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Sunday, June 18, 1telt

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

L

--Businessmater.brief

--The House of the Week--------------------.---

WASHINGTON (AP) Microsoft Corp., beset by battles
witb government regula101'S, won a ·
legal victory when a federal
appeals court approved a settlement
over anticompetitive marketing
practices - and rebuked a federal
judge who emerged as a powerful
critic of

Country Home's Friendly Facade Wel~omes Guests

:{.:

The U.S. Court of Appeals foi
the District of Columbta Circuit:
said Friday !bat a lower court judg4f
should not have rejected an.
antitrust settlement between the
Justice Depanment and Microsoft,
!be largest personal computer liOft.;

O.hio Lottery

Reds
hike
lead

Pick 3:

981
Pick 4:

2324
Super Lotto:

2-23-31-41-42-44
Kicker:

Sports, Page 4

921921

'

w~

Low IOalgbt Ia 60s. Cloudy.
Tundoy, pardy cloudy. HlxJts Ill
Ute 80s.

I'm your neighborhood State Farm
Agent. You can trust me with
all your insurance needs.
Vol. 46, NO. 35
Copyrlghl1995

1 Section, 10 Pegea 35 cente
A Multimedia Inc.

New•-

Pomeroy-Middleport;
Ohio, Monday,
June 19, 1995
.
i

Hend_erson interchange being
' "

.,

considered for developmept ·

...

-

By MICHELE CARTER
OVP NEWS Staff
POINT PLEAS'ANT, W.VA.-

.......

-

..... ""'
.•
F-54

By BRUCE NAntAN
AP Newsfeatures
Charming columns and an invit·
ing front porch define the facade of
this country home.
From the porch, the front entry
opens directly into the spacious
central living room of Plan 1'-54, by
HomeStyles Design ers Network.
which features 1,633 square feet of
living space. A fireplace anchors
the living room and is flanked by
fun ctional shelving capable of
housing a TV or stereo on one
side, and favorite novels on lhe
other. Above, a ceiling fan ensures
the Oow of fresh air.
Natural light floods the adjoining

Split-UpS. ;~,_nt_in_ue.:..:..&lt;!f_ro_m_o_-1_:__ _ __

,I

Louis V. Gerstner Jr . assured
emp loyees of its· newly acquired
Lotus Development Corp. subsidiary that their johs remain ed
secure .. .former slugger Pete Rose,
banned from baseball for gambling,
was ejected by PepsiCo's Pizza
I i ut chain as a pitchman for a new
~commercial.

COMING UP:
Mnnday:OPEC ministers con·
.venc to diSCllSS pricing nnd production.

Tuesday: Commerce Dcpartmcn1 repnrls .MHy housing starts.
Wednesd:~y :
Comme rce
Dcpartnicnt reports April aud 11mquarter trade figures. Federal
Reserve releases regional cc&lt;momic
a.~.scssmc nt .

Thursday: U.S. and Japanese
negot'ia tors resume t:1lk~ over
1\Jncrican accc~.s to Japan~s aut omotive market
Frid:~y: Commerce Department
reports May 'orders for long·lasting
goods. ·

II

•

dining area through a bayed win·
F-54 .
dow arrangement From the dining
.TilE CENTRAL living areas arc enhanced by a fir~:Piace In the llv·
area. the backyard beckons the
ing room and im open snack bar in the kitchen and dining room.
viewer. through French doors, lo
join tJ.e great outdoors.
.Joining the dining. area to the · backyard through a boxed-&lt;Jul win· borne office or to accommodate
·kitchen, an eating bar will setve as
dow and offers a corner walk·in overnight guests.
a favorite spot for kids after school.
closet A private bath with a second
The strategic placement of the
(For a more detailed, scaled plall
walk-in closet makes the master
kitchen speeds up the process of
suite a retreat at the end of a long of this house, i11cluding guides to
carrying groceries in from the
estimatilfi costs andjinanci"i, sell4
week.
garage. A door opens to the backTwo good-sized secondary bed· $4 to Howe of the Week, P.O. &amp;n
yard also. 'Because it is isolated
rooms can .be used in a variety of 1562, New York, N.Y. 10116-1?62.
from the home's living spaces,'JI1e
ways. Young families can give chil· Bt sure to indude lite IIMmber of the
utility room keeps laundry noise to
dren a space of their own. Empty· . pla ... )
a minimum.
nesters can use the spaces as a
In the sleeping wing of the home,
the master bedroom overlooks the

more aggressive competition, tinkered with ways to cut costs,
including precooked burgers and
pre·scramblcd eggs ... Bo&lt;ing Co.,
enjoying a surge in orders· for its
new 777 jetliner, surt ered so me

embarra!\~mcnt when a lest

Locally owned
low mileage car.
Approx. 3Q,OO.O

miles.

N!!W S·Biazer
trade·in with Pwr.
locks, pwr
windows, pwr.
seats and much
more.

Tow Boat Open House
Public Invited
Wm. H. Zimmer (2000HP)
Operated By The Ohio River Company

night

carrying Transportation Secretary
Federico Pena unexpectedly lost
cabin pressure.
TICKER:
The economy S/IOWed further
wcalmess, mruked by a big drop in
industrial production last month.
l:&gt;ut the Federal Reserve said the
economy isn't sliding into a rcccssion.. .leaders of the sevc.n leadi ng
industrialized nations or sO·callcd
G-7, meet in g in llalil ax. Nova
Scotia. endorsed a plan to thwart
any future Mexican·stylc financial
debaclcs .... Ule Semite passed a pro·
found overhaul of the nation's
telecommunications laws that will
free cable and telephone service
pmviders
from
many
regulations ... ! nlernalional Busi·
ness Machines Corp.'s chairman

.To Order Study Plan

II

Laather interior,
VB Engine,
Loaded with ·
typical Cadillac
amenities and
Locally owned.

DISCUSS PLAN - Norman ·Roush, chief engineer for the West
Virginia Division of Highways and a Meigs County native, is piclured pointing out .t he proposed construction of the I new Shadle
Bridge and Henderson interch11.nge during a development meeting
·
Friday.

Automatic
transmission . air
conditioning,
· power steering,
power brakes and
much more.

A boat and two motors found in Ravenswood, W.Va., last week
fit the desCription of a boat and motors stolen recently from Meigs
County, Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said this morning.
·Randy Marnbout, Racine, reported Saturday morning his bass
· fishing boat was stolen from Crystal Lnke near Letart Falls, Soulsby
said. Deputies received word that a boat:. fiuing the description of
the stolen boat, and two motors were at a residence in Ravenswood.
Deputies co~tacted Ravenswood Police and the person with !be
boat gave a statement as to how and when lie got the boat. ·soulsby
noted. Two youths were contacted and the .boat was impounded
after they gave conflicting accounts, he said.
An investigation is continuing, he said.
It is really difficult to keep boat.' from being stolen unless you
take them out o( the water, Soulsby said. He said boat owners
should record boat and motor serial numbers, keep a description of
the equipment and lake photograph which can be used tu identify
the items if !bey are stolen .
1

A Racine man wa.1 arrested Sa'turday moming by deputies of the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department on charges stemn\ing fmm a
.
Friday evening crash on Ba.~ha~Road near Racine.
Shawn Price, age unreport
wa~ cited on charges of failure to
main~1in control and fictitious
·.
According to a sheriffs repo ·Price allegedly put his expired
tags on a 1983 Nissan owned by Marisa Gray, Racine. Friday nigh~
Continued ~n page 3

Full study plan information on this house is available m a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4 .95 each: Your Home· How
to Build, Buy or Sell It, Ranch Homes, 24 of Ihe most popular lrom this
feature ; Practical Home Repairs, which tells 'how to handle 35 common
problems; and. A·Frames and Other Vacation Homes. a collection of 24
styles. Send check orttloney order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the We'ek. The Sunday· Times Sentinel, P.O. Box t 562.
New York , N .Y. 10116·1562.
CUp lhis order and relurr'l !abet

Enclosed is $4 for plan No.

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

' for lhe booklet(s) _ _ _~----Encosed is $4.95 each
Namte _____~----------------------------------

Street _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,._ _ _ _~-------City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_
State ( Z l P l - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - -

1993 Pontiac Gran Prix SE

The

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Bibbee

unnutched nouuon.
• fhrl'f ,icklebar models: Namlw-

proflle guards, ea~y adju~tmrnl~.
urethanNoll condit+oning, and a rur thats SlX inchr!t wider
lh3n other mil.~es..
•

MOTOR COMPANY

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• Thret rotary Nlodtl&lt;lohn O..re·
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• Gtt excellent manruverability
piUl d!i"line prot!&lt;IIOn lrom the
· new 1ongue design.

CARMICHAEL'S
. FARM AND LAWN

668 Pinecrest Drive
Ph. 614·446-2412
Between Gallipolis &amp;Rio ~ronde on Old Rt. 3S
GOOD DEALS ••• AND A GOOD DEAL MORE

•'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- When 7 -year·old Chanelle
B9olh. found "a sbor like you get
from the doctor" along the banks or the Ohio River Saturday. she
was careful not to touch tbc sharp
end.
Chanelle's mother, Teresa
Booth, cleanup coordinator for
·Wayne County during the Ohio
River Sweep, said the 20 volun·
leers in her area found other
strange items along the banks,
including five prescription botUes
filled with pills.
The address on one or the bot·
ties showed it came from· a home
about 40 miles away near a tributary , the Guyandouc River , .she
said, noting that much of the collected trash did not originate in the
alung th~ river, accordinA to Mdgs County
. RIVER SWEEI' • Approximately 350 Meigs
Recycling director Kf.'nny Wiggins. Workers at
Ohio River.
Cou nty residents participated hi the annual
"The people living up the holOhio River Sweep Saturday morning. Vulun- · Racine load tra.~l1 onto a truck supplied hy CfmJpany C, 463rd En~ineer.s, an Annv Reserve unit
lows and up the creek beds, they
leers al Forked Run, Middleport, ['omerny and
lucaled in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
throw all their stuff down (the hill·
Racine cnlleded 3pproximately six tons .of tra.~h
sides) and it washes eventually into
.
in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and its tributaries, about three
al and a submerged automobile fuel
the river," Ms. Booth said.
· • About 18,000 volunteers from Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana and llli· times as much as they collecteu last tank still full of gasol ine, she said.
To coincide with the cleanup,
six states were estimated to have nois. The Ohio River is the sixth· year, said Nancy Barylak of the
longest
in
U1e
country.
AI
least
one
Allegheny
Co
unt
y
Sa
nitati
on
employees
of businesses along the
swept the shores of the' Ohio River
area
in
eadl
of
the
72
counties
was
Auth
oritv
.
river
held
fami
ly events and picfrom Pennsylvania into Illinois on
cleaned
up.
.
Betsy
Mallison
of
Pennsylva·
nics.
Ms.
I
son
said.
. . Saturday, hauling off trash left by
The sweep is the biggest envi· nia's Deparunent of Environm ental
·noods and litterbugs, said Jeanne
She estimated that about 40 pcirronmemal
event of its kind in the Resources said cleanup crews
!son, the director of the project that
nation
,
Ms.
lson
said.
cent
of the 1.400 volunteers in
moved
into
areas
the
y'd
never
covers six states.
"When we talk about trash in touched before.
Cincmna11 were children. including
Ms. !son did not immediately
the Ohio River. it has gone down
"We had to cancel some of Ule . her son J.J., 10.
know Saturday exactly how many dramatically in the six states," said traditional areas we do because
" It's the right thing to do, and
people participated 9r how much . Pam Van Hom . cleanup coordinator there. was no garbage." she said.
I'm just trying to do my part." J.J .
trash was collected.
in West Virginia.
"It proves it's working.''
The sweep was established in
"Our first year, we cleaned up
AboUt 800 volunteers picked up said. insiSting th at his mother
1989 by the Cinoinnati·basetl Ohio several open dump s along th e 518 tires and more than 50 shop· didn't force him to help.
River Valley Water Sanita!ion
In add1t10n to a lot of boJUcs and
river," picking up about.1 ,500 tons ping cans. Ms. Mallison said.
Commission and Ashlan'd Oil Co.
can&gt;.
J..l . found !ires, a basketball
of trash, she said. Last summer,
Moving iD\0 fre sh, dirty areas
along a stretch of river fr om about 200 ton s could be collected let the workers co ll ect more backboard and even a tricycle.
Cincinnati to Ashland, Ky .
But J.J.'s favorite item was
. in West Virginia .
garbage. including a breadmaking
Now groups, of volunteers clean
Volunteers in Pennsylvania col- machmc, a motorcycle. a typewrit· somcthin£ else. "\Ve foUnd a broup along the 981 miles of riverbank lected 59 tons of garbage along the· er, a lire hose, construction matcri· ken brooni in the sweep,'' he said.

Chechen
rebels reportedly free hostages ·
,
.

Nobody Does Hay Better
The revolutionary

funds, any access additions must be cut to six months .
Right now, the DOH is waitini
approved in Washington, D.C.,
on rigbts·of.way for the construcRoush said.
As the plan stands now, there tion to the Coast Guard Station
will be no light at the end of the along U.S. 35. Roush said. He statnew bridge, and traffic will shoot . ed the mone y is available and !be
strai ght throu gh to Huntington. plan is ready to go to bid as soon as
Deitz said if the development goes clearances are ready .
The new construction will totalthrou gh. the light may be necesly by·pass Henderson, Roush said.
sary. ·
According to Roush , the deci· Residents will have the choice of
sion on th e access road musi be using the old road for local traffic.
"Progress is good," Pat Sauber,
made in the next six months.
owner of McDonald's, said. "We
. l~oush said the new bridge plan have 10 consider what is going to
1s well underway. The span will be happen to the little towns. Longparallel to the e&lt;isting bridge with
time heri tage shou ld mean someappro&lt;ima tely 75 to 80 feet
thing."
between them. Pending funding , he
Sauber asked Roush when he
sa1d construction on the bridge
(DOll) was going to buy bis prop·
should be ready for construction in
erty . Roush said the appraisals
Spring 1996.
were being reviewed and an offer
The corstruction underwa¥ on shou ld be made soon. He added the
S.R. 2 will cut the construction state would give the restaurant
time for the interchanges.off the owner as much time as they could
new bridge down quite a bit, Roush
to move from the site. The mini·
said. By this preliminary work
mum time would be 90 days , he
being done , Roush es timat ed 1 the ~aid .
two· year construction time being

Volunteers
Local ·briefs----. clean up
Ohio River
Boat, motors recovered

Man cited after crash

Point Pleasant Sternwheel Regatta
•
Sunday, June 25
12 Noon '• 5 pm
Fourth Street Landing
Point Pleasant

Economic development being considered for !be Henderson, W.Va.
interchange could bring 1,000 to
2,000 long-term jobs to Mason
County.
The development, which would
be on the 87 oacre McCausland
land, could become a reality if an
access road to the site is available
off of the new Shadle Bridge,
according to John Deitz or the
Greenbrier Group, an economic
development firm.
The proposed development and
the status of !be new Shadle Bridge
were discussed in a development
meeting last week at the Mason
County Development Authority
office.
Norman Roush, chief engineer
for the West Virginia Division of.
Highways and a Meigs County
native, said the plans for the new
bridge are in !be design stage and
don't have the access drawn· in Ulc
plans. He said the Greenbrier

Group is working, on the necessary
repons and studies to submit to the
DOH for access road consideration.
Tbey have been working together
since March.
Roush said when the plans for
!be new bridge were developed, the
DOH did not know the McCaus·
land property was being considered '
for eq,nomic development.
·
Doug Browri. represeming property owners Smith McCausland ~nd
Hairieu Brown, Said the develop·
menl hinges on adequate access.
He said a master plan will be done
after access is granted.
According to Deitz, the 87,acre
McCausland property is divided by
the Silver Bridge. At the present
time there is no way to join the
tracts because ·of the bridge, and
two access roads would be neces·
sary.
.
Roush said since the property is
now being considered for development, it must cut in on the appraisal
value if the access is approved.
· Since the Shadle Bridge project
is being funded by state and federal
. I
.

til
.

1

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES • Work on the Racine Community Housing Improvement Program enters into ils second
week loday wilh wprkers making improvements to residences
owned by low-to-moderate-income homeowners. Peggy HoiJ.ltan of
Racine and Mike Remy til' Porter, employed by Barnes Construction of Cheshire, work on the Fifth Street home nf Rnn and Linda
Grimm.

•

•

BUDYONNOVSK, Ru ssia (AP)
- Chechen rebels freed the ·J,SOO
hostages from a hospital today and
headed home with a refrigerated
truck carryin g th e ir dead after
Moscow agreed to a cease·frre and
new peace talks for Cbechnya.
To ensure thctr safety, the rebels
left in a convoy of .buses with
dozens of Russtan ~ff1ctals and
oUlCr volunteers, oflictals srud. The
volunteers bad swapped places.
with the hostages seized six days
ago.
The buses later stopped near the
hospital where th e gu nmen had
been holed up, and the leader of the
Cbecbens issued new demands,
said Alexander Mogilny, a
spokesman for Prime Minister Vik.tor Cbernomyrdin in Moscow.
Mogilny said he did not know what
the new rebel demand&amp; were.
The rebels invaded Budyon·
novsk in southern Russia on
Wednesday and demanded an end

to Russia's war against Chcchnya, demand to ~.c'lke 150 hostages with
a brenkaway republic in the Cauca- them.
sus Mountains.
It was not immediately clear
A government attack on the hos· whether the gunme n took any of
pital Saturday . failed to free the the hostages with them. Most were
hostages. The tcbels freed more left m the hospllal , although then
than 400 hostages, mostly women condition · was not immediately
and children, over .the weekend as known . Russtan sec urtt y forces
talks conttnued wnh the govern- sealed orr the area around the hosment.
.
,
pttal.
_
.
Chernomyrdm agmed Sunday to
The gunmen were accompamed
a number of the rebels' demands, aboard the buses by. more than 150
although he. stopped .short or volunteers, mcludm~ JOurnaltsts
protmsm~ a wtthdrawal of Russtan
and etght members ol the Russmn
forces from Chechnya. The govcm· parham.ent, ~atd Mogtlny. the
ment promtsed to declare a cease- pnme m1mster s spokesman.
fire, resume peace talks and. give
.The IT AR-Tass news agency
the gurune.n safe passage 10 Chech· S31d the rebels boarded seven buses
nya. 90 miles to the south, after all m gro~ps, and camcd !herr dead to
the hostages were released.
a rcfngerator truck that accompaEfforts to free tbe hostages nted them . Each bus can carry
bogged down for several hours about40 people.
wday while officials and rebels
Several ti mcs today , Cber·
argued over who would escort the
nomyrdin appeared on Russian
gunmen back to Chechnya. The · television speaking by telephone
government rejected a rebel
with rebel leader Sharnil Basayev.

•

"All hostages must be left in the

~ilal.'' Chemomyrdin told him

at one point. "The volunteers that is another sto ry. Shamill
Shamill Wait a second ! How can j
guarantee you safe passage if you
have som~ hostages with you?"
Early today, peace talks began
in the Chechen capital , Grozny,
between a high·level Rpssian delegation and a group sent by Chccben
leader Dzhokhar Dudayev.
'!be Russian military declared a
cease-ftre Sunday night in Chechnya. Both actions satisftcd demands
made by Ba;ayev's grou p.
The Chechen delegation to
ioday's peace taiRs was led by
Usman lmaycv, Dudavcv's justice
minister, and Asian Maskhadov,
the chtef of staff or Qudayev's
forces.
The Russians previously had
been reluctrull to talk to close associates of Dudayev who has been
denounced by Mo~w

,.

.•

�•

•

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel

.'

I

I

1 CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

' MAR~ARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All Jetter.; are subject to edillng and must be Signed Wtlh name,
address and telephone number. No unSigned letters will be pubhshed. Letters

should be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities

A distinguished career,
from civil rights to AT&amp;T

•

•

'•2

WASHINGTON ..:._ The seeds
of President Clintoo' s trade battle
, wilh Tokyo may bave been sown a
•quarter century ago In the citrus
' groves of South Florida.
, Walter Mondale, wbo is now
1U.S. ambassador to Japan, was a
Democratic senator from Minneso.1 ta, and Mickey Kantor, wbo is lhe
1U.S. trade representative, was an
'! idealistic recent graduate from
.j Georgetown Law School. These
, days they are the central characters
· ;lin a drama which is now entering
its fmal act.
Japan has been given a June 28
deadline by Kantor to open its mar:
kets for American cars and auto
lparts or face 100 percent tariffs on
lt3 Japanese lu~ury cars sold be!Cl1
!Kantor's ultimatum follows 1.l!l
:monlhs of negoli:atioru; with Japan
to close a $37 billion trade deficit
in these products. For 35 years
Japanese auto-makers have enjoyed
a free ride.
The economics are compelling,
but they are only part of the equation. Mondale and Kantor's rela-

tionship dates to 1969 in a town
called Immokalee. Mondale was
chairing a Senate subcommittee
investigalinR malnutrition and
came to Immokalee to observe lhe
squalid conditions endured by
migrant farm workers. Kantor bad
just moved to South Aorida, wbere
be helped set up the South Florida
Migi3IIt Labu' Services.
Kantor, wbo up to lhat point bad
never met a U.S. senator, became
Mondale's personal tour guide to
tields where children as young as 7
were toiling for the citrus business.
Mondale saw a worl&lt;l. where
mtgrant workers lived on dirt
floors, without electricity, and
developed diseases thought to be
confined to sub-Saharan Africa.
Before Congress passed reforms
that Kantor helped Moildale draft,
mtgrant workers lived behind
barbed wire in places like "Camp
Happy."
"You wouldu't put your dog in
some of those places," Mondale
told us recently. "I remember
being jmpressed Y{ith his

I

By LAURIE ASSEO
Associated Press Writer
WA~HINGTON -Mementoes in tbe cbambers of U.S. District Judge
Harold Greene give testimony that long before overseeing the breakup of
AT&amp;T, he played a key role in shaping two of the nation's significant
civd rights laws.
• A framed page of the ftrst dtaft of lhe Voting Rights Act of 1965 with the title added in Greene's hllndwriting- is evidence of his lasting
mark on American law.
As a Justice Deparunent attorney, Greene dtafted much of the land•
mark voting rights statute as well as lhe 1964 Civil Rights Act.
· In another frame is a 1963 magazine photo of Greene and two other
Justice Department ofticials sitting at a conference table with Auomey
General Robert Kennedy.
• "They were willing to lhink in broad terms, not tied to narrow mat- ••
ters," Greene says. "and it gave me some confidence" for bis future judt(!ial career.
As be prepares to take senior status with a reduced workload after 30
years as a judge - 17 on the federal bench - it's clear that Greene has
an abundance of confidence.
• Greene is known as an organized judge whose genUe manner doesn't
quite disguise the fact that he's very much m charge ol h1s courtroom.
"I assure you, 1f be were running the Simpson trial. il would be over
by now," says White House counsel Abner M1kva, fonner chief judge of
the federal appeals court m Washington.
But Greene also likes to have fun He's not above trying to fool
reporters into thinking lhey missed an imponant-ruling in a case; the twinkle in his eye is the giveaway.
Born Heinz Gruenhaus in Frankfurt, Germany, in 1923. Greene
became a U.S. citizen and Americanized his name after his Jewish parents
fled Germany in 1939.
• He earned bis law degree at night at George Washington University,
became an assistant U.S. attorney and later moved to Justice Department f "
headquarters, heading the civil rights division's appeals and research section.
'··
. "We were optimists," says Burke Marshall, who headed the civil
rights division and was one of the men in tbc 1963 photo.
· He recalls that Greene's section wrote the legal briefs leading to the
Supreme Court's 1962 ruling lhat congressional distncts must represent
approximately an equal number of people .
Greene plans to take senior status Aug. 6 - ·30 years to tbc day after
President Johnson named him to the District of Columbia Court of GenerHaving been asked by a student
al Sessions. In 1978, President Carter promoted him to the federal bench.
at
Northeastern University's
~· Hundreds of cases have come lbroug~ Greene's courtroom over the
School
of Law if she could nomiyears.
nate
me
as commencement speakHe supervtsed the 19!!4 AT&amp;T breakup m the largest antitrust case tn
er.
I
agreed
for several reasons
U.S. history To Ibis day, )te continue.• to supervise the consent'llecree that
One
was
thatas she told the stubroke Ma Bell into seven reg10nal operating companies, unleashmg the
denls
she
wanted
an advocate
teChnological revolullon that has transformed lelecoorununications.
"for
the
protecllon
of
the most
. As a result, Amencans can shop for the hest price for Jong-dtsllmce
unpopular
speech."
service and buy lbe1r own phones instead ol renting them forever.
Also, lbt s ts a law school tbqt
\ Greene is proud that he persuaded former President Reagan to testily
oo videotape in John Poindexter's 1990 Iran -Contra tnal without a places an extraordmary - but not
e~clusivc - emphasis ou public
~prerne Court confrontation
• Reagan bad resisted, but Greene said that when the lime cwne, " I mterest law · It is the only co-op
law school in the country, and
lvund him very pleasant. He didn · t put on any airs.··
many
of its students alternate three
: In 1986 he blocked the Library of Congress from banning from its
months
in classes with three
ti)Jilding five·people who had protested cuts in the library's public hours.
months
working
with such employ, "Bannmg tS not one of the rcmcdtes present m the U S Constitution,"
ers
as
lawyers
of
last resort for
Greene wrote. "Perhaps in the Sovtet Umon or South Afnca, but not
prisoners
on
death
row.
the welfare
h~re."
unit
of
Greater
Boston
Legal Ser. Greene acknowledges he's co11s1dered an activist judge, saymg, "!do
vtces,
and
a
provider
or
legal sert~nd to hold in lavnr ol the person who's goltcn the raw deal \J
vtt-es
m
a
remote
comer
of
a Nava• He has unsuccessfully attacked lederal sentencing gUtdehnes that ·
jo
Ind1an
reservatiOn
in
UL'Ih.
Some
s'arply limit JUdges' discretton. He aml some other colleagues on U1e tedeventually
go
into
corporate
law,
ctal bench insist the guidelmes gtve prosecutors too much power lo deterbut
they
have
learned
about
the
mine sentence's by decidmg what charges 10 lite.
depths
of
the
justice
system.
lower
: Despite his many achtcvements 111 other areas of the law. even
Another mot1vatwn I had for
Greene's friends persist in linking him to the AT&amp;T case
getting
on the ballot was my long
• Mtkva recal led an inciden{ years ago when he and Greene were going
and
somet1mes
stormy relattonshtp
tti anollter judge's Chrisunas party
w1U1
Northeastern
Universtty itsell
• On the way over, M1kva said, Greene was grumbling that people had
When
I
was
19
and
edttor of the
descended on him at a telephone store when he went in to buy a phone
Northea,tem
News,
I
was gtven an
and someone spotted him as the man who made phone-shoppmg possible.
offer
by
the
president
(II Ute univer· That's the pnce ol preSiding over a btg case, Mikva said he told his
sity thai I could not poss1b ly
c~lleague. And when they arrived at the party, Greene heard it all over
·accept. We were muckrakers, on
aga1n- Ibis time from Utcn-Chtel Jusllcc Warren Burger
"Burger said, 'Hltrold, let tnc tell you what you've done to my phone campus and all over the city, and
the prestdent abhorred controversy
bttl,"' Mtkva saul. He recalled that G~us t gave me that wry Either wnte only about the Impressive achievements of Ule universi~
StniiC "
~
.•
(}""

(Kan.tor' s) commitment to the
cause. We were young then 'll.nd
strong. We'd Start at6 in the mom·
ing and ~o all day long. And ,when
the beanngs were over and every·
thing was done, around midnight,
we'd get together and talk until 3
o'clock."
Not much has changed )letween
the two men - who still have
many red-eye sessions, only now
it's be~ause Washington ts 14
hours behind Tokyo And instead
of bohng up in Mondale' s hotel
room as tbcy did during the Aorida
fiel&lt;tltearings,' now the two men ·
huddle in isolated comers Qf military ba~s outside of Tokyo, or talk
to each other. on secure phones that
distort voices into a cartoon-like
sound.
For Mondale, who was Kantor's

TRY ~ tO L~T 'tt·

lNTIMlDAT' YOU

choice for lhe ambassadorship, the
get-tough policy with Japan is an
ecbo from bia failed presidential
bid in 1984. As organized labor's
candidate, Mondale declared bis
support for a bill that would have
required lhe n!IC of American parts
in imponed cars. The move would
have driven Japanese vehicles from
"'tbe U.S. market. "This is tbe
nation 1hat.rebuilt Japan," Moodale told campaign rallies. "l say
the time bas come to rebuild the
United States of America"
"Essentially. I feel that that
campaign, was correct, but of
course maybe I have to. My main
point in that campaign was that lhe
huge American federal deficit
raised interest rates dramatically
and drove up the value of the dollar
so everything we sold was too
expensive and everything we
bought was too cheap."
Kantor left South Florida and
moved to California, where he traveled in dJC s:une political circles as
Mondale and played a large role in
the 1984 campaign. Kantor:s ardor
for d1e cause of labor and workers'
rights has not waned with the passage of time, though he now thinks
more globally. Just Ibis month, he
gave several unnoticed speeches on
the need to address workers' rights
issues around the world, including
child labor, prison labor and slave ,
labor.
Kantor consults closely with
Moridale and has told st~ft'ers be
doesn't make many decisions with·
out his input. Mondale has served
as a two1ter: a diplomat whose ·
stature as a tonner vtce president
has greatly impressed U1e Japanese;
and a smart and s.wvy politician
who understands how domestic
politics - in the United State.' and
Japan - factor mto the deCisionmaking proce~s .
Mondale acknowledges some
O!l-UJe-job training:
"I work on it all the time.
becau~e I didn't come here as an :
expert. It involves trying to under·
stand my own country ... and bow .
these issues play out in American
life .... I just feel our two nations
must resolve Ibis but it's difficult. .
The resis~'lllt'e to change here - to
opening up (markets) - is very .
Impressive.''

......v:l.¢1

'

_..,.,

''!580~11~1 ()~l?g':J

For both men, life has come full •
ctrcle
Jack Anderson and Michael ·
Binstein are writers for United .
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

They ~hoot speakers, don't tt)ey? ______
.
.
.
;
.
.

Berry's World
\ '

'

"

•t•

I

0'996by~A me~
#,fUr"11f61fP'UM• ~,

"'""',..j

Munch

Nat Hentoff
For a lime, the bound volumes
of the issues we had published disappeared from the library, but they
were ev.entually restored, and so
was I. In later years, I have been
mvued back 10 Northeastem where,
like the Ancient Mariner, I tell
once again about that silencing of
JOUnlalists which began my abiding
unerest m freedom of the press.
Some 10 years ago, I was
awarded an honorary doctor ol
laws by my ahna mater That was
pleasant, but I can't take any
clients However, bemg abk to
gtvc advtce to a whole class ol
lawyers at this year's commencemen! was more than tempting.
As the voting neared its climax,
there were four finalists - Janet
Reno, Ruth Bader Ginsburg,
-Hillary Rodhwn Clmton anti this
columnist. When the top three
declined, I was lefl And Ute oprc•silion among the students hegan.
Those who vehemently wanted
me disinvited, and maybe defenestrated if I cwne, objected to what
they thought were my views on
abortton. Allboogh they must have
learned how impor1ant accurate

tact patterns would be lO their
future cases, none of them called
me to find out what my views actu·
ally are. In the student journal, WE,
my brave soonscu. Leslie Dickson.
herself strongly pro-choice, trted to
· puncture the hearsay. In capital letters she wrote about her nominee:
" He does not believe the state
should criminalize abortion."
I wrote a teller to WE and confirmed that report, adding that my
concern 1s that the privacy proteclions for abor1ton in Roe v. Wade
have been mterpreted by courts to
also perm11 eulbana~ia and phyStetan-assisted -suicide in our legal
system's growing hastening of
death
As the day ot reckoning neared,
Leslie Dickson told me, " [don't
know what they'll do. but I am
absolutely sure something will happen ." The morning of the commcncemcnt, a law professor tOld
me, " Be prepared for anything."
My talk was about lawyers who
are devoting their lives to public
interest law. Steve Dright. most of
whose clients are on death row, and
Anthony Gril't'in, a black Texas
lawyer of enormous integrity .who
was fired by the sL1te's NAACP as
general counsel tor representin~ the
grand dragon of the Texas KmghL'
of the Klan. The state of Te~a~ was
trymg to get lhe Klan's membershtp hst, and Griffin won the case
by invokmg the landmark 1958

Supreme Court decision, NAACP"
v. Alabama, which stopped that
state from confiscating the
NAACP's membership list
-:
During my talk, there was no
demonstration, no disruption. I was ·
relieved but also disappointed I .
had been geared fnr tr.ouble But ns ·
the graduates crosseflthe stage tu
get thetr degrees, I began to see·
patches on some ol their black ·
rohes - "Save Legal llborllon,"
"For Fret'dom of Choice."
Also along the line of gmduatcs.' ·
however, were four male students
balancing infants on U1eir arms as'
they reached for their degrees. I
would have liked tn think Ibis WIL' ·
a coumcr-demonstration for life. ·•
But I was told that it was not
unusual for pnre nts to carry their
newborns :~ong to share the glory'
ol commencement. "Don' t make
any more of this than there IS,,. ·
saill a law school official.
Still, it did seem 10 me that the
infants were more v1V1d wtlnesses
for chmce than the slogans on the
paJchcs.'
·
Nat Henlnff is a nationally .
renowned authority on the First ·
Amendment and the rest or the '
Bill or Right•.
.
(For information on how to'
communicate electronically with ·
thi• columni.&lt;t and others, contact Amtrica Online by calling 1800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Ignorance of past threatens future_ _ _ __
Japan can't quite bring ttself to
say it is sorry for Its conduct during
World War ll, and that understandably gives heartburn 10 a lot of people - particularly in Asta.
The trouble is that while Japan
owes more than an apology to millions of folk, living and dead, wbo
were brutalized by depredations,
11 is being asked to pass a unique
test You can count on the finger of
one band the number or govern·
ment• in modern history that asked
for forgiveness for thetr sins or
even admilled they had committed
them. What distmguishes Japan,
however, 1s not what 11 refuses to
say but w~altt neglects to teach.
There IS no doubt thai Japan bas
much to be ashamed of. Mass mur·
der of ctvilians, savagely unscientitic "experiments" on priSoners of
war, the forced prostnution of
Korean and other ~aptive women:
All of these accompanied their
wars of aggression across As1a.
They justihed their actions by
claiming the need to drive out tbc
Western Imperialist:; and build an
"Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere." In
dojng so. they proved that Asians
could be as inhuman in their lll!at-

I

ty, I was told, or clear out your
oll'ice Tbe entire stafl - except
for one - lett wtth me. He became
the new editor.

ment of Astans as the round eyes
ever were.
For all thiS, Japan patd a justifiable price. Its lands were occupied

Hodding Carter Ill
by Amencan forces . Its leaders
were tned and convicted as war
_ criminals. Its form of govemmen.!
and many other traditional props
were replaced or severely reStriCt·
ed.
That was half a century ago.
Implicitly, the Japanese have been
ap~logizing ever since, mostly by
U1etr scrupulous regard for intem~­
tiona! law and thetr con tinuin g
refusal to lift the restnclions on
their military role from thetr Amer·ican-tmposed constitution. E~plic­
illy, they have been all but mute.
That 50-year-old wtlltulness is
currently playing its way out in
Japan's parliament. Earlier this
month, the lower house passed a
resolution about its conduct during
the war, but it dropped the earlier
language about an apology. What
emerged was a singularly 4nsatisfying restatement of an old
Japanese tbcm~. which is that many

nations did things lor which they
should exp ress regret and th at
Japan is among them.
That won't do, but it is probably
going to have to suffice for the
ttme being The Japanese are well
aware thai there are few nauons
wnh clean hands Smce they arc
also almos t pathologically incapable of dealing head-on with controversy. they don't say what they
could to some of their more vociferous critics. If they did, tt could he
pretty embarrassmg.
For instance, it would not 1\e
very diplomallc but it would bC a
lair shot to ~sk Amencans when
was the last time U1e U.S. ~ovcm­
ment had apologized to Native
Americans for its land-grabbing,
treaty-breaking. near genocidal
behavior toward tbem. The
Japanese might ask the British government to recite chapter and verse
examples of official British
remorse for centuries of tyranny
and oppression aimed at Ireland.
Africans all over the globe could
demand that tbc West apologize-for
its participaiion in lhe slave trade.
You get the idea. Remorse has
rarely sprung unbidden from tb~

lips of winners. There is something
in human nature that can rarely
swallow pride and do the right
lbmg. There is nothing particularly ·
Japanese about such reluctance.
Once you say that, however,
you have to add that the Japanese •
arc makmg a · serious mistake
whose consequences will be felt for
years to come. Japan is too rich a ·
nation to be ea.,ily loved. More 10
the pmnt, so long as it will not .
come to gnps with il~ reeent pas~ it
will be seen by many other coun- '
tne.' as a powerful potential threat
rather than as a powerful potenoal .
friend.
An&lt;!,lb.1t is where Japan is actu- ,
ally quite dilterenl from many ;
other countries'"whose

governmenL~

and people have visited unspeak- ,
able mi~ery on others. Not only ~
does japan refuse to apologize, it
alliO refuses to allow an accurate ,
~ccount of its behavior in 11s official history books.
Hndding Carter III, former _
Stole Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, edl· :·
tor and publisher, is pre•ident nf
MalnSireet, a Washington, ,O.C.•
based televl•ion prodlltdon company.

The record high temperature for
this dat~ at lhe Columbus wealher
stalion was 98 degrees in 1994. lbeo
record low temperature was 4 7""'
degrees in 1959. Sunset will be at
9:03 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be
at6:03 am.
Across the nation
Chicago was a sultry 74 degrees
hours before daybreak, San Francisco was brisk at 53 and thunderstorms were hanging over the
Plains states.
Separate low pressure systems
were lining up to produce showers
and thunderstorms over the NorthWest and Southeast.
'
Sunday's storms showered
medium-size bail on parts of the
Southeast, mcluding Rock Island,
Tenn., aixl Steele, Ala
Near Boise, Idaho, marble-sized
bail rained down on Interstate 84
Sunday, and the High Plains got its

IyTtie "-l8ted " The National Weatb,ef' Service
says it will be mosUy c~across
Ohio tooi&amp;hl with lows from the
mid 60s to IWIIOO 70.
It will agaiu be bot Tuesday,
especially across northern Ohio as
tempetaWres agaia reach lhe 90s.
However, a cold front will drop
southward across ·lhe Great Lakes
late Tuesday and Wednesday,
brlnsiag a chance of sbowers and
lhundcrstorms to mucb of tbe state.
The cold rront should pass south of
Ohio late Wednesday. Higbs will
cool into lhe 80s for lhe rest of lhe
week.
Skies were mostly clear
overnight. Many areas remained
hazy tl\ro~gh the night and some
fog developed early this morning.
Most of tbe fog was not dense.
Temperatures statewide ranged
from the mid to upper 60s.

W.VA.

k.w

,

S&amp;my Pt Cloud!:

Cloudy

-----Weather-..---...,
South-Central Ohio
Today ... Hazy sunshine this
morning then increasing cloudi·
ness. Hlgb in the mid 80s. North
winds less than 10 mph.
Tonigbt...Mostly cloudy. Low in
the mid 60s. Winds light and variable.
Tuesday .. , Variable cloudiness
with scattered sbowers and thun-

derstorms. Hi~b .in tbe mid 80s.
Chance of rain IS 50 percent.
Extended forecast
Wednesday ... Fair extreme
northeast...A chance of thunderstorms elsewbere. Lows in the 60s.
Highs m the 80s.
Thursday and Friday ... Fair.
Morning lows in the upper 50s to
mid 60s. Highs in the 80s.

-. --Area Deaths----Edward Burkett
Edward "Eddie" Burkett, 76, Middleport. died Sunday, June 18, 1995,
at his borne.
·
Born September 17, 19 I 8, in Pomeroy, son of the late Frederick and
Mary Helen Fell Burkett. He was a barber in Middleport for over 40
years, a past president of lhe OH·KAN Coin Club and a member of the
Sacred Heart Catholic Cburcb. In addition, he was a World War II Army
vete1311 and a member of lhe Drew Webster Post 39 American Legion in
Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife of 35 years, Elizabeth Joachim Burkeu of
Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law, Robert C. and Kay Burkett.
Charleston, W.Va.; a stster-m-law, Phillis Joaebim ofMiddlepon; a brotber-m-law and sister-in-law, Phillip and Charlotte Joachim of Palm Beach,
Aa. and several cousins.
He was pl'\lceded in death by two brothers, Fred and Albert Ilurkeu and
by a s1ster, Mary Burkett.
Mass of Cbnstian Burial wtll be held Wednesday, II a.m at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy with the Rev. Father Walter E. Heinz
officiating.
.
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. A vi gal service will be held at the funeral home Tuesday at 8:45 p.m.

Doyle Sargent

~

Doyle Sargent, 77, Pomeroy, died Sunday, June 18. 1995, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
.
· A retired engineer with Columbia Gas, he was born Jan. 17; 1918, in
Pomeroy, son of the late Guy V. and Maude Hawk Sargent, be was an
Army veteran of World War II where he received the Purple Hean and a
member of the Drew Webster Post 39 of lhe American Legion.
In addition, be attended the Hemlock Grove Church of Christ and was
a member of the National Rifle Association and the Shade River Masomc
Lodge.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Golda and Robert Roush of
Hemlock Grove; a son, Richard Sargent of Pontiac, Ill., and grandchildren, Seth and Ashli Bentley of Apple Creek.
He was preceded in death by bis wife, Nellie L. Sargent; brothers
George V. and John Sargent, and a stepmotbcr, Bertha Sargent.
Servtces will be held W:ednesday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Gene Zopp officiating. Burial will follow in
Burlingham Cemetery.
Fnends may call Tuesd.1y, 5-9 p.m. atlbe funeJ&lt;~I home.

Herbert L. Shriver

Shri~,

•

cast.

More stormy weather ts likely
for the Pacific Northwest forecas~
as well as the northern Rockies and
northern Inter mountain Region.
Scattered lbunderstonns will be
possible from the Dakotas and qastem Montana to eastern New Mextco.
Dry conditions are expected
from lhe rest of the Plains to the
Great Lakes.

Scattered thunderstorms are
likely from 1011tbeut Kentucky aad
soulhem VirgiDiuoulh to Aorida's
norlbem lip.
Nortbem New England also am
expect torrid temperatures as weU
as scattered showers and thunder·
storms. with a few strong storms
possible.
The nation's hot spot Sunday
was 102 degrees at Iron Mountain.
Mich. The h1ghes{ fteat index was
119 degrees at Duluth, Minn. The
coldest spot was. Flagstaff, Ariz ..
with an over01ght low of 24
degrees.
Today's temperature forecasts
range from the 50s to 70s in the
Northwest and Inter Mountain
reg10n, 70s to 90s in the Southwest
and Southeast, 80s in lhe Midwest,
90s to I 00s in New England, and
80s and 90s in the South.

.....--__,;...,.- Local briefs... -----.
Continued from page 1
he was traveling southbound on Bashan Road and lost control of the
truck, crashing i~ the repon stated.

Pomeroy bar broken into

~

The Court Street Grill was broken mto between noo Sunday
and 6 a.m. Monday, accordmg to Pomeroy Police Dep anent
reports.
I
Severalttems of merchandise were stolen. records show. Access
was gamed lhrougb a fan m an alley
The incident remains under investigation

No one hurt in wrecks
Two non-injury. non-citauon acc idents happened Sunday,
according to Pomeroy Police Deparunent reports.
Dorothy Davis, 74, of Middlepor1. reported no damage to her
1988 Honda after she W;lS backmg out of her parkmg space and did
not see another vehicle entering the Crow' s parking lot at 12:07
p.m. Sunday. records show.
Delores Frank, 62, Reedsville. reported her 1994 Mazda had
light damage to lhe door.
At6 p.m. Sunday, Charles Yeager. 68, ot Mason. W.Va., pulled
out of Adolph's parking lot into the paUl of a vehicle ,heading west
on West Main Street, records show. Yeager's 1991 Fot'd had moilerate damage to the passenger door.
In bts car, LaVera Yeager wa• taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by private auto, reports stated
Richard Seyler, 75, of Pomeroy, hall hght dmnage to the front
end of his 1985 Chevrolet truck.
·

Boil water order issued

said.
Clinton opposed the amendment, and admimstration officials
Sunday said the seven- year plan to
balance the budget was too short
and arbitrary.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Indiana-Ohio direct bog prtces at
selected boying points Monday by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: 50 to mostly
1.00 higher; demand good to very
good.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs ., country
points 44.00-45.00, few 43.50 and
45 .50; plams 45.00-46 50, few
44 .75.
U.S 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
pomts 38.50-43 SO
Sows: under 500 lbs. steady to
finn; over 500 lbs steady to 1.00
higher.
U.S 1-3 300-500 lbs. 25 .0028 50; 500-650 lbs. 28.00-30.00, a
I few over 650 lbs. 30 50

" It makes much better sense to.
to transttion thts over a 10-year,
period than to try to force it mto a ·
seven-year period," Wbite House ·
Cbief of Staff Leon. Paneua said on
ABC's "Tbis Week Wilh David·
Brinkley."
try

Estimated receipts: 32,000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Caule: steady to 1.00 h1gbet.
Slaughter steers: cbmce 60.00·
68.75; select 55.00-62.75.
.
Slaughter heifel'l&lt;: choice 59.5067.75; select50.00-62.00.
Cows: uneven. 1.00 lower to
2.00 higher; all cows 48.51) and
down.
Bulls: uneven, lower to 2.00
higher; all bulls 59.00 and down.
Veal calves: 7.00 higher; choice
190.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to 6.50
higher; choice wool~ 80.00-97 .SO;
choice clips 80.00-95.75; feeder
lambs 90.00 :utd down; aged sheep
37.25 and down.
·

Meigs ·announcements
Alanon m~eling set
Al -Anon Will meet 7 p.m
Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church for famtly and
fnends of alcoholics.
AI· Aleen meeting set
Al·Ateen will meet at 7 p.m

Hos'pital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June Hi discharges - Karlee
Jones, Reva Jenkins, Eva Allen,
Stella Perez , Deborah Maynard,
Bronis Persons, Matthew Gilbert.
Kevin Bailey and Bobby Kuhn.
June 16 births - Mr. and Mrs
Michael Drewer, a daughter. of
Radcliff, Mr. and Mrs . Kevin
Milam, a son. of Reedsville and
Mr and Mrs . Jamie Davis, a
daughter, ol PatriOt.
June 17 discharges - Mrs.
Jamte Davis and daughter, Lara
Brewer and Mrs. Kevin Mtlwn and
June 17 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Mtcbael Bonnell, a daughter. of
M1~dleport , Mr. and Mrs. Jason
Fullum, a daughter, of Huntington,
W.Va. and Mr. and Mrs Jeffrey
Hall, a son;ot Wellston.
June 18 discharges - Mrs leifrey Hall and son, Shem Mayhone
and Irene Allen
Printed with permission.

Sunday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church for teenager~
affected by alcoholism of family•or
friends.
OA meeting
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of Am~rica, will meet Tuesday.
7:30 p m. at the Chester Lodge
Hall Quarterly birthdays )\'ill be
observed. Potluck.
Auxiliary to meet
The fraternal Order of tbe
Eagles, Auxlii;try, will meet· Tue.•·
day, 7:30 p.m at the hall.
BTVFOC to meet
.
Bedford Township Volunteer
Fue Department Commtttee will
meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the BedJi1fd Town Hall

The Daily Sentinel
(USI'S 21:1-%0)

Publtshtd every af1emoon. Mondtay through
Fndoy, II I Court St , Pomeroy, Oh1o, by the
Ohto VaUey flblt ~h tng Company/Mul!nncd1a
Inc . Pomeml:) Ohm 45769 f»tt 992·2156.

Second &lt;;Ia.~~ pos~e p:nd :n Pomeroy. Oh10
Mtmber· The A~toc1ated Preu :md the Olno
New~paper A~!&gt;Ottrulon

POSTMASTER: Send addrc&lt;&gt;~ wrnction~ to
Dlllly Scnu~l. Ill Court St, l'orneroy.
0hJ045769
&amp;

g·'"·

JoAnn Wears
JoAnn Wears, 57, of Pomeroy, died Saturday, June 17, 1995, at Grant
Medical Center in Columbus.
Born Sept. 22, 1937, in Pomeroy, the daughter of the late Willard and
Agnes Wilson Mowery, she was a homemaker. She was a member of the
First Church of God In Gallipolis.
She is survived by a daughter, Myrna Swearingen of Pomeroy, daughters and sons-in-laws, Sherry and Troy Brooks of Pomeroy, and Debra
and Robert LeJene of Montgomery, Ala.; son and daughter-in-law, Robert
and AniL1 Wears of Gallipolis; sister, Linda Rye of Montgomery, Ala.;
brothers, Jtm Mowery of Columbus, John Mowery of Woodsfield, and
Jack and Kenny Mowery, both of Pomeroy; and six grandchildren.
She was preceded in dealh by ber husband, Oren Wears; son, William
Wears; brother, Robert Mowery; sister, Judy VanCooney; and granddaughter, Jessica Ann B"rooks.
.
.
Services wtll be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Ewmg Funeral Home m
Pomeroy. wiU1 Pastors Paul Voss and Robert Musser officiating .
Friends may call between 5-9 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.

----Hospital news---Middleport
Veterans Memorial Baughman,
Sunday admissions - none
Sunday discharges - none

By Carrier nr Motnr Roolt
One Week
Onr: Mt;~nth .
..

Meigs EMS logs 20 calls
Uni IS of the Metgs County MarguereU1a Wolle, treated at tllc
Emergency Medtcal Service logged scene;
8:33 p m. Saturday, Maples
20 calls for asststance Saturday and
Sunday including seven transfer Apartment,, Mary Duck, HMC;
calls. Units re.~pondmg mcluded:
3:1 I a.m Sunday, Lincoln Hill,
Charles McGrath. treated at the
.MIDDLEPO~T
12:01 a m. Saturday, South scene;
3·45 p m Sunday, North Third
Fourth Avenue, Emory Gordon,
Avenue,
Middleport , George
Veterans Memorial Hospital; )
10:33 p.m. Sunday, South •!/ec- Edward Burket~ dead upon arrtval.
RACINE
.
ond Avenue, Valene Goodman.
VMH .
5·36 a.m. Saturday, Broadway
POMEROY
and Main streets, CatToll Teaford,
8 a.m. Satur&lt;lay, Lmcoln Street. VMH,
5·19 p m. Sunday , stale Route
338, Charles Landers, VMH;
6:52 p m. Sunday. Portland
Road, Charloue Conley, VMH.
RUTLAND
Am Ele Power .... .... .... .. .......34 3/8
3·56
a.m
Saturday, Happy HolAkzo .......................... .........59 5/8 low 'Road. Betty
McKnight, VMH;
Ashland 011 .......... ...... . ...35 t/4
5:05
a.m
Saturday
, Depot
AT&amp;T ...... ..............................51 118
Bank One ............................. .Jlt/8 Street, R1ta Darnell, VMH .
SYRACUSE
Bob E.. ns .............................. .:zo 3/8
4·04 a.m Sunday, state Route
Champion Ind ......... ,............ lll/4
Charming Shop ........................4 7/8
124, DenniS Rttfle, VMH.
City Holding ................... .. ..26 t/4
TUPI'ERS PLAINS
Federal Mogul ........................ l7 7/8
4: 10 p m. Sunday, Allen Ro;~d,
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... 421/4
Roy Chmty, Camden-Clark
K-mart .................................... l4 314
Memorial Hospital.
Lands End ...................... ....... IS 3/8
Limited Inc............................. 22 Ill
Mulllmedla Inc...................... 40 3/4
"Say Love With
People's ....................................... .23
Oblo Valley Bank ................. .33 Ill
Rowers From!"
One Valley ....... :..................... .30 114
Rockwell ............................... 46 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myers ...................l6 l/4
Royal Dutch .......................... Jl4 1/8
Sboney's Inc ........................... 10 J/8
Star Bank- ............................... 43 314
Wendy Inl') ............................ 18 1111
Worlhlnglon lnd ....................ll 114
106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy. OH
Stock reports aro the 10:30 a.m.
(614) 992-6454.
quotes provided by Advest of
GaJUpolis.
(800) 433-6203

StQcks

FLOWER SHOP

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Today's livestock report

~on

A Leadmg Creek Conservancy District water mmn on Highland
Avenue near Higbl;md Church broke alter land slipped, according
to water officials.
Water was restored by 3 a.m. Monday. said Brent Bolin, Leading
Creek manager.
A boil advisory will remam m ettect for customers on State
Route 7, norU1 of the State Route 143 mtersecllon. Other areas
include Colim~ Road, Htghland Road, L1urel Clill Road, Burdeue
Road, Childrens Home Road, Wtllow Creek nnd Goeglem Road.
Water should be bmled tor at least Unee mmutes before use,
Bohn said. ·

1

SUHSCRIPTJON RATES

Herbert L.
91, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Saturday, June 17,
1995. at Ravensw
Village.
Born March S, I
in Wetzel County, W.Va., son of the late Francis ·
L. and Carrie Melissa B~n Shriver, be was a self-employed electrician.
He was a member ot the Ravenswood International Order of Odd Fellows IS, Gay Encampment4S, Palriarch Mtlitant, received the DecorAtion
of Chivalry Medal. In addttion, he was a member of the Silverton, W.Va.,
Grange wbere he served in vanous oflices, the state and natmnal Grange
and U1e Pomona Gnmge He also donated the property where the Silverton
Grange is located.
.
,
He is survived by his wife, Ruby Boggess Sbnver of Ravenswood; a
daughter, Patricilj Shriver of Ravenswood; a sister, Dorothy Lewis of
Mason, W.Va.
He was preceded in dealh by a son. Curfis Shriver; three sisters, Ersal
Parsons, Gustie Coffman and Wilda Barker, and a brolher, Homer Shnver.
Servtces will be held Tuesday, I p.m. at Straight, Tucker and Roush
Funerlll Home, Ravenswood, With the Rev. Dr. Dan Hogan officmting.
Bunal wdl follow in Ravenswood Cemetery.
Friends may call Monday, 2-4 and 7-9
at the funeral home Oddfellow services wtll be held Monday at7:3 p.m.

Saturday admissions :- none
Saturday discharges - Mabelle

WASHINGTON (AP)- Senate seven years. The Senate voted for a
Majority Leader Bob Dole wel- $170 billion cut to follow congrescomes President Clinton's entry sional approval of spending reducinto the balanced budget debate,
tions that put lbe budget on tbc path
but says 11' s too late to have any
toward balance.
imrrtediate impact
"At least lhe president is touchHouse and Senate negollators ing some of lhe bot button 1ssues
should reach agreement this week like Medicare," Dole satd on CBS'
"Face the Nation." But be sa1d
on a Republican plan to auain a
balanced budget m seven years, that if Clinton wants to show he is
Dole, R-Kan., said Sunday. He pre- sincere about budget cutting, he
dicted lhatlhey will se!Ue on a tax should help pass a balanced budget
cut over that period in the 1311ge of amendment to tbe Constitution.
$230 billion to $260 billion. 1
~Her tbis year; the Senate fell one
Clinton last week outlined his vote sbon of approving a constituown plan to bring the budget into tional amendment to require a balbalance over 10 years, with smaller anced budget by 2002.
cuts in education and Medicare
" If the president WOI!ld just give
than envisioned in GOP plans and a us one vote, work with one Demofar smaller tax cut.
cratic senator to support a balanced
The original House budget budget amendment, lhen I would
included a $350 billion tax cut over think that Ibis is for real," Dole

./

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lbare or lbundcrstonnS, with some
areat reporting bail and ·gusty
winds.
'
Mucb of tbe Northeast still
swelters under a heal wave: lllter·
national Falls, Minn., readied 99
degrees on Sunday, tying its alltime reccrd bigb for lhe date.
Records from the mid-80s to the
upper 90s were broken from Fargo,
N.D., east to Portland, Maine, with
more steamy weather in the fore-

Clinton's budget plans hit from both sides

\

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Cold front will bring showers to Ohio Tuesday

\Veutl1e1

Tueldly, Jae 2t

Monday, June 1f,,1St95

''. ? '

EDITOR'S NOTE- Laurie Asseo conrs the Supreme Court and
· legal issues for The Associated Pres_•.

OHIO

Old partners work to open Japanese markets
I

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

{i.•

The ~ly S1allnel • P.ge 3

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

Acca·W , , . fGW

·

111 Court Sbeet
Pomuoy, Oblo

MOndiy, June 11, 1115

..

One Yenr

$1 73

$7.60

.. S91 00
$INGLE COPY PRICE

O;uly

35

CenL~

Sub~cnbeN np1 dec&lt;i1nng to (XI)' t~ c.1met may
rem11 1n advanct: dtn:ct lo The Dllily Sentu~tl
on a 1hree, ~11 or 12 month ba~JS Credn will~
!l'o'en cnrnereach wttk

No ~uh~cnpuon b~ m:ul permllted 1n areas
where h,:Jmt: camer ~Crv1cc: '" a.,.al Iable

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsidt Mt'ias County
13 Week'
. .
. . . $23 92
26 Wtth
...... , . $47 06

l2 Week&lt; ... •

,

..

S92 l6

Rales Outs1dt: Melr Count)'

•

I)Wtek,

S2561

26 Weel\
~2 Weelt~

$4q 6(i
.... .. ..$96 20

••••••••• •••••

.

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What Price Servic'e?
Federated Funeral Dtrectors of America membershtp is
reserved for selected independent funeral homes nallon·
wtde.
"l.
As FFDA members, we are obliged to meet rigid
professional standards and mamtain sound business
practices.
Our affiliation w1th FFDA assures the families we are
prtvileged to serve thai they will always receive quality
service at affordable prices.

Straight- 'liu~er- !R.pusli
funeral :}{orne
Ravenswood, WV • (304) 273-2152

Prtneed - Atneed- P""truwd 3'~'1f'
Opo-d Wi'l:c!'~ioSorvlooAIOrtol.&lt;l,...,

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�Sports

The Daily~!~~~~

.MoildiY, June 1t,18t5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

Pavin wins U.S. Open championship

Page4

By BOB GREEN
SOUTHAMPTON, NY. (AP)
- Corey Pavm spnnted up the
18th fauway. bts eyes follow•ng
the fliabl of a near-perfect 4-wood
shot. When he saw wbere tt landed,
Pavm lifted both arms mjubilatlOil.
tben li:nelt m prayez
He knew he'd never again have
to answer quesuons about • 'the
best player never to wm a majOr"
And Greg Norman kriCw 11, too
Nonnan was on the 16th green
when Pavm's 228-yard shot ran to
wtthtn flve feet of the cup on the
home bole at Shmnecoek Hills
"I could hear the gallery chantmg, 'Cor-ree, Cor-ree,"' Norman
S3ld "That was a pretty good gtveaway about what bad happened "
Wttb "the best shot I've ever
played under pressure," Pavm vutually wrapped up the 1995 US
Open He shot a 2·under-par 68
Sunday and fimsbed at 280. giVIng
him a two-stroke vtctory over Norman
The 35-ycar-old Pavm had won
12 PGA events but thts was bt ~
firstmaJorchamptonshtp
"! haven't had a feelmg hke

.By beating the Expos 10·7,

.Reds win series &amp; pull away from .Cubs

•

•
.BrJOEKAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -Carlos
.Perez figun:d the C10cmnau Reds
were wwting in ambush He JliSt
.couldn't do anyth10g to avmd 11
Ev!:r smce Montreal's exuberant
..ookle 1beat them last month, tbe
.Reds had been look10g forward to
the rematch They got together
before the game Sunday and
!Iemtnded each other how much
they dtsliked hts fist-pnmpmg cele.brauon after every strikeout
Tben, they got even The Reds
gave Perez bts comeuppance,
.]j:nocking btm out m the second
mmng of a 10-7 vtctory over the
Expos
"Oh, yeah, everybody was
ready," a subdued Perez satd.
"They were lookmg for the fastball
no matter what
"I faced them before and

pttcbed well When a team faces a
young pttcher like me (for the first
ume). llley don't know what pttch·
es 1 ba ve They know more now
what I have "
And Perez knows JU~t bow
much hts anucs - pumping hts
arm after strikeouts, hoppmg over
the foullme- annoy otliCr teams
"That's hts game That's how
be pnches," satd Reggte Sanders,
who bu an upper-deck homer to
s~vt Perez's rrusery. "Allndoes tS
boost the btuers up"
It (jidn't help that Perez bad little ammumtion He kriCw warrrung
up 10 tbe bullpen that tt would be
one of those days he had avotded
until then - 1 2/3 mmngs, five
runs, four btts, two walks, one bit
batter and one wdd pttch that let in
a run
"I dtdn't have any control thts

ume." he S3ld. "I talked about thiS
about two weeks ago I said some
day I was gomg 10 have a bad slart
That happens That's baseball "
After Perez left the game trmlmg 5-1, both teams fumbled around
and watched thetC bullpens extend
the game to three hours and 22
mmutes. the longest mne-mnmg
game at Rtverfront Stadtum thts
season
"I forgot about Carlos," Expos
manager Fehpe Alou satd "It's
been so long, and there's been so
much that happened "
Reds starter Kevm Jarvts, who
glared at Perez after getung hit on
Ute pttcbmg arm by a fastballm the
second mmng and later had words
wtth htm, let the Expos take the
lead wtth five runs m the fifth The
Expos put together a season-htgh
seven bus m the mnmg and went

up 6-5 on Mmses Alou's RBI smgle off Xavter Hernandez
"II started to tighten and swell
up," Jarvts S3ld of hiS ann "But I
thought I could go out there and
ptt£h six mnm~s ''
An mnmg later, Gabe Whne (I·
I) gave up 11 two-run homer to
Mark Lewts, bts second, and the
Reds put the ~arne away m the seventh Ttm Scott gave up an RBI
smgle to Lewts, who went 4-for-4,
and Damon Berryhtll followed wtth
btS ftrsl homer
Lewts, who came to the Reds m
a trade wtth Cleveland last December, ts 13-for-16 m hts last six
games
"When I was first called. up to
the btg leagues (wtth Cleveland m
1991), I hll over .400 for the ftrst
month and a half," Lewts satd.
"There's no way I can keep thts
up I went through thts before I'm
not gomg to get overcon IidenI "
Mtke Jackson (1-0) ptlchetl out
of a two-on, two-out Jam m the
siXth for Ius first wm smce May 29,
1994 Jeft Brantley pitched the
nmth lor hts nmth save

WINS U.S. OPEN - Corey Pavin holds the champion's trophy
aloft for the gallery shortly after winning the U.S. Open Sunday at
Shlnnecock Hills Golf Course in Southampton, N.Y. (AP)

In the Stanley Cup finals,

Huggins
to stay at UC

LOSES THE HANDLE -

Cleveland third

Into third base on Randy Velarde's single in the
flfth inning of Sunday's Alll!ldc;an League game
In Cleveland, where the Yankeel'\.on 9-S. (AP)

ba.~man Jim Thome (ten) loses the handle on the

• baseball as New York's Tony Fernandez slides

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Yankees defeat Indians 9-5

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By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- Jack
McDowell strung two wms together for tbe flrst ume all season, and
Paul 0 'Net II homered Sunday
Jnght as the New York Yankees
beat tbe Cleveland lndtans 9-5
New' York won two of 1ts three
games m Cleveland, marking only
•the second ume the lndtans have
Jost a senes thts year Mtlwaukee
-won two of three at Jacobs Fteld m
late May
• McDowell (3-4) gave up ftve
..,runs and JO hils, mcludmg home
runs by Jtm Thome and Paul Sorrento, m seven-plus mnmgs He has
won Ins last two starts after gomg
.Wmless for etghl stratght starts
from May 3 through June 8, the
• longest dry spell of Ius career
John Wetteland, the Yankees'
fourth p11cher, reheved wtUt two on
and two out m the etghth and
struck out Manny Ramtrez, then
got the last tllree OUIS for Ins nmth

.save
The Yankees scored 111 tour of
the first five tmungs, wtth all seven
of those runs comn\g alter two
were out
Charles Na£y (4-3) lost m Ius
shortest outmg smce 1993 allowmg five runs and live hils whtle
walkmg a season-htgh tour m Um:c
mnmgs

The Yankees took a 2-0 lead m
the flfsl on Don Mattmgly's RBI
smgle and Danny Tartabull's (Unsconng double The Imhans had
blown a chance to get out of the
mmng when Nagy mtssed lirst base
taktng the return throw on
O'Netll' s potent tal double-play
grounder
,O'Netll htl a two run homer m
the second, hts seventh, and Randy
Velarde drove m a run wtth ,, sm
gle m the thlfd
,
Tony Fern.mdez anti Bernte
Wtlh.uns hll RBI smgles ott Tason
Gnmsley m Ute lift h. makmg 11 7-2

Kenny Lofton scored Cleveland's ftrst two runs on Omar
Vtzquel's smgle m the ltrst and
Carlos !&gt;aerga's smgle m the thtCd
Thome htl a two-run homer hts
14Ul, m tl1e stxUt and Sorrento let!
oil the scvctttll wnh Ius 13th ot the
year
The Yankees m.tde 11 9-5 111 the
nmth 011 att RBI double by r-eruandez and,, wtltl pttch by Enc Plunk
Notes: The Yankees have htl "l
least onh double m thetr l.tsl 21
games
Manmgly had htts m hts
ftrst two at -bats atter collectmg
Just two htts m ht&lt; prevtous 20 ,,,_
b.us H •s nmth mnmg smgle Monday mght ended rn• 0-lor-14 sktd
The Yankees arc 4-1 at l:tcobs
Fteld since n opened l.tst year
The lndtans hav e sold out I I ot
thelf 25 home games, mcludmg the
l.tst SIX All three games of theu
senes With Doston be~ mnm g Mnn
day nt ght also .u e sold out
Lollon h," two or mot c lnts m I0
of hts last 15 gruncs

CINC!kl (AP) - Bob
Huggms wtthdrew as a j;:andtdale
for the Mtamt Heat coaehmg JOb
Sunday, saymg he prefers to stay at
tile Umverstty of Cmcmnatt
"If I never have another chance
to coach m the NB A, I can hve
wtth 11," he satd at a news conference "What I am comm llted to
nght now ts makmg thts the best
basketball program I can make 11 "
Huggms, who has coached
Cmcmnatt to a Ftnal Four appearance and four consecultve NCAA
tournament berths, became a leatlmg candtdate for the Muum JOb last
week
He satd the Heat never offered
lum a contract, contrary w published reports He was m contact
w1U1 agent Ron Gnnker all week
Huggms, 41 , has one year left
on hts contract wtth Cmcmnau,
wluch ts workmg on a IO·year
extensmn Huggms satd detatls ol
U1c new contract are sttll bemg &lt;Itscussed
I
The extensmn reportedly would
pay htm $750,000 a year and
mcludes an escape clause
&gt;
M tamt ts looknig to replace
Alvm Gentry, who was ftred last
month There have been reports
Utat Pat Riley , who restgned a.' the
New York Kntcks' coach, was
under constderatton, but the Kntcks
have not released hun from the
final year of hts contract
The Heat has fruled to make the
pl.tyolls m five ot thetr seven sea·
sons, mcludmg tlus year,l when
they were 32·50 Kevm Loughery
was fired as coach 111 February, and
Gentry wa.&lt; flfed lnllowmg dte se.1·

son

NICE JOB, REGGIE! - The Cmcinnati Red•' Reggie Sanders is
congratulated by thtrd ba.&lt;e coach Ray Knight aner Sanders' two-run
homer in the first inning of Sunday's National Lea11u• game against
the visiting Montreal Expos, whn lost 111-7. (AI')

Athens Legionnares post
15-10 victory over Meigs
Athens took advantage ol a
sevcn·run mmng to opei);&lt;:IJil a 9-1
le.1d after one mnmg, and'IW:Id off a
Metgs comeback attempt to post a
15·1 0 wm over Metgs 111 Etghth
Dtstrtct Amencan Legton baseball
acuon Fnday
Each team pounded nut 12 btL&lt;,
aiU1ough Athens (5 2 overall &amp; 2-2
111 dtstncl play) had seven ot tl' luis
111 the 11rsttwo mmngs Metgs (1-4
&amp; 1-3) had hve of tis luis 111 the
tinaltwo ummgs
Danny Jones ptlchcd the ftrst stx
mnmgs for Athens before Josh
Chapman went the lmal three
mnmgs for the save Mtke Wolfe
went Ute dtstance tor Metgs
Jake St Angelo led the Athens
attack wtth four smgl es, whtle
temnmates Andy Perry and Dustm

Dcnms chtpped m wtUl two singles
each Wolle had a dooble and two
smgles and tour RB Is to lead
Metgs Teammate Ryan Marlm
added three stnglcs and an RBI
Chad Burton had two smgles and a
RBI, whtle Brett Newsome added a
double and an RBI Jeremy Grunm.
Scott George, Rtck Hoover and
Andy Wamsley each added a smglc
Mc1gs was to have hosted
Logan m " twmhtll on S.tturday
No dcl,nls ol the game were .wall

able at press tunc Metgs w•ll travel
to Athens on Tuesday evemn!(th
play Athens tn a mne-mnmg g(unc

Inning totals
270·020-400= 15·12-4
Athens
Metgs
010-001-251=10-12-2
WP - Jones (Chapman save)
LP - Wolle

Meigs volleyball camp set for July
The 1995 Metgs M,traudet volleyball wtll be belli from July I 0
unul July 14 at Metgs I hgh School
The camp, open to gifts entenng
grades 7-I 0, wtll be held from 9 to
II am dally
Regtstratuln forms, whtch are
avatlable at the mam olltcc at

Metgs Htgh School, can be sent to
Rtck Ash Box 126, Syracuse Oluo
45 779 Checks can be m.ttle
p.tyable to the Mctgs Athleltc
Boosters
For pnces and more mformauon
call M.trauder Coach Rtck Ash at
992 5960

Baseball

f~illallt'lphla

Ne-w York

O r~tqn

2tl

I!J

1:&lt;1.
596

Dctrmt ..................... :;!.4

2(

4KO

T11n.•nt o
New Ycd;.

20

20

26
:!7

4J5
426

Duli1m&lt;reo

19

2K

404

-c~nlr11l On&lt;I!IIIJn

llll
55
75
i

"

CLEVELAND

34

13

7::.!3

K:'l.ni'lll.'f City

J7
22

20
25

S74
468

7
12

356
21Hi

17
11

Mllwau~

Hi 29
I 4 3S

Chtcago
Mmnt".lmta

Cahfrr::·~···
Tex~

w..,hrn Division

.:::. 2830

Oaldand
Sc:!lllle

27
25

19
21
23
:23

6121
57
5&lt;10
521

Saturday's sc.:ores

C.:t'ntral OIYh11nn

CINCINNATI

31

CIIIClli;O

25

llou.&lt;;lun
St UlUI~

"

P11t:..hurgh

?

ll

"

Toronhl 4 Te11ru; 'l

Searr le6 Mlnm:M•t."l 4
Calif( rnra 4 Clnt.:ugn J (II)

Sunday's scores
4 Mllwouku 2
DetrOit lO Bnlt lm«e II
Tnmnt" 7 Tew 2
0 •k.land J KanNa~~ Clly 1

J5

II

Ill

ColorJCkl
San FrunCJ);Cu

San Du·gu
l...o!' Angeles

27 22
27 21

151

"24

500

'i4()

24

:\5

490

5
25
3

Saturday's scores
Plttladelplua 1I flOfid:t 4

Son Otego II PittsburJh S

San Franc1"co 4 St Louu; I
CINCINNA115 Montreu14
A1lnm:~7

Colorado I

Sunday's scores
Phrlldelplno-. Flumla '\
1

l'lltsbur!lh (I

New Yrrlri: 10 HCiuston 4
CINllNNATliO Manlreu17
San Fnulcurco 6 St Louts I
Uu Ange le~~. 6 Orrcngo~ Q
All ant:~ 9 Colorndu 4
1le 2 5) ;~t Muntrea l
7 J) 1 3~ p m
Atlama (Smultz. S 3) at CINCINNATI
(Schoure k 4 3) 7 35 p m
San Fr:~nctsth (W1lson 3 3) at Pill,.
buc~h (Neal# 6 3) 7 3S p m
Phtladtlphra (Qunnurll S 2) 111 New
York (Mhck.i 4 2) 7 40 p 111
1M&gt; Angda (Nonk'l :\ I) tat St U'!uis
(lt.l/4-2) S ll pm.
Flonda (llnnut"Kind 3 I) at Color&lt;tdo
(Rwz51) 90Spm
Clu cay.u (FmteJ 4 l) ~I San Dtegn
(ll&lt;lrmllon 2 2) 10 OS r 111
H {I U51Qn (

Tonight's ~;ames
I) ut ClEVIZ

r

420
162

6

(F&lt;Wtro

New Ynrli: I} C' l EVELAND~

Teu.~

...

646
521

Ionl~ht's ~ames

Cahromu1 K Ch1cago 4
Seattle 2 Mmne...otu I

o4

JO

119

Wl'~&gt;h:ru ll•••~wn

8o~mn

(Wakeltelil

17

m

J
5
125
15 5

nt

(Grtlfi5 I 6) ill De1rurt {AMafTIC'
0·1) 705pm
New Yor k (Perez 4 3) at BDimnon•
(Khn~enbeck 1 l) 7 35 r m
St:.a!tle (Deicher ' 1) n1 Oltcouo (Fer
nanJc:t:! 4) 8 05 p 111
Mm nl!ao01ll (EtiCklion 3 5) at Oakland
(Qnh\'eroN (i 2) 10 0.5 p rn
IC!IMa.t City (Appter 9 ~) 111 CahfMnta
(Busk te.5..()) l OOSrm

Tuesday's games
Mtn n~

(Mahonw 0 .3) B( Ollldand
(0nt1Yei'OI 6 2) ~m
Do1ton (EIIbt m J-0) at CLEVE
LAND (Ojea 2.0 D.l p.m.
Teu• (Oliver 2) at Detroit (Bergnmn
3-4) 70.Spm
Mtlwauk~ ( Rob~nQn 21) at Torooto
(l·h:n!Jell' 4-4) , l~ p m
New York {Hitchcock 1 4) 111 Balli·
n...-e(RIIUdc&amp; I 1) 13.' p m
St-.!tllc (John~ , 6 I) 111 CII(CUIJU (AI
vurezl )) HO , fL
Kal'lllat! Cily cGubtcza -'f..5) a~ Calt(tN"
nJa { AndtrliOQ 0 0) 10 Oj p m

NATIONAL LEA GUt:

TuC5d.:~y'~ g:~ml.!s

Hnwuon (Reynold~ 2 5 1 at M~~ntrtul
(PJ Moutinez.5 ll 7 l:'i p rn
Alllinta (Madl.lux 5 I ) at CINC'IN

NATl (NJtll:oWskl {1.0) 7 3.$ p m
San Frantucu (Le11er j .1) at Plitt
burab (loBtZli 2·3) 7 35 p m

Ptuladel(liUa (Gretn ~ 4) ::11 Nt'w York
{HarniJch I 3) 7 40 p rn
L:w Ange l ~ (AoUXtl I 5) at St U1uts
(Pe11&gt;(1Vfiek::! I) I :\.5 p n
F!Cirtdn (Wttt I ~) 11 Colmmlu !Grulu·
2 I) 9'0Sp tn
Chtcago (Cll~t lll u .5 2) at San Dlt'ilo
(Sanlkr~ S 2) W (lj p m

AL leaders

Ka ns.t.~

Karr01 Lo~ An~elet&gt; 39 Gam CINON
NATI 39 CulitJIIa Co lurodo 36 S('~¥•
Clu~o~:u 36 Bonds Siln Fmnc1sro 3l'i\
Clurr~r Jone11 Atlanta 35 Ktng Pitt:;
tour~!lt

3.5 Grace Cturago :\5 M tW
tlhlllllti San Fmnctsco :\~
lOTS Bu:htOe Cnkll'lUio 1'1 Gllk.ey
Sl [.(IUIIi CiS MnndCiliJ Ll ti Angele!i (1&lt;4
Karr-•1: Uos An"'cl~s r.4 D Dell Hous
tun 64 T r.wynn s 1n D1ego 63
Suiwhcz Ouca11u (ol Cu.o;tllll Culor.·utu
rt
OOttDLEs Grnc~ Cluca~n 22
Dtdt etle C 1l1 radr I!J Lanklurd St
Lours Ill McRoo Otrctl~,tn 17 Cordero
Montreul 15, Sunchez Clmago 14 R
Sanden; CINClNNATI 14
TIUPLES McRae Oticag.o 4 Dontla
San FranttiCO 4 l...arli.tn CINCINNATI
4 9 are IK-d With 3
HOME RUNS L Walker Colorado
JS. Ga nt CINCINNATI 14 MaW
tlltanl~ San I ranct~ IJ Mondeflt Los
ADi!.tll.'fi 12 C:ua1llt1 (CIInrado 12 SoMa
ctucago 12 Kanu5 l...ill! An~eles 11 R

C!!} 17

HITS I 1 ti c n C l f VEl ANil foS
Baerga CLE Vr!L"NIJ f5 C Dam
C :~ltfnr nt 1 h4 Delk CLF.VE I AND W
R Alonmr r (oro nlu CoO E Mar11ncz
Sctltlle GO t{nt blauc h M1nne~nta 59
Murrny CLEVEI AND 59
DOLIULES Bel CLEVELAND 22
DtSarclnil Cul1fnrnltt 16 E Martinez
Sealtle IS Seillc:r Mllwuuk.ee Ij
Ga@.nt Kun~;as C1ty IS. Nnchnn~
Dl!l&gt;t l'lll 14 J Oltve r Milwaukee 14
S~ern Olk.lan11 14 Jr yner Ka~w. C1ty

"

TRIPLES R AIt mur l o runl, G
Lofl nn CLEV ELAND 5 Whnc= Tm·tm
II 1r S lhSamna C. II Ft•rnta. 4 OrJdy Ar
dHson Dall lnw re 4 DWJII!llflls N~w
Ycork, 3 ~ ...-clark. Mumc:wta 3
HOME RllNS McOw irC Ollklnntl
18 M Ynut;hn B&lt;lNton 16

Fteltl~f

to Oklahoma Ctty of the Amer1ean A~ll­
ctattun
N.11tu n11l LcaRUt
ATLANTA DRAVES Activated
Do.vtd Jushce nutftdt.ler fn,ru tlu: 15 dny
d1Nablcd hst ()phoned Bnan Kuw!lz out
ftddcr to Rtchmc•ntl of the lnternnttonal
Lea1:1ue
CINCINNAfl REDS Plnced Hnl
t-'foms !mit ba.~e man on Lire 1"i t.luy d•~
~led 11~1 Culled up Cnlt~ Worthm~ton
tnhelllu from In hamlpoll,.. of tile Amen

can Assuct:.ti!Oil
COLORADO ROCKIES ActtViltcd

Druc e H.ufftn r1tc1ter fro m the IS day
Optwned Lan ce Patnttr
pttcher tc c( II rmlu SpnnGJ! of the Pactfic
Cuasr lc&amp;i;Ue AciJvnlt!tl Armando
Rey noso rut cher from tile 15 day ths
ablt'.tl h~t Alllllgned Omar Oltvern.s p1tch
er outn.:ht to Colorado Spring~~ of the Pll
ctfic Coa.~ l League
FUlRtDA MARLINS Optwncd Bob
Natal catc her to Charlotle u( the lntema
uona ll.ngue
II()USTON AS1 ROS Sent Andy
SIIRk!eW!CZ mflelder to fuclion t)f ;he
Pat.:t iJ c Coast League on a rehabtlttal!nn
thsahlct.lll~t

OL'i..~ljlUIIlt'nl

1

K11 4 ftl

STRIKEOlrrS k Jnhnsun St!attle
102 ArPJt.'r Kiln.'a.' Crry 87 rmley Cttl
lforn1a 15 srnllhHnyre Oakland 70
Brown D:kllnnore 60 Cone Toronto S9

CINCINNATI II
!,'TOLEN BASES Verw; florttlo 17
D Santft.rs CINCINNATI 16 Lark.tn
CINONNATI 16 Mouwn HoUR.ton 14
R Sanden CINCINNATI 14 D Bell
Houston 14 Ot'Shrelcl~ LCI~ Angeles 14
Sheffield Flunda 14
PITCHING (5 decuowns) Holme&amp;
(,1lur:.ultl ~ 0 I 00{1 :\ 37 C Perez
M t~n lreal r. I
lfS? 2 12 M1rnlls
PIHiuddp lua ~ I flU 3 21 Ratz Cn l
~ r:uk) s I 113'\ 39() Sclulltn&amp; Pluhul~l
nl ua 5 1 111 J 0!.1 Smtley CINCIN
NATI S I 1113 3 51\ G Maddu1 At
llnlil 5 I 833 l 91 Portugal SWI Fran
CI~CO 5 I 831 3 28
STiUKEOUTS Nomo Lo' Angeles
75 Schllhng P!HIIIdel[1hl:i 74, B~nes
San D1~go 67 Smoltil Allonta 66
Fa~ ~ l' r n Montreal 62 P J Marltne.t.
Montn:al 59 Valdes., Lc$ Anitelts 58 0
MaM ut Allanta. 58
SAVES Slocumb Phalatlelph1a 16
Myer~ Chicago IS Henke St Louis IS
Beck San Francrsco II RoJas Montre-.tl
I I 1 Drautley CINCINN A11 g Todd
Worrell t.o.. Angeleti 9

Transactions

llan.o;ott 80$1on 58
SAVES Meso CLEVELAND 17
ltoe Sllllth Cnttrorn1a 17, Montgomery
K:ms::r.o; C11y 12 Eckl':f•ley, Oaldand. 1:2
Ayala Seattle 10 R Uernandn Chtcago 1.0 Henn•rmn Detroit 10

Baseball
Amerkan IA•(!.UC

CALIFORNIA ANGELS Releated
Mttc1t Wl111lmJ, ptlchcr
CJUC A.GO WHITE SOX ReasSI&amp;ned

Paul Gonulez thud bRSernan from BlrmSm.nhttn Laaue to Prince
W1lh•m of U1e Ca.roh1111 leaiue
CLEVELAND INDIANS Purchued
li~ coutroct of Oreeg Olson pndlar from
Buffalo of the Amencao AuocililtiOD
Destgnaled Jdf Cook, pitcher for IWI&amp;JI
me.nt
TEXAS RANGERS At.:tJ\Ialed Jeff
Frye tnftdder from the IS day dlubled
h~l s~nt Shawn Hare, ooU'ielder oultiidJt

NL leaders

m~am of the

8A1TINO Btchette Colorod(,, 367
V Bell Hfll.l510n 340 T Gwynn San
Ott'IJ:O 339 lar.ldn CINCINNA11 3311
Cll!IUIIa, Colorado 337 Karro1 Los An
ll,t.le~ 332. R Sanden, CINCINNATI

Jll

Or!ICt: Oucavo 331
RUNS M1ondellt l:..us Angela 41
Bonds San Franc11100 40 Bt~J.!io Hous

Arena

Detrott coach Scotty Bowmnn
attrtbuted Saturday mght's loss m
large measure to the Red Wmgs'
mabtltty to wm faceoffs - a sktil
1hat was bastcally lost once the Red
Wings lost Pnmeau
Fedorov, also a center, ts sttll
recuperatmg from a separated
shoulder Even though Fedorov
satd Sunday that hts co•u.ltlloll
" definllely 1s tme," Bowman mllm.ued otherwiSe
"lie can't lllke laceotls :md we
don't know how he ' II be tomorrow
mght," Bowman satd
Even though Fedorov tS ued for
the playoff le.1&lt;1 wtth 19 pomt~. hts

HUNTING ION W Va (AP)
- North Carolma ftshcnnan Rtck
: La Mountain on Saturday captured
: the $100,000 two-day Red Man
AII -Amencan Bass FtShmg Cham. pwnslup
: La Mountam, of Grover, N C ,
· also won $1 000 for catchmg the
tournament's largest ftsh, a 4
· pound 5 ounce bass on Fnday
:
Ron Yurko, ol Conneaut, Ohm,
won the $25 000 second pnze wttlt
a two-day total ot 9 pounds 14
ounces

Joel Rtchardson, ot Kerne• sv tlie N C . won the $12,500
lhlfd pnze wtth a total catch ot 7
pounds , 13 ounces Rtchardson
cnught all of hts fish on S.llurday
Rtchardson also won $500 for
catchmg U1e largest lish on Saturday at 3 pounds, g ounces

do you have

SnOOer~

De

trmt IS: Tlwme C LEVFLAND 14
Jhnurel Cl L:VELAND 13 Th oma~
C luc:~.gn 1:\ Sorrcn1n C LEV ELAND
13 Palmeuu Dallunore 13 Gae111
Kall.(l]S City IJ
STOLEN BASES Lofton CLEVE
LAND If&gt; Gnutlwm Kamo~s Ctty Jti
Mc~ m1 re Texn.~ I ( Knoblauch M n
ne.•,ota 15 Cnlcman Kans:lli Crl y IS L
JIIIIIISOJ! Cluc:J.~h )4 l~vter U&lt;~klam/
(:\ N1xon Te~a.~ 13
PITCIIINO (~ deCtMnnN) la varet.
CLEVELANO ~ 0 I 000 I 15 Bh~kie
Cahfornm c; !I I 00(1 199 Du:•rn Se:~l
tie 50 l flO() 4 1c; OcMart lnct.
CU:."VELAND fiJI I 000 2 S~ R Julin
son Sen t!It (, I !'l''i1 2 75 Han~ nn
B~:~str&gt;ll 6 I 1157 3 23 Dutcl1er C 1hfor
1113 "' I Hl1 ti iUI Sto tlkmyrto O.!klalld
S I M33 4 2:\ Ulnj,!stun C:tltfornta .'1 I

33 1 Offerm1on. los Angelel
BA111NG Nwl¥rag Bo&amp;ion 365 C
Davrs Cal!forola 36.4 Settur M1 lwau

ton 37 Gnn1 CINCINNAti 37 R
Sonder~ CINC INNATI H 0 Holltns
Plu!adelplnll 35 Fmley San Dr~go 35
RBI R Sand~rs CINCINNATI 41

RBI McG wtrc: Oa~lant.l 4( M
Vaul,lhn Dushlf) 43 E Mutllnl"l Scuttlt
41 Drll ~ Cl EVI.:LAND, 311 C Davt~
Cahfur nta l]l S1ertu Oakland l7 Gael
It

San Ore j J'l

() 1lhuul 7 K nrum.~ City 5
IJc:tl'l' It ~ Ballnm Ill 3

B 11~Wn

21

17
23
24
29

540

llJI

Hoo!.lon 7 Nt~w York 3
U1R Ang~ll!s 121Chtcago 5

Milwaukee 9 B(.A'Iton 1
CLEVELAND 7 New York 4

LAND (Murtmet 6-0) 7 05

1:&lt;1.
646
m

15 32

Flonila

Dt\'lst"n

11: L

17

"2719 "'3023

Montreal

AMERICAN LEAGUE
f.;~slrrn

11

All.:tr~lrl

Major leagues
I&lt;;ow

11: L

fum

kee 36 1 E M:~rtlnez Seatlle 3SJ
R:unucz CLEVELAND 340 Lofton
CLEVE( A!'olD 319 Knoblauch Mm
nCl&gt;c Ia 3)7
RUN S E Marttnez Sealllc: 41 ]ohn
Vaknhn B&lt;».!l n 40 M1.:0w1rt: O:.~kland
40 Delle Cl EVELAND 39 Plu rs
CaiiCorntJ llJ C Davt~ Cal1forma 39
M Vau~lm Du'&gt;tu n 31 Brady Am!cr~1 n
Dahu nurc :0

DETROIT (AP) - Maybe u's
tune for Vtachcslav Fettsov to gtve
Serget Fedorov another btg push
Earher m the playoffs Fettsov
was mstrumental m bnngmg
Fcdorov back earher dtau expected
from an lDJUry and the Detroit cen·
)er helped the Red Wmgs beat the
Clucago Blackhawks m the chnchtng game of the Westem Conference finals
Now the Red Wtl1gs find they
could use atlotlter top performance
from U1etr top center, p.trttcularly
followmg an mJury to another key
player, Ketth Pnmeau
Pnmeau, probably the Red
Wtngs' best taceoft man, suffered a
back mJury m Detroll's 2-1 loss to
New Jersey 111 Grune I of the fmals
Saturday mght It was sllll uncertam whether he would play m
Game 2 'Fuesday mghl at Joe Loms

:~ La Mountain wins
'
:·area
bass tourney

Scoreboard
Eu1un DlviJollon

Red Wings need
healthy Primeau
after loss to Devils

•.

have come on goals

"I've changed my game, per·
sonally," Fedorov s,ud "Nola
whole lot - but 1 do play a httk~
dttlerent style (than last season) ·
The 25-year·old Fedorov carne
out ot the most dtsctphned system
m the world - the Russtan Red
Army team - to emerge as a s~v
111 the NHL
In RuSSia he played wtth the
players he worshtpped as a little
boy - parucularly Serget Makarov
.md Fettsov
Fettsov, captatn of the Red
Army team , remembered that
Fedorov crune Ill as an 1mpresst ve
17-ye.'lf-old
·

0
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992-3381
Represenflng fhe OhiO Casualty Group of Insurance Compames

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
- Norway scored two ltrst·half
goals wtthm three nunutes and held
off European soccer champiOn Ger·
many 2 0 Sunday to wm the 11nal
or the women's World Cup compeuuon
liege Ruse and Mananne Pettersen scored tor Norway, whtch
fmtshed runners-up tu the Umted
States Ill the maugur.~ world chanlptonslup four years ago 111 Chma
Norway played wtt.llout captam
Hctdt Store, eJected .lfter recetvmg
two yellow cards m Ute sctmlinals
agatnst the Umted States But the
Norwegtans dtdn't mtss her much
m mtdfteld outplaymg the Germ.ms Utroughout U1c lin;t half
Store was not permtlled to hit
U1e trophy after the final Instead,
co captain Gro Esepscth accepted 11
from FIFA prestdent Joao Havelange and Swedtsh Pnme Muuster
Ingvar Carlsson
Norway outscored the oppost·
unn 23-1 m SIX games

took over the country in 1975 He
got a JOb making pails and scythes
for use m tbe nee flelds There was
no pay, only food - and not
enough of that
·'They mtstreated all the people
We would work 13 to 14 hours a
day JUSI to get some food to eat,''
Stphann satd
HIS older brother, who once
taught English and French m a pnvate school, was taken from the
fatmly one mght by two umformed
me'lwtlho earned niles. He was tortured before he was ktlled Another
brother was killed m the war zone,
two of the esltmated 2 mtlhon
ktlled dunng the bloody Khmer
Rouge regune
Alter hts mother dted because ot
,, lack of medtcal treatment lor an
ulcer Stphann dectded to get marned Ilut the Khmer Rouge kept
men and women separated
One day Stphann spotted Sann,
who hved nearby, and a strange
courtslup took place
"My stster knew her mom,"
Stphrum satd 'I asked my stster to
propose to her mom l11e commumsts do not date, no nothmg She
satd she would marry me I L'llk to
her maybe once. She was very
shy ·
Stphann had to get permtsston
to marry The ceremony was at the

By MARC KATZ
Dayton Daily News
FAIRBORN, Obto (AP)
They were ankle-deep m Cambodt·
an mud. m the mtdst of walkmg
four days and three mght~ to safety
They watched for land mmes. the
Vtetnamese and Khmer Rouge any of which could ktllthem
AI one pomt, Stphann Ttth
whtspered to hts etght-monthspregnant wtfe Sann, "I want a boy
I would ltke to teach htm to do
somethmg better m thiS hfe '
What that would be, they had no
tdea The gutde was about to leave
the group because tt could not
move fast enough wllh Sann p.'lCChed from a lack of water. her
feet swelling
The thought crossed her mmd
she mtght dte alone In the Jungle
"I told her tf somethmg happened, I'd dte wtth her," Stphann
satd

A month later, m Thatland,
Veasna Ttth was born Now, the
son ts begmnmg tu do somethmg
better m thts life
Havmg completed hts freshmru1
year at Fatrboru Htgh School, the
15-year·old ts not only a good student, but one of the state's best tenIllS players He won the seclmnal
and dtstrtct tenms tourumnents and
lost m the semtfinals of the state
umament
"People a•l; me where I learned
to pl.ty,' Vca"t.l sil'd "I tell them
n
d tau •ht me: '
T ts not i1le futher"~y lesson
·---.._
Stpbann Tnh, 40, spent 1hrce
years m the Cambodtan Au Force
but qmt when the Khmer Rouge

whun of lhe commumst comman-

der. who marncd several couples at
once
' You must pmmtse to serve the
cnmmumsts," Stphann smd "No
mustc, no cake no nothmg. The
communtst leader got up and say,
'You get marned tnmght "'
Sarm's JObs - first m the nee

advantage of a re~Lart after a cau-

pa~ t

uon penod JUSt 17 laps from the
end of the 200 1.1p event to m.tkc a
move for the lead
G01don lapped the re.1r ot
Labonte's Chevrolet Monte Carlo
as the two raced to U1e tlagstand,
then drove Ius Chevy hard to the
outstde and got past Labome as
they charged mto the first tum of
the two mtle, htgh·banked oval
Labonte refused to pantc,
though, btdmg Ins ltme and makmg
hts own pass m tum two on lap 188
look easy a.' he retook Ute lead for
good

' We've tned stncc 1991 to
unprove our play tn .utack and
defense,·' satd coach Even
Pellerud "I'm very unpressed' by
the gtrls They've played at thetr
best level for stx games 111 a row,
wluch happens seldom m foot ball .
Rit'\1'. who had ntL'8ed three carher chances, scored the openmg
goal m the 36tlt mmute wnh a low
shot ncar the post .tJter a fine snlo
run It '\'as her ltfth goal m the
tournament, one behmd scormg
leader and teamtn,ne Ann· Knstm
Aarones
Forward Pettersen made tt 2-0
m tlle 39th, knoekmg a rebound
over goal te Manuela Goller from
close (3llge Goller matle the mtllal
save on mtdfielder Lma Medalen's
shot from lbe left, but she couldn't
holll on to Ute ball
Tbe Untted States. whtch edged
Norway 2-1 111 the 1991 ftnal,
blanked Chma 2-0 m Saturday's
bronze. medal grune at Gavle, centr.il Sweden

land mmes

They also hu.ltrom rovmg hand~
ot V1etnamese who would shoot at
people wttltout askmg questtons
After the gUide lell, the famtly
lost tts way but strangers helped
them to the border 1 here they
were greeted by guards shooung
thetr guns m the atr The famtly
was scared unttl 11 reahzed they
were bcmg welcomed to a

IH!W

country
On Nov 2\ 1979, Veasna was
hom m a Red Crqss bamboo hut at
the l11rnlru1d horder
Alter lime m a relugee camp m
Thmland, they took " boat to lhe
Phthppmes to learn Enghsh
Another son, D.tra was hom On
Apnl,;n, 1982, they came to the
Unue'il St.ues, sponsored by the

"We've raced each other hard a
lew umes hetore now, and th.ll JUSt
shows how close and compettttve
both our cars arc • Labonte .tdded
111 the tace came out on lap 188
Team owner Joe Gthbs. the forbecause ot debns on the track
mer Washmgtnn Redskm s coach
Thts ume , though, Labonte, who htred Labonte at the stan of
whose ftrst Wmston Cup vtctory, tlus sea.son smd '!lobby e&lt;une 10
crune on May 28 m the Coca-Cola behmd Jell twtce earhcr lbts year
600 at Charlotte. wa.~ able to hold and I tlnnk beatmg htm tike tht&lt; IS
htm ol f Gordon d1d pull alongstde really good for Ilohby 1 know tt' s
on l.•p 192, hut was unable to get good for me and the rest of our

ht: was 13 years

stn~.:e

fields, then m a garden to grow
food for thnse workmg m the nee
fields - were mtles away When
S1phann could get away, he would
vtstt Sann, maybe every stx
months
By 1979. the Khmer Rouge
were bemg overrun by the Vtetnamese cotnmunms, and Stphann
U10ught Uungs would change They
&lt;ltd not He wa' sull a mtstreated
slave, only the ma.&lt;ter changed
So early one mommg, Stphann,
hts wtfe, hts l~ther, a gmde and hiS
tamtly took ott They had the
clothes on thelf backs, a few other
clothes c.trncd m a rolled up blanket. some pots and pans and a hule
fond- rn•d an axe Stphann earned
tor protccllon
Someone usually stayed awake
to watch lor thteves Dunng the
day , they looked for loolpnllls to
tollow so they would not step on

Presbytenan Church
Stphann stmted watchmg televtston He was mesmenzed by tenIllS

/ "I d1dn't know what II was
called," Stphann smd "I a.~k my
nephew, ' 'How do you play l How
do you keep score&gt;' I mtght be
mterested 111 playmg sport I had no
JOb I studted Enghsh at Falfbom
Htgh School My nephew bought a
tenms racket

' I w.ttch the match, but I don't
watch for fun I watch how they btl
the b,\11, l10w they bend U1c knee "
When he was 4 or 5. Veasna
was ha~ded a tenms racket
Stphann began teachmg bun how
to play. as he had seen the game
played on televiSion Stphann
learned how to hit wtth topsp10 and
passed on the tdea to hts son He
worked wtth hun all ll1e ume. and
to test hts own game, he would hll
the ball agamst lhe wall of a Kmart
Veasna ca ught the eye of a
teachmg pro who says the youngsterts "an excepltonallalent"
Now Stphann works 10 the Fatrborn water treatment plant . and
Sann works m a Dayton laundry
There tsn't a lot of money tor
lessons mtd court tune
Veasna sttll constders hts dad
Ius mam coach, lbe Olte who some
day mtght lead hun to a college
schol.trslup
llte lather pushes the son to do
hts best, .md he IS always tliere
l hts " far from Carnbodta, far
from the ktlhng helds
"He'll tell me never to gtve
up Veasna satd "He says he 's
40 years old, and he· s not tired at
all ..

Labonte wins Miller Genuine Draft 400

old He h.ttl played m dtfferent
towns rutd studted m spons schools
and matured qutcker thrnt hts JUmor
temnmmes ·
Feusov satd Fedorov had great
workmg habits m Russta , someUung that has translated mcely mlo
U1c NIIL game
But 11 was dtfftcult even for
Fedorov to work through a separated shoulder He tmssed Gatne 4 ot
the Chtcago senes and would have
mtsscd Game 5 us well tf n hadn't
been for,, swttch m schedulmg that
gave htm another day's rest
That s when Feusov stepped m

from home

ball close to the bole"
Tom Lebman. wbo fmtshed
thud after a final-round 74, also
praised Pavm
"FlCSt and foremost. tbe coy's a
compeutor," Lehman satd "He
bas heart, a lot ol heart. He ba.• all
the shots There tsn • t a course
Corey can't play."
Lehman fell out of utle content1on when he drove mto a farrway bunker on tbe par-5 16th and
got a double-bogey 7.
"After that 1 really didn't even
want to fmtsh \, S3ld Lehman, who
fimshed three 'strokes behmd Pavm
Neal Lanca"er had SIX birdies m
a seven-bole stretch shot a u s
Open record 29 on the back mne
and ftmshed wtth a 65 the best
round of the toumarnent '
He ued for fourth at 284 wtth
Jeff Maggert Btlly Glasson Jay
Haas DaYl~ Love III and 'rhtl
Mtck~lson Maggertclosed wtth a
66, whtle Haas and Glasson shot
69 Love 71 and Mtckelson 74 '
'Pavm was never under par for
the tournament Whtle Norman.

J,ebmm aad Bob Tway were slu1·
gm' It out over the front mne,
Pavm moved up by playmg that
stde m par
"Wben I saw the weather aDd
the wmd and the condtlton of the
golf course. I knew a score of even
par would be very good," Pavtn
satd
He got 10 withm one of that figure wub a 12-fOOI bmbe pun on the
12th bole. Tbal gave htm a share ol
the lead for the ftrSttune
"I was very aware of wltere I
stood," Pavm satd "I'm a dedicat·
ed scoreboard watcher"
When he hudted the 151b, agam
from about 12 feet, he wa.' m tront
to sL1y
"After that, I wa' JUst trymg to
make pan&lt;," Pavm srud "I had two
fantasbc opportumttes for btrdtes I
dtdn't make them, but I dtdn' t need
them"
Not when the other contenders
fell vtcttm to the mcredtble
demandsofthelastthreeboles-a
bogey by Norman on the 17th,
Lehman's double-bogey on the
16th and Tway's bogey-bogeybogey fimsh

Tith among Ohio's top tennis playerS'

Gordon, who lends the stock eat
senes thts 1ea.,on wuh Utree vtcto·
ncs got one more shot at L1bonte
when t11e last of et~ht yellow tla~s

"When I first looked at hun, he
was a pretty htg kid for hts age and
preHy strong," Feqsov s.uJ "He
was also pretty mature
"I dtdn't know why unttl I
lnund nut that, he had heen away

what malces biDl a peal playa-. He

can do what he bas to dO to get the

Because of father's lessons,

By MIKE HARRIS
BROOKLYN, Mtch (AP) Bobby Labonte turued the ~1blcs on
Jeff Gordon, fmally beaung the
younger dnver m thelf third head·
to-head battle of the sea.1on to wm
the M tiler Genu me Draft 400 on
Sunday at Mtchtgan InternatiOnal
Speedway
The 23·year-oltl Gordon, who
beat Labonte, 31, on the way to
1wo early-season v1c1ones took

Norway beats Germany 2-0
to win women's World Cup

I

111 Second Sl

performance m the postsea.&lt;on bas
been choppy - conststent wtth a
sub-p:tr regular sea.son
He was a good player for the
Red Wmgs but not the dommator
he was last season when he scored
56 goals and becmne the most decorated Russmn m NHL htstory
Fedorov won the Hart Trophy a'
the NHL's most valuable player,
the Selke Trophy as the best defenst ve forward and the Pearson
Award as the league's best player
m a vote by hts peers In addmon,
he wa.~ a flfSHeam all-s~'lf center
In hts own defense thts year,
Fedorov satd he ts pL1ymg "a more
dtsctplmed style" Uumlast season
Translauon some emphasts on
defense, forecheckmg and setung
up te.'II1Ullates a.' well as scormg
Thus hts goal totals crune, down
from a year ago, wtth 20 tn the
lockout-shortened season Of Ius
19 pomts m the playolls, only four

that m a golf tournament, ever,"
Pavm satd "After wmnmg your
fmt maJor. the second should come
easter"
He may be rttht Tbe PGA
Cbampionshtp wtll be played m
August at Rivtera m Pactfic Paltsades, Calif, where Pavm already
has two Tour tnumphs
For Norman, tt was another btg
one that got away II was tbe seventh ume be has been mnncr-up m
a maJor charnptOnshtp
"ObviOusly I dtdn't get the JOb
done by makmg one blf&lt;lte over tbe
last 36 bOles," he srud "I gave tl
my best shot"
Norman, who led or shared the
lead after the second and thud
rounds, shot a closmg 73 10 the dtfficul~ gusty wmds atSbtnnecock
Pavm bas overcome hts shgbt
phystcal stature and lack of length
off the tee to become one of the
most respected players on the Tour
"He's one of tbe great sbotmakers," Norman satd "We've got
players out here wbo are one
dtmenstOnal; they can only play
one way Corey deftmlely ts a
manJllulator of the golf baU That's

'Jell's awlul tough," Labonte
satd "He snookered me on that
resl.lf~ you know He· s been dmng
thts up front stu ft a lot longer U1an
I have
"He got me stdcways cnmmg
ofl (tum) lour .md got by me on the
restart I couldn't race hun m the
comer and t11ere wasn't any sense
m runnmg stde by stde wttb that
mrn•y laps lett We just held on and
l got hun back when they threw the
(next) yellow Next ume I protected my hne olf lour

Korb claims to have plan to
keep Bengals in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP) - An
entrepreneur says he has found a
way to keep the Bengals 10 the cuy
wtthout spendmg any taxpayer
money
Sktp Korb wantS to butld a $250
mtlhon, domed s~1dmm that would
be financed through pensiOn funds
of reured construction workers,
mstead of Lues
Korb has been toutmg hiS plan
smce October Thts week, he final ly gelS to make hts presentatiOn to
a regtonal stadtum task force
Tbe task force. made up government offtctals and busmess leaders
has been studymg ways to pay for
new homes for baseball's CIOcmnau Reds and football's Ben gals.
The teams currently share Rtver·
front Stadtum
Several pohuctans , executives
and Bengals geneml manager Mtke
Brown have cnttctzcd Korb' s plan
because Brown has been pusbmg
for an open-atr stadmm, and umon
pensiOn offtctals have not gtven
unequtvocal support and promtses
of tens of millions of dollarS for the

pion
But as state and local ulhctals
work to keep the Bengals from
accepung an offer to move to Baltimore, Korb's plru1 ts gemng a closer look
The group Korb h.1s orgamzed
IS to present the task force wtth a
plan to build a combmed Bengals
dome-multipurpose arena that
could seat 75,000 fans
"ft's do or-dte," Mayor Roxanne Qualls smd "Korb ha.&lt; been
telhog everybody for months he
can do tt It's ume to find outtf •t's
real or Memorcx "
Korb satd the stad tum could
generate as much a.1 $90 mtlhon for
the Bcngals each sea.o;on and attract
as many as 90 non-football events
annually
He smd he would dehver letters
from trustees of natiOnal unton
penston funds expressmg sohd
mterest m the plan
" The best part of our plan ts
what we don't need lrom taxpayers
- thetr money," Korb satd

team ·

The wmner crossed the luush
hne 0 27 seconds - about three
car lengUts - al1ead Labonte, who
averaged 114 141 mph earned
$34 080 tor lite vtctory
Rusty W.tllace, the tl elendmg
race champton moved Irom filth to
Uurd 111 the lust five 1.1ps He was
tollol\'ed across the ltne t)y John
AlldteUJ, m his besl c.treer fimsh,

Morgan Shephenl and Dale Jarrett,
whose cngme blew on the last lap
Dale Earnhardt who carne tnto
the 14th of :ll Wmstnn Cup races
thts season wtth a 77 pomt leatl m
the stand10gs, crashed on lap 128
Earnhardt, the !wo-ume defendmg
sertes champton, had the wmd
knocked out of hun and came away
wtlh a sore knee, hut was ot.henvJse
UlllllJUred

Hts 35th-place hmsh, combmed
wnh Sterling Marlm's seve nth ,

moved Marhn 11110 the pomLs le.1d
by SIX over Earnhardt Gordon
remamed thtrd , but cut hts deficit
f[()lll 12~ 10 12 pomt~
Rtcky Rutld, whose tangle wtl)j
Hut Stnckltn on l.tp 72 tgmtcd a
10 car melee, was lbe only driver
taken to the hospttal desptle a nt'h
of acCidents on the newly repaved
and superfast ov.tl
Rudd, who was woozy after th~
collisiOn wtth the concrete wall and
complatned or pam tn hiS rtght
''~'~ w:ts transported by helicopter
In " hmpttal m nearby Jackson ,
Mu:h , tor pre.ci1ultonary lestmg
and ohservalwn lie was later
1

relea.... ed
Mtnutc' .tiler the end of the
r,acc, Mu..:h.1cl W.tlinp whu hn-

lshed JUst hehm&lt;l Lnke Speed tD
12th cut oft Speed's C.'lf on the pt'
hme, lorcmg hun to stop Waltnp,
who~e team smd Speed nearly pul.
thetr &lt;Inver 111 the wall whtle pass&lt;
mg hun late m the race. chmbe4
out of hts Ponuac, strode to
Speed's car, calmly unhooked the
wmdow net and appeared to throw
two nght h.mded punche.~ mto the
car He then walked away as Speed
remamec..l m the car

Speed l.tter satd the punche~
were open-handed slaps to the stdt
of hts helmet and he wa• nol
IUJUred

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•

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....
"

Paige • • 111e Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, ·Ohio
Moncl.y1 June 11, 1 •
..~.-,.:,:==::!.=::.::=.---~-~-,--~.....;..;~.:..-;._.;._.;...~--------:---___,;.;---

:::unusual names give owners an instant sense of humor
u uausrlll name.

. ,ou milbt Bnd thll we like
just
AJ a high scbool cheerlcadel; I line.
once wu inllllduced at a foocball
Whal would lay to the IJ8ftlltlpme. The IIIIIOIIIICCirllid, • ... IIIII to-bc?DothelWOofyoubaYeaJOOCI
bete is rhe clauPter ofTcd Rose and of humor? If 10, cbancelere
Rose Rose, Roae Rose.• The lhal~cllllclwWhavca.e,m.Hc
..........,IOIRII with lluahta: I wu mqtuhaw:topuaupwiduclloolyanl
DOt the leut bit anharrused. I had le8sifta, but it 'Mlll't take him Jona 10
- . . De.- .u. ......
Reprcllac
bear Roee Rose all my life.
· 1c:1m 10 acc:ept It with JOOd humcx MIL Dbea wllo wnMID blar110 bclr
to scllool with Scou Scott. I - R.R.w. CHARLES'JON, W. VA.
h ¢wod •
110 lhelr chiJd
m« a Mary CJu'i1tmu. I even
DEAR ROSB: 11llllb for tbe JI'CIIl
;·M-.· W., 11117 My meic!eft ~~~~~~e1 once
Biously
thou&amp;fll
about
keeping
my
tr.ttimonial.
Reid on for more:
1 ' wu . _ 1toee. My MOiher'a 111111e
maiden name when I got married
Den Ana Lnders: 1 must
; •i.sllalo._(han by .m.p, mine because I didn't want to lose the IIIUetted he cllanp bis name·IO
• 1 by bildl). Ia &amp;ci,IID'ibu&amp;o m y fur\ of being Rose Rose. If you "Muon."
•
. of ..._ 10 lhe r.ct dill I bed IUCh ulc most of Ul with unusual names,
Por 4S years 1n radio, my husbend
had a daily program called "The
MasonDixcinLine."Theonlytime
·

.,.1

L
. henl

I_,

Eastern
honor
rolls
posted
--

' • Honor rolls for schools in the
; :·;Eastern Local School District for
1 • .the final nine week&amp; grading period
_ )lave been announced.
Students earning a grade of all
"A's, "B" or better in all subjects,
- or "B" or better in ,all academic
·· ·.subjects and a gmde no lower tban
in art. handwriting, music and
· - physical education made tbe honor

; :·c·

:.-rou.

·

The list includes tbe following
students from their respecrive
scbools:
·
..
Tuppers Plal111 Elementary
.~ ;.
Sixth Grade: Joseph Brown,
, . Joshua Kehl, all A's; Marthew
:· Grubb, Kevin Keaton, Dustin
Kebler, We$ley Shnfer, Gnry Vierling; overnii.
Fifth Gmde: Brndley Brilnnon,
.: .Lin~sey Cross, Tiffany Kidder,
,. Chnstopher Lyons, Kimberly
• Marcinko, all A's; Theresa Baker,
Janet Calaway, Darlene Connolly,
•. Tina DeLa Cruz, Jared Marcinko,
· · Stacie Watson; overall.
~ :
Fourth Grade: Ashley Boyles,
·, . 'Thomas Siml!lons, Tyler Simmons,
.. Jaime Whillock, Carrie Wiggins,
, overall.
• · Third Grade: Jessica Boyles,
·• · Hailee Cline, Christine Gregory,
; ·: ~yan Kidder, Nicholas Weeks,
overall.
,• • .

I

•
Chester Elementary
• • Sixth Grade: Juli Bailey, Krisren
- ~hevalier, )osh Clark, John Cooke,
'· Wes Crow, Joey Taylor, Jason
: :wruner, overall.
·
Fifth Gmde: Anthony Bearhs,
~ Tammy Bissell, Holly Broderick,
. ,Jon Duffy, Ben Holter, Garrett
Karr, Jon Will, all A's; Tricia
, -Congo, Sara Mansfield, Janet Ridenour, Charlie Young; o~erall.
, . • Fourth Grode: Carne Crow, all
·· A's; Travis Batey, Adam Cheva- .lier, Cacy Faulk, Amandy Fetty,
' Sonya Frederick, Matt O"Brien,
Jennifer Thoma, Brandon Werry,
. ·. :Chelsey Wood; overall.
•
Third Grade: Briuany Hauber,
• Alyssa Holter, Jonathan Owen, all
"A's; Rachel Elliott, Kassandra
·Lodwick, Ryan Stobart, Rebecca ·
;'l;'nylor, William Woods; overall.
Riverview Elementary
, .. Sixth Grade: Amber Baker,
&lt;~randon 'Browning, Nathan
::Marcinko, overall.

•• •

he ued Ilia ClriPull - for middle- picked 0111.
JOY~ ~I dOa'llle&amp;ie
011e lli&amp;ht. my father - pla)'inl
lllyaoeeWI'rldiculedllil-'llley Cllda wlllt- of lliiiHclndtr 11111
wae m buly
Ina Ill the Jc*inllyllid, "YCII'CJOinlto._
wortllwblle ,....., to wldcb lie pvc the lllby MIDI Dlcbon "ecar1101hls
hissupport.Hecliedin 1990,.,.MI iswhercwediawtbelinconhaviaa
alwa)'l be poud 10 wry hil rwne. any mcnldds. •
-- MRS. MASON DIXON
The .ic*e W1J11t on, .-11 10 my
ret pond 10 "Port Wortll," whose motber'uurpilc, and lbey did indeed .
husbllld Wlllted 10 lllllle their chiJd neme me Donn Muon Dickson,
Muon Their 1aa
Dixon
tbinkirJ&amp; nollody would ever call me
· My~ ftlllly
~- Muon. Ironically, Muon SIUCk, and
Actually, it is Donn ~ Dicbon, no one has ever called me Donn.
but 1 have alwa)'l gone by MMm.
MyadvicetoFonWonh is:Gofor
When my mother became iL hehadalotoffunwith Ibis name,
unexpectedly Jli'Cillllll 37 yen qo, and people always remember me. myparentsdecidedtonamemeDonn D.MASONDICKSONINCALIF.
afteranuncle,buttbeyclidn'haw:a
DEAR M.D.: You and many
Olhen. Keep reading:
Dear Ann Landen: When my

''*'"'""'

:=-

,---··F;Iag Day activities.__,

10 LOitlftd

bUJband was 1 r.ouna radio
ill Knoxville, -.-, t1te
atatioll'lflllltllll called him itt IIIII
ro1c1 him !bey were havilla aoub1e
with his lini 1111111c, 'StaiOII." People
were ceiling in for "Setan," or
"Station." or "Slayton." It was
Dear.U. t n dr Ill My iiiiiD WIS
Janice ~ Dixon. llld ol coanc,
I wu the buu of a J!elliiiiiiY ,iotea
--lbout wbare I "drew lhe 1i8e.•
Wbllll cli¥111Ced M£ Dboa,l 1'11
happy 10 be rid of the name.
what llbllln lovcwitbHowardJm ·
So now my 111me is Janice Mason
JIJr. No grea~~~rovement. --

a-

L

'

"A.ColltctltHrofltlyFtliiOriltlGems
of IM Day" Is dte ~CI lillie lift
for IMI special someo11t who I~
ilfiPOIIibll 10 buy for.

Science, nature project'
presented at garden club

.Modern Woodmen hold meeting

News policy

,..

:~ce~:~d.L:te el~lhl:~:,~:~

Public Nolice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant

to

Section

121.22 of the Ohio Revised
Code, the Meigs Counly
Budget. Commission will

'.

meet to discuss budget

atlocar.lona. The mooring
witt be held al 9:00 a.m. on

~t

June 30, 1995, in the

Auditor's Olllce\ of the
Meigs County Courthouse.
Meigs Counry Budget

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 7
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 14th issue of The Daily
Sentinel.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete
the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)
·
.

.----------~---~--,

I PARENTS' NAME
I
·
I CITY &amp; STATE
I CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE
I
I
I
Submitted By

·

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

L--~~--------~~---~
·SEND TO:
The Daily Senti~t_el ·
P.O. Box 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

BABY Sentinel

.Procedure,

judgement by

default wilt be rendered
has been aoslgned Caoe No. against you lor lhe relief
95 CV 028 and Is pending In demanded In the Complelnt.
Public: Notice
lhe Common Pleas Court ol
0 ated thlo 31 •t day of
Legal Copy Number ~5-400 Meigs County, Ohio, Second
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio May, 1995· La E S
Mailing ~;~ate 6/10/95
45769.
rry · poncer,
Surface Transportallon
The object of I he
Clerk 01 Courte
Program
Complain! Ia lo qulellllle to (6) 5• 12• 19• 26;
Seatad proposals will be
(7) 3, 10; 6TC
accepted from all proReal Estate General
qualified
tho r=======~~==~~;;:~lf'
Bureau of bidders
Conlract atSolos,
Room 118 of tho Ohio
Department
of
Tranaport1tion, Columbus,

Ohio, unltl10:00 a.m.
Commission
Nancy Parker Campbell Thursday, July 06, 1995 lor
Howard Frank Improvement• fn:
Molga County, Ohio lor
John lentea
(6)191tc
Improving varloua sections
of Slale Route 124, Village
ol Racine, by llneor grading,
Public· Notice
and reourlactng . wllh
Lebanon ·Twp. budget will uphall concreto.
be open for Inspection at
"The _dale 111 lor
the ofllce of lhe Township complellon of thla work
Clerk June 19 thru June 29 shall be aa oet forth In lhe ·
between 4 and 4:30 p.m. bidding propooal."
Public hearing end regular
Plano and Speclllcallons
mooring will be held al are on file at the, Department
Township Building, June 29
oiTranoportallonJorry Wray
OFFICE
at 7 p.m.
Dorothy A. Roseberry, Cleric
Of Tranaportatlon l~ew:Wirui'G.:Pc;;;;;;;;y:-su;;.;;R;;dj:M;;b;i;Hc;;;;;;~;;'f
30348 Valley Balle Rd. (6)Dlreclor
19, 26; 2TC ·
11 NEW
-Pomeroy·
Road· Mobile Home with
Racine, Ohio 45771
kitchen , living room, one bedroom, and bath . 16 x 16 deck ,
(614) 843-5474
Public Notice
newer AeriatorSeplic, siUing on 5.3022 acres.
16\ 19. 19951 tc
ASKING $18,500.
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
NEW LISING· Pine Grove Rd. · One floor frame home with 3
Public Notice
COUNTY,
OHIO
I~ ~;~~~f," n~~ 1 1/2 baths. Gas-wOOd burner heat. TPC waler.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Case No. 95 CV 028
II
22 car anached garage, appliances. Approx. 3.2+ acres.
STATE OF OHIO
John R. Jellero, el al.,
ASKING $28,000
DEPARTMENT OF
Ptelnlllla,
TRANSPORTATION
va.
ROSS ROAD· Levanon Township· 120+ acres of wooded
Columbua, Ohio
lea A. Nelson, deceased,
ground. Owner will not split $350 per acre for all. OWNER
Bureau of Contract Sales
el al .. Delendenls
WILL CONSIDER REASONABLE OFFER I

992•2259

110

VACANT GROUND- SR 338- 23.88+ acres, approx. 6 miles
lrom the Ravenswood Bridge. Grear building site. Once had
some dozer work and driveway prepared. ASKING $17,500.
(OWNERS WILL CONSIDER REASONABLE OFFER I)

Help Wanted

WANTED:
EMERGEN~Y

TUPPERS PLAINS AREA- Modular located on Christy Road.
This Is a handy-man's fixer-upper. Featuring 2 bedrooms,
SKll S INSTRUCTORS
bath, space lor fireplace insert. Part basemen! w/utlllly hook·
needed to teach communitY and personal skills to ,._..;.._Wooden o~tbullding, garden area, covered deck area. .
water. Nice country locallon. Home has many '
an adult in their own home in Gallia and Mel'gs
possibilities. But does need work.
Counties. HOURS: As scheduled I as needed;
ASKING $20,500 reduced.
must be able to stay overnight; 2-hour weekly stafl
LET US BE YOUR HOME TOWN REAJ,. ESTATE '
meeting; or as otherwise scheduled. High school
degree, valid driver's license, three years lice,nseld 1 I ~:~~~~:J~~~:~I LET us HOOK YOU UP TO A
driving experience, good driving record and 11
TODAYII
adequate automobile insurance. coverage
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.:....................................992-2259
required. Training provided. If interested, contact
TRACY L. BRINAGER.........................................949-2439
Cecilia at 1-800-531-2303.
Deadline for
SHERR! L. HART..................................................742·2357
applicants: 6/28/95.
•
HENRY E. CLELAND 111....................................... 992-6191
KATHY M, CLELAND................:........................... m-6191
Equol Oppott:mlly Employer
OFFICE................................................................. 992·2259
.

RELIEF COMMUNITY
·

'

· 1•

••

LaW

, LIRCIII
.
•
•Mowing
:

'

-

•Trimming
•Firewood
'

Also:

' Contract Work

SOl!I'HERNB

Fifth Grade: Corey Young,
overall.
Fourtb Gmde: Nichol HoiJllker,
all A's; Krysral Baker, Cyrus
Knotts, Abbi Thompson, Ryan
Wachter, overall; Randall Mahon,
academic.
Third Grade: Cody Bartram,
Debbi'e Weber, a teacher at School slal'f for the tlowers pL1nted
Steven Dillon, Sandy Powell, Tyler
Riverview Elemenrary School pre- at the school.
Thompson, Annette Tucker; oversented n science and nalure proj~ct
Refreshmenls were served by
all.
.in which the children had parlici- hostesses. Dolores Frank ll!ld MariEastern High Sehoul
paled. during a recem meeting of lyn Hannum to those namljd a1J9ve,
Twelfth Grade: Charles Bissell,
t11e Riverview Garden Club.
and Theda Hoskins, a SI.I\\S~ Detty
Ryan Buckley, Joe Kar"hnik,
The prnject included a minia- Boggs, Margarer Grossni!:kle, Ella
Janet McDonald, Bekky Mclmyre.
ture hydro greenhouse, an ant farm Osborne, Marlene Putnam, Frances
David Toundas, all A's; Susan
and an lierb garden.
Reed, Nancy Wachter, Maxine
'Brewer; Julie Brown, Randy
For devotions, Janet Connolly Whitehead. Janice Young, Nola
Burke, Jessica Chevalier, Alan
· read "Memorial Day," "Sleeping Young, Mary Alice Dise and Ruth
Durst, Eddie Fl'iend, Ryan Hollon,
on a Cloud" and "Friend." RoU call Anne Bederson. Debbie Weber
Annie King, Heidi Nelson, Jessica
was answered by members received the door prize.
·
exchanging plants. and a thank you
Radford, Amy Redovian, Vic VanThe nexl meeting will be a
note was read from the Riverview potluck picnic on Thursday at Nola
Meter, Geoffrer Watson, Stacey ..
Woolard, overall.
Young's home.
,
•
Eleventh
Grade:
Rebecca
1
Evans. Jorge Gomez, Jessica Karr,
Robert Laughery, Crystal Morris.
Ginger Nutter, Connie Pooler,
The Modern Woodmen of and Julie Gillian, all of Coolville.
Brandi Reeves, Crysral SummerAmerica Camp 10900 recently held
Graduation gifts were given to
field, all A's; Beth Bay, Holly Clean honors picnic for new members John Knisley, Shannon Breedlove,
land, Melissa Dempsey, Debra Diland graduates at the Hocking River Jeremy Dotson, Jerry Breedlove,
lon, Jessica Frederick, Donald
campgrnund.
Josh Gilberr, Tom Proffitt and
Goheen, Robert Hoffman, Traci
In opening ceremonies, John Janet Smith, all of Coolville;
Lm1ce, Jennifer Mora, Robert MurBreedlove led the Woodmen's . Alfred's Todd Elliott; and Torch's
phy, Nicole Nelson, Micah Otto,
creed, while John Knisely led The Tony Sasser.
Heather Well, Amy Yates, Lauren
Pledge of Allegiance, Joan Cole
After tbe presentation, each
Young, oven~l.
spoke
the
prayer
and
Ida
Liv,
graduate
.told their plans for the
FLAG J':IU:SENTED- The Coolville Veterans of Foreign
Tenth Grade: Mereditl1 Crow,
furore.
ingston and ber group sang.
Wars Post 3478 presented a new United States Dagon Flag Day,
Maria Frecker, all A's; Laura Arix,
Billy Breedlove, senior ainnan
Silver baby spoons were awardJune•14,
to
the
Pomeroy
Nursing
and
Rehabilitalion
Center.
The
David Baker, Angela Bissell, Canwitll
the United States Air Force,
ed to the newest members: Morgan
posl is acli.ve in the Athens, Meigs and Washington County area.
dace Bunting, Sherry Burke,
was
welcomed
home on leave. He
Leanne Gilbert, daughter of George
Here, Larry Driggs, right, pnst assistant adjutant, presenl~ the nag
Angela Chaney, Catherine Coram,
will
relurn
to
Hawaii
June 19.
and Wendy Gilbert;. and Shane
lo PNR,C administrator Jim Lindeman.
Eric ,Dillard, William Francis,
Michael Gillian, son of Michael
Christi Grossnickle; Amanda Mil·
hoan. Christina Moore, Erin Sex·
the real ealale situated In
ton, Lisa Stethem. Tracy White,
_ __;P:..u=b=l;,;,;ic:..N;.;;o;:;.t;;,ic::;e:......_ ; the Township ol Rulland,
ovcmll .
Get Your Message Across
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION , Counly ol Molgo, and Slalo
In an effort to provide our readNinth Grade : Kclli Bailey.
or Ohio and and being one
With A,Dally Sentinel
To: Lee R. Nelaon, acre, !110rt or ·teaa; and to
Michelle Caldwell, Billie Pooler, ership with current news, the .Galde.c eaaed; the unknown quiet title to the -Interests of
Michael Weeks, all A's; Stephanie lipolis Daily Trib~ne and The Daily
BULLETIN
BOARD
heirs,
nexl ol'kln, devlse01, lhe Plaintiffs, 10 preclude
Sentinel
will
not
accept
weddings
Bearbs; Chris Buchanan, Brandoh .
tegatooo,
edmlntolralara, any claim ollntoreat by lho
1600 column inch weekdays ·
Buckley, Jamie Drake, Jeremiah afler 60 days from the date of the
execulors and/or assigns, If Defendants, and tor costa of
event.
Kehl, .Jeffrey Kimes, overall.
any, of Lee R. Nelson, this action.
18°0 column Inch Sunday
deceaatd, whose addresses
You are hereby required
Eighth Gmde: Stephanie Ev;ms,
to answer the Complaint
are unknown.
Jason Stevens, overall. ·
All club meetings and other
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
· To:
A'nna Florence within lwenly·olght (28)
Seventh Grade: Josh Broderick , news articles in the society section .
Nelaon, aka Florence days attar the last
Matt Caldwell, Mauree1\ Heines, must be submiued within 30 days
N.elaan, dacu.-ed; the oubllcatlon of lhls notice
Jessica Pore, .Joshua Will, all A's; of occurrence. All birthdays must
.unknown hatro, next of kin, which will be publlohed
Malt Boyles. Jessica· Grueser, be submitted within 42 days of the
dovloeea,
legatees, onco a week lor six (6)
administrators, executors socces•lve weeks. The last
Chasntie Hollon , Brook Nichols. nccurence.
and/or asolgna. If any, 01 publtcallon will bo made on
Cnssie Rose, Edward Schaekcl, · All material submilted for publiAnna Florence Nelson, aka
Amanda Upton. Srcven Weeks. catiOn is subject to editting.
Receive your complimenlary
Florence Nelson, doceooed, lhe 10th day ·ol July, 1995,
whose oddrosoes ere and lhe lwanly-otght (28)
Amtmda Wheeler, over;dl.
skin analysis and facial by
unknown.
daya for anawerlng will
BeautiControl consultants.
Y()u
Ira
hereby
nolllled
commence
on that date. In
Call today lor your appointment.
.
~ase of your failure to
M·F 9:00-7:30 Sat. 9:00·7:30
that ·you have been named anawer or otherwise
Delendanta In a legal acllon respond as required by lho
:~~"""!'~=~ Ohio 985-3569;o;,.,....,.,l
onlllled John R. Jellora, el Ohio Rules of Civil

.THE DEADLINE BAS BEEN
EXTENDED FOR

••

t.CtiTII

•

IIIIIOIIIICCr

·~~------------------------------~
I

The Deily S.ntlnel • P8ge'7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r

614·992·5291
.,., mo.

Give Yourself The

Sporta Edge with
The Sports&amp;
Entertainment
Line

1·900-263-1800

Ext. 1986
$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yra. old.
Procall Co.
1
....... (602) 954-7420
11111

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot
. Every. Wed. Nite

5:30p.m.
Eve(yone
WelCome

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior

Take the pain out ol
painting. Let us do It lor
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
!3efore 6 p.m.leave
message.
Afler6 p.m.
614·985-4180 3124/04
Public Notice
NOTICE TO'BIDDERS
Sealed bids wilt be
received by lha VIllage of
. Racine· at their olllce
located · In the Town Halt,
Third Slreet, Box 313,
Racine, Ohio until 4:00 pm
prevailing local time on the
10 day of July, 1995 lor the
Ractne·Water Project, which
will lncluda lnllallatlon of a

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949. 992·6471
Mon - Frl a a.m. • 6 p.m.
Sat. a p.m. - 5 p.m.
Sun. by appt. only
SeNiftil Pornllfoy, Middl&lt;lport
&amp; surrounding area .
Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

SMITH'S

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMA~S
. 985-4473

COinRUatOII
CusiOm Building I Romod!llng

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEWAJi.RAGES
• REMGDELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753

MODERN SANITATION

MY BUSINESS

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned&amp;. portable toilets rented.
Dally,
&amp; monthly rental rates.
Parties

Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning
PLUS . .

Sand Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
: 1 ;

: I I I :,1

I

".

t.:

:

I : I" I

•

Pickup &amp;Delivery
Service
Owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio

Ll~Netone

-.;;I

•

:

_

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

(614) 949-3005
..... .

- ------------------~
r--:l::-:-lirr-u-tOM-low~Ratts-1""' 1 · ~

WICKS
HAULING
(SpeclaiJze In
driveway sprelding)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from Rt. 7
Tues.-Wed.-Fri.•Sat.
1-6
•Craftsman Tools
•Toys
-Glassware
Loads of Misc.
Buy-Sell-Trade
tCJit1 mo •

YOUNG'S
pCARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
.
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1/12/tfn

110\\ \IW
E\L:\\ \'1'1\c;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Ser,vices.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

·water well, meters, and a

water line In Racine, Ohio.
Bids will be opened and
read by tho VIllage or 30 Announcements
Racine at 7:00p.m.
Bid form speclllcatlons
can be picked up at the
Vlttage of Racine, Town Hall, Shade Horse Pull
Third ·street, Racine, Ohio
Horse PuHer.s Ass.
during regular bu•ineas
Juno 24" 6:00 p.m.
hours or mail request, with
Athens fairgrounds
510 ree, ro P. o. Box 313,
Racine, Oh 45n4·.
3200 up &amp; down
•
· By Order of the Mayor
ol Racine
11 0 Help Wanted
4t (6) 5, 12, 19, 26 41C

HELP WANTED

BISSELL.BUILDERS, II C.

New Homes • VInyl Siding Ne~
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Pl. Plrrunt
&amp; VICinity

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
· FREE ESTIMATES

It,

Big- Slle-tllllllti .... _

Htndtroon. 1:311-t, Tut-WidThur, Firat T""" E-1 Clol1oo.
lOIN ~rnlue,

gin

• a ...,.,.

614-992-7643

ware, Hom. Interior, kttl "!'IC·

· ( No Sunday Calls)

80

ICIII'IIPPI.IAICI

lllrl'&amp;

public Sele .
andAuctlen ·
Rick Poer•n Auclion ~.

TAMMY HYSELL'S ·
DAY CARE

111111:1

oFectory Authorized Parto
&amp; Service

• Lots of Fun and
oFul Reliable S.rvlce
Learning
•Waahera - Dryera - Rangea ·
•
Lots
of
6ftefrlgeratore •Fraezera
•Dishwaahartf
Experience
•H.W. HeaterS
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
-Microwave• •Diapoula
•Thanks Melga '
A.M. till 6:00 P.M.'
Surrounding Araaa
g92-5388
.(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 1:1114/lfn
lf1Wn
•All Makes •42 Yearl

. ,...------,

MANLEY'S
. ROME
IMPROVEMENt

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013 OR
,992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1-800·848·007

Rooting, Siding, Room
Additions, Concr~te, etc.
RO. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614 .
(614) 388-9865
24 Hour PagerAnserlng Servlc
1·800-215-2023

'
DARWIN,~

5118(tfn

Love &amp;Romance

H&amp;H SAWMILL

Fate Awaits You!

Portable.

1-900-726·0033
Ext. 6250
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Procall
(602) 954-7420

i

lu~Jl tlme auc:.t loneer, comptete

One Stop Complete Auto Bodt Repair

auction

PRECISION AUTO..OTIYE

90

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Clnn Late Madel Can ! 0t
Truclla, 1187 llodtlo Or N-t•
Smi1tt Pontiec. 1100 Eatl-

ELIM HOME
Adult Care Jt]
Facility /' I \

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio
10121~94/t~'n

For low income
elderly &amp;
handicapped. Family
home atmosphere
w/T.L.C.
992-5042 .......,,

AB&amp;T AUTO
3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949-2882
Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience in Area

1·900·945-61 00

Ext. 1327,
12.99

per min.

~ust be

18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602-954-7420

Children and ·Family Services Program of Woodland
614·742·3212
5/tlr'l mo .
. • Centers, Inc. positions will work with severely mentally
disabled/severely emolionally disabled population of
children and families In Gallia . Jackson and Meigs
ALFALFA
Counties. All positions require a valid driver's license
and experience wilh children and lam ilies in· a mental
AND MIXED
Portable
health setting·is prelerred. The posilion openings are:
Case Manager II- Candidates mu st possess
Bandsaw Mill
HAY
Bachelor's degree in social work or equ ivalent
32124 Happy
FOR SALE
education/experience. LSW required.
Hollow Rd.
Therap.lsts II· Candidates must ,possess a Masler's
Middleport, Ohio 45760
BAILED TO .
degtee in social work or reli!led field . Ohio licensure of
Danny &amp; Peggy
LISW/LSW or LPCC/LPC preferred.
YOUR NEEDS
Brickles
Psychologist- Candidates must possess a Ph. D. in
psychology or related field . Ohio psychology liceAse
614-742-2193
949-2512
emt roo.
required. ,
'
Competitiye Salaries and benefits offered. F:'lease
send Resumes lo Personnel Department. Woodland
Howard L. Writesel
Centers, Inc., 3086 Slate Route 160, Gallipolis, }lhio
ROOFING
45631 or call (614) 446·5500. EO~/M Employer.
Submi«ed by: Bernard F. Niehm. Ph. D.
NEW-REPAIR
For further information contact Sherry Gordon. at
Gutters
614-446-5500 ext. 18 or by FAX at 614-446·4402.
Downspouts
Mobile Welding
GuHer Cleaning
Diesel Injector SVC
Painting
HELP WANTED
Injector Pump SVC
Executive Director- Woodland ' Centers Inc. , is a
FREE ESTIMATES
Tune-ups
private, not for profit community mental health
949-2168
985-3879
center· that serves Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
S/16/94 TFN
co'Lnties in Southeastern Ohio. The Executive
Director requires a minimum Masle r:s degree in
Business Administralion or a Health Care Field.
Five Years experience in administration and ·
MERIT
management ~n a health care field required. Must
be knowledgeable regarding all aspects . of the
delivery of mental health services. Candidates
should have a workin.g knowledge of accounting
systems, .delivery of health . care, personnel
management, · budgetary management, clincial
records
systems,
marketing,
program
development, publiC relations and operalions. Must
have excellent communications skills a nd
REFINANCE
.PURCHASE
knowledge of community resources.
Competitive Salaries and benefits offered. Please
CONSOLIDATE
send Resumes to Pe rs onnel De partment,
Woodland Centers, Inc., 3086 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or call (614) 446·5500 ext.
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit
446. EOE/AA Employer.
Our Specialty
Submitted by: Johnnie Russell , Chair Person ,
Woodland Centers, Inc. Board of Trustees .
For further information contacl Sherry Gordon,. at
614-446·5500 ext, 18 or by FAX at 614-446-4402.
MB#048ll

H&amp;H SAWMILL

GRAY'S .

1-800-MERIT-98

..

wanted to Buy ·

em--.r.ele ntil,

O.coraled ataneware, _.. • •
phcltwl. aW ...,... .........

--

-R/veorlnt
olcl -AnliquH.
entiquo
.Ru11-Moor.t,

owner. I14·1D2·25H. We lluy

J &amp; o·a Au10 Peru and
bu~lng Wfetkl,

-ttt.

junll iUIOI &amp;

Also, pons lor u1e. !10&amp;l'T.I-5343 rrr 7T.H033.

FREE

•ALIGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

ESTIMATES . ·
FULLWARRAIHY UI(E NEW
Chip Repair In Tubs Or Sinks,

Looking forward t~ seei11g old j'rie11ds
and maki11g 11ew!
5/19111n

Resurface Old Ce ra mic li le, And
Fiberglau Shower Cracb Or Sags

BATHTUB

Top Pri&lt;OI Paid: All Old U.S.
Coir1a, Gold Rina1, Silver Colna.
Gold Coins. Y.tS. Coin Shop,

s-Ill"""""'·

151
Gollpollo
Two pt;IIH ta the Benny Henn ·
cniaadt In LouiaviUe, KY. Jun.

23. 304.t75-7541 .
Vogue China In Old Chflrlttton
Panatn81~
' r

Wanled To Buv Uaed Mobile
HrrrnoCal614-~175.

•

-

Wanted To Bu1, Ju'* Autos, Any
Condl~on. 614·3118-8062, Or a1•·

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kirchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling

Wainad 1D buy· .oiquo end ulld
tu_r,.tura, no lram 110 '-'08 ot too
&amp;mal. Will bwy on. piece or camplote ollatel, Dobr Ya:tin, 61;.
882·7441.
.
Wanltld To Buy: Junk AuiO! Wl1tt
Or Wlthour Wo1ora. Call brry
I.Naty. e 14-388 030"

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Room Additions
Siding, Roofing,' Patios

A Big Hue
Just Call

1.icenaed

1no:ka.

Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
.
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-21 g3

·Could Be Yours!

HrYice.

HII,Ohlo l Wool VIrginia. liM·
l'T.I-5785 Or -773-5447.

&lt;i2BI11n
.

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING
Radiator Repair
Service Portable
aluminum welding
New radiato'rs
. available,
recores also.

•

Reasonable

Kenny's Auto Rental

Insures · Experienced

Call Wayne Nell 992-4405
For Free Estimates

Kenny's is the place to come
·when you need a car rental.

~'""'

F &amp;A Tree Service
TJimming · Topping ·Removal
Stum p Removal
20 Years Experience
Guaranteed
992-6351 &amp; 992-4447

We Have Cars and Vans!
Kenny's Auto Center
1-800·486· 1590
264 Up per River Rd .
Bus. (61 4) 446-997 1
,..,,,
Gallipolis, OH . 45631

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Limeslone &amp; Gravel,
Septi1 Syslems, Trailer &amp;
House Sires.
Reasonable Rates

iae N. Sayre
· SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-21~,

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

•Sidewalks
•Driveways

8:00 a.n;o.-3:30 p.m. ,
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Sidin g.
Roofing, Vin yl

Do

Offaraing Clinical, Nurs1ng Honw,
And Home Health Servlcea Jn
Jackaan.. Vinton, Meigs, Aod
Gallia Coonttea. Salary And Bentfltt Competltive. For More lnbr·
mation Conract: Michael L Mt·
Graw PT. MA &amp;14·28&amp;-81;31 .
'
AVON I All Areu I Shirley
Spoors. -675-1428,
•

AVON SEllS AT V«lRK·HOMe'
'

Need-~- "-"0?
Awn~go sa.$151Hr. Bwtolhol

Computera Uaera Needed. Wack
own houra. S20k 1o 150klyr. 24
1111 714-3113-4580 exn SO&amp;
•

CONSUlTANT

•

Mature Person To Help Children
And Adultt With A Serious Pralem. Enureals. Appointments ~
By Us. Hard Work Anef Tt&amp;Yfl
Requ ired. Uake $40,000 10
150,000 Commlt~lo n. 800-• 712233.
•

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.

~ R eplacemenr .

Wlnd()WS, Blown
tns ulatlon, Storm
Doors. St()rm
Windows, Garages.
Free Estimates
111Mtn

-

7 Kluena Found Abandoned,
Htlp U1 Qlvt Them A Good

Home eu.. 4•1213 Leaw M•-

I Kittens, •

Whl11, 8

.,, .. 381 1515

WM1co Old

Four adult Muecovy duck• wlrh
bai&gt;IM, .11'1rM miles ICMIIh ol Ylcf.
dlopor1,81..__

Kin.na, cute, very playf\.11, a.ut
whiltl, .wilt doll- llri1ttln rMIOn- d l -. :1\4 11115-'llll:l

* Struts And Shocks
* Tires I Tires! Tires!

Wanted •
"' ltcENSEO PHYSICAl
THEIW'tST ASSISTANT"' •
tmmodlato Opoitlng For LPTA Jo
Work In Active, Growing, MuliJIael1ad Phvli&lt;:al TheraJlY Praelite

Own Houri, 20K -SOK /Year, {4
Hr.. 714-2..0.7488 En11 13.
•

~-- -

J&amp;L INSULATION

•Slabs
992-3265

10:30 4.Y. · 12:00

lng

Bill Slack
992·2269
-

~lp

TO!Ti!O!J Op1ionel. lodlnop.
•
30 AMouncements
HI00·7•2-4738
•
WANTED: El-l' '1 S1Udonll AVON EARN SS$ 11 homo·J 1
K.t To PerJiclplltl In F....... All ...... 30&lt;-882·2645, 1·
Ile Enrichment Parg~m At
800-1182-&lt;1356. tNDIREP
\lnl¥orlity Of Rio
dora From Juno ~"!""'!•
Computer Uttrl N"dtd, Wo~

Light Hauling,

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE
•Patios
•Porches

ANNOUNCEMENTS

110

Klltent·'4 Five Week Old. Graw.

Cream, &amp; Black &amp; Whlre. litter

TllinodCeltl14-250-1114.

long
-

NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY•
$1200/loiCINTH

PER WRITTEN AGAEEioiENT" :
21 I'WOIJ(a - t o _.. lnnl!l!ill)' For l - ~·
·Of lltgollenullcblolrlg eo.tpo.

.

NO EXPERENCE

NECESSARY

.

.
•

•

E-..

Comploct'Tralnirlo For All f'ot1.

-.e......... -.....
At Per

W~aon ~I.

.W'11!11

Are Neat In Appearance, AbQit
halrod kltt•no. 1 whitt , 1 Ta
lla~dle RtofHintlbiHIJ """
304.tJ5.1084.
Willing To Woll1 Hlid, This CatAd

Do For 'ibu.

-

CALL IIOIIDI.Y I
MSOAYOM.V.
•
I!ITERYIEWS 8'1' APPt ONI.Y •
61&lt;1-441· 1175

60 Lost and Found

•

A&lt;cl(&gt;llnO Appllc:ellono AI.
FuUTime
F!Kellllorio1 lluot l5i
Willing To Work W..... NHde,
· 304.t75-1!211t .
Hila N......
Ctnw, ~II OIL
· Eoc.
l oll. H•orlno Ard, :140 $R 1 N -

Found: 2 -

Roo, Ko·
nawha St. lrtl. now I t 1nlmal

-

6 14-444~

N o - Colla l'loua.

"""'L t"*

�Page 8 • The Deily Sentinel

..
Monday, JUM11, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

J8onday, June 19, 1995

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

'

_ _ _..:.N=E::A::..C:.r::o::•::•:.:w:.o::r:..:d:...:.P...:u:..:.z_z_le_ _ _ _ ••

BRIDGE

UFib
ot3 Sc*tlng UEntarged
j -Colleae
ot7 Happy aound
c Naarly all
8 Cleaning loot. -41'- canals
5G Pltasure
12 Hatchel
53 Fr. article
13 Plaintiff
55 Wiler pipe
1-' Dlvo'o
59 Not grocetuf
_.:iaHy
62 - BolO Kappa
15Molde63 elrthmark
16 Showing
64 A.·S. oerf
newiHe
18 Tropical fish
65Caok
66 Singer Guthrie
20 Aug. hrs.
21 Seult - Marie 67 SOiaclous
51 Reoe~
22 Be sick
24 Sufi. for
. DOWN ·
auction
211 Olsrobe
1 Jellies
3D currenll
2 Draft animals
34 Ingrid's
3 Finnish first
daughter
name
35 Actor - Julia
4
Hazier
37 Method
5 Gravel ridge
3S Wild buffalo
1
40 Construction · 6 Post
7
Harass
beam

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

·------------"1"'----"!ft

Plna In -oy now

Domino's

hiring
hour drlvtfl, Average . . pal "

•

R;w.;[
1
!l'llll

~

Outoldo Salooman,
P.rfntlng Co. Noodl Aggnollllvo,
Solf·ltlr!M Far Fuii/Ptirt nmo.
Flonc:hCifrF't-.111 Ul 1,.
O..Oboook c... hu 74 ..t 111 AN coiUono
... rralllo. For
1n metion ,p1OOM -tact
Jon Ellu, lt4-DD2-14n
~""-- NM , _
TankTI\Icllco.•-o..r
,.,__~ ,.. _::;:--•
~--· '' -•«IPI ill ~Ct.

•'*"-

tilt.
opt., flOOd nolgho
llolhood.S04-e7Mt!SS...,5pm.
2 &amp; :sllr. opt., N- Haven area.
Broad Run Rd .. Ul5tmo plus
o1oc •· ~ 1 dt
eez
•~. ·~·
P. roq. 304' •.

_..,

lltle
"'!:ORTION

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

.... &lt;flMt '

"'"IfilL~

""'nd-". Woold1- ·
man~~donon 1111 *For
rnorh-n•
and D-an
fnlorvllw &lt;Ill Jim GIJfagl• •
801)o552-1437111t2111.
-

~

r--·,.

-

~....,

'TIE.s .. ,-•

11M IIWtt II G-10

•,.

1-

~"

,, 0 ,.J

&amp; ~"'-

I''

1'~

port From 1232-8355 • can at4002·5851. Equal Housing Oppor-

loonllleo.
Nice 2·3 bedroom apartment rn
lllddfapan,814-DD2-5851.

• ..,,

Babjbad, otrolfor, lllllng. -~

,,,.._
,., ... ~

t&gt;gh-.-715-41W&amp;

="'

4

~l::plir~,l~~:~:c:~~ ~~::~,~~i ~~~~to~.t.~.l:.f~ ~;!;_h,
81

eo--···

B
and, Broker. 304·882·2405 or
3111 11115-31158. ·

for Sale

T,.Ner roc for oalo In Mason, Ideal
lor ""til proper!)', axklng 81500,
Z·IOiry gorago, bolklo- He· at4-742·3705.
von su~rmarkol. betlom Hoor
~
360
Real Estate
comproroly remodeled, 2 boys:
Wanted
(front bar 40'•28', toar bov
4
8
-32'x23\ !00'• 0' lo~ ft ,500. We But Farmo And Acreage, 20
304-882· 7113.
•
•
Acroa And Lar-, N• llmll, 614 .
3 - - 2 Blthl, Haol ~ 885-3084.
•·· . '
Gu Furnace, 1 Acre, Garage.
Aroa. 112.000, 814-387·

310 Hames

~*.Trn':::~\:'·J::C'\"c'Z:: ~;~
170 MISCellaneous
Oll.mond &amp; Sap~hlre Wedding
~~ ••zo a
- •o"" a....
Rl ~·...

· -

3badroom, 2baih modular homa
on parmanonr toundltlon wiudllry
building ond garogt. Sail on 1a·
ere, more or leat, ...,... lol. Latge
dock, •38.500. 304 • 937 • 311
~12 ,
304-837-2010 or 304437-21
or Owner 3 BedrOO!'I. Full
maenl. Madlton Avt.Oilllftftllt.
,_
WiWIIhout eltro Pt, 40 lot. Ro·
ducoTos3e,soo. 814-378-2888

aa...

...... - ·
Ina
· 01 ~ ·
180 Wanted TO Do
·-~-.
-•·· Tree
"
_ , _ CompltlO trot
care. 20yr1. exp. 1 lneured, tree Duplex apt buUdJng, good lfweatllllmlillt. 114-441·1181 or 1· ment. For lnformetlon: 304·075·
800-508-888?.
4880.
----------·I
Adufl Care. Male Or Female, Four bodroomo, both, new heat
Nlft1L Preler Dlyl 014-448-1887.
pump. air &lt;andl-. range &amp; ,..
~lga,.IDr indudtd, full baooman~
carullod Nuralng Acoalotancp~,!ff· gonogel llfoo-y, nco lo~ oooct
abfo For.,_ aroln
locallon, 814-9112-311glftar 5pm.
HomaL Date. EvoningL &amp; Wookondl. zo Yean E-lonce, Ex· Four Room, Bach, Baoomont;
-Rolarancta814-2!i0-1342.
Deck. Out Of Town On At 7 Land
10Aiver $35,000 814-+SI-D431 .
Will Do Ylrd Work, W - t Hill •
aldol, Cut Brush &amp; Work In Hay Newly riiiiiD&lt;Iofed hou.. 3br, 1 11
&amp; T - 814-441.0173.
2balh, largo larnlly room, largo llv·
lng room,
ltncod in cfou·
GanderaWIIIkolnWI~~nc:t, ~lnl~gd · blelot,"Camp onley area. 304Y•r
or
n owa ea •
a~.
Gullero Cleaned llghl Houflng, ~--'--...,.-----·I
commerlcaf, Rooldondal, Slevo: Priced cheap to ooiOo tstaro 5
room ono story houoe, 2 bOd·
114 ue 88111.
a-lii dO 't -rooma, balh, carport potio, baao·
George•
rta bl 1 ~"'"' • n
mem out of all Hood watm, wry
haul your ""
rogo to ;,. mil juot call good locadon &amp; nofQhborhood. 1o~ •7•
tD57
coted at 832 Gront St Uldd.......,•
-~ 7
Ohio, S25.000 .81 4 ·982-70.7~
•
sun Volley Nursery School. 814-742·2550orl14-384-83114,
· Chlldoar• M-F ea .... s:30pm Agoo
2·K Young Schoof Age During 320 Mabile Hames
Su..;,_, 3 Days pa1 W""" Mini·
Sa

·-w

aarar,,

ITI.Iml1~57.

for

It

---..,-----,....,-·1

410 Houses for Rent
tBR, House In Rio Granda. New

CarpeL No Pata 81+388-9948
n-•room House, Gra~ St.,
2 •3 o..u
Goflipc;ls,814..,.,.o:J84.
,

2br., 1300/mo plus doposil, no
poll. Pt. Pleaaanc area. 304·675+tll8.
N
ewlr remodeled house, !tHee
rooma, bath and garage In Middleport, 814 -002· 6.912 or 614·

ge2·2117·
Nice three bedooom homo in Pt.

Pleolllll~ ato~-S9 2 ·5858

420
.

·
M bile H
0
omeS
for Rent

2 Br., Pore~~ Yard, l5 M11os Soulh
218, $200oMOnth, 10010 eposll,
Reforencoo 114·258·8769 or 258·
1337.

a2;.:•~.~tt~a0H~.ts~~50
er~~a~~~
...,...,...

,.....

. Household
Goods

Dna O..ro.. SOIIINio oyllorn ...,..,.
••~.

Ona Flohor/Yimaha 11oroo oro-

Open: 1 ·8 Monday · Friday, 8
Noon Saturday, Cloaod sunday,
2864 Karr Road, BI&lt;IWol~ GI4-Z4S.

.. .. ll300. 304-BII2-3448.
9047.
Orlando. 4 Holll Nklhll- Dlo· Strawborrln, Pick Your Own,
noy, Uoa Anytime, Paid S300 Soil ClludtV.W...,It4-245-5121 ,
SDD 814-470-281111.
Driando· four hotof righta, near
Dloney, u.. aflJifmo, pold 1300.
aol SOD, 11..,..70-281111.

Avand ro~lgeratorllrHzor, 1part·
mont olzo. 2 t12yrt old, $150.
304-458-1976.
~~~~~~::z,soctlonol
c . I &amp; v· II s 10 ck S5 00 Yd
610 Farm Equipment
&amp;
80
or Klll:h.O Car·
851 NH ... na balor, hydraulic
eel In Siock. Over 35 Patterns . And Gaurontoodl S_tOO And Up, vorr good condition, ooklng
lnvlln Stoc~ Mollohari CarpstS, ¥WII~Doll~~·~"'~·,!•~
ISSOO. 81 4-9 85-394 9.
1 4~8~1111~8~14~1:.·
614,..4&amp;-7444.
_
SatofNte dish S250. Nlntando WI Hay Rake, , Now Ideal, Good
Country ·furniture·Furnlture for aeverat Game• ,, 50, Commdora Shape 1450: New Case lnlern~~·
Evory Room. 6ml., Rt 2 Nortll, Pl. ·"''''"""' wiprlntor and game car· tlonal, Round Bailor 17500. Lawn
Pleasant:IJ4-6 75-6820.
1rldg11, and 40-60 game cflacl Tiller, eo•, U18d 1 nma 45 Min.
~o
bl ·~ Calf 1 1000
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ..,. · 4 1n 1 - ' " 0 - ·
·
·Single Plow like New $90.
7
Was hen, dryen, refrigeralora, cc304;...;~~;;.5-;;.5388:.;.;.._ _ _ _ _ _,1 Bush Hog Sft. $500. Bar Ha)'
Sk
A I'
78 Mower Uoed 4hro. 13,900. New
rangoo. agga PP •ancoa,
Sofa I Chair 175, 2 llalchln9
Vine Streel, Call 614 · 446·7398, Swlvol Rockers S40to .. 12.000 Hayo~aro FooFront-Back $250.
'lAna.
1. 800~•99·~•BTU Air Condlllonor $150, All Lawn •rae tor Front End loader,
Good Condition 614-38&amp;- 1803.
88hra.. Still Und•r Warranty
l.A'f'NE'SFURNrTUAE
$11,000. Sq. Bail., wiWiaconsin
Complete home furnlahing 1.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Qalld·n Engine, Run• Good $400 814·
Hour~: Mon · S&amp;L 8·6. 814·448· Upr~ht. Ron Evant Enterprlna, 245-5008.
0322. 3 mffeo out Bufavlllo Plko lfockoon, Ohio, HI00·537-11521l.
Free Dollvtry.
~::;~Dot!'"~a~g~uipmont
PICKENS FURNITURE
Su~:r Single Waltr Bed $125,
ng
w
'
N ••• ~
Co or Console TV $110 81&lt;·388· u·~ Hay Equipment·
•~0328. ·
·
No appUoncoo, Houoahold fur· =::..--------·1 Nlj 585 Square Baler ·Like New
nlohfng. 112 mi. Jorrlcho Rd. PL Tandy 3200 compullr wlprlnllr. $8,500: JD 327 Square Baler ·Ex
Pleasant, WV, call3114-815·1450, only 7moo old, hardly uaod, $5,750; JD 327 Square Baler
8t4-UU418.
!t:;300::::;·.:;:~::;:::!7_;:S~a-;::::::.,·
WS ith ~lckor, $5,750; NH 273
quare Baler II ,950: IH 27
SWAIN
550
BUilding
Square Baler 11.050: fH 241
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. a2
SupplieS
Round Baler $3,250; JD Rake
Olivo SL, Gofllpof11. New &amp; Ueod ,....,..,..,,.,..:;.::~;;.:,;:...-,...,.1 1750: JD 3D Sickle Mower 1600;
fWour~tboourt.:., h o ~_ '!!!·.. ,"!:.ttern I Block. brlck. HW9f pipee. wind· NH477Haybina$2,950.

=::.:=.:.:.:.::::.::.:::;:...__..:..._,
~~~~g~~~~o:,•;,~t~':~n-:~~hn"::

"lJ;," ~~n~

aa.

---1

----I

'"

-

81-

.,.

OWl, llnlel .. etc. Claude Winrert,

Rio Grande, OH Call 614 • 24 5- UeodTractcrs:
VIRA FURNITURE
St 2 t.
JD 2940 $11,900; JD 2840
8t4-......S158
::::.:;:.._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l$t0,900; JD 2640 $t0,900; MF
Ouaii(JHou-Furnli111And
Muot Selll 4 All Slaof BuifdingL 1 taSGao-NioiiS.250.
Appliancea..Gre&amp;tOeala0'1
Each, 24 " 30 , 38 x36 , 48 lCGO,
Cath AndCarrrl RENT·2·CYMI
801125 . tst Com. o, tot Served. NfiWH &amp;s Rakeol T A n d ' - Alao Ailalfablo
Srrailt Bedroom Mobile Homo In
FreoD;;;;;yw11111n25MNoi.
Act Now &amp; Sova 11. Sounders
.
Kanouga Ideal For Ono Peroon
Con~. 81....,.Hl219.
CARMICHAEL'S
FARM
&amp;
1180/Monlh, $50 Deposit, Com· Wuher GE Hoavr Dury, Cut to =:;:;;:.:.;:;::;:.:.;:::.::;_ _...,__ I LAWN, 888 Pinecreot Drivo, Gal·
pltlollyFurnlohad614-448·7408.
•as. Kenmore Dryor $75. Whirr. ·560
Pets for Sale
llpsfls, OH 45014, 814,..48·2412,
pool W.oher Heavy Ducy Almond .:.:,;;_,.;_.:..;.:_;;_;;;_;__1 HIOO·SD4-1111 .
Two bedroom, 141170. 'M)Oded lor, Nice' $150. Kenmore Orwtr AI'Onn-A-Wonth' Ilea pro~ ~;:..;..:.;;...;..:.:...:.:._.,..._ _.._
hunllngl fiohing prlviligea, contral mond It 50. lloytlg Wuhor, 1 .-help? Aolo JD NORTH
Square BaJaro. RoliN. Hoy E air, botda gas heat tmall garden. Vaar Warranty , 205 . Whirlpool
ouce••• about . the HAPPY tort, Mowert. Htr BlnH, Tedder,
oo pots, no drlnkklg, $380/mo. plu 30• Eloclrlc Range Cut To IDS.
JACK 3-X FLEA COLLAR. Kills Wagon1, Cufdvaton, Sudors,
$300 depotlt, 614-384·6655 any- Electric Rangt 3D" HarYett Gold.. both male &amp; female adult flaa1. Corn Plantlrl, Dlakl, Olhlt

- "

755-5885.

510

lolL At a2N, Loculi Rd on righ~
PointPieaoanL 304~75-t078.
.
3br.. ollolectslc, Gallipolis Ferry,
$250tmo plua utilities . 304-675·
4088.

WantN To Cart For 1M EIMtfY 11J77 New \tJrker, 14x70, 3 door~
rn Their Homo. Hove ~ Loving (1 front 2 bacll). :!badroom. lP or
Heert, Complt .. Cara,• ts y..,-, Nat Gat, 3 1811 of llePI·traatGd
Exptrl•nct, live In, 01,1 Or lumber, wif1dOWI, acreena. 1 dma.
lly dOOrl ell new, vlrt)'l underpinning
Nighl1. Duo To VI • Itrng .om
oo•• too, all appliance, new wa· 440
4partments
Call Me In HlllabOro S1S-3D:i- ier heater. Mult have bonded
11324, Alk For lladll'·
mover. It o,ooo lfrm. Call Lucy
for Rent
--• ......., 11,.. Ka~ 3011-882-37311.
Will cfo ba
- · · ,..__
•1 and 2 bedroom apsrrmanbl. fur·
DD2·3t73or814-DDZ·5851.
1gg 1 Aomlng, newly nomodollod, 3 nlohed and unfurnohed, ao&lt;urily
Wdt Do Interior, Edlf'lor Palnlk1g. added room 1, deck 1 co¥ered deposit required, no P•ll, 6t4Roasonablo Ratoo, Exporfoncod, porch, yoflow vinyl. 304·578-2057 Qg2·22l8.
RelaroncOI, Far Free Eotimo- ahor 11pm.
Cai
_ SS7S5.
1 Bedroom Air Conditioned. Near
614 24
2br., New Moon crollar, $2000, Holzor'o, 1250/Mo. t Udlide' De
Yard &amp; Lawn Core. Reuonoblo Gil' furnace, good oond. 304- pollit Roqulrtd, 8t..,..48·2D57.
Rain, FrH EstlmaiH, Sadofoc· 875-111122 or 304-173-5357.
.1 o-•·oom s~"n·• Floor, Unfur·
---~ 8!4-- ·-o~.
~
lion Gu ~~-.
Limited Offorf 19118 doublowide, nlshod Aparunonc, In Gallipollo,
3 br, .2 bath, II6D5 down, $2Sg/ With Slovo, Rofrlgorolor, AC
FINANCIAL
month. Froa delivery .a ootup. ~~~~~o..NoD'!f.~tl61ifl!!!'!.n2c5.oo
Only a1 Oakwood Homes. Nllto
.....,.."liN
'"""'-. ....._._
WV304-J58.8885.
210
Business
2br apartrnan~ Jurnilhod..u~lldaa
Opportunity
NfiW 1816 ux70, lncludao 1klrt· Included, 1 or 2 poreono. Refer.
___..,....;-=::::;:;::~..:.--.l'ng, 110p1, lllockl, ono roar oncoo I Securlry Depooll ro·
·!NOnCE!
homaownetl tn auranc:e and IIX (Jiired. CIII304-77"J.GGCJ8.
CO monlho FREE fo1 """' Only tt025
OHIO VALLfV PIJ!ILISHING
· o-, -~ •zor. 17 - monfo. Coif BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
rocomrnondo thac you do bull·
"""-32311. ~
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
nee• wllh pooplo yau Juoow, and I .~:..-==7..:::::;._____ ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drlvo
NOT to oond monoy d\rough flo New Bonk Ropoo. Only • loll. ~om I2281D IZDI. Walk to shop
maU undl you ho¥0 fnveotfgatod --ln.~ _, 7101 _
l movfto. Call 61 4• 44a.2588 .
ttooflerlng.
1 :;:::.=.:.::::.:.::.::~:.:.:·~·~.;.;;;;.;:._...
E
I'
qual Houllng Opponunky
•
OAKWOOD HOMES, Nitro, WV.
.
Gold-own your own bu-.. luH Direct facio~ nf81. No middle BlaudlullWo Bedroom, In Counor part rlmo. ooll gold l oliver
S
•
•
_ s.·• .,_... , ~Room
•
lbl
.man. avo 1•000 •. 30•• 755 . ••
,ng. ...........
•
cofno, u.ooo por w•• psn •· 5885
Largo Eat In Kflchen, aohor,
co1Marllai814-QD2·1'141.
1.:.:.:.::.· --..,------- Drrer, Dfohwaohor, Frfg, Slovo,
Pata,
Price
Buorori New 14x70, 2 or Provided. No Smokoro, No
Lonl V.ndlng Butlntll For ""._
~ eons ....._ I ~-·11!
a-JI-SOio:Yoncl SodaiSnacko. Priced - · ~·1 . . . _ , ,_UM&lt; ' $400 Dopoctl~ $450/Uo. ...... ~·
10 Sail Oulckly. Calf -~~ 1·100· Fro• deUvory • aatup. Only 01 tione AI: 1743 Cent_, Road,
~ -•
Oakwood Homn, Nitro WI/. 304· et ........ 2205. .... ilablo01171115.

3,......_.

tr• w/3 or more bedroomo, have
•
oullldt dogL 311&lt;-882·2408.

Black Door •160 . Rtfrlgtrator,

Almond, Sldo-By-Sidt, lea I Watar In Door $350. Refrigerator
Copportont, Froor Froo $150. TV
portable 12' Romoto Control $85.
31' Chest Freozer 1150. 18 cu. fl.
Uprfghl Freezer 1150. Skaggo
A~lances. 78 Vine St. 11+-«07308 or 1-800 •DD 341tD.
Wuhor, DryOf, Rofrfgarator, Air
Conditioner, Mfcrowovo, Color
T.V.. 814-2!11-1238.
530
Antlq
UBI

.

Buy or oafl. Rlvorlno Antfqua1,
Pot124 E. lloHfn S~~ TonWRL 124,
meroy. outt: "'· · · 10:00
a.m. to 6:00p.m., Sundly 1:00 to
6:00p.m.814-DDZ·25211.
Richmond Plano, 83yro old, noodl
tuning, (playa rtal good) •700.
304-875-8558.

540

MIScellaneoUS
Merchandise

1 Sh P 5 lock 1 1 v.omo ha 2 CY1·
Ga Carta. .,... 2-Carl Trailer
w/UdfiN Bor and All Accoaaorloa.
''
10011. Roadt to Race 114·387·
asg4 or 814· 441·8080 Alk For

Jow.

1 lot ~"'~o.-. 1111onio1 ...
""",.,
,..,, .. '111'
zoo amp bel, storm door, !ruck
tool bol, 12' bonciiOW. 3114·8754004..

.•

=•.:Oo:..~:.::C::·------1 Equll)mlnt. Howe'l Farm~
ery; Aou11 32. JJdleon OH lt4-

Availabl:;:=
·

Gooom Shop -~t Grooming. Faa· za8.5044.
•
turing Hrdro Beth . Julia Webb.
Caii81H48 0231.
630
Uvestock

•

"80 Corvone Good Conclltlon,
low MU.ge, 114-742-2284.
1881 ChOYy lmpalla Small V-8
Runo Good, Ntod Botrory 1600
OB081-·4111 . .
1011 Ford Granoda Gr•t Inter~
or. And Exterior, Low lllftago,
814-2SO.t0t2.

•K 1 6 2
9A K Q

1180 Mercury Capri, $500, 814·
448-8958.
.

_1_88_3_P_f_y_m_o-ut_h_R_a_rr_a_n~-,."',-l-or·l
n•· for ·-•r .....w, 1110 young

rabbi~tr:1"si2 Ny~ Av•

nuo.~·-.,.
1883 Z28Camoro, whiro, auto..
PW PD,'"•tad ...,......._ - ~
'
~·
••-no, . ·-~goodoond.
304~75-2580.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
We st North
South

AKC Choc. lab. Pupa. Roady To 2 ~arUng Regia- Anouo Bul

aa.

nai814-311U75e.
:,::::.::,:::::.:::;::.__ _ _-,One biiJ ldd, S30; two nanny llldl,
C!Oia. 814-742·2237.
REGISTERED ANGUS And Chf.
•-g"l Bulla •-• Halhoro 17110.
"'' ..
nnu
Up. Excollont Bloodllneo, Slate
~forma, ai4-288-53DI Jack·
-·

AKC Golden Rolrlovor i'upplta,
Roadr JuN 17th, WNI Hold Willi
Depoall, $150 Each, 814-381· Wii"G Au• $30 114-251-1015.
ll243.
,
640
Hay &amp; Grain
·
AKC Llvorwhile, Fomalt Dalma· 25 Acres a1 Hay To Cut On
lion, 3 VIars Old, looking For SharOI AI Rio Grande 81&lt;·245Good Homo 1100 814·2&amp;1-11449. 5482.
·
JokaAIIIr7p.m.
vc R""' 1 ~ Cock Sp 1
~Aunpp•·o""'
, -~ "w-oa•·
-•~. 2· 10
"",1
• ~
~"
ock, 1r-... M - . 114• 85 * 441
, - , ~~~,4 ""2
71, 0 Autos for Sale
• ~ OYenngo or
,. •
88 n . . , _
'81 Lincoln Towne Car, low mllal,

".!

!:"i,~::,r;.lol· wild op-

1g85 Honda Accord LX, maroon
Inside and ou~ loodod, oxua Ill~.
78,800 mfleo, $4t50, 614-192·
zse..f!Airapm. - •1088 Buick Sktfark, good running
condi~on, high mlfoaga, 304·882·
=20:.:52:::.;.- - - - - - - - · I
1987 T-Bird Turbo Coupo Fully
Loaded, Recently Wrecked, Front
End. Bodr Excollant COndition, No
Rust 514~405.

-----~----1
1888 Dido Toranado, olr powor

windowt, locka end ua11, rune

greo~ $0200, 614-D4D-28n.

"1 •n~~:-:-:G:-ran-d:"Pr:":",
.,-::SE:::---,r:-·~lo--~.l
..,
..._...
...-

od, power •••~ ounroo, leather
Interior, 58,500ml., $8500. 30""'
67''-a"-5'""pm.
~-- ·- ·-~"~"-·1-::F:-d-:-F:--::,,...;.-4~.-=o-:-00:-1-:-f-I
m as,
ld•• 1 1oor 11eauYB, d.. , $2550
ea
r co ege llu ent.
•
Scolly'l Used Cart. 304·882·
3752.
1081 GEO Trockor, 4WD, Con·
vortiblo. Sun &amp; - 1 Ill:, Tapa,
27 mpg .. 15,200 mi. 17100 114·

,wa.r435.

Co-.

1DD3 WHtollorcury
Fu~
lr Loadod1 28,000 llllo1, Under
W.trOntr t12.000 Firm 814-4487420. '
1004 Oklo Cutiaoa Sllmo S, v.a
Auto With
PfW, 1'1\, PI
Sto, P~lllrr., AC, AM·FII Cao·
• • · Latdld. Muat Stlll14-~

av.-.

8551. ·

18g4 Plymouth S..ndanco. Low
llllalga. Excallollt Condition, Air,
4 Door, $gODS 114·258·8154 or
258-e321.
Junk Au too FOt S0ftll4·2""·
I058.
-

720 ll'uekS for Sale
t8113 Ford Stop-Side -MotDr. Sale or TraM For a Good
Hor•ll-737.

lno molllllt'•l~l~ raody to ftlh.

2 NT

THAT TATER!! HE'S
TH' SPITTIN' IMAGE
OF YOU,
SNUFFY!!

•

PEANUTS
WI&lt;AT HAPPENS IF A
006 DOESN't LIKE T~E
FAMILY 1-!E'S LIVING LiliTH?

HE SNEAKS AWA'i AT
N161-!T,

I-lOPS A F~E16~1'.

AND I&lt;EADS OUT WEST

I 973 Coachman t,lolor Home.
47,000 Original MiloL Now TiroL
Nlco Original Condition, Evorr·
lhlng Work• $5700 814·245·

iofl 14400.

2870.
tea&amp; Ch"Y S·ID, 4ctl.. 5opd.,
wi jo o. nMbad liner, ooc.
oond., IO,OOOml., 13800. 304.e75711111 .

*"""

1ggo Chovy Truck w/Aiuml,..m
Whoolo, Sharp, WhiiOIAad. EX·
-Cond111ot1114-2511-18117. ·
For Sale or lilldo For Nloa Joap.
'71 Chaoiy Pickup. Now ~50 Mo·
tor, Now P~nl, Tlrao, Whoofo,
..
a •• I
~--r
•UII .,.. 500, - OUI Calla
Only lt4-311N011.
_
730
li .eo
1875 Ford cargo van, t 0' bed,

"ans

•woa

SIOO.~SODI.

East
Pass
All pass

29 Underwater

ships
31 Plaything

. 32 Singer Adams
33 ~ooked a1
36 Rules
39 Moslem
commander
41 Perched

44 Ivy league

the easy line -

school
46 Cui off
48 Ger.
. philosopher
50 lwo 51 - - abou1
52 s~oul
54 Ms. encl.
56 Elects
57 No ·
58 MinUte
60 Zodiac sign

61 Compass pt.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

and a

hike over the hill .- the wrong route.
Playing in srx no-trump against a club
lead. how do you proceed '
South's seq uence. a strong, artificml
and forcing two cl ubs fo ll owed by a re·
bid uf two no-trump. shows a balan ced ·
23 ·24 points.
The declarer saw that he had to work
on the diamond sUit. So, he won the
first triCk in the dummy and immedi ·

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

rtte oNt.Y TttiNG

~·vt eve~
AT TtfE 'TOP Of I~

ately played a di amond to his king.
wh ic h hel rl. After leading a spade to
dummy's ace, declarer played a seco nd

lttN
Ttff'

diamond. However. East wasn't asleep.

He wOn with his ace and returned a

spade. This removed dummy' s final enl'ry before the diamond queen could be
unblocked. South lost a spade to East's
jack at ttick 13: one down.
South's line looks ·logical. but it is
wrong. South should win the first trick
in hand , play a spade to the dummy and
lead a diamond. Suppose East ducks
his ace. Declarer wins with his king.

fOOl&gt; C:tiAI/11, ANI&gt; NOWMY DOC-TO~ 'TOOl' Mt
~fl&gt;

Off

MEAT.

:_.,

-.z.......

'BORN LOSER
-!"'THGrnmt£, t-\OTIFY 111( EtiXX) ..,
e#.IK. I'U.. &amp;. ~Tif¥.:. II PINT
(A Ei..COD FOR1J.I£1R ~IVc ~y

&amp;

Motor Homes

WONCE.RFLL ICE.I\ CHIE:F.
1-\0IJ C£1'-lE.ROJ:) Of YCX.l !

crosses back to dummy wjth another

"' · "'

NOT MY I!VXlO,THC*:Ni\Pft.L .

. spade and plays a second diamond. The
club queen is the guaranteed dummy
.., entry, safe from attack.
·

YQ!JR~ I

Phillip Alder's new book. "Ge t
Smarter at Bridge.· is available,
autographed upon request, for
$J4 .95 from P.O. Box J69. Roslyn
His , NY 11577-0169.

by Luis Campos
Celeon~ CIPher c ~tJ\OQfams are

XKBNAEVUS)

(UOKGSU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION · ~For a s1ngle woman . prepar1ng far company means
Wiping th~ hpstlck off the milk carton ~ - Elayne Boosler

WOlD
GAIA I

0

Rearrange leiters of
four scrambled word!
low to form four words

I

SELENT

I P I 1 ·I
2

13 L

u c El

N 14

.I

-!-..,, w=-~,

'I_S_C_A_B

• c

.

1 1
.

.

.
I

While siltrng rn a traffic
eryone began honking
hom
It seems that nothrng rs more used
than the car horn and nothrng rs
'more· ·-····.

BIG NATE

A

WEDtJESPI\'( 15
OFFICIALL'I' THE
FiRST Di'Y Of

SVI"1t'\ER.

... BUT THE LA~T
OA'( Of StHOOL ISN'T
UIJTIL FRIOAY!

WHAT IDIOT
CAME UP WfTH
THAT ONE?

PRINT NUM,BERW tEllERS 1

t;;:r IN THESE SQUARES

A

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

V

GE I ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

. FaJTOw . Dolly· \Mlole · Intake - DO the WORK
People Ieday need more educabon and want to qurt
work at an earlrer age. When the trend for longer education
meets early ret1rement who will DO the WORK? .

UNE19

SERVICES

..

••

BASEMENT
.
WATERPROOFtiG
•
Unconditional lifetime guarantee;!
Local refarancea lurniahed, Call,

1 (800) 28'1·0578 Or (814) 237· '
0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Et· :
tabilohad 1875.
I

':"Ac_o_V~I-ny_f_S_I-di_n_g-2-0%_0_1~1-S-ol-t1 1'

!

Vinyl Siding /Replacement Wind•
ow•~ Roofing, 26 Year• Ezper· ~ ·

Hom'

,,

Main· •

lanance· Painting, vinyl aiding~

carpenby, tlooro, wlndowa, balho,
mobilo homa oopofr and mona For
lroa oodmato call Cho~ 814-gl2·
8323.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Joa'a Home Maintenance, vinyl
aiding, rooting, axtet'IOr painting,-.
power wathlna~ fret aatiNtel•.
814-8112....51.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron's TV Sonolca. opoclalfzlng In
Zentttl a11o NrYiting moa1 otNr
btanda. HouN call•, 1-800-71:17·
0015. wv 304-578-23118.
820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

...

FrHman'o Hoadng And Cooling.
lnttallallon And Service. EPA

Cartlflod. Ruldonliaf, Commorclol.
114-251!-1111 .

840

Tuesday, June 20. 1995

Electrical and
Refrigeration

CCWFDRT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE Etl!ERPRISES ,.
Htot Pumps, Air Conditioning, 11 ·
'lbu Don~ can ua w. Bolh L011r' '

Fr•• Eat/matt&amp;. 1-100-287·1308, ~~-

114-ol48·8308, wv 002045.

RuldenUai or CDIM'Itrclaf wiring.
new MrVIc• or
Matter iJ.
canted electr.lcl an. R\denour

,..rL

Efoctrfi:af, WV000308, 304·8751781.

I
•

2

Genoral

O

Complete "the chuckle Quoled
.
.
.
.
.
~ y fd lmg •n !he m•S~1 n9 w o rd~
L-...1.-.L-L...L-.L~ you develop fr om slep No 3 bel ow

2811 1978 Covolcadt campln".
t r~!"'· 882
AC•.!':70PI 7. 304·882•
-·,.
~ .

r

A V C J

PKTEJH .

UES l NG
~_:,,.,G.:..,.:I..:...T'I-'-'TI.:....,Ir::',..-1

tunr

Horne
.,.
Improvements

OBMHJG

TFMS ' U - FVU · EMAJ

T M U

I.

Hl88 31h: Camino Clauic YeHow· .
atone lravel ~iler,
equlped,,·
1 ~~ c_ond .. 18,500. Cal 304~75- o;
f II •
1884 fnnob ck c
loa"-~ Iota orru-.,•m,.e!r· u IJ,
-.
-··
-...., fi ..
nanclng. 304-875-8903. .

810

WJUS

WMUJWMBB

GJDBMXJAJES

aooa

2 7

SF J

SFKNLFS

' V

s

1184 Chevy Jamboroa 24h mol!&gt;f .
homa' 18'000m1 ' verv' ,......
............4 - - . . I t '
-~.
tlon. ~58-1643.

created trom QU01a1101"1S by lamous people. past anCIOtes&amp;n1

Ear;n 1ener '" !he c•pl"1er stands !01 aroo! her Today~ Cl~ X equafs C

•

1974 Dol-Ray trUck &lt;ompar, good ,
condition, oelf contained ; sOlve, '
rurnsoa,lco lx&gt;x. 304-BD5-3!;08.
' .
1976 27 Champion, 440 englnt, ~"
p,ood tires, generator, arr, new:
rant end. new flaxsteel furniture, ·
new carpet, microwave, S.,OOO
mfleo, good cleon condition, 814,
742-2194.

C&amp;C

1088 Ford 4,., will

6 NT

the meadow -

,

13200.3G4-e75-M)4,
1880 fntarNtlonal IChool bul. zo

See Ed fhlo. Phone 304·882·

Pass

De -

28 Mild expletfv~

have a choice between a meander in

1

Will lnllall Wfndohlofdo StOO • ''
Up, 810·388-9082, Or 814·448· r"

o1nco. 6t4-387-08t3.

1881 Clwly Plcii.Up. llack, Low·
Shor18td.I14-241-53)D.

2 t

1

Friedrich Nietzscbe . the German
philosopher, claimed that "a few hours
of mountain climbing turn a ras~al and
a saint into two pretty similar crea·
lures. Fatigue is the shortest way to
Eqt1alilly and Fraternity - and, in the
Ll[oen.vwill surrender to Sleep."
Even though the FrGnch are not
known as a nation of mountain
climbers. that is a clever workin~ of the
country's motto. In today's deal, you

I

trailer wlaccasaorlea, excellen1 1.
condition. t13,800, 814-892·360L •
ahor 5pm.
.
~~:
Criu Craft 21ft. ci.t""""" cabin. lika
new,I11.000. »Wt15.'2454.
!
760
Auto. Parts &amp;
Accessories

campers

Pass

measure
Surfeit
Editing term
Rowing tool
Future L~.Bs .'
eKam

By Phillip Alder

198~ Bola 180 folandor. 18'8' •

"'RT.

11
17
19
23

2.5 Edge
.
26 Arrow polson
27 Actor Robert •

Easy or ·
difficult?

Acconorlao 111,300 6U·U8· :

790

ot melal
10 Liquid

lead: •4

3040·

1978 GIIC blaciii121Dn 4 · drive. VI, etandard, 33• 1lra1,

wry good condition, corr 114-002·
23581or
appolnlmlnl. Serious 1011 Chaoiy Van (ZO) Good Co•
-.on~y. .
dillon. 12400 et4-38Ui04.

an

&lt;

*

1883 Ford Ranger Low lldtr wilh
onug top campo~ walk thru,
Aonter llm'fm " I atll Utteo, 4
apood, 42,000- mloo - .
1om condillon, ooklng $3200, 11 .,_
742·2882.

Go Allor 8 Weeko, Juno 28 814- From Champion Blooclllno. 1 :....a.::.:8582.==-------- l Oldamobflo
No A/01, AI Orlgi-

2.

BARNEY

1988 Chav• 510 llo!Of, 2 _8 , v.a, ·.
•
1084 Marc:ede• Benz 500SL, 2 Still In Truck, Runt Goad t&amp;OO ,.
1
1
8
405
Seata. Soh Top &amp; Hard Top, low _:-o~-_zse.::.:.:.__;.;;.·- - - ' - - - C
$
Miles. Good ond 1lion U:I,OOO New gal tanka, one ton truck •.
1
8 ~7827.
Wheels, radlaiDrl.loor 11'1111. ec.
1g84 Old a Dafra 81, exlla nlco, D &amp; A Auto, Riploy, WV. 304-372·
31133or t.aoo.273-Q3211.
2dr, 11400. 304-578-2818.
Renau Il
Encore, SOUTHWESTPICK.UPPARTS
1i84
Becla, Cabs, Doors, Fenders And
111 •000mlles, runs good, 750 · Mort. 3 Mlle1 South Of GallipoUa
~78-2S73.
At Juctlon Rt 7, &amp; RL 218, 8t4· '
•••• _
,.
1985 Crown Victoria, V-8, noedo ' ~3 ••7·
· ,

=

a Fleetwood -

·9 Sources

• K Q2
AA K 5

Open Bow; 4.3 LX Mororuloar, '" : ·
::.:..:.::::.:...:.:.::..__ _ _ _ _ _ , power ahlft prop, cuatom haul •:

811oo Old Puppies, Part Chow, tlllonth Old Polled Charolalo
Pari Colllo, 1 Block a Brown; t Bull, Yorr ThiCk, Dr Roglltored
Whillt, GH ue .8881 .
Angua BaM 11...:in.-2111..

AKC Roglotorod Cocker Spaniol
lor ltud •• ,.,•• onlr. ·1 14·848·
2338.

'

1018 Honda ·GofdwinCI Willi Trll~
orvety Nlca, $5,800,080, 114·:,.
....a.liiZI.
,.
&lt;·
1888 RIIIO, nevor boon ,.cod, •·
col 814-DDZ-31187-Dpm.
'

$2100, - - ·
11187 ~our Winds 21' CUddy ca.
bin 305 llercruraor 110 Board, All

•9 6

SOUTH

Autos fOr Sale

pauanger, with wtKh Utt •1350~
304-5711-2818.

1
bu"·

oA J 7

108742

18'4 Kawa~akr 2zo Blyou, ••• •
ohapo, $2,700. 384-875-7453 a~ •,
.,. 4pm.
·:.
'
t855 c - No RuiL N - Mocllflod 1817 Suzuld 230 C.ad :'
Rai-1!4-2511-IDII&amp;
• SperL good cond.. only 11400. ' ·
1110W7M2118.
:
1875 Plymouth S.omp, olontl Moving Mull SOli . 1884 · Hon~o :
oulo., 74,000ml, good running VT100~~ ...... ~ ....,__ roo! ' ,
cond., liDO OBO. 304-175-2714
~-- - · ·-•--.
1
or 07s-1sn.
loolhor oodclobago. - battery, , ·
850Dmlln, graal cond., 11500. •:
ten Ford LTD, runa aoocl, 1500. 1110W75-5312.
:
le&amp;t ChOYrolot llaffbu, 4door. 750 Boats &amp; Motors
~odr. transmlnlon, good llroo,
for "'-'le
••
S2tiQ. !Il4.a75-78611·
___________...;;~,·.
d
1078 Ford Escort, goo concl.. I S ' - - . naooo1y -~~ !ilil'4&gt;. :
112000. 304-875-IOIII.
Evlrww&lt;lo motor, foor control troi· , ·
710

;:::;;::=:.-:-:-----:---

AI&lt;C Cocker Sponiolo, 1 fomale. 7
mal.., IIIIo &lt;looro..d &amp; clawa
removed. 3 tricolor, 1 black, &amp; 4
black &amp;'whllo, llrll lhotl given,
1100, oloo fomala copper noot
Beagle, t30, only 13 wkt. old,
81 4-8112-3252___

91 0973

1815 Suoukl Ouodrunner 230 ::
With R..orso, Good Sholl'! '' •
11400 eu 3110111.
.: ,

-.,1M-·a

azm,

SKILLS IN·
LIEF COMIIUNITV
~• N~~ ~ 7
h
s TRUC , - - •0 ....

MCJ../100 s:&gt; FAST 1-)'JW ...

1082 -10111 LTD SIOCC, \1ooy •
Good C-tlon, law lllleo 114- '
2!11-1024;
I'

Air cono11-.,
11,500 Bill, Komore. ....,..._
yro.Oicl.8t4-247112411 '

'""""'ndo

HIGH 1W-\I-Xli.CGY l::l

lhlald, ftartnl. ,.,. ~ 11100. ·
304-773-58tf.
·::

"--ntd.-

~!:;!:!.'

EAST
•J I 0 8 5

--gi. . . . -·.
•

1!0100,

-.n:::.,.::.

lfa AI 1·800-531·2302. Deadline
For Appllcanlo: a/28/05. Equal
Opporlllnitr EmploJOt
,

,

•Q J 3

1878 K-akiiDDO, 4Cyf, WI ::

e:=.

'

-

1-;~=::::==::::;===:r=========:l

r!likg~n~nyor :~~~~~~~~;,!oe.

01086 54

&amp;MEEK

·'

1075 Harley Davidson lupoo ;
Glca, ... o l - par~~,-....,., '
,.,....,..,14,000,114- :
-~
-•

4clr.. 1857 Cltfvy, oriQinll rllllnlno
geor, ·1 4200. Full·ol!l oofa bod,
blue I lin, 1100. lllbaiWI!Irbtd,
twfn-oize, 1100. 304-571-ZDZD.

·

•-

...~-··

.&lt;.
11 1-t-

..... •$1 c.
_..1"... ,'" L"'•rL...
,.v
~ ,.

Nice one bedroom efficiency Booll By Rod Wing a ; - -40
Part-lmt P'lillon wlllt . .IIIIo
i::;~=::::::::;::==::r-;;=::======::1 apartment In Po,_oy, 114-DD2· To ·50 Dogrooo, H.H. Brown
lllytimt houll ........ b I5851.
Guaranlaod, LOWOII PrieM, Tho
~
~
210
Buslneas
~~....,.------I1Shoa~~Ca~to,~8~,~~~~~·~·~222.~--1 1580 ...... for Sale
-·
~~- .. ~'::'*'=
_
330 F111118 fOr Sale
One bodroom opanmont rn Pt I·
boally dlo"rtlocl- ..,_
.Opportunity
Pleosan~ rurnohad, cl01n &amp; nioa, Concreto &amp; Ptaollc Sop lie Tankl,
.,..
••·
-~
13 Ac,.o And Barn l Houoo, 3 no- Phona!ll4.a7S.t-.
300 Th
2 '000 Gallon• Ron
Co
~==~ man~i"
Bedrooms, I 112 Blthl, LR, •
~
Evonl E~torPtiMI, Jackoon, OH Amorlcl/1 Cocftar Spaniel Pwp.
hool1h -~~~- PNio!rrod. Af&gt;For rent: o ·VIctarlen loooulflully -~.au •• 01135
Dna bedroom apartment In Mid· 1. - .537-esze.
AKC
C~
plrln_or_AIOU""!to:
docorolodroa,.uranLSOatoiO
BUSiniiSand
dfepart.alludHdnplld,I25Q/mo.,l.:.:==.::=._____
'10.11
721.
~~n•ceNTER
and...,.. oqul= wlft MrY· 340
$100dtpooi~014-1411·2217.
Couch &amp; Choir at DO 814· 441· Oafmadon pup(IIOI. Alec Rogll• .
~·~~
thing you nMd ~nglolcll-ohal.
. Bulldlngl!l
Ono bedroom furnished upstair• ,722
·=1~.- - - - - - - - lttod. tiWtco old, 1200. 304-037·
715llolnpall end .,.,., biG .. ~
•
'·
2II2D.
Pl._,. WV
otalnloll otHI lrooza&lt;, ,.rrigoro· Two Bay Block Building In Kanau· aparonont In llldcllapor~ all udll· Daybed Wollollod, complete Will
25550
~
' tor, oloop ~yor. convection...., ga For Garogo or. Body Shop, tiel and cable·Included, $330/lno. drawers, book cue hoodboord. Fulblooclod SL llorNrd pupplto,
EDEIM
and much more. Call Doltlo Turn- fdool For Part Time Buolnon puo llllt&gt;Ool~ coH 814-Qg:!-2458.
304-875-7023.
I " IZSO.I!4--:IIIt .
erRalrtyto-atOI+4102·Hu Udlflfu 1125/llonth 814· Twin Rivero Towlr, now accepting
POSTAL JOBS
....a.7ol08.
oppllcatlono b 111f. HUD oubalc!Srarti12.0811W.for1XM1andoplzed opt for elderly ond handl· Electric Whoafchalrl, Electric Uquld - • nordolnotto!Ob?
plication Info. col 218-7S«l01
-~ EOH !ll4.a •&amp;-88
,
. . . Now"lud Sooolor Ultl, Aok RIG Food &amp; SuppiJ, at•·
extWV5411, Dam-Dpm. Sun-Frt.
.....7
70.
SIOfrwoJ ElovaDra. llh Cholra, 882·2te4 a-out HAPPY JACK
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
~Upolllra, 3 Roo,. 1 llot1 11 Bed- -man·1 Homocoro 114 •441 • Trivormicl&lt;lo Recognized ~are &amp;
Srarl l12~~~nm and
.55 Acres Of Lond Wilh 28x32 room), FdurDnlohedl, ~!.!!'n, Refer. 72113.
':!~.round, &amp;
n .. ·ldl On cr c~ ..... n-• 1 enc• an
epaa I .-.-.ulred, No
.._.
Appllcollon Info. Call 2t8· 76g.
~• 110
It ••,... ~. ' ~1181 ........ 1518.
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8301 Ext OH 581, Dlm-9pm, Sun800-287~ 814-.e:JJB.
AERAI1CIH waroRII
Llqwfd Wormers Not =The
Fri.
Ar:roo
All
Wooded
$550IAcre
Wedgo
Apartmenta.
1
1
2br
..
no
&amp;
I
n
8Dc1t.
~~~ ":.te'b~~ut HA~~
•
2
On Lowio Rd. In Harrloon Town· psto. 506 Burdono SOHt. 304· CaiAonE-1-.7-e528.
JACK TRIVERMICIDE. Roc·
Ravanawaod Village Health CanAll real e:;;tate advertising in
175-2072 afllr 5pm.
tor, ZOO South Ritchlo Avonuo,
ohlp. Doy: 814·448·3158 E..nlng:
ognlzod SOlo I Efltc:lillt Agolnol
RovenoWood, WI/ II now 1 coept.
thts.newspaper Is subject to •
•::.t:.;ol-.;258-:::.~15:.:52=·:....------1450
. fumlshed
KMwnono ,.lrigonoiDr a1110, - · Hook, Round &amp; Tapeworms In
lno oppllcadono for cortlllod ...,..
lhe Feoeoal Fair Housing Act
"oorns
trlc otovo 150, waohof 1 dryer Doga &amp; Catal
tng 111 t1 rant cl . .aaa given by
ol 1968 which ma~es it illegal
Four Jo• ....., Rac:lne-- apprGI. 1
f1
$12511:. .. In e.c cond. 304-875Georg. BolO, RN. lnt8t'ealtcl perto advertise ~a ny Preference,
1/2 ICt8l eech, 11artklg at 15000, R
t.....
1864.
Prafeallan.1l Pet Graamlna . By
aont appl~ In pereon Mondar·
lfmhafion or discrimination
call 01~fr2025.
ootna '\II rent. week or month.
Max, LtiYt A Mtaugt I'll Gtt
Thuradly, Dan&gt;3r&gt;nl EDE.
based on race, coloo, religion,
lot In Spring Valley Area, Will ~~!~:~t-20/mO. Gallla Hotel. UltetU,
114-742·1311t.
llad&lt;.I14-256-05SO.
sex lamlllal status or national
Accomodate Uobila Home 014·
Martao Wtlhtr/Orytr '110, Rabbltl, Netherland, Dwarr &amp;
Sal •• Po.ltlon "ountaln Slalo
'Hamu, Polnl Pt:aaant, wv. Oalt
Alle r 7pm Or Leave
Full Blooded 814-.3 881
For An Appolncmant, 8 14 ' 448•
hook·UPI. Coif after 2·.oo •.. m., ............
a:wo ·
limitation or discrimlnalion:
r:
""., ... ...
REMOTE, beautiful, rfdga-top 3114·773-585t,llaoonYN.
:.:::.::;:::.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ · spoclof I Roro, Whllo, Blchon
·•·•
1
d
land·,
threo
mffeo
1outh
of
Car·
Moving sale· llfl·bock lounge Frloo, Origlnaff• From rF,.nco &amp;
So moOn. n. ~~0\lonngo 8 n
Tl\isnewspaperwlllool
~• ..!.~
ID .,.,..., oldarlr wom.
poniAII', Ohio, IlL Union Rd. (Col· 460 SpaceforRent
chair, dook, old clllna oablnet, S ~ fn,No
·-.!';::--no
0"·11' High
h
home
n
Pomtro"
knowling!y
accept
umbla
TR
14);
7.845
acrtt,
laro•
gat
heating
etava,
karo·
~,
..
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1
1
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ea
,.
advertisomenls lor real estate
17010:5.047 acre.. $4542: (other Trailer lot for ronr. 1mile oH Rod - tent hHitr, old Olk wood • • ·
Apply by wri.tlhg Tho Dally Senti·
whlcil Is In vlolallon ollhelaw.
porcofo IIVIIIIablo). Ownar Rnanc· noy Piko axiL 814-245-5344 thor rocket and _,od ltont dreooar 1Wo lull bloodtcl mala Collie puP.,
nel, clo Box 729·0, Pomeroy,
Inc C 11 fo
d
n
5Pm
..... 8... .v." ._...
8 we•kt o.ld, ••tra large. $100
Ohio 45768, ghrlng experience,
Our readers are hereby
ng, a r aoo map, 814· 5• 3•
.
~-:;:;:;:..;..'.;.~..;.;;;:.;':.;.;.-:.;·
_ _ _ _ _ 1 •c:h. 814-742·2050.
refefenc• &amp; wage requirammL
inlonned that all dwellings
8545.
Trailer lot for renr In Middleport, Naw 4 Wonlh ad Lift Clwlr, 114·
advertised in lhls newspaper
s_canfc Vafl•r.· Apple Grove,
200 amp, gao, ofactric and water, 378-2720 AfTER I P.M.
580
FruitS &amp;
Wanced· drfvar lor dodloalod run,
are available on an equal
b
If 1 - ·
bll
· 014-Qg2·8912 or 814-DD2·21 17.
Vegetab. les
time orr. ~od wagoo, no touch
eaul u · - oro. pu • Wiler.
NHot Dog"~- 0"
0pponunltyb8Sl5.
ciuAa.~Jt: ~ 578-.... ""'
IIIU-""'411
ntlffll
lrolgtl.6t4-DD2·5012.
·~-~-· "
•
~470 Wanted tO Rent
or 1 Steomor, Ueod t Time 1275 Srrawberrlel
,
You Pick Or We
81
1
1534
0
WANTED: EMERGENCY RE·
::~~.d:~bJ: ::~.~: ~:~c~~~!:d Want to rent nice home In coun4-44 Leave ~ge.
Pick, TaylOr Slrawberry PatCh,

In Gollfa And Mofgl Counties.
HOURS:
AI SchodulediAI
-Hooded; Mull Be Able To Stoy
OYa&lt;nlght; 2-Hour Woaklr Sta''
. oe
"ootlng;, Dr AI Olherwl
Scheduled. Hleh Schooll)ogroa,
Valid Orf¥Ofl u..nH, Thl..
Yoars Llctnled Driving Eoporl·
enco, Good Driving Record And
Adoq~a· AoolomobUo lniWran~

~ C.A1'

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• ~ 5 2

;Ohfo.~-y;;;;;;;;d;;;"--:
740
MotOI-clll
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RlvOtoldo Apartmonll In lllcl&lt;llo- 1::::.:::::...________

Part Tlma Baby- For 2 Small
CNidran8t4-3117-03t4.

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tDDO Do&lt;1ao Ram ¥art 8-210:::72,000 Mlfoa, ...- . C&amp;n h
M: OolllpOIIo Dalv ....... '
121 Third Avo-. Gaur-• :

Gracioua IMng. 1 and 2 bodrooftl I nflor ulao. 10 . . . 1100, 11411 VIHago Manor end DDZ-711115.

Port Time Babyalttor Mull Ba
Able To Drivo And Ba Within tO
Min. Df Holler Hoopltlll ltU48848 Allor 8pm.

¥:'t."';.~!'fr ~~=:-g:' :,:::

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..,-.-,110&lt;
at-

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10 h p . - Atmr 1rPt part·
ablo gonorator 1400. 114·742·
2502.
• ~-- ,....._ ~- Sullo, Bll·

syo-

Furnlehod Efflcioncy 1185/llo.
Utfllllu Paid, Shore Bath, 807
SKancl, GoiUpoUa, 11H41.....18
Allor7 P.M.

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLE* by Larry Wright

p11.,..,

_,driwtno_wi,_end

AI.Rl'TIIIEAN

for Rent

oano, Gold Crulhod. Good Con2221 .
cidonl200at .......
2b&lt;lrm. apto., total oloctrlc, op· • T c
1 •• Concll"
.on on
.. ~r
furriohad, laundry room ~Pt.c:llago,
Syollm
Or Slllt uoner
lacrUiioa, c:1oaa to ochoal In town. 11,2511 lnotallod, 5 Yr. Worranry
Applications available at: V~logo All Porta, 1·100·217·1301, 114·
G - Apts. 140 Ot call eu.gg2. HU301.
3711 . EOH.
38' prottuno lnoutalod 11001 ••
Entclencr ApL 111 UUIItJ Paid. tr1nce daor, goad ehape. S04 $200.00.No-114-381DDI8
e75-o4427.

"""*

--....---

Apnnlntl

440

BEATilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

.'

"
·u1

ImproVements in 1your material affairs ·are
md1c8ted for the year ahead . Large
returns are probable 1n areas where you
barely cleared a profil previously.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) lnvolvemenls
w1th fr1ends could be both pleasant and
'productive today. Avoid making changes
1n situations that are presently running
smoothly. Tty~ng lo patch up a broken
romance? The Astro·Graph Matchmake,r

.'

can help yOu understand what to do to
blems thai appear ro have. no Immediate
make the relationship work . Ma11 $2 .75 to solutions could be resolved )oda)t 1f you
Matchmaker . c/o thiS newspaper, P.O . analyze them from a posn•ve perspec·
Box 4465 . New York, NY 10163.
live . Expecl good resulls .
.
CANCER (June 21-Jufy 22) Do some· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You w1ll
thing positive about any hunches you get probably be lucKHH .n 101nt endeavors
today on tmprovtQg your career pos1t1on. today than you will play•ng a lone hand
Your percephons wtll prove both accurate You w111 team l!P wnh rhe nght partner
and useful.
intUitively
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although you AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Show
might do things on a grand scale today. extreme attentton when convers1ng With
they w111 shll be withtll the realm of posst· knowledgeable people today B1ts ol SIQ·
bilities. Your assoc1ates m1ght s tart to niticant 1nformat1on mtQht come from sev
doubt you.
eral clttferent sources.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Do nol seem PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) In negohal ·
too eager in businesS dealings today . Let 1ng cnttcal matters today , g1ve the other
the other guy make the overtures. If you guy credit for being .as trustworthy as you
play hard to gel. you might come out wtth ere Good thmgs can happen when
bet1er terms .
begun fro,m a good premtse.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Friends will ARIES (March 21·Apifl 19) Endeavors
find you a charmtng companton today · you manage personally should go off
because you'll 1nna te ly know how to rather welt today Do not delegate thmgs
m~ke them feel impo~ant by b(lnging out to others that you know you can handle
their virtues and strong points
more effectively your'tieif .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) 'Give mal · TAURUS (April 21J.May 20) Something
ters perlaintng to your ambitions and unusual migt"lt develop today that1s v•s•·
career top prloroly loday. You should be ble IO yoorself and others, but 11s benalo·
able to pull on something 1mpress1ve .
cial ripple eHects may go on behind the
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dee. 21) 'Pro· scenes, unobserved.

Monday N1ght

Tonghl

..

�Monday, June 19, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page10 • The D•ily Sentinel

Groups join ·forces·to
prevent dog bites.

Meigs cancer fund
raiser gets under way
Kickoff for Meigs County's lion and Ohio University. Brokaw
annual cancer LTusade which this also listed a number of cancer
year~s
a goal of $9:500 a ~d research scientists who bave been
involv
ly 175 volunteers was awarded tbe Nobel Prize.
staged
ently at the Senior Citl·
Susan Berry gave information
zens nter.
on the Cancer Response System.
Attending tbe kickoff program For more information about various
were members of tbe Board of types of cancer and treatments, fell·
Directors of tbe Meigs County unit idents may call toll free 1-800of the American Cancer Society ACS-2345 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m .
(ACS) and numerous volu.n teers weekdays, she said.
who were recognized and welBerry showed a video and
comed by Jim Thomas, board pres- described activ.ities at summer ·
camps for children and young
idenL
Swaking at the meeting were adults who have, or are in remisLibby Brokaw, president of tbe sion, from cancer. The cost of $500
Washington County Unit and pey person is paid through the Ohio
trustee of District 11 of the Ohio Division of ACS , another project
Division, and Susan Berry, Ohio which contributions help to fund,
Division Unit Service Representa· according to Berry. Medical personnel and other volunteers donate
uve, Columbus.
. Brokaw spoke on the impor- ,. their tiine to the camps, she said. ·,
tance of volunteers. She stated that
Thomas outlined functions of
ACS contributes approximately the Meigs Board and said that
$90 million per year toward • while the hou se-to-house fund
research in tbe United States. New drive is the largest effort, other
~tments sucb as taxol and bone
activities to ra ise money do take
marrow ·transplants are only a few place. Other fund -raising projects
of the research results which have this year, be said, have been selling
been so helpful in treating cancer, cookies and cards for Christmas,
daffodils for East~r and taking
she said.
' Brokaw noted that tbe Ohio donations from grade- school cbil·
Division of ACS bas helped in · dren for lhe "Send a Mouse to Col· tunding 72 research projects in lege" program.
Ohio including some at Children'-'1A golf tournament is planned
Hospital Researc~ Foundati.on , for July, and a Celebrity Dinner for
Riverside Methodtst Foundauon, September. Thomas noted.
The president expressed appreCleveland Clinic foundation, Ohio
State University Research Founda- ciatio n to Prece ptor Beta Be ta

The United States Postal Service
and the Humane Society of the
United States are joining forces to
prevent dog biies. The two groups
are jointly sponsoring National
Dog Prevention Week with runs
tbtough Saturday.
"Last year nearly 2,800 letter
carriers nationwide were attacked
by dogs," said Wayne D. Rogers ,
district manager for lhe Columbus
district ; which includes 390 post
offices in central and southeastern
Ohio.
' "Dog attacks ·are clearly a
nationwide problem and not just a
postal issue,'' added ·Rogers. The
. Humane Society reports lhat chil·
· dren, lhe elderly and letter carriers

I

•

~
.. - .~\·
'
•

FUND RAISER • A kickoff program for Meigs County's cancer
crusade was held recently. Libby Brokaw,lefl, president of I he
Washington County Unit and trustee of District 11 of the Ohio
Division is welcomed as guest speaker; hy Jim Thoma• President of
the American Cancer Society Meigs Unit. Brokaw spoke on
research gr~nts.
·Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
who, for tbe second year is heading
up lhe fund drive with the assistance of sorority members from Xi
Gamma Epsilon, Ohio Eta Phi and
Xi Gamma Mu Chapters.
"Being a volunteer gives each
one tbe opportunity to get involved
in worthwhile projects, and people
being involved makes a better COlli·
munity," 1llomas said.
He introduced board members
and presented Pat Boyer, executive
director of tbe Meigs-Gallia Unit of
ACS who outlined the various ser-

vices available to Meigs Co. cancer
patients and !heir families. She may
be contacted for information or
assistance atl-800-446-7479.
Also introduced was Eleanor
Thomas, fund-drive chairman, who
thanked her comminee . Thomas
also expressed her appreciation to
all the captains and volunteer
workers in each township and village. "Without these volunteers
covering all tbe roads and streets in
Meigs Co. (432 square miles) there
would be no annual fund drive .
These are people giving their time
to help others,' said Mrs. ·Thomas.

I

·.types of summer jobs require spe· report the amount ~o your employ·
cia! reponing. These include jobs er. Your employer is responsible
whe re you earn tips, · · here for reporting the correct tip and
you work around some ne' s ho ___....,_ wage information to the Social
and jobs on a farm . If y work at a Security Administration and the
nemal Revenue Service.
job where you make $
If you ge t a job doing farm
per mon'lh in cash tips, 01 t income
is covcrCd by Soc ial See m ty. That work, you will ne~d to cam at lea.'t
mean s you and your emplo9 are $150 a year for work to be counted
rcquiretlto pay Social Security and for Social Security purposes. Your
Medic are taxes on this income. employer should' be taking money
And reporting tips and other out of your wages each time you
income now will mean more Social get paid and sending it to the federSecuriry bene lits for .you and your al government to cover your payfamily later when you retire, or if mentto Social Security.
you become disahled or die.
·
If you work as a babysiucr or do
When you earn tips, you must oth er work in another perso n's
keep :o daily record of the tips you household (culling grass. painting,
rece ive. 1l1is includes tips received gardening) you also need to eam a
in c:L"ih directly from customers or

cer1ain runounl before your wages

from other emp lo yees and tip s
added to " credit card charge . If
your lip income totals $20· or more
in a month , yo u arc requi red tn

count for Social Security purposes.
How mu ch .depends on how old
you :u'C. If you are 18 or over, you

would need to eam at le;t&lt;t $1,000
before your employer would need
to deduct Social Security taxes
from yo ur wages. If you are under
18 , your wages as a household
worker are not covered under
Sbcial Security, so no tax would be
deducted . To make sure that you
receive credit for all your earnings,
you should reques1 a free eamings
stmement from Social Security at
least every three years. When you
get your statement, check it to be
sure it's ri~ht If you find an error,
call the special lOll -free number
listed on th e form to geq your
record co!Tected.
To £Ct. a statement request form,
all you have to do is contact the
neares t Social Security office or
call our l111l-free number: 1-800772- 1213. Ask for the Request For
Personal Ea rnin gs And Il e nefit
Estim ate Statement (form 7004).

r1ces
E

p ,

N

D

E

Coolville Library is located at 84
RUGGED READERS
The Coolville Library is holding 1/2 Main Street in the old Bank
a Rally Round Rugged Readers One buildin)l.
CRANE GRADUj\TlON
Summer Reading Program every
TI1e following were at the 1995
Thursday at 2 p .m. sL1rting June
graduation ,dinner for Christie
29 .
•
Programs include: Snakes Mash Crane: daughter, Vanessa
Alive!! by Scott Moody on June Crane; hu sband, Billy Crane;
29; Little Critters in the Woods .by ' father, Bob Mash; brother, Bobby
the Hanesworths on July 6; Bats in Mash; grandmother, Ann Mash;
your Belfry by John Zook on July aunt and uncle, Susie 3nd Wayne
13 ; The Andy &amp; Hayley Show, Pullins; cousin, Jesse Pullins ; aunt
July 20, and ldabelle's Grand . and uncle Susie and Butch Mash;
Finale , July 27, by Idabcllc cousins, Bert and Leigh Mash; in·
Markley.
laws, Bill, Peggy, and Ben Crane;
The five programs are geared friends, Dwight Cullums, Mildred
toward school-age readers , but Jacobs, Mike Lightfoot and Rachel
adults are welcome , too . The Norman. ·

N

$17,988
N&lt;l Doc Fees [lclr.()IOO'

!Save $50001

save $5ooo I

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY 3/4 TON RAISED ·
ROOF CONVERSION VAN .

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN

'

'

·PIS. P/8

UsiPuce
$10.2.19
FittlfY Rebate
-S300
GMAC l$1 Tlrre Blfter

I Save '1331
•

I.

5'"
Pr&gt;ce

Tom Pedeo Orsciivnl

• $531

llstPrK;e

$17,169

- SSOO
- $1,411

Factory Rebale . . .
Tom Pcdefl D~coonl

- SSOO
. $1.781

Pnce

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cloth lnterlOf
• Well Eqwpped'
No Del: Fl!l'l! Dt!frooeie'J'

• t6 va~e P,.....r
• Onver S1de Atrbag
· 4 Wheel Anh·locl&lt; Brakes
· Power Steenng

• Power Brakes v
• Power Door Loc..:s
• AWFM Stereo
·Steel Bened Trres

• Styled Wheels
• W~l Eqwpped'

BRAND NEW '95 GRAND PRIX SE.
· • A11 CondftJon
• Au1omanc
• Ooal AK!lag
• Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

• Power Door Locks
• Power Wmdows
• AMIFM Stereo
• Trlt St€9n"J
• Oel11y Wtpers

·Styled Wheeo ·
·We11Equt~ 1

ISave '2281 I
No{)x Fee Dlit~tt!PJ'

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344-5947. 422-0756

·PIS. PIB
• Power Wmdows
• Power·Locks
·Ttl! Steenng
• Cruise Control
• AMIFM Cassetle
• Caplatn Cha~~s

·Sola/Bed
• tnd&lt;ect L&gt;ghtrng
• Premrum Wood Pkg.
• Full Convers1an
·Aluminum Wheels
, Loaded! .

Sale Pric'l

$14,888

'

• V&gt;Sta Bay Windows

USI Pnce .. . • • .. .. $21,309
Buck Qualldays
CertrfiCCIIe ·
• $400
TCNTI Pede(l DISCo~
- S2.421

Salo Price

$8 888

.BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY 8-SERIES PICKUP
• Drwer S&gt;de Awbag
• Rea~ Anh·Lod&lt; Brakes
• Power Steenng

$13,599

Rebale
TomPedenDtscount
Sal~

-ssoo

• 350 V·8 PowSI
• Long Whe~ Base
• RaiSed Roof
·Color T.V.
• Dr1ver Side Air Bag
• An11-lock Brakes
• Air Conddton
• AutomatiC CNerdnve

llst Price
FN::!~

i\ilwa~J;e To

0ua11r.oo Buyers

350 V· 8 POWER/ COLOR T.V.

,.

• lndJrect Ltghhng
• Premtum Wood Pkg.
• Fult Corwerston
• Atummum Runntng
Boards
·Loaded'

• Power Wmdows
• Power Locks
• Till Steermg
• Cru1se Control
• AMIH.t Gassene
• Captatn Chatrs
·Sola/Bed

Pick 4:
9690
Bucke;ye 5:

5-17-19-24~32

Low toalgbtla 60s. Putly
ttoudy. Wednaay, pei11y
cloudy. Hlgbs Ia mld-801.

J

Vol. 46, NO. 36
Copyrlghl1995

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 20, 1995

.'

•

Water problems dominate council ·session
resident George Wright will investigate lhe problem
By JIM FREEMAN
and propose some solutions.
Sentinel news staff
.
"I hope this is not somelhing that ·u be put on
Water problems - from flood water to drinking
water- dominated Monday night's regular meeting · the back bumer," said Soulsby. In dition, debri s
from the Hood still needs to be clean up, he added.
of Pomeroy Village Council.
Blaeunar said the storm left a two- t hole in his
Council met with approximately 10 Union
front yard.
~
A venue residents concemed over' an open sewer run·"This was a stonn like we never h d before," he
ning from Osborn Street toward Mulberry Avenue.
said.
The sewer flooded during last monlh 's Oash flood,
In other flood related matters, Wright asked if the
damaging several homes in the area.
·
village
could assist flood victims by disregarding a
•, "'The sewer is a health hazard and a danger to chil·
portion of their water bills for water used for cleanup
· :dren in the area," $aid Meigs County Sheriff James ,
Some village residents ran up large water bills
. M. Soulsby, who resides on Union Avenue.
cleaning
up their homes, he explained. Council did
Soulsby proposed extending a drainage pipe up to
not
further
address the' issue .
·Osborn Stree~ ~ealing orr lhe open ditch .
In
addition,
otloer nearby resident• brought up a
Pomeruy Mayor John W. Blaettnar acknowledged
problem
with
an
open sewer running off Laurel
a pipe at the end of lhe ditcl) plugged up, aggravating
Street
behind
Mulberry
Avenue .
. the flooding, but said it will be at least a few weeks
quest
for
better
drinking water encounCouncil's
before anything can be done about the problem.
tered
a
setback
under
dte
guise
of Ohio EnvironmeuIn the meantime, councilman and Union Avenue

tal Protection Age ncy regulations, according 10 engineers from Burgess and Niple of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
the village's consulting lirm .
The village drilled several test well s in Syracuse
looking for wells to replace the ex istin g vi llage water
we lls, t~so in Syracuse. The problem: OEPA require'
all new well s to have a treatme nt facil it y - which
may cosr up to $1.4 millio n, engineers said.
.
The village may explore oU1er options including
drilling another well near i ~&lt; existing wells and treating the water to remove

m~mgrUlcse

and iron.

CurTently one of the village's two wells produces
;o high enough level of manganese making it unfeasibl e to treat. This well would be c losed .
Pomeroy's water is extre m(}ly hard a nd high i11
iron and mangane se. The mangan ese reacts wilh
chlorine bleach turnin g laundry and swimming pool

water brown.
In other business, Pomeroy voters will deci de two

levy issues Ibis fall after council approved final rea~F
ings o f resolu tions placing the lev ies on the ballot.
To btl decided are a two-mill , five-year renewal
levy for fire prot ec tion and a nne- mi ll, five-year
replacement levy for cu oTenl village expenses.
Also, cou ncil agreed to purcha'e $4,864 in e&lt;j uipment for the fire department.
.tJ1
Following co uncil's discu&gt;sion on skateboarders
two weeks ago, the village was advised by legal
council not to set aside an area for skateboarders,
Blacunar said.
However. village offkials wi ll tolerate some
skateboarding on more remote village streets provid· .
ing skatchoarders do not block off the streets, he
added.
Prese nt were Blaettnar, Clerk Kathy Hysell and
councilmen Scott Di ll on, Bill Haptonstall, John
· Musse r, Larry Wehrung, Wrighl and William Young.
Also auending were Poli ce Chief Gerald Rought and
Village Administrator John Anderson .

Meigs receives $5,000 grant for pU~t project

•

using the doll s in their pregnan cy
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
prevention
program s.
Sentinel news staff
She said that the dolls are com"Baby Think It Over" , a pro- jmterized and anatomically COITCCI,
gram aimed at preventing teenage
and weigh seven pound s, two
pregnancy, will get underway in
ounces. They have a n e lec tronic .
Meigs County this faiL
system which si mulates realistic
The pilot project uses computercrying io signal the need for feedized dolls to teach teen s on the
ing, or holding the .baby, and they
responsibilities of parenthood and
are.
programmed to cry for 10 to 35
to make lhem aware of the time and
minutes eve ry few hours for 24
effort required to care for a baby.
hours a day.
·
"Hopefully, it will force teen s
She explained that in order to
to think about what they are doing
~ top the crying, a small key mu st
and to make wise decisions," said
be in serted into the baby' s back
Nonna Torres, R.N .. nurSing direcwhich requires th e teen to hold th e
tor for the Meigs County Health
~oil in the same way o ne would
Department which will carry out
hold a baby lli)d Jor an amou111- of
the program as a part of its Child
time it 'may take to soothe or feed a
and Family Health Services Conreal baby. When th e dolt cries in
sortium.
The project is being funded by a the night, th e teen ls required to
$5,000 grant from the West Ohio pick it. up, or rock or hold the baby
for approximately 20 minutes eac h
Conference Task l=orce on Partnertime before the lTying stops.
ship Ministri es in Health PromoTorTes said tentati ve plans call
tion and Illness Prev~ntion . The
for
the program to be carried out in
check was presen ted to Torres
the
county's
three high schools as a
Monday by th e Rev. Kenneth
part of the regular healtb curTicuBaker, .loca l Cooperative Parish
lum
. Students, she sa id , will be
Director.
The "Baby 'lllink it Over" doll s assigned a doll for several days and
will receive a grade for their care of
are being used nationwide; accord·
the 'baby'.
ing .to Torres, who said lhat every"You can't 'stash' this 'baby'
where they arc used, the pregnancy
away , like some studenL~ have done
rate among teens has declined .
with the egg or fl our sack projects,
About a hundred schools are now
beca use it is computerized and

!'REG NANC Y PREVENTION FUNDS • The Rev. Kenne1h
Baker, Meigs Cooperative Parish director, 1presented a check for
$5,000 to Meigs C ount y Health De)lartment nursi ng director,
Norma Torr~s, Monday, fur a 'pregnancy prevt:ntion program in ·
Meigs schools. The \grant came from tl1e West Ol)in Methodist
Conference Task F~)rct=.
·
·
The program is designed to give
records how long the 'baby' cries
teenagers an experience in taking
before being picked up and what
care
of a baby- before they get pregaction has been taken by the stunant
. That, according to ·Torres,
dent," said TOITCS.
shou
ld be a· factor in getting
The dolls cost about S300 each
teenagers
to think about pregnancy
and have car seats. suoller; , baby
.
prevention
.
bags , and diapers to J!O witll tltcm .

Mason residents fight
for two high schools · De Wine will battle to keep 55 mph speed limit
.,

• Extended Chass•s
• Onver S1de A1r Bag
• Ant•-Lock Brakes
• A1r Condit•on
:Automatic Overdrrve
• Vista Ba~ WtndOws

634

DO YOU WANT TO FIGHT? · Shirley Gue of the ·Hannan
area asked those attending a meeting against con•olidation or the
three county hijlh schools into to one Saturday if they were. willing
to fight for a two-school plan. The ~nswer was a resnundm~ ~es,
and residents have retained an atlorney to ask the Sch&lt;Hll BUildmg
Authority and Mason County Board of Education In build two
.
schools with the $15.4 milli on instead nf nne.

WIST

1

humble

Pick 3:

•

POMEROY -The Bedford
The Community Calendar is
published as a froe servico to Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
non-profit groups wishing to ment Committee, Tuesday, 7 p.m.
announce meeting and special at the Il 'edford Town Hall.
events. The calendar is. not
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vildesigned to promote sales or
lage
Council will meet ii~ s peci~l
fund raisers or any type. Items
session
Tuesday, 7 p.m.· at village
an: printed as space permits and
h;~lto
discuss·
water line\
cannot be guaranteed to run ·a
specific number or days . .
WEDNESDAY
.
MONDAY
POMEROY
- Alzheimer' s
RAC INE - Racin e' Village
Council will meet in rec~sse d &gt;;es· Related Disorders Support Group,
sion Monday, 7 p.m. at 1Star Mill 1-3 p.m . Wednes day at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center.
Park.
POMEROY - Wildwood Garden Club will meet at noon at the
Park on SR 33 for a picnic and tour
of D enise Arnold's herb garden
and greenhouse.

Ohio Lottery

S~rts, Page 4

Community calendar--

TUESDAY
RUTLAND _;,_ The Rutland
Department Ladies Auxiliary , 6
p.m., Tuesday at fire station . Plans
to he completed for'Jul y 4 celebration.

Braves
Reds 10-0

are the most frequent victims of
dog attacks.
·
The Postal Service , which
recently mailed out dog bite pre·
venlion tips to every address in tbe
United Slates, advises dog owners
to keep their _dog jnside, away fl'OIII
the door, in another room or on a
leasb when tbe letter carrier arrives
to deliver mail. Dogs have been
known to burst through a screen
door, even a plate glass window, to
get at the carrier.
Mail delivery can be stopped if
a dog is a threat to a letter carrier.
And, if a dog attacks or l;&gt;ites a let·
ter carrier, the owner could be
liable for the victim's pain, suffer·
ing and medical expenses.

-Society scrapbook--

·Looking for a summer job? Tips from .Social Security
By ED PETERSON
.
Social Security manager, Athens
Are you a studelll in search of a
summer job? Or, have ·you graduated and are looking for your fi.rst
job? If so, here are several things
you s hould know about Social
Security that will make your job
bunting a little easier.
· First of all, you need a Social
Security number- it's one of the
fir s t things your prospective
employer will request from you.
You should take your Social Security card with you when you apply
for work. If you don't have anumber, or lost your card, call Social
Security's toll free number, 1-800772- 1213. and you can gel one
within two weeks of compl eting
· the application process.
Secondly, while Social Security
tax is automatically deducted from
your earitings in most jobs. some

,

'

$18 488

'

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK .LESABRE
• A1r CorxJmon
·AutomatiC

• Dual A&gt;rbaQS
• 4 WJ)eet An~Lock

Brakes

• Po~er Sleenrg
• T111 Steenng
• Po~er Brakes
· ·Custom Cloth lntefiOI'
• Power Door locks • S~led Wheels
• Power WiOOows
·Wei Ei)•Piled'
• AMIFM Stereo
NO DOC

Monday • Saturday; 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

By MINDY KEARNS,
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASAN'T, W. Va. Approximately 75 Mason Cou nt y
citizens who are against one high
school facility in the county joined
at Hannan High School Saturday
and agreed to back "'The' Morgan
Proposal," a plari .initiated by board
of education member J. David
Morg:m, to build two high schools
instead of the one school plan.
In addition; funds were raised
du ri ng the meeting to se~u rc the.
services of Kell y and Grubb, a law
finn in Charleston, to assist with
th e fi ght again s t the one high
sc hool , which is scheduled to be
buill in Poi nt Pleasant, in front of
the vocational school.
Mason County recently received
word that it will receive $14.4 million for a consolidated high school
on July I from U1e School Building

Aut hor ity. The new schoo l will
consolidate Hannan, Point Pleasant
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
and Wahama high schools into one,
Senate i s sh ifti ng the National
whid1 will force .some children to
Highway System bill into gear, but
rid e Uw bus over three hours per
faces battles over lifting the nation-·
day, opponents say.
al speed limit and whether people
Those attendi ng agreed tl1 at it is
sho ul d have to use seat be lts aild
impossible to keep all three county' moton;ycle helmets.
hi gh schools open, but did agree lo
A slew of. amendments may be
seck ass ista nce in asking th e · offered to the bill, which would
School Building Authority a nd
de signate 159 ,886 mi les of roads
Mason County Board of Education
across the co un try - primarily
to usc tl1e SBA money for two coninterstates and main highways so lidated high schools instead of
as the National Highway System.
one.
Americans coul d be freed of the
'
.
Not all who attended Saturday's
meeting were happy llhoul the two
sc hool plan eiU1cr. One man called
for th e impeachment of tloe school
hoard members, and mooU1er couple
left after they found out U1e group
was not fig'hting to ~eer all three
lly The Associate d l'r&lt;ss
sc hools.
Bad air has hit Ohio, from
Continued on page 3
Cincinnati to Tnledo to Cleveland .
Record hig h temperature' and
stag nant air contributed to the
p~oblcm Monday iL~ chemica l emissions combined in the atmosphere
in the presence of sunli£htto creaic
ozone. ·nw air is hazardous to pe(i·
pic with respiratory and cardiac
prohlems, the elderly m1d tllc very
wr of lhe Mw;on County Developyoong.
ment AuUIOrity.
VanKirk said the stal e is still
"I've been on the phone most of
working on the plans in case fundthe
afternoon concerning pc,o pl e
ing becomes available . lie said
shortness of breaU1," said Dr.
with
,upgrading roads, including the
Martin
Il rucggemann, director of
interstate highways , has always
pulmonary
medicine al Christ Hosbeen a slow process.
.
piL11
in
Cincinnati.
VanKirk told Mason County
"The heat, l10midit y and smog
nflicials ~t a meeting June 5 in Putaggravate
their symp10ms. Tl1eir
nam County lhat the widening of
activities
are limilell considerU.S. 35 from Point Pleasant to
llbly."
Kanawha· County is also not
Toledo set a record late Monday .
expected to be finlshe&lt;l for up to 20
aflemoon
when the temperature hit
years.
98;
the
previous
high was 94
VanKirk said the state will have
degrees
in
1964.
Cleveland
reached
to seek special funding for tlle 36·
92
degrees,
tying
a
record
nlso l'&lt;ll
mile project, which is estimated to
in
1964.
cost $400 million. West Virginia
Businesses in urban nreas have
bas asked to have the road desigbeen
asked to reduce smokes tack
nated ~s part of'U1e national highand defer some emis·
emissions
ways system to be eligible for the
funding, the 'lllly likely source of sion-gcnerating factory operations
to off-peak hours.
money for the work . he said.
ResiUen ts are asked to share

Rt. 2 update may
be 20.years away ·
GLENWOOD, W .Va. (AP) State highway workers began plans
for upgrading West Virginia 2 to a
four-lane highw ay more than 20
years ago .
Bot Highway Comm issioner
·•
Ftcd VanKirk says it cou ld be
another 20 years before the twolane road linkin g Point Pleasant
with the Huntin gton area is
expanded.
""1l1ere's no dedicated source of
funding right now," VanKirk said.
"A realistic time schedule, is proba·
bly 15 to 20 years . That's based on
the assumption we're going to lind
lhe funding somewhere."
VanKirk"s assessment surprised
and disappointed development oflicials, who say the road is needed
for economic development.
"We feel that we have to have
that road system to bring in the
types of industry and job s we
need," said John Musgrave, direc-

national spee d linrit if the bill
becomes law , leaving the state s to
se t their own limits.
But Sens . Mike DeWinc. RObia, and Frank Lau tenbe rg , DNJ ., are promising a battle to retain
the limit of 55 rni les per hour on
most roads, 65 on rural interstates.
"This clearly flo c&gt; in the face of
real it y, common se nse, logic and
hi story. I believe, on this is sue, the
facts are in and they arc conc lusive," De Wine said. Monday as
senators beg an considerin g the

Ozone levels prompt
alerts across Ohio
rides to work. usc puhloc Iran'·
ponation. refrain from nonesst!ntial

car trips, avoid filling car tanks
with gnsoline &lt;tnd delay mowin,g
lawns until after 6 p.m.
The Toledo Area Regional
Tra nsii Autlwrity said it will
reduce hus fares on had-air &lt;lays.

Riders will pay 50 cents- thncgul;u· larc is 85 cents - and riders
65 and older will pay a quarter,
down from 40 cents.
''I think we 're getting some
pret't y good volunteerism," Cory
Chadwick. air quality program
manager in the CincinA3li region ,·
said Momlay. '"Everybody rcalllcS
the economic iJnp:lct. ''

An air pollution read i ng at
Lebanon, nm1h ot C'inclnnati. was
just under the federally mandated
ozone limit Sunday and dropped
sligh tl y Monday, Chadwick said. .
If two readings al that lll(Hntor
exceed lhe limit 01is year, Cmcinnati could be reclassified from a
"moderatcu to "~erious" rating
for ozone pollution and subjet" t.he
region 10 increasing re~trictt_on~
including mandated car-poohng,
Chadwick said .
.The year's first alert for the
Dayton-Springfield area followed
three days Of ICI)IJlCfiiiUnlS around
90 dc~recs .

measure in detaiL
Thc ·mcasurc went 10 the floor
last week buo sta lled when
Demonats launched a filibuster

over -a controvcr:-.ial provision to
eli minate the requrrement that federal contractors pa y pr eva iling
local wages. lt 1v;t, cased over that
political speed hump Friday when
Republicans withdrew the provi sion.
DcWinc said that in 1973 !here
were 55,000 hi ghway death s

nationwide. A year later the toll fell
to 46,000 after imposition of the
speed limit, he said .
·'This ha s saved lives ,"
DcWine 'aid . "If we raise the
speed limit ml(l take the limits off,
from a national perspective, people
will dk ."'
Opponenl.l of the speed limit say
few drivers observe it anyway and
contend that the SL1tes. rather than
the fetleral govcmment, should be
the judges of what is safes t for their

residents.

Board .OKs funds
for tourism, schools
COlUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's tourist information hotline is
-,he mo..~t successf,ul in I he nation, according to thP Ohio Otpartmel)t nf llen~lnprnt'nt.
The hnlline- I-8(HI-BUCKEYE- is the key to prnmnting
the .&lt;t~te's $9.4 billion dollar tourist industry. said Genrl(&lt; Zimmermann deputy &lt;Jepartment director in charge of the Di_vi.&lt;inn

uf Travel and Tourism.
·
The State Coni rollin~ ll•,mrd on Monda)' apprnnd spending
$600,000 fnr the ~t!rYic~ fur the next six munths hy Family Vaca ..
tinn Servh::es nf Columhu~.
The exhmsion of t.hc contpany's 18-nmnth~ $1.8 million con·
truct is neces.'iary to maintain the service -through tJle peak su mmer trav~l periO&lt;~, Zimmermann said.
1-, a mily Vm:atiun Services alsn pro,• idt·~ truvel tips, fishing·
UfKiates untl brochures, and a _computer databo1se wilh informa ..
lion about 10,000 sites in Ohio.
There were 1.2 million calls to the toll-rr... line last year, a
record numbn for the third· year in a row, Zimnwrtnann said.
That is the most calls nf any state touri~m phone service,- he
sui d.

Tuurlsm packets wen sent to more than 8011,000 or those
callers.
Ahuut three-quarters or the Ohio callers traveled within the
stat.. Ahout two-third&lt; nf out-of-state callers chose to ' 'acatiun
here, he said.
The out-of-state I ranier spends an avera~tc of $700 a trip,
cnmpllrL'tl with $400 for the in-sta1e vacationer. Thai has led to
mun promutions g~ared tnward the resid·enl'" of surrounding
stahs and Canada, Zimmermann said.
The controlling l&gt;oard also approved a two-year, $4411,000
two-year contract to Cochran l'ublic Relations or Columbus
01nd a o_ne-ycar, $470,000 contract to Soltis, Tangeman and
Partners of t' airlawn for promotion of tourism.

•

•

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