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                  <text>P8ge 10 • The Dilly SenHnel

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 24, 1...

Racine Grange plans for J~ly 4 celebration
At its regular meetiDg Racine
Ol'lllge No. 2606 of OK Grove
made Plans to Participation in the
R~eine July 4 parllde were mlde
when Racine Grange 2606 Qf Oak
Grove met recently at the hill.
Members were uked to meet at
the home of Barbara Dugan on Tuesday, July 2, at 6:30 p.m. to help put
together a noat. Also at that time
pl.ans will be discussed for the Meigs
County fair exhibit booth.
Hemlock Grange visited Racine
Grange and brought the lecturer's·
program led b Hemlock Grove master, Rosalie Story.
Reported ill was Mrs. Geraldine
Cross, who . is in Columbus · for •

surgery.
Plans ue bein1 IJllde to remove
some trees from tbe .....,. property.
As . for leJislative atrain, pendinJ
actJon of the Hawaiian Supmne
Court to legaliz.e homosex1181 IIW'riages, which mOISt then be recognized all other stales ICCOI'dinlto the
U.S. Constitution, wu disc:IISHd.
Legislation is pending in Congress
now to counteract this move and
members were urged to write letters
on the matter. Also reponed was the
Clinton Administration's move to
grant Communist China " ~ost
Favored Nation" status. It was pointed out that this status should not be

Jflllted since China is in severe violation of buman rishl.s, uses pr00n
IIberto produce items, and ban U.S.
produc:ts with heavy t~lfs.
Chuck Yost, master, reponed on
the recent law sisned by Gov.
Voinovich which now recognizes an
unborn clJild as a ~fe_ This is the
res~lt of the recent death of an
expectant mother where the unborn
child was not considered to be a life
in the courts.
A repon was given on the recent
success of Racine Grange at the
Grange district talent contest. Rachel
Ashley won first place in instrumental solo and vocal solo; Rachel &amp;

·Agaasl upset during match
·at Wimbledon

Whitney Ashley won fim place in
subonliiWe vocal duet; Keith Ashley
won piano solo; Whitney Asbley won
piano solo in the age 1(}.14qtegol'y; and Whitney and Emily Ashley
won the vocal duet category qe 1(}.
14. All wiD compete at tbe Ohio Sllle
Gran11e talent finals at the Ohio Swe
Fair in August.
.
Racine Grange is working with
Sw Grange on a booth for the Expo
to be held at the Meigs County Fairgrouuds in September. The next
meeting of Racine Gra~ge will be
July ·II. Officers will be elect~ .
Refreshments were served following
the meeting.

Enhancements to the technology
elements of the OVAL program were
discussed at the recent meeting of the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries held at its
headquarters.
.
On the recommendation of Bill
Burcham, representing the Briggs
Lawrence County Public Library,
new computers, software, and a scanner were authorized. These items will
be used to develop world-wide web
pages for the member libraries and
OVAL to provide access to services
via the Internet.

Mountain biking
is taking off

CHESTERLAND, Ohio (AP)- mountain bikes began to soar in the
Mark Gulaian has just competed in a mid· ' 80s. Last year, two-thirds of all
cross-country race, and now he's on bikes sold to adults in the United
his hands and knees, wiping the mud States were mountain bikes .
off the frame of his moun lain bike.
These are happy statistics for the
"This isn't bad," he says with a makers of Cannondale bicycles.
smile. "The last race I was in was so Since opening shop in the early By POPULAR MECHANICS
muddy, I actually had worms wrig- 1970s as a manufacturer of bicycle A Hearet Magazine
·gling in the mud on my bike by the accessorie~ in a small plant above a For AP 'Speclal Faatt.irea
The World Decimal Time Society
end.
pickle factory in Georgetown, Conn .,
wants
to ket rid of leap year -and
"It was so cool."
Cannondale has turned itself into a
in
the
process institute the decimalPerhaps yoti don't agree that it $140 million maker of high-end bicyization
of time.
was cool. But there are more than cles.
" One world should have one
30,000 American mountain bikers
Can nondale produces all of its
·
chronology,
one calendar, one clock
who would agree· enthusiaSts who bikes, which range in price from
and
one
time
zone," Michael Pinder,
plunk down $30 annually for a $400 to $5,000, in a small plant
president
of
the
100-member Britainlicense to compete in a variety of tucked into the Allegheny mountain
based group, told science-technology
races.
town of Bedford, Pa.
editor
Jim Wilson in an article in the
There are screaming downhills
"We're the only large manufaccurrent
issue of Popular Mechanics.
and rugged cro~s-country races. turer that makes all our bicycles in the
The
10-year-old
group now is lobThere are races for professionals and U.S.," said Cannondale spokesman
bying
the
United
Nations to change
first-timers, for anyone of any age Tom Armstrong. "That's our single
. the way we keep track of time. ·
. and any·ability, from coast tO•Coast. biggest competitive edge."
Leap year, Pinder said, is the prodMountain biking isn't just for
Most large-scale bicycle producuct
of a forced connection between
gon~o. over-the-edge daredevils any- ers have their bikes assembled in a
days
and years. Calendars measure
more. Mountain biking has become a few Asian superfactories. Revamping
whole
days - but the year contains
recreational activity for riders from 6 lines and styles can take an average
· to 76, arid has changed the face of the of three years. Cannondale is able to a fraction.more than 365 days. Leap
bicycle manufacturing industry. This revamp its line annually. or, if nee- years, and more recently "leap seconds," take up the cosmic slack."
summer, it's even an official Olympic essary, daily.
Pinder doesn't argue against the
sport, making its first appearanFe in
Cannondale uses a sophisticated
this summer's Games in Atlanta. .
manufacturing system which lets' il
"Thj:re are I0 million mountain design and alter tube dimensions by
bikers in the U..S. who ride off-road computer. and make critical angle
at least six times a year," says Tim cuts for the frames with computerNEW YORK (AP)- Eddie MurBioomenthal, market,ing director of controlled lasers.
phy
is tired of reading how his new
the lnternati~?al 1'1ountain. Biking _ . It also has developed a patented
Assocoatwn. That s, pretty ompres- "tab and slot" design for assembling movie "The Nutty Professor" is his ·
sove If.you cons1der that m 1976, that their frames. The aluminum seg- last chance to hit it big at the box
office.
number was ze.ro." . .
ments are secured together like ajig"The reality of my situation is that
•&gt;~ountam boke.traols have sprung saw puzzle before being welded,
up all across the country, from those eliminating the very cumbersome if my career was on th~ decline I
in state and national parks, to trails at and time consuming jigs that other wouldn't he making movies," Murski resons seeking a new source of manufacturers must use to piece phy says in the July I issue of
Newsweek. "They don't give money
income in the off season.
together their frames.
to
blacks in Hollywood because
And for those seeking a little.
Says · Armstrong: "Basically,
they're
swell."
cross-country adventure, a mountam we're set up so if one of our riders has
The 35-year-old actor, whose new
bike trail reaching from Canada to a race on Sunday, and comes to us on
movie
opens Friday, says he does
Mexico along the Continental Divide Monday wanting to try out a bike.
have
a
few·
big career regrets, howis being developed by the Adventure with. say, longer chain stays or a
ever.
Cycling Association. One-third of the frame alteration, we can ha'vc it
. Among them was turning down a
trail, through Montana, Idaho, and inade for him by that afternoon."
starring
role in the 1984 smash hit
Wyoming, is open now, with the path
While the Olympics will push
"Ghdstbusters"
and a chance that
through Colorado and New Mexico mountain biking further 'into the
planned for .completoon by 1997..
spotlight, some hope that the rugged- same year to sing ·on the charity .
·
Whole thm-wheeled, feather-hght ness of the event will not. frighten record "We Are The World."
"I
was
working
on
my
own
album
road bokes domonated the bocycle away the averageTider.
and blew it off," he says. "I was like
busi ness in the '60s and '70s, sales of
'They' ll prclbably put me.in !he back

The member libraries served by
OVAL, the first state funded regional library system in Ohio, includes
Athens, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Ross, Scioto, and Vin·
ton Counties. Wanda Eblin is Meigs
County's representative on that board_
In other matters the board .
approved the adoption of the 19961997 salaries and benefits package
for employees. On the recommendation of Theora Bradley, representing
the Ponsmouth Public Library, the
Board granted a three percent salary

raise to regular employees, plus provided a series of one-time bonuses
based on employee performance
evaluations. Minor changes to the
personnel procedure were alsq adopted. .
.
Director Eric S. Anderson
informed the board that Margaret ·
Downey, member services assistant,
had done an outs(anding' job in managing the changeover to voice mail.
The system, . installed the second
week of June, will increase the access
citizens and member .libraries will ·

Pinder said, has I I timezones but
trains connecting the countries that
once were part of the Soviet Union
run on Moscow lime. In China,
where the consolidation is more complete, all five timezones operate on
Beijing time. The United States military uses a single world timezone, ·
Pinder has stepped up his lobbying efforts because he thinks the year
2000 is the perfect time to make the
change. If executed, it would occur
exactly at the stroke of midnight on
March 21, the vernal equinox, which
would hecome the new New Year's
Day. We would throw away our old
calendars and clocl1s.
The short name for the first new
year would be abbreviated 000.
Those who needed to know past dates
with precision would use a long version. ·
"Our planet is 4.6 billion years
old, so 2000 A.D., could become
4.600,002,000," Pinder said.

Public Notice
Th Olive Township
Budget will J;e opan lor
lnapecllon at the Olllce of
the Townahlp Clerk lrom
June 24 through July 4.
Public hellrlno and regular
meeting will be held et the
Townehlp Building July 5,
t886 at 7:30p.m.
u.rtha Dura~ Clerk
41645 Coolville RCNKI
Reedlvllle, Ohio 45772
(614)6674291
(6) 24 n:c
PUblic Notice

Public Notice
Section 6: Thatlhs salary
olthe Clerk of Beech Qrovli
Cemetsry shall be and Is
hereby eatabllahed at the
rate of .$600.00 par year.
Section 7: That the ealary
ol the Zoning Olllcer ahall
be and Is hereby
eatabllahed at the rete· ol
$1,060.00 par year.
Section 8: WHEREFORE,
this Ordinance shall take
effect and be In lull force as
ol June 10, 1886, upon It's
paaoaga and approval by
the Council.
PASSED liJ3I96
John Muoaer, Preeldent
Scott Dillon
Gerl Walton
LlorryWehrong
Geora- Wright
·
William Young
ATTEST: Kathy Hyeell
Clerk/Treaaurer

Public Notice
clearly mirkad aa "Tractor
Bid". The deadline lor bid
aubmlallon Ia July 1, 1996
at 5:00p.m.
The .tractor may be
Inspected by ·appointment
by contacting Truatee
Bonny Upton at (614) 985·
3340, Truatee Roger Rltchl,
et (614) 867-3882, or TruJamea Wateon 11 (614) 9854372.

The tractor will be sold
"ae Is" end no warrantl••
are exprea- or lmpllld by
this advertl..,ent or 111e.
The Bosrd ol Townllllp
Trustee• ol Orange ·
Townahlp reserve the right
to refuoe or reJect any and
all bids.
Osle FotlrOd, Clerk
Orange Townllllp Trueteea
(6) 21, 24, 27 3TC .

OROINANCE 642
An Ordinance to nteblleh
eatarlel lor varloua non·
elected eupervlaor.y
pareonnel ol the VIllage ol
Pomeroy, Ohio.
BE IT OFIDAINEO BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, OHIO:
Vlll•ae of P4meroy
Public Notice
Section 1: That the ulary Mela- County, Ohio
of the Chief of Pollee of the (6) 24 (7)1 2TC
LEGAL NOTICE
Tha Rutland Townllllp
Pomeroy
Pollee
llel*bloen~ ahatt be and Ia' ___:P..:u::b:::ii:.::C..:N.::o:::t::lce::!-_ Truot••• will held their
Annual Budget hearing on
haraby lltabllahed at the
Wedneedey Ju!y 3, 18INI at e
rete of $17,770.00 per ,..r. ·
PUBUC NOTICE
Section 2: That the Nlery
The Board ol Townahlp p.m. •t the Rutland Fire
ol th• Tax" Aclmlnletrlllor Trueteaa of Orange Stotlon. The public ·Ia
ehall be and le hereby Townahlp wilt 1111, by Invited to attend.
eatabllahed at tht rate ol Haled bide, a uaed tractor, (8) 24; 1 TC
St2,a11.oo par,.....
to·wll: a 1960'e Case,
Section 3: Thai 1M aelary Model 830 by I!NIIed bide et
Publl N0 t.1
of the VIllage ~lnl~ Ita regullr mHtlng on July
c
Cl
ahell be and 11 hereby 2, 1981; II 7:30 p.m., lot
ORDINANCE 141
estebllehed et the rate of which lime bids will be
An Oi'dllUinc.to aatabllah
S24,1130.00 par Jllr.
opasne;t·d
ld
Nlerlee lor verloua non·
11 •
Sect!~ 4: Thet IIMINiary
b 1 conta10 1ng al•eted aupervliory 1nd
ol the Streat Supervleor tha prilpoald elltlng price,
ahell be end le hereby end the buyer 'a name, non-aupervlaory employet~a
aetebllehed at the rete of •ddreae end telephone . ol the Village of Pomeroy,
S19,0H par yet~r.
number ehould be mailed or Ohio.
Section 5: Thai lheu••~ dlllvwed In peraon to Olle
BE IT ORDAINED BY
_,
F
II
d
Cl
k
10
THE
COUNCIL
OF THE
ol the Fire Chief of the
o ro , er o range VILLAGE
OF. POMEROY,
Pomeroy Fire Departmlnt Townlhlp II 415·2 0 OHIO:
•h•ll .,. end Ia hereby Keebeugh/Follrod Roed,
SECTION 1: Thlt the
establlelled et the rete of POmero,, Ohio 45789. The
exterior ol •II envelopea eallrlea ol the verloue
ti,030.IID
containing bide ehould .,. ••rvlce, general, etreet,

par,_.

Public Notice
pollee, water end
weat-ater emptoyeee eholl
be lnd are horeby
..tabllahed et retee eel
forth on Exhibit A, lltlched
herato, which exhibit 1hall
be end le her•by adopted
•nclepprovecl.
SECTION 2 Thia
Ordinance ehall take effect
end be In lull Ioree •• ol
June 10, 18M, upon Ita
paauge and opprovat by
the council.
PASSED: June 3, 1886
John Muller, Praoldent
Scott DNion
Gert Walton
Llony Wehrung
Georg• Wright
William Young

(8) 24; {7) I; 2TC

a

By ~Ill FREEMAt&lt;l
Slrltlnal Naw8 Staff
Meigs County Commissioners
Monday afternoon tentatively awarded a bid to Mid-Atlantic Storage Systems of :Washington Court House for
a glass-lined water. tank for a Leading Creek Conserv~y District water
project.
The action was based on the
assumption that a lawsuit filed
against the commissioners last year
·by Welding Inc. of Charleston, W.Va.,
a manufacturer of welded water storage tanks. was being dismissed.
The suit's dismissal will allow
work to continue on an LCCD water
line e!&lt;tension project in the western
end of the county. Water lines have
Qlready been installed iri the project,
which was bogged down by the suit.

· Both the long and short versions
of the new calendar would replace the
named months and days of the year
with a three-digit number.
"If you look at your office cal~n­
dar•. you may already see a small
three-digit number near the date."
Pinder said. "The higgledy-piggledy
Roman months and the mystic dates
of our week would be obsolete."
. Future February 29ths and Friday
the 13ths would vanish.
·
Time-telling would change even
more radically. Hours, minutes and
seconds would be stricken from clock
faces and digital readouts. Instead of
reporting hours and minutes, our
clocks would read in tims and millitims. Each millitim would last about
0.086 of what we now call a second.
"A millitim is a very small unit of
time," Pinder says, "but well within
the capabilities of our current watches."

The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section fdled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
Th~ Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 19th issue of The Dally
Sen~.
·
·
Be sure your chlld, grandchlld or relative is included. Complete the
fol'lll below and enclose a snapshot or waUet size picture plus a $6.00
charge for each pbotogr~ph. (Enclose paymeJJt with picturb). : '
.

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I PARENTS' NAME
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I
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I CITY &amp; STATE
I
I CHU.D'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE
I
I
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I
I
I
I
Submitted BY----------1

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SEND TO: .

The Daily Sentinel

P.o. Box.129 • Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769

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Clearing tonlaht, Iowa
In tha 50a. Weinead,y,
sunny. Hlghl In the mid
lOa.

.,

31-

A Gannett Co.llewl,..,.,

Extension of LCCD lines·
to western end.of Meigs
significant for residents ·

"

For some residents· in the western end of the county, the decision by
Last year, Mid-Atlantic submitted
In addition, the board agreed IQ funds.
·.
the .tdeigs County Commissionen to approve the purchase of a water stora bid of $1.59,225 for a glass-lined grant $300 in Memorial Day funds to
Ashley said the &amp;UV is a legal vetage tank comes. as big news.
wafer tank, the type of' tank called the Meigs County Brooks-Grant erans organization .
Approximately 125 families along Loop, Side Hill, Carpenter Hill, Carupon by project engin~rs.
Camp of the Sons of Union Veterans .
"(The SUV). is both a lineage
penter-Dyesville ·and Cotterill roads in Rutland, Columbia and Scipio
Welding Inc- submitted a total bid for a next year's Memorial Day group and a veterans group at the
townships will be aff~ted by the Leading Creek Conservancy District
of $207,497 and. earlier filed suit observance.
same time," he slid.
waterline project, according to LCCD Manager Brent Bolon.
against the commissioners, acting as
Commissioners are allowed to
Ashley said the organization
Although many people, especially those in urhan areas, take fresh water
the grantee for L~CD, alleging that give $300 to veterans groups fQ cel- would have used the $300 to pur- . for granted, getting fresh water in rural are_as is often more complicated
it was not allowed to offer a tank bid. ebrate Memorial Day.
chase wreaths, nags and gunpowder
than simply turning a spigot.
·
·
Welding Inc. does not manufacLocal SUV President Keith Ash· for memorial salutes, and !hen used 1
"A pickup truck with a plastic tank in the back is a common .sight in
ture glass-lined tanks, whido LCCD ley .told commissioners that accord- the remainder to purchase re~roduc­
this part of the county," said Bolin.
officials claim last much longer and ing to the Ohio Revised Code, the tion Civil War-era uniforms and othWater lines and a pump station are alreadY in place, needing only the
require Jess maintenance.
Sons of Union Veterans is entitled to er items.
storage tank to put the whole project into operation, according to Bolin.
, Pomeroy attorney Linda Warner, the funds earlier granted to the Grand
He said he resented the use of the
Some families are already hooked up in areas not affected by 'the tank,
representing the conservancy dis- Army of the Republic, the Civil War word "costumes"· by Prosecuting
he added.
trict, informed commissioners Mon- Veterans organization which has Allorney John R. Lentes. who earli·
Meanwhile, Bolin.would like to see the LCCD recover some of the
day that the suit may be dropped. si~ce become extinci. The Sons of er recommended the group not be
estimated $30,000 it has spent fighting the lawsuit by Welding Inc. of
prompting the commission's action. Union Veterans is clearly named in granted the funds.
Charleston, W.Va.
"We don't have any documenta- the revised code section.
Hoffman said the re.quest by the
"Thirty-thousand dollars would lay a lot of waterline," he commentOther veterans groups in the coun- newly-formed chapter tQOk county
tion on this yet," Commission Presied.
.
ty
also
receive
the
Memorial
Day
dent Fred Hoffman explained.
"It !llaybe silly to fight (the lawsuit), but sometimes you have got to
(Continued on Page 3) .
stand up."

ode/ for the .future~ Middleport Cfluncil
.

.

.

approves 20o/o hike ·
in water/sewer rates

COLUMBUS (AP) . - Gov.
·George Voinovich's. chief of staff,
who has been with the administration
.since Voinovich took office in 1991 ,
.is leaving.
.
· Paul Mifsud, 49, announced his
resisnaiion o" Monday, citing family fe81ons'. He will resign from the
$9§:154-a-yearjob on lillY 26.
Voinovich praised Mifsud's work,
especially in economic development.
"Paul ~as done an dutstan~ing job
in serving the people of Obio,"
Voinovich said. "He js one of the
most respected chiefs of staff in the
Countty.''

·

Mifsud helped negotiate workers.
compensation reform and oversaw
the state departments of Development, Transportation, Commerce,
Workers' Compen~ation and the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
~ He also was the focus of a state
inspector general's investigation, but
was cleared last year.
Mifsud had been acc~sed of per·
suading a Cincinnati businessman to
drop a lawsuit against the state in
return for the promise of state business for his company.
. The investigation focused on a
telephone call Mifsud was reported to
have made to William Cargile in July
(992. Mifsud denied having the conversation, and Cargile later changed
. his story about what Mifsud told him.
· Mike Dawson, Voinovich's
spokesman, said at the time that the
investigation was politically motivated.
In his resignation letter. Mifsud
said he wanted to spend more time
with his wife, Kathy, and their chil-

When Racine's new branch to the Melge County Public Library Is complatlld, It will look like
the architect's modal above. Construction Is scheduled ~o begin In early July, according to
Library Boerd President Pat Holter.' A construction contract for $287,fOO was awarded to Home
Creak Entarpria~a of Pomeroy earlier this month. The 3,000 aqtlare foot library will encomptlsa
the old carriagt houu on the Tyrae-Pickens alta, right, with wings to the Iouth and waat

'

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Meigs in~luded in disaster declaration
By The Asaoclat~ Prase
Storms that swept 'ihrough nonheast Ohio downed ~es, causing .
power failures and damaging h.ouses,
but no injuries were reiJ?rted,'iluthorities said.
.:
Meanwhile, residents in Lawrence
County i~ southern Ohi,o were irying
1
to recover from nash Hooding over
the weekend that destroyed seven
homes and eight mobilc,homes.
Water was up to 10 feet deep in'
some places •. said, Larry Jewell,
deputy director ofthe county's emergency management agency. •
Also on Monday, G'?v· George

Voinovich declared a st•te of comergency because of weekend nooding
in Lawrence and Gallia counties in
southern Ohio.
Three to 4 inches of rain fell in
about three hours Sunday on ground
that had been saturated from rain
throughout the day. the weather service said.
Terry Hemby, director of Gallia
County's emergency management
agency, said damage to roads and
bridges was at least $2 million. 1
The worst damage in Lawrence
County occurred east of State Route

775, primarily around Scouown, Jewell said. ·
Another 20 homes were heavily
damaged and 15 more had minor
damage.· Jewell estimated the prop.erty loss today at $500,000, plus an
additional $100,000 in crop damage.
Gallia County also was inCluded
in a disaster declaration issued by
President Clinton. The other counties
in the president's declaration were
Adams, Belmont, Brown, Hamilton,
Jefferson, Meigs. Paulding. Scioto
and Williams countie~.
The counties were damaged by
Hoods that began May 2:

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Upon the recommendation of the
Board of Public Affairs, Middleport
Village Councitapproved a 20 percent increase In water and sewage
rates during itS regular meeting Monday.
,
With the increase, the first since
1992, minimum village water bills
will increase from $6.65 to $7.98,
while minimum village sewer bills
will increase from $7.80 to $9.36.
Bill Browning, assistant water
and sewer superintendent, said that
the increase was "desperately" needed to keep up with increases in general supplies used by the departments,
land rising electric costs for opera1 loons.
' "This department is not a charity
· organization. This department is a
· business, and it should be run as a
business. If major repairs are required.
over a two-to-three-year period and
we go in the hole with, no monies as
surplus to fall back on,.we won't be
able to co(lle out of that big a financial hole," said Browning of the
depanment's current tight budget.
A I0 percent increase in operating
.costs over the last year will realistically limit the water department to a
I 0 percent rate increase with which
to establish surplus funds, Browning
said.
"We are never going to ·accurriu·

' a rainy day fund for emergencies. We
. need to be able to operate efficiently," .said Browning.
Council originally discussed
water and Se\¥ag~ rate increase
March II, when the Board of Public
Affairs ·first recommended the raise.
However, the issue was tabled after
a motion by Council President Bob
Gilmore to approve the increase died
without a second
Council member George Hoffman
made the motion during Monday's
(11eeling for the rate increase, noting
•that although he wasn't in favor of.the
·increase after. council first considered
:it, he had second · thoughts after
researching all the financial figures.
"When we first discussed this in
iMarch, I wasn't in favor of·it. After
extensive conversations 'with Bill
.Browning, and considering the
,increases in operational c.osts, innaition: and examining other figures
while preparing for the 1997 village
!budget, I feel that we must do this to
ikeep the water system and the village
;financially healthy," said Hoffman.
Council member Beth Stivers seconded Hoffman's motion, and it was
approved 5-0 with Gilmore, Stivers,
Hoffman, ~ick Childs and Rae
Gwiazdowski voting for the measure.
Gilmore .noted that even· with the
increase in rates. the village will still
have the lowest water and sewer rates

a

in the area.

late a real astronomical amount of I Paving work at the Middleport
money in surplus and it's not our bQiiter parking area ncar the Ohio
intention to do that. We do need to River levee should be C011Jplete withaccumulate some surplus funding as
(Continued on Page 3)

~igs deep for White House cohtenders .
'

By SONYA ROSS
AsiOCiated Preaa Writer
,
: NEW YORK - Bill Clinton and
Bob Dole went to the same New York
high-rent. district in search· of cash,
separated only by $1 million, a few
city blocks ,and. the celebrities who
planted themselves firmly beside the
president.
The take at the end of the day
seemed to reflect the advantages of
incumbency: Clinton raked in $3 mil·
lion at two big-ticket fund-raisers. He
was serenaded by Tony Bennett and
condoned' by jazz · legend Lionel
Hamp1on, who hasn 'I backed a
·
. Democrat in 40 years.
. Dole, meanwhile, raised about $2
million at a reception where business,ulted auests' paid.$500 each to sip
cocktails and gazed at the two big
Republican names of the night: New
York Gov. George Pataki and Sen.
Alfo111e D' Amato of New York.
· . One New York endorsement that
still ellldes Dole is that of Republican
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. The ~ay­
br- who faces re-election next year
ill this heavily Democratic; city declined an invilllionto Dole's event
· ~was not seen at Cllnton:s either.

•

'

Of poJitics and big bucks: the Big Apple

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

Ill the CllrJao·OIIIce.

•

Voinovich's
$taff chief
quits post.

dren. ·

Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice Ia·tt.reby ginn thet
on July 8, 18INI lrom 6:00
p.m. ID 8:30 p.m. e publlo
rMetlng on lhe Buclaet •nd
Rev•nue Sli•rlng for the
yet~r 1187 lor tile VIllage of
Pomeroy, Ohio will be held

Kllllly HY11111
VIllage Clerk
Poineroy, OH
(6)24 (7) 1 2TC .

"You got to under'Stand: We're a ·
little spoi led. We'll be staying at a
hotel with ·AC and all that good
stuff."
And roommates?
No again, says Hill. "Too many
egos to share a room."

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 25, 1996

Water tank purchase gets nod
from coun~y commissioners

have to OVAL staff while at the same
time reduce the person hours required
to answer the phone.
On recommendation ·Of Mrs.
Dahlberg the Board approved
Books By Mail contract' with the
Wayne (:ou~ty Public Library in
Wooster, Ohio. This is the fourth nonmember library to contract with
OVAL for these services.
The Board renewed the contract
with Optimum Cleaning services of
Jackson for weekly cleaning of the
headquarters building.

'

Public Notice
SALISBURY '!QWNSHIP
TRUSTEES
A public heartng on the
annual budget lor yet~r lllall
1M hold on the 2nd hy,of
July, 18M at the townahlp
hall, Rockaprtnga, Ohio.
(I) 24; 1TC

Buckeyes:
8-12·26-31-35

.

THE DEADLINE IJAS BEEN
..
EXTENDED FOR

I

Kathy Hyeell,
Clerlc/TNaaurer
Villea- of Pomeroy
Melge County, Ohio

2~0

¥ol. 47, NO. 4Z
2'181 hne, 12,.....

Murphy's new movie, 'The Nutty Professor,' opens Friday
row with LaToya and Sonny Bono
"If we lose, we will be kicked out
any way.' Then I saw the video, and ~ of the United States," the Detroit Piswanted. to jump off the roof."
tons guard jokes in the July 1 issue
of People magazine.
NEW YO~ (AP) - For Grant
But one thing is certain- none of
Hill a~t,l his teammates on the latest the millionaire NBA stars will be
U.S . Olympic Dream Team, winning ·bunking in Atlanta's Olympic village.
the gold os the only option.

4-4-2
Pick 4:

\

Decimal Time Society .wants to get rid of Leap Year
. need for these timing adjustments. It
is the entire timekeeping system he
and his fellow members of WDTS
want to trash. Their plan is to subdivide time the way the metric system
dovodes space. Their year would consist of 36 I (}.day weekJ. Their day
would be divided into I million
units, called millitims.
"Dividing days into a million
units would complete the decimalization of all our common units," Pinder said. "We would have to throw
out our clocks, but clocks :ire pretty
cheap these days."
Pinder said the American government agreed to the decimalization of
lime in 1884, when · it decided to
divide the continent into four timezones.
Some of the ideas proposed by the
WDTS have already been successfully adopted in some areas. The
Confederation oflndependent States,

Pick 3:

·Spolta on Page 4

.
Library board discusses technology enhancements

PRESENT PRoGRAM • Geor~ and Debbie Plckene, veteran
ml11lonarln In Nairobi, Kenya, are home on furlough from the
million field thle summer. The Long Bottom netive preached at
bolh morning worehlp nrv!cee of the Middleport Church of
Christ Sunday Mr. and Mra. Plcl!ens and their two sons, George
Mark and John Michael, also did a slide presentation concernIng.their work In Kenya slast night.

Ohiq Lottery

The lack of celebrity - and M~rsalis.
national Republi~an leaders- althe
Ley performed a lusty blues
Dole fund-raiser did not go unnoticed composition whiCh the evening's
in the Clinton camp.
'
·
host, comedian AI Franken, said
"What's significant about Dole's Marsalis "threw together" especial·
fund-raiser is not who comes, but ly for Clinton.
Later, Clinton hobnobbed at a pri- ' ·
who doesn't," said Clinton cam'
vate reception · at the lavish Plaza
paign spokesman Joe Lockhart.
Dole dido ' t seem concerned to Hotel, where guests were enterlained
have Clinton in such close proximi· by comedian Rosie 0' Donnell. Ben·
ty. "It's .a big city," he said. And, nett performed two songs, ilnd pop
philosophically, the candidates are star Michael Bolton sang opera. .
Dole, speaking to New York's
"miles apart; trUst me," added state
GOJ' executive director Brendan . GOP faithful, cited a recent poll th'at
showed Clinton's lead has shrunk to
Quinn.
Clinton seemed .10 agree, telling 6 percentage points. "This race is
the crowd at a $1,000-a-head event at beginning to close," Dole declared.
Republicans were hoping to raise.
the Waldorf'Astoria: "We're right
and they're wrong. You know what . just over $2. million Monday to be
I'll do and you know what they'll split between the state GOP and the
Republican National Committee. For
do."
$500,
about 700 guests were offered
The crowd stOOd throughout ClincocktAils
and a buffet of roast turkey
. ton's speech, delivered against' a
huge, replica of the t1.S. Constitution, and rare beef~ but few chairs- in
with the words "We The 1 People" a ballroom dotted with l!alloons.
• Dole also attended a second,
enlaiged in black. The president's
comments drew applause from blind smaller fund-raiser al uother hotel.
pianist Marous RobertS, ·who per- State GOP chairman Bill Powers
formed in a quartet thai also includ· c;J~IIed tile night's total take "subed jazz trumpeter Wynton Marsalis stantial" bill.would not specify and
'
·
and his brothel, ·drummer Jason amount.

ON THE STUMP.- Pt ul~'lt Cll!'lton apolte
In New York Monday during a $1,000 paroparaon fu~l. . aa aupportws liatwned In the
~- They .... from .left, .Sen. Daniel
'
I
,
'

Patrie~ Moy!llhan, D-N. Y.; comedian AI
r,...ken; and o.mocn.t~c National Coiritnlltae
Chairman Dan Fowltlr. (AP)
·
,.

'

�•

,Comments
..

Pomel Of • Middleport, Ohio

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OHI O \'Jt·o~ tl 1 t r

Tueeday, June 25, 1111

. .The Daily.Sentinel Many.options for yo~.ng investors
By JIM LAWLESS

iutllifJsfwf in 1M8

The D1!a MolnN Regia•
It is wrillen that 1hose in their 20s
and early 30s have the best invest111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
ment seats in the house.
6:14~992-2156 • FIX: 912·2157
A relatively thin slice of their
annual income pie can put the
younger set on tab for a significant
financial package for retirement.
This is not news to most citizens
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
in their early years, however.
Unlike their elders over 35, these
ROBERT L. WIN.GETT
-members of the so-called Generation
Publlaher
X are piling on retirement assets.'
They are motivated.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
The Institute of Certified Financial
General Manager
Controller
, Planners in Denver says arecent poll
found !hat !hose in their 20s and a bit
beyond are more likely to believe in
lhe existence of UFOs than believe
Social Security .will be .around for
them when lhey retire.
._---~---------~--~------..1
For their part, the financial plan. · ners say ~any of tho~e in their 20s

.2,

'

Who is Bill .Kristol?
/~And why ·doesn't
Bob Dole like him?

-doing a good job ol' Irulpti111111t1 Kansas Ciry, Mo.
saYing.

:tJteir J1111icipation 1'1141 in 401(~)

·

~!JremeQt plans. for e~le, ts

htgher.lhan baby boo~ers • and lhey
Invest m.TDre aggres&amp;tve assets such
as $loCks m an.attempt to build a Ill'&amp;·
er nest e~ ..
At ~s mvestment ~tage, you~
asset builders ~ue best sUited 1« maxII!JUm gro)Nth .mvestmehts With the
h1ghest potenhal for Cajlltal SI'!Jwlh.
1ncome or both. .
. .
. Fmanctal planners and mvestment
~xperts ofte~ re~ommend young
tnvestors begm with mutual funds
that seek rap1d growlh or some combmauon ~f growlh and mcome.
Wtth ume on thelf Side, younger
investors can build a healthy retirement ponfoho and. be~efit fro~ compoundmg mterest, dlv1dend reinvestment . and capital ~rowth, said lhe
Mutual Fund Education Alliance of

Mutlial fund choices for mlitimum growth, says lhe alliance;
include agaressive-growth funds,
growth funds, small-company stock
funds, ititernational funds and specialty-sector funds.
A pair of growth funds recom.mended this month in separate
reports by two lon1·time analysts are
Mutual Discovery, (800) 553-3014,
and Oalcntark, (800) 62~-6275.
Widmann Sill &amp; Co. of Bryn
Mawr, Pa., has put in 30 'years evaluating no-IO&amp;d mutual funds for individuals and institutions.
In the firm 's latest screening of
3;700 growlh mutual funds, Mutual
Discovery and Oakmark were two of
only 10 funds to make lhe final cut
by surviving Wi·dmann Siff's performance guidelines.
Both· an: recommended for
growth- and maximum-growth pan-

it."

•

Generational politics also might be at play here. Dol~ is nearly 30 years
qlder than Kristol. ·
' ·
. "For conservatives I think it's imponant to look beyond Dole," Kristof
said in an inte..View. "To wish him well but to really lh·i n\ through the conservative agenda for lhe next several years."
In the Foreign Affairs anicle, he described conservatives as ·adrift on foreigr, policy, unable to draw distinctions between their ideas and President
Clinton's policies.
· His example, of course~ was Dole.
· .In lhe opening paragraph he referred to a speech Dole gave a few weeks
ago on Asia policy. It was designed to spell out differences with Clinton.
Instead, Kristol wrote, Dole was "reduced" to asserting lhat "there really.
are differences in foreign policy between him and lhe president, appearances
to lhe contrary notwithstanding."
Kristol makes his living wilh words, so it is hard to ignore hi's description of Dole as "reduced."
·
As if that were not bad enough for Dole loyalists, Kristol went on to
describe lhe Clinton foreign policy achievemc;nts of the past six months and
· concluded that "somehow most Americans have failed to notice that they
have never had it so good."
·
But let lhe White House read on before it gets too comfortable wilh the
conservative author:
Kristol is advocating what he calls a "neo-Reaganite foreign policy"that
calls for boosting the defense budget by up to $80 billion a year and pushing ahead with a missile defense system.
As for critics who say the United States already spends more on defense
·than lhe next six powers combined, Kristol wrote that "lhe enormous disparity between U.S. military strength and that of any potential challenger
is a good thing for America and the world."
In the tough, real world of politics, Kristol has little expectation the Dole
campaign will embrace his recommendations.
"I'd like it if Dole would pick up some of what's in the anicle," he said.
"I do think Americans might respond-to a Reaganite message. Do.le would
have to take on large thunks of his .own party to aniculate it. It's pretty lat_e
in the day for him to do that, I suppose ."

I

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~· ·

.·~
.

l&amp;W NMJti,~HS lnln ' -""'...
lt'a Dlat,Mtfm'rJii\TQD! COS!

'
1

a
c:KfON,,·

"'-------------------··-....;___,;._._-----.----....,J .

Beverly Hills

d~ntist

Acc.W~ '-'for
MICH.

folios by Jay Schabacker, editor of
Mutual Fund Investing mll'ketletter
published in Potomac, Md.
Mutual Discovery is a "contrarian fund " that buys stocks of smaller
companies most people have never
heard of, such as Algoma Steel,
Transocean Drilling and Bell Ban·
corp., said Schabacker.
Mutual Discovery and Oakmark
each have lhree·year total' annualized
returns of 22 percent
Small company stocks are a
favorite Schabacker !heme for longterm investors.
"Over lhe y,ars, my long-term
statistics have repeatedly confirmed
that small companies reward patient
inVestors best he said. '
Mutual Discovery is one of his
small company ~utual fund choices.
fidelity Low Priced Stock, (800)
544-8888, is another.
Fidelity Low Priced Stock ism~
aged by Joel TIIIi~ghast, a "savvy"
investor who has guided the fynd
since 1989 and has "beatthe crowd"
with a five -year annualized total
return of 19.7 percent, Schab4cker
said.
Linder Dividend, (314) 727-5305
gives investors a different look that
appeals to Schabacker. It is .a " value "
type fund that i~vests in medium-size
stocks that will add extra income to
a ponfolio.
·
Linder Dividend returned 18.9
percentthepast 12 monlhs, including
a 6.4 perc.ent dividend yield plus 12.5
percent capital appreciation .
Portfolio manager Eric Ryback
achieved those results thrpugh a mixture of common stocks, shorter-term
high-yield bonds,. convcnible prcfem:ds, real est)lle investment trusts,
some utilities and "highly favored "
foreign securities, Schabacker said:
Jim . Lawless cannot
answer mail individually but be
will answer selected Investment
quesdons In lhls column. Write to
him at The Des Moines Repter,
P.O. Box 9S7, Des Moines, Iowa,
50304. Readers are reminded lhat
brokerages may have Investments
in the stocks they m:ommend. ·

IMlnelllkll78" I·
IND.

in words ana song·- that he sexually abused the young boy. He did so
LOS ANGELES - · Remember last year during an interview on
Evan Chandler?
ABC with Diane Sawyer, Chandler ·
He's the Beverly Hills dentist charges, and again in his latest album.
And for lhat Jackson must pay.
who several years ago accused pop .
How much'? Chandl~r. who
music superstar Michael Jackson of
sexually molesting his t~n 13-year- between root canals co-wrote the
old son. Instead•oftrying to put Jack- screenplay for lhe 1JIOVie, '.;'Robin
son in jail, Chandler sought to pick Hood: Men in Tights;'' wanis at least
his pocket. The civil suit he filed in $60 million to settle liis latest ·com1993 was settled out of court, report· plaint against the pop music king. He
also wants an album. Not a copy of
edly for more lhan $10 million. ·
Now Chandler is hoping for " HIStory," the Jackson album he
cites in his suit Chandler wants a ·
anothe~ visit from the tooth fairy.
The former dentist to the stars is court order "to allow him to publish
back in coun. And lhis time he's not and cause to be distributed to the pubjust suing Jackson. Chandler has lie for sale" his own musical comalso named the pop music star.'s ex- position - something . he calls
wife, Lisa Marie Presley, the Sony "EVANstory." And, yes, he wants to
Music Corpomtion, the Walt Disney be taken seriously.
Company and some 300 unnamed
Humm'l'm·
t
persons as co-conspimtors.
But, of course, he blew his chance
Ai~ed and abetted IW Jhis cast of for that when· he chose to press his
characters, Jackson violated thC terms child-abuse charge in a civil, rather
·Of their confidential 1994 agreement., than criminal coun. How many parChandler says. How' By denying ents who really believe some guy was

A nearly stationary high pressuie
'' system will provide Ohio with more
- , sunny skies and mild temperatures on
· Wednesday, forecasters said.
Afternoon temperatures will reach
into lhe mid-70s to mid-80s, the
National Weather Service said Clear
skies tonight will allow the mercury
to dlp into .lhe SOs.
A threat of thu~derstorms likely
will return on Thursday.
The record-high temperaiUre for
this date 81 lhe Columbus weather
station was 101 degrees in 1988
while the record low was 43 in 1979.
Sunset tonight will be 81 9:04 p.m.

molesting their child would paSs up ' ~c, they falsely acc.uscd me .. .''
the chance to.pul:him in jail? Who '
Chandler beheves these words
would seek a financial pay-ofT in lieu arc targeted at htm . Maybe. Maybe
of a criminal proseclni6n'?
not. In recent years Jackson has bccn
If Michael Jackson is a child dragged into civil court by a Del\vcr
molester, he belongs in jail. And· if songwriter who accused him of ste.aiEvan Chandler has any evidence ing his lyrics and ~ woman who said
that suppons the charge that Jackson he fathered her ch1ld. Maybe he was
"sexually molested ,and assaulted" ·talking about thcm ..Or maybe -like
his son, he shoulcl·give it to a prose- most song writers - he wa'sn 't talkcutor- not try tG•ilse it to launch his ing about anyone in particular.
own recording career.
And remember the ~cent contr&lt;&gt;-·
When Chandler· and Jackson versy over Jackson's usc oftcrms like
reached their out-of-coun settlement "Jew me, sue. me" and "kikc me,
lawsuit lawyers for both ' men d·on't you black and white me" in a
announced the deal in a joint, one- song on-the "HIStory".album? Well
page statement. Twice in that docu- Chandler, who is Jewish, suggests in
men! Jackson assened his innocence. his lawsuit that . they were aimed
Now, two years later, . Chandler directly at ' him. Now he wants a
claims such a denial is a violation of chance to fire back with his owl)
the agreement: ·
repertoire of songs.
Some of these denials, Chandler
Evan, get a life. The statute of limcontends, are buried in the lyrics of itations for your child abuse charge
several of the songs on Jackson's expires in three years. If Michael
"HIStory" albt!m. What is he talking Jackson did the unspeakable to your
about? Well . m one song Jackson boy, give prosecutors the evidence
sings: "somcb,ody 's out, somcbody's they need to put him in jail.
out t~ usc me, they really wanna usc
Put up, pr sh4t up.

'

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•

·. ,.l. l

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.

Lee Okey Wood II

Avice Roush Frecker

.

.

Avice Smith ROIIIh Frecker, 87, of Columbus. ud formerly of Raci~.
died Monday, June 24, 1996 in the Riverside Methodist Hospital in. Collllllbus, following a brief illness.
;
•· Aretired school teaCher in Meigs Cciunry schools wilh 14 yean of school·
ing, sbe was born Sept. 24, 1908 in Athens, d8ushter of the late Guy and
Elizabeth, Williams Smith.
:
She paduated from Pomeroy High School, Ohio Universil)' and wlls
retired after many years of teaching in the Meigs County schools. She serv~
20 years as an elected official of lhe Racine Village Council and was. a lon•titne tnemher of the Delta Kappa Gamma teachers professional sororil)';o~~
45-year member of the Order of the Eastern Star, Racine chapter; a life me...
ber of the Retired '!eachers Association; Meigs County 4-H advisor and fo/
many years judged projects at county fairs.
,
•
ShC was a long-time member 9f St. John's Lulheran Church, Pomeroy:
Sitrviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Larry and June Roush of Racine;
a daushter and son-in-law, Janice and Dick Briggs of Hilliard; a stepson and
daughter-in-law, John and Betty Frecker of Dayton; a sister, Rita Frazier Qf
Gallipol!s; gra!ldchildren and spouses, J.R. Roush Andersen o.f Michiga~ .
Randy Wendorff of Wisconsin, Christy (Charles) Dimond of Denver, Cot..
omdo, Richard (Sandra) Briggs of Powell, Robert (Jamie) Briggs of Columbus and Bonnie (Jack) Krider of Dublin; and several nieces and nephews atfd
great-grandchildren.
She' was preceded in dealh by her parents, Guy and Elizabelh Smilh; foster parents, Howard and Hattie Bolin; a brolher, William Wayne Smilh; and
two husbands, Lawrence Roush and Wendel Frecker.
Services will be held I p.m. Thursday, June 27, 1996 in lhe Ewing Funetal Home, with the Rev. Aaron Young officiating. Burial will follow in the
Letan Falls Ceme.tery.
·
:
Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday, June 26, 1996 and one hotlr
prior to services at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations may 1!,0
made to lhe American Diabetes Association, 937 High Street, Columbus Ohi!l.
'

Pomeroy· teenager remains.
stable following accident

A 17-year-old Pomeroy girl remained in stable condition in Huntington's
St. Mary's Hospital this morning after walking into the palh of a vehicle Saturday on Upper River Road in Gallipolis.
.
According to Gallipolis City Police, April K. Halley was struck by a truck
driven a 16 year-old Middleport resident at 9:12p.m.. as she w.alked near
·the entrance of Norris Northup car lot
,
.
Halley was taken to Holzer Medical Center, where she was then trans:
paned to St. Mary's l:lospital.
·
··
The accident remains under investigation.

Lee Okey Wood ll, 69, Rutland, died Monday, June 24, 1996 in Middle- ·
burgh Heights.
.
A retired labor foreman at the Ohio Valley Eleciric Corp.'s Kyger Creek
Plant in Cheshire, he was born Nov. 4, 1926, in Richwood, W.Va., son of R.eunion planned
·
.
the late Lee Okey and Susie Whitlatch Wood.
Thompson-Beeson reunion will be July 7 at the Little Kyger Church she!:
A member of the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church, he was a U.S. Army ier house, I p.m.
·
veteran of World War n. a past commander of the Eli Dennison Po~t 457 of
,
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Hoilse Powell, lhe retired chainnan of the the American Legion, a member of the Buckeye State Sheriffs Association Announce~~ reunion
lhe
Harrisonville
Lodge
F
&amp;:
AM.
and
The
Daniel
and
Calherine
Rose
family
reunion
will
be
held Spnday at tl\e
·Speaker Newt Gingrich says feelings Joint Chiefs of Staff, will speak at lhe
He
is
survived
by
his
wife
of
48
years,
Bea
Ward
Wood
of
Rutland;
three
home
of
Jm
and
Karen
Werry,
Court
Street
Road,
Morning
Star area, Racine,
within the RepUblican Party'opposing OOP convell(ion in August.
sons
and
daughters-in-law,
Lee
and
Teresa
Wood
of
.Rutland,
Greg
and
Cheryl
at I p.m. Meat will be .provided for the meal. Rain will not cancel.
'
abortion probably will ca~ Bob
Meanwhile, Gingrich told The
Wood
of
Marion,
and
Randy
and
Robin
Wood
of
Rutland;
three
daughters
Dole to pick. an anti-!lbortion running New York Times that his party was
'·mate - unless he picks Colin Pow. out of touch with American voters and sons-in-law, Candy and Rich Smilh of Cheshire, Rhonda and Brett BuDding COtl1Diittee
The Soulhem Local Building Committee will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. a(
.ell.
regarding raising the minimum wage, Hutchinson of Gallipolis, and Fonda and Chell Young of Mason, W.Va.; 14
gmndchildren;
four
stepgmndchildren
and
three
great-gmndchildreh;
two
lhe high school in RaCine. All district residents welcome,
·
"I think Colin Powell is probably a.;cording to poll numbers in USA
brothers
and
sisters-in-law,
Dave
and
Rulh
Wood
and
Glen
and
Joyce
Wood;
·'
the only person who co\Jid do that," .T~y.
two
sisters
and
brolhers-in-law,
Orma
and
Allen
McLaughlin
and
Mary
and
Gingrich said Monday on CNN's
' ''(That) is why I wanted to get lhat
:"Larry King Uve." "I think Colin bill out here as quickly as I could, Pal Ross, all of Columbus; and severn! nieces. and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a grandson, Timothy Chadwell.
(Continued from Page 1)
leases, and with the Moseley Elevator
· Powell is the o.ne person whose whelher it passed or failed, and move
Servi""s
will
be
II
a.m.
Thursday
in
the
Rutland
Ft:eewill
Baptist
Church,
officials
by
surprise:
fCO.
of Columbus for elevator mai11:
··appeal is so bfOII\1" lhat it could o~ on .to~ issues," he ~old lhe paper.
with
Pastor
Paul
Thylor
officiating.
Burial
will
follow
in
the
Wells
Cemecome the Republican party's anu- ._the mmunum wage. bill has passed
"It never happened before and tenance; .
.
.·
tery, Harrisonville. Friends may call Wednesc!ay, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. in the
abortiod·leanings.
.
in the House, but not lhe Senate.
nobody
knew
what
to
do,"
said
Hoff'
Paod
week_
l
y.
bills
of
Powell, who says he favors aborIn• his TV appearance. Gingrich Birchfield Funeral Home, at lhe Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, (rom 7- man. "The (Ohio Revised) Code is :$533,887.31, consJSung of 244
· ·tion rights, also has said repeatedly called President Clinton "a master of 9 p.m. Wednesday.
clear. ~~
entnes.
.
In
lieu
of
flowers,
donations
may
be
made
to
the
Rutland
Freewill
Baplhat he i;; not interested in running for falsehood" who has chosen "careCommissioners also met with
Present were Hoffman, Vice Prestist Church, P.O. Bor.59, Rutland Ohio 45715.
.vice president.
fully managed mendacity as. a ~ute
Chester Township Trustee Elmer ' ident Janet Howard, Commissioner
· Gingrich said New Jersey Gov. to re-election, even if the result 1s to
Newell about West Shade and Seoul Robert Harten bach and Clerk Gloria
•Christie Whittnan, also a supporter of undermine the nation's.tivic virtue."
Camp roads, which were damaged in Kloes.
•.
.abortion rights, probably would not
On other matters, Gingrich told
a flash flood on·May 4.
,.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSlaughter steers: choice 57.00be acceptable;. "She's fabulous, (bw) CNN it is "one of the great dlsapNewell asked commissioners to
To enter the Baseball Hall of,
my guess is that the party would want pointments" of the last year lhat he Ohio direct hog prices at selected 63.85; select 52.00-60.00.
help contact legislators for addition- Fame by vote, a player must bC
Slaughter heifers: choice 55.00- a1 funding since the township is named on 75 percent of the ballots,
someone wbo is more pro-life," he and Clinton failCd to live up to !heir buying points Thesday by lhe U.S.
Department of Agriculture Markel 65.00; select 50.00-59.00.
said.
·
promise~ sealed with a handshake, to
· approximately $42.000 (or 25 per- by members of the Baseball Writers
Cows: uneven, 1.50 lower to 3.00 cent) short in funds needed to repair Association of America.
News':
Gingrich added lhat he hppes set up a bipartisan commission
Barrows and gilts: fully 50 cents higher; all cows 43.50 and down.
the road.
Bulls: Steady; all bulls 46.50 and
higher; demand moderate on a light
Plans call for building up the roads
down.
to modemte movement.
to lessen the impact of any future
Veal calves: lower; choice 90.00 floods.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 52.50.
,.
·
54.00, few 52.00 and 54.50; plants and down.
Hoffman said he has talked with
Sheep and lambs: 2.00 to 8.00 · State Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston,
53 .50-55.00.
Kaczynski
is
being
kept
away
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.00- lower; choice wools 80.00-95.00; about securing National Guard·engiAwaiting arraignment on Unabomber from other prisoners, and although 52.00.
feeder lambs 83.00 and down; aged neers to assist with the construction.
charges, Theodore Kaczynski spent inmates are permitted visitors, Telles
sheep 47.00 and down.
SOINs: most 50 cents higher.
In other business, the board:
his first full day in the county jail, said Kaczynski is not interested in
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 44.00•
Met with Economic DevelopDave
taking a morning jog, eating alone in seeing anyone.
46.50; 500-650 lbs. 46.50-52.00.
ment
Director
Julia
Houdashelt,
who
Kaczynski, 54, faces cluuges of
Grate
his cell and saying hello to the
Boars: 38Jl0-40.00.
advised the board that she has been
transportinJ!,
mailing and using
guan!s. ·
· .
Estimated receipts: 33,000.
named Meigs County's rcpresentati ve
of
Kaczynski, indicted last week in bombs in four Sacramento-related
Prices !'rom The Producers
The Confederate Ghost Knights of to the Ohio Young Cattlemen's Conattacks.
Tw9
of
lhe
bombings
were
four of the 16 Unabomber attacks,
Livestock Association:
the Ku Klux Klan, Parkersburg, ference on July I0-12;
Rutland
was to be arraigned on the I 0-count fatal - the 1985 explosion that
Cattle: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00 W.Va., will host a KKK rally July 6• Reappointed James Huff to the Furniture
killed computer rental store owner higher.
indictment today in federal court.
7
on
Joppa
Road
ncar
Thppers
Plai~s . Gallia-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
"He's being a civil, orderly pris- Hugh Scrutton, and the 1995 expl&lt;&gt;According to a press release Addiction and Mental Health Ser- Some people can keep so
oner - doing what's requested of sion lhat killed timber industry lobreceived today, the group will host vices board for an additional four- busy doing nothing that they
byist Gilbert Murray.
\
him,'~ Sacramento County sheriff's
Units of lhe Meigs County Emer- the International Keystone Knights year term:
seem Indispensable.
Kaczynski was trans(l9fled Sunspokeswoman Sharon Telles said
KKK
of
Johnstown,
Pa.,
and
the
gency
Medical
Services
recorded
•
Accepted
the.
sole
bid
on
bituMonday. ~·He'sjustamtherreserved day to Sacramento from a jail in eight calls for assistance Monday, While Shield Knights of Hickory, minous paving material for July from
Helena, Mont, where he had been
The best years of our lives
person.u
held since an FBI raid on his moun- including three transfer calls. Units N.C., at lhe event, which will feature Asphalt Materials Inc. of Marietta;
are 'when our children are
speeches, a cross lighting and Sunday
responding included:
• Approved transfers of $400
tain cabin on April 3.
old enough to mow the lawn
morning worship services. ·
withm the prosecuting attorney's
MIDDLEPORT
The Daily Sentinel
but too young to drive .
12:10 p.m., Main Street, Walter
budget, and $1 ,040.70 within the
(lJSI'S 21:1·9ft)
Green, Holzer Medical Center;
county court budget;
8: 12 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
• Approved transferring a county- This is about the time of
Pllblidled every ut.uaooo. Monda)' lhrovJb
The following land transfers were
Pridoy, Ill C- St., . , . _ , Ohio, b1 lila
year that all . those easy-toAm Ell p - ...................41 1/4
Center, Irene Ralp\1, Veterans Mem&lt;&gt;- recorded recently in lhe office of owned 1982 van to the Meigs High
Ohio 'kiiO]I N&gt;lilhi.. ~y..oo-. c...
Aklo
•••••
·
.............................
.51-311
assemble toys you gave
rial
Hosrital.
. , . _, Obio 4!769, Pit 092-21!6. S...nd
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene School automotive class;
Aahland 011 .......................31 718
,..,.....,...plidoJ..........,, Ohio.
POMEROY
kids at Christmas finally are.
• Renewed contracts between the
Hamilton :
AT.T .................................62112
10 p.m., Rocksprings RehabilitaBlank One ·..........................34 1/4
Deed, Edwin Stanley Cozart, Child Support Enforcement Agency
M.,.bor: The A - 1'!&lt;11, ud !ho Ohio
t1tJn
Center, Rachael Robinson, deceased, Stanley Edwin Cozart, and .the Meigs County Oerk of
Bob Evana ........................14 718
We think others are thilll&lt;ir•n
- - AJooeiOiion.
O'Bieness Memorial Center.
8ot'g-W...,
••••i••··
...
···············~40
Courts
office
for
child
support
court
of
us, but they a
deceased,
to
John
Wayne
and
Shirley
J'()(l1'!.tASTIRI
1o
Qlamplon Ind. ........................ 11
RUTLAND
The ()ally Sendnel, Ill Coon Sl.. .,_.1,
A. Stoban, Sutton, 291100 acre;
They're just like us. They're
Chermlng Shop ..................&amp; 518
QNo4$769.
12:17 a.m .. Cotterill Road, Connie
Deed,
southern
Ohio
Coal
Co.
to
thinking ollhemselves.
~
. ='clng ............................ 23
Bolen, HMC;
.
SVIISCRIPTION RATBS
Max J. and Susan Delille, Salem;
Magtil ...................181/4
9: 16 a.m., Dewhurst Road, Robin
., cw.ter .. MolorGMI'IItt .............................68 718
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Deed, Robert W. and Peggy Lynn
0.0 - . ............................... .............. $2.00
Haqis,
HMC
.
G~rTIR
...................
41118
446·4524
. '
Harris to Odessa B. Proffiu and
0.0 Mooilt ...... P. ...................................... S8.10
n. 1 •• .,
K-1118rt ...................- ..........12 511
Ono Yoat ......................... ,.................... $104.00
George Daniel Weddle, Lebapon
~nclll!nd .........................23 3/tl
parcels;
SINGLE COPY PRICK
Umttect lrte.........................20 718
Veterans
Mentorial
Doity .................................................... l! CAlla
Deed, James L. Melrose ll to Julie
Peoplll Bal...corp•••••••••••••••••••23
Monday
admissions
none.
K. Melrose, Orange, S acres;
Ohio Vellty Blnk ..............32 112
Subo&lt;riben ... - .... p011he
Monday discharges · - Harry
OM YlleY ...............................:JC
Nmit in ICIV..:e dinK:t to The DtUy Sew:lael
Deed, George F. Hoschar Jr. to
ODIIhree. IP. or 12 nmnth bNiJ. Credit will be
Prem Flnt.....................~.....13 118
Clark, Racine.
Renee Hoschar, Chester;
Holzer Medkal Center
Deed. Wayne and Shirley A. Hub. . . . l:lutcMihlll ..........152 114
NO subttripdoa by nudl permitted in areu
Dllcbtii'JOS
June
l4
Angela
bard, Shirley A. Buckner to Wayne
8honey'1lrto.l ....................11 318
wr..bomoearrler......,loovailallle.
Stwp;
Leona
Taylor,
Mrs.
Franklin
Allan
Hubbard and Shirley Ann
Iter ....
Hendrix and daughter, Ashley Wat· Buckner, Pomeroy;
MAIL8VIISCRIPI101'1S
WenciV lnt'l............... ;........18 112
tooldtMIIp~
.
terson, Dakota Rice, Shen Sayre.
WOfllilngten Ind...............21 111
. Deed, Eilrl A and Lois A. Grimm
I]Woob ...... ;................ ,.......................$27.:10
7 S110W100MS
II WAIIIIOU5IS
•,
Blrtlll - Mr. and Mn. Ron to Earl A. Grimm TJ'ust, Suf1on
~-.w.G
Stock ,...art~ .,. the 10:
!2 ..... .:.. ..... - ........................SIIIU6
.Markley, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and parceb: .
-LJ11. quDII proultltd by ACt' --Mifi'Cooolr
'
Mn.
·
Donovan
Sanden,
dauJhler,
Deed,
Robert
B.
and NOI'DII Jean
., .................... -- ..- ... - .................S2t.25
of QelllpaiiL
.
Cbeahire. .
.
26 ....................., •• ,...........................~
an- to Anthony ud Wendy lt
IL 124, I • t Ol 742·2211
n .......................- ..........................SIOJ.
'Mda .........) ' Doem, Cbeltet.

Meigs announcements

.

Water tank purchase

·:

Today's livestock report

·unabomber suspect faces
federal arraignment today

!:' .

By

KKK rally slated
for area July 6-7

Meigs EMS runs ·

***

... .

• ~

Land transfers

Stocks

** *

***

Sead-""'""'"""

7

***

Ho$pltal news

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

--

-1110)'

Roc"-11 ······-·················57 518

-N9010U000001tl001000000018

26-.. .-.. ..-..... . . . .

q·., lia"

'

are

HM'ISOII of the Middleport ct.tn:h of
Otrill on a request to cloae one block
of South Fifth Street fulm 1-4 p.m. on
June 29 for the aniiUII Vacation
Bible School street carnival actiYities.
• heard from Gene Wise of tbe
Middleport Youth Leap on the
eliminlllion of "no perkin(' signs
along the left side of Art Lewis Sueet
81 General Hartinger Park.
Wise said thai residents have pven permission for parking along that
side of the street, as long as driveways aren't blocked. Council said that
it would look into the problem.
• Horton updated council members on work 81 the pool. He said lhat
state inspectors were very pleased
wilh the work at the pool during a site
visit late last week, and .the pool is
still on schedule to open the fii'St of
July.
Horton also noted lhat volunteers
are still needed to help with painting
at the pool. and can contact Arnold
Johnson or Nlick. Childs for more
information on helping with the pr&lt;&gt;ject.
• Gilmore outlined Fourth of July
activities in the Yillase. He said that
donations are still being sought from
the community to cover expenses
associated wilh lhe Fourth of July
celebration.
Currently, the village is about
$800 short on funds for lhe expenses, which include ftrewotks. Gilmore
said that lhe village is expecting its
biggest crowds ever for the ~v,ent.
Anending the meeting were council members Stivers, Hoffman,
Childs, Gwiazdowski, and Gilmore,
Horton and . village clerk/treasurer
Dennis Hockman.

I

• ·h. •IStory
lioday l.n

•

·and sunrise Wedneidiy'&amp;t 6:05 a.m.
Weather foncat:
Tonight...Ciear or clearing and
cooler. Lows in the SOs.
Wednesday... Sunny. Highs from
the mid 70s northeast to the mid ~
south.
Eatadetl foncat:
Thursday... A cluipce of thunder. s\!)rms. Lows from the mid 50s to
mid 60s. Highs from the upper 70s to
the mid 80s.
.Friday...Dry. Lows in the upper
50s to lower 60s and highs in the
up~r 70s 10 lower 80s.
Saturday... Dry. Lows 55 to 60 and
highs 80 to 85.

(Continulcl from . . . 1)
ia !be IICllt two weeks, acconliftsto
Mayor Dewey Horton.
111c lleltys ill pavins of tbe poject
re~ulted. after consttucti011 crews
retnOved large stones thai were ill the
foundation of the old Ohio Hotel,
which formerly WIS located on the
5ite. The hollis required exl(a 110ne,
which mUll settle before paving takes
place, Horton said.
It is hoped thai the pninglol will
be used not only by boaten, but also
by tour buses which may cotDe to the
town for tours at the Ohio ftjver Bear
Company and other village businesses, Horton said.
In other matters, council: ,
• approved the hiring of Dave Barr
as Middleport Pool manager, upon
lhe recommepdation of the Recreation Commission, wilh salary to be
negotiated based upon hours of work
per week.
·
• approved securing a $60,000
loan on a six-month note for lhe village to use for payment ofcontmclors
bills on lhe pool project.
The loan will be paid back wilh
reimbursements·from a $60,000 state
·gmnt for the project All monies left
over after ·all bills
paid will be
placed into a fund for pool maintenance, Horton explained.
• approved lhe. lone bid of
$13,355.00 on a 30-foot aluminum
docli for the Middleport Levee by
Metal Craft Docks Inc. of Michigan.
• heard from Mr. and Mrs. Carl
DeMosk.ey on sewer backups on
property which they own atlhe corner of Beech and Laurel streets.
• heard from Steve Pickens and AI

Gingrich feels Powell can
· overcome abortion division

Still, if I were Bo Shoales, the
world would be my oyster. I could
wear a crewcut and sti II be attracti vc
to women. I could wear camo and
ammo bells with panache. I could
lead crackerjack teams of mercenaries on top-secret ·missions behind
enemy lines. l could negotiate with
terrorists and militia without appearing tl)e least bit wimpish. I could pop
. up on "Nightline" as an expert on all
things penaining to ~oven missions,
strange weapons, conspiracies and
· military strategies. I'd. cut through
lies colorfully, while chomping an
unlit Cuban cigar. Who cares if
they're illegal' Laws weren't made

~orld

~
• ICollmlual• I
•
(f,
.
..
(f

. By The ANoclated P.....

for the likes of Bo Shoales! I could THIS, rather than Like This.
wear cowb(/y h~ts and nobody would
How I envy this behavior. I'd love '
I've had more regrets in my life
laugh
at
me.
·
to
return
a document to the IRS with ·
lhan the FBI has files (and with the
This
regret
dovetails
nicely
into
a
Scrawled
notation: "This isn't my ·
life I've led, I'd better have). My
another:
I
wish
I
didn't
owe
money
name!
My
name is spelled with an
major regret? I never had a nickname.
to the IRS. Give tfiem their due : umlaut, you ~ew World Order paraI know this isn't something you
Every
time I talk' to them they' re very sites!" Somehow I don't think I'd get'
choose for yourself; eilher you're givnice,
even·
pffering advi~e: "Your away with it.
en a nickname or you aren 't. But a
file's
getting
thicker than tho WhiteAS'far as sneering at the flag goes,
man can dream can't he?
water case. Try to keep up with your well, I'll admit I'm not the most patri- ·
"Bo" would be nice. Every time
EDITOR'S NOTE: Dooalcl M. Rolhl)erg haS covered polities and forquat;terlies,
Ian. Please?" "Call me otic guy in the ·world. Though that'
I see "Bo" Gritz' naine, a little pang
eign policy for The Associated Press.
Bo,''
I
growl,
but they've put me on depends on what you·mean by·patri- .
goes lhrough me. (Proving I don't
hold
again
·by
then.
,
,otism. I'm not much of a joiner. .deserve lhe nick~ame : Guys named
So, l'lll(jmit it, I sympathize with That's.a mark against me right there ..
· "Bo" never. experience pangs of
those
archconservatives who've ·
Public occasions designed to p~t·.
anything, not even hunger, especialturned
right
so
many
times
they're
a
lump
in my t!lroat only make me :·
. ly not regret.)
facing left. Owe mo')ey to the gov- nervous-- these include.those events •
emmcnt? Problem solved. Simply which require the singing of the .
deny the government's reality as an National Anthem, awards cereentity to whom money can be owed. monies, singalongs and wed!lings. 1
In the case or the Freemen, they don't like paying taxes. ! ' never
allegedly expanded this denial to. served in the military.
,
include every debtorthey had, by the . On the other hand, I've neverspat ·
8y The Aasoclated Preas
.
·
.
simple expedient of denying the via' upon a nag, soldier, revenuer or apple ·
Today is Tuesday, June 25, lhe I77th day of 1996. There are 189 days bility of money itself.
pie. 1 believe people have the right 10 •
left in.the year.
They apparently believe that when spout whatever drivel they feel like
Today's Highlight in History:
the government collapses (as it soon spouting.: eve_n.Marge Schott, ev~n
On June 25.' 1876. Lt. Col. George A. &lt;;:uster and his Seventh Cavalry will), only angry white Christia~- me-- with derision their only reperwere wi~ out ~y Siqux and Cheyenne Indians in lhe Bailie of the Little identified men will gain. Money will cussion. I believe you should pay
.~ '
Btg Hom m MQiltana.
lie o\lly what Freemen say is money. what you owe, even taxes, like it or
· On lhis date:·.
. -· ..
. · ·
Cool! •·"w,nat woulck]'t I give to be able not.
. . .
.,
In 1788, the state of Virginia mtifiCd the U.S. Constitution.
to pay off my, creditors wilh Bo
Here's my hope: Money doesn't :
In 1868, AIJI'ida.Aiabama, Louisiana. Georgia, North Carolina and South · Bucks! As long as I had checks left, care what pocket it's in;·so when the '
Carolina were re-admiued to the Union.
I'd be a millionaire!
government falls, can 1 get some? 1 :
In 1888,the Republican National Convention, meeting in Chicago, nomThe state accuses lhe Freemen of may not be Bo, but I'm ·about the :
inated Benjamin Hamson for lhe presidency. (Harrison went on to win the being check-kiting, thuggish, fraud- ~ngrieSt white f118n you' ll see outside :
. ulent deadbeat extortionists. (That's a compound. If that and a dime don't •
election, defeating Gr!)Ver Cleveland.)
In 1906, a love trianclecame to a violent end atop New York's Madison the ru.,.less state for you.)
get m~ a cup of coffee, what kind of :
Square Garden as architect Stanford White, the building's designer, was shot
Butlhe Freemen haven't surren- country is this?
:
to death by Harry Thaw, the jealous husband of Ev~n Nesbit.
dered; they've jusi moved ihe war to
(To receive a complimentary Ian :
In 1942, some 1,000 British Royal Air Force bombers raided Bremen, the courtroom. In their first appear- Shoales newsletter, c(lll t-800-~89- .
Germany, durins World War II.
ance, they sneered at the nag (just DUCK or wrile J;&gt;uck's Breath, 408 i ..
a ,
In 1950, war broke out on the Korean peninsula as fortes from the com- like the Chica1o 7!). One of them Broad' St., Nevada City, CA 959S9.) ;
0 1111111, NEA, lnl:.
1
•
munist North invljded the So~lh.
.•
·
(rather petulantly) claimed lhat lhe , 11111 Sboales ·I• 1 syndleattd :
'
In 195 I, the first commercial color telecast took pi11Ce as CBS transmit· • acc~sations against him were invalid writer for 'NeWIIpllper EatenaritJe .
ted a one-hour special frolJl New York to four other cities.
be!;ause his name ippeaJed LIKE . Auoclatlon.
· •
· ·

Berry's

(f

:Clearing skies~ cooler
temperatures forecast

Writer has m.a jor regret. No ·nick~ame
By len Shoalea

I'll..

W.VA.

should put up or .shut ·up

By DIWAVNE WICKHAM
GllilneH Newe Service

•

1"

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Aaaocl._ed Preas Writer
WASHINGTON- Bob Dole dismisses his tormentor wilh a simple question: "Who os Bill KristoiT' To lhe annoyance of the Republican presidential candidate, kristol is- if nothing else - someone whose ideas get attention.
.Take for example, the cover of the latest issue of lhe foreign policy journal, Foreign Affairs. Bright red letters call attention to "A Foreign Policy
for Candidate Dole." A c&lt;&gt;-aulhor is Krista I which ought to ensure lhatlhe
candidate won't read it.
_ Just as well, probably. Kristol has trouble resisting the impulse to zing
the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. As when he said last April
lhat Dole "is likely to lose the presidential race to Bill Clinton: He may lose
badly."
·
"I don't know what his problem is," retoned Dole. "What has Bill Kristol done in the Republican Pany. I don' t look upon him as anyboily who
really understands politics."
Going back to Dole's question, who is this guy? To begin with, he is lhe
43-year-old son of Irving Krista( and Genrude Himmelfarb, scholars and
neo-conservative icons. The younger Kristol was chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle and currently is editor and publisher of the Weekly Standard, an opinion magazine wilh a decidedly conservative tilt.
There is a hislory between Kristol and Dole, none of it good.
Among !hose Kristol openly preferred for lhe 1996 GOP presidential nomination were retired Gen. Colin Powell, House Speaker Newt Gingrich and .
fortl)er Tennessu Gov. Lamar Alexander..
Quayle is among lhe Republicans who shrug off Kristol's attacks as a
ploy, at least in part, to genemte·interest in his magazine.
"This is a new magazine," said Quayle. "It needs some publicity. It's
the oldest game in town: Republicans attack each olher. That's the thing ymr
guys write about. If he had attacked Bill Clinton, no one would have noticed

Middleport Council OKs

WMn •d&amp;!,luae Z6

I

l

_._._

w.

1

Rutlantl Funit••

t

�.-

•

I

Pom1roJ •Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Senti.J!.~l

Sports

Cardinals end Smeltz's wi.n streak

Tu11day, June~ 1996

IJ' BEN WALUl
pme winning suealt iii !he majors with 25, and Montreal scored nine with a home run, helpinJ ' r API • MWrller
&amp;ince0aylcrdf&gt;erryinl974,andthe timesinthcsecondinninJ.
Isrin~ and the Mets win ll
• One pit;b into tho pme 111111 it wu · fint in the NL since Steve Carlton in
Rodripz went 3-for-S with foar Shea Stadium.
obvious this miJhl not be John 1972.
RBis, includins a two-run double in
Isringhausen (4-9), who b8d loll
Smola's nipt.
Smo1tz
had
given
up
a
total
of
fo..the
bia
inning
thai
gave
the
Expos
a
'
seven
of his previous eiJhl ~
1
Dominant durina hia 14-JIIIIC eained runs in his previous three 4-31ead. His performance carne on a slowed down Colondo for eillk
winning siRak, bueball'a bigat starts. But the Braves' string of two promotional day for Oh Henry! can- inninp. John Franco pilcbed ai!XJI'(winner wu in troyble from the atart strai~hl shutouts ended on Smoltz's dy bars at Olympic Stadium.
less ninth for his 17th save.
Monday. Ron Gut hit Smoltz's lint first pitch, and the Cardinals quickly
Darrin Fletcher hit a three-run
The Rockies ~re held without a
futball o- the center-field fence, IOided the bases with no outs, setting double, Shane Andrews had two hits home run, ending their team recordBriall Jordan lata' lllove in six runs up Jordan's two-run sinile.
and David Segui scmed twice in .tying streak of 'conl~C!:ting in 17
and the St. Louis c.dillllls stopped
Jordan, a former defensive back Montreal's biggest inning of the sea- straight games.
.
the Atlanta Bralle&amp; 9-2.
for the Atlanta Falcons, ~t'a CIWU· son. The burst ruined the majOr
New York rookie Alex Oclloa
''They came out swinsina," high for RBis. He had a sacriftce Hy league debut of Piratesstaner Elmer showed off his StroRJ right unf, '
Smoltz said. "I've maintained in the third and finished Smoltz with Dessens (0-1).
throwing out Dante Bichette at Ill!'
thraugbout this wbole streak that if a. a three-run homer in the seventh. •
Moments after the Expos erupted, pl.ate in the top of the fourth when II!=
team was soillg.Ill' beat me, they ~
Smoltz struck out eight, increasing Pittsburgh manager Jim ~fyland was tned to score from second b.- on ~
to get a lot of hits. They got 10 hits. his major league-leading total to . ejected in the top of the third for argu- · two-out single. Ochoa led off the bot:
-So, it's thai simple."
• 141.. He also fell to 4-9 lifetime · ingastrikecallbyplaJeumpireHar· tom of the fourth with a doublito
. Smoltz (14-2) luld'not lost since againSt St. Louis.
ry Wendelstedt.
right field, but was thrown out bJ
his first Sllqt of the .season, on Apnl
"They've definitely gor my num- Reds 7, PbiUies 0
Bicbette trying for a triple.
•
4 against San Fl'llll':lsco. He ~~ad ber, if you want to talk about num·
Mark Portugal pitched his first Marlins 2, Giants l
~
n~ allowed a OlD m. !he flfSt •~mg bers," Smolti said, "I've got a los· shutout since 1993, holding Philadel·
Jeff Conine hit a two-run homer,
s1nce that ~ until tbe Cardmals ing record against them. They've phia to four hifs in Cincinnati.
and Florida won despite p;etlinp; iust
scored three nmes.
always been able·to get hits."
The Phillies lost for the eighth three hits at Joe Robbie Stadium. :,
"We ~ere ~ggressive •. l~!ti"ll f~r
"After the home run, they got time in 10 games, and dropped below
Conine's 12th home run ciJIIC i"
the f1rst p1tch, Jordan Slid. Ronme some base hits on fastballs. I didn't the Reds fqr the worst record in the the sixth inning against Mark Leiter
got i~ all~ the flfSt ~~tch of the game have a great fastball, but I didn't NL. The Re4s have won five of sev- (4·6). San Francisco, shut out in its
and tl c~e_d us on..
. . make enough good pitches, either," en.
past two games in Atlanta, got fout
The YJS!tmg Cardmals moved mto he.said. "The only frustrating thing
Bret Boone and Willie Greene hit hits and lost its fourth in a row. ·
first place•., the ;'IL Central ~nd a~so is the way it ended, the last inning. I home runs, backing Portugal (3-5).
· John Burkett (5· 7) pitched seven
stopped, Atlanta s season-high SIX· felt the whole time I've given the
Jim Eisenreich had two hits for the innings and gave up three hits- a
game wmmng strel!k.
team a chance to win. Tonight, I did· Phillies, raising his caieer average at home run to Rich Aurilia and doubles
In other games, Montreal heal n't"
·
Riverfront Stildium to .500 (23-for: byBarryBondsand·KirtManwaring.
Pittsburgh 11-3, Cincinnati shut out
. Andy Benes (5·8) won for the 46). But teammate Gregg Jefferies
Greg Colbrunn of the Marli111 .
Philadelphia 7-0, New York edged fourth time in five decisions.
went ().for-3, leaving him in a !-for· went ().for-2, stopping his 21-gari'
Colorado 2·1 and Florida defeated Expos ll, Pirates 3
32 slump.
hitting streak, longest in the league
San Francisco 2-1. ·
Henry Rodriguez hit two home Mets 2, Rockies 1
this year. He was twice hit by pitcJt
Smoltz was trying for !he first IS· runs, tying for the major league lead
Jeff Kent !ell off ihe eighth inning es.

Meigs Legion sweeps Wellston 12·5, 9·8
third innings and added a pair in the
By DAVE HARRIS
each .idde4 a single.
·
Meigs took a pair of games from
Gary Stanley went the route to fourth to post the win.
Matt Ault came in to pitch in the
Wellston, Saturday afternoon at Well· pick up !he win. Stanley scattered II
ston in American Legion baseball hits, struck out six and walked three second inning in relief of starter Donaction. The sweep gives Meigs a 5·1 while hitting a batter. Lambert was nie Phillips and shut down the Wellmark overall and a 3-4 mark in !he staner and loser, pitching !he first ston bau to pick up the·win, pitching
Eighth District League play.
five hits, with relief help from Hall. four innings of two hit baseball.
In the first contest Meigs spotted Stevens led the losers with two dou· Skagas was the starter and loser for
Wellston.
Wellston a 1-0 first inning lead, but bles and McGhee added a double.
Ault led Meigs at the plate with a
came back to roll to a 12-5 victory.
In the night cap Meigs defeated
Meigs pounded out 13 hits off a pair Wellston 9-8, the game was called single and a triple. Wamsley added
two singles, and George, Merkle, Joe
of Wellston pitchers:
after five innings because of rain.
Cass Cleland and Andy Wamsley
Meigs jumped out to a S-0 lead Kirby and Wes Wilson each singled.
led Meigs with a single and a double after !he top of the fi.-st inning, only
McGhee led Wellston with a triple
each. Chad Bunon added two singles, . to have Wellston come back to plate and three rbi's, Olafin added a pair of
and two rbi's, Josh Merkle and Gary seven runs in the bottom of the inning singles and Patton a double.
Stanley two singles, and Scott and take a 7-5 lead. But Meigs
Meigs will play a single game on
George. Ryan Marlin, Kevin Deemer scored singles runs in the sccono and

Wednesday a1 Ripley. game time is
6:30. Meigs had a doubleheader with
Gallipolis rained out on Sunday.
FIRSTGAME
,
Meigs 002 234 I()().12 13 2
Wellston 011 100 101· S II 2
Gary Stanley (WP) and Cass Cleland
Lambert (Ll'), Hall (6) and
Stevens
SECOND GAME
Meigs
S II 20-9 8 0
Wellston
710 ()().8 5 I
Donnie PhillipS. Matt Ault (2)
(WP) and Wes Wilson
Skaggs (LP), Kuhn (3) and
Stevens

Schourek's elbow sore again; Salkeld better_
,

AGASSI OUSTED • Doug Flach, of Atlanta, Ga., plays 1 forehand return to Andre Agaaal during 1helr first tourtd Men'l Singles match at Wimbledon Monday. Flach was the surprise win·
ner, 2-6, 7-6, (7·1), 6-4, 7-6, (8-6). (AP)

f!ays for lack of preparation

Agassi ousted in first
round at Wimbledon
By STEPHEN WILSON
AP SpOrts Writer
. : WIMBLEDON, England
1\ndre Agassi insists he still enjoys
tennis. His results and demeanor say
otherwise.
The truth is, Agassi's career is in
a tailspin and he needs to do something fast to re-establish himself.
Agassi's miserable year hit a low
point Monday when he lost in the
first round at Wimbledon to Doug
Flach, a qualifier ranked 281 st in the
world, in one of the biggest upsets of
the Open era:
.
"At some stage you've gotto put
things in perspective and ,say, you
know, 'OK, let's just start working on
getting it better, getting my game bet·
tcr;' " the third-seeded Agassi saia
unconvin~ingly after the 2-6, 7-6 (7·
I), 6-4, 7-6 (8-6) defeat.
Agassi could start by seriously
preparing for Orand Slam tourna·
ments for a change. He wrote off the
clay-court season and promptly lost
in the second round of the French
Open to journeyman Chris
Woodrufff.
Agassi didn't play any grass-court
events before Wimbledon, and jt
showed against Flach. It was only hts
fifth matchon any surface in the last
three months.
.
"I probably stayed away from
playing fortoo long, and then the dis·
·appointment kept me from really
attacking the needs of my game after
the French," Agassi said.
In 1992, Agassi came to Wimbledon without any grass-court prepara·
tion and won the tournament. He
admits that he probably can't do that
any more.
"You start getting older, your
body start's feeling different afer
tough matches'," he said. "I think a
lot of things change. That certainly
can be one of them."
·Agassi's lack of commitment contrasted with all ihe hard work Flach
has put in. He's played 10 events this
:,:~ar on the satellite circuit and he
won three qualifying matches to get
Hito the Wimbledon draw, coming
fi.om two sets down to beat Anders
/arryd in the final round of qualify.

joining No. 6 Michael Chang, No. 8
Jim Courier and No. IS Arnaud
Boetsch. It's the second time in the
Open era that only four of the top
eight seeds remain after the first
round.
Pete Sampras, the three-time
defending champion, recovered from
a slow start to beat Richey Rene.berg
in four sets. Also advancing were No.
2 Boris Becker, No. 4 Goran lvanisevic and No. 12 Stefan Edberg.
. Among the women, No. 2 Monica Seles beat Ann Grossman 6-1, 62 in her first rnatch at Wimbledon in
four years. .
In today's matches, top seed and
six-time champion Steffi Graf was
scheduled to ·open defense of her
wonien 's title on Centre Court against
.Ludmila Richterova.
Oraf, suffering from a swollerileft
kneecap, asked for a postponement
until Wednesday, but was turned
down .. ·
. "My knee is a bit better today,"
Oraf said Monday. "I've been under·
going all sorts or therapy- acupunc·
ture, electric stimulation, massage . ev~rything ·t can do to improve it.
Hopefully, it will hold up."
In other featured matches, fifthseeded French Open champion
Yevgeny Kafelnikov faced Britain's
Tim Henman, and No. 10 Michael
Stich, the 1991 Wimbledon charnpi·
on who lost to Kafelnikov in the
French ,Open final, was up against
Sjen' Schalken.
Agassi unveiled a new Wimble·
don outfit Monday: a long-sleeved
white shirt with a zipper front, hang·
ing over knee-longth baggy white
shorts. But he never looked comfortable, sweat pouring off his white cap
and coughing throughout the match,
the result of a nu and chest infection
he picked up last week.
"I certainly haven't been feeling
great, but if I had just been hitting the
ball better, I think I could have
pulled it ·off," he said.
Agassi looked slow and dispirited
for much of the match . .
"I heard he was kind of lacklus·
ter but I really expected him to come
out today and be really focused and
i~g .
try to kill me," Flach said, "So I was
: "I've played a lot of tennis in the a little surprised that he wasn't as
past couple of months," Flach said. sharp as he usually is."
"I think that probably was part ofthe
The fourth game of the fourth set
rj:ason why I W\)n today - I was featured one of the most spectacular
r~ally match tough."
, points seen in years. Agassi flicked a
.: Agassi was one of four men s sharply angled forehand crosscourt
seeds eliminated on the opening day, on the run. Flach dived forward onto
his belly and nipped the ball over and
•,•
deep across the court from Agassi.
Agassi darted back to hit a backhand,
and Flach popped up and reached ·
·high for a desperation volley winner.
"I think that's the first time I've
everdi~ed
for a ball on grass," Flach
· : The Jack Rogers 7· and 8-year-old
said.
"Thin
was a crazy point. After
team double elimination tournament
will be held June 29 through July 7. the point, I was like freaked out. I
at Harmon Park in Point Pleasant, didn 'I know where I was . for a
W.Va. Entry fee $35 and two base· minute."
balls. Drawing date June 27 at7 p.m.
Call Reece Dalton at 1-304-675·
4689 ror more information.
noRSE RACING
CHICAGO (AP) - Arlington
Park chairman .Richard Duchossois
an 0ounced that Cigar's owner, Allen
Th~ Meigs volleyball camp will Paulson, and trainer, ~ill Mott, have
be hold July 8-14 for all girls enter· accepted an invitation for the horse to
ing grades 7-9 this fall. The camp will run in the I 118-mile Arlington Citabe held at Meigs High School daily tion Challenge on July 13.
The special race will offer a
from 9:30a.m. until II :30 a.m. Cost
$750,000
purse, with a $300,000
is $25 per camper, each additional
bonus for the winner if Cigar runs. If
family member is $10.
he does not run, the purse will drop
Preregistration can be made by to $300,000. ·The 6-year-old Cigar
mailing a check made payable to the
will try to match Citation's modem
Meigs Athletic boosters to ~arsity
thoroughbred record of 16 consecu·
coach Rick Ash, Box 126 Syracuse,
victories.
Ohio 45779. Please include Adult I· tiveCisar
had to pass up the Holly·
shin size. Registration will tab piiCC wood Gold Cup because of a bruised
from 9 a.m. to 9:20a.m. on Monday,
risht front foot.
July 8.

Jack Rogers tour- ·
riey for 7 and 8·
y.ear-olds slated

- Sports briefs-

Volleyball camp
dates announced

By JOE KAY
AP Sporta Writer ·
CINCINNATI
Cincinnati
Reds Slarler Pete Schourek had a sore
left elbow Monday, two days after he
came off the disabled list and started
against the New Yorjc Mets.
Schourek was examined Monday
night by Dr. Scott Jolson, who con·
suited with Dr. James Andrews in
Birmingham, Ala. Andrews thought
the soreness was normal.
"The doctor said I' II be all right,"
Schourek said, following a 7·0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
"He said it's normal to have a little
lateral pain after all . that rest. It's
nothing to worry about."
Schourek has been troubled most
of the season by a sore elbow, which
was diagnoSed as tendinitis. He went
on the disabled list June I. returned
Saturday and gave up two runs on
four hits over five innings of a 5·2
loss in New York,

Indians
not worried
about hurler
CLEVELAND (AP) - What do
the American League champion
Cleveland Indians get when they add
Jack McDowell?· Right now, not
what everyone thought.
. · McDowell (6-6), who joined
Cleveland as the American League's
winningest pitcher in the 1990s, has
won only one of his last ~ven starts.
In his last two outings, the 1993 AL
Cy Young Award winner lasted only
2 1-3 innings against Boston and
gave up six runs in 6 1·3 Sunday as
the New York Yankees completed a
rare four-game sweep at Cleveland.
Still, just as the Indians ate calm
and collected about their 13-14
record since May 27, no one is too
concerned about "Black Jack's"
recent troubles.
"He goes through this every
year," manager Mike Hargrove said.
"It's just a matter of time before he
finds it."
In losing 6-~ to New York in the
finale of the .sweep on Sunday,
McDowell's velocity looked as.good
as ever. His fastball was popping the
catcher's mitt, unlike his counterpart,
New York's Dwight Gooden, who
used to be the king 'of heat but now
gets outs with his curveball.
McDowell did make three mistakes, geuing pitches up in the"strike
zone that Paul O'Neill, Tino Martinez
and Bernie Williams turned into solo
home runs. It was reminiscent of his
previous outing, in which Boston
scored six runs in the first two
innings.
"Jack is still struggling a bit to
find the splitter," said Hargrove,
who added that nothing is physically wrong with McDowell. "He has
not been consistent with the ~oliner
at all, and it finally caught up to

The elbow hun when he woke up
Sunday and was still bothering him
Monday. There was a new twist in the
elbow mystery: The pain had spread.
Schourek said the elbow hurt in
the same place as before. In addition,
another spot was sore.
Schourek thinks he might have
changed his delivery a little bit to try
to take stress off the elbow.
"It may be subconsciously that I
was trying to protect it," he said.
The pain had disappeared before
his 66-pitch start against the Mets. He
was generally pleased with how it
went.
"I felt I threw well," he said.
"Obviously. I'm not where I want to
be. But, it was the first time. You can
throw on the side but uhlil you get in
the game and get your adrenalin
going, you can't get a read on it."

left knee by a line drive Friday night,
said most of the pain was gone Mon·
day and he doesn't anticipale missing
a start.
Salkeld was knocked out of the
game in the fifth inning "(hen Jose
Vizcaino's liner hit him just·to the
side of the kneecJIP.
"There's just a big old purple
. bruise." he said. ''Other than that, I'm
all right. There's no pain anymore.
I've been icing it, riding the (stationary) bike and running."
Salkeld has problems seeing balls
hit directly at him.
"I've been hit a few times," he
said. "I've taken a few off the shin,
one off the back, one in the stomach.
This one's probably the worst."

,Salkeld Better
Starter Roger Salkeld, hit on the

since Apri122, and the defending NL
Central c~ampibns have been' in last
place since June 3.
Luckily for the Reds, the rest of
the division has struggled as well.
. They were' only 3 112 games out _of
first place as they opened a senes
Monday night against Philadelphia,.
the only team in the NL with a worse
record.
"We've been in the back 'Of the
pack for a long time," Knight said .
"We've saved up a lot of energy. It's
still way too early to be making rash
predictions about things. but our
ballclub is getiing real close to being
as good as it's going to he."

BOB.BLES BALL~ Phlladelphla'a first beMman, Gregg Jetfrles,
bobbin the ball after a throw trqm catcher Beillto Santiago In
an attempt to pick off Cincinnati'• Hal Morrie during tha aecond

Davis Out, Larki11 In
Shortstop Barry Larkin, limited
Knight: Things Looking Up
the past week by spasms in his neck
Knight has ~aid it. ma?y ti~es and upper back, was back in the linebefore and he .s sayong 11 agam: up Monday. Center fielCier Eric
Thongs are looking up for the Reds. Davis, also bothered by a sore back
The Reds have been under .500 ·· last week, was a late scratch.

him."

McDowell, who left after the sixth
Sunday and was not in the clubhouse
after the game, entered the season as
baseball's third-winningest pitcher in
the '90s with 98 victories, behind
Atlanta's Greg Maddux (105) and
Tom Olavine (I 02). His durability
and knack for winning made him one
of the most sought'after free agents
of the winter. The rest or the league
cringed when the already-loaded
Indians signed him.
And until recently, McDowell has
been well worth the price. He has still
pitched into the seventh inning in 12
of 16 starts, and into the eighth in
eight of them.

make him the starting quarterback. ·
Gino Torretta got the job

By The A•oclated Pre•
run double with two ()uts capped a
The Minnesota Twins were com- four-run rally .for the White Sox in the
Inning Monday at Riverfront Stadium. The Recla won, 7..0. (AP)
ing off three straight losses to Detroit, . eighth inning.
..
the American League's worst. The
Chicago scored a run in each of
New York Yankees were coming otf the first iwo innings of the second
a .four-game sweep at Cleveland, the game on an RBI double by Harold
AL's best.
Baines and an RBI single by Pave
When !he Twins and Yankees met Martinez off rookie Ryan. Hancock
Nalional League
at the Mel!Oilome on Monday night, (3-0), making his first major-leagu~
Eaat DivisiOn
it was Minnesota that looked like the start.
·
L
Pet.
GB
sharper
team,
defeating
New
York
3·
·
Snow,
in
a
2-for-17
slump,
hit
his
Atlanta
47
27
.635
o.
homer
off
Mike
Sirotka
(0-1)
in
the
Montreal
44
31
.587
3 112
"You can't change what hap- fifth to put Calllomia ahl{ad 3-2. The
Florida
35
40
.467 • 12 112
,
pened
in Detroit," said Marty Cor- nextinning,Salnfonhitltsthree-run
New York
34
41
.453
13 112
dova,
who
extended his hitting streak shot, his l~th homer of.the year.
Philllllelphia
31
42
.425
I5 112
to
a
career-high
18 games. "!just figIn tbe first game, the White Sox
Central Dl'rislon
ured
we
need
to
win
today
and
we
had
two hits off Jason Grimsley and
w
L
Pet.
GB
need to win tomorrow."
trailed 2-0 through seven innings.
St. Louis
37
37
.500.
Yankees
manager
Joe
Torre
~ith !wo &lt;i~ts an~ Mike James (4-3)
Houston
38
39
.494
112
·missed
all
but
two
innings
of.
Mon,
m rehef, pmch-hmer Chad Kreuter
Chicago
35
40
.461 2 1/2
day's
game,
aniving
late
after
his
htt
a two-run.Single, tymg the game
Pittsburgh ~
35
40
\467 . 2 112
brother's
funeral
over
the
weekend
at
2.
Tony Plnlllps then doubled, set·
Cincinnati
31
38
.449
3 112
"No question. we ;..ere sky-high ling up Lewis' go-ahead hit. .
west·Dl'rislon
leaving
Cleveland, but'! wasn' t here Orioles~ Rangers 3
W
1:.
Pet.
GB
early
to
get a feel of the team's
Cal R:•pken went 3-for-4 and
Los Angeles
41
35
.539
mood," Torre said. "We couldn't knocked.'n the first 1wo runs of the
San Diego·
39
37
.513
2
. string any hits together, we just did- game wtth a homer and smgle at
eOiorado ·
37
36
.507
2 112
Texas.
.
.
n't have it soing offensively."
San Francisco 36
37
.493
3 112
The
Yankees
showed
all
the
signs
.
M1ke
ll:f~ssma
won
h1s
lOth game
.
Monday's roslllls
of
a
team
with
letdown,
getting
at
m
14
deciSion
for
the
Onoles,
who
Montreal II, Pimburgh 3
least
one
baserunner
in
every
inning
beat
the
Rangers
for
only
the
thud
FloHda 2, San Francisco I
without scoring off Twins left·hander ume .m II meetings this seaso~.
Cincinnap 7, Philadelphia 0
Rich
Robe'rtson, who is experiencing ~us~ma allo_wed three runs and s1x
New York 2, Colorado I
something
of a turnaround himself. h1ts on 6 .2-3 m~mgs.
.
, St. Louis 9, Atlanla 2
After
an().
7
start,
Robertson
is
3Mussm~
retued
II
of
12
h•lters
Only games scheduled
8 with two shutouts and four com· from the third through the SIXth after
Thesday's Games
.
' . Philadelphia (Quirico 0-0 and Mimb.s 0-3) at Cincinnati (Burba 1-8 and plete games, half of Minnesota's surv1vmg ·a bases-loaded, one-out
total of eight.
Jam m the first.
Jarvis 1. )), 2, 5:35 p.m.
.
"It
looked
like
the
left-bander
kept
Alhletlrs 4, Tlge"': 2
' San Francisco (VanLandinsham 4·8) at Florida (Weathers 2·1 ), 7:05 p.m.
the
ball
down.
He
had
goOd
stuff,"
Mark McOw1re s 22nd home run
Pittsburgh (Z.Smith 4-3) at Montreal (Rueter 4-4), 7:35 p.m.
Torre said. "It was just one of those sparked a four-run _first and «;Jakiand
Colorado (Thompson 3-6) at New York (Jones 6-4), 7:40p.m. ·
games we were not destined to held on behmd Jolin Wasdm s seven
St. Louis (Stottlemyre 6-5) at Atlanta (Schmidt2·3), 7:40p.m
score ."
strong innings.
Chicago (Traschel 5-4) at Los Angeles (Nomo 11-6); 1(1:05 p.m.
Elsewhere in the AL, Chicago and
The A's knocked Detroit right·
Houston (Hampton 5·4) at San Diego (Tewksbury 5·5), 10:05 p.m.
California
split
a
doubleheader,
with
hander
Clint Sadowsky (1 -2) out of
Wedltesday's Gaines
the,White Sox winning the opener 4. the game in the first and were held
San Francisco (Wa\5on 6-7) at Florida (Brown 6·5), I :35 p.m.
2 and the Angels 'Capturing the sec- . scoreless thereafter by Greg Keagle,
Colorado (Reynoso 4-6) at New York (Harnisch 4-4), 1:40 p.m.
ond game 6-4-, Baltimore defeated who pitch~d 7 1-3 innings of threePi~tsburgh (Darwin 5·7) at Montreal (Cannier 3-4), 7:35p.m.
hit relief.
PhiJadelp!Jia (Willianis 1-5) at Cineinnati (Salkeld. 3-2), ~:.35 p.m.
Texas 8-3; and Oakland downed
But .the Tigers couldn't catch up .
St. Louis (Alan Benes 6-4) at Atlanta (Avery 6-6), 7:40 p.in.
Detroit 4-2.
against Wasdin (5-1), who also beat
1'l1e Twins made the most of their
·Chicago (Navarro 5·7) at Los Angeles (Candiotti 5-6), I0:3.5 p.m. .
six hits to knock out Yankees starter Little Me~J's League to
Houston (Wall 5..0) at San·Diego (TI .Worrell5-2), 10:35 p..m. •
Andy Pettitte (11-4), keeping him hold open tournament
from becoming the first . 12·gaple
American League
•
The Mason County Little Men's.
winner in the AL.
East Division
Considering he pitched a shutom, baseball league will be holding an
GB
L
Pet.
w
'
. Robertson had to avoid plenty of open tournament for seven· and
.597
43
29
New York
adversity. He allowed eight hits and eight·year-olds at Harmon Park from
3
32
.556
40
Baltimore
three walks and was hit on the pitch- June 29. "through July 7, in Point
41
II
33
.446
Toronto
ing hand with a batted ball.
, Pleasant.
43
.411
13 lj2
Boston,
30 '
Any !Pam can apply for the tour·
"I was struggling, getting behind
24
55
~76
. 21
Detroit
nament
drawing, .which will take
a lot of hitters; I would just lilse it for
Centnd· Division
place
at
Hannon Park on Thursday,
Pet. . GB
lwo or three pitches:" he said. "I did
L
· W
:622 .
keep the ball down, but man, they June 27, at 7 p.m. However, only the
28
46
Cleveland
made ~orne plays out there. A lot of first 12 teams to contact the leag~e
32
.573
3112
43
. Cl!'tcaso
will be accepted, and no all-star
times it's better to be lucky."
.493 . 9 112'
37
36
Milwaukee
teams
will be allowed into the tourThe best example of Robertson's
jS.
.479
10112
35
Minnesota
luck was !he Twins turned the shot off nament.
14 1/2
43
.427
32
Kansas City
An entry fee or$35, as well as two
his hand into a double play. It was
West DiviSion
baseballs
per te.am. are·requested.
one of several big defensive plays
Pet. GB
L
w
To
contact
the league, call Reece
behind Robertson .
30
.600 •
45
Texas
Dalton
at
675-4689.
•
Paul Molitor and Pat Meares each
4 112
33
.542
39
Seattle
~topped rallies with diving stops of
.526
5 112
36
40
California
hard·hit
ground balls. Meares al~o
10112
41
.
.
461
35 .
Oakland
. '
·
caught
a
line drive by Ruben Sierra.
Mollilay's resullts .
The Twins scored their three runs
Chicago 4, California 2, '1st game
on RBI doubles by Meares anci.Dave
California 6; Chicago 4, 2nd game
Hollins and on a throwing error by
Minnesota 3. New York 0
.
Petitte.
Baltimore 8, Texas 3
• White Soil 4, Angels 2
Oaldand 4, Detroit 2
Angels 6, 'W)Ute Sox 4
Only.ganies scheduled
J.T. ·Snow and Tim .Salmon .each
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Th~y:s Games
hjt
thret·nin homers in the· Second
Detroit (Olivares 3·3) af Oaldand (Wen~rt 2-5), 3:15p.m.
ganie,
gh'ing California a split at ,
New York (Boehringer 0;-1 and Menoolll 2·3) at Minnesota (Rodriguez
Chicago, the ninth loss for the White
6-7 and TrombleY, it..()), 2, 5:05p.m.
.
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Sox in II games and llie J 3th vic)oCleveland (Hershiser 7·4) at Boston (Gordon 5·3), 7:05 p.m.
ry in 17 outings for ,the Angels.
Seattle (Hitchcock 6-;3) Toronto (Hanson 7·9), 7:35p.m.
In the open~. Qarren Lewis'twoCalifornia (Langston S·2) at Chicago (Tapani 7-4), 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Bones S-8) at Kansas City (Gubiclll 4-10), 8:0S p.m.
Spo~s ·brlefsBaltimore (Wells 4-6) at Texas (Oross 7-S), 8:35 p.m.
'
towA CITY. Iowa (AP) - Jess .
1
.
W~nada7'1 Gam.
Settfes, a flnt-teain Al1·1!ig Ten
New York (Key 3-6) at Minne.tQIB (Aguilera 1·2), 1:15 p.IJI .
I
selection last seuOit. Aid be will
Cleveland {NaJY 11-1) at Boston (Clerm;ns 3·~) •.7:05p.m.
'
withdraw his ,ntii'Re (JOIII Wednes- ·
Seattle (Wagner l·IYat Toronto (Hentgen 7-5), 7:35p.m.
day 1s NBA draft. iad return to the
Milwaukee (Givens 1: 1) at Kanw City (Haney 4-6), 8:05p.m..
Univet1ity of Iowa for his senior-.
. Baltimole (Coppinpr 2..0) at Texas (Hill 8-S), 8:35 p.m.
. lOR.
081)' prriel tcbedulecl

sus Plymouth; Pennsylvania and led by Jimmy Hall with a 3-0 record ·
and Chad Ord, at 3-1 .
Marietta, Ohio.
Hall's ERA is a spectacular 0.96,
Division B includes Ashland,
KentUcky; Brampton, Ontario; Can· while Sam Stephens isn't far behind,
ton, Ohio; Ottawa, Ohio; Parkers- a.t 1.91.
burg,
West
Virginia;
and
Heath Engle leads the relief pitchWilliamsport, Pennsylvania.
· • ers with 4 saves and a 2.07 ERA: He
Each team will play five games also leads the team in strikeouts, with
within their division, vying for one of 26.
six spots for the championship round
In middle relief, Seth Howard and
on Sunday.
Jason King have both kept their
Mason County will be taking a ERA's below zero, as '\'CII.J:lo~!lf&lt;l ·
team batting average of ,347 and a has 2 saves and an ERA of 0.8 I,
team earned run average of 2.08 into while King has struck out Ifi.and has
the Zides Tournament.
.an ERA of 0.15.
Joey Mayes leads the team in batNOTE: · Two games early this
ting average (.542) and runs batted in week have been called off., Ripley
(27). Dale Johnson has .scored a forfeited Monday's game at Wahama
team-leading 31 runs, followed by High School, and Thesday's game
Lane Young's 25. Johnson also leads against Putnam County, which was to
in home runs, with S.
have been played at Harmon Park,
Mason County's pitching staff is · has been canceled due to a scheduling conflict.

...

Hurry, Picture Deadline i.8 Friday, July 12
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section tilled with photographs of1
local kids, ages newborn to 4 yean old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 19th issue of The Daily
Sentinal.
Be sure your child., grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
form below and eilclos_; a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a $6.00
charge for each photograph. (Enclose payment with picture).

r--------~----~---,
IPARENTS'NAME-~--~----'1

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Subm~By

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The DaUy Sentinel

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SEND TO:
L------------~----~
P.O. Box 729 • POmerov, Obto 45769
J·

L-~=:. _.;:;:::;._~;...-----=B:A~B~Y~Se:n:tln::e;l_."!!!IIII!'!'!"'!""....~J

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BEATS YANKEES- New York hurler Andy Pettltta, right, leavea
game In the sixth Inning aa Minnesota denied him his 12th win
by beating the Yankees 3-0 Monday night In Minneapolis. Yankee pitching Coach Mel Stottlemyre, left, takes the ball from Pet·
tltta. (AP)

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eOYPf'f~"~IP~ e~~AMJe$
STATE ROUTE 124

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We Will Be Closed June 23rd·July 1st
Reopen Tuesday, July 2nd At 9:30
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. Summer Hours: Tues.·Thurs. 9:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.
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Sat. 9:30 A.M.·2:00 P.M.

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CLASSES TUES.·SAT. 10 A.M.·NOON
TUES. &amp; THURS. 6:30 ·8:30

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~ NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTIC E ':'

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HOWARD
E. FUll
.
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

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responded with a decisive rally in llie
bottom of !he first against Sadowsky,
keyed by McGwire's homer and RBI
singles by Phil Plantier and Ernie
Young.

THE TAX BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR SECOND HALF
1995 C~LLECTION OF THE REAL ESTATE TAXES,
_ALSO FOil DELINQUENT ~TAlES.
CLOSING DATE IS JUNE 28, 1996
T~ILER TAX DEADLINE IS JULY 31, 1996
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-MEIGS·· COUNTY REAL ESTATE OWNERS

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I CITY &amp;STATE-------~--1
I CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE _ _ _ _ _ _ _I
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the Tigers 10-3 in Detroit on June 19.
Bilfy Taylor got the final four outs for
his sixth save.
Bobby Higginson's lOth homer
.gave Detroit a 1·0 lead, but the A's

w

THE DEADLINE
BEEN
EXTENDED FOR

- Sports briefsFooTBALL
MIAMI (AP) - Bryan Fonay,
who sued the University of Miami .
over what he claims were broken
promises to make him !he starting
quarterback, settled with the school.
The school issued a release saying
both sides "have resolved their dif·
ferences on terms mutually satisfac.
tory to all parties, and all claims are
dismissed."
Fortay charged in the $10 million
federal lawsuit that coach Dennis
Erickson reneged on a promise to

Twins stop Yankees; ,W~ite Sox split pair

.Today's Scoreboard

Mason Legion team to play .in tourney
Mason P&gt;unty'sAmerican Legion
baseball team will be playing in the
Zides Tournament of Champions,
which will be held in the Marietta·
Parkersburg area. The tournament
will run Thursday through Sunday,
and three fields will be used for the
games: Marie!ta College Pioneer
Park, Marietta Legion Field, and
City Park in Parkersburg.
The teams will be split up into two
. divisions, with Mason County in
Division A, along with Burlington,
Ontario; Marietta, Ohio; NOBF Con·
cealed Rams, of Michigan; Panel
Barn Lumber, Ohio; and Plymouth,
Pennsylvania.
.
On Thursday Mason County will
play Burlington, Ontario, at City
Park at 12:30.
Friday at 12:30, Mason will go to
Pioneer Park tb play two games ver-

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Pille 6 • The Deity Sentinel

Tuaaday, j une 25, 1tM

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
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Billy MUiigan placed in jail fQr alleged threats to judge
SAN DIEGO (AP) -An Ohio man found innocent.of rape in 1978 after
claiming he had multiple personalities has been jailed in California for
allegedly threatening a judJe.
Billy Milligan, who is awaiting a psychiauic evaluation, also has been
found incompetent to manage his oWl\ affait's. The Columbus (Ohio) Dis·
.
patch reported today.
Milligan, who moved to California from Columbus several y~ qo, was
being held without bail in the federal Metropolitan Corrections Center on
criminal contempt charges.
Milligan's court-appointed attorney. Gretchen von Helms, said Milligan

allegedly referred to strapping e•plosives to his chest to get attention. He
also allegedly talked ahout banging on a judge's door and robbing a bank,
the newspaper said.
Ohio officials remain interested in Milligan because they want to tap into
royalties from a book deal to heiU pay part of the $453,000 bill for his JJ.
year stay in state mental hospitals':
~ Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery, aoting through special counsel Larry Branch, a San Diego attorney, is seeking SI50,000 from the proceeds of fotcign sales of-"The Minds of Billy Milligan," a hook Milligan
wrote with Daniel Keyes. The book did not sell well in the United States but

did well in Japan, '{he Dispatch said.
· ·
A movie about Milligan's case also is in the works.
.
Once Ohio offKials tried to claim his ISSCis, his troubles retumod. Milligan told The San Diego Union-'IiibUne.
.
"Everybody's gotten a piece of me, but I didn't get anything," Millipro
told the newspaper. "Now they'ne -'1 trying to make me sick again so they
can take away my m1,1ey."
:
Milligan was founil innoce nt by neason of insanity on charges that he ktdnapped, raped and robbed three women in the Ohio State University area.
•

Tuaidlly, June 25, 1186

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentln.t • Page7

Applications available
for ·c·ounty.Junior Fair
·King, Queen Contest
Application forms for the i 996
Meigs County Junior Fair kina and
queen contest are available at the
Meigs County Extension Office,
Mulberry Heights, P6meroy and also
at each of the high schools in the
county.
Completed applit atipn forms must
he neturned to the Extension Office
by 4:30 p.m. on June 28. No appli.cations will be accepted after this
·date.
The contest is open to all Meigs
County boys and girls, ages 16 to 19 ·

as or january I, not married nqr have .
been married, nor have borne a\child.
·Contestants must be a member of
one of the organ izations represented
on the Junior F\ir Board (4-H. F.F.A.,
F. H. A., V.I.C.A., Grange, Boy Scouts
or Girl Scouts).
All contestants will be interviewed
Thursday, July 18, at 6 p.m. in the
Meigs High School Library. The
date for 'the ann ouncemeru and
crowning and_cro'wning ceremonies
will be an flounced at later date. ·
'

·Community calendar
1997 F1so·

1.996 ·BRONCO

1996 RANGER

"REAR BUMPER, 4 CYL., BASE TRUCK"
WAS $11,085.00

"EDDIE BAUER WITH EVERY OPTION!"
WAS $32,04o:oo

124,99500
.· 1996 ESCORT SPORT

':AIR COND., TILT, LOADED"
WAS $13,715.00

1996 TAURUS

· 1996 EXPLORER

PRE-OWNED SPECIALS
1993 FORD FESTIVA, 5-SPEED, CLEAN .................................. :................. $4,800.00
1994 FORD F2~, 4X4, XLT, AUTO., LOADED ........................................... $18,800.00
1994 FORD Ft50, 4X4, XLT, LOADED ....................................................... $14,800.00
1990 FORD F150,. XLT, LOADED ................................................................. $7,495.00
1991 LINCOLN MK7, AUTO., LOADE0 ...........~ ......................................... $10,495.00
1992 FORD TAURUS, GL, AUTO., LOADED ............,..................................$7,495.00
1994 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE, AUTO., LOADED .........................:..........., ...$10,495.00
1993 FORD TEMPO, 2 DR., AIR, NICE CAR ............................................... $5,750.00
1993 PLYMOUTH DUSTER, V6, LOADED ........................................ :.......... $6,995.00
1995 FORD F150, 4X4, XLT, AUTO., LOW MILES ............ .........................$16,500.00
1991 FORD F150, 4X4, AUTO., XLT, LOADEo ....................................:.....$11 ,800.00
1994 FORD RANGER, XLT, LOADED ............................... :.......................... $9,995.00
1995 DODGE STRATUS, ES, V6, ONLY 9,000 MILES .............. ,............... $16,495.00
1994 S10 SUPERCAB LS, 4X4, AIR ................:......................................... $14,995.00
1995 FORD F150; XlT, 4X4, LOW MILES ..................................................$15,995.00

"XLT, AUTO., 4 DR., LOADED"
WAS $27,860.00

' All FACTORY REPURCHASE VEHICLES REDUCED FOR THE THIS SALE!! II
96 TAURUS, 96 SABLE, 9S TAURUS, 95 SABLE, 95 ESCORT, 9S CONTOUR,
65 MYSTIQUE, 96 MYSTIQUE,- THEY ALL GOTTA GOlf!

1996 AEROSTAR

"OPENING SOON''
"FULL POWER, LOADED"
WAS $20,590.00

That's right! An old name is bringing a new
game to Ripley, WV and we need help!! . '
Applications for the following positions
are now being accepted.

"XLT, DUAL AIR, LOADED"
WAS $20,197.00

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1996 CONTOUR

SALES DEPARTMENT
- · Sales persons for
.
new and used vehicle sales.
SERVICE DEPARTMENT - Technicians for
vehicle repair. ford-Mercury Lincoln Experience a plus.

1996 CROWN VIC. LX

"FULL OPTION VEHICLE" .
WAS $25,51 0.00

RIPLEY, WV

HARRISONVIU.E --Senior Cit· izens blood pressutc clinic, I 0 a.m. to
1t :30 a.m·. ~ith meeting 3!1d lunch to
follow at town house.
THUR,SDAY
POMEROY ~ Meigs Local J:loard
of Education regular meeting Thursday. 7 p.m. at the central office in the
Pomeroy Mun icipal Building.

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OLD PRESS· The Black Rock Prell Is a living museum to the printed word. It hcnlMI five prnse1 ranging from the "woltc horse"
reproduction proof pressea to the gem of the collection: an 1837Columblan Iron hand praaa.Bob Blaau, left, Ia head of the Special
Collections department at Getchell Library Ill the Unlvilralty of Nevada at Reno, and director of the Black Rock Preas.John Balkwlll,
associate dl~ector for the preas, also teechea classes and print• the limited edition books.

REEDSVILLE-- Riverview Garden Club. Thursday, 6:30 p.m for
potluck picnic at the home of Nola
. Yo~ng.

Creating.books that look as well as they read

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
.,RACINE -- RACO, T11esday, 6:30 Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30p.m.
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

By JENNIFER CROWE
The Reno Gazette-Jourrlal
When you think of art, the Mona
Lisa 'Or perhaps the Venus .de Milo
may come to mind.
Rarely do we think of book~ a~
objects of art, but Black Rock Press
produces books that are as beautifully ~r~afted as any pointing or statue.
The press is a living museum to
the
printed word. It houses five
tions in !ate I ~4. In a recent lawsuit I
ptcsses
ranging from the "work
filed in federal court in the District of!:
horse" reprodu~tion proof presses
Columb1a, 1'3 organizations and two
to
the gem of the· collection: an
individ~als askt9 that the agency be ·
1837
Columbian iron hand press.
ordered I{) prot\ose listing the lynx for
The
black
i(on press is an impresprot~ction under the Endangered
sive sight, flecked with brass
Species Act.
Congress has halted new listings · accents and a brass identification
plate.
.under the Endangered Species Act,
"Not many of these presses still
and "we don ' t have any money even
have
the plates says Bob Blesse,
to. propose (new listings)," said
head of the Special Collections
Sharon Rose, a Fish and Wildlife Ser·
department
at !}etchell Library at
vice spokeswoman in Denver. "All
the
University
of Nevada at Reno,
the listing biologists were moved out
and ·director of the Black Rock
of that program because there wasn' t
any money for them."
.
·
, Neither she nor · Pat Fisher, a
spOkeswoman at agency headquarters
in Washington, would comment on
tl]e suit, which named Interior SecVacation Bible sc hool at the
retary Bruce Babbitt and Fish and Alfred United Methodist Church is
Wildlife Director Mollie Beattie as underway this week.
defend!IJltS.
•
In observance of Fathers Day, AoBiotogists estimate that there may rence Ann Spencer, representing the
be 150 to 400 lynx in Mqntana, I00 women of the church, distributed fruit
to I50 in Washington state, as many b~skets to 17 fathers attending seras 50 in Idaho, 20 to 50 in Maine and vices that day. She read "Father's
scattered individuals in several other Example," Nellie Parker read "A
states, Snape said.
Father Is," and pictures were taken.
"There's only one place (south of , Thelma He~derson and Nina
Canada) where we have, maybe, Robinson attended the 50th wedding
healthy and viable populations of anniver~ary of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
lynx . and that's Montana." said Midkiff at the American Legion Hall
' Jasper·Carll'on, director of the Biodi- in Athens.
,.
versity Legal Foundation in Boulder,
Colo.'

:Protection sought f.or
:Lynx, America's le.ast
:well-studied wildcat
By TIM KLASS
i
Asaoclated Press Writer
. · · Sf\ATII..E (Af) - A snowshoe
· hare hops out of the. trees, eager to
nibble the twigs of a young spruce.
. The rabbit fneezes, almost invisible. against the snow blanketing the
. r~gged mountain forest.
In an explosion of white powder,
a. wildcat leaps I0 feet across the
clearing. ifwo niotc hou'nds and the
bunny· is breakfast.
The meal provides about two days
ofsustenance for the lynx, one of the
world's most reclusive and selective
predators a medium-sized cat that
one~niti~ from Alaska to liU!h and
New England to the Pacific North.west.
Today, even following tracks,
"your chance of'seeing the animal is
exuemely remote," says John Weaver
of Missoula, Mont.. an independent
wildlife researcher who formerly
worked for the U.S. Forest Service
and Fish and Wildlife Service.
• " They avoid being around
humans," explained Lori Nordstrom,
a wildlife biologist who led a status
review of the lynx. •
She and most other Fish and
Wildlife scientists who contributed to
the yearlong. study recommended
that the lynx. already granted state
protection in 13 states, be listed as
endangered through(\!! New En~­
l!md, the Great Lakes, n1irthem Plains
and the southern Rockies and as
threatened in the northern Rockies
and · pacific Northwest. Thousands
remain in Canada and Alaska.
No population counts have been
done, but only 350 to 700 are
believed to survive in the other 20
states where lynx once roamed,
according to William Snape. legal
director of Defenders oT Wildlife in
Washington, D.C.
The Fish and Wildlife Servjcc
rejected Nordstrom's recommcnda-

Press. "There aren't many presses
like thi$ left, maybe 400 to 500.
Most of them in Europe were
scrapped for the . metal during
World War 1."
The Black Rock Press was
founded in the mid-1960s by Ken
Carpenter, a special collections
librarian from California State University, B~&gt;rkeley , who was interested in limited-edition printing. He
acquired a press, got a small room
at Getchell Library and began
printing and offering classes. He
retired in 1981, which is when
Blesse took.over the program.
John Balk will, associate dire&lt;; tor
for the press, also teaches classes
and prints t~e limited edition
books. He's been there for three
years due to the generosity of philanthropist Greg Peterson.
Altho'ugh the university provides the space lind utilities tor the
group, they aren't afforded an operating budget. The press is self·

funded on book sales, gifts and the .
occasional grant.
The Black Rock Pnes$ has different ty.pes of publications: broad- ·
sides and the (imited and Rainshadow editions. .
.
.
Broadsides arc poster-like prints
that are meant to be framed. They
feature some type of signed workd ·
with art and are printed in a limited
edition , Broadsides are usually
done for writers ·and poets who
come to speak at the university.
"We usually do tWo or 'three
broadsides a year," says Blesse.
"We did one for Allen Ginsberg
when he was here a 'few years back
and we recently did one for Paul
Zarzyzki ."
The Rainbow Editions are a·separate series that usc desktop pub- .
lishing techniques. The .pages are
done at,an outside facility using an
ofl'&amp;et printing press. The printed
pages are 1hcn ret~rned .to. the
school, where they are handbound.

.,

We

Lynx declines have been blamed
mainly on aggressive trapping in the
1970s to tbe rnid-1980s, when furri ers paid as much as $500 a pelt, and
loss of habitat from fire suppression
and clearcut logging.
A l.ynx coat, made from a number
of pelts, brings as much as $'25,000.
but trappers tooay rarely get more
than $70 a pelt. even for the best fur
from animals taken norttl of Prince
George, British Columbia, . where
they arc mo~t abundant.

Mature

Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home ·
. Owners Special
Savings. ·
Our statistics show that inatuna
drivers and home owners nave
fewer.and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge you less for your
insurance. Insure your home and
car wnh us and save even more
with our special multi-policy
discounts:

Many youths learn ·about sex
from television, magazines
tions," said .Suzanne Del banco, a
spokeswoman for Kaiser.
Aa.socleted Prea1 Writer
Among the sexually acti~e. 36
:NEW YORK (AP) -· A third of
percent
.aid they still don't know
youths 12 and older say the media
enough
about
birth contrQI and 30
encourag~ them to . have se! , ani!
percent
said
they
need more informore than half the girls say they learn
abOut birth control from television mation about where to get contraceptives. Forty~cven percent said
and movies, a survey says.
Seventy-four percent of yooths they wanted to know more ahout prequestioned by the Henry J. Kaiser· venting AIDS and - other sexually
Family Foundation said at least one • transmit.te4 diseases.
Fashion magazines are an imporparent had talked to diem about sex,
tant
source of information about sex,
but only 46 percent said their parents
liad talked to them about birth con- birth control and sexually transmitted
diseases. more than a third of the girls
trol.
said.
·
·Just over half (55 percent) id the
survey· neleased Monday said their _ Fifty-thnee pe,rcent of girls sai.d
parents had discussed sexually trans~ they got their sex education from the
'IV or movies.
milled diseases.
-~
The phone survey of 757 girls and
Nearly a third (29 percent) said
they had hnd se• and 4 percent said 753 boys ages 12 to 18 was conthey had at least one child. A third ducted for Kaiser -by Princeton Suralso said they believed some teen- vey Reseanch Associates between
agers have sex because· TV and March 28 and Mity S. It has II mar~
gin of en:or of 3 percentage points.
movies make it seem nonnal.
"It's clear that if teens today are • The Menlo Park, Calif.-based
going to make responsible decisions Kaiset foundation is an independent,
abOut sex, they need more than lhe non-profit organization that studies
'biids and bees.•They need practical health policy, reproductive health
inf9f111ation about how. to use con- and ihe AIDS virus .in this country
~ption and negotiate sexual rela- and health and development in South
Africa.

•

.

Susan Pullins hosted a party for
family and friends honoring her son
Jason's graduation from FederalHocking High School ad her nephew,
Garret's first birthday. Garnett is the
son of Lisa and Kenny Ritchie.

Marlene and Michelle Donovan
spent a week at Clearwater Beach.
A a.
John ·Taylor visited his son, Chip.
in Denver, Colo.
.
Barbara and Mi liard Swartz spent

'

a week at Virginia Beach.
Velda and Randall Taylor, Ripley,
W.Va., visited Imogene and Lester
Keaton.

We're not

"Clowning"
Around!!

:· @

(We wouldn't "kid" you about these. rates!)

.A,N~
RNER~
lrisuranc~ Services

214 EAST MAIN
PO..EROY

992-6881
A.ur,P-Ot~~nen

lruurailce ·

~~--·

• APR baled on minimum loan amount of
$1~,000.00 for a term of 60 months. Monthly
payment amount would be $241.89, with a total
finance charge of$2,513.-40. Offer available for
I limited timC, so burry in todtly, Garin&amp; our

rmenBank

Som"' Co""""'

JAanS.hi.-JMt., GOING ON NOWII

Life Home Car Business

n.

•
,I

The ~overs for these books ·are
hand-printed, usually with $Orne
type of anwork, at the Black Rock
Press.
Blesse aad Balkwill produce the
true limited editions. between 100
to 200, made hy hand from the type .
to the printing to the bindings.
which are sewn . It takes ahout a
year.
'.' It's a very time-consuming
process to do books by hand ....
Balkwill says. "But we' re always
creating new things. mixing the
technology with what we know
about handset methods, mi xing the
old and new to create interesting
hybrid designs." 1
This year's limited edition is a
collection of poems by Pulit1.cr
Prize-winning author Gary Snyder.
The introduction was written · by
Ann Ronald, dean of the College of
Arts and SCiences at UNR.
Printed on handmade paper
Continued on page 8

----Alfred
news notes--·-· -~----.

BV KATHERINE ROTH

Contact Guy N. Sayre Jr. or Mike Bing ·
"AM/FM CASS., CRUISE, POWER LOCKS"
WAS $16,195.00

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non·
p~t groups wishing to announce
.J!leedng and spe.:ial events. The
ea1eadar Is not designed to promote
·sales or fund nilsers ofany type.
l.tems are printodoas space pennits
.and cannot be guaranteed to I'QII a
·specifk number or clays. .
TUESDAY
.
PQMEROY -- Meigs County
Genealogical Society, workshop for
lieginning genealogy . researchers,
Tuesclay, 7 p.m. at Meigs County
Museum. 4-H Club members, scouts,
others doing projects, welcome.

..

I

,,

�••
Pllge •• The Dilly Stnttnel

~-:Aepycl~ng
.

'' ,

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuud8y, .iune 21, 1 •

The Dilly Senllnll• P8get .

Pom:l!!f • Mlddllport, Ohio

center puts·worms to work

EDITOR'SNOTE-C df.
Canyon'&amp; 75 millioft wsm&amp; ue pound."
. ~ = 'eriM..,..oaw He
out ip the 20 windrows, each20 feet
In his conservative way, Beerman
. : enlly ft I &amp;I¢ of·· I WJaly, .U.y wide and 250 feet IOftl, thiJt coosti· fiaures he feeds -his 7.5,()00pomwta of
: ~ 10011 ......, fw IIIII belt. tute the farm. There is a pound of · ell1bworms about IS te 20 lOlls of
Now-aCtllfonalaOillflttluat wonns for e~~Ch cubic foot of pnwweeveryday. "And wet-f. lull (Nt worw to won oe a lfUid windrow.
;
· vest that much out every day. Now
'
scale ill u uclerp-oud recydlna
Since wrigaly wonns ll'e touJh to when we expand the herd (yes, herd),
piMt oiiOI'tl.
c~nt, worm growers deal in worm we wut up to 1fJ&gt;,OOO !ons."
By JOHN BARBOUR
we1ght, measured by the pound.
Canyon Recycling WIIS 1he beneAP Ne-featurM Wl'lter
When pressed, Beerman says, fieiary of the failure of uother eafthSAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - In " You' ll get aboiat 1,000 wortns per . wonn operation. 1 North of nearby
El' "'RES 7-2-IMI
:these tawny hills high above city traf- pound,"
. .
..
Escondido, the Fallsbrook Sanitary
fie , the road comes to a dusty end,
Each w~~ ts .morphadi~tc .or District had an efficient operation
·marked by hexagonal caution signs hermaphradillc, which means tt j;ar- which pre-dated Canyon's by five
that say, "Worm Crossing."
ric~ bolh male and female sex. ~ans. years. They blended green waste ·
The worms don't really cross the Thts makes n:product1on con~ement. with sewer sludge tllat evil-smelling
*-~
. road. Why would they want !o?
"This is perfect because every leftover after sew~ge has been treat: Probably no wonns on the planet worm they meet is a potential mate," ed_. .
·
' have such an easy life as the 75 mil- Beerman says. •·:They can't miss,
They fed the mixture to the worms
lion earlhworms that reside here at They really /,ust sll around and ha~e and "they did a phenomenal iob of \
Canyon Recycling, which produces a . sex and eat.
.
taking·c111e of that waste," Beerman
material to improve the soil of gar- · An adult earlhworm will lay one sliys. But the project was doomed by
Chester, Oh
'
dens and lawns, like fertili zer.
or two cocoons a week and out of its own success.
· Actually, the worms do lhe pro- those cocoons can come one to I 0
"lbe communities began growing
No Subelllutea.
ducing.
eanhworms. It 'may take 10 days for up around the, sewage faci~ty and
.
The wonns me fed the leftovers of that cocoon to hatch and another 30 some developers put up houses adja. honiculture, lhe leaves and grass and days for !hose worms to become cent to the sewage treatment plant.,
r~----------~--~
chewed-up branches and other green mature eno11gh to stan laymg
This cn:ated odor problems and
.
waste that would otherwise clog ~oc.~ns..
.
.
lhe resulting public outcry foreed the
landfills and create odors.
. So of thtngs _are really gomg operation 10 shut down.- .
With the help from the microbes nght, between the t1_me an ~arthworm
So Canyon Recycling bought the
that inhabit their digestive tract, the JS, bom to the ttme 11 can hatch more Fallsbrook herd..
:worms defecate what are called worm earthworms is about 60 days."
.
"We don't do sludge here," Beer·castings. This wonn nianure makes
The laboratory expens say tf mmi says. "We are no~ permitted to
excellent soil or soil additives, hold- everything is perfect you can double and we will pro.bably never do any.
ing ~oistur~ better, making nutrients. your earthworm weight every· 60 But there are ocher sites in the city
readtly available_for plants.
.
days. But for the p!en who have their that we are looking into and also oth'
, The sctence IS not new. Vermt- . hands in the windrows like Beerman, er areas in California."
regular price on you( next jewelry purchase ·
converSion, or usmg .earlh_worms to there is a cenain conservatism.
Besides the worm operation, Beer. conven wastemto soli addtttves, has
He figures lhat the doubling man's company uses huge, noisy
·been done _on ~ relatively small scale occurs every 120 days.
griiiders to chew up and compost
1
.
Canyon Recycling has a vermi- cruder mixes, which are then sold
·for .~orne ttme. •
.
'
But nobody s .~one 11 on a large culture operation here for replace· back to the city and landscapers as
.
'
commerctal scale, says John Beer- ment worms and a reproductive facil· mulch and cogeneration fuels.
EXPIRES 7·2·96
.man,thegeneralmanageroftheoper- ity in Yelm, Wash., where the sole
.Behind all this was a state law
allon.
.
.. .
. . aim is worm production to supply which required municipalities to
· The sot I addtttve IS marketed m future operations. • '
divert 25 percent of their solid waste
the form of mulch or compost or ver"Up !here," Beennan says, "we'll away from landfills by the end of
: mtcompost, e1ther m bulk or m bags. have from 25,000 to 100,000 pounds 1995 . They did tills, but that was the
A 55-pound package sells for $7.
of worms depending on the time of easy part - cans, newspapers, glass
813 West Main
· Canyon Recycling, which was yearaad how many we've harvested. -or it was material that had to be
staned in January 1994, now handles We just delivered 5,000 pounds from recycled anyway, like concrete,
Pomeroy
992-6426
:100 to 125 tons of green waste a day. Yell)lto Temicula, C;Uif, where we're. asphalt, wallboard.
'
· · 303 Upper ~lver Ref. •
·"The worm that we use is Eisenia starting another vermiculture opera"By the end of the year 2000,
foetida, which is ~ Midwestern red- lion.
cities ha~e to come up with another
Gallipolis
. 1 44;!6483
•
worm or the red wigglet;." Beerman
"We can't ,make enough · earth- 25 percent of landfill diversion," says
2515 Jackson Ave.
says. "They're a very active worm, worm castings to meet our demand · Beenrian. "The next 25 percent is
Offer ~ood Until 7/31/95
Pt. Plea~nt ·
675-5390
yery prolific, have a great appetite here," he says.
·
going to be much harder to achieve. ·
'
'
.
)lnd live up to I 0 years, which is quite
"We put a prict: of $10 a po4nd on . That's wl!ere · outfits• like Canyon
---------~-----------------------~~------!!mazing."
.
.
these earthworms. Most·of the time Recycling come in. We're a zero dis--~-~--------~. The more you feed lhem, the sellers would want more than that. charge entity. We are 100 percent 1
I
faster lhey grow.
They would want $15 to $25 a recycled. We don't bury anything,
I
"Nothing is wasted."
·

&lt;*TJ 111.--

---------------

Pizza

.,_,.Oat
lt.. Pizia
.. Ut• Bottle of Pop

Stop

-$ 75

992-2635

Middleport, OH

$

R·acine High
alumni hold
:reunion

.A reunion of 22 members of the
:. Racine High School graduating class .
of 1946 was held on May 29 atthe
old Racine High School.
·
. Special guest was Irene Miller
Hayman of Westervitle, a 1.923 graduate of Racine, and a former teacher
in the district.
A special memorial was held for
eight deceased members of the class
of 1946 which had 36 graduatet Two
classmates unable to a(tend went letters to be read.
Special recognition was given to
the class at lhe Racine High Alumni
banquet held in the Charles Hayman
.gymnasium.

press ...

-------=-------

4

SPECIAL RECOGNITION -lrane.MIIIer Hayman of Westerv'lle,
center, was teacher for these four members of the 1946 graduatIng claaa, pictured, left, Romona Allen Yonker, Jeane Miller Fisher, Bud Sharpnack and Bill Hayman.

Although the program will continue as long as Blesse and Balkwlll
arc there, the long-range future of
Black Rock Press is uncenain.
" We'd both like to think this program -will continue and we're doing
things to build a strong program,:'
-says Bless. "But if John and I left
tomorrow I'm not sure the program
would continue. ·We do it because
it'sl .something
we like to do and .we
,.
•
env-tston a lime when there will be
actual' positions and a budget for
S" '
u.

'

· J;ll~ck Rock Press offers a class
each semester on bookmaking. ' ..
- "Introduction to the Book
'Ans," teaches relief• printmaking
techniques, i/lcluding woodblock
and li!lllleum ·printmaking, wood
engraving and printing from photo-

(

lllddlePfrt, OH

..---------------------·--·-·-·-·--·-"'

mechanically
produced
relief
engravings. Students also learn such •';:::::------~---...,
- - - - - - -EXPIRES
- - - -7-4-96
----~-----------,1
binding and paper decoration tech- h
niques as· suminagashi- a Japanese
.I
paper marbling method.
·
I
"1-Iistory and Practice of Bookmaking " is design, typesetting and
0
m ·
•
leterpress printing.
"Students are encouraged to be.
·Needles
as creative as they want," says Bob
•SciSIIOI'II
Blesse. Other courses .include a
•Binding
"Book Arts Workshop, " where stu•Pin a
.dents will work on an independent
•Thntlld
book project of their own concep•Ribbon
•LKeTrlms
tion, either an artist's book or finely
!
,
•Zippera
printed limitelll .edition. Internships
and summer workshops are offered ..
-Buttons &amp; More 110 WEST MAIN POMEROY .
· · 992·2284 .
Blesse says "Most studem don't
----------·---------------.;;;;-;;~~--·-·-·--·--·--·-·--·.1
buy presses and stan printing books.
~-------------~,
-~-----------EXPIRES 7·11 ·96 '
.
.
I
But they carry a lot of knowledge·
with them and develop a different
way of looking at print and type.'.:

COUPON

NOFIONS SALE .

SAVE

20%..,~""-

THE FABRIC S--OP.
_

COUPON

CARPET

I.

SAVE UP TO

S~Jeeted $t)'les

4.0o/
.
!.
/0 OFF .!
· .
.

I

I

·MEIGS CARPET &amp;DECORATING CENTER

imaginary cbnverslllions with son she calied "My-friend " was
Eleanor Roosevelt, and Indian inde- described by Donald T. Regan in his
'
I
pendence leader Mohandas K. Gand- book "For the Record." The
3?080
HOBSON
DR.
MIDDLEPORT,
OH
I
hi.
astrologer later ' )Vas identified as
Throughout American history, the Jo_an Quigley and ·she, in tum, con- 1~:==:::::::::::::::::;::::::=::;.::;;;.;;;.;;.:;.;;.:;=
-------------·--·----..,~r
-----~----------.J
people who advised presidents on . tended she had a dir~t line to the 11
policy were well known - but not president and gave him advice. ·
WFSQRNAUTO
'
their spiritual advisers. Modem preS;Regan did not go that far, but.
idents have had evangelist Billy Gra- wrote:
ham to turn to in times of stress;
"Virtually every major move and
Dwight Eisehhower enlisted him to decision the Reagans made during
'
help get racial peace in the South.
my time as White House chief of staff
"To tell the truth, outside of Nan- was cleared in advance with a·woman ·
wilh_coupon
cy Reagan and her interest in astrol- in San Francisto who drew up horoogy, this is a very unusual phenome- scopes to make cenain that the planna in the Wliite House, " said his tOri· ets were in a favorable alignment for
an Philip Rulon of Northern Arizona the enterpri,se. Nancy Reagan seemed ,.
99 '.
.,
University at Flagstaff, who worked to have absolute failh in the clair• •
Wllh coupon
for the Center for· the Study of the voyant powers of ti)is woman;'' the
Presidency for 25 years.
,Offer oplntll Ju!y 31st
book said.
'
Mrs. Re&amp;Ran's reliance on a per-

992·6173

·

COUPON

LUBE, OIL AND FILTER
. CHANGE SPECIAL

s15" . .

TWO WHEEL ALIGNMENT

· ONLY .$26·

.'

• &lt;.•!

'•

•.,,

I

742-2803
or 446-3622

T

~

Sarah.Caldwell was honored fur

~ years of grange membership at

a recent meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange.
. ; Master William Radfool pre·
!JCnled her with lhe 60 year grange
_pal and _read a letter of congratulations from state master Bernard
$hoemaker.
,
•, Meetina with Rock Sprinas
were aevcral members of Raciile
Orange. .
Opal Oruoser, legislative chair-

I t· '

'

..

match
1-900·988-8988
Ext. 7907
2.99/min 18+
T.T. P•one Req•.
Serv~u

NIOQ.889-3943

Truckll)g •
Umestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoa
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

St. A1. 7

NOTICE TO BIDDERs·

The Mete~• Local a-d of

~n wlahelto 1'11Celve

bldl for lh• following:
producta, Fleet lnauranee,

'BieHIII.IIcery, Milk/ Dairy
•nd TubaiTI-.

Howard hcavatin

Tuppel'll Plains, Ohio 45783
&amp;14-9115-3813 or 814-667-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D · perf. - solid pipe
·
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; '114" c. P. v.c. pipe
I t/2'.' thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
·
314"· &amp; t" 200 p:s.L water pipe (IOO' .roll's thill 1,000' roll'&lt;)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduil
g G
" r:tvetess Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" · Fillings - Regulators- Risers
Fult assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fillings &amp; Water fillings
Fult line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage oanks.

-

Racine, Ohio
Complete Commercial &amp;
Resldentlai.Servioe

949-3151

742-2246
l.Dcatty owned &amp; operated
Free Esdmates
Guaranteed resu~s

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
&amp;14-1192-2n2
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

MGM

eReplacetaettt Windows
..lliltl Gca;as
eStont Dean &amp;witldows
eRoom Adtllliatts

New Location
Mlddleport, Ohio
With 3 Beds to
Serve You Betler.
12-$20.00

Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
. Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

ANNOUNCEMENTS

40

I Mixed Beagle Puppy Greolt
With Chilclreni814""'41-0a109.
2 Free mbbirs. 304-882-36 77.

,,.,..

2 Yellow cats, 1·8mo old, 1 - 11~
o!d. 1 Mixed Beagle, 1 Milul'd Tef·
riet", .both lyr o ld, Ia good home
only, med size. 3CM·675-4650.

H&amp;H
Home
Remodeling
Roofing &amp;
Block Work

2 Yellow t&lt;inen s One Male One

Female, Liner Trained , In side
Only 614-446·3897.
3 Year old, male, 112 black Lab.
vorylriendly.304-773-6145.
'

30"' Electric range, copper tone in
color. 304·675· 1700.

Free Eatimate•

4 parr Black Lab, pan Bea g19
puppies. ~4-675-61 18.

992·2768 or
992·3274

6 Killens 3-lemales . 3·males, 1
calico, 1whlte, 3stnped, 1gray wt

blk ean, parr Siamese , all havf
blue eyes. 304-675-7928.
,

mo.

11411

Giveaway

Bmo. large bla ck/tan pup, 1yr old
1f2 Siamese cat, very unique
both house tra ined. 304 ·675:;
7690 belore 7pm.

Adult neutered male Cocker'

Spaniel , needs fenced .,-ard or
farm, 614-992·6412.

Black Lab pup to good home
304·675-4431 .

I

Couch &amp; rocliner, 614-949· 2469.

,

Fair Condition . Uprighl Piano,
614·251\-6089.
'
Free Kittens, Long H a~red Calico ·
Afi.f1 Also 2 Calico Female Adull
Cats. Excellent Mo use rsl To
Good Homel614·:167.0283.
Free killens, si r weeks old, 6 14:

992-5000.

FUGUNT
FIELDS

SUMMER
TUTORING

Scentttl
.hraiiUIII
Ewerlastlegs

JESS'
COMPLETE
AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Thur.-sat. 1G-5
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7573 ' _, .... pd.

Headliners - Custom Seat
C9vers &amp; Carpet -Convertible Tops •
· Antique Cars -

TRAP SHOOT

• Boat Seats Over 20 Years Experience
(614) 992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

Every Wed1esday
. 5:~0 p.m.
RaciH Gw1 Clull

.......

8/1811 mo. pel.

.

.

'

I

Old uptigru piano, ta 1r cond ition ' •
304·675· 7883:
.

614·949·2096

Persian Cat To Good Home, 6 14367-7561 .

TODD BISSELL

Puppies 112 Bassen. 304 -675;
2398.

$5.00· per ho"
Morning Hours

......

Ten adorable kmens. all co lors
(614) 94~2756 .
.

Three 112 Minia ture Collies

Two niu house dogs to givea-~
way, 814-843-5165.
•

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work

60

LOST : Vicinily ol Five Mile-Jim ·

...

or~304~-6~7~
~
~~7~
. ~----~· ·
Small Black Dog Wilh No Ta11 Her·
Name Is t&lt;atie, 6 14-388 -9247 Or
614-9775.
'

.,

l'ew Homes • Vlny' Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

~12-4 Hippy Hollow Rl).

Middleport, Ohio 45780
o,nny .. Peggy Briddes

814-992..7643

614-742-2183

'

(No Sunday Calls)
·u ....... ,

,.,...I
.

Lost and Found

Hill &amp; CrabCreek Roads. Male'
Coma (Shellie) call 304·675· 7697,

,BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
'

1'

Male, 2 Females, Before g P."M.'
8 14·379·91 40.

11-4/1 mo.

985·4198....

'

MBre Black Lab Mixed 2 Years ·
Old. Play Well &amp; Energetic. 614! '
441 ·0668.

Call -

Herbs

IIU/1 mo. pd.

,...

614-992-3470

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

814·241-2120....., ...

Phone 992·2489

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
· Portable

Howard L. Writesel

~72-5686or

16-$25.00

Kelly Renee Johnson, ctaughter
of Harry.D. and V. Kay Garnes of
, .
Pomeroy and granddaughter . of
man, gave reports on employment,
Eileen Games and lhe late Goldie
Medicare !l'ld the Passport proIngels,
recently graduated from.the
gram.
.
.
nursing
pmgram at Hocking Tech
. The progr~?' was gtven by · ·
• Emm~. Ashley, Fathers -~ Won- · College in Nelsonville.
She also attended Ohio State
derful . was read by ~Ita Yost.
University
and Shawnee State Collbere wen: several musiCal numlege.
ben, bo.th mstrumental and voc~l,
by Whttley, R.ac~l and Em1ly
She is now a registered nurse
Ashley, ~companted by the1r
with an ISIOCiates depee and plans
father, Keath Albley.
.
to pursue her bachelor's degree.
Refrelluneilts were served ~ .
The 199 r andlllle of Meigs
Roy and Opal Oru..- and a SOCial •· Hi'gh School mides in Nelsonville
hour followed.
. with her dauBhter, Kay Ia Lysbee.

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SoU, Fill Dirt

PONDEROSI
PRIMITIVE .
CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON
On St. Rt. 338 W. 8 miles
from Ravenswood
Bridge, 1 mllelrom
Apple Grove, Ohio.
Electric hook-up, dump
ahltlona, non1)ollabte
w11er, large lots,
hiking, fishing.
Rent by week or month.

Summer Images

Johnson
earns degree

WICKS
HAULING

992-3838

D&amp;T
Pest Control

•

KELLY JOHNSON

(Lime Ston~~­
LowAates)

All Kind1 of Eorlh Vlork

I· '

....

Meet your

I &amp; W PWTICS AIID SUPPLY

Lead danger prompts·
yinyl miniblind alert &gt;

.

R&amp;D ROOFING and
(;ONSTRIJl:TION

,.,._

(619) 645-8434

742·3212

Bam-Bpm

recognized
at Grange
'·

$3.99 par min.
. Must be 18 y,..,
Sarv-U (619) 645 8434

(614) 992·2364

Sti(:k/MIG Aluminum Welding

Pick-up dlacardtd
bellerlea, appllancea a
. manymetala.

~ongtime mem~ership

.
We wll work within your budget
Ph. 773-1173
· FAX 773-11881
108 Pome Street
Mason, WV

35 YNrS E~qHrlenCI

992-2156

\.lSA TODAY
·
;l Citing dangerous levels of lead in
iahponed vinyl mi11iblinds, fede~al
officials 'I'llesday wtll warn consinners to get rid of them.
; The U.S. Consumer Product SafeIX Commission (CPSC) 'sa~s lhe
blinds, readily available in · departrrient and home improvement stores,
.wse a danger to children, who might
touch them and then put their hands
in their mouths.
: Lead poisoning · in children can
·~ad· to learqing disabilities, hearing
loss imd growth retardation.
I
: As exposure ~o light and heat
causes the blinds to deteriomte, lead
dilst accumulates.

1-900-1168-4100
Ext. 2469

pel.

FREE

"It is quite imponant for families
with children under 6 to remove
these," says CPSC chairwpman Ann
Brown. "We don't wapt f~ilies to
. put their kids at risk." ·
. She says the•only safe s!)lution is
dispqsal; washina will not -prevent
deterioration, which causes !he--lead
buildup.
1be CPSC says about 25 million
. blinds are irhponed . from 1iiwan,
China, Indonesia and Mexico each
year.·
Retailers say they're co~med
lhe warning will cause panic among
consumers. "The blinds are everywhere, unfonunately," says Meg Farrage of the International Mass,Retail
Association.

Let .them tall you
about the future Ill ,

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

iThe Sentinel ,News Hotline

tit JODI S. COHEN_

YHII

"No Job Too Lll~ or Too Small"

TONYfS PORTABLE WELDING

fOR Ill YOUR

INGELS CARPET
992·7021

• Weadealing
- Tree Trimming
- Shrubbery Maintenance '
No lawn too large
· or too small.
Call today for free
estimate

·cHECK THE

Ft

' 169 M 21111 Ave.

(reoldentllll &amp; oomm~

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • R•Cores
. A/C Condensers/Hose Assemblys

614-992·2979

·-·

Want to Help

AuthoriZed AGA Distributor
• Wakllng Supjil'e&amp; •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Setvices • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AlumlnumtStatnless • Toot Dressing • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, RaUings, Pallo fumHure, Fireplaoa
Mems, Planter hange,., TreHises &amp; lots ol other stuff!!

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
- Mowlng-

---------r.

~

112-41218

Pomeroy, Ohio

LIVE PSYHICS ·

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Anything ,

.... .,, -

lti3013"'Mt-2011FAX

All bldl ehall be r-Ived
In, and bid apeoiiiHII~nl
may ba obtained
lrom,
-·
- TFIEASUREII'S
OFFICE,
320 L::::=======-~~~~~~..;..-...1
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
E. Mllln s - , PorMroy, OH
Card of Thanks
45789, on or before 1:00 -:=:;::;:::=~==i
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
ROBERT BISSELL
p.m., Monc!lv•.Jyly 22, 11!96.. ' r Th f ' I f D
The Melga Local Boilid of
· e ama y o ave
CONSJilmON.
Education r11ervea the · Buskirk would 1\ke
•New Homes
rl.llhl to rejact •ny •nd au
to thank his friends,
YOUR MESSAGE
bide, • nd the oubmiHing of
=
•Garagea
any bid ah•ll lmpoee no
co-workers, and
CAN BE SEEN HERE
•Complete
llllbtltty or obligation upon
neighbors for all
-=
FOR A TOTAL c)f:: ·
Board.
- theAllHidanvelopea
Remodeling
muat be
their visits, prayers,
$7.00 PER DAY.
CLEARLY ·
MA A K I! D
flowers, and food
Stop &amp; qoinpare
~llfllo the type of bid.
·
Cindy J.lll1o"""' 1111,
during his illness and
FREE ESTIMATES
~
;i i j i i j j j i ii i iii i i i iiI iii ii i l i i i i iiii iii i i i i i i i i iiii i i i i ii i iii l
.
n..urer
death.
985-4473
Malga L~=:!
A special .thanks to
7/UiiM
·P.O.Box272
Hospice
nurses
PorMroy, OH 487I9.PH
Marge Skidmore and
(614) 1192-5650
(6) •9, 25, (7) t, 1 4tc
Ann Forbes. Also his
caregivers Cindy
GENERAL
Mayle, Sue Simpson,
CONIUCTORS
Ada Rowe, and to
'
.
Siding • Vinyl
Paul Stinson for his
Aluminum • RoQflng
many visits and
New•Repalr
'•
funeral service.
Guttera &amp;
' To offer story suggestions,'
The love and conDownspouts
report late·b~ing news and
cern you all showed
Free Estimates
offer news tiPs
will never be forgot992-3607
5121/Ve 1 mo.
ten.
·

-----

·

Moat

Public NoUoe

7

1.,

Rooll

·- ----

---

6
9
FLOOR TILE ~~
. 1:::

D1c1t1

1·800·291·5609

7

DO IT YOURSELF . Reg.

Sklng

. 614-992-4025

---....
....------..=
..----·-·

.

,,.

B. D. Constl'ldion

:J
llllllllll t llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll L:
-····
... . .
. .

EXPIRES 7·2·96

liluet be 18 ,....
TOUCII-T- Reqund
...,.., (811) 845 Bt34

/ CaU

n,. Offer

7

Spiritual advisers :are relatively
new happening in White· House.By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Aasoclated Presa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
!he story about his wife's reliance on
an astrologer surfaced in ·1988, President Reagan felt compelled to say ·
that none of his policies or decisions
had ever been influenced by astrology.
The Reagan White · House was
especially skittish about the repons at
the time beca·use Nancy Reagan's
influence over her husband .was an '
accepted Jact. If he~ decisions were
guided by the stars, it was fel~ so was
his . .
President Clinton's staff can
expeet similar q!'C'stions on .the heels
of a new book lhat repons Hillary
Rodham Clinton consulted a psychic:
researcher who prompted her to hold

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

614-949-3308
Cleaning
Alum &amp; Vinyl siding
Commercial &amp;
residential
Decks - Sidewalks
Experience References

....... Minute

Aild-ons

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
•Insulated

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

'

COUPON

lnstallad

quota!

•··· 91 --~iiJ,,StrHtr··Middl•,...• .
.
992.·6250
.

_c_o_nt_ln_ue_d_fro_
· m_pa_ge_&amp;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____;,_

from England and Japan, the book is
housed in a custom-designed paper
case made of a beautiful black'textured paper. Only 125 copies were
printed and they sell for $95.
"There's between $30 to $40 j\ISt
in the'!llaterials for !he books and the
price doesn't reflect the quality of
lhe book," Balkwill says.
Programs similar to the Black
Rock Press can ·be found across the
coun!ry. The University of Alabama,
Mills College and Arizona S)ate
lJniversity an have courses on the
bOOk arts.
Balkwill says the books are being
~sed not just to convey information,
but also as an aesthetic idea. Blesse
feels the informaticm they haTe
could add to the interdisciplinary
education.

.9Lcquisitions
. :Jine Jtt-we{ry

I
I
I

19500

·call tOday with your
·window 'lzea for a fretr

COUPON

I

!
'

Lim~

4

r---------------

i

ROWE
POWERWASH
SERVICE ·

REPLACEMENT for Gtabty Work
Bllhl
Remodeling
WINDOWS
Wlnclowl Kitchens

,.,l)_
:· lflt·¢
.
1
a •
.

99

i

Ext.1277

FrH Estimates

.

Buy ·Any ~Inch Regular sub
and Rece1ve Second
Inch ,
Regular Sub For

I

BuaiMSa ·
Fllll'llly Matters
Allow .Your
Peraonal Paychlc to
AulstYou
1-1100 8118 8600 .

I

BEN

(FREE ESnMAT!S) •
V.C. YOUNG HI

s.tvlng S.E. Ohio &amp; Wilt VIrginia
Toll F,_1-81J0.872-51117
4 48 1418

,Love

387..o266 - 1 80CU50·3359

I
I

==~~"Rooolnnl

28M3 BASHAM RD.
Recine, Olllo 41771

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
, ,. ,.,. ....me. to IMI:k It up

Ncad Direction?

Owner: Ronnie Jones

L-------------------------------------------~
-----------------------------,
COUPON

•

1114781

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding '
. 20 Years E1periente • lns111ed

'

•

I'IIIIUl L ID
tt'l4) Ill . . .

...,1 ...

I

·ll•rtor • Exterior
Milling
Allo COIGr"'ICINIIala WGrll

...........

JONES' TREE SERVICE

'

·. 106 N 2nd Ave.

-~··

.

Ito Gill • f fhloM

••~•

liS II
Alii Ill

61 ........110
•

YOIIG'S

CAIHMIEit SElMa • •

•Ad till lit•

.... ·-

8154422
CIWIM,Ohlo

)ngels Fur-niture &amp; Jewelry

50:% off

...............
.....a. ....
.. ,...

SERVICE

... 2112

UCIII HYDUUUC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

174

..... HolM.

war••MIIN 1

-------------------------------------------COUPON
"SAVE~'

c.. ....•-

..1.111 ...........

.

J . E. NOO! ,_ OWHEA

COIIIM1'IOII

WIUIJ. UiaJ•
FREI !8111W'ft

DUMP TRUCK

•wge Gatti&lt; Bretd

985 ·4300

..,.,s

Ulll'$ '
Plllltllll

TIUCIIII

--------,.---.:..-·--·-.1

COUPON

A

LLHOUOI

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

'•

~:;:::-~&amp;~V~Ic~ln;HY;_,._..
II

ALL Yard Sale s Must Be Paid In; ·
Advance, DE.ADliNE : 2:00 p.m.&lt;
the day befor• the ad 11 Ia run ·

Sundar

odldon • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
' Uondly edition • 10:00 a .m. Sal: ...

.::;uldlr~-:--:::----- l o

:;

'
1

Fir11 Time Sa5e: Miltrnity, G irta~I
N8· 4, M1n1. Ladill , Sat june ,
21th, lit Ill Kyeer Raact 1st'
HooM Ott Right Pall R. V.H.S. o

A.M.•?

;

�REA Crottword Puzale

•

'

·-......

t~~~CMtMt

7 M111Vw1 -

•
,.

F'Otnel'oy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

;:

CDL Uctnlt driwtr with ..nktr

--~ 2)'HII-ilncl
roqulrM, lor ColoHnllua • - coW

014·11112·3220.

:.Ctt Y•rd Sales Uust S. Paid In

Nlldod: IOWboll pliol, lllld)'
""rk, good PII'. coli I •4 I 2-t43·

, day beklre the ad 11 10 run, Sun·
•day odifion. I :00pm Frldl)', Mon·
' day edition 10:00&amp;m. Satul&lt;lly.

1GI ...

~dvanc:e. Deadline:

1:oopm tht

Oarage Salt· June 27, 21, Five
, Points·WipP't Road, wood c:raUs
• ( ITlOft'

reirYshne.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
latan 112 mile of1 Rt 33 on Tom.
blinson Run. Thur- Fri June 2J &amp;

28. Q:OOom ~ ?.

BO

Public Sllle
and Auct!Qn

R1c:k Pearson Auction Companr.

lull tim e auclionetr, c:ompleta
au ction
serv1c:e.
Lil::•nsed
t66,0nio &amp; Well Virginia, 304·

773·5785 Or 30oi·1J'3.54-47.

90

Wanted to Buy

Cl ean late Model Can Of
Trucks, 1990 .Modala Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1800 East·
ern Averll8, Gallipo~l.

Needing A Babfsitter In VDur

in Tit. Goillpolla ArM ()n~
l'llri·Tmo O.,a C.l 11o1arao B P.M.
l 7 ~M.
G14-448-1012.

OIJI!.

01110'1 OPEH
Looking For Financial Freedpm1
We Art Recru iting Uatlvated
Pro-Active People Wi!h leadlf·
thlp Ou.lilies. Hlth level Poll·
t1ons Available NOW I · · Us In
The Adventure Of A '
Gts:
Plld To Ha•e FUN
!he
Industry. It Your Serious
E'njoyino lifo To Irs Fulles~

llakJIII

.

1-IOO-t48-5734 Ext9315.
Non· Smoking Part-Time Uv•ln
Nanny Nlldod For 3 Vear Old &amp;

2 Month Old Good Pay For Ex ·

Non ·Workinq Wasnera, Oryeta,
Stoves, Relr1gera1ors, Freeterl,
Air Conditioners , Color T.V.'s,
YCR's, Also Junk Cars, 814·2561238.
Pay1ng Top Oatlar For Junk Cars.
Trucks, &amp; Running Vehicles To
Dave. 614-448-9575..
Top dollar - antiques, furniture,
glass, china, clocks, gold, silver
coins, watches, estates. Osb~
Martin, 614·992·7"1 .

AI 1'011- --.gin
tNI:i4W ~· iiiUbillettO

- .-

... F -I Fair HcMJIIrlg Ad
ol 1968 ..ntch mailal Uogll
to •any prollrela,

-on,_, _,, rlllglon,
....~1
origin,
or 1ny
in......,.,
to
mokl any aud1 pnll.....,.,
llmllllion or dfoetlmlnlllon.·
11111 .._
will not
kilowtlngly .....,.
a~ tor rallltatt
wlllchlo In Ylolallon of !he Ia...
our reodol1 orelltroby
tnrorn.d hi aK Jwellivs
IC1veftiled In thfs neW'SP19"r
are available on an equal
oppotlunlly l&gt;l;als.

perienc•d Parson, References

ReqUrecf, 814-:!Se-1559.
P01tal Jabs 3 Posi lians Avail ·
able, No Elperlence Necenary,
For lnlormation, Call 1 -818· 7641 .
9016 Ext 7102.
The Gallia -Meigs Commun l t~

Ac:tion Agency Ia Seeking A

Housing Rehabilitation Specialist
To. Fill A Position With The Gallia
J &amp; 0 '1 Auto Parts. Buying aal- . County CHIP Program. Tne Canvage vehic:lea. Selling parts. 304- didate Should Have Four (4)

773-5033.

loll lor r. .: lllkJn; oppliu·
Ilona.
llnl
Park. Counlry
Gallipolis
Fen,
WV.30•·
815-5421 .

Vaara .Experience In Housing
Conarrucrlon, Preferably Housing

Rehabilita~on Wilh HUD Or O!htr
Government Funded Programs;
Supervisory Exl)e(ience In Hous·

ing Trades And S.nsit1ve· To The
Needs Of Low ·Income Families.
Salar~ Is Based On The Current
Salary Schedule. Send Resume
To : TOM PASOUA~E . Galha .
Meigs CAA , 8010 North SR 7,
Sox 272, Cheahire, OH 45620 No
Later Than June 28. 1998. For
Furtl'ltr Information Cali 614·3e7·

7341 Or 814·992-6e29. The Gal·
lla · Meigs CAA Ia An Equal Op·

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1 112 story, 4 br., lr., dr., fr., Ms•
ment &amp; sUn porcn. S3S,OOO, call
614·992·4480.

2 112 badiOOtii home wi1J&amp;th, 'Milk
ikl' town &amp; schoOl, good condition,
remodeling In progress, new ruqs
to sull burer, 85% linanc:e ava1l·

able lo qualified buyer. Property

4jm.

2· 3 bedrooms, brick, DR, new
windows, carpet, c:ompleta new
kitchen and bath, oarage, full
boa~

814·992-63119.

213 Bedroom, good condition,
CiOH ID haspiml &amp; ICt'looiS In Pt.
Pteasant 147,000. Call 3041·67S.
86117.

Wanted To Buy : Auto's &amp; Trucks
"ny Condltion, 01&lt;4·388·8082, Or
614· 446·PART.

180 wanted To Do

Conage , newlv remo&lt;Jeled, w1out
building &amp; privacy renee, 1 floor

Babrsit 1X My Home, Monday •
FridaJ. Bidwell Area . $10 Da~.
Wend1, 814 -388 -9134 After S:30
P.M . Mondor -Fridar Anytime

Jefferson Ave., 135,000. 304·675·
7&lt;62.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Au10s Wllh
Or Wlthoul Motors. Call Larry

lively. 814-388-11303.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Weekenda

3eO

RNI Eslllte
Wanted

3 BR., 2 balh rarich. 2 car

-01.

Spting Valley area, close Holzer
Hospital. 61 ..... •46·79•0.

plart, good

tor

Mapla•AYI.,

elderly or rental,

IPICIOUI Tri · IIVII

ofleri':'Q 3-4bedrooms, 2 112balhl,
OR, FR. fanctd in yard, 1car garage. Watson Realty. 304 ·875·

3433.

Cle1n, r•apotlaitM•, childleu
COIIplo-~-.,,_

--

Good rolor..,..a, wllo ........,..
by YMH, • lllingiO do modor111
ropalro, e 14-tt2-t030, plo111

RENTA LS

410 HoLisas tor Rent
2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Trailer N:.. In ~lipolia, e 14·.«&amp;-

8849 For lnbrmalion.
2 llodrooma A¥Oi abie I II 01 July.
Laroe Vard ,

uao/Mo., et•-••s·

2515.
3 Bedroom ·&amp; lull buemenl, c:en'tral eir I no pets. _.oomo. &amp; de·
posit . 2.,8 B Monroe A•e Pl.

Pleasanr wv. Can lO.o1·875· t7.ol3.
References.
3 Bedroom House In Kanauga,
Fenced Yard, Carport, S325JMo.,

$300 Deposil, No Pels, 814-446·
12079·5,
FOR RENT OR SALE: 3 Bldruam,
2 bath, family room. pool , c:entral
ai r. S550mo. 304· 675 -3030 or
30H75-3431.

meroy, no PI" 614-992-5658.

Unfurnisnad 2 bedroom house,
nice &amp; clean, no inSide pets, de·
potil requ1red, 614·992·3J90.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

c......

P.astor&amp;lle

,*

Two and three bedroom mobile
homes, startmg 11 S240 ·13DO,
sewer, water and trash mcluded.
81&lt;4-992·2167.

440

Apanments
for Rent

614·318-1ot2S.

EEKA:MEEK •

1g95 Poll ria Jt1 Slrl SLT 7$0 3
Sa11or llkt Now, $5,800 OBb,
814-25U743.

a

K 10 4 3
9KJI0652

• 52 .

750 Boats&amp; Motors
for 5ale

aAJ
• A 74
t K 9 5
a .A K Q B 3

..
~

.

I I'

..

-

' •

C.,

TH&amp;RAPIUTIC
BIANBAaS?
I DON'T

COME SEE HOW
RILAXINa
THEY ARE!!

BELIEVE

In Lewis Carroll's "Through the
Looking Glass," Alice protests, "One
can~ believe impossible things."
"I daresay you haven't had much
practice," the Queen replied. "When I
was your age, I always did it for a half·
an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I've
believed as mahy as six impossible
things before .breakfast."
There are some brid~e deals where
it is "impossible" to flud the winning
play or, more often, defense. This is
one of them, which occurred in a
match in New York City. ·
South opened with a strong, artificial
and forcing two clubs. With an excel·
leflt five-card suit, he judged his hand
too ~trong fpr two no-trump, showing
20 to 21 high-card points in the partnership methods. However, he wasn't
feeling so happy when West bid two
hearts and East continued with three
diamonds. What should South do now?
After some .thought, he shut his eyes
ilild bid three no-trump. He half ex. peeled East to continue to four hearts,
which South would have doubled with out optimism . But three no-trump was
passed out.
·
West led his singleton diamond, East
putting In the 10. After winning with the
king, &amp;luth led a low heart toward dummy's queen. West won with the king,
but, as he didn't have another diamond
to lead, South Immediately claimed
nine tricks: one spade, two hearts, one
diamond and five-clubs. Whew!
How can three no'trump be beaten?
East must win the firsJ trick with the dia..
mond ace and switcll to a spade. This sets
up five tricks for the def~nae: three
species, ·one heart and olte..diamood. But
who WOlUkl ever lind that piB,y at the table?

WEMA'&lt;~AVE

TO TAKE
H05TA6ES..

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

8oo11 By Radwlng. Cnippewa,
Tony Lama. Guaranteed loweal

Flobbi• For Sail. 814-250-1318.
~KC BalltU Hound Male 1 112
Years Okf, Female 2 Yeara
:'.:.:100::..:Balh::.::'.:.:'.:.";.:·25&amp;-:::.:::•711;;,::;5.-:--:--l
Schnauzer puppies, At&lt;.C, ult
pepper, shots I wormed, cham·
pionbloodlint, 614-te7·S.OO..
Thla Week's Special : Poodlea,

Rt. 7 Beside Giovanni•a Pizza,

ProcloMIIe, e14·8118-837.1.

Concrete &amp; Plasttc Septic Tank1,

300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron
Evana Enterp,lses, Jackson, OH
1-800-537-9528.
Couch &amp;' loveseat,

2&lt;69 . .

$20, 8t4·1Me·

Electric Rano• S35, 32• Wood
Storm Door ·$25. Ouetn-Annt
Collet Table $35, Brown/Gold

Counlry Wing Back Solo $40. C.ll
30ol·675-6887 ahor 4:30pm.
Electr~c:

Sc:ooters
And
Whealchaira, New IUstd, Van 1

Car Lifllnllallld, Sllirglldoo, Uh
Chain, Call For Broc:hure, 114·
448· 7263.
Fendor'a 10,000 BTU AC 1200;
25,000 BTU Whirlpool At. 1400,
Uatd t 'lear, 814-4411·2311 .
Hell five mn air conditioner, uud
one summer, asking 1500, ce1•~,

742-2187.

JET
AERATION MOI'ORS
Flapaired, Now &amp; RebuMI In Soock.
c.n Ron EYint, 1·1100-537-9528~

Unit IOreuer lncfudtd S450

080, 81,..411-1825.
Large ChiM ClbiML gOOd cond.
30ol·875-tlltll.
.
lawn !rector, MTD Lawnfllte, 1 1
HP, 38·· c:ut, 5 speed, electric
stan, good condition, $375, 814·

949-2249.
Lilllt Tyke riding loy, btl&gt;)' bid
car seat, •troller. high· c:hair,

Ming, pia)'•pon, 304-eJ'5-o454e.

New Gat Furnac:ft, New Gatvanized Duel Work, Now Hood Fins,·
814-379-2720 AFTER 8 P.M.
Ouaen Size Orthopedic Maar811
511 And Frame. Nt¥0f Ulld Slill
In Plalllc Coat SIOO. Soli S250,
814-775-2300.

Cntyller LeBaron Con. Exc.
Cone!. S.l. Onlr Mlch Owned Firm
1993

$12,000.00 61..,441~586.
11it93 Rtd ford Mullang, LX ,
Loaded, 50.000 Miles, 19,000 .
614.flt2·5486.
1884 Dodge Shadow ES, Au ·
tomatic, Air, 23,000 Miles, 61-t ·

Plloco. 814-3afi-G429.

319·93&amp;&lt;, 614-245-11258.

570

1194 Pontiac Grand Am Sport
Coupe, excellenl condition,
$9500, 614-1149:2881 .

Mualcll
Instruments

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST
'

.

BUdget Tranamisslof1s, Used JR.,:.

buill, All Types, Accessible T•
Ovtr 10,0;00 Transmission, AlsQ

O¥Orlual Kill, 114-245-5677

TON\GtiT'~

'

TOP I(~

Ntw Gil tanks, one ton truck
whtela, radia10rS. floor mats. ere •
D l R Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304-372;
3933 Qt 1·100·273-11329.
I
Wanted : radiator lo' ' 7$ For~
Mustang II, V· 8 automatic, 30~
....... Clll6 t4-241-2961 .

.

•

.

Campers &amp;
~
Motor Homes · ~

790

..

1872 Co~c~~~~. ··2~:: -~;;;-coni
Ultd Baldwin Jtlafta, very good
c:ondilkln, ••ceflent sound $500.

--:---·---I

::;304;:::-t::75-:;:25::7:.;1~
.

Fruits &amp;

580

Vegetables

Auto Loans. Dealer wil arrange fl.
nancing _evan

if rou have been

turne*own elsewhere. Upton
Equipmenl Used Cars. 304-458·
1069.
Drag Flaca cars: 1959 Anglia Mi·

Cabbage· rou cui, 30• head,
JoM Hil Farm. lelat't Falla, Ollio,

nus Engine; 1979 Monza Round
Tube ot link Cllasa1s; HHO NOva

B14-247·3042orBI4-2f1-l!11•2.

Bick Half Car All New; 196Q • 396
E"fiine, 814·642·2031 .

720 ll'ucks tor sale

F- ARM SUP PLI ES
&amp; LIVI::STOC K

,

'84 Nissan t&lt;lng Cab. 4~~:( runs
good, $1000; '81 Toyola Corolla,
runt greet, SCOO: 814·992-29111.

610 Farm Equipment
Gravely tractor l modal walk btnind wlro•ry plow &amp; tiller $450.

Tru- bod. 304-87&amp;-5713.
Hay -

25&amp;--6803.

273 N"" Holllllil, •14·
Y,

lnte,netlonal Farmail Cub

S.uy ·

Mowat' Wheel Weighra. Hydrau·
llco $1,750. 304-e75-106t.

Spring Ct.•••••• on Ho,.llto &amp;
Orten Machine rtimmers. Sidtts
Equipmon!Co. 304-87&amp;-7421 .

620 Wanted to Bu~
GRADE LOG WANTED: Dtll¥·

- - - - - - - - - - I trod or wil .plclo•UP Conllet Horry
King Size Solid Olk Wllttbtd
With Full Size Wall Unit H1l
Ltg~IS &amp; Mirrora. A Mll&lt;hlng TV

I 1192 Chevy Cornaro AS 251h An·
nivtnary, Red JBiack Strip&amp;s,
Fully Loaded, Asking $12,000 ,
614-2.5-5912.

Huskia1, German Snepherds,
Chows, 'Pit Bull Airedale, Puppr'

Pricoa AI Shoe Calo; Gllipalil.

So• Springs &amp; Mattrau Sat New,
Not Used, 10 Year Warranly,
S195; living Room Suites From
$275: Bunk Bed S210 Complete;

--~ -

1
··,_
20 1 =....
22 o.c. tl alld1y

DOWN

...........

25Frullf

•

1 Cllrut fruH

a OlciTV-,
.:._ Girl

21-

F21 Hl!lr llnl

3 Fumbler'o

••c~ame~~on

31R-Iign
12-.)
33 ...11-po!loh

·~

5 - - Luqo

iMIK&gt;Vei

&amp;C..Iel'f..

I

10 Shw port
12 Dl-go

71M1118!•
I Unliaually

35 Gn•taiM
311E-gNtniiM
37 - de plut!IJI

• 11510acar

CllrgO

1? Fa11 aircraft

movie

31 Cry of 111-lr

. By Phillip Alder

Antique Bo~tla Show~ June 21,
9am-3pm. S1.00 ldml11lon. 4th
and Main, Pt. 1'11111111~ 814-1112·
5088, 304-e75-4195.

Blue Ridga Spa with cover, ntd·
wood lrarrKtt ataps, a jeta, like
now, 11111 e. Paid $4000, Oclab., 1895, was alkfng 12100, now
12200, 814·992·4044.

~-'

11
13 Did WI'OII8
14 0 1 .. Long-

The impos$ible takes· m-+-+-ta moment longer

IT!!

Antiques

Conditionora One 8,000 BTU;
B,ooei BTU, 814-25&amp;-11131.

0

Opening \ead: • 6

YOU CALL THAT··
RELAXIN•?

PEANUTS

20,000 BTU Sean window air

41&amp;.-.lllnl
.. Lll'iay"

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Soutll
Soulh West North East
3t
2•
2•
Pass
3 NT · Pass Pass
Pass

a •'

:BARNEY

CounJry Fumirure. 304-875-e820.
Rt 2 N, Smiles, Pt Pttaaant. WV.
1-::Tu-::ea-::·-::Sa-r_N~,-::Sun,-1-1-5,;_.- - GOOO USED APPLIANCES
W11here, dr.,erl, ,efrlgerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appllanc•a. 7e
VIne StrHt. Can 8Ua448 .. 7311,
1.80().* 3•01.
Rtfrlgoro!or, good cond. 1125.
BaiQICirptl 13&gt;&lt;27 t75. 304-t75811711.

cond-. t150. :JOoo.e75-345e.

aQ87ti
• 9 3
tAQ10874
aJ

Soulll

Carpeta.A1N. Gt4-.we.7....,..

11 HP 38• Cut llwn Chill S475;
12 HP 38. Cui Wizard SSOO, 814441·0798.

East

Wesl

Big Savino• On Carpet a Vinyl in
Slack, $8.00 Yd l Up. Mallollon

530

Ill-25-M

• • 52
-&lt;f Q I
• J 3 %
aat764

• 8

Applianc:ea : ·
Rtc:ond itioned .
Washers, Or'flrl, Rangts, Atlri-gratora, 90 Day Guaranttel
Fr enc:h Cilr May tag, 81.4-4487795.

6:00 p.m. 814-11112·2528.

Trailer for ren1 in Gallipolis area.
614·446-8849.

Nortlo

1119«1 Hondtl 300 EX S3,100, 614·
3811-8237, 61 ..- g4 Kawouk l 500 Nln)l. Muzz~
txhaull, lank bra, $3200 OBO,
61H•2·2125.

2511·12311.

2 Bedroom Trailer, 8 t.tilei Raul&amp;

2 Bedroom Unfurnished, Mobile
Home, No Pets, $225/Mo., S135
Deposit, 614-446-381 ~·

-304-e75-3441.

Oodoe K Clr. $700 1M' 080.
3Qoo.e7&amp;-lt3o.
.

HoulthOkl
Goods

Buy or aeU. Riverine Anclquas,
1124 E. Main Street, on At 124,
Pomero,.. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 1r&gt; e:oo p.m.. Sundly 1:00.,

8251 .

.,...lhlnll'•

17111 ill~lnlllollll

1GG4 - h o 350
Exctlllnl Condl!lon , $2 ,800 OBO,
Melli Raofint I Sldl"' Ga-ized, Cllltu...,., _. ........, AJ. tt85 Ciere • Door. 4 Cyli nd•r.
Ti~ oatar s1.000 L-A
- - ....... 114-M-5111S
WMngr, S14·3a-1738.

14•70 3 Badroom1, All Electric
For Rent Ot Sale, 6141·388-93!9.
218, $2t01Mo • Deposit, Reier·
ances, 614·446·8112, 614·256·

~:::..:::

I , ..W,

• r::I

14
15 .........
11

4-

19111-750 -

seo
510

12 Llngllle

Handa _
300_
•-wt

Serioul buyer has cnh lor mnd,
~nr condilion , 30 acres or more. · Air Conclitionets, Washer, Dryer,
1·IJ00-24START, ltl't'e me11age Rt!tjg*'IIOt, FtHZif, Stove, Mi·
brCiwrlol
croWIVI, Calor T.V., VCR. SU ·

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom neuse in PD·

creased Energy S1 . A Day 814 ·

446·12311.

_ . , . ..-.,6,.·11i2-111n.

2·3 bedroom 11ouse. SO• tOO lor,
loc:ated 1n Syracuse, appliances
mcluded, call 614·992·5767 after

Wanted To ·Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Call: 614·448·0175

lolt Weight, Feel Better, In-

Ru-

Nice 2 bed·room, basement, ga.
ragft , nic:e yarcf, references, de·
posit, no pets. 30.,..675·5162.

por..,.l'f Employer.

All Natural Fat Lou Product.

~

tland, srorage building , Mptic

oy, O.

loc:attd at 131 Butternut, Pomer·

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc:.
M.T.S. Coin Snop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipob, 614-446-2842.

170 Miscellaneous

Twa ICfls on SA 1:2•

11o-e~

__.,

-·-,...

•or-

..

Goldablrry!Piul Marcar S8wrnill,
Inc. 2BOe US Rl35 Soutll tldo
Wv, 25187. Phone 30ol-t75-75118
or~75-7812.

630

Livestock

2 Hellinger Geldings BrOke To
Drive &amp; Ride, Years Old, 111&lt;4·

245-IIZI2.

e

Simmenrat ·Cowl, Calves; Bulls,

814·245-5595.

640

.

Hay &amp; Grain

ALFALFA HAY· S1orege doll¥try
available· Morgan's Farm Rt 35,
~ny.

'89 f · 250, autorratic, sliding wind~
ow in bac:k, 300 6 c:yl .. e~~:c:etlenc
c:ondition, greal work lruck, first
1D77 Ford F·100 302, Automatic,

1g16 GMC good condition. 304·
e75-5182.
1ge7 Ford ·f250 314 Ton, 351
Wlndtor 2 whHI Drive, 814-44112845 or :JOoo.el'&amp;-2385
lt90 Ford XL larlol, 53,000
Miles, Slllndord, 5 Spold, Excol·
ltni .Condllionl814-24&amp;-562a
1890 Nisun 414, tool box, bad
Nnar, lwnld windows, $1,200 lltr·
eo in ILS4,500. 304-t?S. 7290.

710 Autos for sale

112ft.

~amper.

sell

1874 C~•au Traveter camper,;.
new ale, n• awning, sleeps 5·67
rull blith, IN'erylhing works, good'.
condlllan, asking $3500, e 14·965-;
•1041.

,

H"'VE

I

FUIII

TOD,._V!

HEY, FIIANC.t5!

N'f~

HAHA HA
HAlt ttAtt t\Ait t\A
t\~ HA t\A AA HA

'

Savlnr• You'~ flrtd In the
. CI01sJ(Jed Stctkin.
'
.

'

General

Home

y

F V

RFAAFYB

MLOCA

...

MLZ

UCRV

C H

TZYW

MLZ

H F M.'

NYHFOZ .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~The coldesl w1nter I ever spent was a summer in San
Francisco • - (Giant man~ger} Charhe Dressen
~:

•

TIIAT DliLT
PUULII

S©~c«llA-~t.~s·

::::

'•

- - - - - - ..- ldltoolloy CLAY I. POLLAN...,;;;__ _ _~

O four
Reorrpnge . letters of
tcrombled ·words
low to torm four

worda.

0 P Y ME l

'-C:--L-H-N'"'u--Is .,,"...:,'. .
Il I I
e
I

t~o c~ucklo

r I' r IS r

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS · !'
IN THESE SQUARES
I.
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I

I

fT

IIIII III

..
.

'

"

.

Frugal- Whiff · Noble- Onward- FOLLOWING

"You musl be careful which person you choose as
leader," Granny told n;te. · rhe true value of a leader is
determined by who is FOLLOWING them."

ITUESDAY

Appllancft Parts And Service: All
Name Brands OYtr 25 Years E• J&gt;
perltnce All Work Guaranteed l
French City Martag, &amp;14·U6:
C&amp;C

TYTZO

PY!(NZN

MlYM
MC

OZYUZO

PC 'AKBV

NKPPZNNHKA

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

llbflahod 1975. Call (el4) ,448·
0170 Or 1·800·287·0578.-Rogero

.

CYZ ,

,C)

lDCat references furnished. El·

71115.

F N

8 C N M

~

U,ncondltlonal lifetime guaran1ee.

_,_ling

'~LZ

8

HEY, N"TE .

.

·

My nephew finally got married at the age of thirty six. He ·
. . . .
said he decided to get married
r-~-.:...---;,_, because he couldn't hold in his
l A ZT0 E
, ... • - .. any longer.

...

.BIG NATE

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

by Luis Campos

CNbtily Cipher cryptograme are c•ted from quotaiKJM by lllmOUs ~ . pelt al'ld pr&amp;Nn~
Eadl18tler 1n !he cipher stands lor anolhe r Todly't cJus· W lfqUall:t K

Comple1e
quoted
-.1..
-.L.-.J.L....L.
-.1..
_..
by
f1Uing
in
ihe
m•ssing
WOfdl
L.
You Clevelop from step No. 3 below.

'

810

CELEBRITY CIPHER

· ·

~--r~-,~-::6-rl-rl""· "''-rl-::7~

SERVICES

JUNE 251

.

Ma in.;

mobile home repair and more. For

1GG3 Chwy S·IO, 5 $pold, EX·
rondod Cab, V-B, 38,000 Mll11
St,OOO, Dara: 614·44t·U23,
N!A:B14-441¥7.

~

con-~

304-e7S.fl069.
1112 Chrwy 5-10 T.iooo 5 Speed
At.,35,000'Miln,B..·441-D421. '

.U~~ 11\101-\T C£T ~~
a:t~Ftr.£0
mroltt(,,

tatnad, new ttres, sleeps 6 ...
S1,200. 304-e7S.6072
:

tantnce· Painting, .yinyl sidinl).•
carptr'llrJ, doors , windows. batt'ls,;

~tltimalo ca:l Chel, er4·992·~1

.

..

~.

DRYWALL
Hang, finish, repair.
Cellfng• textured, plasler repair. '

CaR Tom 304-t7S..,86 . 20 Yllrt

-*"'"·

•

t

E.~l'l• Ho~e Malntenanc'e, vinyl :

Tobacco Plants Wanted, 814·

TR ANSPOR TATIO N

self (:9n·•
tained . Delachabi,e awning, de ~·
rnand pump, thower, range-lOp &amp;,
owen. furnac:e, and nat water tank:
Mull see to appreciate. Cali 614· '
440·31114.
'

1~72· Hi

~

M YOO tQI''ri-JANT lO !A'I' IT •
11-1 :() IAAAY I.KlRD5 TK~T TJ.\f.

1872 SG&amp;mper 1811. pull · benm~

1991 Ford Explorer 4•41 Eddie
Bauer, leather inlarior. U,250 .

304-1137·2018.

.46-1052.

~

.

c:a~. sleeps 6, lotally

$3400 080, 614-1149-231 I days.
6Ft Bod $500 080: 1983 Crown
Vic:torla 302, Runs E.xc:elltnt,
loaded , $800 080, e..... e.
4924, Dora: Or 614· U8·H36
Elltt'lings.

-·

THE BORN LOSER

tained, With power unit, •13 wltl\
auto., PB, PS, $4000 firm, et~~

742·2259.

'

. .,·

730 V.ns &amp; 4-WDI
197g vw """· 1950 080, 614·

11112-t412.

1989 DodQI Grond Cttl¥1n SE
Nlca $8,500, 014·U6·3237 Akar
5:00P.M.
1889 Ford 150 Conversion Y111n

Raiaod Roof, PS!PB, Dual Alr,
Dull Tanht. Till. Crulao, 4 Clplli1
Chllri/Sofa Bod. TV. ·Gooil
Cond. $85110.00. (GI41-3811--.

lidiOQ, roofing, ••terior and interi· '•
or ~!nling, power washing, room ~
ldd111ons. Free Eatima tes 614· t'

812·4232.

'

{

'

Ron's TV Service, specializing In ~~o
Zenith also servic1ng most other
brands . House cans. 1·800 · 797·

0015, wv 304·5.76·2398.

~=!:::::!::!!!::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~Ast ro ·Graph predictions for the vear
AS'fRO·ORAPH
ah~ad by mailing 52 and SASE•to Asfro·

..

Roofing I gutters c:orhplete home
rtmodeling dac:ks &amp; siding, 35
y1111 t)lptrltnc:e, B &amp; B Aoofing
and ~nst,uc:tion, 114 ·992-236"

.I

BEDE OSOL

Plumbing &amp;

·

•

19113 Plrmoulh Yora9tr, black
ChlrrJ wllh
Interior, 87k
milts, air, cruiae, new tfrts,
S10,0GD, 114.flfl2-37311:
·

ora,.

11195 Chryolor T""n And Country
Mini Van. Loalhlr Stoll, Loadad
Orly 22,000 Miln, $22,100, 814448-11330,
.
.

740

MotorcyciH

c,.-. vary

1g73 Honda 100 4
Good Condition, New Bantry,
SUO, B14· UB·3g.,, 814·251·

elllt.

And Serv ica. EPA
Commercial.

Electrical and
Relr~J~er8tlon
RSES CERTIFIED DEALER

o~
Wednesday, June26, 1996

LAWRENCE EIHf.RPRISES
Hell Pumpt, Ai' Candhfonlng 'If &lt;
Yau Don't C.Q Ua We Bo!h Loiol ·
frH E11lma1ta, HOO·ZGI-0098 • c

e1o1- ••e 6301. wv 0021145.

~n.

' 'LEO jJuly 23-Aug. 22) New Information
Jie~aining to an importanlmaner might
be revealed today . Use lhis news wisely
and do· npl manipulate it for emotional
..__ _ __,_ _,.; 'reasons.

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250,
Heating
72,000 Mllaa, U,OOO, Can Bt
SHn At: Gollpolia Dill)' Tribune,
825 Third Avonut, Calllpolla ' frHman'a Healing And Cooling •

Ohio.

&gt;

BERNICE ·

01'1..,.3141

820

\

Graph , c/o !his newspaper, P .O. Box
175B, Murray HWI Sfalion, New York, NY
1.0156. Make S:Ure lo state your zodiac

' ,,

ResldentlaiCH c:ommerclat wtrlng, ·.:
NW MrY1ct or r..,.,._ MI!Mtf~ Ll· • ' I
cenltd electrician. Ridenour ,
I WV000308, 30~ ·e75· . ~

Fla;::a~lda:::=n7:ti•'-I":O::-r~C::-o-m_rnor_c_la_I_W_I_r. : :
lng, """ SetYI&lt;t Qr Ropoirs . Li·
,
Ctnltd EI.Citlcian. Weltl't Eltc· o~.n
~- B14 · 446-tg5o, Gallipolis,

A rise In atorua:~~nd pcip!Jiarily Wilhln your
social circle will 'be poaalble during the
coming year. Your.pear group tnlghl stllrt
to take more notlc:e of you now. • .
CANCER jJUfll 21..July 22) Thla .will be
Ofll of lhoa• daya -when,buolness aqd
pleasure ,mgh~ no1 mil' .len. You lt!U&amp;t
chooee one or lhe othor. Do not try· to

juggle bolh sitnultaneoui!Y. cancer•. treat
vaullllff tb a birthday ~- _S ind fQ! VOU!

•

'

.-~ .,

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) ·something
you have hoped far might be realized
today . Do nol let self ·doubls make you
afiald 1o take posMive action.
LIBRA (Sipl. 23:.Gc1. 23) You can pursue a personal ambition today provided
you make this goal your primary obje&lt;:·

tiYe. 11'1 order to su9eeed, .you must be
totally dedicated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 221 RestriCtions
llrallraYG hemmed you in during lhe past
lew days coufq be eased today. · You
~ld I~ acilloo illtlltldiately.
SAGIJTAAIUS (Nov. :za.o.c. 211 Today,

YP!' . . eecrelly De. ad!nqwillpged lcir a

eta8.

laYOr you did lor someone
Frian&lt;ts
moy, no.1 be awaro ol eilhor eiluatlon, bul

you Will not care.

,-

CAIPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 Some·

one you like. but do not lrust compfetely ,
. might prove the exlent of h1s or her loyatty !oday b~ making an impressive gesture
on your behalf .
AQUARIUS jJan. 20·Fob. 11) You will
have a real ~ense of accomplishment
loday if you complete a difficult assign·
rrien1 you 've postponed . Olhers will also
recogl')ize your achievement.
PISCES jfob. 211-March 20) Your posi·
tive, oplimistic attitude will l)ave a des1r·
able elfeC1 on your associates loday .

your behavior will inspire them to behave
similarly.

.

.

.

Dreamers

ARIES (Mwch 21·Aprlf 11) This will be a
good day lo shop for essential, bul hard·
to-gel houli8hOid items . The bargains
you 've searched for can be found in
so1111 oUI-of·the-way """"·
TAURIJS jAprll 20·Miy ~0) Make ~n
effort to deal with Qlhers openly today, '..
even ff someone doesn'1 lrtaf you in a ·
similar lalhlon. You wltllool&lt; good, but he

or ohe wiN not.

:

.'.' '
.,'
... .
.' .
.'

·

GI!~Nt IM•r 21..111,..: 20) Conditions '
that lllect your Jin,nclel ~ wifl .lool&lt;
f)rO!)'IIaing t~y, provldl4! you mille your
--lhil-llr(ghl.
'•
.

.' ,.

'

'

�1'9 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tundlly, june 25, 1916

;Online addict gets ·mo~e than ~he . barga~ned for with chat room~
Ann .
Landers

distance teleJ!!Ione bills from real
hve conversanons were more than
$400.

I .,..,gcd to meet in pmon one
. ,, to. 4JII~
ofthe men I'd talked to in acomputT-.es S~ Md Ct~t ·
er chat room and wound up being
rapcd and nearly strangled to death.
After the assault. did I go to a friend,
a
pastor or a relative for comfon? I
:.BY ANN LANDERS
did
not. I went back on-line.
. Dear Ann Landers: Can you stand
Several months later, I anended a
. :One more testament to the addictive
)latw-e and destructive potential of statewide "convention" of on-line
acquaintances. When I saw face to
the Internet and chat rooms?
• I am a 45-year-old woman who face the son of people to woom I
• should have known bener but suc- was revealmg my ~eepest hurts and
:-cumbcd to the lure of electronic inti- mil mate feeh~gs, l1mmed1ately can• macy on-line. Not only did my celed the serv1ce an~ er,!lScd the promonthly on-line bills run in the -gram from my c~mputer.
I finally reahzed that about 60
neighborhood of $300, but the long-

.... s,....

•·

percc:nt of the ~n on-line were
married and looking for. a httle fun.
Apparently, a great ma~y women are
~desperate for att~n~on and affecu~ that they are wdhl)g to aband?n
thetr comm~n sense and morahty .
and en~age tn cybersex,. phone sex
and ulllmately the real thmg.
.
1 am ashamed of myself for betng
so naive as to believe that chat
rooms were a safe environment. I'm
also ~mbarrasse~ that I had such
poor_judgment. 1 m tn therapy now,
rega1mng my qmfidence and-work" m~ on reprunng the damage done by
th1s year4ong addiction .to cyberspace. •· ~lder But Wiser m Bakersfield, Cahf.
Dear Older But Wiser: There are

·t~o sides to every story and some·.
tames t~ or _four. The ne~t reader
had a tow!~ d1ffercnt ~xpenence on
the Internet. Keep rcadmg:
Dear Ann Landen: Anybody who
has read the letters in _your column
about . cyber-affairs and marriage$
break1ng up because of on-line
romances would conclude that the
Internet is an evil force that destroys
relationships. While these things do
happen, nobody hils mentio~ed the
huge benefits of th1s electromc phenomenon.
. .
I met my gtrlfnend on the Net.
·She is Canadian. I live in Illinois.
We have gotten together, face to
face, only once, but over the last few
months, we have gotten to know

cach olher well. We have fallen in
love.. We have four • meetings
planned and c~l CIICh other twice a ·
week. We e-mu! every niJibt.
I also have made many ftiends on
the Net. Most of us will never meet,
but we offer our support when one
of us is feeling blue and our_actolades when things are going great.
On our news group alone, many
friendships have developed. 1bcre
·have been fo~ marriages so far, and
several relat1onsh 1ps are now in
progress lf&gt;at will probably end up in
marriage, None. of us are hooked on
the Net, but we do check frequently
to see how our on-line pals are
doing.
I hope you will print my letter

and give some balance to the c;yber·
space picture. -- A Netizen from
Chicago
.
Dear Netizen: Thanlcs for the balance. We needed that.
Greetings, leaders: Here's another Burma Shave sign from !he '40s,
sent in from West Hanford, Conn. : '
Are your whi1kers when you
wake '
•
Tougher than a two-bit steak?
Try Bunna Shave.

advises. "Let the skin mature underneath. Eventually, the blister will
rupture. By breaking it, you Introduce bacteria into the are and drain
fluid out, creating a nice place for
bacteria to grow." While a burn is
healing, consider applying antibiotic
first-aid ointme~t to keep the site
from getting infected.
2. Nothing sweet about "sweet oil"
It may be a common home remedy, but the practice of dripping.
warm "sweet oil" into· a child 's ear
to relieve earache pain is no longer
advised.
It might feel good to the child,
but chance of infection is high
because the oil might be contaminated. And witll so ma~y chi ldrcn hav-

ing drainage tubes in their eardrums
these days, chances are high of irritating or bursting the eardrum, or
introducing infection into an already
. painful ear, doctors say. Hearing loss
could result. Additionally, examining ears is difficult " U the ears are
fi lled with glop," Baker says.
Instead, offer pain relievers and
see a doctor about a possible ear .
infection.
3. Kibosh on castor oil
Sometimes, children will go a
few days or more without having a
bowel movement, and that's OK as
long as they're not havi ng any terrible symptoms - stomach pain,
cramping, difficulty eating, vomiting.

Please, Baker says. don't give a
child caster oil as a laxative.
. "It is very, vecy cramping unnecessarily cramping," he says.
If you're worried about a child's
toileting schedule, talk 'to your
physician. Gentle stool softeners are
available. Or offer plenty of 'waier,
drinks, fruits, vegetables and highfiber foods to establish regularity.
4. Sugar water. Too messy
If a child needs .fluids because of
diarrhea, it's no longer necessary or
advised to mix a homemade remedy
of water, sugar and salt, the doctors
agree.
Prepackaged rehydrating fluids,
called Pedialyte or lnfalyte, arc now
available in cans at the drug store.

'

U.S.D.A Choice Boneless Beef

Chuck Roast
English Roast

'1.091b.
Chuck Steaks

Yellow

1.391b.

·~

'

ten.

Baker says the majority of
seizures are harmless and will fade
in a matter of minutes.

Domino

~

Sugar

Onions

c

3LB.

LB.

1

No mixing, messing, ·measuring or•
guesswork. And.no chance of contamination.
5. They won't swallow their tongues
Watchi ng someone in grips of a
seizure can be frightening. troubling·
and disconcerting. But don 'I try to ·
intervene by placing a spoon or
.wooden object in mouth of someone
in the midst of a seizure:
"People ·used to worry that the
person would · swallow their·
tongue," Baker says. "Well that
impossible to do."
And secondly, you might be bit-

WHILE SUPPLIES
LAST

NO RAINCHECKS

$1
2

'

$1''

5#

Umit 2 please

Empress Pieces &amp; Stems

Fish Steaks

Mushrooms

$1 ~·

4oz.cans

3 $1 ·

Mr. Bee

Potato Chips

c

R~. $1.49 Size

· Mr. Freeze'

Assorted Freezer Pops
·C

24 ct~

.

.Limit 4

Am
Singles
$ 89
16oz. ·

'

Coca Cola

KRAFT

Pick 4:
0 4 8-2
BuckeyeS:
1-17-18-21-24

Sport. on Page 4

21ts.

Vol. 47, NO. 43
2Secllona, 12 ....,._

298 SECOND STREET
POMER.OV, OHIO _
P.RICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 26, 10se ONLY
I

DHARAN, Saudi arabia (AP)Am~rican soldiers in full banle gear
shouted at onlookers today to keep
away from the military complex
where a huge truck bQmb killed at
least 19 Americans, wounded hundreds and tore the front off an eightstory building.
American offiCials said 270 people were injured, all American, but
Saudi officials said there were 386
people injured, 149 of them Saudis.
Saudi security · forces kept .the
area cordoned off this morning as
investigators and rescue teams aided
by five bulfdozers were moving
jagged chunlcs of concrete, broken
glass and other debris', searching for
possible survivors and clues.
A parked fuel truck blew up just

outside the U.S. military housing
complex Tuesday, leaving a 35-footdeep crater the size of a large pond.
The blast, the de3dliest terrorist
bombing ever against Ameri~ans in
the area, struck at the hean of the
United States' military presence in
the Persian Gulf.
President Clinton dispatched an
FBI team to investigate what is suspected to be the work of Muslim militants opposed to Western military
presence in the kingdom. Secretary of
State Warren Christopher interrupted
his schedule today to fly to Dhahran.
No group has clilimed responsibility for the bombing. Less than a
month ago, the Saudi_s beheaded four
Muslim militants convicted of setting
off a car bomb Nov. 13 at a U.S.-run

"I heard a deafening noise and could feel a lot of blood on my hands
military training facility in Riyadh.
then the windows shattered and the and 1 knew it couldn' I be sweat
Five Americans and cwo Indians
walls fell iit," said Staff Sgt. Tyler because it was too thick," he said
died.
Christie, 31, of Fon Walton Beach, from his bed at King Fahd Hospital
Underground extremists had
Fla., who was slightly injured.
where he was recovering frQIIl cuts
threatened to attack U.S. interests in
·
The
source
of
the
explosion
was
on the thigh, face and anns.
Saudi Arabia if the four were punbelieved to have been a fuel truck
Hundreds of people rushed out
ished.
parked outside a fence about 35 into the streets.
A U.S. airman in a security obseryards away and packed with 2 1/2
"We thought it was the end of the
vation tower had reported a suspitons of explosives. It left a crater 35 · world," said Walid, a 22-year-old
cious fuel truck stopped outside the
feet deep and 85 feet wide.
Saudi who was walking nearby at the
compound, about 35 yards from the
MISter Sgt. William Sine was time of the explosion. "Some were
·nearest building. When a Saudi offiwalking down a hallway toward the crying. Some just sat on the ground
cer approached, two men jumped out
elevator
when he was knocked to the and held their ears." He declined to
REI.. DING
and drove off in a white car, a senior
ground
by
the force or the blast.
gon Public Affairs
Monl"
give his full name.
.. Defense Depanment official said, ca Aloisio answered questions
"The lights went off ... and I realThe attack raised new concerns
speaking on condition of anonymity. Tuesday on the bombing In Sau· ized the whole side of the building
about
the politicai future of Saudi
Authorities tried to evacuate two di Arabia. (AP)
was falling,"· said Sine, 39, of War-· Arabia', long se,en as a bastion of st;tnearby apartment buildings, the offiren, Ohio. He said he quickly started bility in a volatile region: It is the
cial said. But the bomb went off a (3:30p.m. EDT), before people could to help care for the victims . .
world's largest oil exponer and the
couple of minutes later, at I 0:30 p.nl. get out
"There were some people dead: I United States' strongest Gulf ally.

Deliberately-set fire .,..--.i-The Storyteller--, Minimum·. ~age action
l·e vels hub of act~vity
cleared for July 8 vote
in rural ·c·ommuni.ty

WASHINGTON (AI'&lt;) - Legislation backed by Democrats to raise the
minimum wage is headed for the Senate floor early next month, ending one
struggle with majority Republicans but paving the way for anot_per.
"1bcre's a great expectation that we will pass a free-standing bill," said ·
Minority_Le.ader Tom Daschle, 0 -S.D., on Tuesday after he and Majority
Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss., had worked out a 'complicated agreement to take
the measure tci the floor on July 8.
.
But, Daschle said, Republican-drafted aqtendments could cause Democrats to tum against the final measure, signaling a resumption of political com-

ARABIA (AP)- An investigator said an arsonist set a fire that destroyed· ·
a. store that has been the hub of this tiny Lawrence County village' since before ·
the Civil War,
No injuries were reported in the fire early Tuesday at the Arabia Market, ,
a general store that dated to 1860.
.
An adjacent garage housing two vehicles and several iires was saved,
although the store itself was a total loss, said Doug Burcham, assistant chief
of the Aid Volunteer Fire Depanment.
Firefighters did not immediately place a dollar value on the loss.
"This is probably the biggest fire in the history of Arabia," Burcham said.
~:~:::~pie li~~ irt ~: SOU~hert) 2 hio CQ_IJII.11Unity, 16cated,9~ ~~~;:' .~. '&gt;...~'~\;-l:c~~;
The
was repOrted on Tuesday about 5:30a.m. and took'abiiuttWo hours
to •:ontrol. Volunteer firelighters from Lawrence, Windsor and Elizabeth town- ·
ships helped bring the fire under control. '
.'
Bob Lawless, an investigator with-the State Fire Marsbid's office, said
today thlt evi¥nce at the scene indicafed someone set the fire. He declined ,
to be more specific, but'said th~re were several flammable liquids stored nCjll'by, including gasdline and fuel oil.
·
··
Burcham said today that firefighters suspected arson from the beginning.
:Ed Ashworth, who has owned the store for 12 years, said lhe fire 1\Ppeared
to have ~taned on an outside comer of the building.
1oormer co-owner Blanche Spears still lives across the_road from the market.

·

·

" It's the oldest building in Arabia," she'said. "It's been built on and added
to, 'but the old orjginal building is right there:"
.
Her father-in:law, the late Everett Spears, bqught the market in 1936. He '
later passed it down to his son Russell, who opera,ed it with his wife for 20
yea1rs.
•
·
"For 50 yem,' every time we were up at night, I would look over at the
store," Mrs: Spears said. ' '!'was always afraid of fire."

bat.

I~~.

:::;200:=

Midcllepcll'l Cl1turch
Vacf!llon Bible school gather in small groups dally on the Middleport levee 10 hear the storytejler. In Blbllcel costuming seat·
ad in a boat, Pastor AI Hartson tells his lillie listeners libout
• Jesus, No Ordinary Man.' On Tuesday, hla stories related to
Jesus who fad the multitudes with two fish and.flve loaves, of
HIS •WIIklng on the watar, and of miracle hl!allngs ..(Senllnel photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
·
'

A !fouse-passed measure would raise the current$4.25.an. hour minimum
wage by 50 cents an hour on July I and another 40 cents on July 1, 1997.
Senate Republicans intend tQ propose a six-mon!h delay in each of _the
'incriase's:They also will propose an "opportunity wJige" that would permit
employers to pay only $4.25 an hour to workers in tlieir first six months on
the job. They also may seek an exemption for employees of many small businesses. officials said Tuesday.
. ·
The measure includes a series of small business tax bre~ks that Republi. Can say arc necessary to offset the damage caused by higher labor costs.
While many Republicans oppose the wage increase, Democrats, including President Clinton, say it is necessary because the minimum wage is at a
40-year.low in purchasing power.
Whatever the outc,ome, the agreement to vote early next month marked
the end of three months of maneuvering that often left the Senate in gridtoe)&lt; as De10ocrats sought a vote and Republicans maneuvered to deny it
It also marked Lou's first conccned attempt to leav.e his imprint on the
Senate since his election as majority leader earlier this month to replace Bob
Dole.
Lon told reporters that having the issue unresolved wliS "tangling up everythinll we're trying to do" in the remaining days ofthc congressional session.
'l)le minimum wage increase draws strong supp&lt;in in public opinion polls,
a~ many Republicans said lawmakers believed the party needed to get the
'issue behind it.

Rutland marshal requ~sts council
to acton kids playing in streets.
By TOM HUNTER
"I've seen coal trucks come to
Sentinel 'N ews Staff
,
dead stops to avoid striking ·7-yearA bad situation in Rutland could old children who ride their bikes out
be&lt;:ome tnigic, unless laws are passed in front of them on Main Street.. it's
to t&lt;eep children from playing on vii- a bad situation that needs a solution
. lage m10ets, members of Rutland Vii- before someone gets. hurt," said
!age Council heard during their reg- Gilkey.
ular meeting Tuesday night. ,
In other police matters, Gilkey .
"Council needs to develop an recommended that the village retain
ordinance to keep the children otT the another patrQiman to monitor the vii- .
stnoets. I'm afraid that if we don't do Iage during the e,venings. Upon
something, a child is going to get Gilkey's 'recommendaiion, council
killed," said Rutland Marshal Bill approved hiring Mark Proffitt as an
Gilkey, in response to heavy bicycle unpaid ' village patrolman, pending
and in-line skating traffic on the vii- bondipg and waiving of insurance.
lage streets.
Gilkey also expressed thanks to
Gilkey said that he can't do any- · council for the new village police
thing right now to keep children off cruiser, which was n;cently pur-·
th" streets, because of the lack of a chased by the vjllage. The cruiser, a
viHage ordinance covering bicycle . 1992 Ford Crown Victoria, was fortrnffic on, village streets.
merly used by Meigs County Juve-

.

NEW RUTLAND CRU~R- Rutllnd Pollet in now pabolllng

·. the vlllaa8 alrMIIIn lhls , _ cru!Mr, "..~~-

NCell%.

b, 1111
· VIllage. tha cruiMr, a 11112 Ford Crown VICtoria, wu 4'm«&lt;y
. uNCI by Melli• Cou~ Juvenile Offlcar Carl Hytall, accorcllnq 10

•
•

'

.

.

.

nile Officer Carl Hysell. .
The popular Halloween Haunted
House at the Rutlahd Civic Center
has seen its last visitors, with cooncit's unanimous decision to di.scontinuetheeventduetorising insurance
costs.
Insurance for the Civic Center was
$3,000 more on the premium if the
Haunted House was to be held,
according to Village Cle&lt;k/freasurer
Rosemary Snowden-Eskew.
"It's a shame because we had a
really good .thing going here in the
community with that ~vent. With the
increase in insurance, it's not finan cially feasible for the village to continue hosting the event," said council
member Danny Davis.
Council also discussed theupcoming renewal.ofa 2-milllevy that will ·
cover operations and general expenses in the village. The levy was incorrectly identified as the streetlamp
levy during .the June U co.lncil
meeting, which is a four-year levy
and not up for renewal until fall 1999,
The four-year operations levy will
appear as a replacement levy on the
November ballot for renewal of the
measure.
In other matters, ~ouncil:
• approved changing the past due
date for village water bills to the 15th
of the month.
·
• approved purchase of ii refrigeraror and air conditioner for the sewer plant, if the items are not donated
.to the village.,
• Davis discussed Fourth of July
activities in the village, noting thai
·the par~ will begin at 9:30 a.m.,
with lineup at 9 a.m. All activities
will talce place in the Rutland Fire·
mans Parle.
.
(Contlnuad on Plge 3)
'

.

•
•

A Gannett Co. N.WIIrat•

Saudl Arabian blast kills at least 19 Americans

: Vllligt Mlr.ha! Bll Olllaly.

•

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 26, 1996

c

'

Clear tonight, Iowa In
the 508. Thundly, aunny.
Hlgha rr.oally in the lOa.

•

Products.
Limit 4

•

Pick 3:
e-a.3

fire

Flavorite

5 LB. 101

Reds swamp
Phlllles In twin
bill at home ·

Scad questions to Ann Landers.
Cfe!lton Syndlate, 5777 W. Cen·
tui'y Blvd., Sulte·700, Los Aflleles,
Calif. 90045

:Separating myth from truth with personal health, first-aid tips
By SUE MacDONALD
clinical pediatrics at Children's HosThe Cincinnati Enquirer
pital Medical· Center, Cincinnati ,
Emergency room doctors some- and Dr. Shari Welch, emergency
times feel as if they ' ve sren it all .
medicine physician with Qualified
Beans and crayons stuck in kids ' Emergency Specialists Inc., Cincin· noses.
nati, provide the real truth behind
' Sunburns and poison-ivy ra•hes fairly deep embedded first-aid
so terrible they blister.
myths.
· Nasty earaches, busted teeth and 1. Hold the butter
drowning victims.
You don 't throw grease on a fire,
The goal of emergency treatment so don't slather butter or grease on a
is to get the patient well enough to bum or su nburn .
Whai ski n needs most when it's
go home or stable enough for anoth• er doctor to take over - a process been burned is to cool down and
·, that can be undennined easily if old release heat. So run cool water .over
. · wives' tales or first-aid myths are it. Apply ice or cool compresses. But
perpetuated before the patient gets please - no butter or oit
Likewise, don't bust a blister that
to the emergency room.
'
Dr. Raymond Baker, professor of fonr · as a ·result of a bum, Welch

Ohio Lottery

.

'

'

.

'

'

.

SUMMER PAVING :__ Work began lt)is week
on county paving projects. Meigs County
HighWay Department workers and the Shelly

Co., above, Sprl!ad asphalt on County Road 30
(Forest Run) near Minersville.

It's that" time of the year again: road
crews begin summer work in earnest
Summer county highway projects
began in earnest this week with
paving, slip repair and other undertakings:
.
Workers from th.e Ohio Bridge
Cotp. of Cambridge began work
Monday. on a slip qn Bashan Road,
aPJ&gt;roximately 2-112 mil~s north of
Racine.
.
Workers are shorina _up a secrion
of I'OIIdside there thai began slipping
'

" '

-

recently, according to County Engi-' · . Cost.of the combined paving proneer Roben Eason.
jects, funded by the Federal Emerln addition, county highway work- gency Management Agency after
ers and workers from thci Shelly Co. flooding in January, is $86,662. Work
of Thornville began paving Forest is expected to _take all .week. .
Run Road ,in Salisbury and, Sutton
Other pavmg projects wtlL be
townships Tuesday morning.
· completed ~ summer pro~~': . .
Plans call f~ paving Forest' Run
Me8;llwhile, the counly "ISSis~ng
Road to Pine Grove Road, and Pine town51!1ps w1th ~ust ~o~trol, ~yma
Grove Road between Forest Run tar on the ro•tdS to bm1t the amount
Road and State Route '124.
of dust raised on pvel township
road&amp;, Eaaon said. '

•

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