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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

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1.-toalcbt In 601. Partly
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Vol. 46, NO. 38

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Eastern board moves forward
with new school building plans

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ASSORTED VARIETIES
1212-0UNCE CANS

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least $50,000.
Tuppers Plains and Chester ele·
mentary schools are both more than
70 years old.
The board could offer at least
three options to residents, Karr
said. They include:
-.. buildin~ a new centralized
elementary building.
constructing a new
junior/senior high school and then
con.solidating some elementary
schools in the currevt high school.
- developingI two smaller
buildings for kindergarten through
fifth grnde and sixth through eighth
grndes.
Once the architectural firm is
hired, several public meetings will
be held to decide which type br
new school will be built, Karr said.
The firms the board will clinsid•
er at the next meeting will include:
Vargo &amp; Cassidy of Marieua:
Burgess
&amp; . Niple
of
Columbus/Parkersburg. W.Va.;
Firestone &amp; Associates of Colum·

Changes in the 1996 Election
Calendar were among topics dis·
cussed at the recent Ohio Associa·
tion ol' Election Board officials
convention held in Columbus.
..~
Attending from Meigs County
were Rita Smith, director, and Jane
Frymyer, associate director, Meigs
County Board of Elections.
With the changing of t.he Pri·
mary Election 10 March 19, all
dates for declaring candidacy and
deadlines for registrations and fil.
ings as well as absentee ballot voting have changed, according to
Sinith .
According to the new schedule
.local questions ami issues must be
ccrtilled to the board by 4 p.m. on
Jan. 4, (75 days before U1e primary)
and declarations of c:mdidacy for
partisan candidates must be filed

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.GJMV continues
search for settlement
Leaders of the Gallia-Jackson·
Meigs- Vinton (GJMV) Solid
Waste Management District met
last week to discuss tl1eir ongoing
dispute with U1e AUwns-Hocking
Solid Waste-Management District.
"No settlement offer is on the
table at this lime," said L:p~ce Wilson, GJMV Director. An offer was
made at the meeting, but has
expired, he said.
Wilson did not give any details
of the setOcmcm.
GJMV and Athcns,Hocking
were one six-county district until
they separated in 1993 . Board
Cha irman Ken Farmer, said the
separation was the result of a one·
time offer made by the state for
tlistricts to, split up any way they
chpsc .

.

i\t that time, Athens-Hocking
• agreed to receive only $50,000 in
order 10 write a plan, but has
reccmly pctilioned U1e court, say-

ing il deserves au equal ~hare of thC

money held at the time nf separation .

"Once they signeu the agreement. they decided they neeued
more money," said Farmer .

The Fourth District Court of
Appeals ruled in favor of G.IMV in
May. No allempl h:t' heen made ~o
appeal the decision by Athens·
Hocking, although Fanner said he
believes the case will gu to the
Ohio Supreme Coun.
Further, GJMV has ongoing
action pending in the Jackson
CQurt of Common Pl'cas against

Athens-Hocking, alleging fraud .
One hearing, upholding GJMV, has
already been held.
"We're awaiting a furtJ1er hear·

ing or trial date," said Wilson
The purpose of th e' fraud suit,
said Wilson is 10 recover allumey
fees from tllC Founb District Court
of Appeals decision. Wilson is
oplimistic tJ1at fmurc decisions will

continue to favor 0.1 MC.
"I nm very c&lt;tnfitlent that the

solid waste district will prevail
based on the precedent set hy the
ruling of the 4ih District Coun uf
Appeals. " S&gt;tid .Wilson.
Farmer was more reluctant to
speak about tlte outcome.
"I can't venture a guess about
tllm," he said.

RAC fined more than $1 million
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Ravenswood Alumit1Uill Corp .
bas agreed to pay more than $1
-million 10 seule charges tltal safety
'violations led to a fatal i994 acci·
dent at the company's Jackson
-County mill.
· The company ag•ecd to fix
·rroblems cited by tl1e U.S. Occur~ationa! Safety and Henltl1 Admmts·
.tration in November, but denied
violating federal safety laws.
Under the deal signed this
Jnonth, the company would pay
$1.17 5 miltion in four payments of

..

$293,750 over 18 months.
The settlement was signed by
U1e U.S. Dcp:u-uncm of Labor and
Ravenswood. but needs to be
approved by a judge.
Company spokesman Pal Gallagber said Wednesday that
Ravenswood has bccn•working
with federal safety oflici~~s. but he
was unaware of 1he seulement .
Safety investigators cited
Ravenswood for 33 violations after
a May 13, 1994, accident that
kUled Jerry Butcher, a millwright.

•

bus; Fanning &amp; Howie of Colum·
bus; and Kellem &amp; Associates of
Columbus.
Each company will be held to
45 minutes for presentations and 15
minutes for questions.
The district will not assume any
costs until a levy is passed, . Karr
said. The district has estimated this
levy to total 5 mills.
Once an architect is hired, a fea·
sibility study needs to be completed
and submitted to the state officials
by October, said Ron Minard, East·
ern Local superintendent. The state
needs to approve the issue for the
ballot.
"We need a lot of community
input," Minard said.
The 88 acres of propeny at the
junior/senior high school may not
be adequate since il is divided by
the East Shade River, he added.
In other business, the board
spent $16.200 for social studies
textbooks for all middl~ and high

school grades, Minard said.
The district also purchased its
third new school bus in two years.
Minard said.
The school bus body was pur·
chased from Edmund Da~is &amp; Sons
for $14,716 and the chassis was
purchased from Dils Motor Co. for
$29,5 54. The district has 11 busses ·
and thr~e spare buSes, Minard said.
In other b~siness , the district
hired Casey Coffey as the new
head football coach . Coffey, a
Muskingum College graduale, has
coached the last two yeat·s at a
Morgan County.school.
In other action, the board agreed
to pay Modem Sanitation no more
than S9 ,910 to comple1e the repair
work on the high school septic system.
The board also agreed to renew
.a contract with Snouffer's Fire and
Safety to inspect the district's 25
frre hydrants.
The district will purchase an
$899 laminator for the high school.

Ballot issue would raise state debt for roads

COLUMBUS (AP) - A $2.4 to Sl.2 billion the amount the Ohio
billion ballot issue that would Deparrment of Transponalion may
expand Ohio's authority to borrow borrow for new highway construe·
money for state highway and local tion. Money to pay off bonds
public works projects bas cleared a would initially come from cutting
about $50 million in the agency's
House panel with ease.
.
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The House Finance Commitlee operating budget, which uses rev·
by 4 p.m. on Jan . 19, . (60 l[ays voted 25-2 on Wednesday for the enue from the state gasoline tax.
House Finance Chairman
constitutional amendment after
before the primary).
Write-in candidates for the pri· minority Democrats lost an auempt Thomas Johnson, R-New Concord,
mary election must tile tl1eir deela- · to split the proposal into separate defended Gov. George Voinovich's
ration of intent by 4 p.m. on Feb. 8, ballot issues. Now the resolution . proposal to combine the highway
funding plan with renewal of what
and tl1c deadline fur voter registra- goes to the full House.
tion ru1d changes of address for priThe amendment proposed for is known as the Issue 2 program for
local government. ·
mary election participatiog is Feb. the Nov. 'J ballot would:
"We're talking about how we're
19. March 18 is the deadline for fil-Renew a 10-year, $1.2 billion
ing nominating petitions for inde· program of state aid to local gov- going to present it to the people,"
pendent candidates.
ernments for road, bridge, water, Johnson said. "We're giving the
The terms of offitt of mos.t sewer and simila~ infrastructure people the right to vote on this and
county and many 10wnship offi- projects. Money to pay off bonds we're going to live with their deci·
cials. including trustees ll!ld clerks, sold to borrow the money would sion."
·
expire next year and tl1ose dcclara· come from the income, sales and
Assistant House Minority Lead·
tions of ct:mdidacy for parlisan can~ oUter state taxes.
er Jane Campbell, ID·Cieveland.
didates must be filed by ibe Jan. 19
- Increase from $500 million offered an amendment to split the
date. However, Smith advises, that
petition forrns are to be changed by
(he state and the new petitions will
not be available· until late this year.

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CAMPBEL~

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
The Eastern Local Board of
Education took another step towanl
building a new school at its month·
ly board meeting last night.
An open meeting was set to
interview ·architectural firms for
5:30 p.m. June 28 at the high
school cafeteria, said Ray Karr,
SChool boanl president.
In other business, the board pur·
chased new .social· studies text·
books and a new school bus.
During this year, the board met
with state officials to discuss
acquiring about $8 million in state
building assistance funds. The state
bas paid about 80 percent of building· costs for construction in the
poorer districts, Karr said.
Continuing to repair the current
school buildings will only become
more expensive, Karr had said. The
junior/senior high school repairs
could total $200,000 while Chester
Elementary's repairs could be ;It

Election Calendar
changes
discussed
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•

JUICY•RIPE

......... ~

I'OMEROY FIRE - A l'omeroy' family burning brush
Wednesday morning 'resulted in lire spreading.acros.• their porch
and onto the roof, said Danny Zirkle, Pomeroy Fire Chief. No
injuries were reported to either family members or lire lighters.
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department was called to the Dark
Hollow Road home or Edna Hashman at 11:26 a.m. Wednesday.
The department returned to the station at 12:29 p.m. yesterday.
The Middleport Volunteer Fire Department assisted. (Sentinel
photo by Jim Fr&lt;!eman)

EA.

I

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 22, 1995

Copyrlght1995

resolution into two ballot issues:
one for'local infrastructure. and one
for state highways.
"There are many people who
are concerned about additional
indebtedness for highway pro·
grams," Campbell said.
Total state construction debt
now slands at $55 billion.
Campbell said tacking a plan to
double ODOT's debt' limit onto
renewal of Issue 2 could jeopardize
the infrastructure program. Associ:ilions of municipal and county
officials previously voiced similar
womes.
Crunpbell said two issues would
·tel voters independently weigh the
merits of each.
"If people arc convinced that
going into additional debt for high·
way malleGS is the appropriate thing
to do at this time and can be convinced during the course of a cam-

paign, they will have the opponuni·
ty to vote yes," Campbell said.
Rep. Ronald Amstutz, R· Woost·
er, contended that separate ballot
issues might place the Issue 2
renewal- not the highway planat risk.
"I think. we are appropriate in
pulling lllese together and increase
Ute chances of both of them passing, as opposed to decreasing their
chances." Amstutz' said.
Campbell's proposal for two .
ballot issues was defeated 16·11.
Advocates of more ODOT borrowing view the ballot issue as a
short-term way to raise money for
new highway constructio11 without
an increase in the_gasoline tax.
But they acknowledged the stale
would need additional re•·enue
within six years to pay back bor·
rowed money.

Parts of Ohio belted
by thunderstorms

By The Associated Press
Lightning set a building on fu-e
and a tornado caused minor darnage as thunderstorms brought
downpours and hail to Ohio after
several days of unusually hot
weather.
Lightning at about 8:30p.m.
Wednesday was blamed for a fire
in the clubhouse at Weymouth
Country Club in Medina Coualy,
about 30 miles soutl1wcst of Cleveland , said Medina Township Fire
Chief Dick Bromley. No injuries
were reponed.
Crews from several communi·
ties helped .the township's volun· ·
tecrs fight the fire,. which was
under control after about two
hours.
Victor Albainy. chainnru1 ol' the
country ~lub, said about 35 to 50
members or guests and 16 employ·
ees were inside when the building
began to till with smoke .
ljThere was smoke everywhere

but no flames, and then ... poof,"

he said. Albainy estimated the loss
at $3.5 million.

Lighming struck a m:u1 who was
working on a home near Center,
burg in Knox County about 6 p.m ..
said Troy Weper. an emergency
medical lechnician. Michael Szy.
mm1ske, 41, of Gahmma, was taken
to Knox Communily ·Hospila.l with

slight bums to his ann and side and
was admiued primarily for observmion.
The tornado toucbeil down
about 6:30p.m. in a rural area

or

Columbiana County, just north or
Lisbon in nnrthca-'l Ohio, said Brad
Rehak, a meteorologist for the
National Weather Service in Piusburgh . Witnesses described it as
small, Rehak said .
A dispaicbcr fc1r the Columhhina
County Sheriff's Departmcm said
Ulc tomado hit a rural area about 20
miles south of Youngstown , loppiing 1rccs and utility poles . The
disp:ncher. who would m11 give her
name, said lhcrc were uo jnjuries.

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COOL DII' • Meigs County children seeking to cool ofT on the
first day or summer resulled in plenty of action. at Syracuse's London l'ool Wednesday. Here, halhers plunge into the pool to escape
current ab&lt;J\'e-average tem~ratures.

Point Pleasant regatta begins this evening
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. - . who has recently relcaSt:u hits like, songs as "American Woman." "No
," "These Eyes," and "No
The 1995 Point Pleasant Stern· "Eugene You Genius" and "Look Time
Sugar
Tonight."
wheel Regatta, which gets under- At Me Now," will entcrrai.n rcgana
There
will be sternwheel races
way this evening, will offer a vari- gocrs Saturday night. The concert
S~turday
at 3 p.m., P.A. Denny
ety of events for both young and will bi: held at the Point Pleasam
C'rmses
both
tn the llftemoon and
old, as area residents celebrnte the Battle Monument State Park at 8:30
evening
on
Saturday,
and a fire·
p.m.
llfth year of event.
·
works
gala
at
I
0
p.m.
Chosen one of Country America
The regatta will open a four-day
Besides The Guess Who on FriMagazine's
top 10 new artists ,
stand with the queen pageant at
d~y.
a parade
be held at 6 p.m.
White
has
been
compared
to
a
6:30 this evening in the State TheII
will
run
from
Central
Elementary
young
Vince
Gill.
ater. Eight girls will be competing
School
down
Main
Street
to the
On
Friday,
the
.
f
eatured
enter·
for the title, including Brandy
Point
Pleasant
Register.
Prizes
will
lainment
will
be
Canada's
all-time
Barkey, Kim Crites, Carrie Hall,
be
awarded
for
best
noat,
best
car
Teresa Krebs. Heather Rolen, Dee favorite pop/rock export "The
or
truck
and
best
in
the
miscella·
Dee Sword, Danielle Thacker, and Guess Who." They will be appearJami Jo Caruthers-Tucker. Follow- ing at a 9 p.m. concett, also at the neous category.
· Arts and crafts will be featured
.ing the pageant, Mike Morrison Point Pleasant Battle Mtmumem
from
noon to 8 p.m. at Fifth and
and. Swing Shift wiU entertain from State Park.
Main
streets, the Mark Wood Fun
In all. the group has tO their
8 p.m. until midnight a1 the Fourth
Cart
Stroll
will be featured on Main
credit J4 bonafide Top 40 hits,
Street Landing stage. ·
Street·from
6 to 7 p.m., followed
Recording arlist Bryan White, includin~ such timeless signiuure
I

will

by the Mark Wood Fun Show from
8:30 to 9 p.m. on the park s1age.
Entertainment, in addition to The
Guess Who, will be Charlie Lilly '
and the Poor Side Band at the
Fourth Street Landing_Jrom 7 to
8:30 p.m.. Staffbouse R'oad on the
park stage from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.;
and Ute Convertible Blondes from 9
p.m. 10 1 a.m., on stage 2 (Fourlh
Street Landing).
A captain's breakfast at the
Lowe Hotel will kick things off
Saturday at 8 a.m., followed by the
Pleasant Valley Hospital River Run
at 9 a.m. The one-mile walk/run
will begin at 9 a.m., followed by
the SK run at 9:30 a.m., both at
Second Street at Kennedy Avenue.
An awards ceremony will !1e held
Continued on page ! -

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�'

Thurad1y, June 22,1995

Commentar

'11\e Cub Scouta will bost a rain

"I will present a five-year plan
to balance tbe budget." - Bill
Clinton, Jan. 8, 1995.
"I lhink it (balancing the budget) clearly can be done in less than

~~~~ars."

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less 'tha~ 300
W«ds iollg. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
oddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good laste. addtessing issues, not personalities.

Clinton's numbers
ByTOMRAUM
Aaociated Pl"UU Writer
WASHINGTON - When President Clinton sent his firs1 budget to
Congress, he promised no gimmicks, no smoke. no mirrors. And to show
lJe was ~rious, be agreed to use the same set of figures as Congress.
· But that was then.
·
. After. farst embracing lbe nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office's
analysis of Clinton's budget, White House economic officials now are
denouncing- and ignoring- CBO's calculations.
: The sniping over which set of revenue, spending and growlb projec~s to use is much more than just a "debate between budget wonks," as
·White House spokesman Mike McCurry puts it
· The disagreement goes to the heart of Clinton's claim !bat he could
balance lbe budget in 10 years.
.
Tbe CBO says it can't be dOne lbe way Clinton proposes; and that
enactment of his plan - a highly unlikely eventuality given GOP control
of Congress - would still leave deficits of around $200 billion, the curR&lt;iltlevel, by 200.5. Clinton argues his plan would yield a S 18 billion surplus in .tbe 10tb year.
· In tbe eyes of the administrapon, the CBO has become the new villain
in town.
· History repeats itself. Not too many years ago, budget experts like
House Budget Committee Chairman Leon Panetta and CBO Director
A:lice Rivlin were denouncing White H:ouse budget calculations under
GOP Presidents Reagan and Bush for (li'Ojecting a "rosy scenario."
. Now Republicans are leveling the same "rosy scenario" charges at the
Clinton White House, where Panella is chief of staff and Rivlin is budget
director.
. " We don't use rosy scenarios or cook the books, and we're not about
to stan doing that now," said House Budget Commiuee Chairman John
Kasich. R-Ohio. Republicans are using CBO figures to show that their
b(K)gets would be balanced by 2002.
The White House forecasts for economic growth, inflation and federal
spending for Medicare and Medicaid are all more optimistic than the CllO
figures.
The White House is acting a little touchy toward criticism of its decision to ignore CBO figures and to go with the friendlier OMB ones.
.
: "Give mt! a break," an exasperaied Panella pleaded in a weekend
interview with ABC-TV.
~
And While House economic adviser Laum Tyson wa.~ quick to distribute the results of a Philadelphia Federal Reserve survey of 59
economists on Tuesday that projected an average annual growth rate of
2.6 percent. ·
That's even stronger than the 2.5 percent rate the .administration pro-.
~ject~ ~and which Republicans have said is too "rosy." The CBO projed.~ growth of about 2.3 percent.
· While some of the differences seem smal l, compounded over 10 years
and set against trillions of dollars in federal spending, tl1ey a&lt;ltl up to U1e
difference. between an $18 billion surplus and continued $200 billion
&lt;!elicits. No small disparity.
Tile White House also is hinting that Republicuns are tryinM to politici~e the nonpartisan office.
"There has been a change at the CBO, so there's a diflerent cast of
otJjcials at that entity," McCurry, Clinton's spokesmfm, said Tuesday.
· It was a reference to the naming of June O'Neill, a Republican
appointee, to head the agency. Some Democrats in Congress have grumbled about ber analyses.
Meanwhile, Republicans are n01 beyond pulling a lillie touch of rosy in
their own scenarios.
: The GOP's plans to balance the budget i.n seven years make an
assumption that financi&lt;tl markets will be so giddy !hal Coqgress final.ly
bas acted to balance the budget that interest rates will fall on their ownsaving the Treasury S 170 billion over the period.
Clinton tried to claim a similar $110 billion "economic dividend" in
his plan. CBO discounted it- on grounds that his measure wouldn't really.balance the budget.
· EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers the White House for The
Associated Press and often report.~ on economic is.&lt;ues.

Today in history
By The Associated Press

- Clinton. May 20. .
"It took decades to run up this
deficit; it's going to take a decade
to wipe it out." - Clinton, June
13, 1995.
.
Will the real Bill Clinto[l please
stand up? Because the American
people deserve to know whether
their president truly wants to bal·
ance the federal books or if he simply is playing politics with the
Republicans.
If the president was an authentic
deficit hawk, as he suggests, why
di&lt;! he propose a budget last Febru·
ary that called for yearly deficits oC
$200 billion from here to eternity?
Why has he suddenly climbed
abo:ltd the balanced budget bandwagon, waiting until Ibis week to
unveil a new budget pi'"' to drive
down Ule deficit to zero by 2005? ·
This ap~ars to be !he s'"ne old

budgetary legerdemain for which
Clintou bas come to be known during liis stint in the White House.
Indeed, the president's track record

puer regatta at lbe park at 10:30
a.m., followed by the Second
Annual Mason County Area Cham·

bet offanmerce Handcranked Ice
Cxeam-Makin' Contest at noon, at
Founb and Main slfeets. ' ·
~ and &lt;:rafts will again be reatum~ at Fifth and Main streets from

1
and John Kasicb, R-Ohio, would
caused undue barilsbip fcx babieS
have pared $90 billion in govern·
and seniors and ooUeiiant.
Now the president is trying to
ment outlays. And the biparJisan
"A-to-Z" spending cut bill, costake out 11 position l1D the bilatiCed
budget, after both House and
sponsored by Reps. Bob Andrews,
ate Republicans already have laid
D-NJ ., and Bill Zeliff, R-N.H ..
out plans that would square the fed·
would have initiated a top-to-bot·
era! books in seven years. Clinton
tom review of federal spending pri·
only decided to join the fray after
orities. Clinton strenuously
the Se,nate rejected his original
opposed both measures.
1~ budget by an embarrassing 0The president also did much last
99
margin . .
year to undermine tbe proposed
Of
course, the president's
bal a nced budget amendment,
"alternative"
balanced-budget
which he termed "a recipe for total
plan is the usual smoke and mirparalysis." The president converors. It promises to wipe out tbe
niently forgot his unequivocal declaration in June 1992. when be was · annual deficit by 200.5, but not
ev11n those notorious Hollywood
still masquerading as a fiscal conaccountants - who figured that
servative, that "I would support a
"Forrest Gump" has yet to turn a
balanced budget'amendment.' '
net profit - would try to get away
Clinton has displayed the same
witb Clinton's numbers.
pallern of budgetary deceit this
For one thing, most of the
year. While be continues to insist
spending cuts the president proposthat be wants ·to reduce spending
es are backloaded to 2004 and
and lower lbe deficit, be vetoed a
2005, long after be's out of tbe
measure last week that would have
White House . If Clinton was
rescinded $16.4 billion in spending
earnest about balancing the budget,
slated for the current fiscal year.
he'd be talking about cuts taking
He claims that the cuts would have
effect sooner rather than later.
Also, the president's economic
assumptions border on fantasy . He.
projects, for instance, a $250 billion dividend from lower interest
payments on the federal debt But.
this dividend will not mat.erialize
until after the budget is balanced;
·not before. Even Chelsea u.n der-.
Slands that.
About the hest thing that can be
said about Clinton's tale entry into,
the budget-balancing eflort is that
the message has finally gotten
through to him that the American
people no longer are tolerant of ·
deficits-as-usual.
If the president is serious .about,
working with Republicans in
Congress Ao cut spending and balance the federal books within a
specified ,time frame, Americans
may be willing to .forgive him his
previous budgetary deceits.
.Jnseph Perkins Is a columnist
ror The San Diego Union-Tri·
bune.
.
(For Information on how to'
(Ommunicate electronically with·
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1··
lltHl-827·6364, exL 8317.)

Sen-

Joseph Perkins

_..;;...:;..;~r:.:.:...:...;_::..:...:..:::.:...:.=-­

shows that whenever he has had an
·opportunity to demonstrate his
commitment to getting the government's fiscal house in order, he has
proven himself a traditional taX·
and-$pend Democrat.
It began with the budget deal be
struck wilb Congress in 199~ . The
five -year plan not only raised L'IXes
by $275 billion, it also allowed federal spending to increase by $300
billion. By the time this so-called ·
"deficit reduction" plan is completed, S I trillion will have been
added to Ute 1~1tionat debt.
Recognizing lbe gross ina&lt;lequacy of the 1993 budget deal , at least
some lawmakers nn Capital Hill
tried last year to enact spending
cuts. A bipartisan bill co-sponsored
by Reps. Timolhy Penny, D-Minn.,

nqon to $ n.m. The Ohio Valley
Jets Show Team tu\J.lblers will be
featured at the park at 12:30 p.m.;
tbe Satin Dolls Baton Corps at tbe
pan: at 1:30 p.m.; imd Jeff Pearson
Oti Stage 1 (the park stage) from 2
to 3 p.m.
A new feature at this year's
regatta will be the river captains'
armcllair talks in a tent at the
Potlrtb Street landing. From 2 to 4
p.m., several of the area's most
experi~d river boat captains wiU
provide talks about river life in the
old days of stemwheelers and !heir
participation in it. Among participants will be John Reynolds, who
was born on a showboat, and
Charles Henry Stone.
A deckhand line throwing com-

Jay Pendleton
•

Jay Pendleton, of Middleport, died Thursday, June 22 1995 at the
Ohio State University Medical Center.
'
'
Arrangements will be made by the Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.

Paul White
Paul George While, 77, of206 Henry Street, Ravenswood, W.Va. , died
Wednesday, June 21, 1995 at his borne.
.
Born on April 3, 1916 in West Virginia, he was the son of the late
George White and Constance Bledsoe White. He worked as a general
I contractor and was owner of White Brothers ConS!fuction. He was ail
avid golfer, a charter member of Greenhills Country Club, and a member
of the Moose'Lodge and !he Melhodist Church.
He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth Niland White, Ravenswood, W.
Va.; tbree daughters, Patricia While Addington of Roanoke, Va., Rebecca
E. Parsons of .Atlanta, Ga, and Meredith W : Varney of Ravenswood, W.
Va .. 10 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren, along with several
nieces and nephews .
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by 10 brothers and siste(S. .
·
Services will be held Friday at I p.m. at !he Straight, Tucker and
Roush Funeral Home. The Rev. Hubert Groves will officiate and burial
will be in Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may call at tl1e funeral home
~ today , Thursday, from 6 to 8 p.m.

P~rtie·s plan Medicar.e cuts, no reforms

the Cli nton ndminis!.ration are so

far apart on what changes co make
in lhe Mellicare system that the
issue could lead 10 a pre sidential
veto in the fall and help cause a
cmastrophic shutdown of tlle federal govenunenl.
C linton wants heallh ·ca re
providers. especially hospii&lt;~IS: .to
bear the full cost of Medic:Jrc cuts.
while Republicans hope to spre&lt;~d
the hurden to recipic~tts and to

cans co uh.J arrive at loggerheads
over what they seem to care about
most - reductions in Medicare
spending - causing C linton m

Morton Kondracke
ve to a hudgel reconciliation hill.
Clin ton proposes to cut Medicare
hy $128 billion over seven years,
while f!ouse Republicans propose
$258 billion in cu ts and Senate
Republicans $226 billion.
· Ever si nce the defeat of his
health care hill laM year, Clinton
hilS been claiming thai he would
recommend Medicare cut s only .. in
th e context of overall health
reform ." Rec entl y, while he did
unveil both Medicare cUis and a
new health reform package, the two
had practically nntlting to do with

one a'nothcr. .

The main purpose of the administration's proposal was ·to produce
institute huge changes in the way a hill anced hudgcl , •md it can't he
the system works, many of which done without Medicare cuts. In
the at.lministrallun adamantly fact , Clinton's recommended cut oi·
$12H bi ll ion was double the
opposes.
.
The legislati vc timetable for mntmn t tJmt high-ranking a(Jminis-.
Medicare is so tight !hat GOP bills !ration orlicials h'id previously discrcatjng vouchers, means tests ancJ cussed.
No strategy for achieving lite
"defined oontributions" (or spending lids) might get p:t~scd U1is frdl cuts wa' revealed, leading Repuhli·
charge that the ;K.Jminislrawitl1linle opportunity for seniors to cans to _
.tion
h••'
uone. Aides to HHS Sccreget used to the Changes, encouragt:lfy
Donna
Sha lala said details
ing Clinton to ca'il a veto.
were
l1eing
kept
~ecre t for .. stratc·
Also, Clinton and the Rcpuhli-

gic reasons" having to do with
future negotiations with Republicans, but if they represent a dramatic improvement in the way
·Medicare works, one would guess
that the administration would
unveil them with fanfare.
· The only reforms in the Medicare system hinted at by the administration were expansion of managed care options beyond the present limited availability of health
maintenance organizations. plus
some opl)Ortunities for HMOs to
compete on price instead of simply
. being p:lid a nat 95 percent of prevailing regional medical costs.
Republicans. too. primarily
view Medicare al-l a place 10 save
money, despilc House Speaker
Newt Gingrich's, R-Ga ., promise
10 separate Medicare reform from
tllc budget-hahmcing process.
The only real sepamtion is one
of sequence. First.. !he Republicans
have decreed that there will be
huge cuts in lhe growth of Medicare spending - $258 billion by
tllC House, $226 billion by the Senate - and afterward reforms will
be concocted to achieve the sav. ings. •
Various GOP committees and
task ·forces arc considering how to
effect the s:1vings, but markups
aren ' t expec ted until at least
September by the House Ways and
Means Committee and the Senate
Finance Committee.
Sen . Bob Bennett, R-Utah,

Today is Timrsday, June 22, the 173rd day of 1995. There are 192 days
ten in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on June 22, 1945, the World War II battle for Okinawa
officially. ended, with 12,520 Americans and 110,000 Japanese killed in
the 81-day campaign.
On this date:
In 1611, English explorer Henry Hudson. his son and several olher
Presidenr Clinton has decided, what !he govenunent is doing l1ere stolen the emphasis from the Whatpeople were set adrift in present-day Hudson Bay by mutineers.
once
again, !hat be's for balancing and there isn't working well , or Why argument the nation needs,
In 1815. Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated a second time.
the
budget,
this tim e in 10 years, even worse, is hurting us.
In 1868 Arkansas was readmitted to tbe Union.
and might even find interesting.
not
in
the
Republicru1
seven. Which
Of course, there are combina- Too bad: What-Why is the best
In 1870: Congress created the Department of Justice.
.
brings Washington's budget-spinIn 1911, Britain's King George V was .crowned at :-vestrnmster Abbey.
way to so lve How:Much-Howners
back in the spotlight: seven
Sonn .
· In 1938 heavyweight boxing champiOn Joe Louts knockcd ·out Max
years •. ~ years, lee I !he pain, get to
Schmeling ln the fltst round of their rematch at Yankee Sladium.
As a Fourist, I recommend Dr.
zero,
II s not really a cut it's slower
In 1940, during World War 11, Adolf Hitler gained a stunning victory
Hippo&lt;:ratcs 1 oath: "First, do no
as France was forced to sign an arm•sllce e1ght days afler German forces · growth, the Clinton assumptions
harm ." That's good, hut it's only
are wrong, bite the bullet, be fair lions and permutalinns of these prospective. We need some retrooverran Paris.
·
·.
.
.
- don't do it on the backs of the po sition s and many players sub- speetivity: "Undo past h•mn, genIn 1941, Germany invaded the Sov1et Umon dunng World War II.
poor, or the elderly, or the middle scribe to aspect.~ of all of the above. tly but firmly."
In 1943. federal troops put down race-relat.e d notmg m Detro1t that
class.
But balance i~ get to zero.
It's a question of emphasis, and I
claimed more than 30 lives.
·
~
I look first at welfare. The full
There
seem
to
be
four
ways
of
emphasize
item four, which makes package of "Greater Welfare" that
In 1944, President Roosevelt signed the "GI Bill of Rights," authonzlooking at the budget:
me a Fourist.
lng a broad package of benefits for World W~ II veterans.
h:'-&lt; encouraged dependency, illeI)
Deficit
hawks
say
we
have
to
h ' s been more Ihan 60 years gltunacy and crime ought to be
, In 1969 singer-actress Judy Garland d1ed m London at age 47.
cut the deficit. because there is a since big government arrivec.J to reduced dramatically after a oneln 1970: President Nixon signed a measure lowering the voting age to
deficit, U1at it's gone on Joo long
combat !he Great Depression. It's year warning. Much of lbe Supplethat if we don't cut i1 now, it will ·been about 30 years since Lyndon mental Security Income (SSI) prolS.ln 1987, dancer-actor Fred Astaite died in Los Angeles at age 88.
In 1992 !be Supreme Court unanimously ruled that bate-crime Jaws be harder I? cut later a~d might Johnson's Great Society provided a gram for allegedly "disabled"
grow to a rumous proponJOn of !he boost pha se. By the late 1970s children bas turned into a fttSt-class
banning cross burnmg and similar expressions of racial bias violated freeecono)ny.
there Was a growing view. ofien scam and should be cut. On the
sp:ecb rights.
2) Liberals say don't c ut it so bipartisan, that it was time to
Ten &gt;&lt;~ago: At Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington, Presiother
d, the ssr payment to an
review what had been done, to fig- elder y couple w1th no other
dent Rea
placed Purple Heart medals on the nag-dmped coffins of · much, don't cut it so fast, don't cut
ure out what had worked and what inco e is $687 per month, I'd.raise
four U.S. arines who had been shot and killed by leftist guerrillas in El . it in any way that will hun non-rich
people.
·
.
hadn't.
it
won't encourage dependency,
Salvadcx.
·
3) Som~ conservatives say· cut it
Bu1 when the deficit rathe'r sud- c me, illegitimacy and illiteracy,
five years ago: African National. Congress leader Nelson Mandela
because everything in the federal
denly went into orbit in U1e early only belp poor old people. I'd raise
addressed delegates at the United Nations, where he said victory for a
10
government
and
budget
perlains
1980s, !he emphasis changed, from funding for more prison space to
democratic, non-racial South Africa was "within our grasp,"
" What to cut ru•d why" to •·•How incapacitate predators. I'd cut so·
One year ago: President Clinton announced North Korea had con- most of.what government does is
much 10 cui and when ."
fmned its willingness to freeze its nuclear program. The ftouston Rockets inl~erently bad. Their mouo: Starve
called corpomte welfare.
the
tumor.
We are now almost IS years
defeated !be New York Knicks 90-84 to win the NBA championship.
Medicare and Medicaid are so
4) There are those who say ·cut
inlo that somewhat sterile debate. huge they must be seen in part in a
• Today's Bitlbdays: Movie director Billy Wilder is 89. Author Anne
the budget here and there because
It's not only a bore , but it has How-Much way. But the deficit
Morrow Lindbergh is 89. Pasbion designer Bill Blass is 73.

chairman of the Senate GOP lask
force on health, says that he can't·
predict whether Finance will- go
along, hut he favors creating a·
voucher system to replace current·

Medicare price controls.

·

Seniors would receive a fixed
amount each year that U1ey could
use 10 purchase cala,trophic insurance~ buy into o managed cmc phm. ·
or pay medical expenses out of the
pocket. Ilennen cb1ims the system ·
would give n:cipienl.~ an · incentive ·
to hold down costs.
:
But Clilllon administration oflicial s are adamantly opposed to
vouchers or any "defined contribution" system - based on a per
perso n lid mt outlays - that
replaces the current '; defined benefit" (or entitlement) system, which .
guarantee s what procedures are
covered and at what price.
.
It's possible that Republicans
m~y adopt more conv entional
· means of cutting Medicare costs including requiring beneficiaries to
pay more, cutting outlays to
providers, ami exp•mding managed ·
care - but U1e amounts involved
are still opposed by the administration .
A compromise cou ld occur to
avoid a Medicare collision this I)JII,
but if that' s going to happen, the
Republicans and.!he administration
have to start ncgncintins, m1d soon.
(Morton Kondracke Is executive editor of Roll Call, the news· ·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

Bale sale set
.
The Iledford Township Volun·
teer Fire Department Committee
will hold a bake sale Saturday at
Kroger's in Pomeroy, 9 a .m. to
noon.

q

•

Ben Wattenberg

hawks have cut the budget formed- :
ical research instead of raising it. In •
their zeal to starve the government ·:
tumor. they will diminish serious :
research on real tumors.
.
•
Another silly idea has crept into :
the debate: Cut whole agencies. :
And so. the current plan to elimi. •
nate lbe independence or the Unit- :
ed States Information Agency and
putll under the smothering wing of ;
the Slate Department bas gained ;
mindless support. It would blunt a 1
crilical tool of "public diploma- :
cy," including the ·"Voice of •
America," at a time when putting
forth America's voice should be a
central part of our foreign policy.
Deficit hawks can't see the trees
for the Cores!. Too bad. It's better
to take down some trees and thin
the forest That's the Fourist way,
and the fairest way.
Ben Wattenberg, a seniOf retlow at the American Enterpflse •
Institute, Is ttle host of tbe weekly :
public . televlshm pfogram, l
"Think T~nk."
j
(For information on how to ,t
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con- :
tact Ame.rlca Online by t~~lJinl!l· '
800·8l7·6364, exL SJ17.)
·
I

CRIMSON TIDE

Galllnplis.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.

TALES FROM THE HOOD R
AND
BILLY CRYSTAL &amp;
DEBRA WINGER IN
PG 13

THi Mt!W E\ I'&gt;Till
THi fL1/CTHI Arll\11 Rl
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~ ub ~·n ptJ o n

by moil perm.iued In orens

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lmid&lt;e Mtll!l CouniJ

13 Wcch . ..
...... ........... :.................. $23.92
26 Weeks ............................................ .... $47.06
52 Wecks ................................ :................ $92.56
Rate~ Out.tklt MtlJS Cou nly
tJ wee.~u .......................... . ................. S2.S.61
26 Week ~ .... ,............ ,........................:.$49.66

52 Week~ ............................................. $96.20

r

~

Konnolh McCullough, R. Ph. Cllorllo Rllllo, R. Ph.
R!&gt;nold H.onnlng, R. Ph:
Mon. lhru Sol 8:00 o.m. 10 Q:OO p.m.
Sunday 10:00 o.m.to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Moln Friendly SIJVICI Pomeroy, Oh.
WHk

1119

I
l
I
I

t

I
I
I

'

. ~n unidentified vehicle knocked down several power lines after
hmmg a ullhly po.le al Lasley Street and Mulberry Avenue thi'
morning, according to Pomeroy Police Department reports.
_Lmes covered _lhe roads at 6:21 a :m. today , but Ohio Power Co
ofl•cmls were called to restore the lines, records show .
The incident remains under investigation, records show.

Employees nearly win lottery
. Meigs County Courthouse employees missed winning a $16 mil ·
lion Jackpot by nne number, said Lorena Hill or the recorder' ,
office. ·
·
·~he 34 courthouse emplnyees hit live of six numbers in Wednesdays Ohm SuperLono drawing, which paid $1,344, Hill said.
. Before taxes, thiS will bt: split to $36.48 Jor each employee, Hill
satd.
"The winning number was 40 or 42. We had 41 ," Hill said.
"We' ll keep on trying ."
·
The ticket was purchased mthe Kroger's in Pomeroy.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
4rn Anniversa~y
t~t SALE ·
'

.

.

',..j

~ .
~

THIS WEEK"S SPECIALS
.308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 1-992-6614 • 1·800-837-1094

1994 PONTIAC

199 5 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

SUNBIRD CONV.

Leather, V8, low miles.
STARTING AT

Auto., air, stereo.
MUST SEE~

$25,995

$131995

1994 CHEVY

1'995 BUICK

CORSICA

REGAL

Auto., air, ABS, air bag,
PW, PL, cassette

V6, 4 door1 auto., air, ai.r bag, PW,
PL, cassette, dual temp. controls.

$9I 999

$l5995
·
. I

For Only .

1994 FORD RANGER ••• ~ •••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s8,49S
5 speed, cassette. Must see!

1990 GMC SAfARI.CONV. VAN.....................................58,99 S
1991 JEEP HARDTOP -HURRY! ................................... 58,995

1995 PONTIAC

1995.OLDSMOBILE

FIREBIRD FORMULA

ACHIEVA

350 VB, 38,000 miles.
LOADED!
.

V6, loaded,
2 &amp; 4 door.

$191995

$121995

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.

horne enryic r service i ~ a~ailable.

i

Pomeroy hit-skip reported

4X4, auto., air, Tahoe, stereo.

gr ven earner each week.

No

· Tbe Meigs County Sheriff's Department' received two report s of
hrealc-ms, Shenfl J3111es M. Soulsby said .
The Forest Run Block Plant's .garage was broken inlo Sunday
and a lllfge qmmllty of louis were stolen, S;;111 lsby s.1id.
Also, Toby Curtis reported Wednesday that hi s Racine c•unp ground camp been entered. he added.

1993 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER .........................~ ...............515,99S

Sulxcribel1 not de~hin~ to pay the camer may
rtmJI in Advance direct t&lt;l11~t Daily Se ntinel
on n rhrec. ~lA or 12 month bash. Credit will be

w~rc

Sheriff investigates break-ins

3:59 p .m., North Front Street,
Ella Jane McDaniel, Holzer Medi·
cal Center.
4 :42 p.m ., South Fourth
Avenue, Patti Shane, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
.
POMEROY
II :26 a.m., Dark Hollow Rnad,
structure fire with &amp;Ina Ha,hman ,
no injuries.
9 :~ 6 p .m ., Pomeroy Police ·
Department, Denzil Prater, VMH.
RACINE
9:5 I p.m .. Illind Hollow Road ,
Robert Forester, VMH.
·

Ges

I

I

1992 CADILLAC BROUGHAM ................u.................... 51,7,495

New~papcr A!i~intion .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Molor Route
One Week...• ·
........... ·-··· SJ.75
One Monl h..
....... . . . . ... .....•... S1.60
Orie Year ...................................... ,........ $91.00

A Pomeroy man was arrested Wednesday on charges of 6reaking
and entering into the Court Street Grill over. the weekend, Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
.Chad Speakman, 19, of Pomeroy, remained in the Meigs County
Jail at press time, pending a hearing, Soulsby said.
Deputies reeovered some beer and whiskey after receiving a tip
Wednesday night, Soulsby said. ·
Speakman was walking by the jail Wednesday night and was
detamed for queshonmg, he added. Speakman also implicated t11ree
juveniles, Soulsby said.

V6, auto., air, power windows, power locks, cassette.

·and the Ohio

Oluo 45769.

Man charged for bar burglary

PBE·OWNED CABS (i TRUCKS
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME~ ...........~ ....................... 57,495

t'Otl au•s 1 n ·~POLLO 1 J"
"IUCH1'Y -PRill I'OWDt IV.MGt:JIS ..
SLY S'!',U.t.Oim i n ".JtiPCI DltaOO"

R
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Inc.. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156.
Second dass poMag~ paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

I'OS'rMASTER: Send addn:s~ correction~ to
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Cour1 St.. Pomeroy,

man Alan Greenspan suggested
earli!:r this week the. economy may
have sunk into neg:uive territory in
the quarter ending next week.
The four-week moving average
or new weekly jobless claims continued 10 climb, jumping by 3,750
to 38 1,000, highest since 390,750
during t.he period ended Oct. 10,
1992. It wa the ninth straight
advance.·
Many analysts prefer tu track
the less-volatile li tur-week avemge
because it smooths out the spikes in
U1e weekly reports.
Forty-eight s~11es and territories
reported increases in claims during
the week ended June 10 and five
registered declines. Slate figures
are report ed a week later than
national totals.
Slates witll !he biggest increa&lt;es
were California. 10 ,977 ; New
York, 3.693: Pennsylvania , 3,507:
Texas, 2,538, :md South Carnlina,
2,426,

VB, 4 Door, rear wheel drive.

Ohio Valley Publilih in~ Comp~~yfMul!imedta

••

(

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided b y Advest uf

80010 I

Publi shed every Jfternoon, Monday 1hrou1h
Friday. Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the

!

Am Ele Power ........................34 112
Akzo ............................... ,........ 60 J/8
Ashland 011 ............................34 7/8
AT&amp;T ..................................... 51 J/4
Bank One ............................... .J25/8
Bob Evan ................................ 20 112
Champl~n Ind ........................ 221/4
Charming Shop ........................ 4 314
City Holding .................... .............29
Fc'&lt;leral Mogul ........................ 17 Ill
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... A2112
K-mart .................,.................. 14 3/4
Lands End .................................... 15
Limited Ide.............................22 3/8
Multimedia Inc ...................... 40 7/8
Poop lc 's ........................................23
Ohio VaUcy Bank ..................33 1/2
One Valley ............................. .30 114
Rockwell ...................................... 46
Robbin.• &amp; Myers ...................26 1/2
Royal Dutch .......................... l l l 118
Shoncy's Inc...........................!! 5/8
Star Bani\ ...............................44 114
Wendy lnt'l ............................181/8
Worthington Ind .................... lll 5/8

STARTING FRIDAY
GENE HACKMAN &amp;
DENZEL WASHINGTON IN

(USPS !13-960)

l're~ ~.

Stocks

Reunion set
The Alb~rt and Eliza Hill
reunion will be held at I p.m . Sunday at the Racine S Ulf Mill Park.

The Daily Sentinel

Mrmbfr : The Auoci:tted

r---Local briefs-......·

lie invited.

·CarletOn board
to meet June 29.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
.June 21 discharges - Mrs.
Charl es Caldwell and daughter,
Lester Nibert, Jllll)es Thomas and
Mrs. Charles Wise and daughter.
June 21 birth • Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Fee, a daughter, of Well"
ston.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
seven calls for assistance Friday,
with five transfer calls. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
12:59 a.m ., Race Street, Doris
Hanes, Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
' 10:42 a .m., Mulberry Avenue,
Gerald Sellers~ PVH.
'

a

'

Meigs EMS logs seven calls

446·1088

Revival underway
Collection changed
Revival services arc underway
Day of collection of garbage in
at the Believers Fellowship Min· Racine !he week of July 3 has been
is try with the Rev. Leon May of . changed from Tuesday to WednesMcArthur as speaker, 7:30 p .m. day .
each evening. Special singing. PubSinging group at Church
The gospel singi ng group,
"Padah" will be at the Old BeU1el
Freewill Baptist Church on Route 7
sou th of Middleport, Saturday, at
The annual meeting of the Car- 7:30p.m.
DeWitt is=~
leton College Board of Trustees
will be held Thursday. June 29, at 7
TONIGHT
p.m. at tbe residence of its presiWHILE YOU WERE
dent. Bob Wingett. All board members are urged to attend.
SLEEPING

Hospital news

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
number of Americans filing new
claims for jobless benefits shot up
by 20,000 last week to !be highest
level in a year and a half, further
reflection of a weakening labor
market.
·
The Labor Department sa id
today tbat first-time applications
for unemployment insurance
totaled a seasonally adjusted
39.5,000, up from a revised 375,000
the previous week, wben the number of claims was unchanged.
Tbe government initially estimated claims during the week
emJed June 10 had fallen by 5.000.
,. The latest figure was the highest
smce clauns tmaled 401,000 during
the week ended Jan. 29, 1994.
The number of nonfarm jobs fell
by 108.000 during April and May,
the fir.t drops in more than two
years. Other reports recently also
have signaled a slowing economy.
In fact, Federal Reserve Chair-

FORGET PARIS

·.Meigs announcements

Four·i st fairest forests-~-----

-

Friday ... Showers and thunderstorms likely ... Mainly ·in the afternoon . High 80 to 85 . Chance of
rain is 60 percent.
Extended forecast
Saturday through Monday: .. A ·
chance of thunderstorms each day .
Morning lows in the 60s. Highs in
the 80s.

--Area Deaths--

51Na &amp;UARPING 1JI6 WUire ~~ AAS 9KCM~ b r 6LCCKMDTACI&lt;Lt
IT~~fMeD U~ Aeolll~1./HIRE A1iW Vti~NG1M Cff·SfMO&amp;J,,.,

If old people are joining young
volers a~ cynics about. the political
system, there's a reason: BoU1 ~ar­
ties promised tu cut Medicare
spending · only in the con text of
broader reform . and both parties
lied.
Democrats should maint:tin Uteir
political advantage ~unnng seniors
because they want to cut Medicare
by far Jess than Republicans, but
the primary motivation of boll• parties clearly is to.balance the budget,
not to 1riake Medicare work beller.
What's more, Republicans and

petition will take place again this
year from 3 to 6 p.m .. with an
awards ceremony for both the
stemwbeel races and deckhands to
be held on Stage 2 at 6 p.m.
Mick Souter will entertain from
6:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Stage 2, and
other entertainers for the evening
will be the Convertible Blondes on
Stage 1 from 5:30 to 6:30p.m .;
Mike Morrison and Swing Shift,
Sltt8e 1, 7 to 8 p.m.; Paul Doeffin·
ger, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m ., Stage 2;
Staffhouse Road, Stage 2, 9 p .m. to
I a.m.: and Cee-Cee Dixon, Stage
I, 10:30 p.m.
The regatta will wrap up Sunday, with events kicking off at
noon with tbe Anything That Aoats
race on the Ohio River. Ans and
crafts will be featured at Fifth and
Main streets from noon to S p.m.,
the same time as an open bouse on
the OIQo River Company's 4,000HP William H. Zimmer towboat at ·
Founh Street Landing.
Various gospel groups will
entertain on Stage 1 from I to 5 •
p.m ., followed by The Cl:issies on
S1age I from 5 to 6 p.m. ·

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Today ... Partly cloudy. Thunderstorms likely Ibis afternoon. Some
possibly severe. High 80 to 85 .
Mainly east winds less than 10
mph. Chance of rain is 60 percent.
Tonight.,.Mostly cloudy with a
40 percent chance of thunderstorms. Low in the mid 60s. Light
ea&lt;t winds.

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Jobless claims up by 20,000

••

The everchanging Clinton budget

111 Court Street
PvmeroJ. Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Point .Pieasant.::ntlnued from P•ve 1

P1ge2
Thurscllty, June 22, 1995

at 11:30 a.m. at lbe park.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Taxes and title fee not included .
All payments subject to credit approval

• AUprices Include
rebates to dealer.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Included

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

Taxes &amp; fees not

\

�Sports
~. Smiley

The Daily ,§,S~!~~ J,
Page4

&amp; bullpen help Reds get 3-1 win over Braves

; By TERRY KINNEY

Johnson decided not to take tbat
, . CINCINNATI (AP) -.The last chance again Wednesday night,
' • tJme John Smiley. h~ tned to go · c:alling in Hector Carrasco and Jeff
more than seven mmngs ... well, Brantley 10 nail clown a 3·1 victory
Smileywisbedhebadn't
over the Atlanta Braves.
Cincinnati Reds manager Davey
"The last time

- .Ufi
~

I

I

\',' Ai.TuN St..:OftES- Clncinnatl's Jerome Walton stirs ~p plen·
ty ur dust as he scores in Cront of Atlanla h}lckstop Jayif~ Lope7. lit
·II•• first luning of Wednddoy !light's game I!' Ci'!fiRJl!l!i+ wJ!ere ~~~
lleds won 3-J. (AP)

pitch' he ran into a little trouble, so
to be on the safe side ..." Johnson
said, leaving unsaid t)le memory

Kyger Creek
tournament
II"St SUbml"tted
The tournament directors o( the
Kyger Creek Little League TolU113ment, a 26-team diamondfest
scheduled for July 14 to July 23 at
the Kyger Creek Employees Club
field on S.R. 7 betwen Addison and
Cheshire, submitted the list of par·
ticipating teams.
Gallia Cou1uy's 12 teams are
the Bidwell Pirates, the Gallipolis
Indians, Rockies, White Sox and
Yankees, Green, Hannan Trace, the
Kyger Creek No. I and 2 teams,
Nationwide Insurance, Rio Grande
,
and Vinton.
From Mason County, Fruth
fl.finfiH. !-lome C~re Medical,
:. 11 !2ounty J)ar Assoc1at1on,
~..11&gt;~ 'V F\N, Mead Body Shop,
'lite i&gt;y 1 .• lla1 . n /l.cds, Poi'!! Pleas·
ant llai·dwarc :md Villa~e , Pi .:za Inn
wi ll .bc present.
Mdgs Coumy i~ represented by
Middleport Vaughan's Cardinals,
the Pomeroy Mariners, tbe
·oy Reds·, the Racine Red
Rutland and Syracuse Uub·
Greenhouse.
i~tionaJ 'fUMers recf:ivCd Will
btjh· !L!d to an alternale waiting
.~ ~~iJJPse teams sub•I\itting a ros·
&lt;AJ'.\1'\\1 be IJOtifi,lld Of tl~r SL1lus in
!be toummnent.

~

that Smiley had been displeased
with his humiliation at the hands of
Mo.~treal.
.
.
He threw a lot of quality puc:bes," Johnson said of Smiley's
seven-inning, one-hit effort
Wednesday. "He's a gamer. He
probably could have got the job
done."
The angry words hatl come June
16, when Smiley (6-l) suffered his
only loss. He had pilched seven
scoreless innings, but allowed six
runs on five hits in the eighth as
even he" wondered why ,Johnson let
him continue.
So despite the throttle hold he
had on the Brl)ves, Smiley wasn't
upset at leaving Wednesday night's
game for a pinch bitter.
"ll worked out good. We got an
extra run,'·' Smiley said.
Smiley was the stopper Cincin·
nati badly: needed after .losing to
Atlanta tw1ce by n~ombmed 20,2_
The j~eds' VICI(JfY spappetl th ~
Braves~ wint~ing sireak at seven ...!..
the longest .in baseball - and let
Cincinnati finally catch up with
Tom Glavine (5-4), who had never
lost"' Riverfront Stadium.
He was 12-0 in 13 starts beli&gt;rc
Smiley and Ute Reds' bullpen came

bi~e~ for a three-hiue~ and came
w1thm ooe out of sh~Umg '?ut the
Brnves for the first tune th1s sea·
son.
"WeneededthiS&lt;lllC,.just to get
the .terun back on a wmmng page,"
Smiley .rud.
"Everything wa~ coming ortmy
hand real good. So we went right
after the hitters- mostly breaking
balls early, fastballs later- and I
bad some good defense behind
me."
Smiley allowed only Jeff Blauser' s leadoff single in the fourth.
Hector Carrnsco·gave up .a single to
Ma~k Lemke in the eighth. Jeff
Brantley earned his lOth save by
striking out four of the five halters
he faced, but he also served up
Fred McGrirt's IOlb homer in the
ninth with two outs.
'. '
Glavine didn'l pitch badj~,
allowin¥ fp~r hi~ jlJ seve11 ;nnillr~ •
n• IJHICflll)a'ti 1))3J)flf3Cture~ runs ~ ·
~ hit batsman, fi'eltlds thoice,
~m1r and sacrilicbllies.
WINS TVC HONORS Jerome Walton and Ron Gant Chad Burton, a junior at M e'l~'
each figured in ..\!'"' of the Re1Is'
High School received lirst-t•am
runs.
Tri-Valley Conference honors Cor
Gl vine hit Walion in ~1e fllst.
I~F first lime this yeaf arter a
Walton stole second, went to ib\(d g,real season wilh tlie Meigs
on a, groundout and scored ·on M,arauders. He excelled as a
Gant s grounder til short.
o~ r s t
member or Scott Gh•en's dia·
·.
mond club and will pllty Cootball
at th~ &lt;rhool this foil ~· !~ the
The cost or the caUip will be son or.Connie Burton or Middle·
$35 to pre-regisf~r .w\1 $40 on the port and Steve Burton or
Cl!lllp's first day . Check.\ should be l'oT.eroy and is t!Je gra~Jdson . or
'!1ade payable to tfowie Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs. jan\es B. Roush of
!lox 263; Racine, Ohio 45771.
West Columbia and of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Burton uf Pomeroy.

SHS to host cage camp Monda'y
The eighth annual Southern
Basketball Camp, for students
entering grades 3·8 i,n lbe fall, wi!l
be held on MQI¥Iay, June 26 tp Fn·
day, June 30 .at Southern High
School.

.

Scoreboard
'

'

Ctucallu (Bullinger 3-(J) lll Uuustun
{Drabek 3·4), ~ : OS p.m.
s~ua Fr;~ncis~:o (Bautista 2·3) at. Los
Allgele~. (Martine:z.7-4 ). 10:05 p.m.

Major leagues
ll! L hi.
.580
.472

Boston ... 1.. .. .......... . 29 21
Dt-troit ...................l5 28
Baltimore ...............21 29
N.:-w YorL ............21 29

'

•

s.s
8
K
'8

Ccnlral Diwlslon
14 .120
21 .. SKO
25 .4!JQ

ll .S

ToroniO, ............. .. 20
.

llll

.420
.420
.417

ClEVELAND ....... 36
Knlllla.~ City ....... ,... 29
Milwaukee ............ 24
OltCili.'O ................. 18
Mlnne50la
..... 16

28

30
36

7

.37S
.JOB

17
21

o~kJ:md

................. 28 25
Sentlle ...... ., ............ 26 15

•

'

.521
.510

3.5
4.5

Baseball
Amerlnn l..cii(I:Ut
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Signed
Mate Knapp, catcher, In a rnlnof-lt!llgue
co ntrnct.
,
CAUFORNIA ANGP.LS: Placed Chill
Davis, desivnmed hitter ~ un the IS·day
d isahled Jut. Activated Gre~ My er~ .
catcllt'r. from tile IS•day di~ab led liKt.
CHI CAGO WHITE SOX : Rea'&lt;llig_ned
Carmi ne Capru ccw, u utfidder , rruru
Birmingham ol U\e !jouthern t..eacue to
Nashville or the American AI50CiaUon.
DETROlT TIGERS : Placed Todd
S"teversoD, 01.nnelder. 011 the 15-day dis·
abled IW retroactve to June 16. Recalled
Mike Gardiner. pitcher, from a rehabilitation auignment at Toledo of tbe lnterrta·
tiona\ league.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS : Traded
Derrick May ; uutrielder, to the Houston
A.'trO&amp; fuf a player to be named.
MINNESOTA TWINS : Optioned .
Kevin Maa.s , fin;t baseman. to Salt Lllk.t
City of the Pacific Coa.~t Uav.u.e.
SEATILE MARINERS : Si·W~ed .Mat·
tiit W~:ymClUth and Andy Coltell ~ pitc!lers,
and Ramon VII.Zquez.. sho r1stop, to mlnor·
leal{ue contra ct' Placed Chad Kru eter ,
~:atdter , on lll e 15-day l.lisabled li~&gt;t Roca\1«1 Chm Wtd~ter . cn t ch~ . from Tacoma of the Paciric Coast L..eaaue
TEXAS RANGERS: SiBn~:d Ted Sil va, pitcher.
TORONTO BLUE JAY S: Signed
Crai14 Wilson, Cl.ltCJier , to a minor· ie:tgue
C(J ntrnct.

Wednesday's scores

Today's ga01es
Mdwauket' 1Spark5 2- 2) at Toronto
(l)arwiri 1-1). 12:35 p.m
Seattle (Tones o- 3) at Chieneo (Abbott
3--2), 2:05 p.tiL
Dos.ton (Clemens 1- 1) at Baltimore
(Bmwn 5-5), 7 : 1~ p.m.
~-

''

'

Friday's games

'' .

Milw aukee {Bonu 4-4) at De truat
(Well~ 4- 3), 7:05 p." m.
Boston (Z, Sm ith 2·2) at BaltitnClre
(MUSSina 5-5}. 7:35 r .m.
Toronto (Cone 5-J) at New Y(lrk; (McD~:~~ell

3-4), 7:35 r .m.

Minnes&lt;:~to1

K.ans~

(Tapani 4·6) at
C·'rrier 10-21. ~ : 05 r .n\.

City

CLEVELAND ( Na~y 4·3) at Oucago
{Oerc 2-6). K:_n5 p. m.
OllkiDI)d (S tewar t 3-5) at T t :tiUi, I
( Ro~ers 7-J), K:35 p.m.
'
f'a hforn ia (La ng.~ t o n 5-1) at Se:mle
(Dddt~·r 3- 1), l!U5 p.m

NATIONAL LEAGUE '
[a.~ltrn

Plt illltl~lphiu .......... .34
Alinnta ................. 30
M un lr~a \ ......... , ... 21
NewYork .......... li)
floru.l:t ........:--•-"'"" 17

17
21

26
33
.\.3

.667
.5811
.509
.365
.340

4

8
15.5
16.5

I'.I
24
]5

.627
.520
.SIO

S.5

Out'a~•o

l2
21"i
.2(1

St. f.A!Uill

. 22

Jl

.4 15

II

19

31

.3110

12 .~

l'tii~&gt;I\Urgh

8999*

2ij

24

.SJ B

Snn Fr-o~n c • ~u , ... 211
S~:~n Oi"lt"
2(,
I11N Ali!! Cii:S ... , ...... 26

25
25

.S2 tl
.S i o

26

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Wednesday's scores

Today's games

I

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Nalional 1Aa1ut
CINONNATI REDS! Opl1oned Scott
Sullivam , pitcher. to l udianapoii5 o f the
American Auoc:•atio n.
UOUSTON ASTROS: Optioood Dour;
Broca1l, pttcher, to Tu c~ nofthe Pacific
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PmSDURGH PIRATES: Sent RiCk
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Baskethall
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
: (AP) - Jerry Sloan of the NBA's
; Utah Jazz, Dobby Cremins of
· Georgia Tech and Clem Haskms of
: Minnesota were chosen ass 1stant
· coaches for the 1996 U .S. men's
• Olympic basketball team .
The trio will ass is t Atlanta
:
• Hawks coach Lenny Wilkens in the
: Atlanta games. The selections were
: made by USA Basketball Men's
• Senior National Team Committee
: with the approval of the U . S.
· Olympic Committee.
,
Basketball
• ATHENS , Greece (AP) .: Yugoslavia , returnin g to intema•tional compehtion after a 2 112:year absence because of U.N. sanc:tions, defeated Greece 84-80 in
·overtime at the European Basket·
:hall Championship .
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The Daily Sentinel • Page s

· Eastern cagers participate in North Carolina team camp
•'
El~11en girls from Ea.~tem Higb
• . School made ~ trip to Wilmingt&lt;;&gt;n. North Carohna.and the ~ni~ers•ty of North Carolma at Wilmmg-

ton for the sixth annual Seahawk
team camp.
Eastern joi~ed Tri-Valley Conference champion Alexander in the

•

'

•

camp, which had more than 40
teams from all across the country
competing. Overall, teams from
eight states - Virginia, Georgia,
Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Ohio and
Indiana - participated in the
cqmp.
Eastern tied lor fifth in its divi·
sion and performed well against
some of the country'~ top private
and public schools. One of East·
em's best gmnes was a 48-43 loss
UJ Colleton Prep, a private school
!rom Charlotte, N.C. , a temn that
linished 24-3 last season. Colleton
Prep has Ginger Speaks, one of tlte
top seniors in Nortb Carolina. East-

ern's Rebecca Evans did a great
defensive jot&gt; on Spenks, while
Chasalie Hollon and Crystal
Holsinger each had key buckets in
East'em's mlly .

',.

Jes~ica

Altending camp were

Karr, Beth Bay, Rehecca Evans.

WHEELCHAIR RACE ~ Deidr~ Carleton comp~t~s· ln the 25• meter wheelchair race during recent Sp~clal Olympic action. She
~· placed fourth in her division.

.•

· Meigs County places
49 in Special Olympics
Forty-nine Meigs County alb·
· letcs participated in the Area 8 Spe. cial Olympic Track ru1d Field com·
petition al Ohio University's Peden
· Stadium.
·
Athletes competed in nnd, placed
' in t11e lollowing events (according
: ro 'their diviSions) :
Chester Arthur Jr .: ROO-meter
run. second place ; staulling long
· jump, tl1ird place ·
.Jennifer ArU1ur: 50-meter dash.
second place; soflhallthrow, lourtlt
place
Cl1fistie Barber: softball throw,
lirst place

fourth place
Lisa Montgomery: 400-meter
walk, tbird place; softball throw ,
third place
Kenny Napper: 50-meter dash,
fourth place; shot put, !bird place
Tara Norman: 400-metcr walk,
second place; softhall throw, lirst
place
Mary Rankin: 25-mcter indc·
pcndelll walk, third place; softball
throw, four01 place
'
Jessica Simpkins: 100-mcter
dash, sixth place; softball throw,
fourtlt place
Kim Smith: 100-metcr walk,
Jessica B-arlimus: running long first place: sof'lball thrnw, first
jump, second place
place
Mike Bissell: running long
M.aurkc Smilh: 4£Xl ~mcl er walk,
jump, scvenU1 place; softball throw.
nrsl place ; snftball throw , first
second place
place
Amy Boggs: 50-meter da~h.
Mike Smith: IOO ometcr dash,
sixth place; scil'tball throw , l'ifth Sf!VCnth place; 400-mctcr run, first
place
.
p1acc; high jump,. fourth place; run ·
Don Dufl'ingwn : 100-meter ning long jump. sixth place: shot
w :~k . fourth place; softball throw ,
put, third place
• . liflh place
April Snider: I 00-metcr dash ,
Jacob Cadc: .SO-meter·tl!L,h, sec- • first place; 400-metcr run, second
· ond place; standing long jump , place; high jump, second place;
third place
· running long jump, lirst place; shot
· Deidra Carleton: 25-mctcr put, lirst place
wlu;clchair mce: fourth place; dis·
Marion Snider: 800-mctcr run ,
tance hall roll, second place
lirst place: running long jump ~ sec·
• Brett Counts: soft hall throw , ond place
fifth p~acc: stmu.ling long jump,
Pat Snider: 50-meter d&lt;L,h. first
fourOt place
'
place: Softball throw, second pk1ce
Mary Jane Curry: shot put, first
Unda SommersL 100-mcter
place; s~anding tung :j.ump , first walk , firs! pli1Ce; softball throw.
place
lirst place
Amy Jn Davis: ]()(}.meter walk,
Byron Watson: sorthall tlnow,
sixth place; softball throw , fourth sixth place
~ place
William Wears: I 00-meter
Angel
Day:
100-meter walk . second pl&lt;tce; ' soflhailthrow,
wheelchair race. first place; dis· fourU1 place
.t:mce ball roll, lir,, t place
Mink Weher : 5!i-litctcr &lt;lash ,
Sharon Fike: 100-mcter walk. third place; softhall throw. fourth
fourth place; softhall throw . fifth place
place ,
Dill White: 100-metcfda., h, sec·
Keith Friend: 100-metcr walk . OJH.l place: rum1ing long jtunp, scv·
third ·place; softball lluow, sixth cnt11 pi:ICC c
place
Nicki Wilson:. HXJ-m cter walk.
Joan Ban: 50-meter dash , first fifth place; snfthall llumv. second
place; runn~ng long j111rlp. fourth place
Jessica Wolfe : 50-meter dash,
place
Mdissa H:m: 50-meter dash , first place ; softball throw. second
fourth place; softball throw, third place.
place
·
The 4 x 100-metcr relay team ,
Mandy Jeffers: 50-meter dash . consi~ling · of Chester Arthur .lr .. ,
thinl place: sranUing long jump. Mike Bissell, Marion Snider and
fourtli· place
Dill White. placed first while lhe 4
Jeremy Johnso n: softhall llm&gt;w, X IQO -meter relay unified team,
fourth place; standing long jump . consisting of Jennifer Arthur,
1
·
fifth place
Steven Deha II, David Karr and
Sandy Johnson: shot put. second Andy Kinnru1. placed , econd.
plate;· swnUing long _jump. fourth
Twelve of the atltlete~ will represerll Meigs County at the 26 th
pttcc
.
David Karr : 100 - mctcr dash . annual Ohio Special O lympic s
third place; sh91 put, first place
State Sununer Games this weekend·
Roger King: snftb:lllthrllW , tilth at the Ohio State Un&lt;versity iu
Colun)bus. They will he among
place .
Roger Lance: 50-meter dash , 3,200 :1ihlctcs cmnpctin g in II
fourth place; softhall throw . third ~porL' . 'Ilte Masons in Meigs Coun ·
1y arc sponsoriug nin..: of the nlhplace
Robert Lawrence : SOD -meter lct c,.
run , third place; running loug jump.
Michelle Snider has been chothird place
sen tn the Ohio del egatiOII for tlte
Marsha Mace: 50-me ter dash . World Special Olympic Gmncs in
fourtl• place: softhall Um&gt;w . lilllrth Connecticut during the first week
place .
in July. Chuck Kinnru1 is coach for
Randall M:~mn : 400-rnetcr run, t11e Meigs Count y Spec1al OlympiC
fourth place; running long jump, Team.

..

Hnl~inger.

V:1lcrie Karr ,

J\n~ic

Wolfe, Tricia Davis, Mary Styer.
Sten)lanie Evans, Hollon and
llea·u~ Mora .
Senior Jessica Karr made it I&lt;J
the division linals in the one-on·
one competition, where she lost 10·
9 on a que.,tionablc call at the lin·
ish. She placed second in the field
of 16 girls in bcr division .
On Wednesday ffi(~fllit\g, Ll)Ui,, .
hurg (N.C.) defeated Collewn Prep
53·52 bcfme Eastcm postc&lt;l a 62·
46 victory (&gt;Ver Louisllurg , its
biggcsr of th e nighr. Karr and

Evans hall great

grunt:~.

led 27-23 at the half, t11cn once led
'
59-34.
E:L,tcm senior Bct11 Day w:c. the 1
"Mostlmproved" honoree in cmnp;
scoring some key gonJs ~md gaining
severn! aggressive rebounds with
temnmacc Tricia Davis. llcttlhcr
Mora and Mary Styer al so played
aggressive ball and diu a steady jnh
fur the Ea~les.
Eastern led Middletown Fen·
wick by eight point., for thrcc-quarters of the g:unc. hut lost 46·37
going down the stretch . Eastern
otlso fared well against two schnols
from R:tlci~h. N.C. Division I Cary
deleated E.1st~rn 50' 35 ancr open·
ing up tl 25-20 halftime lead. hUI
head coach Sc(llt Wulfc wa...

ple;tscd with his club ' s dfnrt
01gainst the much bigger ~clmol.
Ravenscroft, anoU1cr Raleigh team
which was '25·3 f;L,t year. defeated
E;L,tem 44-~4 .
The game Wolfe wa~ mn 't
proud· of was a 59-52 lo s~ to
Williamshurg, Kcmucky's undC·
feated small school champion.
Williamsburg had just come off
three consecutive undefeated sea·
sons, but Easrcrn playe&lt;.J well in :l
sevcn-poilll loss. Stephanie Evans
had a hig three· pointer , one of
seven Easlem had that day.
Willirunshurg wns allending the
first nf three ·c:unps this yeru·, one

Providence Day (Charloue. N.C.),
Garlield Heights (Cleveland) ;md
Margareua (Sandusky) and North
Wilke' (N .C.).
En!&lt;~lcrn's thrcc~mHhrc~ wam,
'onsitin~ "~Crystal llnhin ger ,
llc;uhcr Mnra, Tricia Davis anti
Chasatie Hollon, made it 10 the
divisional semifinals. while Rebecca Evans and Valerie Karr fa ired
well in the three-poi nt shonl·&lt;&gt;Ut
and foul ~ h1x11ing cnntc~t. Karr w:.'
ouSied l&gt;y overall winner Val
Oxman of Clarendon II a ll . who
was pc_rfccl at the lim.• in \Vcd nc~·
day night's fum h .
Tnnya Crevier's ~ how w:is cmc
of I he hiShlighl s of tamp . Coming
off n tlcmnnstralion with Shctquillc
O'Neal or the Orlando Magic .
Crevier pafonncU for the 'j:l mp.
·Duhbcd as the world's greate~ t ball
handler, Crevier once dribhled six
basketball~ and once and spun II
l&gt;askctballs simultaneously.
Crevier expressed her com mill·
mcntto tl1e Lurd in he1 A.l .M. talk .
'' A.l.M . fnr the stars ," she said .
. A.l.M . stood li&gt;r "auiwilc. integrity
and motivation - • ~I key cmnro·
ncnls ol ~ uccc s!oo . " CrcviL'r al ~ o
stressed the importance or pmcticc
and tllC imporlam:t: uf hcing a good
human hc iu g She lat c 1 sig ned
aulngraphs ror Ihe camper,,_
Another hi ghlight or the camp

of the reason's fnrits success.

was a tlay ar Wrightsville Oc;:tciL

Other Eastern victims were
Division II Red Springs (S .C .),

UNCW hired a radio deejay and
provided fnoli a nd g:unes fo r the

~iris

''I

al thl' tx::u.:ll .

E:t~ccm cnach Sc( ,u Wolle !-.&lt; till.
was ve ry plc ~ L,Cll witll our clfnrt.

Some of our young kid s really
grew up . Mc&gt;st team ., we played
had their em ire varsity rus1cr. We
put Ute ynungcst tc:un on the mun
tt{laiusl some cxpcricncctJ lcam~
and we held tough . very tou gh . 1
WitS really pleased wilh our g1rl,, ,
ihey really improved and esse n.
tially have a half sc:L,nn ol van.ny
hall under tl1eir belts.';
Collctcm Prep coach b y -Evxl"

saitl. ··E:u.acrn is young. hut thc1·
h:tvl' one nf the tnughc~l IC&lt;un ·, 111

ramp. We're used Hl hlowing flC!I·
pie ·~~~~ a nd they pla yed u&lt; 111 the
wm:
TVC champion Alcx :!ll tk r

mi!-!MXI the lin.als by ju ~t onl' game
l"re!-.lunen guards ioillL'tl th~.:
cutin: \'anoily cluh on the trip ~outh
Alcxamlcr was 1)-3 ovcntll on lflc
~· ip . a credii to the competition in
~1.'1 lwu

the conference .
·
1
Wolfe concludcd."l'm ui''"P·
pointed more uf our older player;
never made the trip. Our girb ~ , 11
exposed loa physical brand of has.
ke1hall much lik e (state champion )
Jackson Center gave us last year
A.' a result, we started to play more
aggrc~~ivc and we plttyed well a\ a
team ."

YOU CAN'T ESCAPE Tt-£ GREAT
BUYS IN THE CLASSIFIEDS.

avera ging

in dnuhl ll figures throughout the
camp. Freshmen Angie Wolfe and
V:ileric Karr had big buckets in
Eastern 's go·ahcall rally . Easlcrn

No matterhow
deep the damagel
Bank One!s Flood

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of all:

Assistance Loans
really measure up•.
QUALITY
THAT ENDURES

Ask about Bank One's Flood Assistance Loans with a special low interest mte.

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
. Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager
992-2588
VINTON
Gallia County Display Yard

Bank One's lop priority is always
putting our customers f~rst. And
· special drcumstancescall for
special measures. That's why we've
lowered the inten&gt;st rates and
waived fees on loans to assist
Southeast Ohio n'sidcnts mpair
the.damaj,'l' recent floodwaters
left behind.
If you've suffered propeny dam·
age as a res ult of flooding. call us
today to apply for a Bm1k One

Pomeroy· Steve Dunfee or
lks ]effer.; a t 992·213:l
Rutland · ]oi!fl May al 742·2H88
Gallipolis· D&lt;'bbic l~hodc:-sat

446·0902

-

BANKSONE
Whatever it takes.
Bank ( h"H ', i\11,.11'- ,' ll\
\oil •ml~ -r Fi ll( ·

. .t

155 Main St.
Jay &amp; Joe Moore,

Flood Assistance Loan and
·receivt.':
• Waivt&gt;d $.10 docum&lt;'nlalion
fee.
• 9.00'X, fixed APR on amount s
uplo $10,0(X) for five years.
•lO.OO'X, fixedAPRonamount s
owr 810.000 for more than
five years.
~or more infonnation. c allthl'
rcprescnta!ivcdrn;estto you
bdoreJunc 30:

f.• t9% HM-JC Ql~l C0RPORr1'10N fnr ~·~.-.trnple Qll ,; lr:~.\n nt t 10 OOIJ ldr ll~t' ;'('ar~ .i1 &lt;} 00'\ APR lht· 1Th.111!"!-, IVIV'nf." Ill' I· ~f tJ.!, f.;&gt;(: • ',k l..r~ "'
ilV:l•l\1.·• · 1.-, !1/lo(! "'{) IT•' "ll't' .jr·cJ may l(•t"j 1'"., ~....r,-..• vrr,j.,· ·1·.-,·• (pl'oOl(.o Of ··1\.IU-11 !.;1•' 'l''·•l"t Sci!J!''LI !r&gt; .,l'i Iii, •1·1 ,,. V 1
I ,-.,· .f•f• ; 11 .-!It. 1•I, 1'

Ma~agers

jl)l lt• Ul ''t'J'o ltJ,\''" ··v• '$'!)(!(" IIT1U''·' Ill

•·&lt;Cu•;~C C':o•·· •JIT•V

•,It·.

"•Ill~ ;)(_~!!(· &lt;e~./1&gt;·

j, }ll' .tBPii

WILL .HOT BE UNDERSOLD
N ANY ITEM AT ANY TIME

Our prices can'! I! b!!ll W! wtll milch inV local DIIC! on como!l'lblo noms, e~:ludmg sOtctal orders.
PriCeS llll~ Ill l!l'l!l!d ltrlllrt !Ill' "'tllll

die lh ell'
e

You 've got questions. We've got .answers. '"'

Radio Shack ValuePlus• C1edlt Card aod ' ·

Mast~jorCIIdltCard~areWel&lt;ame ;
p,"'....pply.l""·~~c..,..ongRidlo$1\-ki•IO·.. and.....,.. w... _
••.,lab•

1101
II ~ .PM!o:fl)tl&gt;t1g ftllrl ~ be 19fC!I.I OfHI~ IWbttel
IOI'I'~IIIhlld... IIMdpnc:l! Aflllrtopal"'9l1Dn1Mioll• '
·~~lbleo ...~~ue~~~~o~prOIMIIIIOIDCNl ~Ril;llo,
&amp;hid • • • Wh-llr"C!II-1 '"fi-J not 11e --~ 1~11"1111111 OA

·~·~- ...,....,, __,...

Pr,c;ts gu•rant..d through ll30Jt5

•

.

2 FOR

Holzer Clinic of Meigs
County has chosen the
month of June as our service
excellence awareness month.
We would like to take this
opportunity to thank all our
customers for choosing ·
Holzer Clinic as their health
care provider. Please drop in
to visit us at the Meigs
County Branch on 150 Mill
St. in Middleport.
.

THERE~rRSHO~~--------------~----------~----~------~
~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ONE MONTH FREE ACCESS

fkf&gt;per

~...;_Sports

athlt'lic director, UtirJ vice president, ef.
fective July 1.
MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE:
Announced dtal Northern Illinois willjol o
t~ conference, effective for the J99 ·98
uc.:lldemic year.
NOTRE DAME~ Announced Gus Ornstein, sophomcwe quar1crback., will trallli·
rt:rtt1Michi~an Stalt'.
ST. JOHN'S : Annuun~etll.he rcliiylUItio n or Cnrnrine Calznncttl. ttAAi~tant In
U1e alhleiit: tlirectur.
VILlANOVA ~ Na111cd Doh Batman
wumen 's lenn i' maCh.

l,

Detroit I, Te.u.s 0
Bo.stoa :3, CLEVELAND I
Milwaukee 10, TorontCJ 9
New York 2. Baltimore I
Cllicngo 5. Sen tlie 4 (10)
Minm:soto1 .1, O:tk lam.l 2
Kltnsa.~ C1 ty lt. Califnmta 3

••

NaliMIAI Ba:;kelbllll A11!10tlalion
NBA: AnnOunced that Ure NDA and
the NalioDill Bn.~ketb:lll Players /v;s\Jci~liun have reucheJ ligrt"CIIIent pn a co(lec·
tive bar~aining ngrecnk'nt that wuuiJ be
in efrect\lunu~h the 2001.1-2001 season.

USA BASKETBALL: Named Dobby 1
Crernint&gt;, Clem Ha.&lt;ikins and Jerry Sloan
a.~si!ltanr ba~lc.ethall cooches for thi: 1996
men's Olyiupic baskt.-tball team.

Transactions

Wutcrn Vhiliion
.
Califoraia ............... 31 21 ..596
Tc-XWi ................... 30 22 5n

•

Basket hall

Pittliburgh (Neagle 7·3) at Montreal
(HetttlU:13-4), 1:35 p.m.
florida (Burkett 4·6) at CINCINNATI
(Jarvi!! 1-3), 7: 3~ p.m
New Yott (Saberhagen 1-2) at Atlanta
(Mercker 4-3), 7:40p.m :
Chicago (Navurro 5·2) at Houst ~;~ n
(lfutnpton 1-3), 8:0S run.
Philndf:\(lhla (Schillin~ S·l ) at St
· Loui!i (M()(~iln 2-2). 8:35p.m.
San Franci5cn { Por tu~::~I 5- J) at Los
Angele ~ (Valdes 4-2). 10:05 p.m.
Cuh!fadn (Fr.:-emao 2-4 ) at San D1e1to
tA.~hby 3-41. \0:0.5 r .rn .

EMitrA Dlvillun

Fined tlr~ Chicagu Bull11 SlOO.OOO for ai·
low in g Mi chael JunJiln Iii weor Nn. 23
durin g the playoff~&gt; ii"Uih:atl of No. 4~.

of

Frlday•s games

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ium

pitcher, from Calgary.
SAN PlEOO PADRES: Optioned Jert
TnN!ka, pitcher, to Las Vega.~ of IlK' Paclfh: Co,.;t lea gut::. 1\lrchased lhe (.."flnlmct
Glenn Dit;hrnan, pilcher. from La.~ VeiliS.
.

(Puh.:i~ht:t 0-1 ), 7:40 p.lll.

Ba seball

Thuraday, June 221 1995

5!~
Plrolator

Ill fltlrs

Valvollne
10W30,
10W40 or
6W30 .
Motor Oil

...v....""

.

We will provide you with an updated pamphlet of
what services Holzer Clinic has available at all
branch and main clinic locations.

Thank Youfrom the Employees of
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County .

.'

244,. '""""''
$4 19 sale prrce

tll.l.lllffi.mliit&lt; u~· 9lJ)on

"
"

.'
' '

' '

~her

-

lltTIII

' '

' '
'

PI..OIIU! WHO XhOW

''

-

I

:-----;, --:-;;--;;-,~
.&lt;Jf

f~.Ji! '

Mhalfl

fi

TelliCO .

Antl-trem

~I( Jlj_l,. ••

,_:::::-.--;)

Ust; VAt.You~r._

GALLIPOLIS

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
'Store Hours: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8:30a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.·Sunday

209 Upper River Road

. 446·3807

�•

•

me.
I am not an egomaniac who thinks
I am &amp;0111~ I am I former male
modclwholllll~~bolhmenand
·
women. For a while, It willhe only
•......... _
way I knew to find love. After seven
~~
years of therapy, I know 1 the
difference between love and lhe
Dear ADa Leaden: I have a very lhings I did to replace lhe absence of
Joni 1101')',10 I don't cq!CCliO ace this iL
leaerin lhenewsp~pa:
After years or promiscuity, I
I grew up in a amalltown in Soulh con1111CICdAIDS. IIISICadofbe:ingsad
Dakota and had a very confusing and upset, lam happy. Ipraythalmy
childhood. I 1111 male, but until bigh nextlifewillbeowmlovingandkind.
school, lloc*ecl like a very preuy I' have forgiven myself and Olhen,
JiUJc girl. My falher was attracted to and all I want now is peace.
me, as were several other male
I am saddened by lhe Slife of the
members or my extended family. world. There is so much anger,
Physical, sexual, mental and verlJal deslruclion and danger. When I sec
a:buse werefrequentoccllll'CDCeS until an act of kindness, I am almost
I was in my middle teens.
moved to tearS. It pleases me wben I
· I ran away ~Thxas ~soon~ I ~ I!COille wh~ •.enjoying ~ir
could, found a job and tned 10 bUild . lives. I didn't enjOy !!'me, and I realize
a life. Dcpressio.n consumed me•.and what a shame lhat IS: . .
I auempted sUJCtdc. l was commuted
The reason for wn~ IS lQ thank
to a mental ward twice and once you for providing me wtlh laughte~
checked myself in. I have had three tears and joy when few other lhings
psychologists and ~ne psychiatri.st. touched my hearL :ou perform a
All of lhem have tned to sleep w11b useful serv1ce. I cant say I always

qn:c:. wilh you, but I have alwaya
enjoyed your words. So kind lady,
even thoug!o I am bey~nd help, I
wanllldyoutoknowhowspecwyoo
•to me, and I wish you happiness
always. Continile to be brave and
spealcyourmind.--NAMEI ESSIN
PLANO, TEXAS
DEAR PLANO: Don't give up on
yourself.lt is possible that you eould
have many years of peace and
productivity.
You have a greatdealtogive.You
could counsel AIDS patients and
makeavaluablecontribution.Pieasc
hang in !here, and let me hear from
you sayingyou received my message.
I send Jove.
Dear Ann Landen: I read your
column aboutlhe rooster in FI'IIIICe
whose crowing irritited the
neighbors. The owner was fmedfor
disturbing lhe peace. 1 wish we had
some law in Michigan lhat would
llkecareofthe young hoodlums who
gun lheir engines day and night
It is especially bad in mobile home
parks where lhe speed limit is 20
miles anhour.1bey zip,aroundgoing

Ann

by Bob Hoeflich

in Columbus- Elizabeth Sbarpnack-4llld I'm pleased.
Her daughter, Kathryn Spires,
also of Columbus, writes tbat Mrs.
Sbarpnack, wil .. obse rve her 94th
birthday on Tuesday , June 27 .
Kalhryn says that Mrs. Sbarpnack
lpves to read Tbe Daily Sentinel
and enjoys "Beat of the Bend." Sbe
is interested in any and all infonna·
tion about the crops in lhe Letart
area and small wonder since she
was a long-time resident of Meigs
County h·av ing lived at Plants,
Letart Falls,and Racine for many,
many years.
Mrs . Sharpnack moved to
Columbus in 1976 and is currently
a resident at the Rosegate Care
Center. At 93, she enjoys receiving
mail· from Meigs friends 311d so you
migbt want to wish her a happy
birthday next Tuesday.
Mail will reach her at Rosegate
Care Center, 1850 Crown Park
CourL Columbus, Obio 43235 .

l

•

Ann lights-up man's otherwise dismal life ~

Beat of the Bend ...
Gecz. It seems lbal I bave a fan

June22, 1885

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pllge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Landers

get your tickets in advance and to
do lhat you might want to contact
one of the local participants. However, I am advised lhat tickets will
be available at the box office.

· Garland A. and Sieglinde Miller
of 31980 Hysell Run Road in 1986
were asked by the editor of the
"S indeltinger Zeitung," a Gennan ·
newspaper to write about lheir life
in the U.S.A.
Tbey did some articles not realizing lhat the articles would still be
of interest to readers of lhat newsra~;~
forwarded a copy of
the newspaper containing one of
lhe articles along with the English
translation. And, by the way, the
newspaper is read not only in Boeblingen and Sindelftngen but also
in Soulh Africa, Australia, Argentina, Russia, Hungary, Ireland, Canada ami in some cities in the United
States.
The article, wri uen and transL1t •
ed by Sieglinde, deals witJ1 a visit
And lhis Saturday evening at 8, to the Vi cki and Jack Cummins
the cbalter show of the French City farm above Racine and takes the
Treble Makers will be held at the reader through th e processes of
Aeriel Theatre in Gallirolis.
tomato growing between February
This is lhe relative new barber- and August, right down to picking
shor chorus in which four Meigs and packing lhe tomato group for
Countians-Denver Rice, John market. Quite interesting and now
VanReetb, Michael Wilfong and lots of people in lots of places
Gerald Kelly-arc taking part .
know about Vicki and Ja~ k and
Besides the local urea chorus their tomato crops.
several visiting bnrbfrshop quartets
will be on hand to make guest.
So now Co ngress is battling
appearances. These inclllde Mar- about lhe speed limits on our highguis , Rumors, Heritage Station, ways. According to lhe statistics,
Kanawha Konlsmen, t11c Singing some 8b,OOO lives have been saved
Kernels and the Chessy System by the 55 m.p.h . limit, but that
Quartet. So there'll be a whole lot doe sn' t seem to be an important .
of singing going on.
factor. No Sir. We want lo make it
Tickets on the main lloor are legal to go faster. llut keer in mind
$10 with ducats in the balcony we suprosed to keep smiling.
going at $7.50. It )YOUI&lt;I be good to

!.'!Z'!·

Postal worker
gets safe
driver award ·

lllellt 60.
.
'lbele WICkal think they •Killl
Koog when !hey pt da" can. If;I
had the money, 1 would move 11!1
Pranee, ~dlezeisiCijiC)Ctforthe
law and a decent judge. ••
MARYSVILLB,MICH.
DEAR MARYSVILIJ;: You doll;'t
need to move to France. Ir reen-~
pun1t1 are zippina around at 60 miles
anhourina20-mlleronc,youshould
report them. Your call, by the way,
~ld save some lives. I recommend.
iL
Gem of the Day: The bell safety
device on a car is a rear-view mirror
•• wilh a cop in it
Is life passillg yo11 by? 1\bnl 1o
improve yow $0Cial skills? ll+ile for
AM I.an4ers'MW boo~l. "How lo

Make Friends .a11d S1op Being
Lonely."Sert4astlf-Mdle.ssed,long,
business-size erndope and a cMclc
or money orrltr for
$4.25 (I his includes postage a.ltd
handling) lo : Friends, c/o Ann
lAnders, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 6Q6JI..()562. (In CQIIQI/a, send

MINERSVILLE
I

WE WILL BE CLOSED
JUNE 21st· 22nd • 23rd &amp; 24th
Regular Hours: 9:30-4:30 Tuesday-Saturday

Stump Removal
20 Years Exjlenence
Guaranteed

For low Income
elderly &amp;
handicapped. Family
home atmosphere

•

~

Racine
-Gun Club
Every Wed. Nite

$5.15.)

5:30p.m.

I'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service

•Room Addi!lons
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill .
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Give Yourself The

Sports Edge with
The Sports &amp;
Entertainment
Line
. 1-900·263-1800
Ext. 1986

Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992-9949 . 992-6471
. Mon - Fri 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Sun . by appt. only
Ser;ing Pomeroy, Middlepo~

S2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs. old.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·7420

&amp; surrounding area.

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

1/6/tmo

L&amp;W
LAWN CARE
1.

•Trimming

1

Also:
Contract Work
614·992-5291
611311 rna.

110\\'AIW
Bulldozing, Backhoe,

hterior

Services.

Take · the pain oul of

HJ me Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

llimeslone Low Rales)

WICKS
HAULING
(Spe.cialize in
driveway spreading)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992-3470

-. • -

.-s.

614·742·2193

.·

TAMMY HYSELL'S
DAY CARE

Kenny's is the place to come
when you nee d a car renta I
H (
d
f

•Lots
of Fun and
Learning

0

ne alfe ars an .ans.

W

II

Kenny's Auto Center
1_800 _486 _1
264 Upper River Rd .
Bus. (614 ) 446 .997 1
I OH ' 45631 __...;.____~!::J
1 ~~~~~.!:!:,~~.!,..

Speciar offer includes:
t Clean motor
2 Grease roller bearings
3 Clean &amp; check ag1tator
4 Clean all moving parts

HAY

FOR SALE

5. Clean &amp;check title&lt; system
6. Check belts .r ·
7. Check electrical syslem
8. Replace filler bag

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts ".•·\

BAILED TO
YpUR NEEDS

949-2512

&gt;·

One year warranty on work performed. '
Valid on all nationally advertised brands. "'
We service most makes &amp; models.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
304-372-6144

368 W Main St., Ripley, W\1

KEN'S APPLIANCE
· SERVICE

ANNOUtJCEMENTS

PII'Sonats

005

Gendeman s..king CampaftiCm .
ohip From Nlco Fomai&lt;&gt; For Tab.
Wallet &amp; Friendship. Send At·
plla1 Ta : CLA 307, clo Galhpolls

Oailr TribuM, 825 Thtrd Avenuu.
Gdi'poll' OH •51131.

Giveaway

40
112

t

yoor old blonde Coc&gt;•r

Lots of
E
•
;Kpenence

~.o~g~~;.~~t'2k·i,r.~~ ".
.malo' t 1ema1o. »1-875-s w
1

Killeno Found AbaMooeo

Help U1 Giv e Ttlam A Good

Homo

Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. tiii6:00 P.M.
992·5388
3115/ttn

6t4·444!· 1213Leavo Mo&lt;

18

11"·
AOui!Roos~er. 614-256-6285.

we" H1ghland Whilo l•m·
lAaie S Vrs , Female 6 ' ' '

AK&lt;;
&amp;tl

Good

Homes A Muatl 61-4·367

~-----------~ ~~~·~A~~~S~P.~IA·---------

MANLEY'S ..
HOME
IMPROVEMENT

r-~===""'=,.,..-

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
'
P.O. Box .220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
(614) 388·9B65
24 Hour Pager-

All

Black Kiuens And Black

F1ae ktnons 10 a good home, par!
Siamese &amp; Persian, 614·9•9·
2510.
Free pupp ies, 3male, 1romale,

mother lull·blooded lleaglo. lalhor
Cairn TQfrier, :.U..SS2·3.t35.

Free. 2 cal&amp; and

Klnen 10 good home, 61&lt;·370·

L-----------~~'~""'~"U ~~~'-------------K,uen&amp;, Lou~ Of Males, 614-44 ;.

Bill Slack
992·2269

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335
·
12114/tfn

2 kme ns. 30&lt;·

a75-200a.
4&lt;8·2952.

Ansering Servic
1·800·215·2023

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Surrounding Areas

An a

Wh ite Kluena To G1veaway, 614·
.w6·1850.

Garage Door Panel, 7J9, 814-

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAl

•Thanks Malgs &amp;

.

Non-working appliances lor partS
only, refrigerator, ttove. &amp; gas

furrace , 814-992-5205.

;

Puppies: Save Me From Thf
F'oundf 9 Pari German Shephard,
Border Collie M1dd , 614 -387!:-

0582.

•

lang

Spade Female Quee ns

y,._

Healer IS!*ti&amp; Mil, Aboul 8

Old Grea1 For Older Couple! 01•

2.S.06t6.

60

-

Losl and Found :

Found- blac;k &amp; white male shee"
dog WICORar, 61.t.-247·2043
•
Found· Blue Tick hou nd, fema le',.~
{)14·949·2129,
'
•

TONY'S PORTABLE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•

3 Friend!)' K iilona, 2112 MD nlh•

~~~~7ae Good wou... ~ e··

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - , ...- - - - - - -.. · 0411.

•Factory Authorized Parts
&amp; Service
•All Makes •42 Years
•Fast Reliable Service
•Washere • Dryers • Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers
•Oishwaahel's
•H.W. Heaters
•Microwaves •Disposals

992 -38:-u~

• New Homes
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

Ke.nny's Auto Rental

Vacuum Cleaner Service Speciai-

ALFALFA
AND MIXED

DARWIN, 0~!~, rc•

Interior &amp;

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Afler6 p.m.
614-985·4180 3/24/94

... _

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

~

TOLL FREE 1·800-848·007

EX( : AVA'IT~G

painting. Let us do it for
you. Very reasonable. ·

•Firewood

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speciahz1ng in Cuslon\
Frame Repa ir
NEW'&amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MOD ELS
992-70 13 OR
992·5553 OR

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

•Mowing

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

1/1211fn

""'-

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

I

Portable
Balulsaw Mill

"':""':"~ Spaniel,
114-082..575.
r;;;;.;;..;.;.......;;;;;...._ _._,, . . - - - - - - - - - . : . . . - - - - - - . . . , ~======
r
2 pupp~es,»&gt;-882-:J696.

MY BUSINESS

(614} 949-3005

·•; : ,,, . ,

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

"'"'"

Owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio

Everyone
Welcome

Middlerort postal carrier and
clerk Ernest Imboden recentl{
SATURDAY
.
received a 16- year safe driver's
,
POMEROY
J.W.
Eskew
award
reunion Saturday, Forked Run
Officer-in-charge
Leeann
Park, noon. Potluck dinner, takj:
Smithberger rresented Imboden
own
table service
with a pen and a cake along wilh
the award gfven to post;1l employSUNDAY
ees tlmt are In a drivers s~1tus posiHENDERSON
, W.VA . -'tion with a record of no-fault acciDescendants
of
Sam
and Melvina
dents.
.
Birchfield
reunion
,
Hendersoo.
Imboden is a United States Air ·
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Community Center, Halloway
Force retiree and is a member of
PL'Iins .VFW Posl 9053, Thursday, Street, Sunday. Basket dinner at
the Syracuse · Volunteer Fire
7:30p.m. atlhe post home.
noon.
Depanmem. He is a slate certified
ERNEST IMBODEN
advanced EMTEA and fireman and
is a certified CPR and first aid
instructor for the American Red
Public Notice
Public Notice
Cross. He is also a life member of
Public Notice
June 5, 1995
PUBLIC NOTICE
Board of Truotooa OF POMEROY, OHIO:
the Mason , W.Va .. Veterans of
Section
1:
That
the
Sewer
The Board of Trusteeo of
Don A. Hill
Foreign Wars Post 9926 and AmerHysell, Clerk
Chrlatopher Wolfe Department will purchaoe a
ican Legion Post 140 in New Letart Township will hold Ita
jet
sprtlyer
from
Jack
I
v:!~~~~
of Po·meroy
annual Budget hearing July
William D. Graham Doheny Company at a cost I!
Haven. W.Va . He has been rust 3,
County, Ohio
•
(6) 22; lTC _ _ _ __
1885 ot 7:00 p.m. fori.:::.::;:.;.;;;;_
quartennaster HI the VFW for, rast
of $15,500.00.
George L. Wrlghi
1996, at ·tho ontco bul!dlng
Public Notice
Section Ill: That this bid
William Youno
three years and was recently elect- In
Letart Falla, attar which _
is
hereby
declared
to
be
an
ScoH
M. Dillon
ed command&amp;r o f Dislrict 8 in tho regular mooting will be
ORDINANCE 634
EMERGENCY
measure
William
P.
Haptonstalll
western West Virginia for 1995-96. held. All cttlzono welcome. An Ordinance to establish necessary lor the lmmet.:arry Wehrung
He has been' employed by lhe lntpoctlon altho budget at exception to bidding re· diate clean-up from flash
15,
22
2tc
U.S. Postal Service since 1979. He . homo of clerk on July 3, quirements of the VIllage of flooding in the VIllage of
and his wife, Wanda, reside in 1995 between the hours of Pomeroy, Ohio.
and for health and
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE POmeroy
3:00p.m. &amp; 4:00 p.m.
safety
reasons.
Syratuse.
Joyce Whlta,'Cter~ COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE

:.1

wfr.LC.
992-5042

H&amp;H SAWMILL

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

I\

Facility /

992-6351 &amp; 992-4447

MODERN SANITATION

ELIM HOME
Adult Care 10\
1

Trap Shoot

_::..:::====--

Normal Hours Will Resume Monday, June 26th

F &amp; A Tree Service

;

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
o.f Alcoholics Anonymous meetilll!
Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred Heah
Catholic Church.
·

?

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Trimrrung · Topp1ng ·Removal

-Community calendar-·The Community Calendar. is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar js not
designed lo promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
Caf!not be guaranteed to run a
specinc number of days.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Libraty Boatd of Trustees meeting,
1 p.m. Thursday, Pomeroy library.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

Thursday, June 22,1995

Ii~~~~~~~=

STATE ROUTE 124

I

MEET

WELDING

SINGLES

Rad iato.r Repair
Service Portable
aluminum welding
New radiators
available,
recores also.

Of All Lifestyles,

locally or
nationwide.
1·900·945·5500
Ext 7898
$2.99/min. 18+
Procall Co.
602-954-7420 612111 mo.

614·742·3212

Found- change pur~a a1 Fruth"•.
cal 6t4-992.S491 to idenlily.
•
Found- keys on ai48W'alk in trart1.
of Pos t Olltte, claim at SentinQI

OffiCe

•

Found: Ca1 &amp; House Keys, Vicino
il~ : Bull Run Road. Vinton, Start
01 Ohio Ucense Ptate, Jud~, 6 t .o\·
368-9!161.
Found ; Irish Sellpr. deep red',
male, W/coUar, Yert lri'ertdly. 30ot;
675-6038.
.
•
Found : Watch. UpPer End 01
Park, GalliJXIUI. 614-446 -1.C71 .
•

loat or Stol&amp;n : whl!e male AngorA

know better but still
too young lo care!

llappy \Birthday
Vickie
I LotJc You
Bobby
110

30 Announcements

Shade Horse Pull
Horse Pullers Ass.
June 24'' 11:00 p.m.
Athens Fairgrounds
3200 up &amp;·dawn

Help Wanted

WANTED:

$16'988
\'

ilti&amp;!!
1i!i!i'l

All

BRAND NEW '95 314 TON CONVERSION VAN
• Atr Cond1110n
• Automat•c Overdnve
• Vtsta Bay Wtndows

• PIS, PIB

" '

U~ul' ~Ull ~tHl~ lu Ulluub:u liLUtlll

ISave $6000 I

• Onve&lt; S1de All Bag
·Anti-lock 81akes

1994
Disco

• tnd~rect lighhng .

• Power Locks
• T•lt Sleenng
• CnHse Control
• AM/Ff.\ Casse"'
• 4Capta1n ChaJrs
·Sola/Bed

• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion
• Alummum Runn•ng

ISave $6000 I

rsion Vans

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY 314 TON
RAISED ROOF CO.NVERSION VAN

s7 o

• Ra1sed Roof
·Color T.V.
• Onver S•de Atr Bag
• Anti-lock Brakes
• An CondtUOn

Boards
· Loadedl

• Automauc Overdnve

• PoWet W111dows

• Vtsta Bay Wmdows

UstPnce

$10,219
Factory Rebate
. . . • $lXI
GMAC l·sl Ttme Buyer
AlowarlC$ To
Qual ... Buy"'
. · 1500
TomPedM~ -£531

Sale

Pnco

$8 888
'

BRAfll NEW '95 CHEVY S-sERIES PICKUP ·
• Driver Side A1rllag

· Rear Anti-lock Brakes
• Power Steering

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cloth tnter1or
• Well EqUipped!
NoOOC Fw. ~·

EMERGENCY RELIEF COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTORS
needed to teach community and personal skills to
an adult in th eir own home in Gallia and Meigs
Counties. HOURS: As scheduled I as needed;
must be able to stay ovE)rnight: 2-hour weekly staff
meeting; or as otherwise scheduled . High school
degree, va lid drive.r's license . three years licensed
driving experience, good driving record and
adequate
automobile
insurance
cove rage
required. Training provided . If interested, contact
Cecilia al 1·800-531-2303.
Deadline for
applicants: 6/28/95 .

List Puce
Factoty Aebale

·

Tom Peden D~o\11

' .. $15.165

S13.599
•$500
,· $1.411

BRAND I(EW '95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
• Power Brakes
• Oni'Or Sid&lt;&gt; A1rbag
• Power Door locks
• 4Wheel Anti-lock Brakes · AMIFM Slereo
• Power S1een119
· Sleel Belted Tm
• 16 Valve Power

j Save '19111

'1:::'

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVROLET CAMARD

• Slyle&lt;l Wheels

• Well EqUipped!

• 4WoeelAnl1·loc

• AMIFM Cassene
· D~ay W1pers

Brakes
• Power Steer1ng

· Conso·e
• Buckel Seals

• Oual Allbags

• Cru1se Control
• AMIFM Cassette ·
• 4 Caplatn Chans

• Custom ClOth lotenor
· Froni And Rear Carpeled
Floor MaiS
•Rear Spoiler
·Well Eqwpped'

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BUlLETIN BOARD
16°0 column inch weekdays
18°0 column inch Sunday

. . . . $2 1, JO!I

- $400

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

· S2.92t

$17,988

• AwCooobon
• • AutomafiC

• Dual A.tags
•4 Wheei Ani·Lock
Brakes

• Power Sleenrq
• Power Brakes ·
• Power iJOOf locks
• Power W1r.:!owS
•AMIFMStereo

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw.Mill

Cuslom Buildi ng &amp; Remodeling

•NEW HOMES .
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

614·742·2193
Wlmo,

Love &amp;Romance
Ext. 6250
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Procall
(602) 954·7420

·AB&amp;T AUTO

House Repair

8t

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

Room Additions

•ALIGNMENTS •.BRAKES
•TI~ES •Oil CHANGES

Siding, Roofing , Palios
Reagonable
Insures- Experienced
Call Wayne NeH 992-4405

Lookirrg forwunlto st•l'irrg old j'rit•rrd.l
anfl lllllb· in~ ~~~J it l !

·

5119ftfn

Los1 : ? Golden Aewevers , an~
swers 10 ·Regg 1e .&amp; Stac:y- Lasl
SBi'n Apple Gtove area. 304-6751689 days or 304 · 576 299 8
a...enings.
•

Remode Iing

Office Hours; Mon.-fri.
8 :00 a.m .:3:30 p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum . Siding,

( No Sunday Calls)

·

Lost Papfar Ridge Road, FriendlY
Wh ite Fo-x Dog, Lemon . Spo ts1
L-____,.....___;;.;;;;, (GF ) ln. Ears, Geroge Ftench:

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages o Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

614-992-7643

Vic lni1y. 614 J ~46 - I ~20 , Lea'l&lt;&amp;

IAessage.

4 1;y95

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

FHEE ESTI:\IATES

losl. Blac.k lab Dog Wilh Co l!ai
And Tags, Neighborhood Roalll

For Free.Estimates

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

COMMERCIAL untlliESJDENTI ,\1.

LoS!· blacll &amp; wh&lt;le male Boardeo
Con1e, child's ""1. 614·992·3976. •

Remodeling

Howard L. Writesel

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

c~~~7:'..'!"~~~~;~~·w •rO:

Kitchen &amp; Bath

r------..
J&amp;L INSULATION

Fate Awaits You!

1-900-726-0033

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772

Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm

Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Fre;e Estimates
1119./ttn

5f16/94,TFN

614·367·7641.

•

WISSING! Siamese cat !rom Ualr\
Stre&amp;t ar&amp;a. Reward II 304-67 ~· '
6397,

70

Yard Se It!
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnh y

'f.

2 Fa milt: 1.1112 Stale Rou 1e
South, Sth H6ute Past AaccooA
Bridge On Right. Sa!~lrdav. 2•ttr.

10·3, Ra1n Canc; eis. Women~

Clothes Size 7-10, 13oy Clolhel
10.16, Girls &amp; Boys TOddle 1 4-fit
Boys, levi
Oo.::ker. Carhar1
Jacket, 3 Piece Wcioden Pallo~
WOoden Furn iture. ·Lots· Toys'
Lamp&amp;. Misc .. I.Jte ·e B11 de
bie, Mu~ More l

a

e:ar;

s.•

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

• S~led Wheeis
·Wei EQU~'
No lh: Fees Dl!tM!'lll"

•,

EXCAVATION
Limeslone &amp; Grovel,
Septic Syslems, Trailer &amp;

Just Call
1·900·945·61 00
Ext. 1327,
'2.99 per min.

•Sidewalks
•Driveways
•Patios
•Porches
•Slabs
992-3265

House Sites.

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602-954-7420
~1&amp;'1

COURT STREET GRILL
KARAOKE - FRIDAY
DEE &amp; DALLAS
SATURDAY ·
9 P.M.· 1 A.M.

· 1111 Sleenrq
•Cuslom Clolh lnlenor

HAULING &amp;

A Big Hug . .
Could 114! Yours!

51231t ,..o.

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK ~E

AUTOMATIC OVERDRIVE TRAIISMISSION
·.Automtioc Overdnve • Power Blakes

· T1~ Steermg

,Tom Ptlderl OrSCOunt
i

$13,488

Equa! Opportunirr Employet

• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
• Full Corwers1of)
• Alum1num Wheels
• Loadedl

"""' Ouai&lt;la~
cen.ticate

· St 797

I Save '22971

• Power WmdOws
• Power Lod&lt;s

LrsiPrce ..

• $500

Sale Price

$11,688 .

. Sofa/Bed
· lnd~reclllghling

• PIS, P/B

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
L,._...;,..,;_.;.;;_,;;,;.;;.;;.__,J

mo.

22¥. 23rd, a .? 4886 s

n:aso:

Bidwell. Air Con(lttionor, Warf11
Morning He ater. Ctothea And •

Morel
~outo 1~1 Sal, Sun Q. 2•
Toola, Glassw j,IJ, Fteezer. ~to!
tilter, Pool TatUt. Lots Good Stu HI :

38,8

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Advance. DEADLINE: Z:OO p.m:
the! day beforo the ad is lb run:
Sunday edi_t1on
Monda~ tdlllDf'l •

""'

2 00 p.m. Friday~

2W p.m. Satur....
.

Couch, Cha11, Tablo, Cha1rs,

Jr. &amp;•

Morel ~n . Sat. Centenary.

·

Men• Clolh&amp;s. Paperbacks And
Eureka. Several Families!

lues,:

Wed, Thurs. !f.S.. 61 .. ·256·935-4.

MERIT

Garage Sale Creme an s. 3 Fa-~
milia's, 011 160, Past Porter
~mby Lane, Tnurs · Sat, 8 ·6.:
Sorrelhlng For Everyonol

on·

June 23td, &amp; 24th. Add1lon Ptke,•

Public Nollca

i='.W:..'Ti::.,"'11t:l 141f
TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422·0756

'

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

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
Orange Township will
hold a Public Hearing on
tho propooed Budget for
1996 followed by their
regular monthly meeting
. July 6th at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of the Clerk · Patricia
Calaway.
Patricia Calaway · Clark
Orange Townohtp
46686 Gulhrlt Road
Cootv!llt, Ohio 45723
(614) 985-3860
(6) 22; 1TC

Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Salisbury
Townohlp
budgol for yaar 1996 will be
ovallable for public
Ltnspeicllo&gt;n at the cterk'a
463 Hooker St .,
Middleport, Ohio, dally until
July 5, t 995 when public
hearing will bo hold at the
Town a h t p
Ha II ,
Rockoprlngo , Ohio, at 6:00
p.m.
Richard Bailey, Clerk
(6) 22; 1TC

COMPANY

. 5 Mile Past T~ra Apart mtnta.~

* Struts And Sho~~s
*Tires I Tires I nre"'s71" - - - -

-a,

Clolhilg Size 1
ndi1tt SmlUes,;
Cr11llt, Oddt I Ends, Can~al If._
llalrt
•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy

REFINANCE
PURCHASE
CONSOLlDAT}';

•
.,.,.,.,___,.--..:._-.
All Yara Sa!et Mu1t Be Paid tn"

Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

s. Stgn·up tor
4 New Tires

Stop 1n

Our Specialty

1-800-MERIT-98
M8#0489

•

Giveaway July 1 LISten tor
WtMef on Big Counlry Aal1 o

~

Advance. Deadline: t :OOpm the "
day before the ad it to run, Sun-:

day edition- 1:OOpm FriOay, Mon.•
dot odtion 10:1l0a.m. Sal\Uday.

,

Gorago aato- 39553 SA 103, Po-

a...

"'"""· F(ldoj' June 23,
guno,
toola, 1oya. thls It the last day t
wll bo open,
s..ap Shop.

oavo·.

•

•

�-

.
•

)

.. .....

.

•

I

•
Thuraday, June 22, 1885

•

' 22, 1996
Thursday, June

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The D.,ly Sentinel • Page t

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
NIM--homelnPt.
n wnc.ll+812.fll!l&amp;

ORTH

420 lloblle HomH
for

Rent

y.v, lr's

I'M "f"e~l--INGi

-[A!I-TII~ $Aii&amp;r: -'IND
'-1"6 ·~ r,.; 1?&gt;19 TRovl!~.cE"!

elO 8 7
¥A K 3
't 4 3

•

EEK&amp;MEEK
"

UFO Sl1UA11Ct.l
440

Rick ~araon AuctiDn Campanr,

lui tim' auctioneer, comploto .
..uotion
aarvlco. Llcanud
III.ONo &amp; Welt Virginia, 3Q...
7T.H711 Or 304-773·5-1-47.
.

80

Wanted to

Buy

Cl.an Lite Wodtl

Cat~

-•·

Or

PI me
for Rent

"How come I put on weight just watching a cooking shwi,
bul can't take it off just watching an exercise show?"

112 Dupler on Aliloon Ad, 3btd·
roomo ond '-"' upotalra, llltcllon,
dnlng room ond litllng room WI 11
2bolh on ground noor, pluo lull
butmlnt. 304-G75-1180.
fu ~
"''· un '"'·- apL, good llligbboriWlDd.30+87H11illllllr5pm.

buy~:;=:;:;::;====:l==========:12 &amp; 3br.apl., Now Haven oroo.
I
Brood Run Rd .. $285/mo pluo
110

Help Y/anted

buying wra.c:ks, junk autos &amp; Sales Position. Uounraln State
truckJ. Also, parts for JaJe. 304~ Home.. Polm AMIInt, WV, Call
773-5143'" 773-5033.
For An Appolnlmonl, 814·4~1Top Prlcea Paid: All Old U.S. 8340.
·
Cains, Gold Rinf'• Silver ·colna,
.. S C I Sh
Someone noodtd ovonlngo and
G ld C I
Ga~paln IL op, - · ill caralor aldorly _,_
1;,
an In her home near Pomeroy.
Wantod To Buy L\uia Tykes In Apply by writing The Dilly
Good Condilion; Kitchen Set, nel c/o Box 720-0, Pomeroy,
Sand Box, Picnic Table I little Oh(o 46748, giving experience,
TIIwo Car. 81+245-5887.
,.....,_ &amp; --

s..!n'd'A..;,;.o,

s.n•-

Wanied To Bur Uaed Mobile Tho Sc:ulhorn Local Sc:hool Dlo·
• 5.
trtct 11 currona• IIOioing appllcaH
Cal B1
orne
4-«6~ 1 7
•- following
'
~77"-':-'-'---"'-:,.:;--:.:_...,....-,
1 tiona tor 1.--..
coaching
WBnltd ill buy- IU\IIqua and uaed poolaon, lor tho 1DDS.1D9B ochool
furniture. nD ltam too lat~ or ma ~-: l'leAd toolball, Ullllant ttotamall WID lluy one poco or com- boll, junior high footbal, lunlof high
~~~::,'~tea. Olby Marlin, ' 14- ~lrla basketball, and a•illtant
:::--:-:::-::-----::-:-:----:::,.-1 lgh achool glrla baskalbtl. ApWantod To Buy: Jun~ AuiDa With ~~~u~.:.:"~~:.c::
Or Without Motora. Call Lorry cine and.CPR. Poroono intorHiod
Uvely. 81.t-388-Q303.
should contact Jim Lawrenu,
Superintendent, Southern Local
Schoolt, PO~ Box 176, Recine,
EMPLOYMENT
Olio 45771.
SERVICES
WANTED: EMERGENCV RE·
LIEF COMMUNITY SKILLS 'IN110 Help Wanted
STRUCTORS Needed To Teach
Attn: Pt Pleaaanl. Poalal Poal· Communlt~ and Personal Skllla
Ilona available. Permanent tultiRMt
~~~~:u:n~ ~t;lg1 r,"t'~u~~:.~.
tor ~lerkllaortert. Full benelita.
HOURS:
AI SchedulediAa
For exam datt, •ppllcatlon and Needed: MUtt Bt Able To Star
111aryo Into: 708·264·1600 a•t Overnight; 2-Hour WHkly Staff
3670,8amta8pm.
UeeUng: Or AI Orhtrwlat
AVON I Ail Areu I Shlrlo• Scheduled. High Sc:hool Doorto,
' Valid Driver' a Llc:enee, TMrae
·.cS:..poo:-::fl-",~':-:::'-:":7S.-:-::t..al::::.::::-:-::::::::~ I Years llcanaed Driving Expari~
- AiiON SELLS AT WOIIK-HOI.IE
once, Good Driving Rocord And
Adequate Automoblle lnaurance
=~~~~ltai
Coverage Roqulrtd. Tntlnlng Pro·
Territory Opllonal.lnd'rep.
vldad. II lnterellod Contact Cod·
lla At 1-ID0-531·2302. Deadline
1.eoo-74 2-&lt;1 738
For Appllcanta: B/281115. Equal
AVON EARN $$$ at home-ar Opportunity EmpiC7j«.
work: All area a. 3&gt;+882-2645. 1.
ID)-992-6351S. lNOJREP
We are an old local compan~
seeking a motivated pet~an to
CONSULTANT
take charge of customer delivery,
Mature Person To Help Children showroofT'! 181LlPB and warehousAnd Adulll Wilh A Serious Prob- es. Send r4!1aume cloThe Dally
lam, Enureala. Appointments Set Sentine4, P.O. Box 120.00, PomarBy Ua. Hard Work And Travel t:Jt, OH &lt;45768.
..... Required. Uake $40,000 to
Wanted liO
. DO
$50,000 Commiaalon. 800-477 - 180
2233.
Ace Tree Sel'\l'lct. Complete tree
,Easy ,Work I Excellent Pay! AI· care, 20yra. exp. &amp; lnaured, tree
aambie Product• At Home. Call e11lmates. 614-oto41-110t or 1Toll Free, 1-800-487·5566, Ext. 800-508-8887.
. 313.
C . dN
...
,
ertl 11 e
ura1ng nil11tan1 ""a11~
Hlflng Sales Aepr•sentatlwea For able For Personal Care In Private
-Houaa Ot Lloyd. ExcellenJ Bene- Home a, Dayt, Evenir'lgl, I WeeIlls, And Pay Free Kit To Start, kands. 20 Years Ellp.-rience, Ex~
Fantastic Hoarau P.lan, Also c:allent Relerences 814-256-6342.
Booking Pardosl614-3~2197.
General Uaintenanc e, Painting,
Housewives Or SlUdents, Do You Yard Work Windows Washed
Need Extra Income? Can You Gutters Clea!'led Light Hauling,
Sing or Dance? Call 814 -448 - Commerlcal, Residential, Steve:
7802.
614-«D-8861.

Tg

Job opening- Molgo County
Board or Mental Retardation and
Oovelopmental Ciaabilille• needa
•chool age Instructor to leach at
Carleton School. Must have 'ur·
tent valid Ot11o QepariJ'tl&amp;nt of Eduutlon Teaching Oer.tllicare and
haVtl or be eligible to obtain Ohio
Oeparunem of Education Multi handicapped certlfica1ion. Sand
reaumt b~ June 27 lD: Carleton
School, 1310 Carleton Slfeet. P.O.
BoJ1307. Sytac:use, Ohio 45779.

:r.•

lady ID live in with okler~ women,
St&amp;O a week, references r&amp;qu , . c:a.U 61+742·2076.

Little ceetart, Mgmt. Tralnetts,
Exc. Career Growlh. Benefits. Apply Gall., Jackson
Athena Or
Mail Reaume To: P.O. Box 10.
BarbOursville, W.J, 25504.

°'

Mechanic with some u11periem;u
&amp; own roola. 61 o4·742 ·3095·
Needed Babysitter For Saturday
And Sunda~ Only,, For More In·
formation, 814·4&lt;46-92ot7 After 5
P.M.
Now Accepting Application• For.
Full Time Recaplioniat Must Be
Willing To Work When Neede,
Weekends Etc. Apply Ar Scenic
Hills Nursing Conllf. Bidwell, OH.
t1o Ph:rno Calla PIH•
Outside Sal11man. Commercial
Printing Ca. Need a Aogretalve,
Self.&amp; tartar For Full/Part Time.
FrenchCil)' Preu614-&lt;4-'S-4383,
OVerbrook CentDf' haa 7-3 and 3·
1'1 RN positions available. For
mort Information plea•• contact
.En Blao. 81,..DD2-&amp;«72.

Owner Operal!lfL New JerHy
TIM Truc:k Co. II ••king Owner
Oporaurro with
uporion&lt;o.
cl9andrivii'Q raccrd will tank and
h8Z-matondor......,.._Stoody
year rourd work, WeeklY SOnl•
ments, home oo ~For
more Information and 10 180ip..,
intonriow &lt;sil Jim Gallegror II
800-552....:17 txt 208.

""*

Georges Portable Sawmill, ·don't
haul your logs to lhe mill jull call
304-675-1957,

FINANCIAL

21 o

Business

Opportunity
tiOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommendl that rou do bull·
ntll with ptOple ~au know, and
NOT to Nnd montY thrOugh tho
md undl you hllve lnvtatfgattd
lhoofloring.

Homes for Sale
_
~·
boaldo Now He·
2 1 -· • -•g•.
~ven SujMrm~~rkal, bonom floor
complotoly remodeled, 2 boys:
(front bay 40'128', roor bay
32'x23'), 100'140' lot, $18,500.

310

ror, 200 SGuth Ritchie Avonut,
Ra..,_.t. WV II , _ a - ·
ing applkedaniiDr W1lfltd nur•·
fno a11iotant ctonoo olvtn by
QOoigo RN. 1-ltd plf·
oono opply In poroon Mpnday111urod1)&lt;, .....:Jpm. EOE.
304-8112·2713.

.::::::===--f

Sa"'

Gaa Furnace. J Acre. Garaae.
Addloon Aroo. M2.000. 11•·3877317.

olocric, ref. .&amp; dop. roq. 30HB2·

1 lillp Sloclt &amp; 1 - . ~

Go c.ta.

-

WIU~III)' Bor

..... 2-c.t

ond Ail -.orito.

IOO'IIr Roady IO Rico eto-387·
o5o• or 610-..e-eoeo Aok For

.row.

1 upright Ktroatnl htltlr, 1
Body by Joko machine, 1 omall

tru" "'-·

Cai30+87H2117-7pm.
plc*up
A8 ... ,__

South
I NT
2•

BARNEY

-

' LOOKY

WHO'S

Inc.

'CO MIN'

I~========:r::::::::===::;;:::==-

!I

----

'"-'---·~-------­

--PEANUTS

1 TI-IOUGI-IT

1'1/E DECIDED I'M NOT
' 601N6 TO SUMMER CAMP
Tl115 YEAR .. .

AI!OUT TEN SECONDS

AI!OUT li.
AND THOU6i-IT
A90VT IT..

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

dleport. all udldea paid, $250/mo.,
•100dos&gt;9oh-61:•-.2217.
One bedroom furnlohid upotalro
aparmontln Mlddlopor~ all udii. UH and cable lncfudod, t3301mo.
plue depoait, c:all 14-992- 2450_
One bedrOom turnlahed upstairs
aparcment Jn Mk:klleport, all utilitiH and cable lnduded, $330imo.
plus ......-11. caU &amp;14-992-2459.
.....,_
One Year Old. Spacious 2 Bed~
roam. Juat ot t.tilea From Gallipolis. Appllancea Furnished, No
Smoker•, No Peta, $450/Mo.
1400 Deposit. Application• At:
1743 cenlanary Ad, Qalllpolia,

BORN LOSER
-~

· uovla Sale: Video Store Remodeling Approx. 1100 Moveo: 200
Adult Movies, Would Like To
All Together, 81 ... 367.0612 Alter

Satr

5~M .

One Drake Satoillto oyatam $600.
One Fisher/Yamaha atereo ·~•­
tam
304-862-3&lt;1&lt;16.

450

Orlando· four hotel nlgt1ta, near
Disney, use anyllma, paid $300,
soli $99, 61 ... 470-269e.

Space for Rent

For rent- commercial building In
center ol downtown Uiddleport.
Central air and heat, 814-992~
2459.

470

Wanted to Rent

Married couple seeking a houu
in Pomeroy/Middleport area, 2 br.,
mid to larQe yard, Bill &amp; Pam
~ad&lt;, 1·304-882-3366.

--

MERCHANDISE

51 o

--

-

---

Household
Goods

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, J!afrigratora, 90 Oay Guarantee!
French CitY. Maytag, 614·-4•67795.

s:m.

Rerrigeratora, 510'111 •. Waahert
And Drrtt-. All Aeco,dltlonad
And Gaurantaedl $100 And Up.
Doliv•. 8 t4-8SII-8U1.

w•

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
UPflght. Ron Evana Entarpril&amp;a,

- · Olio, 1-800-lil7-ll528.
SUNOUESJ WOlFF TANNING
-,
lEOS
Comrrtercilal· Home un1t1 from
$198. Buy factor~ direcl and
SAVE I Cail TODAY lor NEW
fREE color catalog, 1-800-•6281117.
Udlll)' tralilr, 1975 Dot""n plcwp
for parts, goad tlra1, automatic:
transmission, and good motor.
30H711-4e63.
Wing Back Chair flame Stitch
Pattern Shadel 01 Teal Green,
Same Aa New Condition, Quean
Anne Coffee Table And 2 End
Tabioo With Cheny Flnloh. Real
Nl.._ 814-406-3377

550

Building
Supplies

o-r-c.

Sunlc Valle,, Apple Grove,
bnutlful 2ac loll, public water.
c,.~o-.Jr., -576-2336.

RENTALS

410 HOusas for Rent
2·3 Bedroom Houae, Gr•pe SL,
Qallpolll. e1....., 1-036-0.

Pass

4•

All pass

anci Donna

24 Btoppod

aleoping
28 Counlng

1 Nonh o1 Okla.
2 Songbird
3 Well l(enll-

4 ObJect of

32 Hopbum,
lor thoft
33 Pwraonollty
35 Kin ol pre

worthlp
5 Olcl witch
6 Chance
7 - Marco•
8 Film erlllc

11 - out: make1

P•ullne9 Against
10 Beoketball't
Archibald

do with
19 Mineral
21 EIOdlng lor reel
23 Ntwopaper

Fann Equipment

8 Mox Old Pupplao, PArt Chow,
Part Collie, 1 Black I Brawn; 1
wtllt, eu ua 8881 .

AKGA

A H

Y ·D

A-K Z

EKZ

KGE

AGSCKA

ZDCRGDN
AK ·Z GABZ

K ·G E

Iv

o· w K

B ·H

OZ

DHVHNT
SDRZEE

Y A Y E ·. • · -

C H"z E
KZ

F

H B •

aozE

GCGAZ.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "We owe to the Middle Ages the two worst,nvenlions .
of humamty- gunpowder and romantic love .~ - Andre Maurois.

1MAT DAILY

ruznu

S©Ro\l~-"£i(JSII

WOIO
GAM I

- - - - - - - ldlt•d br CLAY I . rOLLAN - - - - - - -

0 ·tour
Rearrange Jett•rs of
scrambled words

the
be·

low '9 form four words

CALUYN

UMES 0

PI I I

I

,...L=E~=R~M=~u
=F~=~~
:~
I I I" I I
,..-

·,

Putting down his checkbook a
husband lamented to his wife,
. - - - - - - - - - - , "YVhy is there so much month left
B uN N E 0
at the end of each - - - - -?"

I

ABJJ)W IN Tl-£ Will ON
HIGH PRICES. ~HOP THE. CUSSFrEDS.

Ford modal 1320 4-wheel driva
tractor, 59hrL 5' New Holland linIsh mower. •• Brush hog &amp;
blade. EKcellenl condition. Musr
sell. S10,500. 304-773-5778.
Hay Rake, New Ideal. Good
Shape $450. Now Case lhterna·
rional, Round Bailer $7500. Lawn
Tlllir, eo•, Used 1 Time 45 Min.
11000. Single Plow Like New S90.
Buah Hog 5ft. 1500. Bar Hay
Mower Used 4hrs. $3,900. New
Hayapears For Front-Back $250.
lawn Tracrar fronr End Loader,
68hra., Still Under Warrant~
$11,000. Sq. Bailer w/Wisconsln
Engine, Runa Good $400 614·
245-5008.
Massey Ferguson. Dyna· Bounc;:e
MOWOf, 7 FL $250, 614-«6-1052.
Livestock

2 Yearling R&amp;gister&amp;d Angus Bull
From Champion Bloodline. 1864
Oldsmobile 88, No Rus~ .All Origl·
na.l8,4-388-8756.
4 Ouiutar Horses, 2 Green Broke,
2 Broke, 614-446-41t0.
Arabian mara, gentle beginner•
horae. $500. 30-1-458-1783.
Goats b' sale, 614-949·2494.
Regiatered Limousin Bull, 614·
379-2425.
.
Wing Pigs $30 614·256-0015.

&amp; Grain

Approximately 400 bales of last
yrs. hay,
cents a bale, 8141148-2179.

ao

Exc•llenr oat hay, never wet.
$1.50 per belt. 304-67!;-2902.

TRANSPORTATION
Autos for Sale

THESE SQUARES
UNSC~AMBLE

ABOVE

lETTE~ S

SCRAM-LETS ANSWER$
.Wretch - Legar- Swirl- Semite - MATH as WELL
A professors admonition to his class: "College students
who watch too much" television will go dov,;n in history.'
Laughing, he added, They will also go down in MATH as
WELL!"

•

ITHURSDAY

SERVICES

IT ~~PAND£P 5&gt;'!. wriNG
iliii Ms-. Wt. $USP!iCT
Al-l Ali€N T~AN~PlAJ./T .

810
· Home
•
1969 Ford 2 Ton Dump Truck, 5
Improvements
•
Speed, With 2 Speed Rearond. V·
----,BA=-=-=se=M"E"'I'IT=---.r
8, Gas Englne•.Good Condllion,
WATERPROOFING
~
Can Ha ul Heavy Equipment,
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.'•
$4,000, 614-446-451&lt;4.
·Local refer,nc;:es furnished. Call!·
19Z1 Dodge 314 Ton Solid Body (814) 446·0670 Dr (614) 237 ·''
318, V-8. Auto, Runs Good, $700 0488 Rogers Walarproollng. Ea-~
080. 614-256-15&lt;0.
tablilhed 1975.
·~·

•

·•

1983 Silverado 305, Auto: 010
115,000 Miles, Runs Good, looks :-::----=-:---:---:----"
Appliance Parts And Service: All ~
Good, 614·3e7·7025.
. Name Branda Over 25 Yeara Ex~,.
parlance All Work Guaranteed~'
1984 Chevy S~10 ijlazer 41&lt;4, French Cit~ May tag, 614 ~4&lt;46
good condition, $3500
304- 7795.
·675-3581 · ·" '" 5:30pm.
C4C General Home Main·
1964 Dodge 350, Qual Cab, V-6, tenence- Painting, vin~l siding,
4 Speed, 2 Hitches, Elac:rric carpentry, doors, windoW&amp;, balha;Brake Set Up, Excellent For Tow- moblle home repair and rTI)re. Fo,r
lnQl Good Condition/ $3,500, 814· tree aali mate call Chat, e 14·9G2j.
..6--4514. 614-446-3703.
8323.
•

J:

oao.

1988 Chevy S~10 Runs Good, Joe's Home Maintenance, vinyl
Nice Truck, 12,200, OBO, 614- Biding, roollng, e11terior painting,
..1~564.
power washing, tree eallmataa,
1987 Chevy S-10 Pick-Up 4 Cy- 614·992-4451 .
linder, 4 Speed, AC, AMIFM Cas- Ron's TV Sel'\'ica, apeciallzlng In
nne, Runs Good $4,000, 614- Zenith also urv:lclng moll oihe'Zt
446-4556.
br~nda. House calla, t-800·797:-576-2398.
1987 Ford Ranger', extra sharp, 0015,
58,_000 low mileage, new am·fm
Plumbing &amp;
s1ereo, new tires, $4000. 30~570- 820
2400.
.
Heating

wv

1987 8-10 ·4x4 Blazer, auto, ver~
good, $6000. Phone 304 - 675~
1523.
1989 Chevy S-10, ~cyl., Sspd.,
dnted wlndowa. new bec:lllner, exc.
cond., 80.000ml.. $3800. 304-67S.
7981 .

Freeman'• Heating And Coaling.
ln•t•llatlon And Slfvic:e. EPA
CortlftOd. Resldarrtia~ Oommorclal.
614-258-1111.
.
1!
840 Electrical and • , ••

Retrlgerall~n

AKC English Sprlngar Spaniel
Pupploo, 8 Waoko Old, $300
Each, 81.._25HD35.

'··
-:C::;DMf=ORJ=--=_,.:::S$4;;-_:;:,RE;::D:-:DEAL:::-:,,-::E;:,R- :•.
B3 lnt.-noaonor 8670, 350, 1 Dap.
LAWREI'ICE ENTERPRISES '~'
_,,...,_ 79 Fruahauf ..... 45', Heat Pumps, Alt Con41Uonlng, ~~~·
You Don't call Ua Wa Both loae!•"
Fr• Eatlmatel, 1-800-287-1301, 1 ." ·:·
00:545:
,,

AKC Rogllltrtd Cocker Spaniol
pupplll, Iii WHkl old, 2- 10/ld 1078 lTD Runa Good, Maka
black, 3· boll, •ready 10 go. 8 H· Goctd Work Car, Air Condilioning,
085-34-45 tvtningl or 814·882· S1ereo, Cruise Control, Depend ~.
8U7daylmt.
able, $350,814-.,.1-1788. •

1880 Dodge Ram Van B-250, Rel;kkrntlal or comrntr&lt;:ial wiring,~~
72,000 Mllea, 11,000, Can Be new ._...Ice or rapalra. Maettr
Soon At: Golllpollo [)ally Tribune, ctnaed tltcarlclan . R1dtnour .....
125 Third Avonue. Galllpollo Eloc~lcal. WV000308, 304·875- .

AKC Choc. Lab. Pupo, ,Roady To
Go ARor 8 WH~O. Juno 2B 614408-DSB2.

PRiNT NUMBERED lETTERS IN

TO GET ANSWER

A.C. tractor 50150 N.H. Baler, U.F.
Hay condlllonar, 2 ha~wagons,
utility wagon, brush hog, all in
good condition 304-882-3754.

710

'ZLXZBYZDWZ

f)
UI&lt;.E iT:S GONNA
KILL H IM TO BUY
ONE LOU&lt;;'( T- SHIRT

Hay

by Luis Campos
CAiebtlty C!phe1 cryprograms ;ue created l1om Qootallons by fafi'IOYS peop1t past and p1ftHtll
Eacl'lleHer on lhe c.pher stands to1another. roo:a~·, ewe X eq~is P

8

1979 Ford Mo1or Home, CanopY.- ·
Mictoym.va, Good Condition, 614256--6574.

112 Freezer Bear. $125 Pd &amp;
814-«6-1052.

640

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Complete the (hvt;kle q uoted
.
.
.
.
.
.
by l dh l'lg 11'1 the mru,ng words.
I........J.-..1..-'-...J.---'-----' you develop Jrom step No 3 below

W~h\

630

1'--'--L--...J'--

1--T~--,~;---;15;-TI~-r-1 G)

,.

610

l""rl-+--+-

I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

s·

.,.._&amp;

Waohor GE Heavy Duty, Cut to
SiS. ~onmoro O.y•r •75. WN~­
pooi Walhor Hoovy Duty -.1c• •uo. Kenmore Drrtt At·
mond S150. Maytag Waohor, 1
Y11r Warranty 1205. Whirlpool
30• Electric Range Cut To $85.
Eloc.. lc Range 30" -~ Gold,
Black Door t150. Refrigerator,
Almond, Slcla-By-Sida, Ice I W.ttr In Door •350. Refrig•ratar
CO-tone. F - Froo S150. TV
porl.lble 1'Z' Romollr Control MS.
31' Chill Frooz• 1150. 10 cu. II.
Upright Froazor •150. Skaggo
Appllancoo, 78 Vine S4. 61....._
TJHar 1 at 4H 31SIG.

Pass

Hts .. NY II577 -0169.

Wedge Apartments. 1 &amp; 2b~.• no
pa11. 506 Burdette Street. 304~
67S.2072 ehor Spm.

460

2•

$14 . ~5 from P.O. Box 169, Roslyn

1Win River• Tower, now accOPtlng
application• ror 1br. HUD .Obaidlzed apt. tor elderly and handi- ·
capped. EOH ~-675-6679.

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,
:Jl&lt;4·773-565t, Masonwv.

22 Ru

Easl

Pass

Phillip Alder's new book, "Ge t
Smarter at Bridge," is -available,
autographed upon request , .for

Carpet &amp;,Vinyl In Stack $5.00 Yd -Black, brfck, aewer pipaa, wind·
&amp; Up 60 Patterns Of Kitchen Car- owa. lintels, etc. Claude Wintall,
pat In Stock. Over 35 Pauerna Rio Grande, OH Call 6U-245·
Vtnyl In Stock. Uollohan Carpera. 5121.
330 Fanns lor Sale
614-446-7....
13 Mrea And Barn &amp; Houae, 3 Country Furnlture-Furnirure for Mull Solli 4 All Srael BulldlngL 1
Bedrooms, 1 112 Batha, LR, &amp; Every Room. 6mi., RL 2 North,· Pt. Each, 24•30, 38x38. -4Bxee.
80J125. 1at Come. 1st Served.
Paved Driwway, 814 448 0635
Pleasant 304-675-6820.
Act Now &amp; Save IS. Saunders
COn ... 614-44Hl218.
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. d1yers, ralrigaraton, 560
Pets for Sale
. 55 Aero a 01 Land With 28x32 rangu. Skaggs Appliancaa, 78
Building On Cloy CMpel Road, 1· Vine S~eel, Call 814-446-73g8,
'Once·A·Month' flea program
800-287-e308,
1·600-4119-3-199.
ntod help? Aok RIG Feed and
Supply, 614-gll2-218• about the
Four Ialii near Rldne- approJ. 1
VrRA FURNmJRE
HAPPY JACK 3-X FLEA COL112 acrH each. starting at $5000,
614-44&amp;3158
LAR. Kllla both male. a'ld female
... 614-040-2025.
.
Oualily Household FurnlbJrt Ard
am.k nau. lnllablo
. AppliancOl Great Deals On
Lolln Spring Valley Area, Will
Groom Shop -Pot Groontlr1g. Foo·
Cash And Corry! RENJ.2-QWN
Accomodate Mobile Home 814"
turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
And Lay.... y Aloo Available.
448·44Q8 Aft•r 7pm Or Leave
Cal 81 &lt;0-44&amp;-C231.
·Free Deii\Wy Within 25 Mikta.
M-go.

One rlverlfOnt lot, one plus acre.
new well, SR 338, Apple Grove,
$15,000, 304-372-5668, 81+2472120.

,

::0, I'MCf THE MN.E. ':£K, RIGHT z

81 ~2205.

Rooms for rent - week or month.
Starting at·$120/mo. Gallla Horaj.
81 4-M&amp;-9560.

Dealer: South
West North

Yesterday I included a depressing
quotation from Raymond Chandler
comparing alcohol and love. Here is
more bad press fo~ lqve, from Evelyn
Waugh, the British novelist. "All this
fuss about sleeping together. For physi'
cal pleasure I'd sooner go to the dentist
anyday."
How does that relate to today's deal'
All will be revealed. For now. how
would you plan the play in four spades
after West leads the club two?
South won the first trick with dummy's ace and called for a trump. East
defended perrectly, rising with his
spade king and, when it held the trick.
giving his partner a club ruff: West
cashed the spade ace before exiting
with a heart. Now declarer had no option but to take the diamond finesse.
When it lost. South conceded one down.
"Well defended," said South to East.
But when North didn't echo the sentiment, South wanted to k'now why.
"It is true. he did do well. Yet you still
should have triumphed. Berm-. playing
a trump, cash your three heart tricks,
discarding a diamond from hand. Then,
after West has received his ruff and
cashed the spade ace. what does he do?
If he exits with a diamond, it is into
ace-queen. And if he plays a heart.
concedes a ruff-and-discard. Either
way, you don't lose a diamond trick and
do make your contract."'
This type of play is called the
Dentist's Coup. You extract an opponent's safe exit cards before conceding
the ruff. Then, what~ver he .returns is
!he replacement filling for the trick you
just lost.

one bedroom apanment In Mid·

Rooms

OOWN

By Phillip Alder

2bdrtn. apta., total elec:trlc. appllancaa lurnlahtd. laundry room
flcllidot, cioN ID ochoolln town.
Apptlcatlona available at: Village
Q,.., Apto. 1.0 or un B1••DD2·
_37:-1-1._E_DH_.-...,.---,----,--

FurniShed

82 Nolle&lt;t

A trip
to the chair

r1eaoon~ furnilhod, clean &amp; nice,
no pets. Phone 304-(175-1386.

Mobile Homes
for Sate

Umborto-

511 Scr-H
10 Comora pen
81 Fltd

Opening lead: • 2

ljo - U·

r....

32()

58 Aulhoo-

/Vulnerable: East-West

~~.,_...,r~=~
--------------....""",..'....,.""
0 1M by NEA.

57 Above

·

35 lml18ted
37 Small ponion
41 Goooo r.nue
42 Vorlleal y
44-tlve

SOUTH
eQ J 9 6
•Q 2

222 1

Upatalra, 3 Rooms I Balh (1 Bedroom), Furnished, Clean, Refer·
enca and Depoail Required, No
PolS 614-448-1519.

• 10 8 6
eto 9 6 3

c~::&gt;

new

This newspaper will not
k{'IOwlingly accept
advertisements lor real estate
whic.til is in violation of\the law.
Our readers are hereby
.
inlormod lhat all dwellings
1
adven sed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

tKJ972

oA Q 5
6K Q J 4

1

limitation or discnminallon
based on race, coiOJ: religion,
sex fam ilial status or national
origtn, of any lnlenllon to
make any such·preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

•J 9 6 5

•

=

All real estate advertising in
this neWspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1966 which makes it illegal
10 advertise •·any preference,

.10874

0

3 Largo &amp; 1 Small lodroom,
28"12•' Kitchen, Dining, Family
Room Combined, CA, Walk To
Cliy Sc:hoola, Large B~yard, 1 2br aporlm8nl, furnllhtd, udlldeo
1/Z Story Brick. 81&lt;4·448-2153 Included, 1 or 2 persona. ReferAndL81W8Mtuag&amp;
enc111 &amp; Security Deposit raqu!rw4
Cai:IU773-11009.
3btdroom houH on 74 ocrto. 2D I:-::-:-:=:::::::-:-==:-:-==::-:::
mlnutto from Pt Pltoaont 30•· BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
882-3754.
BU[)GET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTAJES. 52 Westwood Drive
Dupler opL building, good irMIII· from $226 to $291. Wal~ to shop
menL For Information: 30•·675· l movlea. Call 61&lt;4·4-46·2568.
4680.
Equal Housing Op!""tunil)'.
Four btdrooma, bath, new heat Furnished EHic1 tncy $195/Mo.
pump, olr condldoner, ronge &amp; ,.,. Utilltloa Paid, Shere Bath, 607
hlgerator lndudod, 1\JII booomon~ Second, Gallipolis. 614·"6·4416
gora:,a' brHzowoy, nlcolo~ good Altlf 7 PM.
loca n, 11 4-St92-3 111 after Spm. I·G-rac_lo_u_s_liv_l_ng-.-,-.-nd-_bod_ro_o_m_
2
Newly remodeled hooH, 3br, 1 11 apartments at Village Manor and
2blth.large tamlty room, large IN· Rlv8ralde Apartmentaln Middlelng room, gorage, fenced In clou· port. From t232-$355 . Call614·
blo lo~ Camp Conley area. 304· 992-5859. Equal Housing OPflor675-.oo&amp;ci.
I .
tunllieL
Throo btdroom homo. now cor· Now large upatalro 2 br. apart·
PI~
vinylaklng, carport, eel- ment, 4 miln wnl of Tuppen
tar, air conditioner, 3 plua acres, Plaint. on 681, 814-985-350&lt;4.
one rrile from Apple Greve on SR 1--~-------338. Open houM Saturday~ Sun- Nlce 2~3 bedroom apartment In
day. Priced in twendes, 30ot -372~ LM_kkl_le.;.po_r_L_6_1..
_9_9_2_·SB_se.
_ _ __
,.
2 72120
81
__,• 4- • One bedroom apartment in Pt
·

1977 New 'Anker, 14x70, 3 doors
(1 tront 2 back.), 2badroom, LP or
Nat Gaa, 3 aeta of atepa-traated
Interior &amp; exterior pal'ntlng, low lumber, windowa, 1creens. &amp;
prlcea &amp; free eadmal8a, 61 ""992· doors all new, vinyl underpinning
5859.
goea too, atl appliances, new waUlke'a lawn Care ~ Uowlng ·rer heater. Uust have bonded
lawns, Trimming Hedgea. Wee- mover. 110.000 firm. Call Lucy
deating, AI Riaaon&amp;bfe Prlcel, Kaylor 304-882-373V.
Also Other Odd Jobl, Call Mike
Anyllme For A fret Eatimatal 2br .. New Moon lraller, $2000,
new gas furnace, good cond. 304614. 3];.9111 .
675-6922 or 304-773-5357.
Need 8 persona 1seamstren Qr Limited Offerl 1998 doublewidt,
to busy to 1ew? Call 30•·773·
S
5869 , Brenda. 30 ~,. experience, 3br, 2bath, · 1695 down, S2591
·month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
riferen«tt.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
Sun Valle~ Nunery SchooL WV. 304- 755-5885.
Childcare M·F Gam-5:30pm Agta
2.K, Young Sc:hool Age Ourlno · New 1995 14x70, Includes akirt·
Summer. 3 08., 1 per Week Mini- lng, steps, blocks, one ~ear
'
homeowners lnaurance and slx
m..tm EIU-446·36 57.
rnonlha FREE lot rent On!)' $1025
Wanted To Care For The Elderly down and $207.17 par montt Call
In Their Home. Have A Laving 1·8Q0.837-3238..
HEeafl, ComplaLtlo ca,ro. 15 Yeaors New Bank Repoa. Only 4 left.
llperience, ve n, 0 ayt r Neverlfvedin.304-755-7191.
Nlgh11. Out To Visiting Family
Cali Mo in Hiiloboro 513-393- OAKWOOD HOMES, Nitro, WV.
. 932 4, Ask For Beck)'.
Direct facto')' sa lea. No middle
ma·n. Save S1 ,000's. 304·755·
Wll do t.ddDe work, pti:Jnll814- 5885.
882-3113or814-0D2·5858.
Will Do lntorlor, Er..,lor Palnllna. Price Buterl New 14x70, 2 or
Rooooneblo Rollo. Expo~lonctd, 3br. Only SSII5 cjown, S1851monlh.
Ae,.,encet, For Fr.. Eatlmalet, Free delivery &amp; aetup. Onl~ at
Ookwood Homoo, Nitro WV. 304·
Cal 014-245-5756.
755-5885.

Gold DWn ,our CMn buaiMu, fuU
or part time, 1111 gold &amp; allver
colno. 82,000 par w~. pouiblo.
Part Time Babysitter Uust Bt cal lo1ar1t It 014-W2·7B41.
Abl• To Crhre And Be Wllhln 10
Min. Of Holzer Ho•pital 814·448- Movlo Solo: Video Stora Remodeling Appror. 1100 Movea: 200
8848 Anar 6pm.
Adult Movloa, Wvuld Like To Sell
All Together, 814-3B7-Get2 Aher
· Pari· Tlmo EKpo&lt;ionetd Medlul SP.M.
.
Tranocriptiorill. AIIIIIY In Pw-,
Ufdlcol PIUI. ll3e State Route
REAL ESTATE
reo, Golllpollo, Batwoon 1-5,

eon-

310 HOmeS for S8te
3 Bedloon' 2
Heal Putr1).

•K 2

0

11112-2218.

J &amp; D'o Auto Parto Jlnd Salvage,

....... Thnl fridl¥.
•
Ra..,MOOd VINogo -llh

nts

I lr1d 2 bedroom aportmtnll. furnlohad and unlurnlohtd, HCUrlly
dopoolt required, no pott. 614•

Truoko, 1817 Modolo 0r Nowor,
SmUll 8ulc~ Pontiac, 1800 Eaot. _ __ ~_ ........,
1111
- - _,..,.....
' Decorated stoneware, wall .. le~
1 - - . . . okllamps. o6d lhtt~
old clc~o. ontlquo fumlturo.
Riwrine Antlquoo. Run Moore,
ownor. 614·992-2526. Wt

A rt

°_.,

20F-.a

6A 4 3

62

f/£PLL.~?

s

6A 8 7 S
EAST

WEST

If 51'16 HERE "'llW 11-i£ FAA
IS &lt;?0100 10 INIIESTlGATe: 1llt

48 Polna

13 L . ployer
14 lllbllcll t~be
15 Ptlnltt ......._
18 Unclooo (paM.)
17 Dlmlnullvt
aufllx
18 Hoaltry Iabrie

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

.•

152 Poll-53 Nolthor't
....55 lntec~~

l ~~ridge on tllo
Alvei5
!alter

1~ C~ltl--

/

wv

u.,

Olio •

1188.

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

e=hday
Friday, June 23, 1995

In the year ahead, you miJlhl establish
two new primary objectives. it probably
won't be easy , yet there are Indications
that you can achieve them before your
Mxt blnhday rolls around.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your posalbltitles tor adVancing your latest Interest
are very strong today: .Move loiWard In a
poaitive manner . Get a Jump on llle by
underst8nding the influences that govern
yOIJ '" lhe year ahead . Send lor yuur

,.

Astro-Graph predictions today by m~111ng
$2 and SASE to Astro -Graph c/o lh1s
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465. New York.
NY 10163. Be sure to state your zod1ac
s1gn.
Lfi'O (July 23-Aug . 22) You could be
lucky today in your financ1a1 Involvements , but you 'll need to take a very
active role in bnnging aboot success.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) Lell to your
own devices. you 'll be capable of sub. stant1al achievements today . Do not let
others infringe upon your time with frivolous projects or activities.
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0el. 23) II looks as 11
the obstructions to somethmg you've
been hoping lor will be lifted today. Once
this oCcurs, follow through w!th alacrity.
SCORPIO (Oel. 24-Nov. 22) II will prove
important In this cycle to matnta1n good
relationships with entrepreneurial ·friends.
A close pal might po1n1 you towa'rd something prolitable. ·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) AI ·
though 11 might reqwe exira effort and
dedicatton. an important career obJective
can be achieved in lh1s lime frame
~

CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19) You
m1ght do better than usual today m
endeavors with pronounced elemenls of
chance W1th the odds 10 your Javor. a
few calculated risks may be •n order
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) This could
be the nghl day tO implement a change to
benefit to your househcNd. Use your •ntlla·
tive instead of JUSt dwe!Hng on matters .
PISCES (Feb. 2D-Mareh 20) Auihorshlp
won't be a~ importanl as success today.
If you feel your companion's suggestions
are better lhan yours . use them.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) lndustnousness will not only give you pride .of
achievement today , It Could also increase
your holdingS . Dolng good work will
reward you ampty
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It could
make you feel very uneasy today '' an
endeavor 1nvolv1ng others isn't managed
effectively . You mustn't hang b4ck: step
in and lake charge.
.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Give domes•
tic matter~ priority today 't1 you~ ve left
something crttical unresolved, now 1s the
time to settle it to your satisfaction.

I

JUNE 221

�I

Thurtlday, June 22, 1195 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..... 10 • The Dally S.ntlnel

Ohio Lottery

Reds
rally to top
Braves

Pick 3:

539
Pick 4:
9887
BuckeyeS:

Sports, Page 4

Low lolllgbllD ~ Partly
doudy. Satunlay,llbowers.
Hlgbsln 80s.

18-29-30-36-37

•
'
VoL 48, NO. 39

With Factory -Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
Invoice on Most
.
Models.

I
I

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 eento
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 23, 1995

Copyright 1M

.

'

New state budget wiU contain tax cut
By JOHN CHALFANT
AssO&lt;iated Press Writor
COLUMBUS (AP) -Ohioans can look forward
. to a tax cut in the new slate budget but the amount
ha5 not been determined, legislative linance leaders
said.
However, local governments and libraries that
wanted a bigger share of state tax receipts came up
short in delibemtions of a joint conference committee
Thursday.
The six-member panel was created to resolve differences between House and Senate versions of a
$33 .5 billion state budget for the next two fiscal
'years starting July 1.
House Finance Chairman Thomas Johnson, R. New Concord, said the committee had agreed the
srending plan would con lain a laX cut.

"TI1e question is what it will he and what size,"
Johnson said. ·
Representatives proposed a $180 million state
income ~'IX cut, mostly for derendents. in their ver·
•ion of the budget , but made it contingent upon a
state budget surplus surpassing $ 1 billion.
Senators replaced the House trigger mechanism
with an increase in the personal exemption for all
taxpayers that would cost $34 million in tl1e first year
and $69 million the second. It would link future
increases in t11e personal exemption to inflation.
"Right now we're favoring t11e Senate approach,
putting it in without the trigger,·· Johnson said.
Other delails have not been worked out.
Senate Finance Chainnan Roy Ray, R-Akron, said
tl1e ~'IX cut depended in part on how the committ.ee
decided to deal with the thornier issue of school
funding.

''When we finish the education section and U1e
higher education section that gives us the amount of
money we can spend. That will affect Ute dist1ibution
of lhe rennanent ~'IX cut," Ray said in an interview .
Conferees vo ted 4-2 to adopt Gov. George
Voinovich"s recommendation to freeze at current lev·
els U1e percentage share of stale tax receipts thai go
to local govemments and libraries.
Local governments wanled a hi gher percenlage
that would have given them an additional $200 million. 1
Rep . Wayne Jones, 0 -C uyahoga Falls and Sen.
Ben Espy, 0-Cniumbus, opposed Voinovich's prn-

fKlSal.

.

Junes said it sent t11e wrong message to local govemmenl .
"They had an agreement years ago ll1 at tJ1ey were
go!ng to get &lt;t cel'tain percentage of the budget. Now

it's been reduced. Local govcmmenls have a hurd en
on them and libraries and all those diHetcm funds ,"
Jo11es saic.J.

"We made a cc•mnitmenl 'md I think we _,lmuld
keep i~" he said.
in other action, the conference committee pumped
an extra $1 million into the Legislative Sctvicc Commission budget for expenses relateU. to convcnlion.s in

Cleveland of the Council of State Govcmmenl' an(l
tl•e National Gdvemors Association.
Sen. Richanl Finan, R-Cincinnati, said t11c money
. was tOr s~urity and meeting preparation costs.

"-It 's not dissimilar from what we did when we
brought the National Conference of Slate Legislatures into Cincinnati. It takes money to bring these
people in," Finan said.

Df,lring Meigs County visit

State t~easurer defends loan program

MARSHALL McCORKLE

DELMAN CHENEY

Soloa Consultant

S.lea Con1ulhlnt

:1.~;

\;

* * * * * * * * *.* * * * * *.* * * * * * * * * *\* * * * * * * * *
.

.

USED CAR &amp;TRUCK CELEBRATION

LIVE
REMOTE
~GiC
OF JULY~-

1 0 -1

SATURDAY, JUNE 24 - ll A.M. TIL 2-P.M.

*********** ************** *****

1995 LINCOLN MARK VIII

V-8, auto., NC; AM/FM cass., titt,
. cruise, all pow~r equip., sunroor~

1994 LINCOLN TOWN

1994 FORD TEMPO

APR.

•99%

Signature S9fies, V-8, auto.,
AMJFM cass., titt, cruise, all power

19 Mo:

New Cars &amp; Select Used Cars &amp; Trucks

Signature Series, V-6, auto ..
AM/FM cass., lilt, c;ruise,
Pac~'"ge . more.

"TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

199 Mo:

4

c~linder.

99Mo:

1993 FORD F150 4X2

cyl., automatic, air cor1dil
tioning, AM/FM cassette, long
more.

300, 6

--''

1993 FORD MUSTANG LX

1993 FORD TEMPO 4 DR.

Dr., 4 cylinder, air condrtioning,
AM/FM cassette, tilt. cruise, PS, PB,
PW, POL.
#956491

2

automatic, air condition-

ing, PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise.
· AM/FM cassette. more.
1955742

•

-

$159Mo:

1993 MERCURY TRACER

1992 MERCURY SABLE STATION WAGON
V-6, auto. air conditioning, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette,
PS, PB, PW, POL, clean, one owner.

Station Wagon, 4 cylinder, auto.,
air conditioning, PS, PB, AM/FM
cassette, luggage rack, more.
120570

24MO.

1992 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS
V-8, auto .. ,A/C, PS, PB, PW,
PWr. seat. tilt, cruise. AMI'F'-'
cassette.

V-6, auto., air cond., PS, PB, P
POL, tilt, cruise, power seat
AM/FM cassette.

etc .

$6,949
1991CADILLAC BROUGHAM

V-8, auto ., air cond., AM/FM cass.
tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr
seat. Only 34,000 miles.

$15,449
1991 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS
V-8, auto .. air cond. , PS, PB, PW
POL, Pwr. seat, tiH, cruise, AM/F
cassette.

$189Mo.'

1993 FORD MUSTANG LX

Convenible, ~ cyl., auto., air conditioning, AM/FM cassett~. tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PW POL.
#946921

-

1991 CHEV. CAMARO Z·28

V·B, auto., alr ·cond., PS, PB, pow
er door locks, mt, cruise, AM/F
cassette, more.

1993 CHO'.

TON CONVERSION VAN

1993 CHEV. %TON

1993 FORD LX

V-6, auto., air conditioning, AM/FM
cassette, tiK, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
POL, Pwr. seat, etc.
120830

24MO.

$239 Mo.'

1993 FORD TAURUS

V-6, auto , a11 cond., AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL,

4.3L 5 spd., air cond .. · PS, PB
AM/FM stereo, long bed, slidin
back glass, more.

$10,949

Pwr. seat, more.
#20790

24MO.

$239 Mo.'

• ALL PAYMENTS QUOTED ARE 24 MONTH RED CARPET
LEASE uTHE PLAN". PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON $2,000
DOWN PAYMENT AT TIME OF DEliVERY.
WARRANTY INCLUDED ON·ALL CARS.

1993 FORD F150 ·.

Lightning, 351, HD, auto., AC, tilt,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL, AMJFM
cassette, loaded.

$16,449
1991 CHEV. ASTRO

MARK Ill CGnvetslon, 4.3L, auto.
NC, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL

CD.

STATE TAXES NOT INCLUDED.

•

~

"Tiara", 350 V-8, auto .. air cond., AM/FM cass ., tilt,
cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL, much more .

$219Mo:·

1992 CHEV. CORSICA

V-6, auto., air cond., AM/FM ster
eo, PS, PB, PW, POL, @, ABS

$11,949
1992 FORD. T-BIRD

$199 Mo.'

-

••

cyl., auto., air cond., AM/F~U
cass., PS, PB, PW, Pow.
locks. tilt, more.
4

cass., tilt, cruise, PS, PB,
Pwr. seal.

UP TO 36 MONTHS

1993LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

1994 FORD ESCORT

4 cyt, auto., air i:ond.,

FINANCING

TREASURERS CHAT • State Treasurer J. Kenneth Black·
· well, left, and Meigs Country Treasurer Howard Frank took a
moment to converse Thursday morning during Blackwell's visit to
~Meigs County. Blackwell was in the county defending lhe Agrl·
Link Deposit program administered by his office. The program
provides low-interest loans Ia eligible farmers.

•

1993 CHEV. '/,TON VAN

Conversion, auto., air cond., PS,

PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette. more.

$13,949
1992 PONT. TRANSPORT

V-6, aula., air conditioning, AM/F
cassette, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW
POL

$9,949
1991 SUBARU GL

5 Door hatchback, 4X4, 4 cylinder

auto., air conditioning, AMJFM cas
sette, PS, PB .

· By JIM.,FREEMAN
Sentinef news staff
State Treasurer J. Kenneth
Blackwell visited two Meigs County farms thursday moming in an
effort to garner support for the
state's Agricultural-Linked Deposit
(Agri-Link) program, which provides low-interest loans to eligible
farmers.
Blackwell, a Republican, visited
the Letart Township farm of Rex
and Julia Thorn ton and Ty rone
Brinager and Sons Farm near
Reedsville in Olive Township.
Both farms receiv.e assist1ance
through the program.
1
At these stops, he defended the
Agri-Link program which is
adm inistered by his office.
"It is imperative to improve and
defend the program," he said,
explaining some of the program's
benefit~.

I

"It is fascinating to see young
fanners, on a family fann, and see-

may Stl"ll get

•
t
customer service cen er

Concerning the Meigs County January and mid·March to .apply '
visit. Blackwell said he wants to for an annual operaling lom1. •
know how (the Agri-Link program)
At that time, applicants should
affects real people and their work- indicate interest in receiv_ing a
places.
reduced rate through the Agri-Link
"We need to meet people and Deposit program . The maximum
get their reactions and recommenallowable loan is $100,000 per
dations," he added. "These .vis its , applicant.
are important because they give I
Applicalions are evaluate~ using
real life examples of how U1e pro- a number of factor s including the
gram can help."
need for a reduced intere st rate, calThe program allows Blackwell culated debliequity ratio m1d calcuto channel $100 million of the
lated interest/ope\ating expenses
stale"s investmenl portfolio into
percentage.
f)·
reduced-rate investments for the
A former Cincinnati mayor.
purpose of lowering loan rates to I Blackwell became stile 1rcasurcr in
eligible fanners.
1994 and currently serve s on the
In order Lo qualify, a farmer
National Comminee on Growth
must be headquartered in Ohio, and TaJ&lt; Refonn .
maintain 51 percent of all land or
In addition. he was accompalllcd
facilities for agricultural purposes
by county commissioners Robert
in Ohio, be organized for pro{it and
Hartenbach and Jilnet Howard
complete a three-page appilcation.
Tackett, county Treasurer Howard
Farmers should contact an office
Frank, Meigs County Republican
of the Farm Credit System or an
Cbainnan Gene Tripleu and county
Extension Agent Hal Knccn .
eligible lending institution between

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

REDA schedules
anouncement on
corporate air park

A ni·a jor announcement surrounding a proposed corporate air
park in the area will be made next
week, the director of U1e Regional
Economic Development Association said.
R. V. " Buddy" Graham told
more than 40 people at REDA's
annual pul)lic meeti.ng Thursday
details -will be outlined at 9 a.m .
Monday at the Doh Evans Cabin on ·
Hidden Valley Drive bet ween RodIJey and Bidwell.
REDA officials, along with U.S.
Rep. Frank A. Cremeans, R·Gal ·
lipolis, and the Gallia and Meigs
AMERICAN QUEEN • The American Queen, the largest
county commissioners will be on
steamboat ever to travel the Ohio River, is expected to pass
hand for the announcement , Grahmn said.
through the Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam at approximately 4: IS
p.m. Saturday, and the Racine Locks and Dam around 10:30 p.m..
Graham had initially plmmcd tu
The boat, which i• heading toward Pittsburgh to pick up passen·
outline details at the puhlic mect gers for its inaugural cruise to New Orlean.•, garnered national
ing, but decifled to reschedule U1e
publicity this week when it was freed from a sandbar on the Ohio
announcement for next week when
all public oftkials could attend. He
below Louisville, Ky. Four towboats pulled the $65 million sternwheeler off the har Wednesday. The American Queen is owned hy
declined 10 discuss specifics until
the Delta Queen Sleamhnat Co. The American Queen ~ill slow
ihen, only to add that ''some of the
things we'll get into" will conccm
down and pia,' its calliope in a salute lo the following cities: (All
times are local, approximate and subject to change: Updated times
the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport.
will be posted every six hours on a toll free number: 1-800-240In a reporl 10 REDA members ,
3711): Maysville, Ky., 8:30 p.m. Friday; Marietta, 8:15 a.m. Sun·
Oral1mn, who becmne lllC 2-yearday; Wheeling, W.Va., 8:40p.m. Sunday; Wellsburg, W.Va., 11:45 ~ld development oig.a nization 's
p:m. Sunday ·
clircclor in August 1994, said t~c
ain thrust nf REOA's efforts arc
Gr~nde
d' ected toward establishment of a
I U
· allia Coumy industrial park off
State Route 850 near Rodney.
'fhe project, which REDA rc surreclcd last year with the Galha
A House-Senate wmmittec County Chamber of Commerce,
The money restored. to U1e proposed s~1te budget by a legislative fonned to iron out differences over has received local funding C(1)ntnilconference commil1ce this week the biennial budget returned $2.0
will allow for ihe opening of an million to ODES TueS&lt;.Iay, but it
Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser· was more than $7 million less than
vices customer service center in . what Voinovich requested.
WASHINGTON (AP)- PresiThe governor asked for the
Rio Grande, a spokesperson for
dent Clinton says -Republicans
State Rep. John A . Carey Jr., R- money to replace federal funding abused the political process in
OBES received for its operations.
Weliston, said.
rejecting Henry Foster as surgeon
But the fundin!fis contingent on Fnilure to restore fundin£ would general, and hi s spokesman sug· final approval of the budget, which have killed plan s fm 1he Rio gests findmg a replacel'.'ent may
the spokesperson s&amp;id legislators Grande center and several others not be easy "if right-to-hfe is a lithope to have on Gov . George the agency plans to establish.
OBES Communications Direc· mus test.''
Voinovich's desk by July l.
But as the tumult settles from a
The elimination of funding for tor David Garick told the Jackson
·bruising
and ultimately futile battle
OBES by the Senate imperiled Journal-Herald in its Wednesdity
with
the
GOP-led Senate, White
plans to establish a cemer for Gal - edition he wa' conlident tlJC agenpress
secretary Mike
House
lia, Meigs and Jackson counties at cy will pro cee d wilh . the Rio
McCurry
says
!'resident
Clinton
Rio Grande, which ODES hopes to Grant.Je ct.mlcr. ·
may
give
Foster
a
new
chance
to
open by June 1997 _
Continued on page 3, .

Rl·o

ing, what a point or two off the
interest rate can allow them to do
- purchase additional equipment,
increase their profit margin·," he
illustrated.
·
. He went on to describe Agri·
Lmk as a partnershi_p between
fanners, bankers and the state.
"Banks are crucial to the program," Blackwell noted.
"The most frequent criticism by
legislators is th at many participating banks have looked ai the pro·
gram as a way of helping the big
fanning operations at the exclusion
of the smal l family fanns ," he said. '
"S.ome (small farming operations)
can't break into the program."
We need to promote and market
the Agri-Link program - to get
the word out. he said.
Racine banker Bill Nease said
the program hefps fanners in Meigs
County.
'
"The money is going to the right
people," he said. ·

mcnt.s from Gallia Counly an&lt;) Gal·
lipolis govemrnems, and -from Dob
Evans Hums Inc. REDA is cu n·enl ly tracking down state and federal
funding to develop the site.
Graham hailed the cooperation
between the city and coumy in pursuing the park, pari of lhe "solid
foundation" he said REOA has
·established in the past year.
He also cited the irnpor1m1ce of
working with both government
units to improve" key ingredient to

c.fevelopfficnt - ~ewer :-;ervice.
" I think the city is trying to
. grow; tllc county is trying to grow,
tmU witb that in mind ~c're lJying
10 get a handl e on the sewer issue,"
he said.

REOA has decided

10

mumw its

focu.s on atLracting mnnufacluring

jobs while concentrating on retention m1d expansion of existing husi·
ness. Graham said. In audition, tlw
gniup will work on infmstruclurc
improvement in th e area, with an
emphasis on turning U.S. 35 and

SOLID FOUNDATION- The last 10 nmnths have heen
spent hy the R~gional Econumic Dev~lopnlt'nt Asstlciatinn
building .a Hsnlid foundation," HEDA DiJ:"eCtur R.V. •'Ruddy"
Graham, at podium, told the organization's nu•mlwr&lt;o:hip during
its a!!nual meeting Thursday at lhe University uf Rio Grand e.
REDA Prt&gt;Sident Rohert Eastman listened at ri~:ht .

State Route )2 into major arteries

establishm ent of a low-interest loan

for southeastem ()hio.

prognun and

D()rg~Warncr

Auto-

Convincing the stale that :l2 moti ve's acquisition of the Fcdcr:tl
shonl&lt;l be pari of U1e proposed 1-74 Mogul plan t in Oailipjllis as oU1cr
Mid-Allanlic Corridor would aid in ac tivirjcs in lh~ p::uH year.
Working with Uw Ma.,on Counsp'urring highway development in
ty Development AuU1mity, Graham
West Virginia, Graham said .
..It doesn' t lake brain surge ry to said REOA is making strides with
realize that you can't have econom- development projects across th e
ic dcvclopmem wiU10ut good build- n vcr.
"Our Mason County members
ings and infrastructure," he noted.
In addilion lo the indu strial · have contributed heavily in wc»·kpark , Graham outlined REDA 's ing on regional issues, but without

inlra,rru.:turc; we're ham ,1nlllf!.".
he said .
Also al the mcc li ng. RIJ)A
Prcsidenl Robert EaSiman: pre"dent of the 10-store Ohio Vallcv
Supcnnarkct' Inc .. was honored by
the US. ~m:lll Bm.inc~:.; /\dmi'nts-

Lralion
w11h
ihc
Oh10
Entrcprcneunal S ucccs' Award Ior
1995 .
Ea~ lman wa" prl.'~cntctl the
award by Dougi:L&lt; Sweezy, an SDA

economic development

I

srcdal1~o.t .

r

Clinton blasts Republicans for rejecting Foster
tackle his No. 1 issue, teen pregnancies.
McCurry sa id Foster is a clear
choice Lo lead such a drive. And
Clinton, after the vote, said of the
Tennessee obstetrician 's long
career: "He didn ' t gel what he
deserved. but he is still deserving."
"He"s done som,ething about
teen pregnancy; he's tl!)ne something to convince. young people to
abstain froD\ sex;' Clinton said.
As he renews his search for a
nominee for surgeon general, Clio·

10n is also stri vi ng to poruay tb~
Republicans who detailed Foster's
nomination Thursday as the caplives of "e~tremisls who would do
anything to block a -woman's right
to choose.'·
Clinton said that when Republicans mustered enough Senate suppot1 to prevent a final vote on Foster's nomination , they "sent a
chilling message to the country"
aud "failed the fundamental test of
fairness ."

Speaking to reporters in E&lt;hson,
N.J :, before the firsl in a series of
fund-raising speeches, Clinton said
Foster's nomination failed ·'when a
"detennined miuon\V succumbed
t~ fK!Iitical pressure aild abused the
filibnster mle."
Sixty votes were needed to end
debate and bring the nomination to
a vote on its merits. The effort to
do that failed twice in two days, by
idenllcal 57-43 votes. The nomill3·
tion was shelved after the second
attempt.

I

,

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