, Cen1ra1 Air, Carpeted
F
S
loorl , torm Windows. Doo rs,
Vinyl Siding. Lor 88.,50. Priced
Ar; 134·000· 814 ' 448 .. 578 ·
Conage, newly remodeled, w1ou1
building &amp; privacy fence, 1 lloor
pl._n, good lor elderly or ren lal,
Jonaroon Avo., $40 ,000. 304-175·
7412.

3 Bedroom House Trailer Located
In Rio Grande , References Re·
quired. No Pats Inside I 614 -379·
2720 AFTER 6 ~M
Trailer lor rent •n Gallipohs area.
614·446·8849
·- ·
Two and lhree bedroom mobile
hom11, ttarting at S240· S300,
aewer. water and trath Included,
814·1192·2187.
Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport, no petl, eU-992·
5858.

1-::":':'--:-------440 Apartments
for Rent

·

Gaoro•• Croak Road. Gru1 1..,..-~~~----....,N""boro. Convanionr Location. I aod 2 bedroom aper1men11,
3 a; Ranch, Garage, Poal, large nlshed and unfurnl1hed, security
Fencect V.rd. 1514·448·3108, For deposit requ ired , no pett, 614·
olj&gt;ptl •11111t
112·2218.

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enrerprises,
Jackoon. Ohk&gt;. 1·800-537·9528.

Tandy Stnoalion 488 SX, will\ e•·
ua~ $700 OBO, 814-112· 5827.·

Household

Air Conditioners, Washer, Dryer,
Relrigerator. Freezer, Stove, Mi·
crowave, Color T.V., VCR, 8U·

256·1238.

Used sweepers, all ktnds. 304·
875-1128.
WATER WEUS DRIUED
Fast Reasonable Service
886-7311

e 14·

Whir1pbot clolhes dryer, SSO, 614·
742·2187.

Appl1a nces :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri·
graters, 90 Dav Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 61 4·446·
7715.

Gibson refrigerator, good cond.
$100 304 ·675·6986

550

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dr~ers , refrigeralors.
ran ges . Skaggs Apphanoes, 78
Vme S1reet. Call 614·448· 7398,
1·tltJO.ol99·34119.

Block, brick, sewer pipes. wmd·
"'"'· lintels. etc Claude Winters.
Al o Grande. OH Call 814· 245·
5121 .

Soars Upright Freezer 30 Cu. Ft.
$100, 614·446-3844 Aller 71'M.
VI'RA FURNITURE
6H·441·3158
OuAiiry Househord FwniiJrt And
""'lances. Cl{M1 Deals On
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WN

And llyoway- .lolaliabla.
FrM Dtliwlr)' Wlthn 25MIIH.
Whirlpool wosna&lt; IQ5; Small Ralrigoruor $75; 1,000 BTU Ai r
Condllioner $75: Hotpoinl Dryer
S95. Wasl1ar To t.lllch US; G.E.
Almond Retngerator Newer Model. $95: Gr_, Aafrigidair• Aalrig·
ortlor. $ 1SO; HolpOint Range Har·
vosr Gold $95; Sltaooo ApP!ianc·
ea, 78 Vine StreeJ, Gallpolit; 814·
441· 7308. 1-800·411·3411.

20113.
Blu• HHier Puppies , 81 c·258·

1535.

.

Buoi""a FO&lt; Solo: F't1 Shop. Ful·
ly E!l"ppod. &amp; Stoc..... Greo1 Lo·
cat1Q n i Senou1 lnqurnes Only,
!1~1 ·0770, 614- 446· 7507
Fe frets,

s Waeks Old,

1 Uate 2

Jack Rusaell 11fri8t' puppies, 10
11&gt;1- lui grown, all colors. 1250'eo.:
two Sheltie mlniature Collie&amp;,

Boatd•no.

Puppy Pllace KaMela,
Stud Service Puppies, Grootnlng,
au,, Sail &amp; Trade, All Breeds
Payments Welcome, 814· 388·
0420.

Schnauzer pupp1es, AKC, sal! &amp;
~pper, tholl &amp; wormed, cham"'"" blood Unt. 814-867·5404.
Unregtstered :lemale Siberian
Husky, 7 months old, v8fy lov•ng,
preferably to home on 1 farm,
$100, 614·11411-2957ahar 4prn

570

Musical
Instruments

Piano Lessons: Lucw Jane Bulmer. H•lfllrd. Cll 304·882-2395.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610

Farm Equipment

Ford 4000 wlti disc, 2 bo11om
pJow, runs good, good condilton,
15,200, 814-112-2822.
Spring Clearanca on Homelite &amp;
Green Machine trimmers. Stders
Equlpmanl Co. 304-875-7421
Wanted to Buy

GRADE LOG WANTED : Dollv·
ered or will ptcM·up contact: Harr,
Goldsberry/Paul Mercer Sawmill,
Inc 2608 US R135 Soulh side
Wv. 25187. Phone 304·875· 7598
or 304-875-1882.

630

Livestock

. Baby pgs· lor sale. 814·949·2908

or &amp;1•·11411-2017.
Harelord Bull. 3Q4.e7s.8981
Three month .old male Pygmy
goall, $100 OBO. (814) 992-

2122.

640

HBy .&amp;

Grain

ALFALFA HAY· S1oraga dollvory
available-Morgan's Farm Rl 35,
Pliny. 304-937·2018.

TRANSPORTATION

71 0

Autos lor Sale

'84 Ford Tempo, 4 dOor automat·
ic, left rear tatt light damage,
97,000 miles. $500 OBO. 614·
949 ·2311 dayo or 614·94g· 2844
Mr'IIOQI.

21,000 Mil•. M ,1 00 080; 1114

loadtdl low Miltt l 1 ,., 441 .

eoo
__.

---------I
_1
1gg1 Oldo CuUa11 Cala11, oun·
roof, rNr defrost. 4 cyl, Slpct, ac,
am-1m ca11ana. 13.300. 304·175-

-·

N

1113 :100 EX 1 1, 100 080; 1i7~

c:II.;;.7·.;;50:;;2S;;;·~-----s
1114 Harl-r 0a¥idton oftal!

Cuaram l11' Than 4,000 Mitts,
lola Of Eotr. . t 814 ·UI· 1588,
E-.,814-441·1103 ~.
1005 Ylmaha ' t imbtrwolf 4J4
S3,500, ., .. 311-w.JII.O.

560 ·

1013 Chrtsla&lt; l olloron GTC low 200 Yahama •·Molo. Call 304 j
Eacellenr Condirlon , •sa-•s.•atwe:oopm.
'
$10,910, 304·115· 1182 leavt Kowalik! Bayou 300 4 Whealar
lolo111...
&amp; Honda Bulh Hog, 42 Inch Cu~
12.000 Boll. 814-245-0011.
11183 Mltlllbilhl Ec!lpaa, 5 Spaid.
Red , Sunroof, Air, 51,000 Mlltt,
750 Bolts &amp; Motors
~ $8,500 , Malnrenance
for Sa~J
• 814-441-i545.

IIHtll

2 AKC Female 8atHtt Hounds,
·
114·387· n55.
2 Purebred Chocolart Lab Puppita. 8 W11h, Both Male,
WormOd, 111 Shall. 1100 Eoch,
114·251!·1133.

3 F-Ie AKC, Ao- Pupptos
loll, Prlca Aeducod.- 8 Wo•k•
Old, E•callont Ouolity Aloo For
Sola 1 Momh' Old Mlfa ChnHII
Sherpa~ 814·370-2117.

'·

Pus

BARNEY

I.

11,700 080, 114-2SH340, 114·
251J.41487• •

Surgea,okts,.S1.._.2072.

1m ca..er._

1011 - . , Gao, a~ air, abo, am~'tid 113,000 ul lor
$10,500, Clll304-882-3413.

Boal wldl S..ive! S..ll '"d Trol •
toy Molor I 400 814-245·5512 ofo
814-:US.S802.

77 Oldamobilo 08, 74k, v.g.,
$1 750; '85 llocfge 100, 114k, V.g..

760

:

Man Pontoof\,

'89 f ·250, ......lie. llldiiiQ wi....
ow in back, 300 6 ql., excellent
c:ondltion, great worM truck, first
$3500 lakea II homo, 814·D4i·
2311 day~
19l5 Ford pickup, 31~ ton, V·8,
automatic, PS, PB, runs good,

PEANUTS

.
I

I'

W~EN

1072 Scamper 18ft. pull· behin&lt;l
... _ . o l - 8 , 101afly sell con
tained. Detachable awn1ng, de'
,mend pump, oh....,., ran . .·top ~
oven, furnace. and hoi water tankJ.
Musl see lO appreciate. Onl1
S3.500 can 814·446·3814
•

WAS THE LAST
TIME '(OU SENT

MliSICIANS

ME FLOWERS'?

tAlE DON'T

DON'T

'SEND FloutERS,

DANCE ..

tJe~st
11\P-GA"ZtfV.ft·
~\
\

•

1174 Chateau Traveler camper;

814-1182·2881.
sleeps 5-8, Qoad condmon, ask,
---~---=-:--:--"----:-1 ing $3000, 614·985-.1114.
'
1978 F-150 Pick-Up 302 Au·
tmoalic, 1800; 1011 Marcurw 1978 Smell Self-Contained, 10:
Marquis 302 Aulomatic 1800, Camper Wit, Toilet, Gas Stov,
81+4•8 0188.
Ralriget'&amp;lGr, Furnace, l:tcellenl
Condition, $1,350; 814-446-3334.
1070 Ford ~-5-2.
1980 Chev1 1 Ton Good Shape. 1e10 Cilltlon 21ft. 5811 containH
New T•rttS, $1 ,400, 6t ... 4.t6·284a trailer, awning, bath w/ShOwer, rei
lrigerator, srove wlov.n, exc_f'
Aher 8 P.M.
cond. To many e~etraa to list. Calt'
1986.GMC good condilion. 304 · ror deUUia. $3,950. 304-372-3480. 1
675-5182. •
1986 Rockwood camper, sleep&amp;
8, stove, tcebo~e, good condulon,
1987 Ford F250 3/4 Ton, 351
Windsor 2 whHI Drive, 614·4411- 8 14·985-4198
2845 or 304-e7S.2385 .
1998 Palmmo· Camper l'ra1l8f AI
1102 louzu pickup, 4 cyl. 5 C, Hear. ~fngeramr, Stove, Sink,
spoad, rico, 70,000 mi!H. $5500, Awnmg, Microwave, 614 -446may consider partial trade klr 1 2701 .
4114 or pontoon baa1, ,, • ·992·
1998 Tra~tel Trailer Van , Many
2594af!or epm.
Extras! lnc:ludes .Siide-Ou'
1993 Chevy S·10, 5 Spao&lt;l, Ex· $22,000 814·89• ·5321 Chesa ·
rondad Cab, V-8, 31 ,000 Mlleo peake, OH.
$9,000, Days: 114-441·U23,
Mini motor home, 1984 N1uan
Ni~t~ra: 11H41-o487.
Mtrage, dual rear wheels, 4c~l.
1993 Ford Ra"gor SPLASH.olfl10r, 5spd. 20mpg. sleeps 5. $2.800.
auto, atr, cassette, 38,000mi. 304-875-2949.
Whl18 In color. 110.900. Clll 304·
675-1602.
SERVICES

t

1993 Ford Ranger XLT AMrFM
Cassette, AC. 814·38&amp;-0408, AI·
lor 5 P.M.; Or Dayo 8-4: 304·511·
4563.
1013 S·1o Taho~ Lono Bod, 4.3
Vonec V-8, Auto Trans, AC,
Trades Welcome! Cook Motors.
614·11lot8-0103
lnternaltonal Log Truck Stngle
Axle. Laos Than 5,000 Milos On
E"fllnt, 614-441·1417. .

25

I•

- 2•

••

=:.t.. "

I•

33 .,_

• ...,...v......
fi'P·

........
44Bur--.

43 Soultlwn1eni

...

In)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Lull Campoe
Ce&amp;ebrity ~ cryptog~s a~ cru~ lroni quocatlons by fwnoua
Eachlenel-.,lheciptMirtWidllofanoltW

'L K ·

H

DLIWVHVP

IMNWIXWV
RFGLS,
YVMEN . '

Iy M

ME W•

'*'*· ~ w
T~oW;J ~p

AHE

YMVCG

MK

HHYME

I XW A

J F I

HAM

YLDD

'!"' •

..

'

sign.

BERNICE
. BEDEOSOL

&amp;

your Asiro-Graph prediclions for lhe year
ahead by marling $2 and SASE to Astio·
Graph, c/o t his newspaper. P .O . ·Box
1758, Murray Hill Stallon, Ne'l/ Vorl&lt; , NY.
1D156. Make sure to·slale your zodiac

,'

CAN~R (June 21:.July 22) In career or
commercial rriallelll loday. do not hesi:
lale lo bargain lor betfl!r terms . The tim·
ing will bo right lor you 1o assert yoursew.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2~) H you honor your
promises and commilments loday, you
gain lhe respect ol your associales.
Try lo do a good deed, lOr ~ne.
VIRdO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22) Even 1ho0Qh
you would ' prbbably .do II better if the
roles\ were re118rsed, someone will lry lo

Freeman's Healing And Cooling. ·
lflslallation And Servic:e EPA
Certified. Aalldential. Commerc~al .
614·258-161 1.

will

and

Refrigeration

~

AW

SMJDHEC.

O four
Rearrange lenert · of
Krombled 1words

I

low to form ' four words.

.

•

NECMET

•

'

..

.
·,

lETTERS IN

PRINT NUMBERED

IHESE SQUARES

'

TOO BUSY

to notice?'

•

.

ITUESDAY

I

I

Ohio.

•
F I

'

Cloul(led Stcrlon.

{

s.rllco Ot Rap~lra. l l· ,
ctniOd Etoctrlcian. Wlfah Eliclrlc 114· 448 -0050. Gallipolla

.1. .

Q

Loudly- Quest - Badly· Trophy - TOO BUSY
"Have y~u ever noticed," my friend mused, "thai happy
people don I thtnk aboul being happy because they are

Sovlnrs You 'll find In the

...

IIIQ, -

·
pr-...nt
·

SCRAM..t.m ANSWERS'

You

ASTRft GRAPH

171111.

:~

'

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE tEllERS
TO GET ANSWER .

BY NI'ITE
WRIGHT'.

~=~=~==~~~~::::=~

=A~allcl
~a-":'ia~I~O=-rc=-om~mo--~..,..ia_I..,..W.,. Ir-- ~

.

(llbbr.)

'

• DRVW~LL

u:

.•

53~ .... -

Hang, finiSh, repair
Cethngs textured, plaster
Call Tom 304·875·4188. 20
experience.
·

RntdenHal or commercial wiring .,
new ltrYICe or re~rs. Mas11f r
censad electrician. Ridenour •i
Elocrrlcal. WV000308 , 30•·17.5 .',

·

52~

'

Do"''

..

Poellc~ ·

50....,...18nct

C&amp;C General Home Mam.; ·
1enence- Painting, vinyl 81dmg •.
carpentry, doors, w•ndows, baths,'
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chet, 614·992·:
6323.
1

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps. Atr Condnioning If
You
Call Ua We Bodl Loiol "
Fr. . Ellimates, 1·800·29HMl98, ~
114-441-1308. wv 0021145.
'

concern·

48. - on (1\ne .,.
COitlldet,_ '" ,

FLOWE!l,;

Appliance Parts And Service· All'
Name Brands Over 25 Years h .'
pe11ence All Work Guaranteed,
FrenCh Cily Maytag, 814 -448 ·
7795.
I

Eleclrtcal

..

47latMIIelrri'
(2 wda.)
:

e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran1ee. ~
Local relerenc:es furnished . Es-•
tabhshed 1975 Call {614) 446·'
0170 Or 1·800·287·0578. Rogers'
.l
Waletprooling.

840

.

Harrow'• ,...
42 11.-d drlnUF
41

.....
..

Improvements

Plumbing

•

40-op

FRI'I~II..E

. . Heating

.

l.,..cllenl

..

Home

820

frteilil

28 CocMd
2lllelng
31 llqtlllwotlltg

Allpasa

"I Al'l .,.,

810

TtMnl'•

27 . . _••

Eut

Sunday morning, March 10. I look
the scenic railway up into the rain for· .
est. We went past many waterfalls in'
full flood, across 40 bridges and
through 15 tunnels before pulling into
Kuranda Station. The bighlighl of the
trip to that picturesque village wae the
show at the Tjapukai Aboriginal Da~ce
Theatre. Wbat does an aborigine call a
boomerang that won't come back?
I returned via the Skyrail, a gondola
that runs high above the rain forest.
This gave me a clear idea of how tall
the trees grqw.
In the evening, it was back to work
teaching a lesson based on the Law of
Total Tricks. This deal was included
more for the card-play technique than
as an example af the Law in action . .
An aggressive South will cha-cha with
a weak two-spade- opening. And some of
you might quickstep with a two-spade
response, a weak jump shift in competi·
lion, with that South hand. Regardless,
North has an easy enb:echat to game .
West le.ads the heart four . East
cashes two heart tricks before switching to the diamond 10.
Rather than rely on one club finesse
working, the declarer should choreograph the contract via an elimination
and endplay. After winning with dummy's diamond ace, continue with a diamond ruff, a spade to.the dummy, a di·
amond. ruff, a spade to the dummy and
the final diamond ruff. Now play a club
to the 10 (or queen&gt;. East wins but is
endplayed, He must either lead a club
into dummy's ten~ or concede a ruff.
and-discard.
A boomerlinj! that won't come back
isa stick.
· •

.••

tor Sale

.Nortit

Wesl
Pass

........

24·11uedve

By Pbllllp Alder

New 88 Olda 442 T·Tops Gray . 1082 Camaro Hops, complet8t
S1lver, '-Q'ria Owner. 20,300 M1les body. 304-675· 5815 or 304· 895&gt;
'
:
Fuiii'Qwor;'Garage Mapt
(614~ 3237 .
441·011!9
Budget Transmisstons. Used tRe"'
Auto Loana Dealer will arranoa fi. buill, All Types. Accen•ble TO:
1
nancing even if ~Ou have been 0Yer '10,000 TransmiSSIOn , Alsa,
'
turned down elsewher•. Upton &lt;Mim;al KtiS, 814·245-5677
Equipment Used Caro . 304·456·
New gas tanka, one ton cruc
1069.
wheetl. radiaaDra. floor rrw.ta. •1:
Drag Race Cars: 1958 AnQtia Mi· D I R olu10, Ripley, W'l. ~·372:
•
nus' Engine: 187g Manza Round 3933 or HI00·27:HI329.
Tube 4 link Chassis: 1a10 Nova
Bad&lt; Hall Cor All Now; 1111111 • 301 790
Campers&amp;
Engine. 11U•2·2031 .
Motor Homes
lNcks

12 ..... alice
13 Mnr. In MldriCI

7Dull~

u..r·:

llooll - '
22TotNeplllee''
23 ....., nut
.

2S

•
.
Aboriginal
and,trick dancing

111111121 FL Well Crah CC 210 H~
Inboard Fullw Looded. Tamdor,
A11te1, Eagle Drive On Trailer '

720

Acu.a

c.n-.

.

11114 ~cfge Sl1aclow ES, 2 Dow,
4 Cylinder, 5 Spoad, Air, AIIIFM
Cnseue, 57,000 Milee. Asking:

Accessories

11

Opening lead: • 4

1ill 21 Ft Century Cutty Cabil\
1U4 Dodge Shodow ES, · Au· Morino Radio. Go9d Conditionl
tomaJic, Air, 23,000 Milee, 1114· S13,000 eu ..u6- 1588 After :r
.;.311-__;113,;..;..84,;,,.;.81_
...;2...
45-0211;.;.;~·- - - I P.M. Or &amp;14·441-1803 Daytime.
I

$135Q; 614-11•9·3221.

4 Cut&lt;ar-) .

5--I Roman doziln

11 . . .

20 Took 08Nal ;

Vulnerable: North.SOuth
Dealer: South

1078 GluoMuler., 14', 35hp. El•
gin onglna. OMdo. carpel 6 in11r1•
or """"" 1500 ObO, 114-015-4418. :

Pirts &amp;

I O,p
,
I llaclllo• gun

PwtoNtn

· ~432

•'

Auto

1 Screwb'.N
2AcnulloW
3Acnu

• Q

Wiles,

.;.,...;___;________ I Ball Hunter Two

DOWN

lloiRh
6 Q J 10 g I 7
• 3 2·

Miln. $ 12,000 114• 245 •5311 AI· callant Condillon. 13.150. &amp;14 •
W 1:00 P.M.
441-11401l.
•

Pets lor Sale

Groom Shop ·Pal G10omlng. fea.
ruring Hydro Bath Don Sheets.
Caii614·441.CJ231 .

• 4 •
• A K 10 t I 7
• 10 • 8
6 K J 8

tKJ76 5

Building

Pole Bldg Spl· 30',45'119', 1 · 15'•8'
Sliding Door, 1 · 3' Man Door,
Painted Steel Siding, Galvalume
Steel Roof : $6,4441 Erected: Iron
Hartt Bldrs 1·8()0.352-1045

Eut

• 3 2
• J 54
• '8 7

Supplies

Metal Roofing &amp; Siding GalvanIZed, Gatvalume, ana Patnced. A1 lizer Farm SuppliH 6 14·245-51113

Weat

1883 Che\lr Lum•na. , 0 ,000 1HS Vam~ha WatTior 350cc Ex,

1893 Plymouth Sundance, Au·
romalic. Air, RHr Spoiler, 48,000
Mil... Alking $5.300 OBO. 814·
258-8340, 114-25e.e187.

lf.lf.N

6 A K IS
• Qe
t A 4 3 2
6 A Q 10

Wotft Tan nino Bodo
TAN AT HOllE
buy DIRECT and SAVEl
CommertiaJJHome urill tram
$199
Low monlhly peymenta
FREE oolor caorlog.
CaiiTOOAY 1.8()0.842·1305.

Country Furniture. 304-675--11820.
R1 2 N. 6milea, P1 Pl11oan~ WV.
lues-Sat 9-8, Sun I 1·5.

Now 32,000 BTU Clnrral Air Coi&gt;
ditioner, $500; Sala E •cellent
Condition, $100; Ele&lt;. Hoop. liN
With Trapeze Bar, S100; Dbl. Bed
C0mp01e $20, 2975 S1. RL 141 Or
114-448·9350.

10ga1 11nk 101 up opacials. Fith
Tonk I Ptt Shop, 2•13 Jackaon
Ave. Pol nr Pltuanr, S04· B15·

620
New 18 Ft !New Sx8 Utility Trail·

MERCHANDISE

510

Aullralian Shepherds Out 01

WOfklnll SIDCic, 11•·2511-13110.

Concre1e &amp; PlastiC SepDC Tanks,
Fruits &amp;
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron 580
Vegetables
Evans Entetprisea. Jac:kson, OH
1·8()0.537·9528.
:::---:~-::-:"7.'-:'-:":::-':-1 Strawbemes Ta~lot ' s Berry
Counlry Stylo Rod Chaclo,ed Sola Patch, O!len Mon, Wed, ffl . g.a,
$125; Antique Oak Bed $800. SatTiH Noon. 614·245-0047.
814·441·Q25e.

Tandy Compulor. 2500 RSX. 2
Meg Ram, 107 Meg Hard Drive,
Tandy VGM 3CO Color Monitor,
Mouse IMouse Pad. SOYeral Programs Already Loaded. $550.
614·245-53116 6:00P.M.

RENTALS

knowllnfiiY aocapt
· -101 raal-ta
wlllcl118 in violatiOn of !he law.
Our,readart ora hereby

Wanted to Rent

June 1S, accepting depaalta,
l14--302e.
AMC Roglllarod Bo11o" Tarrier
pu1&gt;91n, two moln. ona tomola.
ready to QO, call 814·841·24i5,
1 14-llt2·3'1$20&lt;I1 ..112-311&amp;.
AKC Rt81s1ered Bo•er puppttl.
:I00-875-11005.

ma1H. St2Stea.: Bt ..7•2-20SO.

All Natural Fat Loas Product.

1

-":-:4-·3-:-11-:-2_121_.-::-::--:---:--.:-:·1
1111 lolu~~~ng LX oluiD,..1ie, S.O, -

....... Old, 114·378·2812.
4 Pioco LMIIQ Room Suite. WOOd
With Cuohiono, Like New. $2i5; 2

11

AMC rnl1i PioiiCIWI, - - .

AMC
Rog lllorad
Garma"
Shilpherd Pupp.u, From G.,ITIIn
1mpor11, Call RivaNiiW KaMIIo.
814..... 11142.

1 10 XL Fran&gt;ln Log Ski- With
Powor Shih Coble Winch Huoky
Brute 300 XL K,....... Boom Log
loader Mounted On Tandem
Tratlar W11 Case Forklift With
Bucket And log Forks, 814·4481417.

Sunblrd4Docw, AuiD, AIC, PVwlf 3CM-87S..1782t...MI

Lebaron Can¥. GTC A~o~tg AIC, Hartey Dl'lktton Sporltttr N~
21.000 MHoo.... 500 080. · T - i Paint ...200, 114·

---·1

~:~~!11~4-:!11!:2!;!·2521~!:.,·
A•IIa-540 MI•~
,-.v...

11111 Corsica 4 Ooo&lt;. ""'"· AJC. 1ii2 SUulll GSltA IOOW loot
12,000 Miloo. $f,fll0, 080; 11113 Milea. 0014 COftdlllon, btra'o'

AMC Lh111 Apoo Pupp111.
R... yl Shots , Worm~ . Pnvtte
OWner. Athena / Marietta, Stale
Aau• Mel, 114-551-2722.

1300 ..m. ona malo, S2SO, r-ay

Anti que Bonte ShoW· June H.
hm·3pm. 11 .00 odtni11ion. 4f1
ond Mlin, PI Pl0111n~ 114·1182·
5018, 304-875-4785.
Bu, or Mil . Rlnrtne Antlquee.
\124 E. Mom SlrMI, o" Rl. 1:U,
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. ID e:ao p.m., Sunday 1:00 ID

Working couple with children
need nice, roomy, renlal home In
Pt. Plenant 1mmedlatel,. Call
814·992· 2291 or 814· 992·13g1
or 304-773-6183.

orl!;n.oranylnleo!lonlo
ma~e

T h i s _ , will not

•

360

-familial status or nallontil

Setre1ary Po11lon
For Immediate Htre · Full T1me
Secre.ary For The Comm,mity lm·
provement Corporation Of Gallia
Coun1y. Must Have Advanced
Computer Skills, Microsoft Office,
ACT Helpful. Should Ba Able To
Wr ite Bu11ness Letter&amp;, And
Have General Command Of Secretarial Skills . Musl Be Neat,
Couneous With E•celtent People
Skill. Send Resume, Cowtt letter
And Relerencea To Eucudve 01·
rector, The Community Improve·
ment Corporation Ot Gallia Coun·
''· P.O. Box 485, Gallipolis. Ohio.
45631. Deadline Monday, June
24 , 1996 . All Applications Are
Stnctly Confidential.

rn

.-mps. DMko.
a.crs. Enterta inment Ctniera, Tablet,
C,eata, Typ.wr ltert, 114··441·

Refrigerators , Stoves, Washers
And Dr~ert, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And ·Up,
w~ Deliver. 814-IIU4H.

limlta!lon or diSCt1mlno!lon.•

The Veterana Service Comml•·
a1on W11t Be Accepting AppUca·
11 ons Thru 27 June For The Poai·
t~on Of ·Temporar~ Secrelarr.
Mu st Pouess Good Communi·
• 11 ona 1 Skills ·
ca lion And 0 rgamza
Compt.ll&amp;r E•periente Prefe"ed.
ln Accotdance ·With Section
590t ·07 Of The Onio R1ivloed
Code. Tho Succo11lul Candldala
If A QuellShall Be A Veteran 0 r,
fle d vereran Is Not Available,
The Spouse, Survlving _Spoust,
Chlld Or Paron! Of A Votaron.
Appllcallono And Complero Jab
Deacri p!lon Mal Bo Obiain.O
Through Tho Vatarana Sotvico
0ifica
The Gal lo Caun1j c-1house The Gallia Counw Veter·
ana Service Commlllian Ia An
Equal Opporturity Emptowar.

.....

Rainbow IWiePif wl atuichrnenta.
304·675-1121.

Telephone Sales Call Between 1 ·
s PM. 614 ·44 1 1634

Someone To Clean House, Reier·
ences Requ ired, Send Responn
To : CLA tOO Clo Gallipolis Daily
Tri~""''• _825 Third Avenuo, Galli·
45631 .

Space lor Rent

2 Spaces With Volts, Choice lo~ cation, Memory Gardens, 814·

lmmec:ha.te' openings for part ttme
AN'S and LPN'S, all shifts. Com·
petlliw wages, d•lfenrntial With &amp;II·
per1ence, equal opportunity em·
ployer Contact the 0 1rectat of
Nurstng, Pinecrest Care Center.
110 Pinec:;rest Dnve, Gallipolis
OhiO, 45831 614·448-7112

c-.

UMd Fumi~n 1:111 -

ChOIO Pu-o, S5Q

E- ,-,.-......772.

Merchandise

Gracious liv1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
ta87 Clayton 1~x70 , 3br, bath &amp; apartments at Village Manor and
112. nowtv rltr1\0dllad ball w/8 ill Riverside Apartments in Middle·
whtrlpoof tub, S11,000. 30~·578 · port From $232-$355 . Call e14·
3190 .. 304-578·2984.
992·5064. Equal Housing Opporrunihes.
1991 Schull Mobile Horne 3 l!o&lt;l·
rooms. 2 Baths. Kitchen. Oimng Lafayene Mall · 2 Bedrooms, 2
l.R., Hutch, Heat Pump, AC , Balhs, All Ublities Included, $4251
Porch , 112 Acre. Hdllop Ot iv&amp;. Uo. Oeposi1 Requ i,ed: 12 Room
Galhpohs, $25,000 Cuh Or And Bath, No K1tchen 1200/Mo ,
$30.000, Owner Ftnanced 9% Int. 614·446-2477.
With $5,000 Down, 614-446·4455
Mlddl,po rl' 4th Ave 2 Bedroom,
lufn•shed apt, depos•t &amp; reler ·
Country home in town· t 314 acr· ence. 304· ~2·2566 .
es in Middleport, Oh10. lovely
1988 Schul t's Special Edition mo· New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom fur·
bile home, 1 112 balhl , carpel ntshed apts. Deposit &amp; referencthroughoul. plus many , extraa. es 304-882-2566.
814-992·7350 No Sunday calls
Ntce two bedroom apartment in
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room, 2 bath '89 Brandywine Mo·
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one bedroom apartmen1s. Apph·
cash, owner financ:;e tor $29,000
With $4 ,000 Down . 304 · 562· ca t1ons ca:n be p1cked up at Po meroy Cliff Apartments Office,
5840.
514-992· 7772.
Glenwood, 3/4acre wl 3bedroom,
2bath, 1989 Brandywine mobile One b&amp;droom apartment 1n M•d·
home . Sen for $2C ,9D5 cash or dleport, all utihues pak:l, 1270/mo.
owner finance for $29,000 , with plus $100 depOSi t Call 614 -992·
71106. 8am-Spm.
$4.000 clown. 304-562·5840.

HOME TYPIST, PC users need·
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Call 1-800·513·4343 E•t B-9368.

Need 6 Ladies To Sell Avon,
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furrithod apl, clopo~l

t';;~H;.;:5~, 2.:::--;;;;:;-;;;::;;;;:-;;;;:
IPII, lOIII eleclriC, IP•

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Working In Full Sarv1Ce KitChen.
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614·245-5860 EOE.

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T1m e AN's And LPN 's, Ail Shifts.
Compe llttve Wages, D1tletenrial
With EJper~ence, Equal Oppor·
IUI'llty Emplo~er. Contact The DIrector Of Nursing, Pii'MtCf81t Care
Cenl8f, 170 PtMCresl Drive, Gallipolis. OH 45631. 614-446·7112.

w.J.n1c1

I

Hou• ..... ivM Iota -

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Wednesday,June19, 1996

IIMi

In , _ veniUAII.
.
don'llook back.
.
•
GEMINI (M~ 21·Jullll 20) Today you SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. ~2) Gel an
might have ClllnCO 10 put Into pn1dicor Nrty start ~y ancl fOcus your anention
IOIIMIIhing you .-oilY learned from a on WOIII1y Ulignn1onl8. You can acc:om·

.I

dolo friend. Thlt bll o1 UNiul knowledge pllah your goala now Hyou are motivated
flhould _..aqually ,... tor you. o.~Tiini. ancl dlllrrnlt red.
IIMI ~ 10 a blldldly gill. Sind tor SAGmAIIUS (Nov. 2J.Oic 21) A mat·

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:::--::~~sso':~~:· ::J..~.aa:,~:
II in detail. II might benelll you ,. but not
anyone
PISCES (Feb. 20-March '20) II cb~nnel
that is presently generaling income can
be expanded at lhis lime. Use ybur imagl·
n~!lon 10 lind two ways 10 reap larger

'-'se.

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doafa-toryouloday. ' ·-..
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rewards.
.
L,IBAA (Sopl. 23·0;1. 231,1 Y~u mi. ~ht ARIES (Min:h 21-Apr!l 18) You will lit In
have to make a dlfllc:ub dadaron mvolving '¥811 today and have a good rappor1 with
friends loday. II you know your decision everybody, regardless of ~Is age. You ,.;n

,

Two·endaavura In which you've Invested
coneiderabfe elfort should slart producing '
results in
year ahead. Reap
all !hat lhiy have to o11ar before engaging will benefit everyone, lake action and

dlllrabfe

ter 'that has sertOUS overtones might be
resolved to your .sallslaction today .
However, you mar have to take a lew
n~ in .order to ,pull II Off.
• 1
CAPRICORN (Qolc. 22-.h1n .. 18) Do not
give up prematurely today and do nol
become discouraged if it seems as if
everything is going against you .
Everything will wori&lt; oul in lhe end.

have a knack lor making 'each person

Jilel special.
TAURUS (April 20·lrlly 20) Your
-ardl mlghl' come in smaller portions
than
had antk:frlr tJ today. Howe~r.
don't lei thll roallzallon disturb you
,b ecatl88 you wlllllll poolll.

vou

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Pege10 • The Deily Sentinel

Tu81day, June~l,1916

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Man believes tradeoff can be. m~de in
Ann

Landers

Ann Landers:· Al. we all
know, women shouldn't be forced to
have sex. NOI even married women.
Men have gone to jail for raping
their wives.
I know this will sound inc~ibl y
insensitive, but what is wrong with
·considering sex a marital obligation? There are women who, for
whatever tcason, just don't want to
have sex. Maybe they've grown

tired of il Maybe they never much
cared for it in the fii'SI place'. Reprdlcss, muy of these women are IIIII'·
ried to men who still w11111 sex. Yet if
the man pressures her for sex or
looks elsewhcie, he is the bad guy.
So far as _I know, marriage vows do
not include a vow of celibacy.
Every day. we all have to do
thinss we don't really want to do but
must I4now ihe yard and fix the car.
I don't enjoy it, but it's pan of my
responsibility to keep the household
running. Is it unreasonable of me to
expect my wife to fulfill my sexual ·
needs as part of her duty to keep the
household running? I'm not talking
about anything bizarre or far-out,
Ann, just basic, ordinary sex on a

Eastern Local honor
rolls announced
A list of elementary students in the Simmons. Carrie Wiggins; overall,
Eastern Local School District who Ashley Boyles, Aaron Yost.
Fourth Grade: all A's, Jessica
achieved academic distinction for the
fourth nine weeks' grading period Boyles; overall. Hailee Cline,
Chrissie Gregory, Nathan Grubb,
has been released.
Listed on the honor roll were stu- Steven Hollis, Ryan Kidder, Kassan. dents who made all A's, those who dra Lodwick, Kevin Marcinko, Katie
achieved listirig on the overall hC)ilor ·Robertson, Nicholas Weeks. .
roll by make a grade of B or above
Third Grade: all A's, Briuanf Barin all subjects, and those who made nett; over·.Jl, Adam Dillard, Andy
the academic honor roll by getting a Francis, Jennifer Hayman, Joshua
grade of B or above in all academic Hayman, Katie Hoxsie, Jessica Kehl, .
subjects and a grade of no lower than Bryan Minear, Dusty Murphy, Darren
a C in art, handwriting, music and Scarbrough, Sarah Yost.
physical education.
Chester Elomentary:
Riverview Elementary:
Sixth Grade: all A's, Jonathan
Sixth grade: None
Duffy; Ben Holter, Garrett Karr, Neil
Fifth grade: Overall , Krystal Bak- Simpson; overall, Brandon Bobb,
er, Cyrus Knotts, Ryan Wachter, Holly Broderick. Joshua Marcum.
Chris Wilson.
·
Evan Needs, Janet Ridenour,
Fourth grade: Overall, Emily Jonathan WilL
Brock, Sandra Powell.
Fifth Grade: all A's, Carrie Crow,
Third grade: All A's, Jaime Reel, Sonya Frederick; overall, Joshua
Morgan Weber, Krista White; overall. Basham, Travis ·Batey, Brent BuckChristopher Myers, Casey Smith, ley, Jessica Dillon, Cacy Faulk, Cody
Chris Tucker.
Faulk, Mathew O'Brien, Jennifer
'flippers Plains Elementary:
Thoma, Erin Taylor. Chelsey Wood.
Sixth grade: all A's, Bradley BranFourth Grade: all A's, Brittany
non, Darlene Connolly, Lindsey Hauber, Jonathan Owen; Overall,
Cross, Christopher Lyons, Kimberly Rachel Elliott, Alyssa Holter, Becky ·
Marcinko; Overall, Tamara Bissell, Taylor, Andrea Warner, William
Jeremy Connolly, Tiffany Kidder, Woods; academic, Adam Will.
Timothy Moreland, Stacie Watson,
Tliird Grade: all A's, Derek Baum,
Billie Jo Welsh.
Cody Dill; overall, Ken Amsbary,
Fifth Grade: all A's, Nichol Carrie Elberfeld, Abbie Chevalier,
Honaker, Erica Lemons, · LcAnn Andrea Grueser, Ross Holter, Sara
Marcinko, Thomas Simmons, '!Yler Pore, Chelsea Young.

BEFORE
BUYING A-HEAT PUMP

nesular basis.
I know I speD: for millions of
men. I'd be happy to compromise.
but tbll's hard to do when your partner bas absolutely NO interest in sex
whatsoever. I've tried to talk,to her
and have asked wbat ·she would like
me to do differently. but she just
plain isn't interested.
So wtiy isn't sex conside~ part
of marriage maintenance? She doesn't want sex? Too bad. I don't want
to get up Saturday morning and
clean t!Je storm dnains, but I do it
anyway. I would like to see your
answer in the paper. -- l'rustrated in
New Orleans
Dear New Orlcans: A husband
who compares making love to his'

• •

marit~l ..relations

wife with cleanina tbe 110m1 draW
Delr AM landers: Our·daulhter,
is not a ~fell candidlle for I'OIJIIIIlic: . "J111ie," bas a little boy born ow or
couplin1. I c111 undetsland why your · wedlock. She nef\!Md help from tbe
wife is not v~ mponsive.
• fllher and his fllllily so she could
You view sex as a wife's duty "do it alone." Janie works for a guvinstead of as a shareG ellpfellioa of enunent agency. When she is at
Jove, and that is tlk. I'OQI or the prob- work, she leaves "Junior" with us.
' Jem. She probably feels as if she is
My wife and .J are 60-plus, not in
"servicing" you and gell very little the best of health, nor arc we
out of it.
wealthy. Janie gives us $100 a week
I suggest that you get counseling for about 4S hours of ~y care, but
from a competent sex therapist. It we have Junior more often than that
might work if your wife isn't com- and don't receive a nickel for our
pletely turned off from yean of trouble. When I objected to this
being expected to perfonn whenever setup, I was labeled the family 's
you are in the mood, whether she is " horse,s patoot.";
or not. Too many command perforI realize Junior is a typical 3mances may have discorinected her year-old. but his whining and
·erogenous zone. Good luck.
, demands for constant attention an:

~----------------------------~

Area students receive
AEP Scholarships
· 1Wo Meigs High School grad- ·
uates have been awarded educational scholanhips from Americar\
Electric Power. Dorothy Leifheit
and Cindi Stewart were selected to
receive two of 34 scholarship
awarded to children of AEP'
employees.
Dorothy is the daughter of
Roger Leifheit who works at the
Gavin Power Plant. Cindi'is the
daughter of Gregory Stewart who
is with the Meigs No. 3 I mine,
Southern Ohio Coal Company.'
Dorothy P.lans to pursue a
degree in physical therapy and
work in a rehabilitation facility.
She was a participant in the Governor's Scholars and Regional
Scholar's programs at Ohio University and served as a coordinator
and instructor for regional leader-

ship workshops. She received the
'County Academic Achievement
Award and the Danfot:tb "I Dare
You" Award. She is a member of
the National Honor Society, 4-H
Club, Fellowship of Christian Students, ,nd participated in the
marching band. quiz team, French
Honor Club, and freshman mentor
program at Meigs.
· Cindi will pursue a careerin the
medical field. She participal'ed in
the Governor's Scholars Program at
Ohio University. She is a member
of the National Honor Society, was .
a cheerleader for four years; and
was active in gymnastic~ and
Senior Spirits.
·
The scholarships are $6,000-$1,000 the fiflit year, $2,000 the
second year, and $1 ,500 the third
year.

•

ly chopped
I teaspoon grated lemon or lime
zest
·
2 tablespoons avocado or sesame
oil
I teaspoon black mustard seeds
Peel, and shred cucumbefli, then
place in a bowl. Sprinkle with salt
and toss. Let sit 20-30 mint!tes. Pour
into a strainer, press out liquid and pal
dry with a paper towel. Place yogurt,
cayenne or papri((a and .mint in a
bowl and whisk with a fork 'until
smooth and creamy. Stir in cucumbers. Heat oil· in a small ·pan; add
mustard seeds. Fry until seeds spul. ter and turn gray. Pour fried seeds and
oil into cucumber-yogurt mix and stir
to blend. Refrigerate I -2 hours before
serving.
TOMATO CUCUMBER
SALAD
2 large tomatoes, cut into .large
chunks
2 cucumbers, peeled, seeded and
sliced into one-fourth-inch chunks
one-half Bermuda onion, cut up
I cup black olives, pitted and CUI
in half
one-half cup feta cheese, crumbled
one-fourth cup olive oil
1 tablespoon redc wine vinegar
Salt and freshly ground pepper

Ohio Lottery·

· ·Redsedg«J

drivina me up the wall. I fear lnother six months of this will undo wbllt
several yean of Alcobolk:s AnonymoJJS bas accompliibed. More
important, our'1111lriage is in -jeopardy. I need your help. -- Grandpa in
Mesa, Ariz. · ·
Dear Gramps: Inform Janie she
no longer can depend on you to look
after Junior and ·to' make other
arrangements. No amount of money
is worth the problems you describe:.
Gem of the Day: A road map will
tell you everything you need to
know except how to fold iJ up again.
Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Aaceles,
Calif- 90045

Plck3:

Houston 6-41n
~ 'extra Innings

. 016

Plck4:
5419
Buckeye 5:

Sporta on Page 4
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. Vol47, NO. 38

35-

Pomeroy-Middlepor"., Ohio, Wedneeday, June 19, 1998

4llecllone,12 .....

A GanMtt Co. Nswtpapec
(

'

Fresh mint, finely minced
Mix tomaloeS, cucumberS, onion
and olives. To~s with oil, vinegar, salt
and pepper. Sprinkle with feta and
mint. Toss lightly and serve. Serves
4.
ASIAN CUCUMBER SALi\D
(The secret. to this recipe is sesame
oiL the dark sort that's sold in most
Asian food sections.)
3 lafge cucumbers, peeled and
seeded
3 scallions
one-fourth cup unsalt~ peanuts ·
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
I tablespoon sesame oil
~
I tablespoon soy sauce
I tablespoon canola or sunflower
oil
one-fourth. teaspoon crushed red
)ll;pper flakes
Salt
I teaspoon sugar
Cut cucumbers into 4-inch
wedges. Sprinkle lightly with .salt and
place in colander willi a plate or bowl
to weigh them down. Allow to drain
a half hour. Make dressing of vinegar,
sesame oil, soy sauce, canola or sunflower oiL ·
'
Add cucumbers and toss. ' ·nkle
with sugar, crushed red pep~, r and ·
peanull. Toss. Allow to sit in the
refrigerator at least one hour before ·
serving. Serves 4.

Py TOM HUNTER

WorkAmerica funds in .securing an Anny offices. in Pomeroy.
named in the suit.
atiomey for a Pomeroy man in FebHe was found guilty on all charges
In the civil suit, the state is seck. · · A non-profit organization operat- ruary .
in the robbery last montb in Meiss · ing the following relief from the
.. ing an educational and job training
The civil suit, filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun, and coun:
·
centc;r_ in Meigs County has been County Common Pleas Court 'lUes- was sentenced to 26 10 SS yean in
- order the immediate removal of
· nllffilll in a ·civil suit concerning day afternoon, relates to the trustees prison.
all .trustees and officefli of
alleged misuse of charitable monies. role in their approval of funding for
Among the defendants in the suit WorkAmerica and appoint a rcceiv~·
· WorkAmerica. Inc .. a non-profit the criminal defense of Brad Robin- are Freedom Road Ministries and ei until successor trilstees are named
· subsidiary of Freedom Road Min- son, Pomeroy.
·
W9rk America founder Walter J. by the Coun.
.. ;is!ries, Inc.: and six trustees of its
· Robinson was indicted on Febru- Robb, and WorkAmerica trustees
: issue a ~rmancnt injunction
board of directors are cited with a ary 14 on two counts of robbery, two Di111nc Snow, Reba Peck, Monika against all the defendanl5, prohibiting
. breach of liduciary duty to a charita- counts of kidnapping, and one count Bennet, Roger Rccb, and Ralph Scar-· them from engaging in WorkAmeri.ble trust, relaled to their approval of of aggravated burglary in the January . mack. James McClain. statutory ca activities or practices.
an expenditure of $2,000 .in 15 robbery of the former Salvation agent for WorkAmcnca, Inc., is also
- order an accurate accounting for
all trust assets which have been in

. · S.ntlnel Newa Staff

'

WorkAmerica trust.ees possession
and control during the time relevant
to the complaint
- detcnninc the defendants personally accountable for the $2,000
check drawn from WorkAmerica
funds to pay for Robinson's attor~~ey,
and order the amount returned to
WorkAmerica.
· Local authorities have received a
number of complaints from people
who used Freedom Road and
WorkAmerica's services and were
dissatisfied with .the quantity and
quality of diose services, according to

COIIFOIIIJ ASSURED.

AMERICAN
ELECTRIC
POWER

Governor signs construction bill
.'

' SIGNS ~ILL - Under the -tchful eye of an Abraham Lincoln
bust, Ohio Gov. George Valnovlch, aeetad, turns to thelaat page
' of the $1.6 billion atata·i:onatructlon budget during ceremonies
Tuesday In Columbus. Wltnnalng the algnlng are, from left, Tam
Browning, state budget director; Stanley Aranolf, praaldent of the
senate; JoAnn Dal!ldaon, apnker of the.houee, a~ Tom John•
aon, chalnMn of the houH finance commlttae- (AP) ....

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Vlli110vich has signed the $I .6
billion state construction bill, giving
the go-ahead to hu~ of projects
around Ohio.
.
The bill, signed Thesday in
· Voinovich's newly restored Statehlluse office, included money for new .
univefliity buildings, state and local
prisons and sp,orts stadillli\S.
· Educ~tion received the 'biggest
share. More than $500 million was
included for colleges and university
projects and $120 million was given
to.help repair the state's public sehool
buildings.
. SchoolNet Plus, the prograin to

place computer work ·stations in
kindergarten through 4th grade classrooms, received $ISO million. It has
been one of Voinovich's priorities:
"SchoolNct Plus will help Ohio's
children be prepared for the hish tech
workplace of the future;" Voinovich
said.
The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction received $269
· milliQII to build a new prison in.Toledo and for other renovations at state
detention centers. The money will
also help pay for more local jails.
Also. included was $80 million for
parks and recreational areas.
While most of the money went to

those projects, much of the debate
over the bill centered on the $38 million set aside for stadium projects in ·
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Columbus and
Akron.
Democrats said Republicans spent ·
too little on school bUildings and too
much on the stadiums.'
Voinovich saidlthe stadiums will ·
create and keep jobs.
·
The governor vetoed two items
that were in the budget bill, including one that would have inscribed the
state motto, "With God, All Things
Arc Possible" on the Statehouse.
Voinovic~. who had suggested

By JIM FREEMAN
"We are trying to operate the village tive session and repon its decision to
Sentinel Newa Staff
. as economically as possible."
Rough!- Which they did.
'
Compensation
for
part-time
In
addition,
Rought
proposed
givCouncil members and Vaughan
BERLIN, Md. (AP) -An elec- socketthat they've been having probemployees
was
among
the
topics.
dising
a
raise
to
the
daytime
dispatcher
were
meeting with Rought this momtrical problem sparked a fire that lems with over the past couple of
cussed at Monday night's meeting of who also serves as the mayor's sec- ing to funher address the subject.
heavily damaged a black church on days," Gabriele said.
- retary. Rought ~d he is not recomIn other business, council memMaryland's Eastern Shore early this
Gabriele said the federal Bureau Pomeroy Village Council.
Police
Chief
Gerald
Rou8ht
met
mending
the
raise
because
of
his
relabers
complained about the appan:nt
. morning. sljtte authorities said. · ·
of Alcohol, To.bacco and Firearms,
with
council
requesting
moving
one
tionship
with
the
dispatcher,
who
is
lack
of
work on potholes in tbevilArson and federal innstigators whic.h has been investigating a series
of three part-time police dispatchers his wife, but because of the increased · lage.
were called to the scene of the blaze of fires at predominantly black
worlcload the daytime dispatcher now
Vaughan explained that workers
at St: John's United Methodist churches in the South, would still to a full-time position.
The move would result in four has-- including processing parking have been busy cutting up trees that
Church in a rural black community investigate the Berlin fire.
·. full-time and two part-time dispatch- tickets and mayor's coun.
fell in the cemetery about two weeks
near Berlin, but state Fire Marshal
The fire was reported about 2:45 ers.
Rought also suggest giving part- ago.
Rocco J. Gabriele said, "it's quite a.m. and put out iii about30 minutes.
Rought said the change would time employees raises above the
Council members also highlightThe blaze damaged the chl!rch's result in bette! dispatching and sched· $4.25 minjmum wage. He pointed ed roads and streets that need ditchevident it's accidental."
"Our preliminary investigation white clapboard main sanctuary and
out that the part-time workers have ing worlc, in particular Pleasant Ridge
indicates it started in the kitchen. It · destroyed an annex, leaving only cin- uling. .
Some council members citing the never received a naise although oth- Road as pointed out by Councilman
appears it S!arted in an electrical der block walls.
added upense of a full-time position er full-time and salaried employees Bill Young.
including health insurance and paid have.
Clerk-treasurer Kathy Hysell
vacations.
Mayor
Frank
Vaughan
suggested
reported
the following balances for
One man killed, one Injured
Said Councilman Larry WehJ:ung: council discuss the mauer in execu- May: general, $34,217.74; safety,

Clues sought in collapse of
~harleston parking garage

By MARK TRUBY
Jlie Herald-Diapatch

9.99o/c APH
.

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the motto proposal. said the Capital
Square Review and Advisory Board
now will have the final say.
"It .is my sincere belief ,that the
mouo should be on the Statehouse1"
he said. ·
Voinovich also denied a req,uest to
conuibute $500,000 toward the
restoration of a church scfiool building near Toledo. Holy Trinity School,
which is operated by the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Toledo, was set
to receive the llftlney.
But several lawmakers said providing the money may have violated
the separation of fhurch and state.

-

THE HEAT PUMP HEATS, COOLS AND SAV-ES

. "He was very alert, though, and it

$4,017.64; street, $26,356.07;· state
highway,
$13,746.58;
fire,
$27,914.22; cemetery, $14,786.29;
water,
$40,222.23;
sewer,
$46,782.68;
guaranty
meter,
$18,625.21; utility, $17,32S.2 1; fire
. ttuck, no balance; perpetual carecemetery, $7,284.55; cemetery
endowment, $38,11 8.57; police pension, $1,348.40; building fund,
$3,159.03; recreation, $4,837 .89; permissive tax, $3,052.59; law enforcement, $3,425.78; COPS FAST grant,
$627 .39; . FEMA flood grant,
$I 6,944; downtown revitalization,
$87 ,000; totals, $412.290.16.
Also present were. council Prcsident John Musser and council members Geri Waiton, Scott Dillon and
George Wright.

'

Mosquitoes taking bite out of summer
By MITCH.WEISS

A81oclated Preas Writer
It's nOI enough that the cool, wet
spring has kept Ohioans from enjoying the outdoors. Now they have
something else to drive them ·inside
-mosquitoes.
"This is the ·time of year I love sit· ling outside on my front porch," said
Betsy ·Raymond, 43, of Toledo, a
teacher. "But not this year. They
(mosquitoes) arc so aggressive this
year. You can hear them buzzing in
your ear, then you look down and
t!K:re arc three or four of them biting
you at onFe. I've never seen it this
bad."
This has been the worst year for
mosquitoes in a long time, Richard
Berry of the Ohio Health Department .
said Tuesday.
Why?
"Excessive rain - so much so
that the ground became saturated,"

Beny said.
With the lteaw nain, pools of
standing water have sprouted up
everywhere. Mosquitoes lay ·eggs in
water. All kinds of water - l'ro!n bird
baths and roof gutters to the edges of
lakes, rivers 'and sllbms.
"The pools arc laigerthan normal.
Just about every mosquito egg ihat's
out there has hatched," Beny said.
Mosquito eggs usually hatch in .
early spring, then again in late spring.
The cool spring weather delayed the
early eggs from hatching. When the
warm weather finally arrived, all of
the eggs hatched at once.
· "They' came out in such numbers
that everyene .noticed them right .
away. They all came out at once,"
Berry said. •
· The population is large all over
Ohio, Beny said.
'
How large? ·
Officials estimate that Columbus

alone has more than 6 billion masquitoes - more mosquitOes than
people in the world.
Communities have been inundated with complaints by residents about
mosquitoes.
Some communities are using
insecticides in standing water to kill
eggs before they .hatch. Others arc ·
spraying neighborhoods to kill the
ones that are buzzing around in back
yards.
·
Some people have bought insect
~;epellents or foggers at stores to kill
the insects.
"We can 't get the stuff in quick
enough," said Hal Kinder of Defi,
ance's Quality Farm &amp; Fleet store.
"I want to enjoy my back yard
again,~ · Pat Joncs,.S I, oftoledo, said
Tuesday outside a store where he just
bought a fogger he hopes will kill the
pes~y pests.
"I like to barbecue. My wife has

looks like he 's going to pull
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Inspec- through."
tors are searching for clues today at
Nursing supervisor Janet Haught
d!)wntown parking garage where . said McCormick was listed in serious
one man was killed and another was condition. Claude McCormick's famsei;ously injured when a section col- ily members nearly filled the smallish waiting area at CAMC's emerlapsed.
Police identified the worker who gency room Tuesday night hoping he
was:killed Tuesday as F~dy Searls, would feel up to a quick visit.
S7. of Hamlin, a construction workMeanwhile, dozens of construcer for Kanawha Valley Construction tion workers stabilized the concrete
structure, allowing Searls' body to be
and·Erection Co.
About 5:10 p.m., Claude pulled from the rubble about 8:30
McCormick, 52, of Charleston and · p.m.
· "They've had steel workers and
Seafls were working on the top lev. el of the parking garage of the Hunt- engineers up there trying .to assess
ington Banks building at Lee and everything," .said Lt. W.N. Moss of
Dickinson streets in Charleston's the Charleston Police Department.
business district when the accident "You don't want 10 start clearing
things out and have the building fall
occurred, officials said.
the 1wo friends and members of in on yOu.' '
Occupational Safety and . Healt!l
the U'onworkers union were using a ·
crane to guide a slab of concrete into Administration officials were poised
pla~e on the fifth level when a sec- to begin an investigation once worktion • .of steel-reinforced concrete ers clea(Cd the scene.
"The investigation will begin as
app1rently broke loose and fell
through seveJal levels. Searls W\15 soon as recovery is over," said Steve
CJiARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Knudsen said the jail staff has had sex with inmates at the Santa Rib
lrapj.eil in the.liasement under sever- Sowards, an inspector for OSHA.
California prison officials expect. to been alerted'.of the possibility that I ail.
,
al tons of concrete, said Kinsley Sowards said he didn't know if know next weekwhether West Vir-· Bragg may have had the deadl
.
Y dis"There's always a chance in a jail
OSHA had inspected the building pri- ginia ~hild-killer Dale Bragg died of case. Bragg had seemed tU recently situation. This jail had 4,000 prisonNyc~. vice president of the properties
, or to ];oesday.
division for Huntington Banks.
an AIDS-related illness.
but refused all offers of med1cal treat- ers in it, roughly. I do not know that
1
The rush-hour accident drew a
Sgt. John Tabareui of the
,Bragg, 41, was found dead Sun- men.t, he said.
he was always kept separate," he
Chaileston Police Department esti- throtig of gawkcrs who stood along day jn the Santa R ·• · ita JaiJin·
Bragg walked away from the said.
the yellow tape police used to cordon Dublin, Calif., about 17 miles south- · Northern Regional Jail and Cornecmat~ the concrete weighed between
At the Mount Olive Cotrectiorial
off the accident scene. 'lbOse who east ofOiiklahd, Calif. There were no tiona! Facility in Moundsville last Complex in Fayette County, an
25 and 5(}tons.
r.lcCormick, who was stn1ck by were . near · the parking garage' signs of trauma or fouL play, said ·~ugust. He had se~ed 22 Y~~ of a · inmate,who refused to be identified
the c!oncrelc slab and suffered multi- described a tremendous rumble sim- · Alameda County Sheriff's Sat. Jim ltfe sentence for raptng ~ kilhng 7- said . Tuesday at 1~1 five .other
Knudsen.
.
. year-old ~ebecca Bnck~r of inmates had sex-Willi Bragg and ue
ple ipjurics, was ~coYering Thesday ilar to a small earthquake when the
The coroner found problems with O!arleston In 1973.
Mnccrned they mav ha
. ve been l'n'ect,
in ·the intensive care unil of aCfident occurred.
~
,
"
He was captu•-~
Cbaileston Area Medical Center's • 1Huntlaaton Henld·DJ.flatch Bragg's lungs consistent with pneu..., in Hayward, ed with HIV. the virus that causes
wrlten Patricia Maher and Jim mania and. tes~ arc being conduct~ Calif.~ in November and.charged with AIDS.
'·
.
. Gen~ral Division.
to detenrune tf Bragg had AIDS, shooting a poltce officer.
BilfWhyte West Virginia depul}l
"Jic has a broken back and ribs," Roa.l coatributecl to this story, u
Knudsen said.
·
Knudsen .did not Jmow if .Bragg
.
'
his l!rOiher Mike McCormick said. dJcl The Asloclatecl Pna.

a

lnh·t·t•st a ~ Low a~

We Are TRULY The Best Company For our Jo

a garden. But every time we go outside we get eaten alive. They swarm
all over us. We just don 't go in the
back yard anymore."
. jlfosquitoes can spread encephali us- a sometimes fatal disease. But
Beny s;lid there's no need to wony
about infectious diseases now
because disease-carrying·mosquitoes
make their appearance later in the .
summer.
The phone has been ringing off ihe
hook at the Toledo Area Sanitary Distnct from people who want their
yards sprayed. The district has been
receiving more than 100 calls a day.
. "The mosquitoes are really bad,"
sa1d Lee Mitchell, a biologist for district. He said the mosquitoes are
"nice and big and husky."
The agency's 25 full-time workers
and a dozen seasonal . employees
have been working overtime trying to
get a handle on the ·problem.

California officials await test ·results

~

31 9 S. 2ND AVE.
992·4485

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
1·800·516·2932
.
, .
.

'

.

Investigators·say latest Pomeroy Council iiiiiTis personnel matters
church fire ·accidental
'

WereThe Inside~
·,

· Meigs·County Prosecuting Attorney
John Lentes .
"I think it's appropriate that the
Attorney General's office would
come to Meigs County to investigate
an operation such as Freedom Road,
compared to investigations of Anier. ican Legion posts in the county that_
resulted in large fines for the sales of
charitable tips. At least we know in
the cases of the Legion posts, the
money generated from the sales was
being put back into community projects," said Lentes.

Gives mQney to schools, stadiums

SAVING MONEY WILL PUTA·SMILE ON YOUR FACE, TOO! .·
:SIAL

"

State files civil complaint against
WorkAmerica
.

'

"I am amazed, my ~ayments are $50.00
per month and my utiliiy -budget went
down over $60.00 per month. It not only
pays for itself, but even pays me to own it.
I recommend a Carrier to everyone."

•

11-23-31-32-33

AFTER
BUYING AHEAT PUMP

•

\

•

Recipes ... --~--r--..,-eontlnued from page 8

CINDI STEWART AND DOROTHY LEIFHEIT

.

•

.

•

.-

C?" Bragg

corrections commfssioner, said he
!"as unaware of any health problems
uragg may have had.
Inmates arc not rilutinely tested
for th.e AIDS vi~ in West Virginia
unless they show signs of the illness.
Bragg was never administered an
~~ t=~~ West Virginia, prison omBragg was engaged to be married
h h
w en e ente~ the state pri•on sys. tern at age 19, said his tlrother, James •
·Brags of Wcllsron, Ohio.
·
H
· e said his brother was in good
health and would nOI have 'refused
tneatmenL
·
'

_..,~
-~~....:._,:~........ ...,. ~'

'

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