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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Ohio Lottery

OUace
bound for
Portland

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Pick 3:
544

Pick 4:
4134
Super Lotto:
2-20.22-35-39-47
Kicker:
584130

Sports, Page 6

Low toDigbt Ill 601. PortiJ
cloudJ. Frlday,lbowen. Hlfllas
l•mld-IOL

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2 Sectlono, 14 Poges 35 cento

Vol. 46, NO. 43

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Gov. Voinovich will sign
new ~ state budget Friday

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FINGERPRINTING CHILDREN • Area
children were fingerprinted yesterday 111 the
Meigs County Library in Pomeroy by the Sher·
itT's department as part of a free child-safety

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program. 1be fingerprinls assist officers in find-'
ing children who disappear, Pictured is officer
Mony Wood. About 50 children participated.
(Photo by Melissa Ciavarella)

Supreme Court rules on
·key church-state issue
..
. I

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GROUND
HUCK

8

PRITO LAY
POTATOCH
BUY

GET

COOL WHIP
T.O PPING
BUYONEGET

LAY'S DR RUFFLESofiEGULAR, U.Q., IWICH OR UTE
14 OUNCE PACKAGE

funding for 01e student publication.
The Constitution's First Amendment bans an "establishment of
. religion" - source of the required
separation of church and state. But
Lawyers for the Christian stuit also guarantees the right to free
noted that a Muslim student
dents
speech.
·
group
received money for a magaThe religious publicalion c:c~e
zine
with
articles on l&amp;lamic docinvolves the University of Virtrine
.
University
officials said that
ginia· s req uirement that all full- ·
was
a
cultural,
not
religious, activitime students pay $14 per semester
into a student activities fund that ty.

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HARTLEY

•

MITCHELL

" IB

" "

A Middlepon woman, Lisa Mitchell, is one of two
people named to the board o( directors of City Ice &amp;
Fuel Company which employs 1nore than 285 people
in Ohio and West Virginia.
City Ice &amp; Fuel Company also announced today
!hat Art E. Hartley, Jr., a Point Pleasant residen~ bas
been elected as the company's president and chief
executive officer.
Mitcltell and Connie Bmwn of Point Pleasant join
directors Harley H. Hartley, An E. Hartley, Sr., Art
E. Hartley, Jr., Vitus Hartley and Gregory K. Hartley
on the firm' s· board.
Mitchell, employed by City Ice &amp; Fuel Company
for II years, bas been office manager and· will .
become vice president of accounting and assistant

~

..

Voinovich will sign the budget tax revenu es decline because of an
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov .
George Voinovicb said be is Friday, said Michael Dawson, press economic downturn.
' An additional $100 million was
extremely pleased with the record secretary.
put
in another reserve account in
the
governor's
office
Although
$33.8 billion budget that the Legiscase
the state loses money as a
would
not
discuss
potential
veto
lature sent to him. Voinovich will
result
of federal changes in welfare
,
targets,
Dawson
said:
"
There
are
sign it Friday, but may veto some
programs.
always
vetoes."
unspecified sections.
Legislators included a personal
Legislators contended the bud"We have come a long way
income
get
was
$33
.5
billion
because
that
tax cut worth about $70
since !he dark days and red ink of
million
in
its ftrst year.
1991 and 1992, and we have was the amount spent through !he
general revenue fund. But the bill
revemed lbe trend toward increased
"This is a family-friendly budspending growth during the auth.orized an extra $323 million of
1980's," Voinovich said in a news one-time spending for education get because we include a tax cu~ a
and human services purposes. That real tax cu~" said Senate Finance
release Wednesday.
·
He said.· the upcoming two-year would boost the overall total to Chainnan Roy Ray, R-Akron.
For a family of four , with two
spending pian, when combined $33 .8 billion, about $56 million
more than Voinovich recommendwage earners making $32,000 a
with the two budgets of his first
term in office, represented !he !()w- ed.
year, the cut would amount to a
House Finance Chairman savings of $23 the first year and
est rate of growth in stale spending
Thomas Johnson, R-New Concord,
another $22 the second year, the
in 40 years.
portrayed !he 1,600-page bill as a Ohio Deparunent of Taxation said.
The House and Senate completSen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus . .
ed work Wednesday on the budget conservative budget despite its size.
"
We
took
a
budget
that
was
a
said
Democrats would have written
that would increase state aid to
pretty
good
budget
when
we
.
a
different
budget if they were in
schools. provide a modest tax cut,
received
it
and
we
made
it
better,"
control to include more money for
and keep $900 million in reserve in
,schools.
the event of an economic downturn Johnson said.
The budget included a $1.1 bilor loss of federal welfare 'money .
lion
increase in spending for primaStill, Espy said Republicans had
Representatives voted 80-16 to
accept the spending plan· that a ry and secondary education over responded 10 some Democratic
current levels, ani) guaranteed e~ch needs.
joint conference committee pro"Ove r two-thirds of our conduced. Senators followed suit later state-assisted college and university
at least 3 percent more in instruc- cerns were mel by !he conference
when they voted 29C3 to accept the
tional subsidies.
committee. I did say they were me~
report.
Legislators placed $800 million I didn't say !hey were exceeded,"
The new stale fiscal year begins
into a rainy day fund in case future he said.
Saturday .

~ouse

enacts handgun
background checks .
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio camps and house arrest- to lirst- lies." said Rep. James Mason, R.
House has stiffened llle penalties time and nonviolent offenders Bexley.
House
passed
!he
.handgun
The
while
lengthening
sentences
for
for using a gun during a crime and
bill
96-2
over
the
objections
and
repeat
and
violent
criminals.
made il tougher to get a handgun
repeated
attem
pt&lt;
to
runend
by
gun
·
A
key
component
is
the
"
trulh
legally.
·
right'
advocate
Rep.
Ron
Hood,
Rin
se
ntencing"
provisio
n
that
In separate votes Tuesday, lawCanfield.
requires
criminals
to
serve
the
actu·
makers approved a major revision
The bill essentially put' into law
10. the stale's criminal sentencing al time imposed by the judge. One .
01c
system alre.1dy used by the state
the
ways
it
doe.&lt;
that
is
by
elimiof
system and created a system of
Bureau
of Criminal ldentilic,ation
nating
time
off
for
good
behavior.
background checks fnr handgun
and
Investigation
to comply with
"This
represents
a
landmark
buyers.
"lhe
federal
Brady
Bill . The law
to
Ohio·
s
criminal
code
and
change
The sentencing bill. which
requires
background
checks to
should
begin
nnw
to
restore
public
passed 91-1, is an attempt to ease
weed
out
felons
and
Olhcrs
. forbidconfidence
in
our
criminal'
justice
prison overcrowding by recomden
fmm
owning
handguns.
system
and
reduce
,Ote
mJXiety
fell
mending alternative sen tences such as community service, boot by victims of crinH! and their !'ami-

Flag issue faces struggle in Senate
WASHINGTON (AP)
Despite overwhelming support in
!he House, a constitutional amend·
ment to curtail flag desecration
faces a tough struggle in !he Senale. with one key Democrat
opposed and the leading sponsor
conceding the measure is shy of the
two-thirds majority needed for pas-

1.

thai amendment," which would
permit each srale to write

iL~

own

flag-protection laws. he said.
Two oth~r. lawmakers , Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrcy of Ncbra.&lt;ka
and Republican Sen. John Chafee
of Rhode !sl:md, circulated a letter
outlining th eir opposition. "We
would be carvi ng out an exception.
small
though it may 'be. to our con.sage.
•litutional
guarantee of .free
"Right now. we are very close
speech,'·
!hey
wro1e.
to !he 67 votes we need in !he SenIn
addition,
they •aid "commu~
ate," Sen. Orrin J-Iatch, R-Utah.
nity
opposition
and disdain" is
chairman of the Senate Judiciary
deterrent
enough
10 nag desecraComminee, said shortly after the
tion
.
and
only
seven
incidents· of
House approved the meaJ.~ure
flag
burning
have
occurred
in the
Wedncsd•y.
At the same time. Sen. Joseph· pa.~l year.
No date has been set for a SenBidcn of Delaware, the senior
Democrat on 01c commillee. said ate vote on the measure. which
he would oppose the measure as cleared the House on a lopsided
drafted. ''l'm not going to vote for ,vote of 312-120, 24 more than !he

two-thirds majority necessary.
The measure permits Congres.&lt;
U11d the stales to enact laws to prohibit flag desecmlion. Tbe bill is a
reaction to rece111 Supreme Court
ruling&gt; 01a1 !brew out such laws as
a violation of constitutional protections of free &gt;pccch.
·
A cheer went up from lawmakers on U1e House lloor &lt;L' llte measure climbed past the 290 votes
needed for passage. Spectators in
the gallery overlooking the chamber joined in the celebration,
although 01cy were swiftly silenced
by guards enforcing the rules.
While majority Republicans
supplied the impetus needed for
passage: the leadership seemed to
auach less irnpormnce· to Ote measure than to other key bill s that
have cleared this year.

Eastern board OKs personnel decisions

The Eastern Local Board of
uate of Point Pleasant High School, Mrs. Brown also
Education approved several permten&lt;.led Factor Training Center in Chickasha, Ok Ia. sonnel decisions at its regular
She and her husband, Michael, reside at Rt. I Point
meeting last week.
Pleasant and have two children, Jill. age 16, and
The district hired Nancy MorrisMichael (Andy), age I I.
sey to a one-year contract to teach
Mr. Hartley is a 19-year veteran of City Ice &amp;
high school English.
Fuel, and is a graduate of the Greenbrier Military
The board accepted !he resignaAcademy and Southeastern Business College. He is a
tion of biology teacher :md football
member of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation
coach David Barr. The board also
board. on the bmrd of directors of Greenbrier Milihired Casey Coffey on a suppletary Academy and the West Virginia ~troleum Marmental contract at the bead football
keters Association and serves on !he advisory board
coach. Coffey will lead the new
of Factor Computer Software System .
·
Occupational Work Adjustment
Hartley ·and his wife, Janet, attend Trinity United
program as this program's teacher.
Methodist Church in Poim Pleasant and have two
Sandy Needs will be imnsferred
children, An IU (Trace). age 20, and Brianne, age 16 . . from Chapter I teacher to third
City Ice ami Fuel Co. in West Virginia and Mason
grade teacher at Tuppers Plains
County E, Inc. in Ohio, a diversified petroleum prodElementary School.
ucts and convenience store operation, bas locations in
Ch ris Stout and Paul Brannon
Ohio at Mt. Orab, Seaman, Pebbles, Beaver, Jackson,
will both work as laborers for sumChillicothe, Circleville, Springfield, Wellston (Rt.
mer painting.
32) and Pomeroy. Its West Virginia locations include
The following supplemental
Huntington, Nitro, Charleston, Red House, Buffalo,
contracts were approved: Arch
Ripley, Big Otter, 1-79, New Haven, Mt Alto, RockRose, head track coach: and Paul
branch, Leon, Cottageville, Arnoldsburg , Mason,
Brannon, assistant volley~all
Millwood, Ravenswood and Point Plea."'lllt
coach.

She is a graduate of Meigs High School and
Southeastern Business College and auended Factor
Training Center at Chickasha, Okla. Mrs. Mitchell
and her husband, Randy, are the parents of two children, Breann.1, age 5 and Travis, age 2.
Connie Brown, !he other new director, has been
employed by City Ice &amp; Fuel Company for nine
years.·Sbe has been office manager for Mason County E, Inc., Gallipolis, and will become vic.e president
of convenience stores and assistant treasurer. A grad,,

ASSDRTlD VARIETIES
24 12·0UIICE CAliS

BROWN

City Ice &amp; Fuel Company promotes
three - Mitchell, Brown, and Hartley

secretary.

KRAFT
16 OUIICE PACIASE

University officials said the
magazine could not be funded
because it was a "religious activity." A federal judge and the 4th
U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals ruled
that the university w)IS'right.

I

••

COCA·COLA&amp;

lion requires the un iversily to har

supports student groups, activities
and publications .
In September 1990, Ronald
Rosenberger and other students
fuunded W'ide Awake Productions
to ..publish a magazine offering
.Christian viewpoints on various
topics. the group was not affiliated
with any religious institution . .
Wide Awake smid university
officials in July 199 I after beiRg
denied a $5,800 subsidy request to
pay the magazine's publishing
costs. 1l1e publication was di scontinued after four issues.

•

\\II Hh ,,.

'

interpret student publications "to
discern their underlying philosophic assumptions respecting religious
theory and belief.' '
''That course of action was a
denial of the right of free speech
and would risk fostering a perva. sive . bias or hostility to religion,
which would undermine the very
neutrality !he establishment clause
requires," Kennedy wrote.
Writing in dissent, .I ustice David
H. Souter said, "The court wday,
for the first time. approves direct
funding of core reli gious acli viii~
by an ann of the st.11e."
Souter contended the Constitu-

•

•

FRESH
LEAl CERTIFIED BEEF

,..

WASHINGTON (AP)- Tbe
.Supreme Court, in a key church·
state ruling, said a public university
wrongly refused to subsidize a student-run Christian magazine.
·By a 5-4 vote, the court rolell
tbat tbe University of Virginia
based its refusal on a misunder...standing Of the· constitutionally
required separation of church and
stale. The court also said !he university violated the free-speech
rights of the Christian students
denied funding.
In a separate cas.e, the court
ruled that !he state of Ohio should
not have sought to bar the Ku Klux.
Klan from displaying a Christian
cross in a public park adjacent to
the slate Capitol in Columbus during the 1993 Chrisunas season.
In the Virginia case. Justice
Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for the
court ''To obey !he establishm.cnl
clause. it was not necessary for the
university to deny eligibility to student publications because of !heir
viewpoint.' '
Kennedy said the university's
regulation required otTicials to

•

•

AMultimedia Inc. N_.par

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 29, 1995

Copyright 1995

••i'

The board approved the resignation of suhstitute t~acher Mary
Felts . Profess ional growth was
rei mburs ed for teachers Rita
Williams. Mike Doug Ia.&lt; and Scott
Wolfe.
Glenn Easterling will be hired
on a one-year contract as a full lime bu~ driver.

The board named Matt Michael
"' th e EMIS coordinator for the
diwicL
In other busines, , the board
learned that mx collections will be
about $1,000 lower Ibis year. since
AT&amp;T tclepbone lines have been
deconunissioned.
High School Principal Clayton
Butler told the board about' a new
high scbool schedule and the new
OW A and agricultural/vocational
classes .
Selected library books will be
thrown away, Minard said.
The board will continue student
accident insurance for the coming
year from Brogan-Warner lnsur-

ance of Pomeroy. The district doe.&lt;
not pay anylhing, but lm&lt; to alTer to
p;treuts for student atltletes.
Funds will deposited into the
bond retirement account at
BankOne of Athens, Minard said.
Bond indebtedness is about ~wo­
renths of a mill.
The board will 'eek quotes for
transronation and lunchroom ~up~
plies fur the 1995-96 school year.
Minard added.
The one-year requirement to
meet GAAP accounlmg procedure:;
with !he smte auditor's office was
· extended one year, he said .
The district also ren ewed its
members hip in beveral organizations including: the SEO-SERRC.
the ETSEO, m1d tbe OHSAA.
Attending were: Ray Karr, president: Jim Smith, vice president;
and members, Greg Bailey, Roger
Gaul and Mike Martin.
The next board meeting will be
held at 6:30p .m. July 18 at the
high M:hOOllibrary.

�Thuraday, June 29,1995
'

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt Street
Pomuoy. Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaager

MARGARET LEHEW
Coatroller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less dian 300
words long. All II'Uers are subject to editing and must be signed wid! name,
address and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

What they are saying in
other Ohio newspapers

••
Pllgl2

The Powell
This idea of Colin Powell Cor
president is getting serious, and
very interesting. On Friday, Juae
23, "Nigbtline" delivered an
IDiprecedellled balf-bour valentlJie.
Correspondent Jeff Gl-eeruield said
Powell is "probably tbe single
most compelling speaker in tbe
United States today." He noted
that "tlle message 118of Powell's
speecb 3/8 absolutely resonates
witb everyone from hmer-c.ity
black ldds to Midwest conservative
religious white folks, and the mes.
sage is a blend of sacrifice, hard
work, pride, bumor. inspiration,
love of country, 'we're all one family ....' It's a brilliant political message." Yes it is. It's a Values candidacy, tbe best kind.
I bave my own story. A few
weeks ago in Dayton, I conducted a
focus group with pollster Fred
Steeper. He asked the participants
who they would like to see elected
presiden~ mentioning a lis~ including Bill Clinton. Almost as a single

voice, tbe whole table said: "Pow-

ell!"
The Powell Potential is serious
because some of the arguments

Sen Wattenberg

-.

against it are not. It's said that third
party or independent candidacies
are unusual and must be taken with
a grain of salt. It's said it's very
hard 10 get a new party or a new
candidate •qualified on SO state ballots. It's said, "Sure, he's popular
now, but wait until he has to take
positions." It's said that voo:rs flee
from third party candidaleS as Election Day nears because they come
to believe that "be can't win," and
tben choose between those who
can.
Third party candidates are not
unusual. In this century they have
almost been a commonpll\ce,
including Theodore Roosevelt
(1912), Robert LaFollette (1924),

Henry Wallace ancl Strom Thur- of "outsidtr," and might have di£.
mond (1948). George Wallace ficully winnin~ primaries from t
•
(1968), John Anderson (1980), and quite CODsei'VIIltve electonllc.)
Don't believe that a thinl party
Ross Perot (1992).
It's still16 months until tbe gen- Cllldidate can't win. A Jooe 1~
eral election . There is plenty of Gallup poU lbowed Perot with 39
time to get on die ballot. Ross Perot percen~ Bush with 31 perceDI. ~
didn't even say be was interested in Clinton with 25 percent, making
running until just nine months Clinton tbe ' third man out. In a
recent ABC poll, Powell beat Clini
before tbe election.
Don't buy tile idea that Powell ton bead-to-bead, 47 pc:rcent-39
would bave to take specific posi- percent. ·In July of 1992 Perot
tions. A candidate wbo can talk dropped out of the ~ace. Then be&lt;
credibly about "sacrifice, bard . re-entered. In tile last pre-election
work, pride, bumor, inspiration, poll Perot was naming at about 15
love of country ..." doesn't have to percent. Experts expected shrink•
get specific. Clinlon ran by sayin~ age as voters said, "He can't win.' \
He got 19 percent. One .third party
he'd "end welfare as we know iL'
candidate
bas won: Abraham Lin•
Is that specific'/ And Perot's best
colo,
with
40
percent of the VOle.' :
thought was, roughly, "there are
·
Powell
bas
one obvious coni
lots of good ideas around Washingsliruency,
and
a
couple not so obviton. I can sort / em out without
ous.
He
Is
black,
and be would get
being pushed by special interest
some
of
the
black
voo:. Powell is
groups." Running as an independent, Powell could accompl~~h thai the child of Jamaican immigrants
better than Perot. (If be runs as a and could become the darling of
Republican, be may lose the mande many recent newcomers, some 17
million of whom have arrived in .
America since 1970.'He is a retired
four-star general, and chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the
THIS DISC IS FILLED
Gulf War. He served 1wo tours in·
Viemam. Some years ago pollste(.
WITH
and social philosopher Daniel.
Yankelovich described America"
attitudes toward Vietnam as an,
"undigested lump." If you think
it's since been digested, read
Roben Timburg's truly wonderful
sruNT To MANIPUI.m
new book, "The Nightingale's
THEEGOOF
Song." When you're .linished you:
A SUPERSTAR ...
won't doubt that tbere is still smol·
dering anger among many of the 9
million Americans who served in
tbe military during Vietnam, veterans who. I bet, would disproporIS IT AVAII.ABI..&amp;
tionately llock to Powell's b.~nner. ·•
Ben Wall~nberg, a senior felON VIDEQ llX)?!
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is _the host of the weekly.
public television progr~m;
"Think Tank." ·
(For Information on how to" .
cummunicale electronically wilh
Ibis rolumnist and others, contact America Online hy calling 1-·
800-827-6JM, ext 8317.)

CONTROVERSIAL

LYRICS AND IS
.NOTHING MORE THAN
APR0M'I10NAL

Clinton is Democrats' one hope in '96

It's absolutely ridiculous for
Democrats to charge, as some
bave, that President Clinton has left
the pQCty. Instead of ragging on
him, they ougbt to hope that his
tum back to the center is for real.
Kent-Ravenna Record-Courier, June 23
The party's only hope for suc: The U.S. S'enate failed to bring the nomination of Dr. Henry Foster for
cess in 1996 is that Clinton can run
· '.
,
. a strong race, and the only way that ·
surgeon general to a vole.
, Once again, the pol.itical process turned its wheels. and justice was can happen is for him to appeal to
snared in the ensuing melee. Not even having the choice to vote for or
the centrist majority of Ute country,
~gainst Foster is an inexcusable move tbat is reprehensible.
which clearly wants movement
- The Christian Coalition and the National Right To Life Committee toward a balanced budget, govern·
sent lellers to the senators, urging thein to keep Foster's nomination from
ment refonn. and an end to social
ever reaching a final vote. Once again, special interest groups bave dictatchaos.
ed to the govenunent how the nation should be run.
The o(d-tinie liberal Democratic
What's most disturbing about Ute Senate refusing to even vote for Fosagenda has been repeatedly rejectter is that these are the elected officials we expect to uphold the law to the ed in presidential elections letter. Those in the Senate had the right and ability to vote but decided to
remember George McGovern, Walignore that right. That doesn't sound very democratic.
ter Mondale and Michael Dukakis?
- and last year it was decisively·
rejected in congressional elections,
The (Youngstown) Vlridicalor, June 12
as well.
Just as the fir.;t step in the treabnent of alcoholism is an admission that
In particular, the Jesse Jackson
a drinking problem exists, the first step toward ending racism in this counagenda of huge government, higher
try is for people of goodwill to unequivocally acknowledge its presence.
tax~ s. more lavish welfare , and
And that's exactly What the Southern Baptist Convention, which repre - preferences for minorities is a total
sents the Mlion's largest Protestant denomination, did.
loser - politically and socially .
The convention made a pledge on behalf of its 15.6 million members Tite more congressional DemocraL'
10 tear down the barriers that still separate the races today.
join Jackson in grousing at Clinton,
The action could not have come at a beller time.
the more associated they seem with
With raee relations, especially among whites and blacks, being severeJackson's ideology.
.
ly tested into today's highly charged political climate and with various
Jackson has every right to argue
for what he believes in, even to the
social programs that have improved the lives of the downtrodden under
extent of threatening to run ror
assault in Ute Republican-controlled Congress, the pledge from the Southpresident, but if he actually runs as
em Daptist convention is much-needed balm.
an independent it would be a disaster for the Democratic Party and for
Jackson's African-American constituency.
Jackson could pull significant
numbers of blacks away from ClinBy The Associated Press
·
ton and ensure a Republican ' victoToday is Thu..spay, June 29, the !80th day of 1995. There are 185 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlighl in History:
On June 29, 1767., the British Parliament arproved the Townshend
Revenue Acts, which imposed import duties on glass, lead, paint, paper
and tea shipped to America. Colonists bitterly protested the Acts, wbich
were repealed in 1770.
·

Today in -history

ry . Worse. he would isolate
African-Americans from both
political parties, when what they
really need is influence in both. .

Morton Kondracke
Liberals, including Jackson,
accuse Clint.on of being "Republican-lite" and a creature o( the
Democratic Leai:lersbip Council. In
rae~ he's a hybrid - part liberal,
pmt "new Democrat" -but be's
hardly a "Republican," as White
House aides say he will show in
speeches and veto messages to
come.
·'
During Clinton's first two years
in office, his most significant
accomplishments - deficit reduction and NAFI'A - were departures from liberal dogma.
He would have been wise to ·
have departed even more by pushing welfare reform and even
tougher anti-crime legislation than
he did in 1994, and to have coolin·
ued with delicit-cutling in the budget he submitted this February,
Clinton's single worst political ·
blunder - arguably, a prime cause
of the Democratic defeat in 1994
- was pushing a health care plan
that wa.~ expensive, bureaucratic,
and heavy on government regulation, practically a caricature of lib·
era! orthodoxy.
But facing re-election, aides say,
Clinton has decided to tilt back
toward the center . Among his
advisers, the influence or liberals
like James Carville and George
S tephanopoulos bas declined and

.

·.

lhat of moderates like political con- it~ markets. When he gets around.
sultant Dick Morris, fonner Con- to it, be will defend the core ideas·
necticut gubernatorial candidate behind affinnalive action.
Aides say he will"also use hill'
Bill Curry, and chief speech Writer
veto to defend education and train:~
Don Baer is ascendant.
Aides say that Clinton's deci- ing programs. to block tax cuts.
sion to· present a new budget .with skewed to the rich, and to prevent
Medi.care cuts was nellCssary to repeal of a ban on assault weapons;·
Of course, Clinton would help
"buy a place at tbe table" in negotiations with Republicans and himself enormously by clearly .
"give him a place to stand" as jus- enunciating where he is headed and
what lines he plans to draw. At the
tilication for vetoes.
moment,
both Democrats and
Clinton enraged congressional
Republicans
believe be stands foG
Democrats who thought they could
:
prevail simply by standing by as notbing and cmt be "rolled."
Clinton
needs
to
make
more
Republican budget-cutter&amp; either
failed to deliver on their promises speeches like the one he delivered
or otiended various in1erest groups, recendy at his campaign fund-rais·
ing kickoff in New Jersey, drawing
chiefly seniors.
Hut, as White House spokesman a distinction between Republicans,
"who believe that all of the probMike McCurry puts i~ "The presidency is more than the aggregate of lems of America are personal and
'interests represented by congres- cultll{lll" and that government cau
sional Democrats.''
do nothing, and Democrats, who
Other aides say that Clinton per- · think that some problems are als.l.l
ceived voters as fed up witb parti- ·"economic and social" and tha,t
san combat and feared they would
government needs to fonn partner·
be deeply offended by a political ships to solve them.
.•
"train wreck" shutting down the
Assuming that Clinton does take_
federal govenunentthis fall for rea- clear stands, though, congressional
sons that would seem devoid of Democrats ought to stop dreaming
principle. .
up phantom opposition candida;
They say tbat Clinton was also c1es. No Democrat of ronsequenec~
affected by public reaction to the is likely to run against Clinton, and
Oklahoma City bombing and his
they all know it.
response to it, further demonstratFor better or worse, the Demo:
ing tbat the nation craves unity and cratic Party is going into battle in.
leadership rising above pure parti1996 with Clinton in the lead. 1be·
sanship.
party would be best off to folloW.
him.
·..
At the same time, however,
Clinton remains a Democrat. He
(Morlon Kondracke is execufought for Henry Foster's ~mina­ tive editor of Roll Call, the news~
paper of Capilol Hill.)
.
tion as surgeon general. He is risk·
ing a trade war with Japan t.o open

Price-low list can yield nice finds

IC:)

SO~E

MOYlE

•... A DASH OF THIS AND A PINCH OF
THAT, AND - 0000! ITS SO GOOD!" .

Ever wonder where fund managers look to find the stocks they
put in their portfolios1 One place is
the 52-week price-low list
Financial newspapers like the
Wall Street Journal and Investor's
. Business Daily list the names of
common stocks tlmt have reached
their new 52-week price lows on a
regular basis. On any given day
you can find anywhere from one or
two company names listed to a
dozen or more depending upon
markel conditions.
Two portfolio managers who
loo)&gt; to tbe price-low listings for
invesunent opponunities are Douglas Johnson of Smith Barney's
Managed Growth Fund, a. lirand
new fund thai will be open to
, investors within the next few
weeks, and Robert Perkins, port(olio manager of the Omni Investment Fund. Perkins has held that
position since the fund's inception
a decade ago.
Why do they tum to the pricelow list for tbeir stock invesunent
ideas?
"I believe that over a two- or
three-year time horizon virtually
every company shows up on that
list," said Johnson, who built his
reputation~ a top-pe~orming fund
manager while managtng tile Safe- ~

I

because the retail environment bas
changed over the last couple of
years.
"There are too many stores,
people are shopping differently and
when there's a lot .o f collfusion
Dian Vujovich
tbat's usually when you get the best
tbe market's expectaJions for com- prices on your stocks," Johnson
panics that have hit their recent said.
price lows aren't as great as for tbe
Perkins likes the retail industry,
high-flying stocks, and tbat these too. "We have been buying what'!
companies also offer some down- call consumer cyclicals. Namely
side protection.
Spiegel, Fingerhut and Ross.
' 'Th ere aren ' t many guarantees stores."
~
1 can make about the investment·
He said Spiegel is a great exambusiness, but 1 can guarantee you ple of a stock that the market paid
are going to have bad markets," he too much for when it was .selling in
said. "My approach ·is to buy a the mid-$20 range. However, when
good rompany that's already down that stock got down to $9 and $10,
in price. When you enter a bad he figured the market wasn't paymarket, those companies, I think, ing en011gh for it.
will outperform the companies
But figuring out which compawhere people have the big profits nies are good buys and which ones
in tllem."
are not/isn't as easy as these two
While Johnson isn'ttalking pro» make it appear. Once you
about tbe stocks that he plans on weed out the good companies from
putting into his Managed Growth the bad, then romes the question of
Fund just yet, two industries in timing. ·
which he currently sees some
"One of the risks you always
investment opportunities are retail
n,m when you start buying off the
and trucking.
new low list is a lot of times you're
He sees retail as one of the most early," Perkins said.
out-of-favor industries right now
Congoleum, the soft floor covbecause of co ncerns about how
ering manufacrurer, is an example
strong the economy will be. and
of a rompany thal was acquired for
co Equity Fund. ''Very few compames keep on going up forever."
Johnson uses Utese lists because
he likes to find good deals. He ~d

storm

conditim•

MICH.

potential_~----~

The Cindnnali Enquirer, June 26
If you believe in public education, bul also believe it can do better:
Study up on charter schools.
An idea taking bold across the nation gives individuals and groups the
authority and money to create and run custom-tailored public schools.
Parents get more choices, teachers get more freedom from unions and regulations, and taxpayerS get more accountability.
.
. House Speaker JoAnn Davidson said the final state budget may
· include bills that allow charter schools and a limited school-voucher
experiment suggested by Gov. George Voinovich.
Ohio's proposed law would allow teachers, parents or g.roups to establish community-run schools witb permission and sponsorship of tbe local
'school board, state school board or a seven-member commission to be
created. ·
Such schools would receive operating money equal to the statewide
per-pupil amoun~ adjusted to cowtty costs.
Charter schools are another step in tbe education revolution to emphasize who is served (students, parents, taxpayers) ratber than who provides
the service (the bureaucracy).
Ohio should give them a chance.

Berry's World

Break seen in

OHIO Weathe1

Thuraday,June29,1115

By Tbe Associated Press
Excetpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest.

Akron Beacon Journal, June25
: Dr. Henry ,Fosler won't be the next U.S. surgeon general. Twice last
week, tbe Senale fell three votes shy of cutting off a Republican filibuster
and sending the nomination 011 to a confirmation vote.
The derailment (If the Foster nomiruuion over the single issue of abortion, disregarding all other qualifications and contributions of a candidate,
shows the constraini11g effect the highly politicized issue of abortion
could impose on tbe selection of nominees for public office.
: Foster's case shows bow limiting it would be if it becomes standard
practice to stifle a nomination because a candidate for surgeon general has
perfonned or holds a view on a legal medical procedure that is unacceptable to some opportunistic politicians.

•

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Omni's portfolio and has yet to ·
perform as hoped. Perkins said the :
fund has owned that stock for three
or four months and has been disap- ·
pointed in the earnings. But his ·
plans are to slick by it because he :
thinks eventually tbe earnings will ;
come tbrougb.
The. price-low stock picker is :
often referred toa.~ a "value" or a :
"contrarian" investor, but there is ·
more to this management style than :
bargain-basement prices.
.
"Whether you're a value or a ·.
growth investor, I think you should :
always measure your down-side ;
risk before you really try and ascer- •
tain your up-side potential," says :
Perkins. "And it's rather obvious '
tbat a stock on its low probably has :
less risk 01311 a stock on its high - :
if the company is teal, has staying •
power and whatever problem the :
market perceives is a temporary :
one.''
'
Dian Vujovlch is the aulhor of :
"Stralghl Talk About Mulual ;
Funds," which is published by •
McGraw Hill. Send questions to ;
,
her In care of lhls newspaper.
(For information on how to •
communicate electronically with :
this columnist and others1 con, :
tact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

IToledo!tw I

patter~

By ne "-lated Press
It's go11en to be a familiar pattern in Ohio: Sunny io the mommas. stormy in the aftemqons and
evCIIings. But soon tbe pattern will
be all sunny.
After another round of storms
tonight and lingering showers in
some areas on Friday, the unsettled
weather should end for awhile,
forecasters said. ·
The National Weather Service
predicted dry and cooler conditions
for the weekend. Highs will be
mostly in the 70s Saturday and
Sunday.
Warmer temperatures will return
on Monday, the forecasters said,
but no rain is in sight.
The record-high temperature for

•lcorumbus!es• I

this date at tbe Columbus weather
station was I 00 degrees in 1934
wbile the record low was 48 in
1923. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04
p.m . and sunrise Friday at 6:06
a.m. .
&lt;
Across the nallon
Strong storms were moving
through central Texas this morning,
dumping up to 4 inches of rain an
hour in several areas and prompting
l1asb flood warnings.
Scattered storms were expected
to continue today throughout the
eastern half of the country. A weak
storm front moving through the
Plains threatened to dump up to
two inches of rain in some areas,
which cOuld aggravate already
existing flood problems.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

...---Local briefs-Three begin prison sentences
Three men were transported Wednesday 10 tbe Orient Reception
Center to begin serving sentences oo tWo counts of brealting and
entering.
Robert "Pee Wee" Riffle, Sard Williams and Kenny White,
Reedsville, were ~ntenced in tbe Meigs County Court of Coounon
Pleas.1bey face two 18-month terms to be served alllseculively.
1bey broke into two cabins in the Reedsville area. said Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.

Man cited in accident
Only minor injuries were reported following a twooQlr collision
on Third Street (state Route 124) in Racine Wednesday morning.
· Kevin Lee Layne, 22, Racine, was eastbound on Third Street
wbelt he went left of center in a curve, striking a westbound car
driven by Clifford H. Roush ,/ 72, also of Racine. according to a
Meigs County Sherifl's Deparunent repon.
Layne s~stained minor visible injuries while Roush received no
visible injuries, the report staled. Layne's 1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass
and Roush's 1991 Chevrolet stationwagon sustained beavy and disabling damage and were towed from the scene.
Layne was cited by deputies for driving left of center.

Woodland Centers votes to ~Pomeroy Court newsfollowing cases were heard $65 for speed; Nelson Mornson,
the Pomeroy Mayor's Court of Middleport, $65 for speed; Ivan
continue Head Start support inJohnTbe
Groseclose, Missouri, $63 for failBlaettnar.

-----Weather----tered showers and thunderstonns.
South-Central Ohio
Today...Partly cloudy with scat-' Higb near 85. Chance of rain 50
tefed showers and thunder- percent
$torms...Some storms may be Extended forecast
severe. High around 85. South · Saturday ... Chance of showers
winds around 10 mph. Chance of · and thunderstorms sotJtheast. Otherwise fair. Highs 75 to 80. Lows
fain is 50 pen:ent.
; Tonight ... Variably cloudy with in the 60s.
Sunday .. .Fair. Low in the upper
scattered showers and thunder. stonits. Low 65 to 70. South winds SOs to the mid 60s. Highs in the
l!found 10 mph. Chance of rain is 70s.
Monday ...Dry. Highs around 80.
50 percent.
·. Friday ... Partly cloudy with scat- Lows in the upper 50s.

Deaths~-­
Viola A. McCullough

--Area

:· Mrs. Viola Allensworth McCullough, 86, formerly of Middlepo~ died
Wednesday, Jooe 28, 1995 in Austin, Tex.
· Mrs. McCullough is survived by a son, Stephen, with whom she made
her borne; a grandson, Mark McCullough of Austin, and brother, Raymond (Cub) Allensworth of Qroveport.
, She was preceded in death by her parents Harvey and Ernaline
Allensworth who resided in Middlepon, five brothers and a sister.
Services and cremation will bebeld in Austin on Friday, June 30.

OVP staff report
Woodland Centers will sponsor
the Gallia-Meigs Head Start Program until another grantee agency
can be found.
1be center's board of directors
voted Wednesday night to maintain
the program, said chairman Johnnie
. Russell of Cheshire.
• Last month, the board decided
to end its sponsorship of the program . In addition, the board
announced that some Woodland
Center.; employees may be laid off.
"Ther~ will be no layoffs, no '
terminations," Russell said:
Head Start is a federal program
designed to give at-risk children an
opponunity for preschool training
including educational and social
skills. According to current federal
program guidelines, local Head
Start programs are administered
through a grantee agency which

a

handles the money for tbe program.
Head Stan officials we{e concerned the program would be
delayed starting in the fall due to
having to find a new sponsor.
"The should not sL111 late," Russell ~aid. "As · far as we're concerned, they can continue to do
things like they did la.~l year."
Woodland Centers' financial situation has improvetl, Russell said,
adding that the agency llnished tbe
month of May in Ute black from a
financial standpoint.
Accounts payable has been
cleared. up and the cr.edil line
expanded, he said.
"We're in•beuer financial condition," he added.
Russell said the board plans to
begin interviewing applicnnts for n
new executive director with the
decision to be made by July 8.
"We have plenty of local' applicants," Russell said.

Fined were:
Jason Bush, Letart, W.Va., $63
plus costs for traflic light violation;
Jason Ryan. Pomeroy, $213 plus
costs for assault: Douglas Mowery,
Pomeroy, $88 plus costs for open
container, $113 plus costs for public intoxication: Tony Little, Middlepo~ $63 plus costs for failure to
comply; Robert M. Haley ,
Pomeroy, $83 plu s · costs for
expired tags, $43 plu s costs for
failure to mainlain assured clear

disLmce; and Thomas Miller. Lan·
caster, $163 plus cosl~ for reckless
operation.
·
Forfeited were:
William Kerscher , Simpsonville, S.C. , $65 for speed; David
Aeby, Charlotte, N.C .. $71 for
speed; Nancy Ubell, Charlone,
N.C., $66 for speed; Sheri Halley,
Gallipolis, $69 for speed: Laura
Horsley, Worthington, $69 for
speed; David Edmonds, Pomeroy,

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

Units of the Meigs County Roush and Kevin Lane, refused
Emergency Medical Service logged . treatment .
seven calls for assistance Wednesday including two transfer calls.
Units responding included:
CQESTER VFD
'
5:16a.m.,
Pine
Grove
Road.
Funeral services were held for Bill Snow, 68, of S!Jade Sunday al
structure fire at John Ridenour resiHughes-Blower Funeral Home in Athens, with the Rev. Denver Dodrill
Two Pomeroy-area men pleaded
dence.
officiating. He was buried in Burson Cemetery, Shade.
guilty Wednesday to the June 19
MIDDLEPORT
Mr. Snow died unexpectedly at his home Thursday, June 22, 1995.
burglary of the Court Street Grill in
9:02 a.nl., Overbrook Nursing Pomeroy.
Son of tbe late Carl and Elfie Maxwell Snow, be was born in Athens
Center, Leroy Miller, treated at the
Couniy, graduated frpm · Shade High School, was a former einployee of
Chad Speakman, 19, Pleasant
scene;
Abex in Athens and retired frbm Athens Mold and Machine.
Ridge Road, and "Erik Paxton, 18,
4:28 p.m.. volunteer flre depart· Gold Ridge Road , each pleaded
'· He raised Belgian horses and wail a member of the Appalachian Draft
ment to sL~Ie Route 554 in Gallia guilty before Judge Robert Buck in
Hotse and Mule Association. He was also a member of Athens Elks and
was a Navy veteran of World War D. He attended Kenny Memorial Wes- County, auto lire.
the Meigs County Common Pleas
POMEROY .
Coun to a felony charge of break.Jeyan Church, Athens.
2:51 p.m., Pine Grove Rond, ing and entering.
. i · He is survived by his wife, Betty Ashley Moore Snow; daughter Diana
Of Athens County; a son and daughter-in-law, Tim and Chris Moore or ·Glen Bissell, treated at the scene.
The two were sente11ced to 18
RACINE
Shade; a son Jay Moore of Shade; -two grandchildren; a sisler and brothermonths in prison which will bC sus8:12a.m., volunteer lire depart· pended if they successfully comIn-law, Aorence and Lowell Ashcraft of Albany; two brothers and sislers·
in-law, Carl Lee and Norma Snow of Athens and Bob and Joan Snow or . ment and squads to Third Street, plete the Southeastern Probation
motor-vehicle accident, Clifford Treatment Alternatives program in
Santa Maria, Calif.; and two sister.;-in-law, Jo Snow of Amesville and
Mary Snow of Athens. ·
·
. Nelsonville . In addition , the two
• Besides his parents, be was preceded in death by two brothers,
must pay restilution 10 th e Court
~lare~e and Marvin Snow; and 11 sisler-in-law, Dorothy McG~ffin,
Street Grill.
Am Ele Power ..............................35 _ Three juveniles also pleaded
Akzo .........,.............................. 59 3/4 guilty to tbeir involvement in the
Ashland 011 ........ ..................,'.35 1/4 burglary and will each serve a sixAT&amp;T............................................SJ
month sentence at the state youth
to Wednesday due to the holiday.
Benefit to be held
Bank
One
...............................
..3llll
center
in Circleville, records show.
' A benefit cbicken and dumpling
Bob Evans ............................... lO 3/8
dinner will be held for the SpauldMI. Olive speaker announced
Champion Jnd ........................lllll
COLONY THEATRE
ihg Family victims of the Mother's
Darren Smith of Gilben, W. Va.
Charming Shop ........................4 718
f&gt;:iy flood, Friday from 11 a.m. to
will be the speaker at the Mount
TONIGHT
City Holdlng ........................... 26 3/4
DENZEL WASHINGTON ,
· 6:30p.m. at the Rutland Church of Olive Community Church, Sunday,
Federal Mogul .................. ,..... l7 3/8
GENE HACKMAN
Good ye11r T&amp; R....... ...... ......... 41 Ill
(lod. Dinner charge is $5. Carryout
7 p.m. The Rev. Lawrence Bush
K·mart
....................................
t4
Ill
IN
.,l,;ill be available, and delivery will invites the pu_blic.
Lands
End
........................
:
.....
14
718
CRIMSON
TIDE , R
lie made in Middleport, Pomeroy,
Llmflcd
Inc
....................
.........
ll
1/4
STARTING
FRIDAY
Smorgasbord planned
and Rutland on more than five dinMultimedia Inc ......... :............39 Ill
CASPERPG
A smorgasbord will be held
qers.
PL'Oplc's ........................................23
,.
ONE
EVENING
SHOW 7:30
Sunday at tile Lottridge CommuniOhio Valley Bank ..................,.......34
44EHl923
ty Center, noon to I :30 p.m .
Eastern volleyball meets .
One Valley ............................. ..30 518
:· Girls between seventh and 12 Adults, $5 .50; children under 12,
Rockwell ................. .. :............ 45 518
grades interested in joining the $2.50.
Rohblns IlL Myers ................... 26 1/4
Royal Dutch.......................... lll 3/4
!;:astern High School volleyball
Shoney's lnc ........................... ll 3/4
team must attend only one of the FOOd drive set
Star Bank ............................... 45 518
· The Rutland Pantbers 4-H Club
following meeting times at the high
Wenlly lnt'l............................ 181/4
will have a canned food drive in
~hool: 10 a.m. or 6:30p.m. July 6,
Worthington
lnd.................... lO Ill
10 a.m. or 6:30 p.m. July 13. For Ute viUage of Rutland July 8, start;
-*-*demils, call Dawn Jackson at 667- ing at 9 a.m. The canned fllod will
Siock reports arc the 10:3U a.m.
be delivered to the Rutland Church
6530 or Paul Braimon at 378-6161.
quotes provided by Advcst u
of God for its food pantry to be
Gallipolis. ·
.
Trash pickup changod
· used for needy Meigs .Countians.
Trash pickup dates in Racine Questions co nc erning the food
have been changed from Tuesday drive may be directed to Kimberly
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
Willford, 742-2103

announcements

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June ,28 discharges · Jeremiah
Brofford, Violet Machir, Rosalie
Bush, Mrs. Mikel Myers and son,
Paulene Spencer and Michael
Voreb.
June l8 births - Mr. and Mrs.
James Fish. a daughter, of Rutland
and Mr. and Mr.;. Keith Gilliland, a
son, of Jackson.
Printed wllh perml~slon.

QUALITY
THAT ENDURES

Stocks

~Meigs

Hospital news

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of all:

Two sentenced
in burglary

Bill Snow

ure to yield;
Jason Ryan . Pomeroy, $45 for
failure to appear: Toni Andrew,
Pomeroy, $45 for failure to appear:
Jerry Haning, Bidwell, $83 for failure to comply; Hollie Green,
Pomeroy, $63 for improper backing; Kenneth Swartz, Pomeroy, $63
for failure to maintain assured clear
distance; Robert Dickens,
Pomeroy, $45 for seat belt; and
Eddie Patrick, Pomeroy, $83 for
two comus of disorder I y manner.

POCRHONTAI

:20 , 9:00 WLY ...,., &amp;.IIT/!Uf . l;)() l:JO {GI

BRTMRN fOREUIR
..-:! PU$11! NO wc..&lt;of; ~

:00, 9: 30 OULT MI'.SNrft!.UI . 1 : 00, l ; 10 IR:I]I

OC&gt;NWF~~!~~

I

.I

:2'0, 9:20 DI\ILY ffltr . SNr/IDI. I: 1'0, l: 20 (PCI ))

THE BRIDGE! Of MRDIION CO .
I

I

NIHU~U NOIAIIIIAII'f......-r

7:00,9: lll DMla ""' .SAT/914. 1100, J: 30 CPGlJt

t20,~:zo

1».1t.r

~1!1!. 1: 20, ): 20 lPG~

BRRUEHERRT

NO ... uu

...:&gt;....,.....,.._,.

1: 30 DU1.1' .-m8S SM'JIUI . l ::JO 1111

DIE HftftO WITH R U[N6lRNC[

I

J«l,USU Oo:Ja..•c.uo-1

tJ :00, 9 : ll'l

~y

lllrf.SNI'IU . l:OO,J : JO \It

COitJitG SOOtll IUC'KARO GlUt!! .. SBAJI COI'I"P:Y
"fliiST IUtHI HT"

GIFT CERT1ACATIES AVAIL.ABLE1

ln

J

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

Meigs County

155 Main St.

Jay

&amp;

Joe Moore, Managers
388-8603

.

The Daily Sentinel
(US"'! ltJ.'lfiO)
Pub!ish~d

every afternoon, Monday lhroush
Friday. Ill Coun St. ~omeroy. OhiO. by the

Ohio Valley Publishing Compa.n)IIMultimedin
Inc .. POmeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph, 992-2156.
Second cln~5 post11ge paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Memi8:r: The Auocinterl Pre~"· and the Ohio
New~paper A s~ll'ldon.

POSTMASTER: S~nd addre~ ~ correclions

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions - Lena .
Icenhower, Ravenswood. W.Va.
Wednesday discharges - Irene
Cable, Pomeroy

FRI., SAT., SUN.
BRUCE WILLIS
IN

DIE HARD WITH A ·
VENGEANCER
AND
MEG RYAN, KEVIN KLINE

IN

FRENCH KISSPG·13
446-1088

10

'The Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St . Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.

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~~ ::~

:::::. .:::::::::::::::. :::::::::::r~;:

R1ltt Oull,. Mrlp Counl)'
tJ W&lt;eks................................................ $2l.61
16 W&lt;eks................................................ $49.66
$2 WeekJ.. ......... ,..................................... $96.2()

POMEROY EAGLE CLUB
AERIE 2171 EMBERS!
DUES ARE DUE BY
JUNE 30, 1995
•

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�Sports

The Daily
.§s,!l}.!!,t.~l
.

~

p.~

In the NL,

In American Legion baseball action~

Reds record 1-0
victory over Phils

Mason County tak~s
_two from Gallipolis
came from Young (1-4), King 0·3;
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
he scored twice), Cather (1-3), Joey
OYP StarT Writer
· As the saying goes, tbere is more Mayes (1-3), Jeremy Tucker (1·3),
Ben Queen (3-3; he scored three
!han one way 10 skin a cat
Mason County's American runs), Scott (l-2; he sc,ored a run)
.
Legion baseball team, getting its an~ Ord (1-3 he scored a run)
This
game
ended
after
five
.
lead in two different ways in
innings
because
the
10-run
mercy
Wednesday's doubleheader against
the host Gallipolis Post 27 crew, rule was instituted.
2 notched a sweep by virtUe' of posting
Tbe second game seemed to be a
a a 12-2 win in ihe opener in five continuation
of the fust. especially
: innings before gaining a 7-4 victory
in
the
way
Mason County ~as
S in the closer at the University of Rio
treating
Gallipolis
pitcher Casey
.C Grande's Stanley L. Evans Field.
~
The first game saw Gallipolis Canaday.
First-inning bits by Cather,
~~ (12-8) get two ru.ns in the first
Mayes,
Tucker got three runs across
· inning on Gary Stanley's two-out
for
tl1e
guests.
The fourth run, which
. double to left field that scored Wes
came
in
when
Josh Wiseman's
McCorkle ru1d D Brunton.
single
to
left
scored
Tucker, was I
Following a scoreless second
, inning, Mason County took the lead emsed when !&gt;orne plate umpire Jeff
' by tallying live runs against Slanley Donnally called Wiseman out
in the third. Hits by Chad Ord, Ja.~on because Tucker's name wasn't on
King and Greg Cather knocked in the lineup card, therefore forcing
four or those runs , while Dale Wiseman ta bat out of order.
In lbe lbird, Mason County's 4-0
Johnson's fielder' s-choice grounder.
lead
was cut in half when
1 which resulted in Lane Young's
McCorkle's
two-out check-swing
; being retired at second for the first
single
to
right
center scored John
~ out, got Gabe Scou home with the
Bmwning
and
Chris
Toler's double
~ ty.ing run.
~
While Gallirolis sent only three to the center fitld fence scored
~ bailers to the plate - none made it McCorkle. But the guests restored
~ to tirst - in each of tbe final three their four-run margin when Queen's .
~ innings, the· West Virginians picked ' line-drive single to left scored
• 1mother run in the fourth before Wiseman and Jimmy Hall.
How did Gallipolis keep
~ rioting for six runs in the tor of lbe
~ fi llh . Mason County got as much chipping away at tl1e visitors' lead'/
:.. ~elp . rrom Post 27's two errors (out McCorkle scored on Hall's wild
of six committed in the grune) in the pitch in the fifth. Then in tbe sixth,
:. . trame as much as its base running . Bobby Fink grounded a single
•: ¢xecu1ion on four fielder' s-choice underneath King at third to score
: grounders, with those grounders Jrunie Gruber.
·· resulting in four runs m the cost of
But Mason County got lbe lead
..'. one out,
that lasted to lbe end when in the
: : Both pitchers needed no bullpen sevenlb,'Canaday. trying to pick on
• belp. Ord struck out two, walked Scott at first. committed a throwing
: three, hit one batter ru1d gave up two error that resulted in King's scoring
' hits (Fink's first-inning single was from third: Toler lbrew to Kevin
· the other).
Edwards at third seconds later to
· . Stanley struck out lbree, walked · nail Heath Engle for the third out
. i'uur and gave up 10 hits, which
In the Gallipolis sevenlb, Toler
struck out, Slanley walked, Edwards

i

I

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Just
seven days after getting rounded,
CJ. Nitkowsk.i was lauded.
Nitkowski gave up just three
bits in seven innings for· his first
major· league win as the Cincinnati
Reds beat the Pbiladelpbia Phillies
.1-0 Wednesday night
The 22-year-old left-bander (I·
I) allowed six runs on 10 hits in 3
2/3 innings last week against
Atlnnm.
Reds catcher Ed Taubensee said
Nilkowski "handles himself very
well. I'm very impressed wilb the
way be pitched."
"He threw a lot of first-pitch
strilces tonight. He really pitched a
good ball grune," he said.
Nitkowski, making his sixth
big-league appearance, WI\S sw1ing
to wonder when he would win a
grune.
TOSSES TWO.ffiTTER- Arter a shaky first Inning that'sliw
"I was really disappointed in
him give up two runs and .two bits In the lint game of Wednesday's
myself
in my last outing,"
American Legion game agal11.1t Gallipolis in Rio Grande, Mason
County pitcher Cbad Ord settled down by not aUowlng a batter past
second base In the second lnnl"'land not permitting a batter to reach ·
base from the third Inning forward en route to pushing the West Vir·
ginians to a 12·2 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
strpck out and Canaday walked. But Jimmy Hall-p/cL ........... 3
2 0
Brunton flied out to right to end the Ryan Roush-ph/2b ........ .! 0 0 0
Totals
·
31 7 11 6
final ihreat.
Pitcher•
Gallipolis will head southeast Hall: 5 ip, IK, 7BB &amp; 2 hits
Friday to face Putnrun Post 181 at Tucker: 2 ip, 2K, 4BB &amp; I hit
Winfield High School in a 5:30p.m.
Gallipolis Post27
doubleheader.
Innjng tntals ..secnnd &amp;iliJH
Player-pos.
!h [ h !!l
Mason Co ...... JOl 200 I= 7-11-1 John Browning-r£ ........... 1 I 0 0
Gallipolis ........002 011 0 = 4-3-2 Bobby Fink-ss ............... .4 0 I 0
Wes McCorkle·s.L ........ 3 2 I I
Mason County
Chris Toler·l b................ 4 0 I I
Plaver·pM,
ab r h !!l Gary Slanley-2b ...... ...... .! 0 0 0
Lane Young·2b .............. 3 I 0 0 Kevin Edwards-3b ......... 2 0 0 0
Ben Queen-ss .................4 0 I 2 C.L~ey Canaday-p ........... 3 0 0 0
Ja.~on King-3b ................ 3 3 3 0 Mark Bilms-IL ............... 3 0 , 0 0 .
Greg Calber-lb............... 4 I I 2 Jrunie Gruber-c ............... 2 I 0 0
Joey Mayes-.r L .............. .3 0 2 I D Brunton-rh.. .............. .! 0 0 0
Jerenly Tucker-cl'lp ........ 2 0 2 I Totals '
21 4 3 2
Gabe Sccitt-IL ............... .3 0 0 0
Pilcher
Josh Wiseman-c ............. 2 1 0 0 Canaday: CG, 5K, 2BB &amp; II hils

Baseball

(GreeD 7·4), 1:35 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Rijo 3-4) at New York.
(Miick.i 4-4), 1:40 p.m.
PiU!ibUrl].h (ltmixa 4-3) ut Hou,ton
(Kite 3-6), S:OS p.m.
Cahnudo (R\1-1. S-3) at l..aR' AD1f,eltii-

,.,.• Major leagues

,.,.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

,.

.

.»:
DostOQ .-., ................ 33

,.1:

X..W

L 1!&lt;1.

24

Detroil ................. :.29 .)()
New York: ............. 26 JO

!·

I'

,.•,. .

.4fl'4
.456

6.5

31

Toronw .. ...... ....... .. 21

:!4

.3K2

II

Crnfr11l Divi.don
CLEVELAN0 .. --... ~9 17 .6%
K£~rum.~ C11y ....... ::10 2S
. 54~

~

Milwaukee ...
.. 25
Oricogo ................ 24
Mlnnesnt:L. ...... :... .17

,r.
,.r

s

Ba.llimare.: ............. 26

,.r

,.

llll

.S79
.492

11

.446
.436

Jl
40

.'298

7

Baseball
11.5
14
14.S

22.5

Di¥.i:du11
Texa,., .............. , ..... .34 24 .SK6

,...,.

California. ...... ...... 33 25
O;J.khmd .... .. .....32 T1

.569
.542
.50(1

Sen11h:..... ................29 29

,.
,•
,.

I
2.5
5

Wednesday's scores

,.
,•

Detmit II, Nc:w York.~
Olica~~' 4. Minn~uta 3
Da!tinwre 4 , -Mtlw~uli.eC 2
ClEVELAND 5. Knns.us City 2
ToruQIO 8, Dotilun 4
Texa!l9, Cnlifomia It
Oakland 7, S~o.~Uie 5

..

Today's games

'

Transactions

Baskelball

A.mrrian Lcii,Ur

Wf~lnn

I',.

Lrdea:1na, iafidder, rrom .Norrul~ of the
lnternationall.eag.ue.
·
PHILADEU'I-nA Pl-lllUES: Aclival·
ed Tommy Greene, pitcher, frqm tlte IS·
day di~~abled lifil. Optioned Gene Schall,
rinot bascnjan, to Scranton-Wilkes-Barre
of ULe lntcrnalional League.

San Dit&gt;go (Hamiltnn 3-2) nt Slln FrEtnciliCO (Leiter 3-5), ,10:05 p.m.

NAISMITH MEMOR1AL BASKETBAll HALL OF FAME: Named Bill
Fmter chairman uf the board.

BALTIMORE ORIOLES· Acttvnlt:tl
Sid Fern:indt!.z, pitchu, fro m the l5·11 ay
tli!mbletl list. Optioned Jimmy Myers.
pitcher, to R&lt;JCh~!p . &lt;•[ the lntern31 innal
L.enttue.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS : NamtH1
Tum Gaud."rn vice prt'.sitfenl ol a&lt;lminis·
trnliun ap.d !Iuman rtltiourc~
SEATI'lE MARINER S Signtd Seth
Driz~k anti Dunny Kurtz, pitchers, and
Shane Monahom, uutrield~r
TEXAS RANGERS : Placed Darren
Oliver and leU Ru&amp;.&lt;;el\, pitchers, atnl ldf
Frye, lit.cond b~man on the IS-clay disabled list. Recalled lo!ie Alberro and
Chris Nichting, pltchen;, from OklahumH
City of the American .As.VIciation.
TORONTO B'LUE JAYS: Pur t ha~ed
the contract of Ernie Pelermann, pitcher,
from Thunder Bay of the N"r!hern
League.

Air, cassette, tiiL ..................................

AlterR-

NEW 1995 NISSAN SENTRA
Air, cassette, power steering ............ ~ .............

s11 ,999

N•tlorual B&gt;~.o~krlball A1111oclation
LOS ANGELES CUPPERS : Tr:~ded

Rondy Woods. euard. and the ri~h ts to
Antonio McOye.~" · fnrward. to U1e Dt!nver
NuG~etli fo r Rodney Rogers , forward, and
Ute ng.llts to Brtint.BII'Ty, guard.
LOS ANGELES lAKERS : Signl':d
Larry Drew,. w;si~tanl coach, to u cunlra!.'t
extension.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS : Traded the
righ!JI to Etic Snow, guard, to the Sealtlt&gt;
SuperSoni cs for Uu:. rlghlli to EureUjns
Zutuukas, forward. and a. 1996 ,.econd·
round draFt pick.
NEW JER SEY NETS: Named Rkhartl
SnOOalrer s11ength and condition I n~ coach.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS:
Tracled th~ ri~hl~ to Shawn Respert,

Foot hull L&lt;'~igU&lt;'

cas~:. cruise ..............................$16,999 ·

,.

..,.'.
.
••
.• •

1.9%APR

Hockey
NatlonulltOC"kry Lti&amp;RUt
TAMPA BAY UGHTNINO: Signet.!
W11ynr Ca~hrnan, assistant coach, to 'a
contract ~xten11iun and prumu teU him to
a.~snciute cooch.

(1- lent~en

4-6), 1:35 run

Valvollne 1OW30,

-

Chicagn (Aivara 1·4) al Kan!mti City
(G\Jbicm 4-6), 8:05 p.m
CLEVELAND (Marhn~7. at MtnnetoOIU
Tro1Tj}ley ll.:!}, 8:05 r m
New York (Per~7. S·4) ~tt Milwauke~
(Roher*ln J-2) ..11:05 p.m.
Califvrnlil (B(l~kie fi,J) ttl DaklanJ
{Onlivero~ !1-2), 10 05 fULl.
r~xWi {GrOt&gt;~ 2·7) Ul s~aul~ (Torru: 2·
3}, 10 :JS r •n.

I

NATIONAL LEAGUE
t-:&amp;~ ltrn Di~sloo

X..W

Phll...r'dplua

ll' L

37
Atlonla .................... 34
MOntrdll .
.. ...29
N~w Y11Ck: ........ 22
Floritla ................. 20

lO
24
30
37
36

en.

.649
.SIUi
.492
.3'13
3~7

Crnlnal Div\,lun
1(,
21 {,J2
lluu:.h•n ..
" 11 2(, 544

CINCINNATI
01icn~o
Pltt~&gt;bur~IL

St

U tUIII

'29

2l

21

29

,l()(l

}:l
1(,

.411

'90

Wr~lrrn Dirillion

Co lorUdo . .. ... .31
Lttl Angtlt\li ..... , ..... ll
SanDtt&gt;~o
.... _•. 30
San Frnn~.:n•cu . . 29

.

'17

534

28
211
30

.SlS
.Sl7
492

Wcdncsd~y•s

Limit12

10W40 or 5W30
Motor 011

• Your cost after rebate

9

~

s

Thla ofter beqlne June 29, 1995 and expires

122171

To.-... your $2.«1Gronil

WOMEN'S

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July 5, 1995. .

""""*"'
wl1h~'

good lor cash. pu-..- 12 quans ol

mo&lt;orQI or 6 quarto ol

""

t995 Grwld Dpon1ng Buyer'• Chock. P.O. Bor8848. YoungArnorlca. MN 55651-8848
• Prool-ol-j)Uidlno , _ 111 )'01&gt;' oril1nal0aled- - l o r a cue ol "'""'"'" Mo1or 01: and
Q) UPC oode trom the bottOm ~ the case Of rwT'IQI.It 6 \WT1)1r-~ nngs from QUiltt bottles
Rebata requests must be matte within 30 days ot sales rece~t.limit ol one rebate per noosenold, address .or otoamzalton. Rebate rt9~ts must

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VaNriiNI' [).J&lt;oll1end OIS-IololorOI,.....,.,. """"""" and"""'l

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be made on this speciil order form and may not be mechanlcaU'J reproduced. Req~ts lrom_P:O. Bo11tS Will not be honOred. Use ol fictitiOUS
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scores
Clly _

Air Trainer Mix II Low.
Sport Training

o~·

I

Today's gameB
CINCINNATI (Sc.:b(luret 5-4) al
Phih•klrttla (Quanlri111-2). I :OS p.m.
St. Looi~ (Hill 1-4) at Chi~tl (Fa.ter
.5·4), 2:20p.m.
C&lt;•loraclo (Murnan 2-j) 111 l..(M ' Anll&amp;les (N'onW1 5-l ), I 0: 05 r .na

Friday's gamOfi
Sl. Lout.li (Urboui 1-J) o.t ChiCilto
{Cast.Jl\(1 (i. l), 1:20 p.nL
Mobtreal (C Perez 7-J) al florida
(IIA&lt;nmond 4·2), 7.05 p.m.

iShuler, Bic.kle &amp; Plantz among leaders
;• By Frank Capehlll't
the four first week leaders on hand,
:: Sports Correspondent
and the standings at lbe end or Ibis
The second week ofthe 1995 Tri- second round showed them snarled
,, County Junior Golf competition was in a three-way battle that leave&amp; tbe
, waged Monday under.imminent skies future wide open.
JC. Olinger of Cliffside had fin1: on the Meigs County Course ani:!
;· turned out to be another exciting and ished third a week ago, and this time
'' close day of stroke making for the fired one of his career best scores to
) \ young golfers.
take this week's top honor with-8 fine
'
All of the four first week leaders . four-over 39 and moved into first
were on hand in the premier 15-17 place overall at 15 points.
year age group. When the scores were
David Reed of Riverside had tied
totaled at the end of the nine holes. with Ohlinger the first week, and
two or them had moved into a slight came in close behind at second this
lead, but it has now become an obvi- week, leaving him third overall with
~. ous five-man chase to lbe wire.
13 points. First week leader Aaron
~'f. Jason Shuler of Meigs had missed
Bickle of Cliffside finished fourth at
the opening 'session, but fired an Meigs with 45 and stands second
· even-par round of 35 to capture the overall with 14 points in the close
first place honors and move into third three-way chase.
_, place overall tie at ten points.
Finishing third this week was Man
. '· · Last week's top finisher. Ryan· Tarbell ofHVCC with a 43, leaving
, ' Norris, and lbird place Scott Hussell him with a total of eight points over• w"re close on his heels with a pair of all. In order behind them came Chris
two-over 37's to tie for second this Burnett, Trenton Tolliver, Nick
week. Norris takes over the overall Doeffinger, Matt Bemacki, Adam
lead with 17 points and Hussell is in Thomas, Ryan Pratt and Nick Smith.
second with 13 points.
·
For the 11-12 group, the first week
.
Billy Thomas of Cliffside was run· had been a deadlock for top spot, but
• ner-up a week ago, but had a few one of lbe leaders was unable to play
' problems this week to finish sixth and tbe second round.
,is now in a third place tie with 10
Brian Bickle of Cliffside was one
p&lt;Jints.
of those two. and did it again at Meigs
A couple of strokes behind the with a round of 47 to outshoot all oth: lbree leaders this week was Matt ers for first place and forge a sizeabie
' Bradford of Meigs with'a nice 39 for lead with 19 points.
' fourth. Mick Barr and Steve
Colby Burnett of Cliffside cap,McCIIoch each posted a 40 in the day tured runner-up honors this week with
of competition.
'
a 52 and moved into second overall .
·Behind them came Thomas, at I 0 points. Trenton Roush was
,..,Andrew Nibert, Drew Dunkle, David absent this week, but remains in third
~Anderson. Joe Hill, Clay Crow,
overall at nine points.
~: Chris Ball and Josh Huffman.
.
Eli Wilson of HVCC grabbed the
~
The 13-14 age group had three of third s)lOI this week and moved into
~·
.

I

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o Kendal'
0 _.,.

I
v. .I

_ ___,___ _ _Zip _-:;::;::=:;;;~

- - o l - o l d o y o u _ _ _ (CHECKONI.YOIIE)

OMobi'
o Pornzol'
OOuolu&gt;&lt;0 01har(opocify) ---.,--:-:--~:.....:---:-;-

TtiS coupon cannot be vsed in ~;onjunctlon witn any otl'lerVaiWline otter_ Mal6rlals beGome lht property ot
The Valvoint Compooy, 1 divis&lt;on ot Millan&lt;! 01. Inc

J64r 1......

, . . , . . ,.._,

GALLIPOLIS - 209 UPPER RIVER ROAD

to go,'.' Brogna said. "The energy
wben we came off the field was
li?, the unearned run.
·
like we just got a lbree-run homer
"'\- "If I'm back.ing up third on the . and had taken the lead."
; lbrow, we:re still out there playChris Jones' three-run homer
ing," be said. "I wa.~ just standing capped a five-run, eighth-inning
'there watching the play. Mental rally that started with Brogna's
errors can cost you a baD grune."
two-out double . Arter Bobby
· . Hollills agreed wilb the pitcher.
Bonilla was intentionally walked,
"I have to catch that ball but he Burkett walked Kent 10 load the
l bas to back up lbird," Hollins said. b3SC!!. Hundley's soft liner to right
·; "He really pitched welL When we off reliever Randy Veres scored
get a pitching performance like that two runs before Jones' three-run
. ·and don't win, .we '.ve wasted an homer. ·
· opportunity ."
"It's a feeling we're not going
:!• Phillies manager Jim Fregosi to lose when we ' ve got such a great
said "Curt Schilling couldn't have aUtlete on the mound," Jones said,
~~ done more tonight He pitched out· "Tbe karma is on our side when
standing, but we just didn't swing something like that happens."
~ the bats."
.
Saberhagen gave up eight hits in
~
The victory was the Reds' 13th the frrst 4 ,1{3 inning~. lben senlcd
It: in 16 road grunes. They are 19·8 down, stnkmg out tour , walkmg
~ overall on the road.
none and hitting a hatter. He only
f. In other NL games, it was aUowed one earned run.
l, Atlanm 4; Montreal 3; Chicago 10,
It was first time in four weeks
.s• Pittsburgh 3; Houston 9, St. Louis that the Mets have won consecutive
~ ·o; San Francisco 2, Colorado 1 in
grunes.
• II innings; and San Diego 8, Los
Padres 8, Dodgers 2
Angeles 2
At Dodger Stadium, Ken
.
Mets 8, Marlins J
Cruniniti lied career highs with two
1
i It was Bret Saberhagen's lbird homers, four hits and five RBis and
•complete grune of the season, the Andy Ashby earned his third
: 761b of his career. Yet it was his straight victory for San Diego.
!· fielding, not his pitching, everyone
Caminiti hit a two-run homer in
was talking about.
·
Ute fust inning and a three-run shot
"Sabes makes those hu~e plays in the fifth of£ Dodgers rookie
and gets us pumped up, ' New ismael Valdes (5-3).
York Mets.catcher Todd H~ndley
Giants 2, Rockies 1
said. "He knows how to wm. He
At Candlestick Park, J.R.
~. figures out'ways to win."
Phillips, who entered the grune in
" The Mets also figured out a way lbe lOth inning batting only .126,
to win, defeating Aorida S-3.
slic-ed a RBI single down the third·
In lbe sixth inning, lbe Marlins base line with two outs in tbe bot·
were seeking to add to their 3-1 tom of the lllb as San Francisco
lead when Kurt Abboll and Charles broke a five-grune losing streak.
Johnson led off with singles·, then
ShaWn Barton (1-0), who came
., were sacrificed to second and third on in lbe top of lbe 11th wilb the
by John Bur~ett. Quilvio Veras fol· . bases loaded tO get the final out,
lowed with a suicide squeeze bunt got the win , his fir st National
Pthat Saberhagen (5-2) pounc¢ on League decision.
;and threw to catcher Todd. Hundley
Astros 9, Cardinals 0
:intirnetotagouta·slidingAbbotl.
Tony Eusebio's grand slam
"
"That's the first one in a long backed Mike Hrunpton's pitching
~ time, in lbe major or minor leagues, as Houston. won at lbe Astrodome.
lbat a suicide squeeze dido' t work Hrunpton allowed five bits in eight
when thebuntgotdown," Hundley
innings, struck out seven and
said.
walked two to improve his career
On the next play, Chuck Carr record against St. Louis to 4-1 and
=:dragged a seemmgly perfect bunt · lower his ERA to 0.42.
t-between first and second. F1rst
The Cardinals lost their £i£tb
"' baseman Rico Brogna grabbed lbe straight and ninlb of their last I L
ball and flipped to Saberhagcn,
Cubs 10, Pirates 3
who liarely beat Carr to t.he bag,
At Wrigley Field, Brian
ending lbe inning.
McRae's grand slrun highlighted a
"Saberhagen makes two out- six-run fourth inning as Chicago
standing plays lbat not too many
ended a three-game Iosing streak
~ pitchers make," Marlins manager
and snapped Pittsburgh's three·
'- Rene Lachemann said. ''(Greg) game winning string.
Maddux might be the only other
Carlos Garcia had bis 21-grune
ne. Not too many pitchers beat bitting streak broken, going O"fot·
huck Carr to fiTSt base."
.
4.
The ll,{ets, pumped up, tied the
Braves 4, Expos 3
grune on Jeff Kent's ninth homer
David Justice's two-run, njnlb·"'Bnd a two-out, run-scoring double inniog homer powered Atlanta over
by Ryan Thompson.
visiting Montreal.
"After that. we were just ready

992·5627

MIDDLEPORT

~

f.
~-=o:_ - .::J
•

.

219 N. SECOND

__:__ _ _ _ _ __

0 r-~

fourth overall wilb eight points. Brian Sang of HVCC edged Chris Casto for fourth this week and has six
points, just behind Casto at seven in
the tighl overall race.
Matt Oliver of HVCC played his
first round of the year to finish 'just
between Sang and Casto. Adam
Newberry was right on the heels of
the rest of the pack.
For the ten-and-under,group, the
top three leaders were on hand and
had yet another head-to-head duel all
the way.
First week runner-up by one
stroke. Nathan Plantz of HVCC
broke a tie on the final hole this week
and snared top honors with a 44 to
edge first week leader Jeremy Roush
of Meigs. Now the two lads are tied
for the overall lead at 18 points
apiece.
Repeating his third place finish

last week, Beau Sang of HVCC now
stands in third place overall at 12
points.
The Juniors now lake a short break
from competiton as the Independence
Day holiday is observed, and will
return to action on Monday, July 10,
at the Riverside Course in Mason,
W.Va.
On Monday, July 17, they will
compete in the final round for points
at Hidden Valley Country Club in
Poim Pleasant All the outings are
scheduled for 9 a.m. tee-off, with registration beginning at 8:30a.m.
Any, or all, area young golfers.
bolb male and female, under 18 are
invited to play in future events. The
fee is $5 each week, and includes a
light lunch for each golfer.
It fs a great chance to learn the
game, meet friends and have a super
competition.

.

Seattle 7-5, Detroit dnwne4 New
Yor1c 8-4. Baltimore beat Milwaukee 4-2 and Chicago topped Minnesota4-3 .
Blue Jays 8, 1ted Sol[ 4
At Fenway Park, Toronto
stopped an ei&amp;ht-game losing
streak as David Cone struck out 11
and Paul Molitor bit his 200th
career home run.
The Blue Jays won for the fiTSI
time since June 18. Last season,
they started a 10-game losing
(See AL on Page 6)

RHOJEAN'S REFLECTIONS
,1FT SHOPPEE

'

.

HONE 992·6278

WE WILL BE OPEN:
FRIDAY, JUNE 30- 10·5
SATURDAY, JlJLY I - 10..3 .
MONDAY,mLY 3- 10·5
WEDNESDAY, JlJLY 5 - 10·5
THURSDAY, JlJLY 6- 10-5
FRIDAY, JULY 7- 10·5
SATURDAY, JULY 8-10-5
'

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eighth, preserving an 8-6lead.
center field off Smith (0-1).
But in the ninth, Otis Nixon
Jim Edmonds extended his hit·
dr.ew a leadoff walk, Mark ting streak to 22 games for the
McLemore singled and Clark dou- Angels.
The Indians improved 10 6·0
bled.
"That's when you like to be in against the Royals. outscoring them
the middle or those situations," · 33-7. Jim Thome also homered ror
Clark said. "It's no secret that Lee Clevel;lnd.
Smith hadn't blown a save or
Murray's drive toward 3,000
allowed a run all year. I like facing hits moves to Minnesota, where the
Lee Smith. He goes right at you Indians begin a four-grune series
and you have to battle him .''
touight.
Clark moved to third on a
In other AL games. Toronto
groundout by Juan Gonzalez. After beat Boston 8-4, Oakland defeated
Mickey Tettleton was intentionally
wallced,Rodriguez lined a single to

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OucalCl' I 0, Pirt&gt;.bur~h 3
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row . Last month, he gave up six
runs to the Indians.
''Of course you remember. the
last lime," he said. "I was trying
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strategy on the last lime.
I was trymg to learn something. I
thought I had a better outing this
time, but it wasn't good enough.
Not even close.'·
· Smith, baseball's Cllfeer saves
leader, had not allowed a run in 20
games. Tbe Angels brought him in
from lbe bullpen before the ninth
inning for the first time, and he
struck out Benji Gil with runners
on second and third to end lhe

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Frlday•s games

••

count )!itches before tying it wilb a
two-run double. With one out Ivan
R~guez singled home the
winner at The Ballpark.
"I'm man enough to give lbe
old boy credit f~ geuing a hit off
me," Smith said of Clark. "The
man hit the best I had."
Appier, leading the majors in
wins, lost to Cleveland for the second lime this season. Eddie Murray
bad a two-run homer, giving him
2,997 career hit~. as the Indians
beat lbe Royals 5-2 for their first
sweep in Kansas City since 1981. ·
Appier (ll-3) .had won five in a

I

r·"'·

[klroit (Aheorne 0-2) at Bolton (Ell-·
llt!-111\UD 3-2), 1 : 0~ p.m.
,
BaliLILIC!rt' (Rhmk5 2·2) at Tumn.w

By BEN WALKE1t
AP Baabllll Writer
Any time Kevin Appier starts or
Lee Smith relieves, the result bas
almOIIt always been the same.
Ap)liet and Smith again wound
up_with identical results Wednes••day. Instead of a win, though their
; sides losl
'
Smith's major league record
.,streak of getting saves in 19
,.straight appearances ended when
,,the Texas Rangers rallied for three
runs in the ninlb inning to beat Ute
~California Angels 9-8.
'• Will Clark fouled off three full-

~·

Clali.lantl (Oarlin~ 2-Jl &gt;II St'altle (Ott·
~it• S-l ). J : J .~ r m.
Oa\IIIIK•re {Fernamkz. 0..1) ul Tumnltt
(Gu1.man 1-3). 7:.lS p.m.
ClEVELANrt {Black 3-2) at Min ·
nes«1t a (Er ickJ.(ll] J·S), 11:05 p.m.
Olic.a.:,&lt;t (Fern:mUez. 3-4) at Milwaube
(GLvenN 0-1), ll:OS
Californut (Ftnley 5-fi) a( Texu
(Puvlik 4-2). &amp;:35 p.m .

,.

-1ndians .eat Royals &amp; Appier again; Rangers top Angels

=: pastSchilling
the bag.
·
took partial blame for

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--·-·-

Nllliun.a lA•pe,
CHICAGO CUBS: Traded Rick
Win::i ns, catdld, to Ou: Houston Alltros
for Luis Gunzalr:t, outfielder, and Scott
Servais: catcher.
NEW YORK METS : Placed Bil l

Atlanta (Smoltz 7-3) at F'hiladelphia

Nitkowski said. "I just kept tellin&amp; ·
myself to bear down all mgbt I'm
really happy to get this one.
"lt's :really nice to get over the
bumr and finally get a win. It's
especially nice lo beat a good terun
like tllll Phillies."
Nitkowski struck out rour and
·did not walk a bauer although be
did hit two. He did not allow a
Phillies runner to reach tliird base.
The Reds scored the game'»
only run, in the fourth inning, aided
by two errors by Phlllies flfst ba.o;e·
man Dave Hollins.
Starting pitcher Curt Schilling
(5-3), who allowed only four bits in
eight innings while striking out
nine, allowed a one-out single to
Thomas Howard. One out bter,
Schilling auempted a pick-off play
but Hollins couldn't handle the
throw. Howard raced to third and
scored when Hollins threw wildly
(See NL on Page 5)

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohld

Thursd.y, June 29, 1 •-.

~~Warriors make Smith first pick; Blazers .· get Trent. in trade·

,.

,: ByWENDYE.LANE
.:
TORONTO (AP) - No one
•· made a big deal about Joe Smith
••
• when be first got 10 Maryland in
:: 1993.
.
::
Sure, be had good size and an
·: impressive physique, but the top
• prep pla)'Cf thai year from his borne
·: stale of Virginia was a guy named
:: Jerry Stackhouse, wbo went 10 play
: ~ for Dean Smitb along with a higbly
• tooled big man, .Rasbeed Wallace.
·::
In two seasons with lhe Terrap-

...

ins, Smith blossomed. and on
Smitb, who at 6-fooc-10 played
Wednesday night be became the center in colle,e •. but will be a
mp pick in the NBA draft, ahead of power forward m the pros, led a
lhe two Tar Heel sophomores.
crop of 19- and 20-year-olds allhe
"When I got to Maryland, no top of tbe draft. One, fifth pick
one expected me to have as suc· Kevin Gamet~ is just out of high
cessful a season as I bad," Smith school.
said after the Warriors made him
Alabama.' s Antonio McDyess
only the third sophomore ever . was taken second by the Los Angeselected first. "I came out and sur- les Clippers, then traded along with
pri.~ed everybody, even myself. My
Randy Woods 10 Denver for Brent
confidence just skyrocketed from Barry, the 15th pick, and forward
Game I. and it never went down."
Rodney Rogers.

;: At Wimbledon,

~~ Henman : tossed for hitting ball·
.~; girl; Rubin wins longest match
-·

;:
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Tbe girl was taken borne and
: ~ Wimbledon fans were treated 10 was to undergo a thorough medical
:: tile longest women's match in examination today. Wimbledon
:: Grand Siam hisiOry and shocked by officials said.
•. a British player kicked out in disHenman was close to tears as he
explained
wbat happened.
" grace.
"It was a complete accident,"
:.
Tim Henman, playing a doubles
:: match with Jeremy Bates, became · he said, "but I'm responsible for
: the first player disgualified from my actions." ,
"There was no one in line with
• Wimbledon in the Upen era when
· : lie slammed a ball that hit a ball the ball before I was about to hit
:; 'girl in the bead.
it," be said. "As I hit it, she ran
:,
The incident occurred during a straigbt out in front of me, so I'm
• tiebreaker in the fourth set of the lhe responsible pany. ·'
:; first-round match Wednesday
It was only the third time in the
~: against American Jeff Tarango and
Open eia that a player has been dis•• Sweden's Henrik Holm.
qualified from a Grand Slam event.
·: · After Tarango bit a net-cord John McEnroe was defaulted from
: ·winner, Henman whacked a ball in the Australian Open in 1990 for
• : anger. The ball bit the girl, Caro- verbally abusing officials, while
; • line Hall, squarely in lhe side of the Germany ' s Karsten Aeries was
• head as she was running to retrieve kicked out of the French Open
: another ball.
three weeks ago for throwing a
::
"With the speed of the ball, it racket that struck a line judge in the
: : could have killed the girl." leg.
·: Tarango said.
The disqualification came at the
The
girl
feU
to
the
ground,
then
•
end of a day that ·saw Chanda
:: .got up and walked back to her posi- Rubin beat Patricia Hy-Boulais by
:; tion in tears.
the record score of 6-7 (4- 7), 7-6
•,
A doclOr and tournament referee (7-5), 17-15 in 3 hours, 45 minutes.
: 1 Alan Mills were summoned to
The 58 games broke the record
:: .&lt;i:ourt '14 by Australian umpire for the most games in a women's
; Wayne McKewen, who announced Grand Slam sinl!les match. The
• that Henman was defaulted for a previous record was 56 games, set
: code violation. ·
in 1972 before the advent of
•,
.•..
'"The rules precisely state that a tiebreakers when Kerry Melville.
; pla,yer must be in control of his beat Pam Teegarden 9-7, 4-6, 16· • actions on coun and in such cases 14 in the French Open semifinals.
• there is no choice but to default
The 32 games in the third set a
automatically on the ba~is of Wimbledon record for most games
unsponsmanlike conduct," a Wim- in a set, topping the previous mark
bledon statement said.
of 26 games - reached six times
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Pepsi 400 tabbed unofficial start
of. NASCAR season's second half,
By PA.UL NEWBERRY
In February. U1e teams face an move has paid off - about
DAYTONA BEACH. Fla. (AP) enormous burden. It's like begin- 100,000 were on hand last year-.
-Hut Slricklin arrived in Daytona ning the season with the Super but tbe race has kept its family .;' Beach a few days early for the . Bowl, and the pre-race activities style chann.
Pepsi 400. But racing wasn' t on his are much greater than at any oU1er
"In February, the kids are in
mind.
track . There's actually four r~ces school," Balewski noted, "In July,
·
"I'm really just going to do a for U1e Winston Cup drivers, count- there's more opportunity to bring
little sleeping, l guess, and lay out ing the Busch Clash and two quali. the ones who are grade-school or
. in the sun," Stricklin said, laugh- fying event,, not to mention hours high-school age. Maybe they'll go ·
ing.
. . of practice and the mandatory win- to the Space Center, or Disney
· That attitude sums up the stag- ing and dining of corporate spon- World, or Sea World. or just spend
gering difference between the Day- sors.
the time relaxing. There's quite a
tona 500, stock-car racing' s most
For the Pepsi 400; " it's ba,ical- few drivers· who own condos
prestigious event which kicks off ly three days and out ," Balewski here."
the Wins10n Cup season in Febru- said.
That's the way it is for Stricklin,
ary, and Saturday's Pepsi 400, lhe
There:s 2 1/2 ·hours of practice who brought along his wife, Prun.
laid-back, unofficial start of the on Thursday, followed by the first and their two young children for a
second half of the season.
round of qualifying . There's anoth- lew days of fun and sun.
Because of schedule changes er practice session no Friday mom" You're a lot more a1 ease in
over tJie years, lhe race is now a lit- ing prior to the second round of Uiis rnce tllaJl you are in U1e Febru- ·
tie before the halfway mark, 15th qualifying, which usually includes ary race," he said. "A lot of hype
on U1e 31-race lineup.
.
no more than a dozen cars. At II goes into the 500 that's just not
"It's like night and day, " said a.m. Saturday, it's time to go rae- there in the 400."
Still, the Pepsi 400 has had its
Larry Balewski , an assistant to ing, and with only 400 miles (160
NASCAR president Bill France Jr. laps around U1e 2 112-mile tri-oval) share of memorable moments.
and a former sport~ tditor .o f the instead of 500. everyone is linished Richard Petty won his 200th - ru1d
local newspaper. ''Not only from in plenty of time to make it back to final - race in 1984 before a
the teams' standpoint, but even lhe the beach for a late-afternoon crowd that included President Reapeople atlhe speedway \ We can swim.
gan. Dale Earnhardt, shut out in the
500,
has posted two victories in the
almost do this one with our hands
It's been U1is way for years. date
lied behind our back.'' ·
ing back to the pre-corpnrme spon- 400.
" In Mr. Earnhardt's mind, the
Compared to the high-pressure sorship days when the race was
slakes of the Daytona 500, th e known as the Firecracker400 and it 500 might be Daytona's other
Pepsi 400 ·is a low-key affair. It 's was run on lhe Founh of July- no race,·· Balewski quipped.
lhe race where drivers, U1eir fami- matte( wbat day of the week the
Still , Earnhardt and the other
lies in tow, arrive a few days early . holiday fell on.
drivers musl beware of one danger
"It used to be like a legal holi- when they come to Daytona for a
to soak up a few rays and take
advantage of a rare break in the day for Petty Enterprises, ·· little R-and-R.
middle or the Winston C up sea~on.
Balewski recalled. ''There was this
" I try not to get sunburned,"
"Obviously, it's a big race tl1at one hotel the'y used to stay at where Stricklin saH "I've go have to get .
sets the tone for the second half, they would rem a couple of floors ready to sit in a car for 400 miles.''
and it's imponant to get the -second and bring everybody down from
jlalf going in the rigbt direction," the shop (in North Carolina)."
URG to host girls'
Balewski said . " But there's not
In 1989, speedway officials
basketball camps
that ·pressure to win N AS CAR· s moved the race to 111e first Saturday
in July to increase attendance. The
crown jewel."

.• AL action ...

(Contlnuedfrom"Page5)
nati .
: streak on June 18.
Robin Ventura homered twice
;~
Toronto manager Cito Gaston
for
Chicago . Puckett batted
; earned his 500th win in the majors.
cleomup,
tl1e lirst time he'd hit any• Mike Greenwell and Troy O'Leary
•
where
nlher
than third in the lineup
·• homered for Boston and Jose
since
1993.
• Canseco bit two doubles.
Tigers 8, Yanke.S 4
Alhletlcs 7, Mariners S
At
Yankee
Stadium, the Tigers
;
At the Kingdome, Mark MeGIJ!gged
Jack
McDowell
for 13 bits,
• wire hil .two home runs, increa'ling
••
matching
the
most
he's
ever given
,. his major league-leadin g total to
up,
in
only
4
2/3
innings.
:: 21.
Travis Fryman and Bobby Hig!
McGwire hit a tv;o-run drive off
ginson
homered for Detroit. Russ
:• Seattle starter Randy I obnson in
Davis
hit
his firS! major leag ue
·: lhe founh inning, !ben put Oakland
homer for New York.
: ahead 6-5 with a solo shot against
Orioles 4, Brewers l
, JeffNelsoo (3-1) .
At
County Stadium , Mike
•
Todd Van Poppe) (1-1) pitched
Mussina
won on the road for the
: 3 213 perfect innings. He struck out .
fLrst
lime
this
year. He is 6-1 wilh a
:: six, and fanned the side to end the
3,
I
9
ERA
at
Camden Yards, but
game.
began
the
game
with an 0-4 record
Whit• Sox 4, Twins 3
and
8
.17
ERA
away
from Balti:
At !be Metrodome, Jason Bere
more.
: lo1ed a career-high by striking out
Milwaukee lost its sixth in a
: 14. including Kirby Puckett four
row,
its worst skid since a team: times. ·
record 14 straight defeats last sea•• ~ Rob Dibb~ relieved Bere (4-6)
son.
and got two ou!S"Hlr...bis ftrst save
since Aug. 27, 1993, with Cincin-

..

previously.
"It got to the stage where I
knew I still wanted to win the
match, but I 'couldn't always
remember why," Rubin said. "I
just kept thinking: keep fighting,
somebody's got 10 win and hopefully, it will be you."
Top-seeded Andre Agassi was.
scheduled today for a second-round
match on Centre Court against
Patrick McEnroe. In other men's
matches. No. 3 Boris Becker was
up against Swedish doubles specialist Jan Apell, and No. 5
· Michael Chang faced Petr Korda.
Women's top seed Steffi Graf
was set to play Amanda Coetzer.
Graf pulled out of the doubles
wilh Martina Navratilova so as not
to aggravate her chronic back condition and recent wrist injury.
"It was more like a preventive
measure to make sure that she does
get enough rest during the tournament," said Grar s coach, Heinz
Gunthardt.
The move wi II allow Graf to
concentrate on seeking a sixth
Wimbledon singles title. But her
decision to back out disappointed
Navratilova.
"If it were me, I probably
would have tried to play a match or
two and see if I could get through
it," Navratil ova said. "At least
give·it a try. But she's the only gne
who la!Ows how badly off she is.''
Navratilova will still play mixed
doubles with American Jonathan
Stark, while also doing commentary with HBO for U1c ftm time.

The D•lly Sentinel • Pt~ge 7

Stackhouse was .selected next,
by Philadelphia, followed by Wallace, chosen founh by Washington.
McDyess, Stackhouse and Wauace
au left school after two seasons.
Minnesota went fifth. producing
the biggest question mark of tbe
draft, Chicago blgb schooler Kevin
Garnett. The rail-thin 6·1 0 forward
is only the fourth high school player ever selected in the NBA tlmft.
"I've seen a Jot in my 19
years." Garnett said . "I do not
think I'm the average 19·year-old.
Given the chance, Tm going to
prove to all of you that I am man
· enough to take wbat is given and
mature enough 10 give it out."
McDyess, Stackhouse and Wallace are 20, and Smilh will be 20
next month.
Not until the expansion Vancouver Grizzlies took Bryant Reeves.
the ·best true center of the draft, at
No. 6 was dour-year player selected.
The NBA' s olher new franchise,
the Toronto Raptors, made Arizona
point guard Damon SIOudamire a
surprise seventh choice. The Raptors already had a point guard, former Chicago Bull B.J. Armstrong,
from lhe expansion draft, but general manager lsiab' Thomas said
Armstrung would be traded.
The selection of Stoudamire
drew a mixed reaction from the
crowd of 21,268 fans in the SkyDome, where the NB A conducted
its first draft outside the United
States.
Smith's selection by the Warriors was received enthusiastically
by about 2,000 fans in Oakland
Coliseum Arena.
"You will love this guy," new
Warriors general manager Dave
Twardzik told the fans. "He's a
blue-collar worker, he's going to
do a lot of dirtiwork for us:"
Last year with the Terrapins,
Smith averaged 20.8 points, 10.6
rebounds and 2.9 blocks a game.
For the Warriors, he fills a void up
from left by the departure of Chris
Webber, top pick of the 1993 draft
. who was traded to Washington
early last season after a dispute
with former Golden State coach
Don Nelson. Webber was also
selected fLrst as a sophomore.
Smith is "a guy that has
improved every year, we think
there's sun a tremendous amount
of growth to him," Twardzik said ..
'.'He brings us size and mobility, he

can defend and he can score. He
has a great presence on lhe floor.''
Stackhouse, who was projected
as lhe second pick but didn't want
to play for the hapless Clippers.
was tbrilled to slipiO thin!.
"Wben I heard McDyess at No.
2, I was as happy as if they bad
.
called my name."
And McDyess wa' relieved to
swll(l his Clippers cap for one with
the Nuggets' name on it.
"It is a beuer ~rogram and situation for myself,' be said. "I will
be able to learn a lot from (center)
Dikembe Mutombo."
Portland. which traded wit·h
DetrOit to get lhe eighth pick, took
shooting guard Shawn Respect of
Michigan State. The Trail Blazers
traded his rights to Milwaukee for
11th, selection Gary Trent of Ohio,

•

and a 1996 first-round pick.
.
New Jersey followed wllb
UCLA forward Ed O'Bannon at
No. 9, and Miami took Texas
Chris1ian power forward. Kurt
Thomas at No. 10.
The 12th pick wenl to Dallas,
which selected Duke center Cbero·
kee Parks. Sacramento completed
the lottery.selectioos with Artamsas
rorwai-d Corliss Williamson at No.
13.
In all, the Atlantic Coast onterence bad a record eight players
selected in the nrst round and 10
overall.
Virginia's Cory Alexander, San
Antonio's first-round pick and the
29th overall, was the lOth underclassman taken in me fLrst round,
breaking the record of nine set in
last year. s draft.

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POMEROY, OHIO·
992·3636

WE HAVE BEANSI·
Tender Snap Beans &amp; Half Runners
1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy/Mason Bridge,
Mason, WV
· Phone (304) 773-5721
Open: Monday-Saturdaia a.m.· 8 p.m.;
Sunday, 9 a.m.-a p.m.

MARATHON

An American Company
Serving
Amer
ica®
®

•

�Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

·. Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Th&amp;nday, June 21, 111&amp;

~-Th-~-~·-J~
___a_,_1_.__· ------------------------------Po-~--~·-M_~__Iepo~rt,~O-hl_o_·-------------------Th-•~D---~~Se-nti~nM--·P~~~~~

Unsealed lid allows taste testing in grocery store aisles
Ann

...

Landers

'

,·,

Dea'r Au Ludera: Wblle 1 WIS
doing my weekly.pooery lhoppina,
law 1 man open 1 jlr of holley and

wte It wilh hia rmaer while Ilia wife
·- ·acarched for a coupqn. When she
realized the coupo11 wu for IIIOiber
brind, !be man closod the honey jar
and put it back on the shelf.
I was shocked by his gross
behlvior and confronted him. He
agteed to buy the jar but took it out
of his shoppins can as soon as he

IIJouaht I WU out of siPL l!epon.ed
the incldem 10 die 11111111« He found
the jlr IIIII leiiiOVed iL
Why do we ltill hive food Items
on the lhcll' dw 1re 1101 aealod? If foil
aJs dw COYer an enlire opening ~n:
too coaly, why not put 1 clelr plulic
ring II'IIUIId lhe 6d on the oul5ide?
Mlny procl•ICta hive diem.
This type of Incident may be l'll'e,
but I'm sure it is not isolated.
Knowing thlt the spqhetti sauce,
jlms, honey ind other iten1s lh11 I
regularly buy may have been
contaminated by someone disgusts
me. Any ide11? •• WORRIED
CONSUMER IN VIRGINIA
DEAR VIRGINIA: You can (ind
should) go 10 the manager of the Store
and tell him )'OU will not buy any food

product dw does not hive a aca1 of
loniUortiOpnnll'lCqaillltlllting
or tampering.
I hope all food shoppen in my
leading IUdience wiU be a1en to such
products and do likcwiae.
Dear A.. l.aDden; My ltulblnd
and I hive had five childn:D ill ICWIII
yan. Pout we1e conceived whilo we
were using birth control. Our
"miracle baby" wu conceived after
my husband had avaSeclomy and his
sperm count was nearly zero. The
surgeon's explanation was "Sorry.
!bose tllinJS happen."
My problem is this:Whenever I am
introduced to a new acquaintanCe, a
crude comment is invariably made
about my having five children in

you ki1ow what causes that?"
In tl1is day and qe, two or t1tree
childn:n may be consideted the ideal ·
family, but some folks, like us, for
'CUillpie,&amp;~edctightcd widt IIIClle. ~
don't feel that we should hive 10

younserones. Even though they may
gripe, it is wonderful training for
I)IRIUbood. I alute lheae dlildreD.
DearAu r sn«t a: All« -'ina
thote letla'l in your column lbout
ilnpolai(:C and "l!!ldling, I tboqJ1t
apolosize.
you might Clljoy this aory.
lhopc)'ouwiUprintthisleaer(l've
A10 thedocaand aya,
never seen one like it}, and maybe "I'm ilnpoleDL Can you bclp me?"
you can educate some of those The doctor describes some
ignoramuses. •• HAPPY IN KEN· pollibiJitica, each IIIOie ellpcnlive
TUCKY
thin die laiL
DEAR HAPPY: Any woman who
Finally, the doctor reUs him of the
bas five children in seven years and most successful opcn&amp;ion that wiU
is "delighted• has my unabashed make him feel like a you11g m"'
admiration. I, with my one child, again. The 0011, however, would be
view IUCh productivity as awesome. $10.000. The man A)'l. "111 disc:uss

aoes

Modern Woodman displa

Getting in shape
this summer can be
fun with swimfT!ing
"Cool off this summer by talting
a plunge for your heart. Swinuning
is one of the best ways to get in
shape, control weight, and reduce
risk for heart disease," advises
Sandy lannarelli, Meigs County
American Heart Association president.
··
"Physical inactivity is a major
risk factor for heart disease, and
obesity is a contributing factor,"
says lannarelli.
The American Heart Associa·
lion 'suggests you exercise moder·
ately or vigorously for 30 to 60
minutes, three to four times a week.
Besides swimming, you can walk
briskly, jog, run, play racquetball,
tennis, bicycle or take an aerobics
class.
Low intensity activities such as
walking for pleasure, gardening,
vigorous housework, and dancing
belp too, if done regularly, said the
Meigs AHA president, wbo also

aeven years. Then a joke is made of
My friends who have lllge familiea
it by IOihC moron who aay1, "Don't say the older siblings lite ca of the

noted that aerobic exercises
increase .energy and stamina, build
resistance to fatigue, improve self·
image, relieve tension, help to relax
and sleep, and toile muscles.
Because tbe water has a cush·
ioning effect, swimming places low
slress on bones, joints, and muscles
which helps to relieve arthritis, sbe
said.
However, she said it is best to
see a doctor before staning a regu·
lar swim workout, especially for
those more than .40 years old, pri·
marily sedentary, bave higlr blood
pressure, beart disease or other
medical conditions.
For those who can't swim, local
colleges, parks, recreation depart·
ments or health clubs often offer .
lessons, said Iannarelli. AdditiOnal
information on programs may be
obtained by calling the American
Heart Association at 1·80\l·AHA-·
USA!.

-have enough human organs to go

around.
"Xenotransplantation (cross·
species transplantation), despite the
hurdles ... does offer us an opportu·
nity to move abead," New York
diabetic Len KoCb, who has waited
two years for a kidney transplant,
told scientists assembled Tuesday
to advise whether the government
should begin regulating the pruce·
durc.
"Consensus does not exi·St in
science on these matters," said
Fox, of the University of Pennsyl·

.

0562. (In CQIUII/a, selltd $6.25.)

. Obio University announced its
upperclass scholarship recipients
for the 1995-96 academic year. The
foUowing are areB'I'ecir:ts:
Stephen J. Smith,
gsville, a
junior majoring in physical astronomy. was awarded the James T.
Shipman Scholarship.
Robby W. Wyatt, Middleport, a
seniot majoring in biological sci·
ence, was awarded the Rush EUiott
Pre-professional Scholarship .
Susan R. Wolf, Pomeroy, a
senior majoring in music W&lt;IS
a warded the Don and Ethel D.
McVay Music Scholarship.
Sarah R. Dub!, Portland, a
junior majoring in elementary edu·
cation, was awarded the Creed
Janes Scholarship Fund.

Dot A holds

Harrison Alumni Association holds reunion

it witll my wife."
11le Relit day. die docD lllltiDd ltlm,
"Whht did your wife ay?" Tbe man
rep!icd, "She would nttl1er haveI -

kitchen.",. SmiT BY JAY SliER
PROM VERONA, NJ•

...' .

Wlwll CG11 yoa flW! tile ~r- wlto
has everyrhin1? An11 Ltuultrs'
bool:ler, "G111U, ~ is ideal for a
ni11Willltd or colfu Ulb/e. "GelliS" is
a colleclioll of A1111 In-d-rs' IMII
reqwsred poelltl 111111 •uays. Selltd a
se/f-lldtJJelled, lollg, bu.rilleiSs-siu
tnwl~ lllllla clwclcor_,Oider
for $5.25 (this illclwk.r pollage 111111
lliwllU.,) 10: Gmu, cloAM l r111dus,
P.O. Boxll562, CllictlfO,I/1. 60611"

..
n

..·-

meeting

PATRIOTIC WINDOW - The junior service club of the BurUngham Modern WOQCimen
Camp 7230 Is showing its pride in tbe country
through a display in the Middleport Department

Store The display features club badges and
other banners proclaiming national pride. (Sentinel photo hy George Abate) ·

;Doctors
debate implanting animal organs into p~ople.
•

:· By LAURAN NEERGAARD
: Associated Press Writer
BETHESDA, Md. (AP)
Bioethicist Renee Fox painted a
grim picture of doctors one day
saving Americans' lives with
organs transplanted from animals
- only to discover tbey had intrn·
duced animal diseases into people.
Furious patients accused ber nf
trying to slow research into these.
transplanl~ while they were dying
because the nation simply doesn't

Gospel quartet--- OU awards students scholarships

vcmia. ''There arc uncertainties and
risks, and not just risks to the
patients in clinical trials.' '
Until now, pennission for these
e~periments h:ts come from local
hospital boards witll little, if any,
e~pertise . Although theoretically
promising, the research so far has·
been done in just a ·handful of
patients aud ali of ~1em died. . .
Concern over U1e possihility that
these experiments could spreall
viruses or even spark new cpi·
demics prompted the Food and

Drug Administration to consider
regulating them. After all, new tlu
strains come from pigs and some
experts believe AIDS 'jumped from
monkey to man. .
The debate came to a head U1is
spring when the FDA stopped doctors from injecting San Francisco
AIDS patients with baboon hpne
marrow in an allemplto boost their

immune systems. Baboon marrow
resists AIDS infection. The FDA
wants to determine if the experi·
men! is safe - and if the baboon
marrow is infectious -

a decision

an agency panel will make uext
month.
The FDA sought advice from
the Institute of Medicine, an artn of
the National Academy of Sciences.

POS'f.tll.

A district meeting or tbe Daugh·
ters of America will be held at
Chester Saturday, it was announced
when Chester Council 323 met
recendy at the hall.
Jean Wclsh. councilor, presided
at the meeting. Flag pledges, roll
call, scripture and the Lord's
Prayer opened tbe meeting. Report·
ed ill were Roberta Maidens and
Martha Durst Elizabeth Hayes
thanked the lodge for remembrances during her illness.
Everell Grant was presented a
Father's Day gift. A letter was read
from the state · councilor Elsie
Swisher about the state session.
Erma Cleland reported that Chester
Council helped institute a council
at Rockport W. Va. She also noted
a rally attended along with the Belpre inspection and a picnic held at
Logan.
Books will he audited July 3 at
I p.m at the home of Kathryn
Baum. on the council instituted .in
Rockport W.Va.
The group enjoyed a potluck
and observing the quarterly birthdays llf Erma Cleland, Everett \
Grant, Ethel Orr, Goldie Frederic~ .
Jean Welsh, Iva Powell, Eva Robson, and Rachel Ashley. Others
auending were Charlotte Grant,
Kathryn Daum, Marcia Keller,
Esther Smith , Opal Eichinger,
Laura Nice, Thelma White, Mary
Holter, Emma Ashley. Ella
Osborne, Lora Damewood, Opal
Hollon, Mary Barringer, Virginia
Lee, Elizabeth Hayes, Joann Baum
and Sandy Wbite.

....
...
"

.IN CONCERT - The Pathfinders, a gospel quartet from Coal
Grove will he in concert Sunday at 7 p.m at lhe First Southern
Bapt~t Church, Pomeroy Pike. Pa,.tor Lamar O'Bryant Invites Jhe
community to hear the group. A Jove offering wiU he taken.

The Community Calendar Is fund raisers or any type. Items
published as a free service to are printed as space permits and
:· non-profit groups wishing to . cannot be guaranteed to run a
" announce meeting and special specific number or days.
events. The calendar is nut
designed to promote sales or
THURSDAY
...

Fla.; from 1936, Eleanor Gilkey
Updegraff, Birqtingbam, Ala.; from
1937, Ivan Cottrill, Columbus;
Aysha Douglas Bailey, POmeroy;
Ola Douglas Sinclair, Pomeroy;
Juanita Hull Richards, Dayton ;
Frances Michael Miller, Belpre;
Margaret Whaley Kostinal, Athens.
From the class of 1938, Leodell
Davidson, Pomeroy; Alice Gilkey
.Whaley, Palm ·Harbor, Fla; Clinton
Gilkey, Albany; Mary Virginia
Hull Gibson. Pomeroy; from 1940,
Cecil Blackwood, Pomeroy; Lennie
Jewell, Pomeroy; William Knapp,
Dayton; from 1941, Joan Finlaw
Sordon, Rutland.
From 1'942, Robert Alkire,
Pomeroy; Frances Gilkey Alkire.
.

Pomeroy; Gladys Hull Cumings,
Pomeroy; from 1943 , Virginia
Alkire Burke, Pomeroy; from 1944,
Anna Circle Cleland; Gahanna;
Bernard Gilkey, Middleport ;
Howard Day Gilkey, Columbus;·
from 1945, Joseph Stanley Jr .,
Shade; Mary Ann Throckmorton
Wbittlock, Columbus; from 1946,
Lena Alkire Hewitt, Columbu s;
Gamet Henderson Swisher, Soutb
Salem; Katheryn Wyatt Ask; from
1947, Dena Chase Parsons, Dayton ; Richard Parsons , Dayton ;
Dolores Wood King, Pomeroy.
From 1948. Helen Alkire Pickens, Racine ; from 1950 Rosella
.Dorgan Birchfield , Albany; from
1951 , Stanley Deal, Mid'dieburg
Heights; Flora Douglas Osborn,

Albany; Gertrude McMurry Mon·
roe. Albany; Pansey Turner Jordon,
Pom eroy ; Juanita Wyant Deal ,
Middlesburg; from 1952, James
Dorgan, Lancaster; Paul Cottrill,
Albany; from 1953, Paul Pauley,
Pomeroy; from 1955, Gracie Forlus
Wilson, Albany ; Don Wil so n,
Albany.
From 1956, Dorothy Anderson
Frum, Pomeroy; Richard Bradley,
Oakllill, W.Va.; Larry Clark. Mid·
dleport; Janice Wyant"Debord ;
from 1957 , Rachel Burridge
Lefebre , Pomeroy; Connie Kay
Carsey Chapman, Pomeroy; from
1959, Virgil Reeves; from 1960,
· Joy Wiseman Clark, Middleport;
and Harold Graham, Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held Thursday at 10
a.m. at tbe Salvation Army on But·
tcmut Avenue. Ail area residents in
need of clothing are invited to
attend:
·

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday, 7 p.m . Sacred Heart Church,
Mulberry Avenue.
. SYRACUSE - The annual
meeting of the Carleton College

Iioard ·o r Trustees will be held
Thursday, June 29 at 7 p.m.• at tbe
residence (pool house) of its president, Bob Wingett. All board members are urged to attend.

FRIDAY
LONG OOTfOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church will host guest
evangelist Robert Bell at 7 p.m .
Friday 111 the church .

· ~------Family reunions----~•
GERMAN
. BffiCHFIELD
Effie Roach for oldest woman, JL
Those from · Pomeroy were
Tbe ninth annual German family
The Birchfield reunion was held Luckeydoo In for youngest child, Keith, Erruna, Rachel, Whitney and
: • reunion was held recently ·at tbe Sunday witb a basket dinner at and Rob Miller and Roy Young for Emily Ashley; Jeremiah Russell;
: family's old home 'site near Rut· noon at the Henderson Community farthest traveled.
Greg, Jan and Zach Davis; Ben
land. Edna Wicker, Galion was in Center .
Holter; Ross Holter; Alan and Kay
HOLTER
.charge of tbe event.
Attending were Effie Roach and
The 13th annual reunion of the Holter; Edith Sisson; Nate, Brenna
In attendance.were five childreh Tom and Phillis Roach, Henderson
· of the late Mr. and Mrs. Howard W.Va .; Everett, Charlotte and George Holter Jr. family was held and Clare Sisson; Roy and Pat
Pauline Ziegler; and Tim
German: Howard Curtis German, Michael Grant or Racine; Eugene, · recently at tbe home of Jim and Holler;
Peavley.
Karen
Werry
in
Morning
Star.
The
Langsville; Robert German, Janey, Rickey, Gina, Andrew and
Those from Racine were Delbert
· ·. Newark, Detty (German) Bowles, Randy Birchfield, Rutland; Phillip family took and shared pictures, as
and
Marie. Heasley; Dill Harris;
well
as
reminisced
during
the
day.
:• Pataskala, Edna (Gennan) Wicker Smith, Rutland; Pam and Shayne
Roger,
Jamey and Noah Holler;
attendance
were
Mac
and
In
·;·and John German, both of Galion. Davis, Albany; Megan Coe,
Tiffany
Dennett; Ryan Holler;
Ann
Cottrill,
Lancaster;
Edgar
and
·.. Also attending were spouses, Albany; Roy Young, BiUe, W.Va.;
Christy
Derentz;
Tammy Holler;
Betty
(Holler)
Vale,
Sanford,
Fla.;
·· grandchildren, great-grandchildren Willard, Mae and Francis Luckey·
Roy
and
Bonnie
V
:m Meter; Helen
Mary
Kay
YosL
Syracuse;
Delmar
· and guests totaling 76 people.
doo, Point Pleasant, 'w :va.; Mr. ·and Jean Hamm, South Webster; Holter; Sue and Harold Hager; Paul
A feature of the reunion was the and Mrs. Larry Luckeydoo and J.L,·
Saturday luncheon with Edna ·Luckeydoo Ill, Point Pleasant; Ron James Werry and Sarab Triplett, Moore; Timmas and Evelyn Holter;
Ravenswood , W.Va.; Roger and Frallces Roberts; Paul, Sharon,
~Wicker and her sister Betty Bowles
and Dreama Harvey, Proctorville; Valerie
Holter, Bidwell; Ernestine Aaron, John and Tracy Card;
preparing the meat and otl1ers pro· · Sammy, Sandy and Nicole Birchviding covered dishes and drinks. field, Pedro; Alva and Velma and Donna Stockton, Huber Randy Violet and Tommy Werry;
Prayer was offered by Tim Ger- Luckeydoo, Mason, W.Va. ; and Heights; Doni Lipps, Little Hock· Jimmy Werry, Rick Werry; Penny,
ing; Dan and Rutb Martin; Marilyn · Srunantha and Jess A11n Pridemore;
man, Newark.
Rob Miller, Elkview, W.Va.
Imboden; Kevin Holter; June
Chil.dren' s gifts were won by
Those winning prizes were and Doug Manin; and Ralph, Mil- Butch
Ashley
and the host and hostess.
dred
and
Anita
Bernard,
Coolville.
Vince, Timmy and Jessica Gennan Alva Luckeydoo for oldest man.
all from Newark. Adult gifts were
won by Joan Burkhardt, Carding·
ton; John Steele, Pataskala; and
Ronda Grimes. Galion. The 50150
drawing was won by Kevin
Buchanan, Galion.
.
Other activities included hiking,
riding trail bikes, three-and fourwheelers, and a game of hide and
seek through the hill s and strip
mines,
The next reunion will be held in
1996 with Robert and Jodi Gennan,
Newad&lt;;, in charge.

N01'1~S

If it surprises you that the
U.S. Postal Setvice is not funded
by tax dollars, join the crowd.

HOLIDlJll

t~e Area Six Health Services
Scholarship and the Dean's Schol·
arship.
Mark A. Murphy, Reedsville, a
senior majoring in mechanical
engineering, was awarded the
Dean's Scholarship, the Paul H.
Black and Irene C. Black Memorial
Scholarship and the Babcock and
Wilcox Engineering Scholarship.
Andrew W. Fields, Syracuse, a
sophomore majoring in mechanical
engineering, was. awarded tLe
Dean's Scholarship.
Dean's scholarships, which are
based on high scholastic performance, are awarded upon the recommendation ·of faculty commit ..
tees in the students academic are:L&lt;.

The Harrisonville Alumni Ban·
quet was beld recendy in the gym
which was decorated in purple and
wbite.
·
Pastor Ricbanl Bradley, a 1956
alumnus spoke on his years at the
school and those since. Honored
were tbe classes of 1925, 1935,
1945 and 1955. and donated money
for needs or the library and for
computers.
· Tbose attending from 1925 were
Ernest Carr, Pomeroy; from 1928,
Stella Diehl Atkins, Leah Cane .
· Williams, Pomeroy; from · 1929,
Ann!l Bowen Halliday, Westerville;
from 1933, Mary Welsh Wood·
yard, Columbus; from 1934, Thor
Carsey, , Pomeroy, from 1935,
Fredrick Whaley, Palm Harbor,

~t~esttt

JrRLUt.S
l"

When you've had yoar fill
of hlgh prices, try us for
a rtrfreshlng change.

GBAND U.OPBNING OF
RUTLAND
. FURNITURE'S
BEDROOM SHOWROOM

IKEIJ.ERI

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a

Trevor A. Petrel, Racine, a
senior majoring in chemistry, was
awarded the Jame s D. Euler
Memorial Scholarship, the Lela A.
Ewers Science Scholarship and the
Alvin Carlson Scholan;hip.
Janelle D. Williams, Racine, a
senior majoring in hearing and
speech sciences, wa• awarded the
Creed Janes Scholarship Fund.
Steven R. Barnett, Reedsville, a
senior majoring chemical engineering, was awarded the Alumni
Sesquicentennial Scholarship, and
the Dean's Scbolarship.
Donette R. Dugan, Reetl&lt;ville, a
senior majoring in nursing, wa.s
awarded the Lillian Holgate
McCracken Memorial Scholarship,

·~----------Community calendar-----~----

Send Us llour

ravorite Recipe

G~egorr A. Duvall, Portland, a
junior maJoring mechanical engineering, was awarded tbe Creed
Janes Scholarship Fund.
Christine N. Harmon, Portland,
a senior majoring in bealth Sciences
was awanled the Cred Janes Scholarship Fund.
Jamey T. Holter, Racine, a
senior majoring in journalism was
awarded the Dr. James H. and Nellie Rowley Jewell Scholarship.
David C. lble, Racine, a senior
majoring in cbemistry was awarded
the Helen Hoover Memorial
Endowed Scholarship
·
· Junetta A. Beegle, Racine, was
awarded the Creed Janes Scholar·
ship Fund.

ChMttuil Creek

(OO~l)OO~
•

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents ; at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables ·
•Soups and Sandwiches
.

.

Bring your recipe into our office or send it to:
·
Holiday Cookbook
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Olt 48969

Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.

Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

We have just revealed one of the best-kept
of all government secrets.
As far as we can tell, there are remarkably
few people out there who realize that the U.S.
Postal Service is rotally self-supporting. All of
our operations are funded from the sale of stamps
and postage, and none of the.m (zero, zilch, nada)
from taxes. It's been that way since 1982. And it
makes us an .exceptional government service.
This is pretty remarkable when you consider that just
about every day, the Postai ·Service delivers to 125 million
addresses from more than 40,000 post offices across the
country, generating annual revenues of $54 billion.
Or that we deal with 177 billion pieces of mail a year.
Deliver 400/o of the world's maii..And that, thanks to .
high..; tech equipment, the U.S. Postal Service contin~es
to offer one of tlle lowest-~ost, fust-class postage rates
of ~ny industrialized
UNITEDSTIJTES
1
natiOn.
POSTIJL SERVICE,.

••
•

DAVID L. MITCHELL
•

C1995 USPS

•

'

,.

David L. Mitchell, son of Kathy
Mitchell Dailey of Pomeroy recent·
ly completed training from the U.S .
Marine Corps in Parris Island, S.C. ,
He is currently on leave.

•

Reunion

policy
..

d

We Deliver' For You.

In the service

"

With the family reunion season
quickly approaching, many will be
submitting articles of family activi·
ties for publication.
.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
The Daily Sentinel requests that
articles be neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing. Reunion
items should not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted within 30 .
days of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing. Anicles
will be published as soon as possible.

Hurry out this weekend to Rutland Furniture for the
Grand Re-opening of our bedroom suite showroom.
For a lirnited time, buy a complete bedroom suite*
and get the Bedding FREE! That's right, a FREE
Mattress and Box Springs with a $600 suggested
retail value to go with your new bedroom suite.
"This offer valid on $1299.95 purchase price or higher.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
"'\fe Ser1lice

Wftal We Sell'' .

MAIN STREET
742·2211

RUTLAND, OHIO
1·8()0..837-8217

'

Service Hotline 742·2212

JZ l

Rutland Fumltl.lre

~VERYDAY

�...

-

P-ae 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice
Public Notice
I-;;;;;:;;;;~;;;;
tnd the following drllfl, Ae•ncr (OIMj LMI w.11. 1111en •••••••or orWra);
propoMCI, or flntl ectlont "ACTIONS" Include the tilt lttuuoe, denltl,
opp-•
verified wtre lttued, by the Ohio edoptlon, mocllflcatlon, 01 •adllallllon or nualllon
complollntt _,. received En•lronmtnltl Prot!tCtlon rtHCIIIoll ......,.lotlw ofiUFIII,,.,....., ..._,
Public Notice
I'UIIUCNOTICE
Th t
fo II ow In 1

_,or

of

Public NoCice

VlriiiiM.,

or oe.U~tM; 1uutn1,

tnd the epproval or
d"""'"'nl of pleno tncl
tptclflcatlont. "Draft
Actlone• artlilt Director
written
of
Environmental
po:t1ct1an't (Director-.)
lnttnt wl1h reepect to .t ht

denyln1.
mo!IJfylna, revoking, or
-tilt a ptnlllt, - - ·
or veri-• which Ia not
precttlttl by t _
8CIIon,
mey be IPPIIItcl....
to
llltEIRbylllng.,...,...

1

· ·

BY NELLIE PARKER
Sentinel CoiTUpondent
My husband, Wilber Parker,
told me this remembrance.
My dad, Pearl Parker, bought
his first car- a 1916 .Model T
l"ith a .brass radiator - about
1920. When dad staned to drive, be
swung around in front or the bam,
lurched over on lbe house side of
lhe road, and wiped out our mailbox.

We kids ·came out, clarnorjng
fot a ride. Dad w:ts going to the
store in Chester to sell the eggs.
u.Nope/' he st;tid, "1 don't know

about driving lhis contraption.' Aod he wove down lhe road,
leaving us wailing.
At Chester everyone gathered
around to see the car. Charlie
Smilh, lhe miller, Emesl and Ben
Knight, farmers, begged for a ride
a.' we children had. Dad hesiL1ted
but the pride of .showing off his
• ownership got lhe best of bim.
He drove up the steep hill back
of Chester, now Route 248. Then,
as now, lhe road curves at lhc bot·
tom and top and in the middle of
U1e hill. Dad got turned around and
staned down the hill. The car swept
down the first ascent, barely made
the curve in lbe middle, tore toward
the curve at the bottom. The )ias·
,sengcrs were clutching each other,
too tenified to yell. Somehow dad
stayed in the road and careened
into Chester.
Roads then were simple dirt,
.powdered wi.th dust in su_mm7r.
wagon-hub deep with mud m wmter. Dad drove our car in summer.
In winter it sat on blocks in the
enou~h

bam.

always calm, said notbing.
In the twenties more and more
automobiles appeared on State
Route 7 that went past our house.
People began to clamor for .a road
lhat was better than dust in summer
and mud in winter. A gravel road
was. made. It was beuer than mud
surely, but in summer clouds of
dust rose from it. I was only 14
when I helped dad work on the
road that went from Route 7 past
the h'ouse of our neighbor, Dan
Summerfield, to Route 248 near
Keno. I was so exhausted by night
lhat I'd go to sleep at the supper
!able.
•
There was great excitement in
our neighborhood when we heard
lhat Route 7 was to become a tar
road. Surveyors arrived first. Later
came the road crew with chaindriven trucks, Fords on tractors that
pulled slip scrapers and a 6team
shovel. We boys neglected our
chores to watch the steam-shovel
dig into the bank, swing around
and drop its load on a iruck.
The bridge that spanned the
brook below our .bouse was made
of railroad lies when lhe road was
din. Dad bad helped build the one
for lhe gravel road. It was concrete
with railroad irons for reinforcement. Now it would have to be
removed to make way for the new
bridge.
Clarence Wolte was lhe "powder monkey" responsible for setting
the dynamite charges. Dad
explained to him how lhe bridge
was built and advised him that he'd
have to use light charges to break
lhe concrete away from lhe irons.
Clarence agreed with tbj.s and
worked accordingly.
But lhe construction boss didn't
agree. Dad had already made his
acquaintance unpleasantly. Dad
had asked Shaw, lhe contractor, if
lhere was any work for him on lhc
road. Shaw told dad he could work
wilh his team scraping ditches.
The construction boss saw him
working and shouted "What're you
doing? Where's you come from? I
didn't hire you."
"I'm scraping ditches," dad
· replied.

We ooys were crazy to drive lhe
car, but ()ad wouldn't let us on lhe
road so we drove it in fhe field
'behind lhe house. My iniliation in
driving U1e car on the road happened lhe fall I was 10. Mom, dad .
and I were i11 Pomeroy peddling
apples . Dad was accident-pwne.
Always hustling and bustling, he
never took proper precautions . He
was crossing the street intcnl on
selling apples when a car knocked
him down. and f'dll over him.
''You're fired!"
Al'ter a doctor pronounced no
Dad
continued workiug. "You
bones broken, mom and I helped
didn't
hire
me, you can't fi(e me ."
dad to lhe car. Mom had never tried
"I'd like to know who hired
to drive the car, and she couldn't
see herself even trying. That lefl you!"
"Mr. Shaw hir.:d me,"
me.
The boss went away, muttering.
~
I can't r~member being fright·
ened. I drove the car home. Dad . Wheu he saw Clarence working at
moaned at every bump. Mom. demolishing the bridge, he started

1

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

IJf Olllo,

DhiiiDft IJf

P'DinlfOJ,

I VICinity

PWUC IIOTICI

Tilt

1tH

, .., . ....

Street, Roorn 3DO,
Columbul, Ohio 43211. A
copy of lht ....,... mull be
aerved on the director
within 3 Uy8- fiHnglht
...,..1 With lht EllA.
·Appllcatlon for permh to

nqutol 1 pulollc meeting
rttto'lllng draft ecttone.
shouting again, "What're you comment• or public
doing? You'll never get rid of the mttllng nqutola mutt be
bridge that way."
aullmlttH within 30 dll)'t of
Clarence explained.
notice of tht drell tctlon.
"Foolishness. Foolishness! Put "Propaood Actlono• oro ~~
written tlalementa of lht
ppere Pltlnt Cheater
enough dynamite in there to blow it d~'• Intent with
r Ol.t., Co. Rd. 311t et
out!"
.
rttpect to the laautnct,
124,
OH,
Clarence shook his bead . "I denltl, modification,
c llty Ducrlpllon:
can't do that. It's too dangerous. reYOCIIIon, or rtntwtl oft --·Application No.
We're liable to blow all the win- permit, llcen11, or vtrltnce. 01-4517, Filter lltckwtth
Wrltton commonte and wtter dltchargt at Wiler
dows out of that house."
requ 11t1 for • public T-... Plant.
"You mean you refuse to do itr' mtttlng regarding •
'!IIpper Plalna Cheater .
"If you put it that way, yes. I'm propoatd tctlon m•y bt Weier Dlotrlct, Co. Rd. 3tt
not going to get somebody killed."
oubmlttH within 30 dtp of It SL Rt. 124, Long -om,
"You're fired!"
notice of tha propoatd OH, Facllhy Deacrlptlon:
Next the boSs ordered a case of action. An adjudication Wu-ottr,,AppllciUon No.
h"rlng may be htld on 1 01-4540, Stpllc Ttnk for
dynamite laid on an d aroun d be pi'Opoltcl actiOn lie hearing Propooed Water Treatment
bridge. The explosion destroyed requeat or obloctlon Ia Plent.
the bridge all right, besides bleak· received by the OEPA Application for Ctrllflcllllon
ing ·nearly all the windows in our within 30 dtyt of luuance
us Army Corp• ot
bouse and damaging our buildlno's . of tho propoaod tctlon. Englnttrl, Huntington
9
WriHtn commenta, r.qutall Dlttrlct, V.rlouo Twpo, OH,
roofs which were peppered With for public meatlnga, tnd Recotvlng Wotero: Ohio
rocks. The construction company adludlutlon hurl
Pertolna to 401
bad to hire the Pomeroy Cement roqueot• muot bo
tj(-~c:~~tfitc:atlon Public Notice
Block Company to repair the dam· , Hearing Clerk,
(H)V5-26.
age. This took days.
Envlronmtnttl Pic&gt;toc:tlc•n Flntl Approval of Pltno and
r •
th
road becam
Agoncy, . P.O.
1041, Speclflcallono
.....ter, e tar
e COO· Columbuo, Ohio 43216-1041
Lead In 1
C reo k
crete. The tar road bad taken pan Of (Telephone: 814-1144-2129). ConltrvonJ'y Dlttrlct,
. the bottom land opposite· our "Final Actlone: ere actlono Rutltnd, OH, laoua Date
house; lbe concrete road finished il of the director which oro 6/15/85, Thla flntl action not
Always small, the fields were now ofltctiM upon l"uance or • preceded by propootd
too little to farm. Thus, road-build- alated tfftcllvt date. tctlon tnd 11 appatllblt to
Puroutnt to Ohio Rtvlotd EBR. Phaot Ill txttnalon
ing spoils farm land.
Codo Section 3745.04, a project, Lotdlng Crook
Our two barns and wagon shed final action may be Connrvoncy Dlatrlct.
were too close to the new right-of- appealed
to
tho
Mtyor and Council,
way. The state offered to pay dad environmental boord of Pomeroy, OH toauo Date
for the barns or move them. Dad rovlow (EBR) by • porton 6122/9S, Thlo flniol action not
chose to have them moved. He
wu • party to • preceded by propooed
·
proceodlng boforo tho action ond Ia appealable to
could have bad a basement put m dlroctor by filing tn tppeal .EBR. Eut Main Streot
for the big barn, but there had
30 day• of notice of
Wttorllne Roplacemont.
never been a basement in lhe barn
flnaltctlon. Pureuont to Flntl tuuanco of
so he decided against it. i always
Ro•latcl Code Section
Hazardouo
lhooght be made a mistake.
. 131'45 . 07, • final · action
The buildings were put on
rollers and moved slowly, slowly to
their new positions.
When the great cut was made
through the bill south of us where
the Ficks live, there was so much
dirt that lhe original plans for the
road by our house ;were changed.
· Portable
The extra din was put on the road
Bandsaw Mill
thus raising the road bed. The
bridge also had to be raised. A big
32124Happy
culvert under it furnished a pasHollow Rd.
sage for our livestock from one
Middleport, Ohio 45760
side of lhe road to lhe other.
Dal)ny &amp; Peggy
I didn't lhink of it at the time,
Brlckles
but I later realized that this madbuilding was an education for us
614·742·2193
boys . We learned as we watched
trl/111'10.
about lhe operation of machinery.

Long--....

'l1lut

,_,

~

f.:::::~Oillo~ .... -·

• Famllr ftllllw, ... • · At. 1..,,

., Cllil Alllll.

BISSELL IUILIEIS, IIC.

a.•.

TMIIacltaaenr

Garages• Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

lllldllpOtt, Ohio
21; 1TC .... ...... .

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Cltotl-,.__

••HI•
Acro11
With ADallr Seatlnel

614-992-7643

Slulf, T - Wllh Cr.trl. S 1 ~*•

·;:: Kenny's Auto Rental

s

THE
WATERING HOLE

-'

UP
FRIDAY, JUNE 30
9:30-1:30
KARAOKE
SUNDAY, JULY 2
5:00-9:00
SYMMES CREEK

••, 264 Uppar River Rd.
· • Gallipolis, OH. 45631
_, Give Yourself Tha
Sports Edge with
. .....
The Sports &amp;
_,'
Entertainment ·
· ·"•
......
Llna
1-900-263-1800
-:,•
Ext.1986
$2.99 per minute
...
..... Must be 18 yrs. old. ·
.'
Procall Co.
~:
(602)954-7420

SYMMES CREEK AT
COURT ST. GRILL
FRIDAY 9 TIL?
$1.00 Cover Charge

30 &amp; July 1

-

1',

.

'

3 FAMILY YARD SALE

AND REMOVAL ·

Misc. Jobs.

Bill Slack

I

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark ..
992·9949 . 992·6471
Mon . Fri 8 a·.m. • 6 p.m.
Sat. a p~ m. · 5 p.m.
Sun. by appt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport

1·900·Date Line

&amp; surrounding ·area.

Call for rate schedule
Min. $2.00

••

All

4 New Tires

DUI- SR

·wrr.L.C.

Best Rates

·

992·5042

22

DISCOUNTS

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

'!!ll!!'t!l

--

.,.-~-::
.

v •·

•

HELPING TEENS- Jonathan DickeJt&lt;, at len, recognized Don
Tate generul manager Roger Jessie Tuesday afternoon. Don Tate ,
Motors sponsored Dickens and ot!ter youths to recent Teen ln.•ti·
·tule program&lt;. The program helps .teens get orr and stay away
rrom drugs. Dickens, a senior at Meigs High School, said he plait&lt;

(614) 949·3005

"'"-

(Limestone Low Rates)'

WICKS
HAULING

FILM DEVELOPING

"You're going to
thank me for it."

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

.

12 Exp. Roll $1.99

'

L&amp;W
LAWN CARE
•Mowing
•Trimming
•Firewood
Also:

611311

24 Exp. Roll $3.99

8:00 a.m.-3:30 p'!tn.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
lrisutation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
~ree Estimates

11191H'n

GOLF LESSONS
CUSTOM GOLF CLUBS
CLUB REPAIR
TROPHIES
PLAQUES
BADGES

36 Exp. Roll $5.99
orrer oood on .1 set or standard size

prints made lrom vaur 35mm,
disc. 110 or 126 color p•lnt Jllm
(C·41

3"

Remodeling

I

,

Mobile Welding
Oiesellnjector SVC
lnjactor Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

process only).

Feast your eyes

on Kodak Colorwatch
Quality this BoUday.

Come see for yourself.

'
.'

'j
woritleave you up inthe all:
"t
f:

•

1-800-MERIT-98

LINDA'S

'

I K•ann1eth McCullough, R. P~. Charlet RIHio, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
· Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m,
Sunday 10:011a.m.to 4:011,p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'tll9

''
''
'

AIISIBII!

!•

0U,.re m'

good han,-1,.. .

Reasonable
lnsuras ·Experienced

Call Wayne NeH 992-4405,
For Free Estimates

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
SpecialiZing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·848·007
DARWIN , OHIO
7n1/Q 1TFN

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot
Every Wed. Nile

5:30p.m.

Chesler

Welcome

•Room Additions
-New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Rooting
·
•Interior &amp; EKierior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FRt;E ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

4113195

•

PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior
Taka tho pain out
painting. Let us do H
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.

'
•

I

614-985-4180 !124/14

'•

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

Everyone

love &amp; Romance
Fate· Awaits You!

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

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEUICE
•FaCtory Authorized Parts ·
&amp; Service
•All Makes •42 Years
•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers • Dryers· Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers
•Dishwashers

•H .W. Healers
•Microwaves •Disposals

•Thanks Meigs &amp;

Surrounding Areas

(614) 985-3561 or
992·5335 12114tffn

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

Umestone &amp; Grave~
Septic Systems, Trader &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

Bulldozing, Backhoe,

614-742·2138

•

FL Blade, Alu. Windows. House·
hold Goode, 1970 Honda Trail

~ old '"""" old -

lOri. old clockl, onlicl•lumlt!n.
Bike, Marcei'Villa, Rt. 218 Behind Ri~t«tne Antiquee. Aull Moore,
78 Salion.
owner. Ot4·882·252e. We buy
Garage Sale: 425 Debbie Drive,

I-------------

•Rrlt Of Season· June 29th, -1st.
3 Milos On SR 325, N. Of Vinton,

j:~~~~~~Co~ln~Sh~o==,P·

Salurdar. Julr 111. 8:00 A.ll. · J 1 D'a AulD PariS and Sat..go,
1:00 P.M. Two Sofas, Chair, buying wrecka, junk autoa ' &amp;
Lamps, Child Tor• And Clolhlng, ll'llckL Aloo, peril for ule. 304.
Olher I l l - • lwmL
77:J.Sl43 or 773-5al3.
Garage Sale: 551 Debbie Drive, I,;_;..;,;.;.;.,;..;,;~=--Frldar June 30th, 9·3, Clothes,
All Old U.S.
Ills&lt;.
Sliver Colfla,
to buy: any Rod UcKutn

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
(;utters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168
5/16194 TFN

. CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE
• Sidewalks
• Driveways
• Patios
• Porches
• Slabs
992·3265
·~"

Appliances, Truck Topper &amp;. Bed ;,1tl:.:.7r1.:.L::.::-:.;.::7:.:.S.:.:.78.:.711:.:.:·..__ __
Liner, 4 Wheeler, Avion Camper Wanted To Bu)' Little Tykea In
2e• Excellent Condilion, (Fully), Good Condition: Kitchen Set,
lots Of Miscl "'Rain Or Shine." · Sand Bor, Picnic Ta~e &amp; Little

30th. July Ill, 2nd. Cloth&amp;L
Knick Knacks, Eto. 46 Burnell
Road, Kanauga.
Saturday 3·Miles Out Georges
Creel&lt; On Johnaons Ridge Seo·
ond Houoe on Left, Boat, Couch,
Choir, T.v., Craltll, Clothea
June

30 AMouncemerits
.CHEROKEE SUPER BINGO July
7th, 8th, ' 1DD,OOO c-all 2 C••
1241 Trip &amp; Pockageo, 814c448·
.:;1923.=-------·1

nkaoCor,OI4-245-6887.
War111Hi ., 111, _ antique and uMd
lumllUra, no 11om 10o large or .,.
omall. Wll buy ana plooo or cornplele eoliiOI, 0111!' llartin, 8,.,.,1192.,...·7_
..,~,.
- ------

Wanted To Buy: Junk AulOI Wllh

If you have 1 riding lawn mower Take Rio Grande Ell! To 325 s . Or Without Mcitara. Call Larry
lhat you wouklllke lO donate to 1 Past Univeraity To Trinity Baptist LMtf1.8 14 388 03)3
church, plaaae call304-e75-SSG8 Caution Ughl. Turn West To
:•::hllr:.,:?~pm.:::...~-----1 Cherry Ridge, 4 11211iles 01 Yard
EMPLOYMENT
5818'· S.IUrda-f. Ju~ 1 '~ 8-3.
40
Giveaway

SERVICES

112 Norwegian Elk hound, 112

T.hurs, Frl, Sat, 9·5, 10 Miles

aqulrrol FromGallipoisOnt41.

n,,, Frl, StAt. 1 s, 3 Miles Be-

224

7S.::::::::,·-·I
!.2:::malt=.,:ki::
'ttei==".:-::::.:::;

low Dam, Table JChalrs, Antique
China Catlinel, End Tablet,

Black bar w/4 •iYel bar a1oo11,

S10ve, Relrtgerator. Crafts. Dolls..

1

~folr.:.""::.::.,.:;tlon.:::.;~::.;.,.:.:..:.:-::.;....::·-:::-:-l
Free puppiaato good home. 304·

875-8818.

::,:.:::=---:::---.-::-1
Friendly Calico Kitten, 'Litter
Trained. lnalde Home Onlr. 614·
44&amp;-31l97.

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

Help Wanted

110

1:·:===.::_~,.:.::.:...,,....,..
Attn: PI Plea1ant Postal Poll·
lk&gt;nt a'llilabte. Pannanent fultrlrN

for clerkllaorlera, Full beneH11.
You Won't ·w ant To Mi n Thla For exam dale, appllcallon and
Salel W. Have Brands From Nike salary info: 708·2154·1100 ext
To Oockell To Esprit ' And 3670, 8amiD&amp;Jim:

Guess.

Rain Or Shine, Friday And

Saturday, 9·3, 1501 Rodney Pk, AVON I All Area• I Shirl•y
(St Rt 850) Look For Signs.
Speo,., 304-67!&gt;-1429.

AVO!f SEUS ITSELF

Small11 fi"Gnth old mala Collie

ml•. ohoto up to dale, 81H92·
2.s. or 814-1192-3478 .....,..;ogo.
Two female flger call will) aomt
whiiAt, 614-IWII-2270.

Walker Coonhound, female. 304·
Q37·2895.

Lost and Found ·
Fcuncl: Watch, Upper End Of Cill'
Pall&lt;. Golllpoli' a1._..14 11.
60

loti: Bilek &amp; White Female Cat
400 Block Fourth, Reward!

-2252. 81 ....287&amp;

eu-

---------I
Average $8·•15/Hr.
Pomeroy,
Home

Middleport
lllor:ountal No lrMntorrl
T8fritary Oplioral. lniii!Op.
&amp; VIcinity
1-100-7&lt;2-4738
778 Olivor St lliddlepor~ 9-S, 28, AVON EARN US a1 homo-at

30. and Juf)' 1. in &amp; outside, mint
ahine, lamps, vanlty, weed eal8f,
porch ,furniture, curtains, bed
spreads, mobile CB anteMa, end
table )Cl men's clothes 38x32
panW.: Iota more.
'
All Yard Sales t.tual Be Paid In
Advanc:t. Deadline: 1;OOpm the
day before the ad lt to run, Sun·
day edition- 1:00pm Friday, Mon.
day adtlon 10:Q()a.m. Saturday. .

work. AU areas. 304..a&amp;2·28"5. 1800-SID2-8358, 1N:(),qP
Babylltttr Heeded In t.ty Home•
Must S. 18 To AwiJ, Refer.ncea
A Muall 14-441· 1185..

Circulation o.tk Clerk Potltion At
Dr. Samuel L 8o1111d Memorial
Li brary. Sam.: Evenings And
Weekends, Full-Time, · 37 112

-11.

Houro AWMit.
Co!npil·
Loot: Older Ford Reddish Brown
Koyboard Skillo A lluol EOE,
In Color, Window Van. Took The Ctrporl ule July I, TyrM Bfvd.. , tr
Cal.:..;_.,;,81.,;,1_1.,::1~:.;f.:.,;;;,;AD:;__ __
W""'U llog, Pit Bull, IJilo Collar I
Tag, Name: Howard, Roulll 2 Jar· Radne.L•lcho Area, Point PIMNR~ Friday
E\1111\in]), 304-8 ~1 83.

Lciot: One Black IIEMOREX
Tho Vlolnlty Of The Gall.lpolla

CaiT\Qorder Banery Saturday In

Public U11 Area . Reward. Call

Services.

Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Sy§k'ms &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

....

()()')

''(PJO

-.)(),)()

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

loll: rwo male tiger· Gil&amp;, 4
months old, one bobtail, Eut

llaln, Pomeroy vlclnl!y, 814·992·

113511.

70

Yanl Sale

FIYt family carport sale· 54$
Gran! StrNllllddltport. July.1-4.
Large vatlety, flln or ahlne. e.m7

=

••I•

Ji.!na 20July 1. 2
Tackorville
Rd.,
ft&lt;ll mobile homo. Tum loll oft SR
124 D Balhan Rd (281Dintt loll
Four family

30,

Gallipolis
Friday, June 30th, 1•1 Cov•rt
&amp; VlclnHy
Lane, lllddlepon. Homo lnttrlor,
I Q Toga Road. Thuro, Frl, SOl Avoh. baby ltema, cklthea. loti
WOmtn, Mon. Chlldreno Clolhlng, ,...,., aom-?
Babvbod, Cor SM~ T"i' llitc.
Garage oil• Fridoy 301h, SolUr·
3 Fomly: M Cormon Or., One !loy day 100. !5'11145 Bklltr Ridge Rd.,
OniJ, Frldoy, 8-3, Loll Of Every· long Bonom, 6~. TV, men'o
lh!nlll .

11*11,)tono,IIOC.

lmm4HII111 Openings : Eac:ellent
opportunity. to joln·u. long 1.-rri
hullh care field. S..klno part·

lime lPN't lor varllb&amp;e lhiftl _,r

!&amp;·bed oklllad Nlrolng facility.
Polnl Ploaunl Nurlllne 1 Rehoblilltlon Cenl« (tormorly Carollt·
wn1 Slalo Roull a2, Roult 1, Bo•
328, Point Pleooan~ WV 25550.
I:"Jionmar~ Auociatol Ftcllill')

•

•

.

At Wori -

Gl---2879.

1111\\ \liD
E\C\\ \TIM;

SAYRE TRUCKING

(614) 992· 5535
(614) 992·2753

ens Oresa Clothes, King Kutter 8 Decoratad aton. .,., -.11 ...._

lg. Size Womens Clothes, An-

C'-, mala,

.

1112/tfn

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

~

1100.

1 ~~~~~~~~~1:9o:o~e:a:ll·

MB#0489

···---.

•

Worried about hanging on to }'Our auto insurance if you happen to get a few tickets or have an accident?
Not if you're insured with Allstate. Your Allstate Agent stands by you, e&gt;vtn if your driving record gets banged
up, and can continue to offer you a poUcy from the Allstate famil~f companies. So you won't ~ave to look
for a new agent or ~urance company. Ask about the Allstate
· Insurability Guarantee. Guaranteed not to leave you hanging.
~

Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Addllions
Siding, Roofing,' Patios

Seat Covers, Night Shirts, Gag AuctiOns every Friday-Saturday,
Glha. Souvenir, Or Just To Speak 7pm, Mt. Alto Auction, Rt 2-33
Your Mind, GaiUa Met Estates. •cro11roads". Naw merchandlae,
Spring Valley On Jackson Pike groceries &amp; lots moft, Ed Frazier

Late Model Cara Or
frl 0130, Sat 11~. 8- 5, MK Cot· "''"''· Hl87 Modell Or Newer,
metica, Baby, S~mmer , Winter
Clolhea. Baby Items, t.4en, Worn·

· Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

Pomeroy

John
Teaford
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

SERVICE

AI Swimsuit&amp; &amp; Sun Coverupl,

tura, Some Old llama.
1!2:~~~304~·7!;73-!:;5+1~7;_.__
Flea
llarket
llonJuly
3rd;
8 A.M.. 90
Wamed to Buy
Anwttl Building, Kanauga, OH. ,;__·_ _ _ _,_,....:.__,..

PURCHASE ' · REFINANCE
CONSOLIDATE
l .

make good
do]j.-7S-S4Q2.

mo.

House Repair &amp;

Ano More. Pori Of Proooe&lt;lo Go ICBrr9=~Co&lt;;ey::.:::;:·,..-,..-,..-,--~
To G.II.H.A. Kklo. June 3Qfh lfri~
July 11~ (Sat) Ancl2 (SUn) ~rom Yard Sale. Thursday thru llon1 10 5 Al Gallallot Em101, 381 day. Rl 2 by !llol\ory Chapel. 111
Bud&lt; Ridge Road Behind Spring road on rlghl pelt Promloe Land
V111ay C1nina, FolowTl'e 51grt.
~Fiaa~Marka:::,:::;_t_ _ _ __
Comr~~~nlty Yard Solo · T·Shlrll · 80
Public Sale
And llort. T-Shlrll Can Be Used
and Auction

And Follow The Signa. ,Juno 301h,

COMPANY

15 Exp. Disc $2.99 .
NEFF REMODELING

Community Yard Sale -.T-Shirta 'tatd Sale. Fri-Sat Tayler Road in

tique Glasa. Furniture, Home lnL, poetry bootcl, publllhtd around

Office Hourg : Mon.-Fri.

Contract Work
614·992-5291

leiL

Q14-256-6578, 614-448-420&amp;.

.

on pursuing a college degree in drug and alcohol counseling. (Sentinel photo hy George Abate)

Yard Salt Fri·SII. 1/~ mile Pllll
Uc:OonaJd'a-Hendaraon. Old apple houae na]~t 10 atone ~ard on

July Ill, And 2nd, 9 To 6, Part Of :.::~--~.,--:--­
Proc:oado Go To G.M.H.A. KldL . Rick Pearson Auotlon Company,
full lima auctioneer, completa
Estate Sale: July 1at And 3rd, 51 auction
service.
licenud

MERIT

4/26/lln

MIDDLEPORT ss2-2n2

"

Slina.

Pine Street, Housewares, Furni- 166,0hio &amp; Well Virginia, 304·

Our Specialty

6191110

MY BUSINESS J&amp;LINSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE

Of All Lifestyles,
locally or
. nationwide.
1-900·945-5500
Ext. 7898
$2.99/mln. 18+
Procall Co.
602·954•7420 612111 mo.

:NtchoJsrrMeta s

(614) 992-7040

'

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

co,

Ohio

Violations

1

Giveaway July 1 Listen for
Winner c.n B~ Country Radio

Authorized AGA Distributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Steel
Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
Aluminum/Stainless
No job too large or too small!
Oxygen Acetylene
Helium all sizes Medical Grade o,
Propane Trimix Ultra Mix Mig Welders
Ph 773-9173 FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy St.
Mason, WV

Accidents/

.ELIM HOME
Adult Care JtL\
Facility 1 I \
Stop ln &amp; Sign-up for

Big, 81g Sale: July 3rd Only,
Somolhrng For Everyone, Baoldo
Ruoo'l Allgvrienlln vnm
Churdt Salt, VOUih Group: llounl
lJon lllaaiorely 8apliot, ....... Rl.
7, Balow loc:ko. Bladen Landing

Auto Insurance
Easy Payment
Plan

992·6351 &amp; 992-4447

MEET
SINGLES

8-FamUy Yard Sale. Furniture,

Home Interior, Lata ot everything I
1111 Viand S~Nl Sam-7 Rain or

. Bldg. Fri. Sot Mon.

Unisex Someone special In your area
Is seeking that dream mate to share a
life full of lovEt._romance, happiness
and all the pleasures of life.
1·900·776·3005 Ext. 9387
$2.99 per minute
18 yrs. plus
Procall602·954-7420
&amp;127/tmo.

F &amp; ATree Service
Trimming. Topping -Removal
Stump Removal
20 Years Experience
Guaranteed
·

'

G&amp;W

All Yard Soleo llull Be Paid In
Advanr:a. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Ytllowbuoh Road, Racine. Ohio.
the di'J before lhe ad is to run. June 30·July 1, 11-&lt;, baby, childSUnday oditi011 • 2:00 p.m. Friday. '""- adulta clo!N"'fo -thing lot
.
Uonctor tdlllon · 2:00 p.m. SoiUr· IMH)'QnO.
day.
Pl. Pleasant
Bun Sole, - : loll Clolhoo,
&amp; VIcinity
10, 12. 14. Curlllno. Sodding,
Hou-. Antiquoo, Old Uneo, 2112 Lincoln Ave. Toya, hou••
Furniture, Urge Sale, Second wares. books, videos. glrla &amp;. II·
H - Loll Blodtn Rd Fnlm 218, cleo clofloo, ""''"' Frl &amp; Sot
1121, •130, 71t, 0·1 ND PriDr
3-Family Yard Sale. 2108 lladl·
Soloal
aon Ava. June 30-July 1&amp;3. 7amBit Sale: Thurlday, Friday, Sotur· ?
clay, ID A.ll. I l4io WOit Of Red-

-.,.. : . •: :a :

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

992·2269

~
Friday &amp; Saturday
32425 Bailey Run Rd., Pomeroy
Utility trailer, band saw, lawn I
mower, bedroom suile. Good stuff!

:.a :. • ; : , , , . ,

949-2512

L----~·------=MU~I~

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
·and Removed

GIGANTIC YARD SALE
JUNE 30, JULY 1-3
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Rain or Shine
Sponsored by
Eastern Athletic Boosters

H&amp;H SAWMILL

YOUR NEEDS

30 II

PiasUcl, Tuppera PlalnL Lots ol
End Tilblll 112 Bed Extra&amp;, bar• clothd, liz• 10 1 111J. SponClotl*lg, Uioc.
sored b}' Bo'J Seoul Troop 235
11om C-.

RI'I·

....

bookt, porch gilder,

Vet'J Nice Bedrom Suit., CoHee,

SALE

'~"".,;_',

'

e. 7 Frl, Sal S.n, 73 Spruco SL l'lrd lilt- Juno 28 I

Parties

BAILED TO

TREE TRIMMING

Fifth Ave.,

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

HAY

,,r -.......- - - - .

CARPORT SALE

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

10121/Wtfn

AND MIXED

five niles oul SR t43,
June 3Dlh· July 111,

4-14-

Darwin, Ohio ·

MODERN SANITATION

·

2M3 IIIII Croek
Watch Signa, Clothet, Toys,
llloc. Lop Elrod, DWIIrl Rabbitl,

State Rt. 33

ALFALFA

-.
•,

' tylt*'g. Sip -

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

10111n

FOR

Auto Bedy Repelr

8 Fomllr: SOIUrdtr Ill Rtcc:oon
Trailer Por1t 0n 141, t.ota or e...
1/30 ·711/tS

1.800-486-1590
Bus. (1514) 446-9971

- '

'l I

June

We H•v• '"" •nfl V•nsl

~ Kenny's Auto Center

t

LINE

Cot~plete

011e Stop

:: lenny's is the place to come
~ when you need a car rental.

Middleport

SUnday 12·
I]~~~~~~~~=
Pomer-

lloral

CAll OUI OFFICE AT 992·2155

391

a.... -. Jukr a 1 4,......._
and

mltlt -.-. hold furftllhlngo, .• -

Size
Women•
Baby
Or Shine,
HomeClolhlng,
lnttt'IOf, Large

( No Sunday Calls)

. BULLETIN BOARD
"6" column Inch weekdays
11" column Inch Sunday .

t

Dryer,
llanr-.Ooara,
Bath- ~nil
hldull~!!c~lo~"*~,._!!:_!..,._~~ml~oc.!-:--~
room Slnk
Top Sho..,
St liCit. FbI ~I ...
Clolhlnt, Bti&gt;J, Kldo, THRI, Cllaltwic ~- Ju&lt;10 1!11, Jukr
1·!. &amp;-.. Hl]rll Scl»aa, ,..., or
418 11-.y Drive. Acrou From i'~hl~n·~·~~~po~n~o~or~ed~br:..:E=•=•::...rn
Porl&lt;lng lOI 11·7 Frl J.ttd ~Be 1 I L
S.. A I Hugo yard ule- JuM 1!11• July
5 F1llfllty Garage SOle: Julr 1•l 4111· 208 Flftll St-. '-2nd, 3rd; 11-7, 7 U1oo F11111t IW ICIOII fnlm Nape.
On St. Rl. 554, Put Eno On Lolli Hugh yard oalo, Do""ld Bucha·
a IIIIH From Chtlhlre On Righi non rooldtnco, M2tl3 SR. 124,
KWQ8t On St Rl. 5541 Rail Rooclov..,Julr 1,U.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Get YHr

.

11

lllddlapart

1toe41, Langllvllt, OH ........ tor ... ~..... ..
AppHcttlen No(t) 04-U- llldiltc" ~· .,... fOr
pultllo-pl u...........
Open burnln1 or July 10. 1. . . Ill the .....
detenetton of hueNoua ofh~IIIW . . .
within 30Uy8
llrwt MIA- lltlloun:.af
of the final action. EeR - - - dUUidbylllt 1:01
to 4:00 P·"'·J
......... dtnltl, eta. of e ........ be llltcl With: at :S2011 11tua lloacl In liD- ... ugh Prtdly. :,._

----------L---------..L.---------'----------1 - of
of,.,...,_
beIrs th e ca I""S
Pa II'"ker Ir.omem
v
=a.':',-:;.:::-·:.~
~=~. 2~~·~~:.~";0::
_
_
_
,..or
Of
and Route 7 Yeste~ear
J

The Dally Sentinel •

Thursday, June 21, 1lltl

•

�I

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Classified Line Ads
Tribune 446-234 2

•

Sentinel 992-2156

3 papers

Register 675-1333

Thursdey, June 21, 1 •
Ov•·1 IS"

J duy;
6 duy;
10 du y1

I) w.Jrd· ur I,_•;;

Monlhly

15 WOflh or 1•.'1\

I 5 wo1 d·,

S I 0 00
S I 1.00
SI.!O;duy

01 less

•:t,

The Dally Sentinel· Page 13

NEA Cro81word Puzzle

8&amp;1DOIC

) l5p•·r .,,;,
s.. Js fll' .:•:
5.60 p•·t wd.
5.06/rl:&gt;r

) 1 00

I'&gt; .vorth or ll'l&gt;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursdey, June 29, 1995

ACROSS

~--)

PHILLIP

I TIOI'Ic* nul

Fenclar
Bl,.. llurt Expotnllon
field
17 Opp¢11 d
11 Alrtatn land
20 Camp. pl.

12
14
11
18

:lOG Thru 2,000 Qaifona Ron
Evant Enltrprl- Jodteon. ott
1ol00«!7-111528.
.

730

~loc1tlc Whealchalro, Eloctrlc
ka bt a. HMA.!Nd Scoa18r Ut&amp;a.
Bleirwar Eleva1oro, Lift Cheiro,
Bowman'• Homecar• e 1.c-448·
72113.

vans &amp; 4-WDI

1(1)'(, NJ,..

1881 Cho¥J Scoaedale 4x4, 'po,
p11, u.llt. cruiert. 304-77$!1011..

~

1aeo Oodoo Rom Yon B-~10.
72,000 Miioo, $8,000, Can ee
SHn AI: Golilpoilo Deily Trb(no,
125 Third Avonuo, Galllpoilo
Ohio. .
.•

one root old, -ko good, aoklng
114-412-5al5.
G.E. Waohor Hoavr Dul)', Good
Condition; Glb10n Drrer, Haavr
Good Co nell don; 8 14·381-

=

TrfnVntfllldor SOw, l'a&lt;1·
altiOTrpoMitor, 81~29. Hoopllal bod lor oola, 304-7735587• .•

JET

eEEf1tlFU

l~;;::rl

1US Oodao Window Van sla,
Au10, PS, l'B, ~It, GC t1,~o.
114-1111

noo"'"'

3301.

EEK&amp;MEEK

'80 Oodae Spor1oman 8/4 1on
.... $111011, 814-ID2-!111151.
:

Fedder• air condidonar for ul•

Harpolnt frOII·frta rtlrlgarator,
good condillon, $1 oo, 814·882·

NO
e-:tt-15
•Q 9 7 3 2
•7

D1 C11M S-10, ted. 4 i:IJ,. &amp;.-$,
olum. wltaelo, AIIIFM e&amp;IHtlo,
f44QOOI0,814lll2-451&amp;
.•

w••1

..,._, iiW1

.__ .. _

0 1 - bV NEA,Inc.

740

Uovia Sale: VIdeo Store Ramo·
doling Approx. 1100 llovo0; 200
Aduilllovieo, would Like To sou
Ali Togelher, 614-3117-0812 Alter
5 P.IA.

Dutch Netherland Dwarf Rabbits,
81 4-388-8577•
Ferrtll, a WHkl Old, t14-S7$-

0no llrak8 Sa181ille oro tom $800.

450

Furnlsh:j
Rooms

Rt.om1 for rwnt • weak 01 month.
Staring at •12011no. Gelila HolOI.
81.......U580.
Sleeping rooma with cooklna.
Al10 ttallar apace on rlvlf. All
hook·upl. Call eh•r 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5851,1otuonWV.

460 Space for Rent

--

For rant- commercial building In
center of downtown UlddlapdrL
Central olr and hell, 114-002·

Price Buaterl New 14J70, 2 or
3br. Only $99S down, $195/monlh.
Free delivery &amp; ootup. Only al
Oakwood Homto, Nioo WV. 304755-5885.
Vary nice 14X70, 1992 mobile
home, 2baths, Includes underpin-ning. porches. appliance1. Homestead Realty, Broker. 304·875·
5540, 304-662·2405, or 304·682·
2447.

&amp; Acreage

u

350 Lots

"'...:

. 55 Acres Of Land With 28x32
Buiking On Clay Cnapel Road, 1·
800-287-ll308, 614-446-6308.

c

1·2 acre lot for sale ln Btudbury
on CR 5, 814-992-6190.

;;

-ill

· ~

1/4 acre in Galllpolia Ferr~ on
Pleasant Ridge Road. $2,000.
614-992-3926.

Someone ""ded evenlnga and
weekends to care br eidefly woman In her home near POmeroy.
"'lllllllr b)' wridng Tho Daily Sendn81, clo Bo1 720·0, Pomeroy,

Four lots near Racine- approx. 1
112 acres each, atat~ng at $5000,
c:aii 614-948-2025.

Ohio 45789, giving experience,

..-

•-

'""'lremont

Sludtntl· Page Position AJ Or.
Samuel L. Booaard llomorial Li·
· brary. Mult Be At least 18 Years
Of Age: llaln Dud" Aro Shelving
And Sholl -Reading. Evonin81
And Weekendl, 12 Houra Per
Week, Year Round, Minimum
Woga EOE, Coil 814.....a-AEAO.

WANTED: EIAERGENC.Y RE ·
LIEF COIAIAUNITV SERVICE
WDRKER(S) Needed AI Two
Community Group Homt1 For

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of t968 which makes 11 illegal
to advenlse ~a ny preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
se~ tamlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any sucJ'I preference,
limitation or discrimination:

Adult• With learning Limitations

In Gallipolis And Bidwell. High
School Degree, Experience, And
GDod Driving Record Required.
Hours : AI ScheduledfAa Need-

ed. Salary : S•. 75/Hr., To Start.
Send Reaume To Cecilia Baker,
PO Box eo.t, Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadline For Appllcanra: 715195.
Equal Opporru~ty Employor.
We are an old local company

This newspaper will not
knowllngty accept
advertisements lor real estale
which Is In violatiOn ol the law.
Our rea,ders are hereby
infonned that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equa t
oppor1unity basis.

eeeklng a motivated parson to
take tharge Of CUIIOmtf' d~ivery,
showroom eetupa and warehout·
ea. Send re:aume c/o The Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Box 729..Q9, Pomeroy, OH 457119.
180

Wanted To Do ·

Seenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac Iota, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-518-2338.

310 Homes for Sale

General Malnlenance, .Palndng,
Yard Worll Windows Waah.cl
Gulloro Cleaned Lighl Hauling,
ComrMrtcal, Rt.l ldtntlll, SteYe:
a1t ue 88111. /
Gaoroe• Porta~ SawmUI, don't
haul your logo 1e lha mill jull call
3()4-615-1857.

304-88l-2703.
3 bedroom house. 10.14 acres 5
minutes rrom 10wn. ~4-675-4575.
3bedroom, 1balh. living room, clinlng room, kitchen, large utility
ro~m. enclosed porch, 1 car
dnve·ln basement, approx. 3/4aera, Rl 2 Flatrock. $43,600. 304·
675-1507 Of 614-8e4-9088.
Cape Cod Style Country Home
On Eight Acre• For Sale In

Racint Area, 2-3 lktdfoom1. livIng Room, Ea1-ln KIIC/lo!l, Utility
Room a Bslh Anacllld One Car
Garage, New Furnace, Heat
Pump, E1c, .45,000, B14-44B·
111102.
Ouplu opl building, good inYIII·

ment For lnformallon: 304-875--

.oeeo.

Four 'bedroom house for

sale ~

free ljl~ two lll&gt;ry, - · 3 ..,..
... BralllUry ..... 614&lt;11112-61110.

Profeallonal Tree Service, Compi eta Tree Cart, Bucket Truck
Service ·50 FL Ree&lt;h, Slu~ Re-

moval, Free Esllmauut In·
ourano:e, 24 Hr. Emergency SerV-

Ic;a -Call And Savel No Tree Too
Bi~ Or Too Smalil 614·368-9643,
B14-il87-7010.

Leon, WV. 11+ roomo, 1ul bllh, 11111
basement wllarge ahowar, Jevel
lot,
furnace, new appliance~.
llull eoo 1o appreciato polonllal.
Exceptlonailr nice neighborhood.
Roaoonably priced. 304· 757·

ua•

8240.

Sprlngliald Armorr 1111-apec,
45ACP.Iikt new, 304-675-6162.

MERCHANDISE
510

Household ·

Goods

·3bedroom houH·Muon. All
oltcoic, $325mo, •150 dopoolt,
ovaiiablo July 1. 304·773·5834
-4:30pm
4 Bedroom Hau1e For Renl, 4
lliioo From Goilipoilo, 814·441·

47 1/2 Spruce Street, Unlur·
niohod, Available July 11~ $340/
Mo. + Deposit, Calli Accepted
Only Between The Hour~ 10·5,
814-448 0332

lor Rent
2 Bedroom Uoblla Home, You
Pay Utliitloo, &amp; ' Oeposi~ In Porler
Area S250Mo.. 814-38tHI182.

Goods

Boar Super Slrlko XLR 80 lbo.
Slghl Culver, $275, 814·44842711.

N~e 2 bod room mobl~ home in
IAI&amp;I.P.,rt, 814-11112·6868.

Smailllobi~

530

Home, Upper Rt 7,
Refarence1, Depoait. No Pats,
614-448-3760.

440

Apartments

for Rent
1 and 2 bodroom opom!Onto, 1ur·
nllhed ltld unf\Jrnllhed, aec:urlty
depolil required, no pall, 01.C·
IIG2-2218.
2bdrm. apta., total electric, appliances furnllhed, laundr~ room
facilltlel. ciOM Ia achoolln town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apta. •~ or call au.• QQ23711 . EOH.

2Rooma Plus Bath: Lafayette
Mall. No Kllehonl All Utllldn paid.
$175.00 llonlh. Oepolll Roquirod.
6t4-4411-773l
o\potlrMnl ' nllor, uuiltlel ·pold,
U715/mo ptuo SilO dopooil on
...,_ 304-1175-4680.

For Rent Furnished 1 Bedroom
Aparlment, Next To library, No
Poll, 814-&lt;488-88Q.4.

Antiques

W~dlng

gown, ivory, S150., prom

dren, 1ize 11, $35. Asaorted
Baby IIA)ms, 614--441-1687.

Zenith 25• Color Console T.V.
Good Condi1ion, $50; Uagnavox
Console Stereo Good Condition,
tso: 4 Dozen Canning Jara $10,
614-379·2171.
· Building

6 Week Old AKC Cod&lt;ol Spaniol
Puppies, Shott I Wormed, Dew
Clawed. 814-258-ll887.
8 Mos Old Puppies, Part Chow,
Part Cgllle, 1 Black &amp; Brown; 1
White. 814-41.&lt;Hl881 .
ACFA 3 Male Himmlayan Seal
Point, Blue .Point Flame Paint,
$100 Each, Neg.; 814-448-1811.

5 piece parlor group, excellanl
concldon, $700,814-992-5058.
. AKC Coeker Spanielo, 1 lamaio, 7
malea. tails clocked &amp; dew claWI
Antique Senee Refurbished Ex· removed. 3 tricolor, 1 black, 1 •
callant Corditlon, 81.t-446-3416.
black &amp; while, lli'lt shots given,
$100, also female copper no ..
Buy ar &amp;all. Riverine Antiques, Beagle, $30, only 13 wkl. old,
1124 E. llaln Slree~ on Rl. 124, 6!4·992·3252 ieaYo moooage.
Pomeroy. Hour1 ; M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. 10 6:00 p.m., SUnday 1:fl0 10 AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
8:00 p.m. 614-992-2526.
pupo, 1irslahoto &amp; - $100.
004 7 5018
540 Miscellaneous
" 73·
Merchandise
AKC ragiotorod Dalmatian puppies, 5 female, 2 male, S250, firal
12' boat wfawivel aaata, electric ahota, mother I fathet' anllable,
motor &amp; battery. Steel chalnuw 614·U92· 5724, after Opm 814·
032 wlcase. Meat block wJtable a 992-GN4.
knife drawer. Weight bench w/ac·
cat~or lee for leo• &amp; arml. 30 ,.. AKC Rouweller Pupple1, e
875-6809.
Wooka Old, 614-256-1851.

:-;::-:::::::-:::::::=:-:---.-.:-:-.,..,..·1

1e83 1B Ft Goooenock Stock
Trailer, For S&amp;le Or Trade For 12
Ft Stock Trailer Bumper Pool,
cane14-448-1179.
21 " RCA CGIOf TV ISS. 52" round
moplo IBiliL $411. 304-6 75- 7128 _

AKC Siberian Huoky Pup. Choice
Female. Rare Mask. Blue E,_1,
Black &amp; White, $150, 814-44110027
·
American Cockor Spaniol Puppieo. AKC Ragil1tfod, Champion
Bloodline, 014-378-2721!.

2G2 lncernational Oie1el power
unil ISOO noedo work. Salalllle
dl th, 1yr old, 1500. Two woodburoing atovea 175ea. Two electric on 1tta1aro tsooa. 30~-8751295.
.

Blrdt, Iguanas, Tarantulat. mlc..
Flah Tank &amp; Pet · Shop, 2413
Jack1an Ava. Point Pleuanl,

1o4x56 mobile home, 4.5 acrta,
new mal, 4 year old fwnace, rT1U1)'
now lurniohingo, $25,000 814843-52~7.
•

Furnllhod EHiolancy, Ali Utlllt~o
Paid, Sharo Balh, $1415/llonm.
e1a Ser:ond ,__ o1.-.3114S.

Didn't Sail: 1874 Kirl!wood 14x70
3 Bodroo1111. Excelienl Condlllon,
llal'" Ollet, 614-388-8G1e, E...,_

' .
Furnlohod Efficiency $1e5/llo. · ~
Ulllilill Paid, Shoro Balh, 607
Second, Ga!Ppolio, 814-44&amp;-4418 Blb)'bod, o~olltr, owing, carsea~
high lltalr. 304-875-4548.
Altor 7 P.IA.

.

Tandy PC wlprlnter &amp; modem
$500. 304-075-3328.

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Waahara, Dryers, Ranges, Refr:l- Toledo 5300 high opeod commergratora, 90 Day Guarantee! .clal meat alw wlextra bladea
French Cl1y lotaylag, 814·448· $1,100 080.304-576-4109.
ntiS.
.Unlden satel!ile system, $650,
carpet &amp; Vinyl In Sled&lt; $5.00 Yd must tall. 304-675-4417.
&amp;.Up 801'atl01no Of Kitchen CarP•• In Stock. Over 35 Patterns Wuher, Excellent Condition,
Yin)'l'ln Sleek. lotoliohan Carps" $100; Dryer Needs Work' $SO:
E•ercise Bike $50; 61-'·«1 -0901
814-448-7444.
Evoolrigo.
Counuy Furniture-Furniture tor
Ewty Room. 8ml., Rt 2 Norlh, Pl Wavelen waterbecl. 304·875·
P1oaaanl 304-1175-fl820.
• 2385.

Compound bow, High Counll)' with
accaasarlee, $200, 61-'·992·
3049.

320

ingl.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprighl, Ron Evan• Enterprises,
Jad&lt;son, Olio, 1-B00-537-9528.

Supplies
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE . 82
Olivo Sl, Gelllpoiio. New a Ueod Bloek, brick, sowat plpos, wind·
rurnjture, heateu, Weatern &amp; aws, llnlela, etc. Claude Winter~,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814-245·
WOrk booiS. 014-4411-3158.
5121.
VIRA FURNITURE
White maple tongue·grooved
814-4-18-3158
flooring, 3/ot• thick, 1 112" wlda.
Quality Houeehold Furri .. re And
Also Spanish n&gt;Oiing dloo, green.
Appliancn Grool Doolo On
304-S76-4109.
Cull And Carryl AENT-2-0WN
And Laraway Also A'IBiiable.
560 Pets for Sale
Free OoliYery Wilhin 25 Mi la~
Washer &amp; dryer, ralrigerato{ ,'Once·A·Mon1h' fl•a program
'double oven stove, and couch: naod help? Aok R&amp;G Food ond
Supply, 814-g82·211W about 1ho
$350 lor ail. 304-875-6780.
HAPPY JACK 3-X FLEA COLWether, Dryer, Retrlgerator, Air LAR. Kiiio bolh male and lemoio
Condl11oner. Microwave, Color aduitlleaa. Avaleb~ 0-T-C.
l\1, 014-256-1238.
Groom Shop -Pel Grooming. fM·
turing Hydra Bath. Julie Webb.
520
Sporting
C81814-448-0231 .

Wonlod To 'Care For Tho Elderly
In Thoir Homo. Havo A Loving
Heart. Compltle C1r1, 15 Veara
Experience, LIYI In Da~a Or
Nlghll. Duo To Vioillng Family
Call lAo In Hiiloboro S13-393832A, ""' Far Badly.

· Door• InYinlon,
Earir Childhood
00¥olopmenl,
814·388·
11832, 614-388-11017, B&lt;lclcr H011. .

Relrlgeraton, Stoves, Washera
And Ortara, All Raconclltloned
And Gauranteodi uoo And Up,
Will Deliver. 614-68H4-11.
Schwinn Alrdyne exercise ma·
chine I I body by Jake machine;
oiHpsr eola, e•ceiiont condition,
014-867-3785 n~htl.
Soclionai Sola Wilh Rocilnora
Ends a Sleeper, And Wurlilzer
argon, 814-448-3431.

3 Bedrooms, Baih &amp; 112. Rio
Grande Area, Waahar, Dryer
Hook·Up, $490/Mo. Deposit Re·
quired, S13-922-0294.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Woohtood Drlvo
from 1228 10 $2111 . Wllk 10 ohop
&amp; movlto. Call I14·UB· 2568.
Equal Houolng Clpporolnily.

Will Coro For Chiidcart In lAy

Relri~oralor $50; Electric Range
$50: ecilner Chair $75, 814-448·
7055.
Relrigerall&gt;r, $75; Bunn coffornall·
•r. $20; tmall refrigerator, S20;
814-94e-2521!.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furnishings.
Houro: lion -Sa~ 9·5. 814·4460322, 3 mllel out Bulavllle Pika
Free OeliYery.
550

Reduc:ad lor quick aal•· alx
RIOrTII. 1 1/2 bo1h, full bateman1
willl garage, YlfY nlco. IAIU ollor
and move right ln. 8)' owner.
$28,000, 614-1192·5122.

for Sale

Orlando. 4 hotoi nlghll near Olsnor,.uao anytime, paid $3oo, soli
$98. 304-3&lt;17-2489.

2btdroom &amp; balh, $2501n10, $100
deposit, Smln from Foodland.
2bedroom &amp; bath. $325/mo utili·
ties paid, $100 dopoail. 304-6753415.

Sun Valley Nuratr~ School .
Childcaro W-F Bam·S:30pm AqH
2·1&lt;. Young School Age Ourtng
SUnwner. 3 Dayo pet Week llinlmum 814 u6 3857.

Mobile Homes

fllherJYamaha 1tareo ayl·

18m $300. ~882-3448.

410 Houses for Rent

2·1tory aarage, beside New Ha·
Ace Tree Service. Complete tree van Supermarket, bouom floor Nice lhree bedroom home In Pt.
caft, 20yra. exp. &amp; inaured , ffee completely remodeled , 2 bay a: I ~Piaasan1,::=;::.;::;8;.;1;:.4&lt;1111~2-~':;:85=8:.._ __
ottimaleo, 814 ·U1·11g1 or 1- (front bar 40'x28', roar bay 1420 MobiiA H~As
.:,B00:.;,..;·-.:..:.,;.:.:,7;;.·_ _ _ _ _ _ 1 32'x23'), 1OO'x40' iol, $18,500.
•
..,,,.
Checl&lt; 111la out. First Save SSS intlf'ior/exl8rlof painting, rool paint·
lng , handwuh down houua'
mobile homes. odd lobi, neat
work. Guaranteed. 1Sy11 expeti·
enee. Relerencea. Free estl ·
matea. 304-875-6921 .
Chrlatlan da~care for Ul;s.ae·
1Chool year, plann~ actlvitiel &amp;
Ieaton a, referancaa available.
304-675-4417.

=~~

Ohio. Cloon 3-4
BR Wiln 20 Win. 01 llfldge. May
Conoider Loaoe W/Oplion On 4
BR. 714-1152-0Ml.
.

9ne

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa1her1, dryetl, retrigeratora,
rangtt. Skaggs Appliancal, 78
Vine suoe1, Cali 014·446·7398,
1-800-49V-34119.
.

RENTALS

0008.

REAL ESTATE

470

.
Wanted to Rent

3 Tan Cenrat Air Conditioner
Package, S,.owm Or Spill Srotom
11,250 lna1allod, 5 Yr. Warranty
All Porll, 1·800·287-6308 814·

Pilla for sate

Pass

GIFT-WRAP IT

:

004-875-2003.
Boxer• AKC 3 Male Brindlel,
$200 Eaoh, 014-370-0208.
AKC Rogillerod Dauchohund, a
Wooko Old, And AKC Regiololod
Miniature Yorklhire Terrltr'l 111
Sholl • Wormed Himolarn. Per·
1/an, Slame• Kinens, 814-387·
nos.

••

50 WELL
PUT ALL
TJ.IE SAND
R161lT
ABOUT

6ll'f REMEMBER,
Wl-lEELBARROWS
TIP OVER
EA51LV 50
DON'T POSH
IT TOO FA5L

J.IE~E ..

--

~1D~8,_3;..,.LI-n-co;,:ln.:..,.'li..;ow-n-C-a-r,-w-h..:i1-a,

wtiAT'S

1.,=,_....,,__,.,..__...,;...

tJIEW.5 n .

h

l ..

.

~~I

II.

T~t

...

LATffT

l&gt;OP~

ON wAl.£.

/

sT,eer1

ME:.

,,_and

-~ORNLOSER
~~

Now Her~

11UU Chevy Beraua, auto, V6,
3.1, pi, 55,000ml., $7,900 080.
304-675-8277 aftor 8pm.

' · J&gt;IDJ.Ii YOU PI&gt;.Y TI-l€. a£C.TRIC.
-~' BILL U6T 1-\(£1(, ~TO~ 7

2 -JD 335 Round
Stock: 1 .JO 385 Ro
S1ock: H &amp; S Hydra lc Biloid
Rake, In SieCk: H &amp; S 11tex Ted·
dero • 4 Rolor $2,85 • I S
Noroo Herw.._ SS.

\..IE~

.

..,

A. LITILE 5100 !JOT
1-Je:E.K, (:,(J.,t7&lt;S, ~ I MD 10
PRI&lt;$.1 T! Z£

()I.)R. ~US ... I

PO\
ffiE E:LEC.Tl&lt;:IC. BILL OFF To PA,'(
TI-\E. Pf-\O~E N&lt;ID WJI..Te:R BILLS!

,.\.JELL, TI-\EN \.IKY

(;.()~'~'\

\.IE. FOOR. OJR.~\e ~
A.C.OOFLE. OF (;IJ6&lt;£&gt;
OF \..1"-IER Nolt:&gt; CAU..
A. (;JXJ:) rn.rno ?

630

Spood, 12.400. 114&lt;11112·8811.

Ma.ver 81 .....44&amp;-7881 .

~2498:::::----:L-:Iv.-.,-st~oc-:k~---l1ese Ford 150, 300, 8 c~lnder. 4
"'Po-n-r""F,...or_S,_a.,..lo-,.;.G_on-1-lo-,S-a-d-dl•e/ 1eB7 Toyola Pick-Up A·1 Shapo,
BiB'&lt;o~ko,~8!!1~4~44!!8:!81i8~1=-.
Alto, Murry .Riding Mower 38"
::
014-387-7441
640
Hay &amp; Grain
:::::-:::--:~~':':'"....-:"-~-.11 g67 Toyo11 pickup, 6 opaod
800 lbL round bale hay, oulol $2000,814-IIG2-7410.
'
fleid
price,
call
814-Ue-2181
or
Ch
Si
do
2831.
1888 OYY ivo,. , low mlie-

-:---I

-'"-,.-1 age, loaded. 304-67&amp;-3D8a.

~889 Chevy S-10, 4cyl., 5opd .,
anlod window~ now bod liner, exc.

0015, wv 304-578-2398.
820
Plumbing

&amp;

•

1 ~:':':':;:::~H~e::::aJ':'I":'n:,g:-:-...,.­

liFreoman'o Heating And CooHng.

inllaliallon And SarYico. EPA
Cerdlled. Ro~dondal Cormtorclal.
814·256-1811.
'
•. '
840 Electrical and

·~==R=ef"':'r::lg:.,ti,.,"'B~tl,;.on;,;__
1

COIAFOAT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
cond.. IO,OOOni.. $3800. 304-675- Heat Pumpl, Air Condidoning W
7881.
You Oon'1 Call Uo Wo Bolh Loul

Premium ooVtllalla rolla. $25. 1889 Ford lruok, low mileage, =~:.J!=~~!~2},87·8308,
Slrlw. lotorgan'l farm. 11135. 304- good condtlon. Phone 304·675·
83Nill18.
15185, 304-875-1128, or 304-675- Reoldondalor commO&lt;ciol wiring
:=:-=-:-=:::--:~-:--:-,....-1 :'eeo:;::·:....~------ now oervlco or rtpalrL t,laotor
Tobacco Pi1nt1. Wat4N'bed planta
F
canted electrician. Rldano•ir
ord Ranger XLT, Ei~l I I wvooo
"
lor oafo, Cali 304-895-31154 alia' 188 4
9:30pm. 0omy llellrluraL
10,000mliH. 304-675-1843.
•• r co •
308, 3o.4-87&amp;-'
1788.

u:.

by

Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher Cryt:Jiogram~ are created Irom quotat1ons by tamoos people. past and orcsen1
Eacl'llet1er 1n the cfl)he.- stands 101' another Tod8y's clt.HJ- J aqua/s B

v

E B.s

'R M I

BHPUBCO

F U G

R B C

K V E 0 1

V ' X U

U XU P 0 G R VS F . '

FUMPFU
J N P S K
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "They're not going 10 get my money to see the junk
!hal's made loday ." - Ginger Rogers.

GAM I
'::~;t:~, S@\\4\llA-lGV..~S~
141to4 loy CIA Y I . POllAN
.

WOlD

Aaorronge la:ttera Of
0 four
ocromblod &gt;i!&gt;rdo
law to farm four worda.

Phillip Alder's new book, '"Get
Smarter at Bridge," is available,

autographed upon request, for
Roslyn

$14 95 {rom P.O. Box 169,
. HIS., NY 11577·0169.

PRINT NUMBfRED
lETTERS

UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

I'
I

FORI

IIIII I I II

remember the manager telling me that what really
caunted was not the hours I put in but what I put 1N the
HOURS.

STRI&lt;f AWNf tJ 11-f Will ON •
HIC?"'.I'RICES. ~HOI' T~ CLASSfJEOS,

.

Good Ear Corn Approx. ISO
Bushell, H Farmall Tractor, •
Good Tlroe. Runs Good, 814-378-

Ford eN Troclor And 5' Finloh

On the briny
Holy person ·
Joke
Badger
Coup d'Bard's river
Vasco daRepetition
27 Israeli airline
(2 wds.)
/ 29 Mild oath
30 Co~rse hair.
33 Weaving
machine
36 Archenemies
38 Abbr. lor a
hh$hOW
41 Goiastray
43 Build
45 S.A. m1s.
47 Dill seed
48 Local
cinema (sl.)
49 Singer
Guthrie
51 Mason's
aid
52 Birthmarks
53 Fi1s1 garden
56 Wriggly fish
57 Sgt., e.g.
11
13
19
2.1
22
24
25
26

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Mutton- Cease- Hoist - Solder- IN the HOURS
As a kid I got a job in a small department store 1

Home
Improvements

Joa'a Home Maintenance vlnyt
1878 1 Ton Truck, Excellent aiding, rooring, exterior painting,
power waahlng, free eatimatea
Shape, 614-245-gw_
814·992-4451 .
•
1881 Chevy 11Uclt V8, IUIO, ohorl
bad, runs &amp; looka ga.od. $1 .~00. P~oleulonal. 20yra axp8f'ltnct
wath all maaon, brick, block, 1
304-075-2074.
atone. Alto room additions, garage•. ate. Free ••timatll, 304198H·250 4x~. 814-3711-21182.
882-3408 or 304·773-eSSO.
1984 llozdo Runo, Look• Good, 1::--:--=~-,...;.:..:;:=:~-­
Aulomotic, Bodiinor, Sliding Bid&lt; Ron'o TV Service, opoclaiizlng in
Window, Call Anyllma, $1,100 Zenilh al10 1arvlclng moat other
080814 388 111143.
' brando. Houoo calla, 1-100·787·

too long
10 Son of Jacob

CELEBRITY CIPHER

8

11111&lt;1 Plymoulh SUrtdartco, 4 Door
12.000 IAileL Exc:olillrtl Condlllon' AppUance Parta And Service· AU
Auto, Air, $11950 814·258-6854 o; Nama Brando Over 2S 'loaro )!,.
parlence All Walk Guarant~d
258-«129.
.
French City Uaytag, 814·•u:
,gg5 Ford F150, Bcyl, iongbed n9s.
aura, air, crulae, tilt. 30•·875C&amp;C General Home Mllln 7116e.
tenence- Painting, vinyl sldl~p.
19915 Dodge Noon 4,500 lliieo, carP;intry, doors, window.. bartit.
nllbile home repair and mor.. Rot
E""tltnl Condlaon, .10,800, 814- free estimate call Chtl. 8 14·SIIit2·
44 l-otl84, S - r r Rod.
6323.
.•
· 720 'lhlcks for Sa lA
"
Install Pools To Dacko, 814-4&lt;111·
'83 Ford F 100, 6 cyl., 614-742· 0219.
•

111"""""-o:
H &amp; S 1350 .Ail Purpooe Tank
Spreader, (8 llonlho Old) $7,g50;
JO 3800 Chopper 2 Row Narrow
Heod U,500: N!IIW JD 350
Spreader, In Stack; Naw H I S
Silage Wagono, In Stock.

In Wday's deal, Tim Cope was playing for South Africa against India in
last spring's Zone 4 Championships,
He ducked quickly and smoothly at
trick one.
Three clubs was hardly a classic
pre-empt, especially in second position. And three hearts was an attempt
to bluff East-West out of a heart contract. Favorable vulnerability makes
some players do strange things.
The key play came immediately,
when Cope allowed West to win the
first trick. Now West switched to the
spade ace: two, six, 10. Then time
stood stin. Eventually West continued
with the heart king.
·
·
Breathing a sigh of relief, Cope won
with his ace, ran the diamond jack, drew
two rounds" of trumps eriding in the
dummy and discarded his remaining
spade on the diamond ace: plus 55U.
Wss West wrong or unlucky?
f think he was wrong. As the spade
six was the highest missing spot card,
East was known to have the spade
king. If East also had the heart ace ,
along with his known four &lt;or five)
cards ill the sui~ he might have doubled three hearts. But, most telling, if
East had king-fourth of spades and
the heart ace, he would have discouraged at trick two to get the heart
switch. However, full marks to Cope
lor his unconcerned duck at trick one.

e

BASEMENT
WATEFIPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnllhed. Call
(814) U8-0870 Or (614) 2370488 Ragan Waterproofing. ea.
labllshod 1975.
•

1g93 Toyota Corolla LE, auto.,
loaded, .... cond. 304-875-4994.

u,._

Pass

1222.

18e2 Dod80 Shadow ES, runo
!rtol. looka good, 814-949-21182.

2301.

.:.:S..::..y::..now-and-'-aa-vo.Bur-IIIY-.
litld ond .loaded on wagono1or
our ioodlne. Conlacl Harloy or
John Rice 10 meko irnlngontlnll.
814-087-33611 or814-087-3217.

,.

25 Fl Mobiie Home, New!r Upltolstared, Large Refrlgeralor Fraez~
er, Large Bath, Carpeted, Goad
COndilion, Ready To Go Clmplngl
I
1868 Ford Eocorl GL 5 Speod, '61 4·258-«157ot NfM 6 P.M.
Air, AIAIFIA Excoilanl Condition,
$1,400, 080, 814-378-21145.
SERVICES

ssso.

.Uaod Traclllll:
1g9o JD 2i!4ol- sao·Hro. RG a
Cano
l3.1!~; 1884 Ford 5030
IAF
S K:iib -78 Hrs -Lilla New
$26,50 · JO 2840 .10,000; JD
2940 $11,900; IAF 135 Gao·
Nice SS,
: Cub L.ow1to)' W 150"
IAOWIIt'$2,4 ,
NowTraciOnt:
JO 7400 IAFWD W !Cob, In
Stock: JO fl«&lt;I Open Slatlon W 1
Power Ouad, In Slock; 2 -JO
5300 II FWD, In Stock; JO 5400
IAFWO,InSIOCk.

·~

- Wll"-T f-IM'PffiQ&gt;TO OC LI&amp;I-IT'S?

7

810

37 N.M. 1U0rt
39
Nixon
40 ~trilo
42 Si.!!!IM Lynn

better.

1

188e Ford Feodva LX, good condldon, AC, AIAIFIA oterto, $1,400,
304-273-3307.

; 31 Dyeing tUb
32 Nerve
3&lt;1 Wn
35 POrtent '

1 NorM prOH
2 Triplet
3 lrlahmen, e.g.
4 JFK jet
5 Roman 3
6 Goo for algna
7 Ten-Ford
8 Active
9 Slumbered

When the dummy comes down, usually you should take some time to plan
your campaign. However, if you see
that the contract stands no chance unless you receive a misdefense, probably the quicker you play the cards, the

.,..,==---'-

1887 Ford c ...... Vic10f~ $2,800;
1D87 Dodge Omnln,ooo; 1g94
Pallmino Toni Camper 814' 36701011• .

c

By Phillip Alder

710 Autos for Sale
1e13 Honda 7G 3-whoolor, eitod
1070 1Aon10 Carlo, ...,. mndllon, OOtdlio,. $o!OO. 304-G15-2074.
80,000 ocluol mil11. .304-a75Hlmaleran Crtom Palm Dtclowod 31188.
1068 Honda TRX300, lourltllx._4Nau,lered, And Has All Shots, 2
Vfhttltr, exc. cond .• like new,
'Nail Old, ll&amp;O, 814 -3711-2730.
1g79 llon10 Ctllfo, ,_pain~ $3,000 lirm. Caoh ploaoe. 304moltlt, lou Nn .35 OOOml. $1500 '·8::711&lt;:':3011~,.7-Kenmore Air Condillonor,
304-8711-!1542.
'
'
· t:
·BTV'o$250, 81 . _ .7782.
10i0 Honda TRX300 4-whoolor
1881 Btlick Ronal 350 Ennlno $2,700, 11184 18ft car hauler, fac·
Liquid Wormero No1
Tho Rune Good,~ nreo, I/Oi•Jli 10fr buli1 nilor, $1,!00. 304-67513 1
Job? Ask J 0 NORTH
UCE lyo Whoolo, ,1,200, 304·875· ~~o.~,.....,......,,....,-,.....-814·448-1933, Aboul HAPPY 2352 Altor4:30 P.IA.
1eg3 Yomoha Tlmbar Woll Ioiii
JACK
_.... condition, 814-742~nlzed TRIVERIAICIOE.
•-te • Ellacd A Roc·
1881 Cttevy lmpalla Smail v-e , ,.....
~..
•
YO go1no1 Rune Good. 81..,._171 ,
211111 or814-1182-5H6.
Hook, Round &amp; Tapeworms In
Oogo &amp; Calli
1881 Ford G,.nade Groallnlori· 198S Banchoo, good condillon,
1 B
ar, And E1tarlor. law· Ullaa-, only rocle 8hrs, $4600. 304-815Proleooionai p 1 G
8
roam ng. Y 814-2SI-t012.
.... 5785.
Max, lean A M&amp;IAQ8 I'll Gel
4
Back. 81 -256-6550.
1881 Oido Cu11a 11, now molor. 1ee4 Suzuki GSX750R, $8000.
Rabblll lor sale. Jameo Alien, R1 . ~75-4143.
~~sk,- CR500, $2000. ~­
1- Box 2a., Gallipolis Ferry, WV.
!Wl4·875-4413.
clean, high mileage, well main· Motorcycle, ·small Honda Cub
Reg. Shelde mlriarure Collie pupL 1alnod, verr good lhepa, aoklng I;LI&lt;o:;;::=:-Now=::,:.:Call=.::6:;14:;:4::&lt;::;8·::29:.;1::;7·;__
Reg. Englloh Coonhound pups. 12500• 81 4-m-6858.·
750 Boats &amp; Motors
Cockaliol w/cage. Paraketl wt 18&amp;4 Ford Eacoll L, Au1omalic,
for Sale
cage. 304-6 7!i-2032·
Loaded, 23,000 lliltl, $3,400,
570
Musical ·
814-388 8522
1888 Four Winds Bciar 18 1/4
Long 130 HP. 1 owner, Garage
Instruments
1e1W llorcedoo Benz IIOOSL, 2 KepUowHouro,81+-+IB-1038. •
Seala. Soft Top &amp; Hard Top, Low
Guilar Fender lt~cao~er, vlnlage Wllea, Good Condlllon $10,000 1992 Cobia 17 112' Open Bo)o
. while, exc. cond., $48S. 304-675- &amp;1..-71127.
14S HP, UO, 70 Hro, Easr Load
4248.
1eiW l'anloc Bomovil~ LE. 304· ~·~•• Exoasi $8,400, 6~8~.
FruHI&amp;
1885 Honda Accord LX, maroon 7 112 HP Searo &amp; 25 HP S••
Vegatables
OUI. - · . _ nioo, ttng, Runs Good. 614-446-7881.,
7e,eoo
mlloo,
$4150, B1HD2· 760 Auto Parts &amp;
Reopbarrioo U-pldt, •1 a pln1 or
8om- -"&lt;&lt;ayo.
wo par rou $1, VlriJII'a Borrr 2!U4 Accessories
•·
Pllll:haiRL 134-oi~&gt;T?M
1DIS lotozdo 5 Spd., Soden, PS, 1:-:-----:-:..;__:..:__._
PB, AMIFM Ca111t1e, Sun Roof New 011 11nk1, one ton truck
'
35
MPO, Excellent Condition, wheels, rada101'1,·ftoot mars. etc. •
FA RM SU PPLIES
$1,200,080,814-3711-21145.
D a R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-37231133or 1-aD0-273-93211.
• &amp; LIVES:r:OCK
1885 Oldo Curtau SUpreme, Exceiionl Condlllon, 38,000 lliieo, SOUlHWEST PICK.UP R\f!fS
&amp;4,850, 814-2584801l
Bodo, Cabo, Oooro, Fendero And
610 Farm Equipment
llore, 3 lliiH Soulh Of GalilpoUo
1ees Oldomobiio Firanza, 4door, ~!~-3u~ o_n Rt 7, &amp; Rt 218, 614·
1on Chofolloo 2hp bompoo-pull rune good, greal work car. Phone '"
trol• ro~ lootd, •IIHIIIU, _, 304-675-5851.
1::~ cond., $1,800. 304·882·
790
Campers &amp;
1988 Cavalier Z-24, Wlti10, V-8,
Motor
Homes
All10, PW, PO. Goad. Condillon,
5' bulh hog, $300, 614-742-3082 n,200, Afte&lt; 8:00 P.IA. 814-448·
1D78 t.'idat 23Ft. Motor Hori\e
., 614-742-3081.
.
8681.
New EX18fior Paint Tirea, BanBrj
eN Ford Tractor With Blade, 1Gll8 Monte Catlo LS Excelltnl &amp; Furnace, Carpet, Awning,
Claan, Excellent Condtionl 29,000
Runo E•coJionl, $1,,50 Or Will Condillon, $3,000, 614-388-11842.
lliiea, Aoking $8,950, 814·44_'8ConlklerTrado, 814-4-18-3787.
•
1011 Nlasan Sentra Hatchback, 0963, 614-448-6265.
CARMICHAEL'S
FARIA
I AC, 5 opaod, CD playor, now
LAWN, 008 Pinocreet Orivo, Gai- tranlmi11ion and exhaust, runs! 1084 Sunstream Motor Home 28'
Upolio, OH 45814, 814--444-2412, loolta good, $1300 OBO. 614- 64,000 Mi~o, Loaded, Extra Nic&lt;JI
1-etlO-!iD4-1111.
Price Reduced To Sail! 814·25811112·3241.
Ueod Her Equ"'"'"t
JO 327 Squoro Baltl - Low Uoo VG, $6,75Q; NH 565 Squ018 Balor
• Like Now *'soo: NH 853 Round
Boler - Liko New 18,750: New
Idea e 1/2' Rake • Llka Now
$2,4eS; IH 27 Square Baler
$1,050; IH 241 Round Baler
$3,250; Oeutz 3 Pl Oioc llower
WI Condldoner $3,100: ~~~ 725 T
Haybina 11,250: JO Reko 8 112'
Rake $750: JD 38 Sld&lt;le llowlf

'

Smooth as silk

21182.

sea

' 21 ~":rid-

Opening lead: • K

AN' WE'LL TAKE IT!!

1873 Holler Davldoon SUllO I
Gilda, lollcl p8lll, -..~
taokl I run• oreal, I14·Dt2·
3Ne.
•,

=a

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer; East
West North East ·
Pass
Pass
Db!.
3.
Db!.
Pass 5 •

Motorcycles

u,ooo

5

:g::rb

SOUTH
•IO 4

\ii\HIIIr

AERATION IAOTOAS
Repaired. Now &amp; Rebuln 1n slock. ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,..---------~ 1887 Suro antiquo molorcre'lo,
Coli Ron E-- 1-etJ0-537·"·- 1
3,000 acrua1 miiH. runs like nPr·
-~
·304-II'IS-SIMl
~
..,,.
....,

t7 6 53
•10 5

· ·2

55 SooUCI
. 51 Tropic81t5I
60
lng ...da
11
orm atoM
112 Hr. port

tJ 8
•Q J 9 8 6 4

.

Lilt
fi887Sizo Barbie Doll. 614-245·

•K65
•Q 10 6 4

50 A.-s......

54 Rl- nymph

•A 8 3

111H Ford F·1!0 4x4 8 Cylinder,
5 Spood, Air, AIAIFM Cooa&amp;IJO,
Aluminum Whaelo, XLT Chr0111o
Padtago, Bodilner, 2,50Q lliloo
Aoklng: $18,200, 814-448-1118

J4"-1t"\

WEST
•A J 8
•K J 9 5 2
•K Q 9 4

•A 10 2
•A K 7 3
EAST

47Tif~

4 trig lronn

ALDER

-toPmlouaPulzlo

11111

44l~ol

I Andooon

KIT 'N' CARLYLEGJ by Luey Wrtpt

c - &amp; Plude Sopdc Tanita,

44 FIMIIW...,

•

•

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE·
BEDE OSOL"

tV.-..r ·

-auu

CJiirthday

ahead. Send for your Astro·Graph predic·
lions loday by mailing $2 and SASE to
Astro wGraph c/o this ne wspaper , P.O.
Bo• 4465, New York, NY 10163. Be suro

Ia stale your zod1ac sign .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You know whal
you'd like to achieve and how you should
go about genrng it, yel you mighl not lake
any positive action today because of a
•· secret fear of losing .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Someth ing
you've agreed Ia. do might be mortJfiffl·
·I cuil lo pull off than you lnttiaily anlicrpalad. Listen lo the sugg es tions of o1hers

loday.
,
LIBRA (~pt . 23-0cl. 23) A door lhal is
•·
usually open to you might b8 closed
..
Friday , June 30 , 1995
today. Do no1 wasle lime trying lo pound
Bely upon your lmagihation and creativity I it down . Seek another, ingress tha1 is n't
if you hope to accompl ish something barred.
impressive in .the year ahead. A word of SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Someone
caution , however: Do not lei negal ive who se help you depend on mighl tel you
as~ociales steer you off course.
down 1oday . Happily , however, you 'll
&lt;;ANCER (Juno 21-July 22) You mu st quickly discover thai yo u don 't really
nol allow a greedy associate 1o gel away need this Individual anyway
wl1h grabbing lhe lion's share of some- SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 21) Even
lbing l~al should be equally divided 1hough you might not accomplish all ol
Ieday. S1and up tor whal 'is lair and just your assignmentsloday, the boss will lorGet a jump on life by understanding the give you II you keep smiling and don 'l
i!]fluen9es that govern you in th e y*'ar throw any tantrums.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) Acquai·
ntances may disappoint you today, but
loved ones won't. Give your loyalty, time
. and attention to those who care for you
as much as you care for them.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2!1-Fob. 19) II you fail
ro take adequate time before making
decisions today, t~e results could disap·
point you. Weigh and analyze ali ot the
pros and cons.
PISCES (Feb. ~0-Morch 201 You can
achieve what you hope lo today, but you
might have ro calch up on some criUcal
tasks you 've neglected . Start al1he
beginning and don'l Jump ahead.
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19) A strong .
desire for immediate gratification might
lemp1 you 19 spend more than your bud·
get can comlonabiy manage loday. Avoid
buying anything on impulse .
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) II your present plans aren't going to come · off as
you'd hoped, le1 go and, slop trying to
force the issue. Unreslralned harmony
generates happiness,
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Someone you
recenUy trealed kindly mighl reciprocate
in a shabby manner loday. Try nol to let i1
get to v.ou. This Individual is atlau~. not
you:

•

I

�.
.•.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page14 • The Deily Sentinel

Thursdlf, June

a; 1. .

Patrol, Ameritech team
for highway safety July 4
MotorisiS are being cautioned
by the State Highway Patrol to
obey the speed limit, buclde up and
not drink and drive over the Independence Day weekend.
Ohio troopers will be out in full
force to deler and stop traffiC viola·
tors, but also to render roadside
assistance to disabled motorists. ·
Tbe pauol and Ameritech Cello·
lar Services are Implementing a
public service campaign designed
10 help distressed motorists.
The program, "Stay Put, Stay
Safe," will educate drivers on the
im(10rtance or staying inside a dis·
abled vehicle and calling or sig·
nailing for help without leaving the

STRUCfURE RAZED - Tbe former Paul
Bailey residence on Park Street was razed Tues·
day afternoon by order or the Meigs County
Health Department. Middleport Mayor Dewey
Horton said the house caught fire during the last
year. Other structures thai have been or wiD be

razed include a First Avenue home that caught
fire earlier lhil! year along with a two-story yel·

low apartment house heblnd the elementary
school. Also, two structuns will be torn down
with the boat launch facility's building, be
added. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

economic ~ war

Japan, U.S. avoid

years, and that the number of
1ap:u.tese dealers offering American
cars will rise by I .000 over the next
live years.
Japanese car makers also will
expand production in tbe United
Sillies.
Clinton said the .agreement
would represent ''tlmusands more
jobs" for Amcrlc:uts.
In Geneva, the Hlp Japanese
negotiator, Trade Minister Ryutaro
Hashimoto, said agreement was
(lOSsible hecausc the United Sillies
softened its stance on specified
" numerical targets" on sa1es as a
way of meas uring progress in
opening the sp:u-e parts and dealershlp .markels.
Japan has resisted t11is as equal
to quotas and managed trade . It
says it cannot force companies 10
buy American products.
The Japanese say American cars
arc too big for th eir co ngested
street s and that U.S. companies
produce few models with the steering wheel on the right . side .
Motorists in Japan drive on the left
side of tl1e road.
As soon as th e accord was·
reached, major car manufacturers
in Japan publicized plans to

GENEVA (AP) - With record
sanctions just hours away, Japan
and the United States averted economic war today with an agreement on automobile lra&lt;)e that' President Clinton hailed as "a major
step towarO frt:e trade throughout
the world ."
"This agreement is specific. It
·is measurable. It will achieve real,
concrete results," Clinton said at a
news conference in Washington. " I
have insisted on it from the sL'IIl.''
Trying to resolve a 20-year-old
uade connie!, Clinton had threatenw to impose I00 percent tariffs
on some $6 billicm worth of
Japanese luxury cars. a move that
would have virtually priced them
out O'f the Amcric:m market.
In tlte agreement announced 12
hours bet'qre the s:mctions ·were 10
take effect, Tokyo promised to
open its market to U.S. manufaclurcrs ami auto parts and increase
· purthases of U.S .-made parts.
At the heart of the dispute is the
U.S. !lade deficit with Japan, which
soared 10 an unprecedented $66 billion last year.
·
Clinton said Japanese purcha.&lt;es
of American car parts will rise by
$9 billion, or 50 percent , in three

Increase production :u.td invesunent
in the United Stales and use more
American spare parts in vehicles
assembled there.
Toyota said il would raise its
North American production 10 1.1
million vehicles in 1998 from
900,000 in 19%. It said It was considering building a new North
American plant.
Some of these plans have been
in t11e works for years as Japan
seeks to cut costs.
The American dollar surged this
morning In foreign exchange trad·
ing U(10n word of tbe agreemenl. In
late-morning New York trading,
the dollar rose to 1.4065 marks and
85.40 ·yen, vs. 1.385 marks and
84 .35 yen before news of the
accord in Geneva. Stock and bond
prices in the United States also
advanced.
"We all went from pessimism
to U1e agreement without stopping
ai optimism," U.S . Trade Representative Mickey Kantor said at a
news conference in Geneva after
the agreement was announced.
The "historic agreement," he
said, "is a. significant step to fun- .
d:unental change" that will "begin
to create a level playing field.'·'

car.

American Automobile A.~socia·
tlon statistics show that in 1993
emergency road service was
requested 24.6 million times -the
highest total in AAA's 92-year history.
As the number of roadside
emergencies continues to increase,
so does the potential for highway
crime. Last year, Ohio troopers
renderc:O 4,500 motorist assists dur·
ing the 1994 lndepend ~nce Day
wt:ekend.
"Stay Put, Stay Safe" Includes
an assistance kit that provides
materials and advice for handling
roadside emergencies safely, a

• lnd1rect llght1ng
• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
: Full Convers1on
o Alummum Runn1ng
Boards
·Loaded'

• Power LOCkS

• Dr1ver S1de A1r Bag
• Antl·lOd': ·Brakes
• A1r Cond1t10n

• T11t Steenng
• Cru•se Control
• AMIFM Cassette
• 4 Captain Cha•rs
• Sola/Bed

• AutomatiC Overdnve
• VISta Bay W1ndO'NS
·PIS, PIB . ,

see right into tbe ba:;ement.''
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) . A f10Sh five-story dep:lftment store · , A gas explosion wa~ suspected,
in Seoul, crowded with evening the lelevision station said .
Hundreds, perhaps more t'han
shoppers, collapsed after an explo·
sion today . Hundreds of people I ,000, people were believed inside
the Sarnpoong Deparunent Store at
were reported hurl or trapped.
The injured, bloodied and cry- the time, shortly before 6 p.m., the
ing for help, were taken to hospi- station said.
Patk, who works at a gas station
tals in ambulances :md helicopters.
"It's like a war-devastated across from lbe department store,
zone," one witness, Park Don.· told SBS that one of the two
young, told SBS TV. "Most parts deparunent store buildings caved in
of tbe building
gone. You can after a loud boom.

are

Another witness told Yonhap
TV that the building collapsed In
''a few second~.''

"1l1e whole building is gone, ii
ju~t

di sappeared," said the woman ,

Lee Hyun-suk, who lives in an
ar).1rhnent near tht! store.· .
Surrom}ding huihhngs seem'eu
unaffected, she said.
Traffic in lhe area was at a

standstill, hampering rescue operaliOns. About 50 tire !rucks were at
the scene.

s

SJODO

$10,219

Faclory Reba1e
GMAC 1st THne Buyer

Tom Peden 01scw1t •

~Save 11431

I

Sale
Pnee

• R~sed Root
·Color T.V.
o DriiJer Side Air Bag
• Anti-lock Brakes
• Air Cond1t1on
• Automatic Overdnve
• V1sta Bay Windows

• Pow" Steenng

·PIS, PIB
Power Windows
o Power Locks
• Tilt Steering
• Crutse Control
• AMIFM CasseHe
• 4 Captain Cha1rs
o

'Sola/Bed

· lndtrect Lighbng
• Premium Wood Pkg.
·Full Cooversion
• Alum1num Wheels
·Loaded!

.128.093
..·18110

- tsoo

Facto!)' Rebate

TomPedenOiscourt .. ·$1 .511

$11,588.

. $631

sa 788
'

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cloth lntenor
• Well Equ&gt;ppedl
·
No oa: f!f!S OdMll!&lt;l"

. ·12.&lt;05

Sale Prir;e

. •m

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S·SERIES PICKUP
• Onver S1de A1rbag
• Rear An_t1·lock Brakes

BRAND NEW.'95 CHM 314 TON
RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

llit Prke ... .... .... $13.599

- $IXJ

Atl•aru To

Oualrt1ed Buyers

ISave $6200 I

.BRAND NEW '95 POifflAC GRAND AM
· • 16 Va~e Power

• Power Brakes
• Onver Stde Autag
• Power Door lacks
• 4Wheel Anh·lod&lt; Brakes • AMIFMStereo
·Steel BeHecl T1res
• Power Steenrq

• Slyfed Wheels
• Well Equ&lt;pped!

SiJ\e Price

I

~~~DNIEYI
olm Corditlon
•Automale
•Dual A1tbags
•4 Wl&gt;!el Ani!· lock
Brakes

'95 BUICIC

•Power Sleertrq
•POwer Brakes
• Power flooo tod&lt;s

• Power Wtnc10ws
• AWFM Sleleo

IE~~
·lih Steenrq
•Custom Cloth lntenor
• Styled Wheels
•WeiEC!Jt~
NO 0oc Fees DeWe'OO "

~~__j S24,888

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4DOOR 4x4 LT
LEATHER INIIRIOR
• AutomatiC Overdrive
• Air Cortd~ion
• Dme&lt; S•de Allbaq
• Anll-lock Brakes

• Power Door locl&lt;s
• Power Driver Se3t

• Power Wu1dows

• Lealher lnlenor

·PIS, P/13

• Electron&lt;: Shifl
Transfer Case
·Remote
Keyoss Entry

• AMIFM CasseHe
• TtiUCru1se
• Rear Wlridow Defogger •loaded!

•

TOLL F.REE 1·800·822·0417 • 312·2844

344•5947. 422·0756
•

· TIUas. Tags. Tille fees Oxlrll AODale ~WI sale pm~ofnewvehde listed whel'tl ~ · On appl'ovedetedrl . Notre~ lor~ IJffOIS.

Friday: 9 a.. ·10 pm; saturday: I am· Midnight
Sunday: loon • 8 pm; Monday: 9 am • 10 JIM

CLOSED TUESDAY, JULY 4TH

·0320

BuckeyeS:
8-18-25-26-27

.

'

•
2 Sectlono, 12 PllgM 35 cents

Vol. 46, NO. 44
Copyright 11185

Pomeroy-MiddleJ)Ort, Ohio, Friday, June 30; 1995

A Mulllmedialno. New tpapw

r

Seoul department store collapses after blast

• Power WindowS

Us! PriCtl ,

.

Pick 3:
296
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

·

Budget hikes Meigs schools' equity funds
By GEORGE ABATE
In 1996, ~tern Local Schools will receive an extra $291,000 in equi·
,
ty funds, an mcrease of 12.3 percent, Carey said. lit 1997, Eastern will get
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe two-year stale budget will be generous to area schools with exua $87,300 for a 3.3 percent increase.
I
equity funding for all three Meigs County districts, said State Rep. Jobn
Meigs Local Schools will get $978,000 in 1996 for a 15.2 percent
'Carey, R-~ellston .
·
.
· · increase. In 1997, the district will get a 7 pereent increase, amounting to
. A finalized state budget passed through a conference conumttee and $530,000.
":Wai!S Gov. George Voinovich's ~i~nature. Althou~h Voinovich can use a . . Southern Local Schools will get $48,000 in equity funds for the first
hne-1tem veto, no chang~s are anuctp~ted, Care~ s:ud.
year, or a 2.5 percent increase. The second year; the increa~e will collle 10
The legislature pnonuzed educauon, spendmg more on schools than $10.000 for a 0.5 percent increase.
, we!fare for tbe first lime i~ 20 years, the freshman Jeg!slat~r said. . ;,
"Southern is so much less, basc:O on schooi valuation." Carey said.
. · ,I was there as the vmce for (100rer s~hool dtslrlcts, C_arey srud. I . But Southern fured better. in Ibis round of the budget, since oth er
don t thmk thts budget wtll solve the equtty problem. But nght now our planned budgets would 'have forced the disuict to get Jess money Carey
districts have benefited relatively well compared to other districts."
said.
·
All schools will receive extra funding through a technology award for
·The Perry_County lawsuit demanding equita~le funding for lbe poorest
sc~dools conunues to be constdered by tbe Oh10 Supreme Court, Carey
students between kindergarten and fourth grades, Carey said.
·
S3l '

·Rutland gears for July 4 celebration
.

8,688
All New1994

.

·:wJJ

· $16,888
. BRAND NEW '95 314 TON CONVERSI«&lt;t VAN

.

'

in tbe day on two Serb-held sub- crude, bu 1 they can cause tremenurbs, including shelling by artillery dous damage.''
near the TV center, as part of the
The Associated Press Television
Muslim-Jed government s el'fort to office on the seco.nd floor was
break the Serb siege of Sarajevo.
destroyc:O. APTV employees Eldar
Ar!illery gunners und silipers Emric, Asja Resavac and Mirso{l
have heen killing civili:ms in Sam- Helac were hospitalized, and Emric
jcvo since the government otTen- underwent surgery to remoY,e
~ive hegmt June 15.
shra(1Dellbal piercw a lung.
· ·.
The Serb rocket that hil tbe TV
Also injured was Cable News
building on Wedne.~day carried an Network employee David Albrlt·
estimated 550 pounds of explo- · tnn, an ·American who had been in
sives, said U.N. s(10kesman Lt. Col. Sarajevo only a few hours, ani!
Gary Coward.
f.andoun Hemani,. a Cmmdian whO
believe they make them by works for Worldwide Television
connecting up to four high-calihcr News.
shells together, prnhahly 128-mm ,
Wednesday's lighting in Sarajeand then they lau11ch them by rock- vn took place m1 Vidovdan, a Serb
et." said M:ti . Myri:u1 Sochacki, a holiday n:unw tor Vid, the ancient
U.N . spokeswoman . "They are Slavic god of healing.

IA'S1ARGIST CUSIUM VAN DIAHR!

jsave $6100j

••
•
'·

r

Ohio Lottery

Murray
gets 2,999th
base hit

•

poster that wili appear in au paliDJ
facilities, and public serviC:e
announcemen1s. All malerials lite
being provided at no cost tiy
Ameritech.
The kits will he available freed
charge at all patrol posts aod
Amerltech Cellular Centers while
supplies lasl. Posters will be dis·
playw and basic safety infonnarion
will be availab~ at patrollocatiops
throughout the year.
•:
The patrol will operate at least
one sobriety check(10int this weekend. Motorists wishing to repOrt
suspected drunk drivers, lnlflic viir
lators or to request roadside as$·
1:u1ce can call 1-800-GRAB-DUJ or
cellular •oui (384).
::

Serbs mark holiday . \
with stepped-up attacks1
By SRECKO LATAL
AS$oclated PreS$ Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Marking one of tbe
Serbs' most sacred holidays, rej)el
Serb leader Ral)ovan Karadzic
urged his troops to bring an end to
Bosnia's war by stepping up their
attacks.
Serbs did precisely that on
Wednesday, pounding government-·
held suburbs of Sarajevo and then
wrgeting tbe city cenicr.
Serb rockets killed eight people
and wou11ded dozen s of others
when they slammed into Samjevo's
TV center, a nearby apartment
building and other sites around the
Bosnian capital.
The attack appeared tn be retaliation for government attacks earlier

.•
••

I

Country music
items auctioned
off Ofl Tuesday

Symmes Creek Band from 2 to 4
p.m.
· Activities in the "Family ,
Friends and Fireworks" ·themed
event will gel underway at 9:30
a.m. with a parade moving out
Autographed alhums, pictures
from
Brick and Depot streets .
arid books, T -shirl~ and hats are
down
Main
Street. Entries will be
among the items contributed by
judged
in
th.
e categories of relicountry and western singers for
gious and non-religious floats.
tbe annual celebrity auction of the
decorated
bicycles and pickups.
Rutland Voluntt:er Fire Depart·
antiq ue cars, semis and horses
ment.
..
witlt prizes in three places. and
The auction will take place at
walking .units with one place to
tbe July 4 Ox Roast in the Rutbe recqgnized.
land park between 5 and 6 p.m.
. At the park, food and game
. Carried out as a fund-raiser for
will open Immediately
bootbs
several yeats, the auctions have
after
th
e
parade. A tractor pul.l
netted several hundred dollars
wi.
l
l
be
held
at 11 a.m., following
each. year for the firemen. s.treaa
10
a.m.
weighin. The cake decsury to purchase equipment and
orating
c
mest
and
tbe pie con0
supplies.
.
test
will
be
judgc:O
at
11 :30 with
For t.he auction, there are T·
.
the
winners
to
be
announced
at. I
.
shirts and pictures from the
p.m.
Statler Brothers; an autographed
Three prizes will lie awarded
· book for Loret'ta Lynll ; A God
ii1
each category. For pies, the
Bless the USA CD from Lee
will be $25 for first, $15
prizes
Greenwood, a T-shirl from coun·
for
second,
and $10 for tl1ird. For
try singer Trisha Yearwood; a ·
cakes,
the
prizes
will be $50 for
varle'ty of iteins from Black
firs~ $25 for second, and $1 S for
Hawk, iiiCiudlng several of their
third.
T-shirts; autographed caps from
The winning entries will be
Martina McBride; :md tapes from
auctioned
off during the celebrity
singer Ricky Lynn Gregg.
auction
in
tbe evening.
Highlighting .entertainment at
From
I
to 2 p.m. wrestling
the celebration will be Ricochet,
matches
will
take place and all
a country western and light rock
afternoon
from
2 to 5 p.m. there
band from Parkersburg , W.Va .
will
be
children's
games includThey will appear on the park
ing
a
treasure
hunt,
egg toss ,
stage from 6:30 to 10: 30 p.m.
water
balloon
contest,
watennelTuesday .
Ottler entertainment will . on contest for children ages five
include a gospel and country sing to 10 in one group, and II to 15
from 11 a.m, to l p.m . and the in another grou p. A tug of ~ar by

"That's the most critical part of education," Carey said. "If they are not
able to reach them at an earlier age, it's hard to reach them .at a later
grade."
·
Eastern will receive $57,000 in the ftrst year and $169,000 in the second year of a technology grant. Meigs will get $181 ,000 in the first year,
with $530,000 in the second. Southern will receive $58,000 in the first
year and $172.000 in Ute second.
The two-year budget increases will not' help Southern Local schools
much, Southern Superintendem J:unes Lawrence said.
"We've got problems like all tbe olber schools that are in equity,"
Lawrence said. "The state needs to do something to help all tbe districts,
not just the really poor."
Southern borrowed $484,000 to llnish U1is school year. Last year, lbe
board borrowed $179.000. Next year, Southern will have to borrow again.
but less than this year, Lawrence said.
(Continued on Page 3)

State, Klan claim win
in high court decision
on statehouse cross

By JOHN MATUSZAK
Associaled Press Wriler
COLUMBUS - Both sides are
Claiming victory over a .U.S.
Supreme Court decision upholding
the Ku Klux Klan· s right to display
a cross near the Statehouse. ·
" It vindicates free speech rights,
and L'lkes into account tbe separa·
lion of church and state claims,"
said Benson Wolman, attorney for
the American Civil Liberties
Unio n, representing the Ohio
Realm of the KKK. "The vlctot is
tbe First Amendment.' '
"We are vindicatc:O," Attorney
General Betty Montgomery said.
" We can require that the Klan let
everyone know that the religious
symbol is ·not sponsored and not
endorsed by lbe s1111e of Ohio."
Th.c co urt rul ed on Thursday
that Ohio should not have tried 10
bar the Klan in 1993 from displayiug a cross at the Statehouse, where
stale orticials allowed a Christmas
tree and a menorah .
The Capital Square Review and
Advisory Board , which oversees
CELEBRITY AUCTION ITEMS -The sale of Items
the Statehouse grounds, had argued
secured from celebrities has been a popular feature or the July 4
t11a1 allowing the cross could create
celebration at Rutland for lhe pasl several years. Kim Willford
the impression that the state was
displays some of lhe hats, T -shirts, pictures, tapes and pholos
endorsi ng Christianity.
' which will go on lhe auction block at 5 p.m. TuesdQy. (Sentinel
Since the gro unds were a tradiphoto by Cburlene.HoeOich)
. tiona! public forom, allowing the
cross would not create an 'imprcssion
of state endorsement of reliFireworks by the Rutland Fire ·
tbe (10ny league will be held from
gion, U1e court said.
Department are at I 0:30 p.m in
4 to 5 p.m. and the celebrity auc"The decision hrings an opentile park.
tion will take place at5 p.m.
ness to the Sllltehouse facilities that
the public ha.s come to expect aud
has a right to expect," said Wolman.
· Michael Reuner , an ·assistant
attorney general who argued the
state's
case. said the decision
rn today's report, Ute Commerce the final three months of 1994.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The mat,e.
means
everybody
bas to be 1rc.11ed
[ntlation during· the first quarter
Analysts believe the second Department said consumer spend·
economy turnw In its weakest per·
in
the
smn~
way.
fonnance in a year and a half dur· qul)fler, which ends today, was far iug in tbe first quarter was a lillie was slightly higher but still well
The court tlecision give&gt; Ohio
ing the fi rs t qu arter, a slowing more slug gish and the ec.onomy weaker than prev.iously estimated. within th e modera te range. One three options , accorUing to Mont·
trend that analysts said is just a even may ·have shrunk. But most But the downward revision was measure of inflation tied 10 GOP gomcry: requiring a conspicuous
do nol foresee a recession on ihe offset by hi gher net exports and rose 3 percent i11 the first three
sign of tltings to come.
sign that say&gt; the st.a te does not
The Commerce Department said , horizon and expect at least a mod- business investment in durable months, compared 10 2.6 percent endorse
lbe religious symbol, plac.
the fourth quarter la'l year.
today that gross domestic product est rebound by the end of the year. . goods.
ing
the
symbol
in a non-conspicuThe Commerce Deparunent said
The Fweral Reserve engineered
Recent conflicting signals (lOse
grew at a 2. 7 percent annual rate in
ous
place,
or
banning
all religious
the first thr ee monlh'( of 191J5, a dilemma for the Federal Reserve, that GDP increased $36.3 hill ion at seven interest-rate increases over a
symtx&gt;ls.
barely more than half the pace of which meets for two days next an annual rate in January through . 12-montb period ending Feb. I .
"The temptation is 10 han all
expansion in the previous quarter. week to consider cutting short-tenn March, compared to a booming Since then it has left rates
displays,"
saicl Ron Keller, execuThe first quar·ler rate was interest rate.s to put some spark $66.8 billion or 5.1 percent rate in unchanged.
unchanged from a monlb-old esti· back in the economy.

Feds report weak economic performance

live director of lbe Capital Review
Board. "But I don't know if that Is
~~e best thing 10 do."
A Klan official listed in the suit
promised a "forest of crosses" will
he going up nationwide.
' 'This was an example of the
state attempting to silence people
whose views are not politically correct, for lack of a better term,"
Donnie Carr. a leader of the Inter·
national Keystone of the KKK,
said .
"There are a lot of Klan people
wat.c hing tili:; court decision close·

ly." he said . "This Christmas, I
01ink you will see a forest of crosses across the empire.' •
"This is not a victory for the
Klan . It is a victory for Christians.'' said Thomas Robb. national
leader of the KKK.

O.J. defense team capitalizes

Hollywood's 'sweater
girl' Turner dead at 75
. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lana · longtime studio, MGM.
Over the years, she appeared
Turner, the sweater girl-turned gt:unorous star wh.ose career was opposite tbe screen's top leading
overshadowed by her many mar- men in such films as Johnny Eager
riages and Ute killing of a gangster (Robert Taylor), Hanky Tonk
boyfriend by her daughter, has dic:O (Clark Gable), The Postman
Always Rings Twice (John
at 75.
Turner, who disclosed in May Garfield), The Bad and the Beauti·
1992 tbat she had been ueated for ful (Kirk Douglas), Tile Sea Chase
throat cancer, died Thursd:ly at her ·(John Wayne) and Cass TimberCentury City home with her daugh· Jane (Spencerl'racy).
"She was not just beautiful in
ter, .Cheryl Crane, at ~er side, said
fonn,
she was beautiful in bear.~"
police Officer Sonia Monaco.
said
veteran
comediap Millon
''She was d~ng fine. This was a
Berle,
a
friend
of Turner's. "L:u1a
total Sho ck," Crane told Daily
was
a
·very
good,
good and fine
Variety columnist Army Archerd.
acuess,
besides
being
a glamor girl.
"She'd completed seven weeks of
She
was
fun
....
I
for
one , witb
radiation a short while ago, and it
many,
many
millions,
are reall y
looked like she was fine. She just
going
to
miss
her.-''
took a breath and she was gone. '
Turner's entrance into movies
The ac uess remained a star from
became
part of Hollywood lore.
the 1940s until tbe mid-1960s, win·
She
was
discovered
at a soda foun·
ning an Academy Award nominatain
wben
she
was
a teen-age
tiQn as best actress for Peyton
-though
not,
as legend
schoolgirl
Place in 1957 after she left her

CROSS DECISION - Ohio
Allorney Genera l Betty Montgomery spoke in the basement or
the . statehouse Tbursdoy,
responding lo the U.S. Supreme
Court decision lhat upheld ihe
Ku Klu• Klan's right to 'erect a
cross near the statehollse. (AP)

on withholding of fiber report

· LANA TURNER
had it, at Schwab's drug store.
.Her early film appearances
earned ber the nickname "the
Sweater Girl" and a pinup place in
many a soldier's locker.
Her love life made even more
headliJleS than her acting career.
Turner was married seven times
and had many well-publicized
romances with such figures as
Howard Hughes. Tyrone Power
and Fernando Lamas.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - When
they broke rules before, the 0.1 .
Simpson judge snapped at prosecutors . lie fined one of them. He
ordered them to put witnesses on
hold . But be never barred them
from presenting evidence.
Until now.
Superior Court Judge Lance !10
imposed the trial'.s btlfshest penalty
yet on prosecutors for playing
dirty, preventing them from pre·
senting a live--page re(10rtlbatlinks
fibers on murder evidence to the
carpet in Simpson's Ford Bronco/
Following a passionate hearing
Thursday outside the jury's pret
ence, Ito said prosecutors had vio·
lated stale rules requiring both
side.&lt; to lrade evidence in advance.
Legal analysts said the ruling
was a major - but not lethal setback for the prosecution at a del·
icatc time. After five months of tes·
·timony, prosecutors expect to wrap

up their case next week with

more

testimony from FBI hair and liber
expert Douglas Dcedrick, followed
hy th e final witne.": N1cole Brown
Simpson's motll&lt;!r, .luditha Brnwn.
Prosecutor Marcia Clark said
she would ques tion Mrs. Brown
· about eyegla.~ses she left at Mezza.
luna restaurant the night of th e
killings and a call to her daughter
shortly before her death.
Ronald Goldman, a waiter at
Mezi.'iluna, went to Ms. Sitnp.,on's
condominium 10 retW11 the glasses
and was murdered alongside his
friend on June 12. 1994.
Deedrick returns to court today
for more te.stimony.
In what the judge called "compelling" evidence, D\!edrick's FBI
rcpprt sho~ed that only Broncos
made in 1993 and 1994 had the
kind of carpet conmining the fibers
found on a knit cap ncar the bodies
and a bloody
glove behind Simp,

son's house . Simpson's Bronco is a

1994 model.
" You hate Ibis close to the end
of the (prosecution) case to lose
any evidence, especially in a cir·

cums1antial evidence case,'' said

Loyola University Jaw professo~
Lauric Levenson. " What they lose
is the ability to tell the jurors bow
rare the, match is. It's a partial
)(,ss.''

Pcpperdine University law prnfessor Timothy Perrin said
Dewnck would ooly be able totesltfy that tile evidence fibers and the
fibers from Simpson's Bronco are
sullilar, without put_ting lhe issue
imo context.
"This evidence is less compelling, less powerful," Perrin
saitl. "The fibers match .,. but
they're not going to be able to say
Otey came from a '93 or '94 Bronco, which .specifically points the
finger at OJ . Simpson.''

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