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•
Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel'

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Meigs loses
_in Legion

'

Super Lotto:

27-28-29-35-36-42
Kicker:

action

0-4-6-7-5-9
Pick 3:

6-5-4

Sports, Page 5

Low tonight In the 60s. Partly
cloudy. Friday, partly sunny.
Highs In the 80s .

Pick 4:

1-0-5-6

•

A Cardinal· Affiliated Supermarket

-a I

;:;;,,.,..,.r"C"TT.t

Vol. 46, NO. 48
Copyright 1995

Connector· moves ahead
.
'

Recent rain failed
to slow progress,
ODOT proclaims

All Meat•Regular. Bunsize or Jumbo
1 pound package

I.

KAHN'S
WIENERS.

By GEORGE ABATE
,
Sentinel News SlaiT
The earth conlinues to ny on
the U.S. 33flnterstate 77 Cmmector projec~ officials said Wednesday.
About 33 percent of me pro'
ject's excavation work has been
completed, amounting to about
797,600 cubic yards of the 2.4
mi Ilion cubic yards in me entire
project, said Charlie Brown, Ohio
Department of Transportation
project supervisor.
"It's behind about one week,"
Brown said. "It's mostly a dirt
project."
Kokosiug Construction Co.
broke ground on me $12.3 million project in March. The 2.25mile section of four-lane highway, along with slip repair along
State Route 7 south of Five
Poinl~. is set to be completed by
June 19%;
. Embankment work is nearly
45 percent completed, with
540,269 of me 1,190,000 cubic
yards moved that will become
embankments, he added.
About I 00 feet from m~ end
of the current four-lane, two
bridges are being built, Browri
said .. The new Salisbury Township Road 79 will go· underneath
the bridges. linking Meigs High
School and the county fairgrounds. ·
Bridge construction cominues
to progress, Brown said. Both the
left and right rear pler_caps_'#ere

•

PilEi

cant.

CONNECTOR CONSTRUCTION- Crews continue to move dirt on the U.S. 33/lnlerstale 77
connector. Above, the old County Road 25 goes off to the right, whi)e a temporary roa" has been
installed on the left fur area residents. 'rhe Oil and cut work in this section bas nearly been com·
pleted, said Don Tillis, ODOT project engineer.
poured last Friday. The forward
left and right pier caps remain.
One of th e decks for the
bridge should be poured by the
end of the monUt, he added.
The bfidges a;e on schedule,
said Don Tillis, ODOT project
engineer.
·
"We hope to have tlte traffic
underneath the bridge by fair.
time," Tillis said.
. Access tQ the Pomeroy Gun
Club will be changed from· lhe
end ne:tr me high school to me
opposite direction, he added.

·'
selves unilaterally," she said.
Associated Press Writer
The Bush administration offered
' WASHINGTON - ·'fbe·Ointon top donors contributing $92,000
administration, which promised special picture-taking sessions with
two years ago to stem big-money President Bush , lunch with Vice
influence in poUtics, today defend- President Dan Quayle, breakfast
ed tlle Democratic Party for offer- with GOP congressional leaders
· ing presidential dinners and trade and an invitation to a reception
junkets to major donors.
with Cabinet members.•
.
Public interest groups accused "
Clinton's 1992 campaign book,
the White House of peddling Puumg People Fmt, denounced a
system _in which ''cliques of
access to the Oval Office.
In a Democratic National Com- $100,000 donors buy access to
·mittee letter, $100,000 donors were- Congress and tbe White House.': .
• promised two dinners with the
· Some. White House aides pripresident; a $ !,000 gets a social vat.ely smd mey were ~mbarra~sed
invitation , with first lady Hillary by the reve~auon, cspectally m hght
' Rodham Clinton; $50,000 buys a of Chnton .s campat&amp;~ pledge to . .
clean up Amenc:m poltucs.
• reception'w'im Clinton.
•
"We suppon the party and con- ·
The tlevt&gt;lopmcnt comes just a
, duct normal fund-raising proce- mo_nth after Clmton anti Hous~
dures mat li;lve been used by bOtlt Speaker Newt Gmgnch shook
, parties,"
White
House hrutds over a pr01mse to establtsh a
spokeswoman Mary Ellen Glynn crunpaign finance refonn commis, siou. Gingrich also has been criti•
: sai&lt;).
She said Congress rebuffed · cized ror his lt-ggressive fund-rais• Ciinton~s campaign finance reform in g.
; proposals, and maintained mat the
Ellen Miller of the Center for
. party has no choice but to com(lete Responsive Politics sai\lloday ll1at
, with Republican flind-~aising,. . giving ·donors ~cces~ !o.mc presi,. " We're not ·going to disaim ollr- ""(lent pots a price t:Jg on tlte White

· By RON FOURNIER

hall gallon carton

VELVET SUPREME
ICE CREAM

NORTHERN
.BATH TISSUE

PRE'E.J
----VELVET SUPREME
'

LIMIT ONE FREE On~ Coupon Per Fam~y
Good Onlv al Cnrdnal Superrn~rhl s

CREAM

BIRD'S EYE
VE ETABLES
..,. ----iill ~ -

'

'Governor's wife sorry
.'for
comments on Dole
•

Tsi;ORTED VARIETIES

ASSORTED VARIETIES
4 ROLL PACKAGE - •

HALF GALLON CARTON
.. : :::.

.;. ;

By BJ. REYES

TROPICANA
SEASON'S
BEST

'

$ 29·

PE

COLA
&amp; , RODUCTS

59

•
'I

Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
· Gov. Gaston Capenon said ~is
wife'.s passion for the arts may
have been why she made derogato. ry comments about U.S. Senate
; Majority Leader Bob Dole.
" But Caperton, a Democrat, also
. comends Ra~hael Worby's state·
: ment that Dole, R-Kan., is an
· "i'diot" who) "terrified" her was
,·
taken out of context.
~
"I tliink she thinks mat a nyone
: who doesn't support young.llhil. dren's opportunities for the arts
· might not understand ·Why she
•might say somethi'ng like that.~ "
Caperton said•Wednesday.
; Worby apologized Wednesday
· and said she was defending me arts
• agail)St attacks from Dole:
·, Congressional Republicans have
i suggested reducing or eliminating
: federal fuuding for me arts.
"I am very passionate about the·
;
· arts," she said. "I am equally pas,

.

•

'·

•'
.•

Stu·d y finds Ohio
·student spending
gap .remains wide ·
COLUMBUS - No school district spent more for each pupil than
BeachWood in Cuyahoga County for the 1993-94 academic year. None:
spent less man Northern in Perry County, a private tax study group said. :
. . The Ohio Public Expenditure Council included mat nmge in a report·
Wednesday mat said total school spending grew 10 a recortl $10.4 billion. :
· . Included was a list of me five highest anu five lowest spending dis-·
tric~&gt; , Utat reflected Ute disparities which led to a pending court ci~11Ienge
of Ute ·school Junding system.
R. Gregory Drowning, Gov. George Voinovich's top financial oflicer,
said Ute difference between me lowest and highest districts WIL' signifi-

By Friday, about 900 feet of
stone - out of 2,400 feet should be applied to Road E.· This
road, located south of the proposed co'llnector, will provide
access lor local residems, Brown
said.

"Lately we've spread a lot oL

stone," Brown sa\ tl.
About 15 more acres have
betltl·seeded to prevc111 crosion.·in
addition to 16 acres previously
covered; Brown sam.
•
"The best thing for erosion
control is to get Ute grass growing," Brown. s:)id.

·Clinton fund-raising
moves drawing fire
Frozen•Assorted Varieties

1 Section, 10 Pogoo 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nawopapor

Pomefoy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 6, 1995

About 3,600 tons, or 7.5 percent, of the aggregate base has
been applied to the project, he
added.
The construction project lost
12 out of 22 work days to rain in
May, Brown said.
Paving is set to begin me first
of August on County R 0 ad 25
near me Pomeroy Gun Club and
Township Road 673. · ...
.Tite project remains on target
to Qpen at least two lanes or traf·
fie between Rock Springs' and
Five Points by Thanksgiving,
Brow~ said.

·

"Unless you cap the top you will oonunue to have a wide spectrum of
aiu to education. I'm not advocating that I'm just saying we have a sys~
tern of local control mat allows for local decision-making ," Browning
said.
He said Utnt while me spending gap would remain significant, extrd
help was on its way to districts at !be bottom.
·
"By liscal 1997 every district in the state of Ohio will oo spending at
least $4,000 per pupil in stale and local aid, and Umt'is signilicant,"
Browning saiU.
i,.
"My view is tltM Ute real progress that is being made is in bringing up
the botlom," he said.
·
.
Tile counci,I said spending statewide averaged $5,218 per pupil in
1993-94, Ute latest year lor which oombined figures wen; available.
School districrs that wam to overtum Ute stale funding system did not
·
share Browning's view. .
The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Funding said
state plans to pump extra aid into low-wealtlt districts woold create a new
.
class of poor schools.
•'They put a 41 percent increase in me equity fund. That puts districts
in the middle at great disadvantage," said William Phillis, executive
director of the group mat includes most of tlte state's 611 district~.
"We're going to have a phenomena where the district' in the middle
arc going to be Ute new poor. Their aid is not going up a.&lt; 111\Jch. What this
shifting does is create :t new set of winners rutd losers," Phillis said.
The council said district&lt; ~spent $2 billion more in combined local, state
and federal money in 1993-94 Utan in Ute !989-90 school year, ll1e first
year comparable statistics were comriled.
·
Local taxpayers provided 50.6 percent of school'revenues in 1993-94,
up fr{lm 50 percent in 1989-90.
,
Stale aid dropped from 47 percent 10 43.5 percent during ·!be srune
'period, while federiJI aid ruse from 3 percent. to '5.9 percent.

Two will ·split $36M
Super lotto jackpot

Inmate flees
Chillicothe
prison camp

CLEVELAND (AP)- The $36 Whited.
million Super Lotto jackpot from
Several customers had spent
CHILL)CQTHE (AP) - A
Wednesday night's drawing will .be rnorc than $100 each on Super
Ross Correctional Institution
split two ways, the Ohio Lottery· Lotto tickets, she said. "Everybody
inmate serNing a 3Q..year senteni:e
S~~id today.
says they'll give me some," she
escaped from a work detail at a
Too lottery said winning tickets said. "But I just tell them , 'all l
prisoq farm witb .me help of an
were sold at Buckeye Book anti want is a million.'"
accomplice, the Strite -Htghway
News in Columbus and Holland
Jessica Baker, 42, of Toledo,
Patrol said.
Oil in Akron. Each prize will be ditln't mind the wait at a south
Evan Druneron, 44, jumped a
paid in· 26 annual installments of Toledo gas station. She said she
fence at me farm about 5:30p.m.
$692,307.
plays me !artery only a few times a
Tuesday and got into a maroon
The numbers .w ere 27 , 28 , 29, ycarr "when Ihe jackpot goes up ."
car un Ohio 104, said Robfn
35, 36 rutd 42.
The jackpot didn't thrill everyKnah, prison spokeswoman., The
- The jackpot for Saturday niglit's· one. Valerie C. Lorenz, director of ~ car wali la st seen on IJ.S ; -35,
Super Lotto drawing drops back ~ The Compulsive Grunbling Center · Knab said. . , .
$4 million.
.
Inc. in Balrimore, said s'tate Iotter;
Dameron remained at large
. Sales for Wednesday uight's ies - especi:~ly with big prizes today. The driver of the car had
drawing totaled $11,013,662, lead to more compulsive gambling.
not been positi~cly identified,
BACK TO WORK - Presi·
falling short of me 1995 reoord of
Site said he~ stndics haw conKnab
said.
dent Clinton walked 'to the Oval ·
$17.5 inillior1 for the March 4 eluded that lottery players tend tn
.
Dmncron
was serving 11 to 30
Orrice Wednesday after he and
drawing for $40 million.
spend m,ori: money, proportionateyears
for
burglary,
meft, aggraFirst Lady Hillary Rudham ClinDavid Astcrino, owner of The· ly, than c:L,ino and race track het·
vated
robbery
and
receiving
ton returned to Wushinglon aRer
Darn, a restaur:tnt-deli in Spring- tors .
.
stolen
property
from
Erie,
spending the Fourlh of July holifield
jn
western
Ohio,
said
1\
s
tate
survey
identified
Franklin
and
Richland
counties.
day at the Camp David, Md.,
Wednesday afternoon th:rt sa les 192.227 paU!Oiogical grunblers, or
lie had been at Ross·Corrcc.presidential retreat. (AP)
were up 35 percent to 50 percent.
ahout 2.5 perce nt of Ohin adults.
tional Institution since June 1991
"Right now. it's just a steady Following the lead of other stales,
and at Ross Correctional Camp
~group coming in," Astcriqo said. the Ohio Lottery now funds several
on
the prison grounds since
House. "It feeds tltc public 's worse
"There's a bunch of high hOJX:S."_. _ a~encies- trring to combat problem
Augusr,
Knab said. Dmncron had
perceptions aboul business _lL~ usual - · Sales at llublJa's Corner near gambling.
worked
at
the farm center since
in Washington,'' she saic..l. .
Decem her. ·
Mount Sterling, about 20 miles
A player must have all six numsouUtwest of Columbus, more man bers drawn tn win the jackpot. Bets
The. prison is medium security
doubled since Saturday's drawing, in the Super Lollo cost $·1 and .ami lhe correctional cmnp is min·
saitl Assistant Manager Karen tlmwings are 11clt.l each Wednesday
imum security.
and Salun.lay.

Health department alerts' parents
to dangers behind lead _p oisoning

sionate about Utose who oppose the
National Endowment for Ute Arts
and Ut ~ National Endowment for
Ute Humanities. My life's work is
devoted to !he--arts. In my zeal to .
defend me arts. I should have chosen my words carefully. I regret my
choice of words regarding Senator
Dol~."

Worby is me conductor of the
Wheeling Symphony and a board
member of advisory council of the
National Endowment l(&gt;( me Arts.
She criticized Dole in a speech
Monday to hundreds of high s~hool
students attending me Govemor's
School for me Arts, the Governor's
School for Science.and Math and
RACHAEL WORDY
Ute Governor's Honors Academy at
Fairmont State College.
. Dole, a GOP presidential candi''I mink Bob Dole is an idiot on
date, has' declined comment on the
matte
every subject. not just me ~- I'm
· not a poltllcaiJ&gt;Crson, but I m temSt~ie Senate Minority Leader
,lied by Bob DMe," ~he said .
Donna Bole R·Pleasants a GOP
She was ftlhng m for her bus- · national coo!~iiteewomarr,''Sllid she
band when she made the comments
was embarrassed by Worby's
in a question-and-answer session.
rcrilarks.
.
'

'

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Parents should be aware of me
·'dangers of lead, an area health offi·
·
cia! said.
Although reported incidents of
high levels of lead in children have .
dropped in me last few years, many
area youths still are at ri sk, said
Norma Torres, nursing supervisor
for the Meigs County Health
,
Depatunent.
Most lead can·be found in. paint
on me exterior of old buildings,
Torres said.
The paint- which wa~ not regulated until1979 -leaves an alii. gator-like. scale when it peels off,
Torres sai,d. Om~r sources mclude
toy~, outdoor sot I. automobtle bat- ..
ter.'es, lead pellets, lead solder, .
Statncd glass, roofing natls lll]d old
~

water lines wim lead ~o lder.
even c.lcalh.
Water that h:ts been in the
The best prevention remains
plumbing for more than six hours
awareness and the washing of
should be flushed by !cuing it run . hattd s before eating, she added.
Ulltil .it becomes cold or about one
Also, a diet high in calcium, prominute, TorTes said.
.
tein and vitamin C, and r.o utine
The paint will taste sweet to
checks once a year wi II reduce the
youms, sp mey may consume it in ·· risks.
din, she added.
The target age where children
Symptoms
include . poor
are most likely to oontiact high levappetite, crankiness, constipation. els or lead remain between the ages
frequent upset stomachs, s light!~
of 6 months and 6 years old, Torre~
nauseated, diarrhea and low
said. This age gap exists because
hemoglobin since the lead disonce a child reaches 6 years, men '
places iron, Torres said. ·
me body's natural 'dCfUOtSC mecha" I really wonder hecausc more
nisms begin oper:tting.
and more kids are being hyperacThe test involves pricking the
tiv e," ~~rres said . "!jus t really
child's finger and tilting a small .
wonuer. .
.
1unount Of blood, Sbe added.
Lcad·potsonmg can cause men·
LCild r.oisoning is ranked as the
tal retardatum, bhndness, ktdney
third largest problcl'l in Meig s
dam:tgc, muscle wea,kness and
(Continued on P¥~• 3)

•

�\

•

,.

COmmentary

Thursday, July 6, 1995

OHIO Weather

Page2
Thursday, July 6, 1995

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 7
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime

The
Daily
.Sentinel
•

Republican legal reforms long overdue

MICH.

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
LE'ITERS OF

O~ON

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

.
are welcome They should be less than 300

words long. All letters are subject to ed1tJng and must be s1gned wath name,
address and lelephone number No uns1gned letters w1ll be publiShed. Lcuers
should be m good taste, addressing issues. not personalities

Washington Today:

. ·

Clinton 'enforcer'
Ickes' bite is really
worse than his bark

Tack iack Tick. Every three
seconds anolher eavil suit is filed in
federal or slate coon. Do you kno'w
where your lawyer is?
Barrrsters don't like 10 hear suggesoons lhatthey have caused a lit·
igation explosaon m Amenca, and
that lawsuits are a $100 billion a
year drag on lhe economy. They
prefer 10 think of themselves as
instruments of JUSllce. As defenders of the downtrodden.
That's why the American Bar
Assocaauon has strenuously
(
opposed eftons by Republicans on
Capitol Hill (whom the ABA's
presadcnt referred to as "reptilian
bastards") to pass much needed
legal refonn~. ·.
The la~yers lobby wams lhat If
the GOP's reforms pass - like
limits on productliabihty and a cap
, ·on punitive damages - Amencans
no longer will be guaranteed "their
day in court." The very underpin·
) lings of the cival JUstice system
will be amperiled, they say.
But here' s the real s1ory. When
and if the GOP ret'onns mke effect,
Amenca's lawyers wall be discouraged from filing thear usual 18 million civil suits each year They'll

By RON FOURNffiR
&gt;\slodottd Press Writer
: · WASHINGTON - It began as a disagreement about the speaker sysJim in a 1973 political campaign . Soon, Harold Ickes was sprawl.ed across
llle floor, bis legs wrapped in a scissor lock around the head ot a fellow
rrolitical operative.
'
·: It ended suddenly, when bystander stepped m to break up the tight
~I Ickes saw was the do-gooder' s leg
. •,
:. "I bit bim,'' Ickes explained years later. ' 'II was a good sohd bne. .
·: Letlhat be a warning to any Democrat o~ Republn:an wbo mes~es wath
President Clinton or his acid-10ngued pohucal entorcer: Ickes bate as
;¥orse than his balk
•
"
: Iclces, lhe .5.5-year-old namesake of a Roose~elt-cr~ legend, as deputy
White House chief of staff. He manages Clinton s poltucal operauon from
Ike inside, trying to bannonize his best advice wath the president's stub·
li&gt;rn instincts and input from a cadre of outside advisers.
• His falher known as the " Old Curmudgeon," was Franklin Roosevelt's mteri~r secretary, a sla&lt;hing poliUcal hatchet man who adminiS·
tered lhe massive public works proJeCL' of the Depre,&lt;ion era
.
. Tbe elder Ickes, a workaholic who spentlitile time wtth hts farmly,
dled when hts son was 12, Ieavmg few memones but an enonnous legacy
· Interviewed in lhe srune West Wing has father once traipsed, Ickes sug{ested !hat living up to has name was never easy
. "I inherited the narne so I finally decided I'll make the best use of it I
c:puld," he said. "But you earn what you earn on your own "
.
. He has spent a hfetime tcying The result ts a legaon of Ickes stones
circulating in Democrauc cucle&lt; lhat reveal a bold political opemuve walh
a;rowdy temper and a slashing wit.
. Some examples:
: • A campaagn for a Democrahc Party post an New York hmged on
detailed mathematical compulauons as the final delegmes ca&lt;t theu votes
Ii:kes made sax tnps to his competitor's hotel mom, where he stuffed U&gt;e
ciJponent's addmg machhies into apallow case. Ickes' canutdale won
' Dad he steal the machines?
: "No. No. No," Ickes said, laughmg "We were just borrowing them"
· • As fanner Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg tried to accept the
.J)emocratic nomination for New York gove['J)or tn 1970, Ickes stood ,up
front to sbout epithets at him.
·
· • Working tor Jesse I ackson at the 1988 Democratic convenuon, Ickes
,;anted as much leverage as possible out of his 1,200 delegates. Tou~ng
if&gt;e convention center with a party representative and an aide to noma.nee
Michael Dulcakis, be asked repeatedly about a package he was expecung.
Finally, the Dulcakis aide asked what was .i~ the package ...
Wilh a straight face, Ickes answered, 1.200 whistles, then watched
lhe Dulcakis aide tum pale at lhe though! of a noisy Jackson prOle st. There
was no package
:
His fierce detennination begets a hm temper lhat has beltnled so!ne
White House aides. They're :unong .the ones who place Ickes at the scene
of Clinton's three biggest bungles: health refnnn, WhiJewaler damage
control and the 1994 elecuons.
But many slaflers s:ud Utey adamre Ickes for has loyalty anti smcenty,
and argue U1at he uses has temper to moUvale..
"It's overblown," Ickes smd. :adding that he sometunes uses has temper "lor eftecl "
•
Supporters say his take-nn-pn~oners style as a perfect fit lor the concaliatory, often undiscaplined Chnton
~
"Harold makes the !nuns run on h
t1 that 's pretty hanl when

probably setUe for only 17 million

But even af Utat's true. and ICI

new tihngs.

msts t~

The pomt of the rcfonns is not
to drastacally reduce the number of

er maker he held liable for the

Joseph Perkins
lawsuiL&lt;. Jus\, to curb the number of
outlandish court cases and outrageous jury awards. !nd af the
lawyers out there think that such
retonn as supertluous, let them
otter a defense of lhe following
lawsuits:
• In Oklahoma Cuy , lawyers
representing 82 victims in the lerrorist bombmg of the federal budd·
mg are suing a ferulizer comp:my,
lmpertal Chemacal Industries,
clauning tbat .the terrorist mixed
ICI' s ammonium ,nitrale ferulizer
wa~t fuel oil to touch off the deadly
explosaon L~st April.
''These produciS should be used
for ferttlizmg crops, not tor makmg
bombs." said Johnnie Cochran,
who took time out from lhe O.J.
Sampson case to get in on this multamtlltnn-dollar claim. The L1wsuit
suggests that the CQmpany could
have added chemacab to iiS feruhzer to make it noncombustible.

tt's nor. how ccm the ft!rt•hz·

actiOns of a madnlan? It's no less

absurd than holding Exxon or
lv,lobil liable for the Oklahoma city
bombmg because maybe their
g&lt;l'oline W&gt;i' mixed wilh Ute fertaltzer.
• In Manhasset, N. Y , lawyers
represenung survivors of the 1993
shooting spree on the Long Island
Rail Road are seekmg $1.5 balhon
m damages against th e maker of
lhe weapon and bullets use&lt;! by the
crazed gunman
· Although Colin Ferguson was
the triggennan, lhe plaintiffs hold
Stunn Ruger (which manufactured
the semiautmW!tic pistol he used)
and Ram-Line Inc. ( wb lch made
the ammunition) equally culpable
for the carnagt!' on the suburban
commuter uain.
But if Sturm Ruger and RamLine are held responsible for fatalities cause&lt;! by misuse of lheir products, do we also hold responsible
makers of cutlery for lrnife-related
munlers (are you reading Ibis Johnnie C.)? Or manufacturers of baseball bats if someone gets bea~en to

a

tbe guy who's driving the tram

,

doe~n't

w where he'~ gomg,'' saul

Bob Borosage, a D.emocmtac. ctMasuiL1nt who worked wath Ick~s on lack:son's 1988 presadential carnpaagn.
"Harold Ickes is one of the few places tCl go an the Wh1le House tor
good political advaoe," saad Rep. Robert Tomcelh, D-N .I
And to thuse who plan ttl tangle wtth Ickes, take note ol \hts epal()gue
lP his man-bites-mim story: Arrivmg nn tlle

sce~1e

ot Ihat lung-ago fight ,

polioe asked if mlyhody knew where they ctluld ltnd Ute sculfte
.. ,
"Yeah," Ickes 10ld them, pmnting down~ long, em ply hallway . ~ It s
right down lhere."
(Ron Fournier cnvers the While House for The Assnt:iated Pres.~:)

Today in history
-

TIIQ' CAN'T .

oo nus,,

l'LL Stlbf•

••

•
•

..

'

IND.

•lcoJumbuslso'

The New Yorker magazme
recently carried, in ats "Talk of lhe
Town" section, a piece about
Skipp Poneous, a lapsed evangeh·
cal minister who runs something
called the lnslttute for Flfsl
Amendment Studaes Accortlmg to
Porteous, the msutute mom tors farright orgamzauons,'hut waUl a special wrmlde: IJ has a network nf
about two dozen moles who act11al-

ly JOin malillas and the like, and
send secret repons to Porteous
The sad truth as that I am an no
position get huffy aboutlhis. I have
done 11 myself What follows as a
true story.
. When .I was in Har.vard Law
School in 1947 I founded the Harvard Young Republican Club and
became its tirst presid~nt. We were
a militant bunch, amJ whfm a Harvard Dcmocralac Club was founded,
a monU1 or two hlter I called m two
newly enrolled undergraduate
members of the HYRC, told them
to keep their membership secret (!
destroyed all written evadcnce of
it), and sent lhem to the tirst meeting of ~he HDC. Their ins,tructions

lcs

Cold front to bring slight
relief from warm weather

Damage suits filed in· court

information on pulp plant

Middleport court
Til~ following cases recently
were heard m the Middleport
Mayor's Court of Dewey Horton.
Fined were:
Jeremy L Roush, Racine, $465
plus costs, three days m jail, for
driving under the mfluence; and
Charles R. McCloud, $100 plus
costs for open container and $100
for dasorderly conduct.
Forfeited were.
Dreama D. Bell, Middleport,
$51 .for speed; Loreua J. Kelly,
Middleport, $54 for speed; and
Kathy McQulfe, Mason , W.Va.,
$60 for,expired tags.

Unit investment
showing
true
promise
.
-technolo£y stocks -

a ca1egory

that \llcludes everythmg from semt·
conductor to telecommunications'
to software companies. After technolo£y, Van Wagoner likes the
health services industry, Compa·
nies falling under Ibis heading are
those lhat provide servioes to people after lhey have left the hospital
and !hose in the medical infonnation business.
.
"We own no HMOs. thank
you," he says. "We owned HMOs
over a year ago and sold the last
holding out m lhe faiL"
Van Wagoner hkes the excite·
ment of investing m new compa·

nies, but he makes sure lhe compa·
nies he cherry packs have real products to sell before investing in
them. "Most of th.ese companies
have been in busine,5s for several
years. So it's not like they are startup ventures. They've got a product
they've been selling successfuJ!Y "
· The Goveu Smaller Comp!lni~
Fund is the sizzle-side of lhe trust
If the market _- and lhe stock picker - stay on top of things,
investors could see half of their
in vestment dollars rack up some
attractive long-term pro£its. The
UIT side is where the guarantees
are: Investors are guaranteed an

.... .,_ '
invesllnent return tltat's a little bit ·
greater than their original -

pro~

vided they dun't sell any of their
unats until the trust matures in
2007.
"Today, unats of the trust are
selling lor about $10 each," says
Jack Tierney, UIT product manager
for Van Kampen Americ:111 Capi~1l.
"At malllruy of the trus~ the zerocoupon bonds are worth $11 a
unil "
If you're mterested m the Govett
Smaller Companies and Treasury
Trust, to get the most out of at , consader th1s a buy-and-hold-until·
maturity investment. Then keep in
mind that along wath the 1099
D!Vs the tax man sends rumm~ly to
mutual fund investors, you'll also
be receiving a 1099 OlD - taxes
are due on the zero-coupon bonds
(even though they don't provide
any income annually) each year
({)(),

(Dian Vujovlch is the author
of ."Straight Talk Ahout Mutual
Funds," which is published hy
McGraw Hill. Send questions to
her In care of this newspaper.)
(For lnrormatinn on how to
communicate electronically wilh
this columnist and~lhers, -con·
tact Amtrlca Online hy calling J.
8110-8Z7-6364, exl 8317.)

vanous mher parts of his body,
along with mental angu1sh,
embarassment, humaliation and
!right
Of the $600,000, $500,000 IS for
compensatory damages while lhe
other $100,000 is for punitive damage~ury trial is requested.
rn an' unrelated matter, Dorsel
Thomas, address unreported, and
State Farm Fire &amp; Casualty Co. of
Columbus !ll'e seeking a total of
$4,340.80 from Ronald R.
Richards, Vero Beach. Fla., for
damages stell)llling from a ·Jan. 3,
1994 motor-ifllicle accident.

""-- ~ w. Va. office seeks to block
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The West Virginia Development
Office should not have to make
public an index of documents wilhheld from Freedom of Infonnation
Act requests, a senior deputy attorney general smd.
.
.
Don Darhng filed documents m
Kanawha County Circuit Coun on
Wednesday in response to a lawsuit
The Charleston Gazelle flied seeking records on a $1 billion pulp
mill proposed for Apple Grove,
Mason County.
The newspaper says it w.ants to

'!;

~

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213·960)
Published C\ery afn~rnoon, Monday lhrough

Fnday Ill COurt St, Pomeroy, Oh•o. by the
Ohto Valley Pubh~htng CompnnyfMulumedul

Inc Pomeroy, Ohio

4~769.

Ph 99:2 2Jj6.

Second cla!'S p01~I!J8e pa1d al Pomeroy, Oh10

,
..
;'

Membrr: 1l1C A~!OCI!lletl

Prr"~~ and the OhiO

New~paper A~wc1m1on

POSTMr\.STER: Sf'nd i!ddred correchons to
The Dtuly Se ntmel Ill Court St Pomeroy.

1

Oh10 45769

1

;
:
·•

SUBSCRIPTJON RATES

B;\;ar
rlrr or Motor Route

0 ne ·~
....ek .
One Month

~

1.

• .••••

,.. •• • •

....

:

One Year

:

,l
\

$91 00
SINGU: COPY PRICE •
35 Cem:s

Dmly

i

$175
$7 60

Subscnbers not dt:Mng tQ pay the ClliTlel: ma)'

·!

reiT\It m advnnce direct 10 The Druly StntJnel

on n thret ~'"or 12 month bos1s Credtt wtlt be
gtven camer each week

t

••

No ~uh~c rlptlon by mtul permlued 1n area~
whert home earner semce tsovtt~1able

:
I

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln._~ld~ Mtlp Counly

~

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

;
•
:

.t2J 92
$47 06
$92 .56

Ratts Outs1dt Meigs County

13 Week.~

-:
•

26 Week~
52 Week! •

•

11 •

..

•

•

S2.S 61
$49 66
S96 20~

indicators drop 0.2o/o

OU sponsors free clinics
Area children younger than high school age can get free immunizations at two free health clinics, according to lhe Ohio University
College of Osteopalhic Medicine.
The OU mobik; heallh program will hold sessions between 3-5
p.m. July 21 at the Wilkesville Volunteer Fire Deparunent. The
other session will be between 3-6 p m. July 26 at the Rullmad Volunteer Fire Department.
To protect children from contagmus diseases such as whoopmg
cough and polio, chaldren need a minimum of lhree doses of OPT
and oral polio vaccine by 2 years old. The Hepatitis B vaccine
series will be given for free to children born after Nov. 22, 1991
Parents should bring a record of prevaous shots For more details,
calll-800-844-2654.

By The Associated Press
The record-high temperature for
Cooler and drier weather i~ fore- tllis date at U1e Columbus weather
cast for Ohio an Uae wake of a cold station was 98 degrees in 1881
front moving across Uae state today. while the record low was 43 in
Temperatures tonight will drop 1972· Sunset tonight will be at 9:03
back to normal readings in tbe p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:10
lower 60s.
am.
The Nallonal Weather Service
Weather fol'ecast:
said skaes will be p&gt;utly sunny on
Tonight ... Becoming partly
Friday and highs mostly in lhe 70s cloudy. A chance of evening showAnd Saturday as hkely to be a rerun ers or thunderstonns east. Lows in
of Fnday
Ute 60s
Wadely scallered showers and
Friday ... Partly sunny and a litUe
thuhderslorms could re1um to the cooler. A chance of a shower or
state on Sunday, forecasters s;ud.
thunderstorm Qnrlh and northeast.

(Editor's note: A lawsuit out·
lines the grievances of one party
against another. It does not
establish guilt or Innocence.)
Two lawsuits were filed recently
m the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. Crow
Ill.
Roger Barber, Albany, ts seeking $600,000 plus attorney fees and
· court costs from Jerry Barney,
address unknown.
According to a court document,
Barber alleges lhat Barney assault·
ed him on July 3, 1994 in Vinton
County, causing severe, pennanent'
injuries to his face, head, eyes and

Area man cited in wreck

A man accused of breaking into lhree Dalwin homes last fall will
be released from the Marion Correctional Institution July 14 so
local authorities can press charges, according to Meigs County
Sheriffs Department reports.
~
Eric James Dobbins, 24, Procious, W.Va .. was Charged with two
counts of aggravated burglary, two counts of disrupting public service by cutting telephone lines, and one count of auempled aggra·
vated burglary, according to deputies.
Dobbins allegedly entered lhe old Route 33 homes of David
Reed, Steve Story and Belva WiUanJ on Nov. 5, 1994, repons stated.

C1995Accu-Wealher,lnc

•

As expected, leading ·

Break-in suspect to return

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy

Via Assoctaled Press GraphicsNet

were to join, keep tltel1' heads low, r good!), and he would reoeive fur- ered from the blow.
anend its meetings, and report to ther instructions. As I recall, he
So beware, Mr. Poneous. What
me weekly
was instrumental in getting Con- ' if one of your moles is elected head
0Jle of the two soon got tlored gressman John F. Kennedy to of the Michigan Militia? What if
speak to the HDC lhat year.
one already has been? . •
I had graduated before our · . Worse yet,. what tf James :
William A. Rusher . human time-bomb went off und~r Ntchols, say, disgusted wuh lhe
the Harvard Democratac Club hut I anti-government rantmg of has
wath the charade and dropped out, heard about it Two weeks betnre brother Terry and Terry's pal Tun- ·
but the Otller kept on He gradually Election Day, at a big c:unpus rally othy McVei~h. has bee~ .a liberal
built up a new sci ot tnends who. tor Det&gt;Jey and Warren, my .succes- mole, rerorlmg surreptlllOUSiy to.:
thought he was a Democrat , and sor as presadent of the HYRC read Poneous) Then the questaon maght
hatllo make sure he wasn't seen on
a letter from the presadent of lh6 become: What d1d Porteous know,
has nocturnal vasits to me. ("Where HOC saying that. he could no and when did he know ~t?
. .
does an alten register around longer stand Truman's ineptitude
Tl!~ more lthmkofa~. lhe lik8h·
here?'' be once cracked,)
and wanted to join·the HY~I
er at seems thai the eustencc of '
Then one evenmg m Apnl 1948
The Harvard Democrals W!:!lL.. politic!!! mol~~ ex~lains 11, ll.ll ol
he phoned me about 10 p:rn - ·
out Of their minds . Instead of things lhat have been puzzling me.
''What do I do now?' ' he asked. acceplmg our man's resignatiOn,
Wha~. for exa'.l'ple, If Arlen
''What do ·you mean?' '
they msisted on "impeaching" "Specter 1s a ~mocmuc,n~ole? T~at
" I've just been elecled president him which of course stmply ke)ll would explam why fie s trymg to
of the Harvard Dcmocmllc Clu~!''
the 'whole matter on page one of drive. a wedg~ imo the GOP over .
I'or one of the few times an my the Harvard Crimson for several abon!on, when he must kno_w has
life, I was speechless. Still, the sat· moa: days. (Being a fellow of con- ca~d1~acy. tor ~1c no~ malton as
uation clearly had possatlalities siderable wi~ he played his part to fuule Fes.• up, senator..
. ..
especially with Harry Truman run· the hilt: "I will always remain." he
(William Rusher is .a Dastm- .
111ng lor presadent that tall l told solemnly told the Cramson , "a guls!ted Fellow or1he Claremont .
our mole to go ahead and be a good democrat with a small 'tl"') The lnslltute for -thv S!u.dy. of S_tate.• "
president ol U1e Harvard Democrat- Harvard alumni magazine later n1anshlp and Pohtacal Phaloso·
IC Club (but oT course not too wrote that the HOC never recov- phy.)

Currently, about 55 percent of
the fund's assels are invested m

I

WVA

,Rev.ealing· the truth· behind the 'mole' ~~per=~~=

If you're a fan of small compa- Sm&gt;~ler Cumpimles Fund has been
By The Associated Press
ny growth funds but a httle gun-shy hard 10 heal . Year-to -dale total
Today is Thursday, July 6, lhe 1871h day of 1995. There are 178 dal';S
of lhal market these days, there's a return for II through June 22 is
left'in lhe year.
new unit investment trust Umt has 32 98 percent That ranJ:s the fund
Today's Highlight in Hastory:
created a way for you to have your
Fifty years ago, on July 6, 1945, Presadent Truman sagned an executive
cake and eat it too.
order establishmg the Medal of Freedom.
For the past two years, the GovDian li.u;ovich
On Ibis date:
'
eu Smaller Companies Fund has
In 1483, England's King Rachard 111 was crowned
provided its shareholders waUa llp· !tllh out of 293 small company
In 1535. Sir Thomas More was executed m England for treason.
top perfonnance. And tor lhe pasi growUt funds, according to Lipper
In 1777. during the American Revoluuon, Brilash foroes captured Fort
few detade&lt;, Vaaa Kampen has sup- Analyucal Services. Lookmg at its
TICOOOCI'Ojj3.
'l&gt;
•
plied m1hions of inveslors with urut performance from year-end 1992
In 1885. French scaentast Louts Pasteur succesSiully lested an anuinvesunem trust products. Now Uae through December 1994, lhe fund
rabies vaccine on a boy who had been httten by an ahfccled dog.
two have teamed-up wath a unit winds up in the No. I slot with an
In 1917. dunng World War I. Arab forces led by T.E Lawrence cap- , investment tru st (UIT) called, the average annualized total retum of
tured the pon of Aqaba from the Turks
.
•
Govctt Smaller Companaes Fund . 42.85 percent. The annualized totlll
In 1933. the fust All-Star baseball game, was played, at Cbacago s and Treasury Trust
return for the average small cap
Comislcey Park; the Amerjcan League defeated the Nalaonal League, 4-2.
The new trust is hke the Dou- fund was 7.84 over that same time
In 1944 169 people died when fife broke out m the mam tent of the
blemmt Twins commercial - it's pcnod
Ringling B~s. rutd Barnum &amp; Bailey Circus in Hartford, Conn.
.Garret Van Wagoner has been
two mvestment products rolled mto
In 1945, N1caragua became lhe fli'St nation to fonnally accept the Unitpori
folto manager of the Govett
nne UIT Basically, it's a pretty
ed Nations Charter
Companies Fum! smcc al•
Smaller
sa)nple investment to understand:
In 1957, Allhea Gibson bec~e lhe first black tennis player to wm a
inception
in 1992 The number of
Half of the assets coming into lhe
Wimbledon singles tiUe, ~efeaung fellow Amencan Darlene Hard 6-3, 6- . trust are mvested 111 zero-coupon slocks m the ponfoho varies from
bonds matunng in )2 years and the 85 lo 100, many ot which are milia!
2
· In 1967, the Biafmn War erupted. (The war, whach lasted 2 112 yeqrs,
other half buys shares of the Goxett public offenngs typically purclllirned some 600,000 lives.)
,
chased shonly after they begm
Smaller Companies Fund
J
·In 1989, the US Anny destroyed iL&lt; la~t P,ershing 1-A miss,iles at an ,,
The goal of the trust as tn prn- tradmg publicly.
anununition plant in Karnack, Texa,, under tenns of the, 1987 lntennedt·
"I don't know exactly bow
vade mvestors ·wa~r both sL1bality of
ate-range Nuclear Foroes Treaty
.
many
companies ,go public e~ery
princ1pal - by investmg in lhc
Ten years 'ago· President Reagan, an bas weekly radao address, turned
~
year,
but
we probably wind up buyzeros - and a growU1 opportunity
up the heat on congressional bud~,et ne~otiators, .accusang flouse
mg
b~lween
30 and 40 of them. So·
Umt comes· from one of the best
Democrats of "creative bookkeepmg Martma Navraulova chnched her performmg small company funds at may one point in time, half of the
fourth consecutive Wimbledon .singles uUe, defeaung Chris E~ert Lloyd.
fund's posttions could be invested
around
five years ago: NATO leaders concluded two &lt;lays of meetmgs,m LonFlfst, lhe fund side to this story. m companies ~tat have been public
don, pledging to sharply reduoe both nu~lear and conventaonal defenses m The perforrilance of the Govell less' than 18 months," said Van
Europe.
.
Wagoner.
~

.·

death?
• In Las Vegas, lawyers for
Paula Coughlin, the Navy aviator
who was sexually assaulted at the
uifamous Tailhook convention. not
only persuaded a JUry to award
!heir client $1.7 million in compensatory damages against the Las
Vegas Hilton, but also a $6.7 million punitive judgment (later
reduced to $5.2 million).
Now, no one begrudges Coughlin compensation for her ordeaL
She surely deserved the $400,000
setllemenl she receaved from the
San Daego-based Tailhook A~soci·
atwn, wluch bore the brunt of
responsibility for lhe assault on the
young woman
.
But lias hanlto see why the Las
Vegas Hilton should have been so
severely puni,hed for its small part
m the Tailhook atfair Coughlin
saad a lack of security at lhe Hilton
led 10 her attack. But what hotel
security foroe in the entire country
would have been able to prevent
hundreds of drunken Navy and
Marine aviators from making sexual advances on Coughlin and at
least 80 olber women?
Clearly, were it not tor the
Hilton's deep pockets, the hotel
would not have been scapegoaled
for Taalhook to the tune of nearly
$7 million.'
• In Santa Monica, Calif., a
lawy~r repreSenting Sharon Rufo
filed a lawsuit seeking unspecitied
compensatory and punitive damages from 0 J. Sampson for the
death of her beloved son, Ron
Goldman.
Rufo , who lives in St Louis,.
and who davorced Ron's father
Fred ages ago. had not seen her
dearly· departed sQn in Ihe five
years preceding his murd~~· and
had not even spoken to hun two
years prior.
But this did not stop the gnevmg mom from being fli'St in line at
Ole courthouse door with a wrong- '
ful dealh action against Simpson,
ahead of Nicole Brown's family
and altead of Ron Goldman's real
!amaly.
It will serve Johnnie Cochran
right, in lhe wake of his specious
Oklahoma City damage claim, if he .
has to waste his billable hours
defending his client Simpson ·
agamst such a frivolous suit.
(Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror The San Diego Union-Tribune.)

Me-i gs·announcements
5458

Snyder reunion
Tbe descendants of the late
Charles and Alma Hinzman Snyder
will meet m reunion Sunday, July
16, 12:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
Rllcine for a covered
dish
.
. dinner.

Revival announced
A weekend revival will be held
at the Believers Fellowship MinIStry, 7:30 each evening and 2:30
p.m. on Sunday. Rev Leon May of
McArthur will be lhe speaker.

Museum benefit set
Modem Woodmen of America
Camp 10900 is holding a matching
fund smorgasbord dinner for lhe
Coolville Area Museum Sunday,
12:30-2:30 p.m. at the Coolville
Lions Club.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government's main forecasting
gauge of future economic acuvny
fell in M~y for lhe fourth straight
month, the fli'St time lhat bas happened since the last recession m
1990.
Tbe latest evidence of a serious
slowdown came as the
ral
Reserve's monelllry pol' y-makers
were meeting to dete · e whether
to lower short-term inte est rates to
stimulate the economy. An
announcement was expected later
today
.
The Coouneroe Department saad
ats Index of Leadmg Economic
Indicators declined a wadely predicted 0.2 percent m May, compared to a drop of 0 6 percent in
April and 0.4 peroent Ute previous

(Continued from l'age I)
County. Torres SlUd. The oUaer top
problems mclude: teen pregnanry,
wnh the county havwg the &gt;~xth
haghest rate out of 88 counues; low
immunization nlles; and lugh
tobacco usage by minors
The county has 75 pea·ent of tl1e
chaldren immunized by age 2, Torres said
1llere's nO reason" for lUll get(lll&lt;l &gt;hots for infants, Torres smd
"lt?s tust laziness. Il's nc~lect at
~ou don't have them unmunizetl"
The maJ ont y of the shots need
to be taken by the chtld' • second
birthday'. The health departmenl
offers these ammum7.~1lons free of
charge.
At least four more immumzauon
days will be held through out lhe
summer, Torres saJd.
Although parents can set up
appointments any hme dunng the
summer, 90 percent of the pareniS
wait unul the week before classes,
she added.
llte coullly has improved mthas
area during recent years, since live
years ago only 37 .percent ot
Meigs ' 2-year-olds had all the
shots lhey needed, Torres said.
When shots are given at a
younger age. lhc experience is less
traumatic and not remembered, she
44

·

Am Ele Power ....................... .34 3/4
Akw .................................. ,.....60 Ill

Ashland OU ................................. .35
AT&amp;T .....................................54118
Bank One ... .'................ ........... .J2114
Bob Evans .............................. .lO Ill
Champion lnd ....................... .ll 718
Charming Shop ........................5 118
City Holdlng .................. .,.,,,,,.,,.,,.l7
Federal Mogul ....................... .t8118
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................42 314
K·p1arl .................................... 14 718
Lands End .... ,......................... 15 1/8
Limited Inc.-............:............... 21 518
Multimedia Inc, .................... .39 318
PeopiO's ....................................... .22
Ohio Volley B~nk .........................J4
One Valley ..............................30 518
Rockwell ................................46 118
Robbins &amp; Myon .................. .l6 Ill
Royal Dulch ..... ,...........,.... ,... Jll 518
Shoney'slnc, .......................... 12 718
Star Bank ............................... 46 318
Wendy lnl'l. .......................... 18 518
Worlhloglon.Ind .........~ .........20 Ill

.

-·-·-

are lbe 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advesl o
GaUl pulls.

Farmers Mark't set
The Middleport Fanners Market
will be held Salllrday from 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Additional information
may be obtained by calling 992·

•

•

The sc hedule for routme 1mmn•

HOW IHOWIWQ ' - - - .

r

PDWU 100RRNGERS
THE MDUIEJ
••WI NO ~ltGHT

7·00,9

oo r»n v ..,.

Slir/t!UA 1 :1S

J:oo

JUD&amp;E DREDD
7•10 - 9:20 !JULY M'I' ,SilT/11111 1:111 ll20

1:20,9:00 llA.ILY 1ttT fllff'/- I;OO,l:)O

.

~«~'•ws HDIAI~-.,

1:00, 9;)0 OIUl.Y ..r!'. SNI'{IUt .l : 00, l:lO I PC\))

I

HllP•'II~a:2..0~~

IHE BRIDGES Ol MROISON CO .

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,
Mtii'AAII HlliMOAtiiiiiH't
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1100, 1:.1Cl I»JJ.Y MilT Ml'/Q,I:OO, liJO !~J)
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Hospital news

LARGE FREESTONE PEACHES
, POMEROY
Dloplay Yard N•r

"
'
Meigs
County

•

EIGS FIR

Pomeroy·M81on Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager

992·2588
VINTON
Glllla County Dleplay Yard
155 Main St. ·
Jay 6 Joe Moore, Managers

992·7527

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I

1:20,,:20 DIULY MJI'I' IIM'/I!UI,1120,lll0 (I'Clll

Week's Speeia.ls

Green
Peppers

l(;j

IRIMRH FDREUER

LARGE BED PILLOWS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions- none.
Wednesday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges July S - Mrs.
Bradley Trent imd daughter,
Bethany Largent, Jackie Williams.•
Births- Mr. and 'Mrs. David
Haynes, daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Leonard, daughter,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Ph\llips, daughter,
Wellston.
(Published with permission)

I'll

POC HONIRS

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-ll923

QUALITY
THAT ENDURES

4•

RPOLID 15

BRAVE
, , HEART R

Meigs EMS runs

(Pel

7:00 'J:40 I»..LY 11M' lill'f'IRM I :00 );40

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
MEL GIBSON
IN

Corn

•

nizations mcludcs. at barth, llepat1:
tas B, two month s, DTI', OPV, llih,
llep B; four month,, DTP, OI'Vr
Hib, sax months, DTP, OPV , Hib:
Hep B, 12-15 month s, MMR ; I~
momhs, [)TaP. OPV, upon school
entry, DTaP, OPY: and entry ml&lt;l
seventh ~rade, MM R2.

PG

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of .all:

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
logged lhree calls for assistan·ce
Wednesday including one transfer
call. Units responding mcluded:
MIDDLEPORT
12:03 p.m., Oliver Street. Julie
Boyles, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
12:49 p.m., Noble Summit
Road, abandoned structure fire at
Robert Romine property, no
inJuries.
SYRACUSE
9:27 p.m.,' Eagle Ridge Road,
Emma Devore, Vetemns Memorial
•.
Hospital.

111 :

added.

448-1088

The following actwns to end
marriage were flied recently in lhe
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spenoer
Divorces asked- Vonda A.
George, Pomeroy, from Terry L.
George, RuUand, June 29; Machael
T. Fetty, Langsville, from Christie
A. Felly, Gallipolis, June 27
Dassolution granted - Charles
Edward Dav1s and Sherri Lynn
Davis, July 5

Sloe~ reporls

bless clauns ru se R percent

ay, U1e biggest incu:a'c ua nearly ;
a year-aa1d-a-half
·nae Labor Dcp&lt;n uncut rcpnrlcu .
today lhat the number of Amen -'
cans filing first-time JObless drums .
was unchanged last week m a sea- .
sonally adjusted 369,000. The total ·
is well above the average of l.uc .
last year, but below a peak ol
396,000 last month.
The stock market con11nucd to '
rise to new records. 1l1e Dow .Jones
industrial average was up more
than 7 points m Ute tirst half hour.

CASPER

Special session
.
.
. A special meetmg of Racme
know how much in state financial
aid the Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. Village' Council will be held Fri- Firefighters sponsor event
mill is seeking. The development dljy, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park to dis·
The Olive Township Volunteer
office has released on! y about half cuss the water grant.
Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary
tbe records sougbt.
will hold a "Little Mr. and Miss
The Gazette also wants "a Child League picnic
Flame" contest at 10:30 a.m. Sept.
detailed justification for exemption
The Middleport Child Conser- 2 at lhe Reedsville Fire Hall. The
claims which itemizes and indexes vation League annual family picnic children who collect the most
documents."
will be held Sunday, 2 p.m. at money will wm, wilh all proceeds
Darling said the state Freedom home of Helen and Harold Black- going to the fire department. Conof Information Act requires only stan. Meat provided.
'
tact Rose Niday at 378-6358 to
that the office give its reason for
enter. Children between 5 and 7
denialm wnting.
Bedford Trustees to meet
years old may participate if lhey
,"There is no requirement to proBedford Township Board o,r:f---!P,.-:ick up cards between Aug I and
vide lhe requesting party wilh the - T'fllstees Wllri!OldTtsregullifilleet· 6.
level of detail sought by the news- ing Monday at 7 p.m. at the townpaper," he wrote.
lhip hall.
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
A bearing is scheduled Friday in
FRI., SAT., SUN. . 'GI'llnge· sel• inspection
the case.
BRUCE
WILUS IN
Meags County 'Pomona Gtange
DIE
HARD
WITH A
will hold an annual inspection at
VEGEANCE
R
7, 30 p.m. Friday at the Rock
AND
Spnngs Grange Hall. Racme
CONGO PG13
Gmnge will host.

Stocks

increase tn weekly llrsHtmc claun.\1 :
for unemployment bcnclits, a stgn :
of
elenora1111 g lahor mark c.· r .

TONIGHT

Elections board to meet
- -The Meigs County Board of
Elections will hold ats monthly
board meeung at 9 a.m Tuesday at
lhe bOard oftioe.
·

Divorces and
dissolutions

The biggest conlnbuwr was an ·

COLONY THEATRE

Music night announced
Musac night will be lleld Saturday, 7 p.m. to midnight, at the Lot·
tndge Community Center.

Gun shoot slated
A gun shoot will be held Sund;oy 1 p.m . at the Forked Run
Spo;tsmen Club on Curtis Hollow
Road. Proceeds go toward fireworks forme Big Bend Sternwbecl
Feshval. 12·gau~e only.

month.
•
Ftve of (be II component s of.
t11e index contnbuled IO'Ihc slttlc :

Lead poisoning dangers

Club sets mteting
The Big Bend Farm Antique
Club will met Monday, 7:30 p.m.
m lhe Meigs High School Library.

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T

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Local News in Brief:
No one was injured following a two-car accident on U.S, 33
· Wednesday, according to Meigs County Sheriffs Department
, reports.
Larry A. Leonard, 41, Sonlh Point, was charged wilh failure to
.. mainlain assured clear distance after he bit anolher vehicle at 10:42
a.m. while driving to see his wife at Holzer Medical Center's maternity ward, according 10 deputies.
Gladys Roush. Clifton, W.Va., bad pulled out from Peach Fork
Road into the median crossover and wailed for two truckS to pass,
according to lhe crash report. Roush lhen pulled into lhe soulhbound slow lane.
Leonard was driving soulh on 33 in his 1995 Ford pickuP' truck
when he applied his brakes and slcidded, hitting Roush's nght side
Roush's 1985 Chevrolet had heavy daihage after it spun around,
deputies said.
•
Leonard's truck had moderate damage after it hat the vehicle,
then lhe guardrail, crossed lhe road and stopped in lhe median, lhe
report said..

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

'·I

/

�·sports

The Daily~~!!:~~~~
Page4

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Reds' 9-0 win over Giants helps them wid~n
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP)- Jose
RiJo, thought lost for the season
JUSt lhree weeks ago. is pitching·
wuhout pam and the Cincmnati
Reds have wtdened their lead in the
NL Central, now by 6 1/2 games
over Houston.
A cortisone shot m hiS pachmg
elbow - a last resort before
surgery - left RiJO (4-4) feeling
pain free after five sbutout innings
in the Reds' 9-0 vtctory over the
San Franctsco Gtants on Wednesday nighl
"Before when I pitched, it burt
for five days," Rijo said. "Now I
feel like I can pttch the next day."
Manager Davey Johnson was

'

happy but reserved
Giants stJJrter Mark Letter {3-6) tor an ~xtra long tulle
"He's sllll throwmg too many was equally effecltve tor stx
" The errors 1:!\Jg me.'· Baker
,rttches," Johnson s.11d "Hts com· nmmgs, allowmg JUSt three hits. satd "Every error
mand is not what 11 should he, but mcludmg a home run by Denuo '
"l am't supposed to talk when
he's not gmng mto anybody
Sanllago
I'm (angry). And I'm (angry) "
"Hopefully. he'll be all nghl
Bul Cmc1nnall ~cored t1ght runs
He had reason to be. Three
and have a btg second half He's a m the seventh and etghtll ~ all but errors boosted the Gtants' total to
key - a btg key · ·
one of them unearned - as the mne tn thetr past four games
Wednesday ' s effort wa; Rt)O's Gtams' delense collap&lt;ed
, A run scored when catcher Ktrl
most etfecttve of thrcl starts smce
''l hate to sec a well-pllched Manwanng couldn't hold onto the
the corllsone treatment He threw game by Letter turn Into a ball on a play at the pl:tle Another
88 pllches - 59 for strtkes - and blowout," satd G1at\{s manager scored when left fielder Rtkkert
allowed four htt s and Ius bullpen Du&lt;ly Baker "It ' s lit!! best game Faney1e and center ftelder Darren
backed htm up wnh four scoreless he's puched lJ he pitches every Lewts collided on a pop fly Anotll·
mnmgs
g:une like that, I'll be the happte&lt;t er scored when a throw 10 tlurd on
Hector Carrasco ptlched two -m ru} m Lhe wofltl '"
an anemptea force play skunmed
mnmgs. Mtke Jackson went 1 l/3
Wednesday mghl, he was one of off Steve Scarsone's glove.
mnmgs and Brad Pennmgton got the angriest. sllll scetlung after
Sanllago and Brei Boone had
the final two outs
keepmg ht&lt; dressmg room closed

NL Central lead

back-10-back homers m the etghth
off Ken Greer.
"I hate to see Greer gel htl like
lhat because be came m and dtd a
good JOb, too," Baker smd
The Gtants, wtlhout Matt
Wtillams for the past month
because ol a hroken nghl fool, lost
Darry Bonds m the thtrd Bonds,
the NL leader m on-hase percent·
age, was ejected by home plate
umpire Larry Vanover for argumg
a called thtrd stnke
San Franctsco had only ftve

credned Cmcmnah wiU&gt; captlahzing on the Gtants' problems
"We're taking advantage of
other teruns' mtS~1kes, good teams
do tltat," he said.
Sant~:~go, who !tad surgery May
25 to remove fragments Jrom his
U&gt;rowmg elbow. went 3-fttr-5 when
he was acttvated Tuesday night,
and Ill two games bas dnven in
four runs after mtssmg almost two
months
"
'I l)on't thmk my arm is going
to hotl1er me at all,'· Sanuago said
Although he hasn't had 11 tested
under lire, 11 ceruunly ha.&lt;n' l both·
cred hts httlmg

base runners after thai, and none

reached second
Santiago, who hall Ius first twohome run game s1nce Au;usl 1992,

I

unez. who won't p•lcll agam before
the break, wtll be well-rested
should Showalter dectde to start
hun
"It has to be up to the manager," he srud ''I'm JUSt happy to be
pantctpaung m the man!event "
The 40-year-old Marunez (8-0),
olf to the best stan of his career.
has won mne strrught decisions longest acuve streak m the majors
- smce he lost a game late last '
July
He rcttrcd 18 of the 19 Texas
bailers be faced, allowing only an
mlield smgle by Rusty ,Grcer wtth
two outs m the ftrst mning wbtle
lowenng hiS ERA 10 2 37

Cleveland pttchers set down the
next 24 httlers after that until Otis
Ntxon beat out an mlield smgle off
Jose Mesa w!lb two outs in the
nmth. Greer' and Ntxon were the
Rangers' only two ha~;crunncr~.; all
mght
Maruncz stayctl 11t the game
after 11 was mterrupted lor more
than two hours by a thundcrstonn
m the middle of the thtrd mnmg,
but he sat down when another
stonn delayed u agam tor 49 mmutes after the sixth
"We kept a close eye on the sll·
uatlon during the entire thing, ami
n wasn't that tough a call," Cleveland manager Mtkc Hargrove satd

"It comes down to a guy like Den-

lellmg you know He knows
what he can and can't do He

IllS

knows the nsks Once Lhe second

one hit, 1t was real nbvmus (that
Martmcz was done) That's a nohrruner ''

Jun Poole replaced Manmez
after the secomJ delay and w~L') per·

feet tor two mrungs, stnking out
hve of the stx bailers he faced.
Mesa tl1en limshed up, striking out
two and eanung

lu~

maJor league-

leading 21st save in 21 Chane"
"G1ve the1r pitchers credit, anti
l llunk the weather played a little
p:1r1 , too," fexas manager Johnny

Oates saul ''You have a two-hour
delay. and then another stopp.tge m
play. and it can change your mental
appftaCh. Both teams were not at
thetr best offensive cap~biluy
tonight, and both pitchers were
around the strike zone."
Rangers starter Kevm Gross (3·
8) allowed only three hus m stx
mnmgs, but one of them was Tony
Pena's two-run double itt the second Gros.&lt; walked Manny R:umrez
and Paul Sorren10 belorc Pena daubled
"Just one pttch changed the
game," Texas catcher Ivan
Rodnguez smd "Other than that,
Kevm Utrew very good. He's start-

ed to pttch better Hts breakrng ball
is bener He's come back "
Rodnguez went 0-for-1, endmg
Ius 15-grune hlllmg &gt;lreak
"He (Marlmez) never throws
the hall m the mtddle," Rodnguez
said "He prunL&lt; the black part of
U1e plate all of the tune He mixe&lt;
his pitches. and when he throws Ins
fastball, he Urrows tl on the comer
That's why be's R-0 "
The lnd1ans, ow nets of base~
ball's best record (44-19), won lor
the etghth ltme in IO games and
mruntamed their I 1-game lead over
Kans:L&lt; City Ill the AL Central The
Rangers h~ve lost loitr of th e last
five.

At Wimbledon,

.Becker beats Pioline after long match to advance to semifinals
was JUSt a very beauttful moment "
The match, espectally the last
two sets, had 11 all Dtg serves (23
aces by Becker). extended ralites,
dmng volleys and wmnmg passing
shots (23 by Ptollnc). ·
·'Throughout the whole match l
dtdn't think I had a really bad penad." Becker said " It wa&lt; more a
question of P10lme raising hiS
game to a very, very htgh level for
the last three sets It was an
extremely well played tenms match
from both player;;.''
Becker JOined themarch of the
men· s top four seeds 11110 the senit·
fmals, JUSt as happened with the
women. It IS the first tune in Wim,
bledon htstory ll' s happe ned m
boUt draws 1}1 the same year
Today' s sc hedule featured a
rematch of the 1993 women's fin:~.
when J ana Novotna cned on the
Duchess ot Kenf' s shoulder after
blOWIII$ 4-1 final-set lead IO Slel-

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
-So. tennis at Wtmbledon doesn't
have to be boring after all
Boris Becker and Cedric Pioline
staged one of the most compelling
matches in years Wednesday, a 4hour, 11-punute duel ftlled wtth
suspense, lenston and - yes great tenms
Ptolme. who almost reured Wtth
~ Ill) ury after losmg the flrsl two
sets, mounted a remarkable comeback before Becker staged hts own
rtdly to reach the semifinals by the
score of 6-3. 6-1, 6· 7 (8-6), 6-7
(12-10). 0-7
•
When Becker broke m the linal
game as dusk approached, the
7,000 fans on Court One rose m a
long ovauon for both players
~"That's what the game IS all
about and the Champ10nshtps~e
all about," satd Decker, a threetune Wimbledon champion "ll

a

Scoreboard
San Otego 7 Florula 4 (!0)
CINCINNATI 9, San Franct~o 0
Pttt.r.buq:h 7 Plul:uJdphm &lt;t

Major leagues

AUant:J 4 Los Angele.~ l
New Yurt 5 Cluca~:o 4
St Louts 4 Mon1Iwl3 (10)
Colnrado 4 H(')~!Cln 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutun Division

.!!!

Ium
80110fl

37

Detrott
New York

34
29
29
24

!ill

m

Crnlnl Di"1siun
44 19 • 698
CL.EVELi\ND
Kansas C1ty
32 29 m
M1lwautl:e
29 34 460
Chicago
2i 34 4l2

II
15
ISS

20

m

44

24 5

Wulrrn DIVblon
37 28 569

Cahforma
1e.:a

36 29
35 31
32 33

Oakland
Seattle

554
53()
4'n

I

s

Detrcnt 8 Seattle: 6

Mtlllle&amp;Ota 8, BaHnnore 2
Kansas Clly J, Boston 2
Olicaso ll .New YorkS
CLEVElAND 2, Texas 0
Milwaukee 8, Oakland 2
Toronto 6, Caltforn1a 5

Today's games
Mllwaukee (Karl 0 0) at Oakland
(Stottlem)Te
J 15 p rn
"Seattle.(Bto :h~ 1 J)t31 CLEVFLAND
(Ogea 4-1) 7OS p m
Xansu Clly (Haney 3 2) at Deuon
(Bohanon 0 I) 7 05 p m
Boston (Snuth 3 4) 31 Mtnn,uOia (Rad
ke4·7) 805pm
Balli more (Mo)'~r 3· 3) 31 Chtco.:o
(Keys~r 2·2) 8 05 pn1

1J ).

New York (Hti'chcm;k 3 •0 ut Tuas

(Pavhk 4-4) 8 15 r m
Toronto (LetterS 3) at Cahrorma (An·
denion 1·2) 10 OS p m

Friday's games
Seatlle (John~oll B·l) at Cleve lnntl
(Clark 4-2) 7OS p m
Kansw; C1ty (Apptt'r 11-4) at Detr01t
(WeDs 7-J) 7 05 p m
Boston (Clemens 2·1) at Mannesota
(Harris 0·2) 8OS p m '
Bi!J/amor~ (DeS!lva 1·0) at Chacayo
(Abboh 4 3}~ 8 bSp m
New Yor._ (PetiLtte 1 5) at Teus
(fewk.sbury6·3) K35 pIll
Tnrorllu (W IIJ I!uns O·J) at O:.aklund
(PnetoO-O) IOU5pm
Mtlwau~e (Suarb 4 3) al 0o~hfunma
(D1ded:1 4·S), 10 OS p m

NATIONAL LEAGIJE
Ea~trm D1vl~ion

Ium

AUanta •

Phtladdphul

Montreal .
Flo rub
New York

.!!! .L 1!&lt;1.
39 25 609
3B 26 594
32 33 492
2J 39 37 1
24 41 369

I

Centnl [){yf-'on
ClNCrNNAll
41 23 641
34 29 540
Houston
33 32 508
Chicago
26 35 426
Pit~burgjl
27 39 409
Sl Louu•

{ill
I
1S
IS

'"

•

f

'5 3()

n 32
12 32
32 3J

'

S38
50.

soo
492

'

(Rcynold~

cham pton Gr:tf, who
leads thetr head-to-he.ld senes 213. hasn't lost 10 Novotna .u1 stx
match~s smce - .ond tl1e top-seeded Gennan hasn't lo&lt;t In anybody
m 30 matches titis year
Openmg on Ce11tre Court wtlf
be two Spamards No 2 Aranlxa
Sanchez Vtcano agrunst defendmg
champiOn and thtrd-seeded Conchtla Manmez
Fnday's men's semtfinals have
Decker agamsl top-seeded Andre
Agasst, and No 2 Pete Smnpras,
wmner of the last two W11nbledon
titles, against No. 4 Goran lvamsevtc of Croatta, whom be beat m last
year's final.
Agass1 overwhclriled Dutchmmi

Jacco Elungh 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 Sampras detenstvely cnnlessed there
was "detitutely some room to get
bener" after coming ftom hchmd
10 defeat unseeded Shuzn Matsuoka of Japan 6-7 (7-5), 6-3, 64, 6-2
lvamsevic, hroken only tw1ce m

5·5) 8OS I'm

m a repon whtcb the school sent to

COLLEGE PARK, Md (AP)Maryland slartmg quarterback
Scott Mtlanovtch bet on college
spons, a report on gambling at the
school found, The Washmgton Post
reported today
• As a result of the, fmdtng,
Milanovtch could be declared mehgible for atlea't one game thiS sea-

the NCAA
The identity of tlte other player,
or players, wasn't knowu, although
Mtlanovich's father, Gary, told the
newspaper tltat his son's name wa'
111 the report.
If a school delennmes thai an
atl1lete has violated NCAA mles, 11
must declare the athlete mellgtble
under NCAA procedures The
school can immediately appeal
their own ruhng to the NCAA's eli·
gtbthly dtrector and can recom-

son.

A source famdtar wtth the case
told the newspaper that tlte names
of Milanovtch and at least one
other football player are mcluded

Flor1d::t (R~rr 3-SJ at St . L.ou11
(Petkov~el3 2) 8 35 p m
Montr~al (Fa~scru ~ 5) at Co Iondo

45
85
135
15

Friday's games
CIHcllgtt (BuiiJnger 6-l) at Ph1lndel·

ph1a (M1mha 6-3) 1 35 p m
Los Angelu (Banlu. 0-1} lit CINCIN
NAT[ (Sm1ley 8-ll. 7 JS p m
New Yort (Puh1pher 1·3) at Ptlll·
burgh (Euckl; 1·1) 1 35 p m
San Franc1scn (RCJuelh 2·1) at Atlanta
(Giavtne 7 4) 7 40 p 111
San D1cg1' (Benes 3·5) 011 lloustun
(SwmdeJI 6 3) 8 05 p m
Aonda (WJtt I 5) at !SI l.ou1~ (Jack...on
0 9) 8 35 p m
MCJntrtal (HereUta 3 4) ;~t Culoratlo
(Sw1ft 4· 2) 9 05 p m

Transactions

2s
3

declared some tootball,players meligible Ill accordance wtth NCAA
policy. She satd the Vt()lauons
dtdn' tmclude betllng on any Mary·
land games.

gmnes

Athleuc duector Debbte Yow
told The Pos1 that tile school bas

Indiana

Finn Dlscoven:

Special New cream
for .arthritis
"I use PAIN BUST because I
su"er from tens/on m my beck
and shoulders. I canY praise your

product enough. I've used other
omtments. but they don Ys-eem
ro work as last nor last as long
Thank you. Thank you
Than" youl" '
C.K.F.
"Last mght when I want to steep

I rubbed some PAIN BUST on my
sore ach1ng knee. 15 mmutes later
I loll sound asleep and woke 8

And what's more 11 will not statn

Baseball
Grctnwell, outfltlder on the IS -day dtll·
abletl It&amp;t Recalled Willie McGee, out
f1elder, from Pawtucket of Ule Internal ton·
al League
NEW YORK YANKEES Placed
Melt do Perez, pttcher, on the 15-day dll·
a,bled hst Recalled Buan Boehrmger,
pitcher, froin Columbus of U1e lnlerna·
t10nal League
Net1onal Lugur
Wlllc.tns catcher on the l~·day dr~abled
list retroactive to July 2 Purchased the
contract of Jerry Gofr, cat:ther frCJm The·
5on of the Pactf'ic Cua5l l..e'ague Opt1nned
Plul NeVIn thtrd b31j01111D to Tucaon Re
called Dean Hartgravea (!tither frlllll
Tucson
Sa~IJ!!B~~~!!e~~ATES 1 Releaied
ST LOUIS CARDINALSl) Optaoned
Terry BnKitihaw, outfielder. to LOurnllle
Of the Amencan Auoctataon Recalled
Nleo Battle, outfielder, &amp;om Lovuvtlle
SAN DIEGO PADRES Pieced D•p
Roberu, mfielde&amp;-, oo the 15-day d1aabled
ltst Transferred T1m Worrell, prtcher.
from the 15· lo the 60-day drsabled hat

SALE

$J9?.'
Air DVSTB
Basketball

--

An

nounced the retJrement of Ball Cartwrtght.
consultant for sroutHig and plllyet deve!·

Pharmacy
Charles Riffle,
1
A. Ph.
R. Ph.
Mon Ihru Sat 8 00 a m to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10·00 a m lo 4 00 p m
PRESCRIPTION
,
PH 992·2955
E Ma1n Fnendly Serv1ce Pomeroy. Oh,
Week
•

opment
N•tl-.nal Fuojthall Lraa11.e

•

SWISHER LOHSE
f

center who wtll stay on ns a W~t Coast

219 N. SECOND

992-5627
!

MIDDLEPORT, OH •.

t

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•

I

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:

1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

In American Legion baseball,

~ Gall~polis gains 10-7
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
The Meigs American Legion
baseball team tied Gallipolis Post 27
and broke that lie m the early
innings of Wednesday's game at
Meigs Htgh School, but Gallipolis
fought back With a five-run rally m
the thtrd frame and stayed ahead
long enough to notch a JO. 7 victory
to sweep the season series between
the two clubs.
A one-out flare single to center
field by Cbris Toler and a double to
nght by Gary Stanley got Wes
McCorkle and Toler home wtth tlte
visitors' ftrst ~uns, respectively, m
the flrst But m the bottom of the
flrst, Meigs tied the game when a
bases-loaded walk to Donme
Phillips ·and
f' Chad Duncan's basesloa&lt;I ed 10 teld single scored Josh
Merkle and Brett Newsome
. A,fter Meigs starter Mtke Wolfe
dtdn t allow a Galhpohs baserunner
pas~ second base m the second.
Metgs capttahzed on throwing
errors by Enc Humphreys and D
Brunton to get Scott George- he
reached on ~ flare smgle to right
center orne with the tiebreakmg run. Metgs .got :wo more
runs when Jcremr Gnnu~ s two-out
smgle - he hll the ftrsl pitch
thrown by Stanley, who relieved
starter Kevm Edwards - to left
center scored Tyson Rose and Brett
Newsome.
' .The
!cad Metgs took mto the
thad dtdn l survtve that frame
Why? Four of liTe etght errors Metgs
commttled m tite nme-mnlng contest
happened m thatmnmg
'
It took two errors - one by
, , Merkle and one by George- to get
Toler home wtth Post 27's third run.
George's error. which came on a
flare to nght by Trent Thomas, also
helped Stanley - he was one of the
three batters Wolfe walked follow Toler home
When Newsome !ired past first
base followmg his lteldmg John
Brownmg's grounder, that allowed
Thomas to score the tymg run from

?·2

Rose, after fieldmg Jason Dmley's
grounder, Utrew the ball past ftrsl
ba•e
After the guests got an msuranc•
ruu m the fourth - McCorkle
scored on Toler's seemg-eye single
·past Newsome at thtrd - to pad
thetr lead to 8-S. they slayed'-tbree
runs ahead of Metgs lrom then on
except for the stxth
In that frame, Wolfe's two-out
hoe-drive doub)e to ngbt center got
Merkle home to tnm Post 27's lead
10 8-6
Galllpohs (15-10) w1U play in a
weekend toumament in Cabell and
Wayne Counties 10 West Vtrgm 1a
startmg Friday
JrininK totals
•
Gall'tpo1IS.... 205 100 020 = 10-9-3
M ·
230 001 010 7 2 8
etgs ...... ...
= ·I ·
Gallipolis Post Z7
Player-pus.
ll!J. t h hl
- Jason Dailey-cf .
5 1 1 o
D Brunton-rf
5 1 1 o
Wcs McCorkle-ss.
4 2 1 0
Chns Toler-lb . .. 5 2 3 3
Gary Stanley-3b/p
.. 3 1 1 1
Bobby Fmk-2b/p/3b ..4 0 I 0
Trent Thomas-If . . ..4 I 0 0
Eric Humphreys-c ......... 2 1 1 0
Kevm Edwards-p
0 0 0 0
John Browmng-ph/2b .'::4 1 0 0
Jamie Gruber-ph/e ......... 2 0 0 0
Ryan Wtlhams-ph/p ...... 1 0 0 o
l'otals
39 10 II 4
Pitchers
Edwards: 1 1/3 ip, IK, IDB &amp; 7 hits
Stanley (W) 1 2/3 ip, IK, lBB &amp; 2
htts
Fmk' 4 ip, 6K &amp; 2 bits
Wtlhams (S): 2 tp, 3K, IBD &amp; 1 htt

-·-·-

Meigs

'ah [ h
Plaver-pos,
Josh Merkle-2b
4 3 2
Tyson Rose-ss
4 I I
BreU Newsome-3b
5 2 3
Mtke Wolfe-p .,
5 0 2
Jeremy Grunm-c
5 0 I
Donme Phillips-If
.. 4 0 0
4 0 I
Chad Duncrut-cf
4 0 I
Rtcky Hoover-l•b
second ~
3 1 I
Scou George-rt
When fust baseman Rtcky Andy Wam~ley-ph .... I 0 0
Hoover recovered the ball, hts errant Travts Rtce-ph/cf .. .. .. I 0 0
throw to the plate resulted in Enc Totals
40 .7 12
Humphreys' sconng the go-ahead
run Brownmg later scored when Wolfe (L): 9 ip, 4K &amp; 3BB

rbc

hi
0
0
3
I
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
6

•

~

I

(

-

. . .....

., ..... ~...

•

-

. .... ,.•;..iY:, . ....

~

DOUBLES IN RUN - Gallipolis Post 27's Gary Stanley (10)
sprints to first after doubting to right field off Mike Wolfe to score
Chris Toler in the rirst Inning of Wednesday's American Legion
game at Meigs High School. It was one of three bits Gallipolis had in
the frame that helped the guest club notch a 10·7 victory. (OVP photo
by G. Spen&lt;:er Osborne)

"''~ ~~

ONE OF THREE- Meigs first baseman Ricky Hoovor stretches
to sn.ng Tyson Ro~e's throw front second base to retire Chri."i Toler
and complete the last of the three double plays the hosts had in
\Verlnesday's game against Gallipolis. However, Meigs conmtitted
et!(ht errnrs en route to suffeting a 10·7 setback. (OVI' photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)
·

In Hubbard LL Tournament action,

Middleport, Pomeroy &amp; Chester winners
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
In two eontrasttng styles, the
Mtddleport Cardmals and Chester
lndtans scored btg wins Wednesday ntghl m the 18th annua l Btll
Hubbard Memonal Ltttle League
Tournament at Kmg Fteld m Syracuse
In the t trst game, Mtddleport
edged the Galhpohs Whtte Sox 5-4
on a last second hll. whole m the
mghl cap, Chester's lndtan~ hlasled
· the Galltpohs Yankees 21-l The
tmddle game was torl elled to tile
Pome~oy Reds, who advanced to
the next round to play Chester
Mtddlepon advances to play Syracuse Doth games are set for Friday
The Cardmals' Matt Lewts and
the While Sox's Mallhew Bush had
a pitcher's duel after shiiky starts

In the stxU1, Smllh rcacll~d on
an error wllh one out Snouffer ~111gletl to put two runners on ami tlolh

that resulted m 1\ 3-3 ue atwr the
lirst mning Galllpohs wenl 4P 3.()
on a walk to Brandon llolley, Ike
Simmons· !tangle (he advanced on
an error) and Do Shuey's te"chm£
on an error to score a 1 Ufl Clayto n

advanced on llawkms' fielder'&lt;
chotce wtth Smtih sco11ug Then
wtth c,unp at the plate , Gal hpohs
scampered to get Snouffer out at
tile plate, but the youn g speedster
&lt;ltd beneath tl&gt;e Holley wg lor the

Wood then hnd a iwo·HIIl smgle fnr

the 3-0 tally
In tl1e bollom ol Uw fr:u11e, Josh
Lynch and Jason Cundtff walked.
then Jus!In Robson reached on an
error to score A ftdder' s chmce by
M'ike Smith and w,tlk lO Chns
Snouffer &lt;eared two runs to lle the

game·~

wuu11ng 1un

Lew1s grdbhell the wm wuh 10
slnkeouts one walk and oue IHt

hatsm,m llush su ll e1cd the loss
ilcsp1te a nmc-stnkeuut eUor1

game

Dunng the next Jour lnntn g~
Lewt&lt; and Bu&lt;h pitched no-htt
baseball Then, 111 the hllh, Gal·
hpohs wok a 4-3 lead on Slliley's
long lnple to ughl and a wtld p1lch
Lewas fanned th~ lu:s t two bailers to
emJ the mnmg

Che&lt; ter l.unbaslcd the G.tlhpnlls
J

YnnkCCii 21-1 m the sccnm.l game,

gmng ahead 1.. 1 alter nne mmng
and R.J ~lfler two tnnmgs An
etght·run fourpt hwkc open the
gmnc.
C h es l ~r

htllers we1c B•·•dley

Br.nmon, who l1.1d .1 perlcct mghl
w11h two w.tlks, getting 1111 w!lh ,,
pllch ""d a smglc lctemy Gt lhlau
lMd two smg lc.s, G.trn.:ll Karr .a single, Dcu lloltet ,, &gt;~ngle, Steve
Weeks a tnple, Josh Wtll a douhle
and Evan Needs a stngle Inn
Dulfy and l11nnuc Putnam ptcked
up the VICtory, whtle Mullms sur:
fcred the loss
Galhpohs h111ers were Skinner,
Queen and Ftfe
Acllon wtll contmuc today when
Point Pleasant Naltonwtde Insurance meets Green at 6 p m , Bict;wcll takes on Kyger Creek at 7:30
p m and Southwestern meets the
Racmc Reds at 9 p.m On fnday's
slate, Coolv tllc wtll l\f&gt;&lt;l Rw
Grande Frid,oy at 6 p m , an~ Mtd·
dl eporl wtll meet Syracuse at 7·30
h~lorc Pmncwy Will mccl Chester

On the NBA labor front,

NLRB official to decide if election kills union

By WENDY E. LANE
NEW YORK (AP) - An offictal of the Nallonal Labor Rela·
uons Board wtll decide wtthm the
next two weeks whether an election
should be held to decertify the
tl!M players' assoctation
0 Dan "liilxennan also will deterSaturday's racmg actwn at In the Modified ET Divtston, it was mme when the elecuon should take
Kanawha Valley Dragway in Jelf Snowden of Rutland takmg his place, who can vote and how the
Southside, W Va., featured mem- lirst wm of the season in his 1966 ballotmg wtll work, based on argubers of !Jle Qlroltl!l!l'ro M_oQ_A~- .c.-Chevy Jl Ken Madden Ir. of Mtd· -liients and test11nony tmm a hearcialion, Danny O'Day m the Super- dltporl took second tn his 1968 mg Wednesday
wench ~heelstander Lumma, C:unaro
. '
In the bcanng, Ute latest step 111
along with the regular bracket
In the StreGt Dtviswn, Loretta an effort by some players to dis·
schedule..
Btrd of Crown Cuy took her sec- solve thetr mnon, lawyers for the
· The wmners were Roger Wise- ond consecutive first place 111 her muon, tl1e dtSstdent players and the
man,,Jeff Snowden, Loretta Btrd 1987 Mustang Wtlh Frank Wash- NBA latd out thetr postliOns on a
mgton taking second Gary New- dceerttlicatwn elect ton
and Tim Chambers.
In the Pro-Mod fteld, it was some of Point Pleasant fini shed
"Th1s ts a very unusual deC!"rtt·
Ron me Hood of Lenmr, N C t.1k- lhtrd.
'
ficauon proceedmgs, umquc m my
mg the wm, running the etghlhIn the Junior Dragstcr Divtsion, expenence of reptesentmg labor
mtle 111 bts 1994 Corvette to a Ttm Chambers of St Albans was organtzattons," utuon lawyer
4.457 oeconds The wmmng speed first ahead of Cijt Casto of M a.~on, George Cohen srud
was 162 96 mtles per hour HIS w Va Thtrd pl:tce went lO Chad
The unprecedented hallie over
the utucin 's tal c comes amtd an
opponent, Danny Vaughan of Smt(h
• 'Belvedere, S C, broke on the startSaturday's dgcnda tcamre the owners' lockout . the first labor
: mg hne.
normal bracket schedule Gates acttonu) NDA htslory
,
In the Pro DtviSloh Roger Wtse- wtll open at II ,, m Tune tnals
Jeffrey Kessler. Who repre•enls
. man of Bl:aver took ftrsl '" Ius Will hegm al I pIll Br:tcket e'tmi- Mtchael Jordan, Patrick Ewmg .md
Dragster. Chuck Claytor of Peebles nal•ru•s wtll be a1 6;30 p m
tite oUter dtsStdenl players, pushed
for a decerttflcauon electiOn as
· limsbed second in hts 1978 Monza
"qutckly and expeduiously as posT~esday
stble" by mail ballot. lie said eligt·
ble voters should be limited to
The 1995 Syra~use Open Tennts -the new balls.
In the smgles compeuton. players on acuve rosters or the
Tournament wtll be held July 1116 wtfh entry deadline Saturday at events wtll include men'&lt; and IIIJUred list m the end of the season,
6 p.m. Regtstralion will be from the women •s open, men's 35-and-older a number he set at approximately
current time to July 8 at 6 p m. and men's and women's lntermcdt- 376
Cohen argued vollltg ehgibtlity
Players can call 992-2365 on Mon- ate. In the doubles compelJIIOn,
events wtll include men's and should be extended 10 players
: day, July 10 for starting umes
'
Entry fee is $15 for singles and women's open, men's 35-and· "'who have a JegJt unatc mtercst in
; $20 for doubles per team. Checks older, men's ami women's Interme- ohgoang em ployment m this
• should be made payable to John diate, mixed doubles and mtenne- le ague •' He. saul that woult.l
mclmJ c. plaY,ers who participated m
; Bentley and mruled to John BenUey diatc mixed
All matches w1ll be played :it tratnlllg camp but were l11ter
1254 Church Street, Box 188,
, Syracuse, Ohio 45779 Entry fee the Syracuse Temus Courl' unless wa1vcd, and thuse on rosters at any
lime Llunng the season - approxt· must accompany ;tpphcation - no other wise noutied.
exceptiOnS
.
Players are limited to three
: p'Vents with matches being a best o[
: three sets with a 12-potm tie break·
er at 6 all. Players should report 15
mmutes before scheduled lime and
each player ts to provide a new can
: ol balls wtlh the wmner keepmg

Snowden and Bird named
among KVDP race vjctors

repesenung opposmg stdcs, were an agrccmc111 m pmlctplc on a new
mately !58 addtllonal players
The NBA argued that 16 other Kmcks leammatcs Ewing and labor deal, tnggenng the lockout
macllve players whose conltacts Charles Sm1lh, Ute utuon' s vtce tltat began July I Both the union
and the league have hlmncU agent!ii
are sltll m effect, such as rettrcd prestdent
tor dtsrupung ancm]H&lt; at Jabot
"fhts
J~n·t
personal
,"
E;w'u1g
Los Angeles L1kers forwar~ Ian1es
.
pc.1ce, hut Ewlllg mmntamcU he
sau.J
aller
the
heann
g
~·
u
·s
c\hout
Wmllly, should be'allowed lo vote
has f!CtcU ou h1s own Ill oppostng
bus
mess
''
as well
unum lcadcrslnp and Lhc labor deal.
Ewwg,
Jordan
and
15
other
A maJottly vute ts rcqm~l!d tnr
''l have ru.lv1seas, nnd that 's
pet1110ned
the
NLRll
on
players
decerulicauon
wh.tl
I pay them tc .... to adviSe me,
21
to
slJJrt
procecdmgs
to
&lt;ItsJune
The unton and the NBA both
tusl
like
PreSident Clmlon has
solve
the
Nallonal
lla.&lt;ketbnll
Playsatd an election should be set tor
adv!,."ier
..
s.
~·
Ewmg !oiatU "I'm
eu
Assoctatmn
and
stnp
tl
.ol
its
0Gtober, when pia yer~ retum lmm
own
man
I'm
£OIIlg to hslen to
autllOnly
to
ncgottatc
for
the
playvacatiOn Both argued that requtrwhal
my
advtser
says and make up
ers
mg players to vote 111 person would
my
own
mmd
''
Thetr
ellorl
effectively
scuttled
prevent agents from exerctstng
undue mfluence on thetr cltents
The lesltmony was punctuated ------Sports briefs----..;......;,;
by allegations from the unton and
Footboll
etl robust safes of cmnmcrc1aJ lun't!:
NBA that a hnndtul of agents mtsPLANTATION, Fla (AP)- desptle a 20 percent mtendancc:
mformed players about what was Seaulc Seahawks wtde rccetver drop lollowmg the 212-day strtke
mvolvcd}- m c.hssolvmg th e umon Dnan Blades, who wllncssed Ius
The strnug showmg comes even
and had nnproperly obUuned 180 wusm's shooung death, owned tl1c
'" 1 he D:tscha1l Network, form ed
stgnatures supportmg the move
£Uil that killed hun, pollee beheve
less th.m two yc;us ago to h.111LIIc
"01 the 180 stgnalure&lt;, 146
Pqltce say 11 's unclear who baiOdlttJI co mm erc J:t l sales h.Is
were t axed lo Kessler lrbm :-~gents,
pulled Ute tngger hut Bnan Blades ,t)uuHII)ccd plans to dtshanc.J after
1101 players
.1 ClfC IJf(ISI:liiC C 111.11
wa&lt; th e only other person 111 the • Llu-. -.Cason
· cmate!'i llle greatest of susptc ton ." H&gt;om when the gu n went oft,
TD N sold a hoot $18 mill um Ill
satd Howard Ganz, Ihe NB A· s ktlltng Charles Dlades, 24 Only commerbal tunc tor the All-Star
lawyer
SUICide ha,, been ruled OUI because g.une, sci to be broadcast by ABC
Kessler dented any nnpropnety
dcteettves have yet to ~1lk wtOo U1e !lll Tuesday mght l(om Arlington,
"We know we've g'ot the voles player lie's expected to be tlllerfcxas
(to decerltfy) nghl now ," he smd
vtewcd today
· l'hat's a 24 pcrccnl 1n crr.:asc
"We're happy to have the elecuon
nusclmll
Inun the estun.ll cd $14 5 mtlhnn 11
qutckly"
" NEW YORK (AP) - Ne•t
genl!ratell Jrnm ad s.t lcs for the
Together at the bcanng, but week's All-Star g;une h:cs gener.ll - 1994 All-Star game on NBC

mr

:at

Beautiful Rope &amp; Herringbone

14K GOLD

··--sports briefs-• -NEW YORK (AP)- Ed-dte
' Murray, who be1:ame the 20th play; er m maJOr league Ius tory to get
• 3,000 htls, wa&lt; ptcked as AL player
: of the week and Htdeo Nomo, who
:won all s1x of h1s ~tarts 111 June,
· wa&lt; selected NL pttcher for the
:month

Price Good Thru
Tuesday

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:;Thursday...J,uly

;; Syracuse tennis tourney

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l'oolball
2

Wlltner and the other wllh a torehand net coni that skipped over
,
Decker's racket.
, At deuce, P10llne Jut a ttred Jooking backhru1d volley long to set
up-Decker's fit Ut match jxlllll. Pwllne sat led a backhrutd long and it
w:ts over.
match m the second game
"The bonom line " you have to
, But Decker broke back 10 even have the destre to wm," Decker
tlte set 4-4, tl1en moved to another • sa td "Even when I was down a
•'latch (lotnt wtth Ptohne servmg at break Ill the ftfth set, I had the
4-5 Piohne held ftrm and the hunger, I had the destre to say, 'I'm
match SIZZled Oll
not g()ing to give up.' "
Ptohne !Jegan showmg stgns of
Decker smd hts deme and motilaugue, breatlung hard and strctchvation were .\s strong as when he
mg hts legs anU mass.agmg hi s won Jus first Wtmbledon IItle 10
lhtghs to avotd crampmg
years ago at the age ot 17
Decker, meanwhtle. looked
''My destre tor tennis hasn't
fresh
changed at all." he MHLI " I lhmk
"l thought I could play :motl1er tt' s tl&gt;e other way. It has almost
half an hour or 41 mmutes out
gotten stronger as I got older.
tl1ere, " he srud "l w.tsn'l tltat ltred 1l&gt;ere was a lime in my early ZOs
ph ysicallyJ~ • ·
when! wasn't hung(y any more,
In the 16th game, Pmhne went but that has gone past me many
down 15-40 on Ius serve He s.tved
years ago"
one match pomt w1th a forehand
Becker reached match pomt at
10-9, but Pwhne s.tved 11 wllll a
servtce wmner and lmally cltlsed
out the uebreaker on his eighth set
poml
The Frenchrn:m went :~lead 3-1
m tl1e final set after breaking Deck·
er tnr Ute lirsl ru1d only umc 111 tl1e

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Lm An geld!
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• Sun Franc1sco

gam~

Chtcagu (fr-.chs~! 2 til at New York
(lla:tml'ch I 6) I 4U p Ill
San FranCISco (Vanl...:lndmg.ltam I 2)
atCINCINNA11(PI.l!1h 5 l), 7 35 p m
Ptuladelplua (W~~~ 2 2) 31 Pittsburgh
(Parris I·!) 7 35 r m
Lo~ Anl!elr~ (Cnndwtl l 4 6) at Atlnnta
(Maddux. II I) 7 40 p m
San D1tg&lt;&gt; (Sander~ 5 S) 111 Hou~ton

25

Wt:dncsday's scores

L

ToVay's

4
7
8
12

MlnDesota

•

578

468
453
387

1\_altimore
Toronto

~

L 1!&lt;1.

27
32
33
35
38

the tournament, again held his
serve eve ry lime as he rifled 33
aces past Sixth-seeded Yevgeny
Kafclnikov to wm 7-5.7-6 (13-11).
6-3
The lhtrd-seeded Becker sailed
through the first two sets. Pioline,
who received treatment for a
stramed stCimach muscle. said he
even thought about qunung
"Then I thought lhts ts the
Wunbledon quanerlinals, I have to
play," smd the Frcnchm~m. a finalISt at the 1993 U S Open. "Then I
had&lt; a httle luck aud Ute match
lurned "
The revttallzed Ptollne started
wluppmg semce retums anl.\_b.tckhand wumers out of Decker's reach
10 take the thtrd sel mlo a ltebrcakcr P10hne squandered a 6-1 lead
and five set pomts before prevatl·
ing
The fourth set went mlo anotltcr
tiebreaker, wtth Decker's wtfe Barbara so nervous she closed her eyes
"nd htd her face m her hands

Ftve-Hm~

Maryland suspends' Milanovich for coll~ge sports betting

Wednesday's scores

Baseball

fi Grat

•

victory over Meigs

:I ndians blank Rangers 2-0 to giye ·Martinez n}nth straight win
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Dennts
Marunez was quick to point out
that Kansas City's Kevin Appter
and Seattle's Randy Johnson also
would be wonby candtdates to start
next week's AU-Star Game for the
Amencan League.
• 'They deserve 11. too But I
would be happy to do 11, · · the
Cleveland nght-hander satd
Wednesday mght after he ptlchecl
brilliantly once again m a 2-0 vtc·
tory over the Texas Rangers
New York Yankees manager
Buck Showalter has already chosen
Martinez as one of the lndtans' stx
All-Star representaltves, and Mar-

7 •

.L

: Murray ts nnly lh~ second
' SWIICh-iutler Wltll 3,000 bitS
: Nomo be~ame the ftrst Japanese
:player to be ~hosen lor the All-Star
·game He went 6-0 wtth an 0.89
:ERA for the Dodgers m June and
:was selected as the NatiOnal
·League's player of the month
: . Derek Bell of Ho~st6n and Ken
:Cam11uli of San Dtego, traded tor
·each other last offseason, were
~selected as co-players of the week .
' m the NL Jelf Conme ol Flonda
was chosen as the league's player
olthe montll
Seatlle's Edgar Martmez was
f\L player of tbe month, and
Kansas Clly's Kevm Appier was
AL pttcber of the month

CHAINS &amp; BRACELETS

SAVE·50 To·70%*
From Suggested Retail Prices
We price all gold iewelry based on weight.
All fine iewelry Is weighed, then priced,
based on New York spot gold pr_lce.
· We guarantee the quality and low price!

•

..._ _'

"

No • covers the great outdoors like Wir.eless One Network.
• Un~en i700 bag phone
• Magnel&lt; moun! anlenna
• Banety w11h cha1ge1
• Otte1 "P'"' Ju~ 31 1995

91 Mill Street
Middleport, on~"t5760
614-992-6250 •
\

~

Cellular Options

• Rates as low as 114 95 moolhly • - . UniJm!oo Long Distance as low
as $8 88
• F1ee custom calling leatmes
• Wde atea pagmg as klw as $7 00
• • 94 1100 sq m1le Supe1system
• Vor;e Mai fUSI $1 95

• tl1 Mob•le·lo Mob1le Callmg

ONE

COMPARE ANYWHERE

.liiiJ .9Lcquisitions

NETWORK

Financing

' 151 Second Ave . -Available
Galllpolla, Oh. 45631
814446-2842

.... -

Stop !&gt;Y a Wireless One Network location today. You won't find betler s~lce allower prices anywhere.

'

Athena

' 1015 East Stale Street
614 592 4911

Parkersburg
6600 Emf:lrson Avenue
304 485 5600

'

.'].

�•

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reader should keep
.

.

)

from his wife, he told me he doesn:1
want to end his marriage legally unul
COf!i lea~es ~r husband and comes,
10 live wtth hun.lltey figure the rest
of the family and all their friends will
assume they are simply sharing a
h_ouse like any other brother and
stster..
. I have told Harry !·thoro~ghly
d!sappro~e of thts wetrd .afl'a1r and
v&lt;ew thctr beha~tor as stck. These
two gtve. no v1s1ble hmt of sexual
mttmacy and behave like normal
brothers and ststers would. Had Harry
not told me about thetr true
relation~hip, I would never have
guessed um a hundred.years. _
In my vtew, they arc trrespons1ble
and immoral. Moreover, they seem .

Ann
'
Landers
00

'

1995, lot~

llmes Svnckfte and
Cr. .IOfl Syndtea~e"

Dear Ann Landers: Recently, my
brother, "Harry, • confided !hat he and
our half sisler, "Cora," have been
having an incestuous relationship for
the pas1 several years. Though !hey
now live in different cities, !hey
manage to stay close with daily
lelcphone calls and frequent visi~.
. Harry and Cora arc both married.
and their children are grown.
;Although Harry is now separated

lip zipped about incestuous relationship
~ith benefits, owns his own eat.; lives
man aparunent with a teammate and
is ~ing ~me college classes. I am
womed stck because he has no car
insurance and does not plan to get any
for quite some time because "it is too
ex~nsive --,about $100 a monlh,"
whtch he can I alford.
I have considered helping him pay
hts msurance but&amp;f!l not eager to do
so because hts 16-year-old brother
wtll ex(Xlet the same when he gets a
car and ttc?uld become pretty cos~y.
Meanwhlle, Cbnscommutes about
40 mtles 10 work datly, goes out a lot
with his friends and has already
gotten a $270 speeding ticket. He
says he doesn't know where his
money goes, but I know he is a big

spender on luxury items and thinks
frozen crab is everyday food.
I have told Chris it's very·important
that he get car insurance · but he
doesn't seem 10 have g~llen the
message. Do you have any advice for
me? -- LIABILITY·CONSCIOUS
MOM IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR MOM: Car insurance is
mandatory in Qilil:omia. If Chris is
involved in an acctdent and has no
insurance, his license will be
automatically suspended for a
minirnwn of six months. He will then
need 10 provide proof of coverage in
order 10 get his license back.
Spell this out for Chris one last
time, and suggest that he give up the
frozen crab and olher luxury items

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio.

.~

....

oblivious 10 the destruction they may
cause tf they arc ever found oul I
have been sworn to secrecy and
would never breathe a word to
anyone since it would cause nolhing
but heartache. D_o you have ltny
words of wisdom on how to carry !his
burden? -· STIFF UPPER LIP IN
FLORIDA
DEAR STIFF: Has it Occurred r.o
you that Harry confided in you
because he has a secret wish to be
caught? . .
_
My adv1ce ts to keep your hp
ztpped ;md let Harry know you don t
wish to hear an~ more about !his
creepy relauonshtp.
Det:r Ann Landers: My 19-yearold stepson, "Chris," has a good job.

Rice and ·Pauline Atkins. Detty yarrow.
Lowery donmed some plants for
. Tile birthdays of Ruby Diehl
the areas.
and Stella Atkins were observed
Eva Robson ant.! P:lUiine Atkins and Donna Jenkins told of her ram- '
allende&lt;l U1e Chester Garden Clu)l's ily's tour of Vennont, of seeing the
orenllOuse..lune 7. ami Atkins and Van· Trapp home anu gardens, and
Chelsie Drannn ·were at Garueners or visiiing the gart.lens at Niagara
Day Out in Columbus on June 13.
Falls. Marcia Denison reported on
Arrangement have been fur- her visit to tbe gardens in Dollynishcd for meetin"S and orgamza- wood, Stella Atkins of the flowers
timis over the past month by Mrs. in· Alabama, and seve ral others
Nicholson, Mrs. Atkins. Mrs. Low- noted the beauty of the roses in the
ery and Dorothy Woodard.
garuen of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
. Devotions by Mrs. Webster Slfauss of Middleport
opened the meting. She read "'The
For the program, Mrs. Rice tlisLong Sweet Days of Jun e" and a cussed welcoming bunerflies with
poem, "One for ~achael." Mem- · plants they need in order to sur. bers nil!!letl a new rose during June, _ vive. She told how to design a butrose month. Mrs. Webster tlis- lerOy garden by finding a sunny
played an arrangement of roses and location, plantin a mix of annual~. .

Plans for a woixshop on llowef
·aq;mgemenL~ lining imo ~1e Meigs
'County Fair tlower show schedule
were made at a recent meeting nf
the Rutland Garden Club held at
the home of Ann Webster.
The arranging workshop will he
held at the home of Donna Jenkins
later this month. "Memories" is the
theme of the two slwws. one u11
Aug. 14 atld the other on Aug. 17.
Reports were given at the recent
meeting on civic

ac1ivi1ie~ .

II was

noted that members worked at the
Harrisonville Masonic Hall :u.nl U1e
two 'planting areas in Rutland,
weeding, watering and mulching
plrmts. In the ,group were Margaret
Weber, Donna and Sarah Dawn
Jenkins, Neva Nicholson, Mat)orie

perennials, and shrubs, sinking a
water pan into the soil , selling a
few flat stones around, and avoid- .
ing the use of chemical pesticides.
She saiu that hutterlly catcrpillrirs
prefer wildplanrs like milkweed or
Queen Ann s lace.
"The Romance of Antique
Roses" was the topic of a paper by
Margaret Weber. She commented
on the qualiti.es of r~agrance,
repeated bloommg, hardmess, and
disease ~esistance. If planted in .
gruups ol three, five or seven, they
create dnfts of color and fra¥rance
throughout th~ garden. she satd.
She t.:lked about tho~ less at~d
lrardy .roses, of those whtch make
lllce hellges and do ~ell in sandy.
s&lt;\11, and of the varteues that work

and buy car insurance. If he doesn't
do it, don't bail him out. It's time Chri.t
learned 1\ few lessons Jhe ~ wa~ Gem of the Day (Credit Louts
"Satchino" Armstrong): "Don't let
your mouth say nuthin' your head
don't understand."
·
'
Wl)at's !he trulh about pot, cocaine-,
LSD, PCP, crack, · spud and
downers? 'The Lowdown on Dope"
has up-ro-the-minute information 011 ·
drugs. Send a self-addressed, longi
business-size envelope and a CMC/l.
or money order for $3.75 (this '
includes postage and liandling) ro:
Lowdown, cloAnnlmtders, P.O. Box,
1!562, Chicago, Ill. 606/l-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55.)

GOLF LESSONS
GOLF '-'-U'D:J I
CLUB REPAIR
TflOPHIES
PLAQUES
BADGES

. John
Teaford

well on slopes helping 10 avoid soil
· mrs. Jenkins gave the hint for .
erosion. She said many antiques are the month on roses. She sa.id th6
hardy, that they thrive and bloom lack of flowers may lfe from
when summer temperatures are improper pruning, too much shade, _
high and rain is scarce.
too much fertilizer, or severe win•
Clotine Blackwood talked about ter kill. She talked .about pruning
miniature roses uescribing them as roses m the spfl!l£ JUSt before the
the perfect perennial. She sailllbey . leaf buds begin to swell, about
bloom all season long , are low- . removing suckers· a~d about the
growing, have perfectly formed wa1enng and rcruhzmg ot the
small roses and work very well for plmns. The second feezing should
cut llowers. She said they require come no later Ulan mtd-July, she .
litlle fertilizer, are winter hnnly and snit!. She also .'alkc,tl about protectare bred to be resiswnt to pest and mg te~ roses tor wtnter by mounddiseases.
mg sml arountl U1e crown.

HIURSDAY
: RACINE - Post 602, Amerii:an Legion, special meeting, 6:30
p.m. llmrsday at· the hall. Diuuer In
follow.

EAST MEIGS - Girls between
scvcmh and 12 grat.lcs interested in
joining the Eastern High School
vlilleyball team must anend one
meeting at the high school, 10 a.m.
or 6:30 p.m. Thursday; or 10 a.m.
: TUPPERS P'LAINS _:: Mem- or 6:30p.m. July 13. For details.
bers VFW Post 9053 and Auxit-· call Dawn Jackson at 667-6530 or
iary, Tuppers Plains, 6:30 p.m. Paul Brannm• at378-6161.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will meet
'fhl!rsl!ny, 7:30p.m at _1J1e home of
clerk Patty Callaway.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Group
of Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday. 7 p.m Sacred Heart Church,
Mulberry Avenue.
FRIDAY
RACINE -'- Special meeting of
Racine Village Counc il and the
' Racine Board of Public Affairs,
Fridily. 7 P·l!1· at Star Mill Park .to
cJiscuss the wmer gnuu.
SATUK[)AY
LONG BOTTOM - An all you
can eat smorgasbord dinner is

Also:
Contract Work

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

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

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

~

'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic .
Systems &amp; Driveways.
. Trucking- Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Procall602-954-7420

tl)tl) ...
•) - .••)00 ,••) 00

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eiUOJing
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Repl~cement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

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

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)

:=~::::::::~ ::::===::::;-;::=
---~~
-~~~- ......_----.~----~;__----J

ELIM HOME H&amp;H SAWMILL

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992-9949 . 992-647t
For low income
Man -Fri.8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
eld~rly &amp;
Sal. 8 p.rri. - 5 p.m .
handicapped. Family
Sun. by appl. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport ·
home atmosphere
&amp; surrounding area.
w!T.l.C.
Call for rate schedule
992-5042 f!J9/tfn
Min. $2.00

Adult Care
Facility

fi1\

r:KI=N.~S~A~PP~L~IA~I~CE""'

•All Makea •42 Years

•Foot Reliable Service

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd. ' .
Middleport, 'Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brlckles
614-742-2193

•Washers - Dryer• • Ranges
•Refriger.-tors •Freezer•

•Diahwaahers
•H .W. Heatera

•Thanka Meigs &amp;

(614) 985-3561
992-5335

mD.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Guaranteed
992·6351 &amp; 992-4447

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

(Umestone Low Rates)

·WICKS
HAULING

State Rt.

33

VERNON L. ·
WEBER
March 3, 1926·
July 6, 1983
Wife, Margaret
- Belle, Children &amp;
Grandchildren

.

WIST

.

lARGEST

VAN DEAliR!

ISave $61001.
•·Onver Side A1r Bag
· Ant1·Locll Blakes
• Au Cond1110n
• AutomatiC Overdnve
• V1sta Bay Wmdows

'

·PIS. P/8
I

• Power Locks
• Crwse Control

. AMJFM Cassette
• 4 Cap1am Chairs
. Sola/Bed

• Ra1sed Roo!
.·Color T.V.
• Ouver S1de A1r Bag
• Ant1 -lOCk Brakes -• A~r Cood1hon
• AutomatiC Overdn't'e
• VISta Bay Wmdpws

Power Wmdows

llsiPrice ..

· · ' Fac1ory Rebate . .

$10.219
· $300

a,.., .

TpmPedenD!SroJf\1

ISave '1431 I

Sal•
Price

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped ·
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

• OrNer S1de Autag
• Power S1ee11ng

~

• lnd1rect L1gh!lng
• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
• Fun Convers1on
· Alumtnum Wheels
·loaded! ·

·Power .Locks
• T1lt Steeflng
• Cru1se Control

• AMIFM Casi.ne

• 4 Gapla1n Clla1rs

•

Facto.y Rebate ... ., $1,500

. sr,oo
· $631

sa 7!88
'~

• Power Brakes
• Custom'CIOthlnterlor
• Well Equ1~ed'
~Doc F!!tiS

·Power W1ndows

$17,688
BRAND NEW '95.PONTIAC GRAND AM .
• 16 Valve Power

· Dnvor Side A11bag

• 4Wheel f.nHocl&lt; Brat&lt;;s
• Power Steering

. • gower Brakes
•Power Door locl&lt;s
•Afi.JFM Stereo
• Steel Belted Tires

• Sljlad Wheelj'l'
• Well EqUipped!

NEW '95 BUICK LESABRE
•All Corlllllon

.

'AUIOmalic

.'ouat Aroaqs
·, 4 Wl'Oel AnHock
Brakes

DehwerOO'

• Power Steenng
• Powe1 Stakes

rOoo.r Leeks

Windows ;
Slereo

• Til St"""11
• Custcrn Cklth lnlenOf
• S~lad Wheels
·VIeii EqUI~
No Doc Fees. OeliverB::f

••

BRAHD NEW '95 CHEVY BLAZER 4 DOOR 4x4 LT
Electronc Shrft
Transfer Case
• Remo!e
Keyless Entry
I

•

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 •312·2844
- 344·5947. 422:0756
.
•

. .

,

'Tues. Tags Title Fees e•l•a. Rebale 1ncl!.lded m sale price o1 ~ llt!llde liSted where applidlble . On awrwed credit. NOI reSI)OOSible lorty)Xlgmpl'ucal errors

Moriday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pnt
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

;.;.~-

•

_,....=oo'l
)

.. ...-

--

be

Kenny's Auto Rental

.Kenny's Js tbe place to come
when you need a car rental.
We Hare Cars and Vansl

ost9.~,c

---Society scrapbook .- - tinning of Rohel't anti Ffctla
Larkins. Wookond guGM" of the

Larkins have heen Alta Dill, local ;
and Roberta Hill and Justin,
Columbu s.
Callers at U1e Paul Hauber home
were Jeannie ll1eiss, Vinton; Bettie
Pigott, Margaret Nesselroad, Harlatl Ballard, Mac McPeck, Georgia
Mount, Delores· Hawk, all ·'local;
Mike and Diane Bowles and children, Pomeroy; Wells Van Dyke,
Droadwcll.
.
The Long Bnllnm Community
A~soci:uion will stage a smorgasbord t.linncr Saturday, 5 p.m. in the
communi ly building .
I

HATFIELD. Ark . (At&gt;)
Revvin' lor righteousness and gun•
nin' their engines. ft&gt;r God, the
Christian Motorcycle Association
Ita' convened.
.
''I'm here because the Lord
wanted me here ,·' said Dale
Dridges of White Cloud, Mich.,
one of about 5,000 motorcyclists
wbo have rolled into tiny Hatfield
for ~lis week's annual rally.
.
'•'ll1e services, U1e fellowship ""
we get charged up to go home and
minister,"•said Dridges, 62.
. Pr~sident Herbie Shreve s~ys
U1c CMA 1s a tOIIllstry, not a b&lt;kc

through li lc motorcycle communily.
The group was born in 1975 or
Shreve's love for hikes and his
father's calling as a minister.
- S,hrcve,- 38 ; •recalled that h-i~
father, a pastor of a Southern Baplist church, "was losing me."
"lie knew I had a love for
motorcycles and thought that
would he a bridge," the younger
ShrcvG said. II is falher bought a
bike. and the two began attending
mmorcycle events togetl1er.
."AII ~of a su,dden, he wasn ' t a
pa.,lof.ttre was a h•kcr people cpuld
'

.

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

Take tho pain out of
painting. let us do It lor
you. Vety reasonable.

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
AlterS p.m.
614-985-418~ ,,,.,••

MEET

SINGLES

MIKE MARCUM'S

28 Years Experience
1-800-377-4477

PHONE
614·245·0437

Of All Lifestyles,
'locally or
nationwid~t.

1·9Q0-945-5500
Ext. 7898
$2.99/mln. 18+
Procall Co.
602-954-7420 1112111 mo.

Love &amp; Romance

. MODERN SANITATION

Fat~ Awaits-¥ou!

POMEROY, OHIO .
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
weekly &amp; monthly reritliol rates.
Sites • Fannllv ~~!!!:~!I'll~

1-900-726-0033

:,

. , ; :,,,.,

I

·.

·.e· ., ..

Rick and Ei!c'i:n Steffy, from
Ephrata, Pa., covered I ,250 miles
· by way of a Harley-Davidson Hog
r~lly at Richmond, Va ., to ~ltend
the niue-day CM/\ rally.
'' We talked to quite a few ·
&lt;;:hrislians wbo were hurling ami·
needed encouragement ," Steffy
said.
Dul U1e fellowship is important,
too.
'
.
. Lynnelle Shamburger, 43. of
Longview, Tex;L', 'snid she and her
hnshand , Dace II , 45, have been
.coming to CMA rallies for four
years .

5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome
NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVICE
Houoe Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling'
Room Addlllons
1
·Siding, Roofing, Paltoa

Ext. 6250
$2.99:per min.
Must be 18yrs.
. Procall
. (6Q2) 954-7420

4113195

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages ·
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
{FREE ESTIMATES)
\/.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
lf12Jtfn

MY BUSINESS
Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning .
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service •
Owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio "
(614) 949-3005

ALFALFA
AND MIXED
HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

• NEW HOMES

~ADDITIONS

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

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION ·
Umest0118 &amp; Granl,
Stplit Systems, TraHer &amp;
House Sires. .,
Reasanable Rat's
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING

614-742·2138

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

on Arkansas towh

club, and one of it.&gt; m:tin goab is 111 come to and~ll Utcir problems,"
spread the Christian mc~sagc . Shre ve saitl.
,

'

Bill Shick
992·2269

•

·Ass«,&gt;ei••ted Press Writer

.

, I

to

. Ry TOM' PARSONS

· Loaded'

----:--

lin&amp;

Moto~cyclists converge

LEATHER INTERIOR

-~

-

fence

Hause Located on SR 124 at
Salem Center.
All envelopes should be
marked accordlhg 19 -type of

Help Wanted

WANTED: Due to recent expansion,
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR positions
available to teach community and personal
skills to adults with learning limitations In
Meigs County. HOURS:
(1 )'40 hrs./wk. (live-in): 3 pm Mon. thru II am
Sat.; sleep-over required; daytime hours off;
excellent benefit package; "";1
'(2) 32 hrs./wk. (live-In): 8 am Sat. thru 8 am
Mon.; sleep-over required; vacation/sick
benefits;
.
(3) , 20 . hr6.1wk.: 4-8 .pm, M-F; vacation/sick
benefits;
Kenny's Auto Center
(4) 18 · hrs.lwk. : 11 am-7 pm, Sat./Sun.;
1 •800 _486 _1590
vacation/sick benefits;
264 ~pper River Rd .
Bus. (614) 446-9971
ALL POSITIONS require attendance at 2-hour
Galli olis, OH: 45631
""""
bi-monthly staff meeting; or hours as otherwise
scheduled. Various skills and talents needed.- LICENSED &amp; BONDED
High s~I)O.!:!l degree, valid dri\'\er's ,Jicense,
\I'll\ I\\
FREE ESTIMATES
good driving record, three years licensed
o~tos'l. t
9
driving experience, and adequate automobile
9.
insurance coverage required. Training.
provided. S11lary: $5.(!0/hr., to start. If
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
interested contact Cecilia at 1·800·531·2302 no
SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
11ater than 7f7195. Equal Opportunity Employer.
EIUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
:•
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR M(,BILE HOMES

.
'·GARDEN CLUD PICNIC
participation in the annual M~igs
Members of U1e Wildwood Gru:.,_.. C9_~n1y Fair flower show.
den Club met recently at Ule Route
As a part of Uw program mem.33-rnMside park for a·picnic.
t&gt;crs' lOu red .Ihe hero garden of
Devotions inclu,ding Psalm 21J Denise Amold.
·
by Deily Milhoan opened the meet·
I
ing. Evelyn Hollon, president, con- ·
t-ONG
DOTTOM
NEWS
ducted the meeting during which
NOTES
.
1ime mcmhcrs respo nded to roll
Kenny
Young
ha.'
completed
his
call with their favorite rose specimen. An arrangemem of yellow 32ntl degree work in the Masonic
Lntlgc. /\lso Harlnn Ballard has
roses in a green conl.ainer. wa~ displayed by· Ev~lyn Hollon. Janet heen honored with the "Golden
Theiss had an arrangement of Spur" award.
During a rcccm slorm, lightning
· daisies. baby's breath and straw
flowers. Plans were discussed fur can1e in on the central air condi·

• Sola/Bed

Tom Peden Olscount.$2, 121

BRAND NEW '95 CHM S-SERIES PICKUP
r Rear Anti·Lock Brakes

·PIS. PIB

'Ust Pr~ ......... ..... $21,309

. GMAC 1st fif'll! Buyer
Alowarce To
aua•~

•

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

• lnd1rect Lighhng
• P.remium Wood PkQ .
·Full Corwers1on
• Alum1num Runnmg
Boards
• Loaded! .... , ' .,

· T1lt Sleenng .

of

Public Notice
p.m. July 18, 1995.
Proposals will be opened at
6:00 p.m. July 18, 1995 Jll
tho Solem Township Fire

constructed to .townships
opoclllcallono.
bid. 1 or 2.
{2) 8 oet of brace pool In
Salem Township Trustee•
Already conotruct~ lance. reserves the right to accept
Spoclltcatlons may · be or reject any and or att bid a.
obtained by writing Salem
Salem Townohlp Trustees
Township Clarka . office:
,
Meigs County
26239 Legion Rood ,
26239 Legion Road
Langlvttle, Ohio 45741 .
. Langsville, Ohio 45741
Sealed proposals must bo (7) 2, 6, 9, 13; 4TC
received no l~ter than 6:00

ISave $6200 I

BRAND NEW 95 314.TON CONVERSION VAN
1

Public Notice
. NOTICE TO BIDDEiiS
Solem
Township
Trustees, Molga County wilt
· receive blda lor tho
following:
{1) 649 Fool more or leas

mo

'

110

Every Wed. Nile

12.114/ttn

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge with
The Sports &amp;
Entertainment
Line
1·900-263-1800 .
Ext. 1986
$2.99 per. minute
Must be 18 yrs. old.
Procell Co.
(&amp;02) 9S4-742o

In Memory

Racine
Gun Club
Tnip Shoot

For Free Estimates

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

~~---.,~·· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;::==::;
FREE
in Loving
ESTIMATES
c""'emory Of

..

or

611111

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone, •
G~avel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

5116194 HN

Call Wayne Nell992-4405

Surrounding Areaa

20 Years Experience

ROOFING

Reasonable
lnsur81. Experienced

•Microwave• •Diapoaala

One Stop Colriplete Auto Body Repair

•

111Mfn

•Factory Authorized Perta
foSorvlco

·F &amp;A Tree Service

SUNDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Child C!Jn'servatiou League .
annual· family picnic Sunday. 2
p.m. at home of Helen and Harold
Blackston. Meat pmvided.

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Haurs' Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Gara!Jes.
Free Estimates

SERVICE

Portable
Band saw 'Mill

812/1

J&amp;L INSULATION

TftchoJs-rMefaJs

211 2/WAt"

.

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

co,

FREE ESTIMATES

•m

6127/tmo.

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

Trimming · Topping ·Removal
Stump 13emoval

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Dible
school, Monday Uuough July 14, p8:30 p.m. Theme, "God the Great
Physician, Middleport F~si Daptist
Church.

Howard·1-. Writesel

Unisex Someone special in your area
is seeking that dream mate to share a
life full of love, romance, happiness
and all the pleasures of life.
1-900-776-3005 Ext. 9387
$2.99 per minute
18 yrs. plus

110\\ \IW
E\C.\\\'IT\C ,

1·900·Date
Line
•

•Mowing
•Trimming
•Firewood

614-992·5291

7122194

being heiLI at the Long Dottom
Community Building at 5 p.m. A
$5 donatiOn ts bemg a'ked for a&lt;Jult
meals and $~.50 for children's
meals . Please call 985-4275 for
more infonnatinn .

L&amp;W
LAWN CARE

Chester
~·

_ _. . . .____ Community calendar.- - - - The Community Calendar is . Thursday at llle hall. Joint meeting
published as a free service to with architect. Auxiliary meeting to
non-profit groups wishihl! to follow at 8 p.m.
announce meeting and special
evonts. The calendar is not
REEDSVILLE- The Olive
)Jesigned to promote sales or Township Trustees mee1ing set for
fund raisers or any type. Items Thursday will be held at the home
are printed as space pe~mits and of Clerk Martha Durst. The budget
~annot be guaranteed to run a
meeting will be at 7 p,m. followed
~peclfic numher nr days.
by t.hc regular meeting at 7:30p.m.

• THe Daily Sentinel • Page 7

'

:Rutland Garden Cl.ub plans. _for .flower arrangement .work~ hop
.

.

Thursday, July 6, 1995

BULLETIN BOARD
00
.16 'colutnn inch weekdays ·
1 00
8 column Inch Sunday~

-· MERIT

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

REFINANCE
CONSOliDATE .
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

Our Specialty

1-800-MERIT~98
MB#0489

-

YOUR MESSAGE ,.
---·
. . CAN BE SEEN HERE
=.
A TOTAL OF
---· . FOR
$6.00 PER DAY.
= ~·
- . .
=
.•
'

~.

=
---·-n-:

·-

J=

~i i mi'iiii iiii iii ii ii ii iii ii iii ii ii ii ii ii iii i iii ii iii i iii iiif:

•
•

..

'·

�'
•

I

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 6, 1995

'

•

\
Q

...T.hursdayl July 6, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page 9

LLEYOOP
BRIDGE

\

NEA Crossword PuzzLe
ACROSS

420 Mobile Homes

ANNOUNCEMENTS

•

'
•' 005

...,....,,_..,._.,......,_-..,.Persona Is

• Are You Ready For Romance7 1
~ 900 338 6000 Ext 4164$2 99
Per M nute Must 6e 1B Yrs Pro
' caU Ca. (602) 954-7-'20

:lo

Announcements

•• Anyone htvlng lnlormallon con
cemlng a near accident June
" 30th 8 15pm MinerSVIlle Oh Jn
~

1 Cry ot po1n
5 Platn1 t1
9 Dandy
12 M I org
13 S sters
14 Coach
Parseghu1n
15 Young horse
16 D1re
18 Frothy brew
19 Act
20 Eol
21 Tear nto
shreds
23 Bells
24 Concen1ret on
27 Acqu.re
18 Never (poel I
19 Pholo holder
31 Posts
33 lnlo agcy
37 - de Jane~ro
40 Generous
42 Tea tyP&lt;&gt;
44 Afncan

PHILLIP

•

volvlng a black or dark green
Chevy Blazer type and dark D ue
Ford please call 614 949 2263

-!ely.

-'0

G 1veaway

Yard Sale 132 S Park Drive Frt

Sat 8?

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Auctions every Fr day Saturday
7pm Ml Allo Auction At 2 33
Crossroads New mer~;nandise
grocer es &amp; lots mo e Ea Frazer
930
R ek Pearson Auc on Company
lu I me auclioneer camp ete
aucl on
se rv tce
L censed
M66 Oh o &amp; Wes Virginia 30.4
773 5785 Or 304 773 5447

90

Wanted to Buy

2 tamale Clogs pan German C ean late Model Can Or

Part Time Mature Person With

Sewing Knowledge Able To Work
Any Day Anyllme Appry JoAnn

Tak ing appllcatlcnt lor main
tenance man at Pomeroy Clllfs
Apt on Monday July ~ 0 1995
between 10 &amp; 1pm In the offtce or
send resume to Pomeroy Cl Ht
Apt 2-'5 Union Ave Pomeroy
Oh belore July 14 1995

Shephard part Collie 6 pups 4
killen a 304 895 3017 or 304
895 3013

T ucks 1987 Modes Or Newer
Smith Buick Pontiac 1900 East
ern Avenue Galllpol s

4 Puppies Smail House Dogs
Pan Pomeranian Part Ter er
Very Smart /PiayltJ 614 446
4763

Decorated stoneware waH tete
phones old lamps old lhermome
Iars old clocks antique furniture
A ver ne Ani ques Russ Moore
owner 614 992 2526 We buy
estates

Ace Tree Service Complete tree
care 20y s exp &amp; Insured lree
estimates Ei 14 441 1191 or 1
800 508 8887

J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts and Salvage
buy ng wrecks junk au os &amp;
trucks Also par ts to sale 304
773 53.43 or n3 5033

Maunew Angel And Angela Ellis
G aduates Ot Meredllh Manor In
terna110nal Equestrian Centre Are
lnteres ed In Training Horses
And nstructlng The Sertus FUder

Stand ng 11mber Free es males
Top prices 304 ~95 3818 or 304
895 3838

SPECIAl !ZING IN THE
TRAINING OF HORSES FOB

8 Mos Old Puppies Par ChOw
Part Collie 1 Black &amp; Brown 1
White 61 4-414&amp;-886~
8 part Getman Shephera &amp; Colle
mix puppies. to good homes 61_.
992 3832
Cats Need Low ng Home Must
Go! Female Spaded Any ColOr
Pteaoe Call 614-388-&lt;!559

Top Prices Pates Old u S Coins
Me e Young Beagle To Good Sl ver Gold Diamonds Ail Old
Home 61-' 388-935.4
Collecllbtes Paperweights Elc
Mixed puppies 6wks o d 2vr old M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
Lab spayed all shots Small ~ea Avenue Ga tpois 614 446-2842
g e good with ch ldren to good Wanled :ro Buy L t e Ty'Jl1s I n
homes onty 304-675 .t650
Good Cond lion Kl chen Set
Sand Box Pen c Tab e &amp; Lt e
60 Lost and Found
TlkSS Car 814-245-~87
Found 2 Beagle Dogs Close
Spring Valley Area Jackson Wanted to buy anllque aM used
turnltu e no Item too large or too
P ke 61 H4e-ll660
small wm buy one pace or com
plete estates Osby Marlin 614
Found Black Eye Glasses
Found Parking Lot Eoodtand Ar
992 7.441
ound Calfee Barber Shop On
Wanted To Buy Junk Autos W ttl
Thord, 614-256 9343
Or Without Motors Ca La ry
Found eye glasses w cln y ot UWII}I 61.4-388-9303
Curts HoMowl SA 248 Lon~ Bot
tom Monday 614 843 5313 or Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes 614~46-017~
6 • 843 5357
Lost Female Golden Ret lei'er
Pink Co tar VICinity B dwel Area
61.4 446--7123

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

LOST Yellow Lab female 50ibs
red collar 0 J Rosenberg p In ed

::;on;,;col=''":::30=4-6;::7~5-~599=5---l 11 0

70

Help Wanted

Accepl ng appl cations thr9ugh
JUy 18th tor Reg sta ed IOngiterm
care Nurs ng Assistant training
Gallipolis
c ass Class begins August 1st
through September 7th weekdays
&amp; V1clnrty
Marjorie Fellers AN class In
11.4 M le 011 218 Ingalls Road
structor PQint Pleasant Nursing &amp;
July 10th July ISh 10 7 Cheap Rehabllllatlon Center State~ute
Prices Come Browse I
62 Route 1 Bo~~: 326 Point Pleas~=-====----I ant WV 25550 304-675-3005
4 Family Annual Fr day Satur
day !36 Hilda Dr ~e Sola Bad AVON I A Areas 1 Sh rley
Sewing Machine Ches t Stereo Spears 304~75-1429
Lamps l nens Clo!hes.
AVON SELLS ITSELF
443 Jerry Or 9? lois olllems Average $8 $15t'Hr "'-1 Wor~
Cheap FurnHure Linens glasa Home
ware lamps etc Fr Clay &amp;: SaiUr Discounts! No lnwntoryt
day
Territory Optional n&lt;Vrep
:C.:'----------1
I 800-742 4738
5 Family 716th 7th Across F om
Cheshire Food Shop Home In AVON EARN US at home at
..._teriOf Bilby 11ems Nice Clothes
work. All areas 304 882 2645 1
800 992 6SS6 NDIAEP
6 7 Baby Clothes Blood P es
sure Cup fotdmg eMirs Galt Bus ness 011 ca Manager Que o
Clubs terrell Bt,pycte Camera promollon we have an excellent
watches games. Lincoln P ke tm career opportun ty tor an indiVJdu
Signs.
al wl!h onQ.._term care bus ness
olfice experience Responsible lor
7 h 8th 3rd House On R ght On overseeing all olllce operatmns
Roush Lane Cheshire Clotl'les lnctud ng AA AP purchasing
S ze 3 To 11
payrol and pal ent lund account
lng Ycu must hawe experience
All Yard Sates Musl Be Paid In with Medicare and Medica d bill
Advance OEAOLitojE 2 00 P m tng We oller competitive salary
the day before the ad ls to un ana be nellis pro esslonal envl
Sunday edit on 2 00 P m Friday ronment and career advance
~anday edition 10 00 am Sat men! Reply to J m Lindeman Adurday
mlnlstrator Pomeroy Nurs ng &amp;
Eureka Comri'iunlty Wide Va d Rehab center 36759 Rock
Ad
Pomeroy Ohio
Sate Something For Everyone springs
45769 EOE
Inc udlng Ple nty 01 Foodl July
Earn up to $ 000 weekly stull ng
6 h, 7th ThlXS. F I
envelopes at home Start now No
Fr Sat 9-5 On Patr ot Road Oft ex per ence Free supp! as Free
775 Baby C oltles Womens Jrs nlormallon No obhgal on Send
M:::.::en;.:s;_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l SASE to Prest ge Umt L PO
Box 1g5609 W nter Sp •ngs Fl
Friday Only Girls 21 Boys 3T 32719
Toys 10 Speed Bike Womens
Size 9 Gavin Street Rodney I
Experienced Undercover Secur ty
O!hcer Wantecfror A Local De
Friday; First House Past Sanders partment Store Please Call 614
Drive Neighborhood Road Wa 441 0507 Ask For Ar,n OnE day
terebed Some Furniture Glass Ard Saturday Only
ware sweepers Mof'9 9-5
HEINER S BAKERY ROUTE
Garage Sale &amp; Oulils July 7th SALES DE~IVERY Needed an
Blh 3:168 St At 55( 3 Miles energe c no vidual w h a good
~F;;rom;;;.;Cil8~.:."'_"";;;.;_ _ _ _ _ _ drlv ng reco d lor oute sates de
1
Huge 4 Family Kids ClolheJ Lois I very Good bene! I package We
Of Mise Tara Estates Addison are an equal opporlun ty emp oy
ar A nqu r es a e Ia be sent to
July 8th. 8 5
WV Job Service at 225 S xth Sl
July 4th 7th atn 6 Family Yard + PI Pleasant WV 25550 304 675
Garage Sate 922 Jericho Road 0657
Yard Sale

Cheshire OH Rain Or Shine
July 7tl'l 9-, 1s1 Wh re House on
Ks~r HOllOw Road otf 160

lmmed ate Open ng lor lull lime
AN al 68 bed Skilled nursing fa ell
ty Exce lent opportunity to join
the long term he a lt1 care l!eld fo
variable shills Point Pleasant
Nursing &amp; Rehabllla! on Cenle
Middl epo rt
(former y Care haven) Slate Route
&amp; VICinity
62 Route 1 Box 326 Pont Peas
ani WV 25550 (A G enmark As
3 tamily mov ng sale Friday &amp; soc~a1es Fact ty) tOE
Saturday July 7 B 577 Sou h 3rd
Ave Middleport Mens &amp; worn
mmed ate Openings ElCcellent
ens clothes all s zes o s of opportunity to lOin the long le m
chlldrenscohes hugeseeclon hea l hcara l ed See~ng par
o1 toys B1g selechon oJ CU'ta ns &amp; me LPN s or varlacte sh 1ts or
bedspreads with draper es to 68 bed skIed nu s1ng fac•lty
match K&gt;ts o1 dol les Shower cu
Po nl Pleasanl Nursing &amp; Reha
taln wilh curtain to match to s or Oil tal on Caner (fo mer y Careha
dishes pols &amp; pan~ 'Jmall mt ven) Stale Roule 62 Route 1 Box
crowave k&gt;r sale reel ner or ental 326 Pont P easant WV 25550
atyle rug and lois moru
(A Glenma k Assoc ates FaclliiYJ
EOE
Ail Yatd Sales Must Be Pate tn
Advance Oeadl ne
OOpm !he Jotfl the ong te m hea th care
day before lhe ad Is lo run Sun field Seeking part t me Certified
day edition I OOpm Friday Mon Nurs ng Assistants lor a 68 bed
day eCiitiQn 10 ooa m Sa urday
sk lied nurs ng !i_clltty 101 varjable
shills Point Pleasant Nurs ng &amp;
Fr da~ Satu day 133 Bulla nut Rehabilitation Center (lormerl~
Ave sewing mach ne luggage Carehai'en) State AotJte 62 Ro
lampe ringe washer lumbe ule 1 Boll 326 Po n Pleasant
planm toots ant ques co llect
WV 255'50 (A. Glenmark As so
ties, much more
elates Facll y) EOE

Pomeroy,

________:___ I

Huge 5 lamll~ July 7 8 400 Au
!land Street Middle port tlrea
baby children s adult clothes
shoes hOusehold Items Oiap!H
Genie lots of mise

PI Pleasant
&amp;V1c1nrty
Garage Sale 2923 Maple Ave
Ju y 6 7 8 Appliances bed
spreads clocks lamps good
cloth ng &amp; lOts of mise

Need someone to work In to
rnatcet packers and pickers
Larry Turley 614 2.47 3042 or
614 247 2642
Outside Salesman Commercial
Print ng Co Needs Aggreulve
Self starter For Full/Part Tlma
French Ctv Press61W.W 4:383
Owner Operatqrs Your Tractor
And flatbed For Dedicated High
Paying Lanes Home onen, Cali 1
800 818 5545

Yard Sale Jwly 1 8 105 High and Oua/lllect born again teacher for
Ave 9-5pm Oueenslze waterbed local Christian echool call S 14
tleadooard coucl'l and chair and 992 6249'1ir814-G92 5129
tots more

••eo

F&amp;br c 1 S lver Brldga Plaza Gllipotls. No Phorw Calls.

Someone nee&lt;:led e~enlngl ana
weekends 10 care tor eldetty woman In ner nome near Pomeroy
Apply by wrlllng The Dallv Senti
net clo Boll: 729 0 Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 g vtng experience
relerences &amp; wage r&amp;rf..llremenl

180

Wanted To

Do

ANGEL RIDGE STAilLES

• Culling
• Relnng
• Team Penning
Pleasure
Other Performance Ewniros
Sta I Young Horses From
Ground Up
CERTIFIED !N5TBLJCTOA
Will TEACH

All rea estate adVert sing In
this newspaper Is subject lo

thB F&amp;deral Fair Housing AC1
ot 1968 whtcn makes t I ktgal
to advert se any preference
I m tatlon or d1scrimlnatlo.Q
based on race color rei glon
!&amp;X famll al status or natlol'\41
o~n or any ntention to
make any such preference
limitation or discrimination
This newspaper will not
koowllngly accepl
advertisements for real estate
wt11ch Is n vlo&amp;atlon ol the law
OUr r.eaders are ~eby
nformed that all dwelhngs
advertised 1n this newspaper
are available on an e~qual
opportun ty basis

31 o Homes lor Sale
6 room hOuse n PI Pleasant Best
ot er For oeta Is call 304 697
1434

Pr ced cheap lo settle estate 5
roam one story house 2 bed
rooms bath carport pa!lo base
ment out of all flood waters very
gOOd location &amp; nelghbornood lo
cared at 832 Grant St Middleport
Ohio $25 000 814 992 7047
614 742 2550 or 614 384-6384

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Beginner To Advanced Levels
Of Wastern Riding Including Per
lormance Events
1982 Townhouse t4X70 with
• Beglnrter To Intermediate Eng
8X24 Factory Slide In Expando 2
IISh Riding
EmphaSIS On .5A10 And filg,aL BR 1BAth Central Air with 6ll:12
Storage Bldg On Rented lot on
pmgress!pn
568 In Aodoey $12 SOD 61.4 245
Olle ng Reasonable Rates And 5750
Qua ly nstruclipn For Both
1984 14x70 2 bedroom 1 large
Horse And Rlderll
bath appliances Iron! porch
good co ndillon $12 000
Cal Us For More lnlormatlonll
614 992 5578 evenings
61....256-6801
2 bedroom lurnlshld good con
Christ an nurse seeking pos ton dillon good lloore &amp; ceilings
S1 000 musl sacrlllce 6 4 992
n ottlce or Christian doctor U
4011
censed n WY &amp; OH 304 895
3865 or 30.4-8QS.3121
25 Ft Motor Home Newly Uphol
s ered Large Ret gera or Freez
e Large Bath Carpeted Good
Cond lion Ready To Go Camp ngl
General Maintenance Painting
614 256 657.4 Alter 6 PM
Yard Work Windows Washed
L m led O!ter 1996 doublew de
Guitars C)e§~d Ugh I Hauling
Commer!Cal Residential Steve
3br 2bath $1695 down $2.59/
6 14 446-8861
month Fee dellver't &amp; selup

oao

Geor_ges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to lhe mill just call
304 675 1957
Lawn Care And Landscap ng Any
Stze Edge Trimming Brush And
Tree Rem oval Free Eatlmatesl
614 367 7887
Protasslonal Tree Servl&amp;e Com
plate Tree Care Buckel Truck
service 50 Fl Reach Stump Ae
moval
Free Estlmatesl In
surance 24 .HJ Emergency Serv
lee Cal And Savel Nc Tree Too
Big Or Too Smalll 61~ 388 9643
61'.367 7010
Sem truck wllog trailer lor h~re
30-' 895 3865 or 304 882 3121
Sun Valley Nursery School
Chi dcare M F. Sam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age During
Summer 3 O~ys per Week Mini
rrum614 446 3657
W I do backhoe work phone 614
992 3 73 or ~14 992 5858
WII Do Interior ;xterlor Palnhng
Reasonable Rates Expe ~enced
Re1erences Fo Free Estimates
Cal 6 4 245-5755
W•l sit w1th etderlv In !heir home
Expe anced Cal after 6pm 304
675 4857
FINANCIAL

21 0

Business
Opportunrty

INOTICE1
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
reco mmends that you do busl
ness w th peoplo ycru k(low and
NOT 10 send mone-y thi-Ough the
ma I umll you have nveshgaled
the ollerl.-.g

Only .q1 OaKwood Homes Nitro

'IN 304 755

ssas

New 1995 141t70 Includes skirt
tng steps blocks one year
homeowners Insurance and s lC
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per month Call
1-1100-837 3238
New Bank Repos Only 4 lei!
Never lived n 304 755 71 Q1
OAKWOOD HOME S Nilro WV
Olrecl tactory sates No m Ddla
man Save S1 000 s 304 755
5885
Price Buster! New 14lC70 2 or
3br Only $995 down S1951month
Free delivery &amp; sal up Only at
Oakwood Homes Nitro WV 304
755 5885

350

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

55 Acres 01 Land Wilh 28K32
Bu k11ng On Clay Chapel Road 1
800-287 6308 614-446-6308
1 1/3acras nvestmenl opporlun
ly: In rental p opertv Smln !rom Pt
P easant on At 2 Pr ce reduced
304-675 6277
1 2 acre lot tor sale In Bradbury
on CA 5 61-4 992-6190
112 Acre Mobile Home Lot Oevel
oped Loca ted 011 325 614 379
2343 No Answer leave Mos
sage
11 AC MIL Georges Creek Road
Water Elec Available $13 500
OBO 614-.U1 1500 Attar 5 PM
Sacres survey map available
county road accen 304 675
1918
Four lots near Racine approx 1
112 acres each utartlng at $5000
call 6~ 4 94g..2025

Scenic Valley Apple Growe
Metal Bu IOing Manufacturer Se
beautiful 28c lots public water
ectlng Small Or Large Bu lder 1 C~ Bowen Jr 304 576 2336
Dealer In Some Open Areas
H1gh P oiU Potential Accepllng
RENTALS
On y The Best Qual lied Call
(303} 758 4135 EJ&lt;I 1500
REAL ESTATE

31 0

Homes for Sale

2 sto y 4 bedroom living room
dining room k tchen utll ty room
batt'! p1u1, cellar garage excellent
ocatlon 5.43 Grant Street Mid
dleport Ohio call 61_. 985 3919
2 slorv garage beside New Ha
van Supe rma kel bottom floor
comple tely remodeled 2 bays
(Iron! bay 40 1t28 rear bay
32 x23} 100 x~O lol 118 500
304 882 2763
2bedroom w lh basement clos e
to schools $1.4 500 Call 30 4
675 6621

Household
Goods

510

for Rent

41 o Houses for

Rent

3 Bedrooms Bath &amp; 112 Rio
Grande Area Washer Dryer
Hook Up $490/Ma Oeposll Re
qu red 513 922.0294

2 Bedrooms 1
Total Electric
No Pets 1 Ml a South Of Eure!Ca
Dam $325/Mo + Depotll All Utll
Illes Paid Ell:cept Electr ic 61.4
256-6089
Nice 2 bed room mobile hOme In
Middleport 614 992 5658

TraHer In Apple Grove WV par
tla y tuml shed $300/mo 304
576 2890

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur
nlshed and unlurnished securily
deposit required no pels 6f4
992 2218
1 Bedroom Near Ho zer s Air
Cond Uoned Super Nice $259/
Mo Oepos 1 ReqUired 614 448-

2957

530

Antrques

Buy or se I Riverine Antiques
1124 E ~an Street on At 1:24
Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 60
am lo 6 00 pm Sunday 100 to
8 00 p"' 814-002 2526

Modern 2 BR Garage Apt Gas
Heat + Air Located near Schools
S300 Month No Pels 614 446
2300

20 cub c 1oot chest treezer
works good $50 Msytag dryer
$50 614 992 7546

2bdrm apts lolal electric ap
pllances furnished laundry room
laclllt es close to school In town
Appl cahons available at VII age
Green Apts f49 or call 614 992
3711 EOH
2Aooms Plus Bath Lalayet1e
Mal No Kllchenl A I UUIIIes pad
S, 75 00 Month Oepos t Requ reo
6~4 446-n33
Apar ment &amp; trailer ulllilles pad
$~75 mo pus $50 deposit on
each 304 675 4680
Ava labia July 10th S1ura N ce 2
Bedrooms All Elect lc Furnished
K1tchan No Pels Close To Sp lng
Valley Water &amp; Garbage Pa1d
$355/Mo + OD Rei 614 4466157 Alter 5 PM
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGp PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Orive
lrom $226 1o $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 614 4_.6 2568
Equal Hous ng Opportunity

Furn shed duplex tbedroom Up
stars $250 +electric Downstal s
$275 +electriC No pets No Hud
References &amp; deposit 304 675
2651
Furnished Effie ency All Utilities
Paid Share Bath $,45/Month
919 Second Ave 614-446 3945
Furnished Elliclency $195/Mo
Utilities Peld Shale Bath 607
Second Gaillpo\ 1 614 446 4( 16
After 7 P.M
Gracious Uwlng 1 and 2 bedroom
cwartments at Village Manor and
Ill versiCle Apartments lfl Midd le
port From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Housing Oppor
runtes
Middleport N Third 2bedroom
lurnlshed apt Depos t &amp;. rater
ences 304 882 2566
New Haven 1bedroom Iurn Shed
apl Deposit &amp; references 304
882 2566
Nice 2 3 bedroom apartment In
M•dd aport 614 992 5858
N1ce 2pedroom apartment w/d
hookup Relerences Deposit No
pels 304-!i75 5162
One oedroom apartment n M d
dleport all ulllt es paid $250/mo
S100depost 614949-22H
Tw n Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1br HUD subsld
lzed apt 1or elderly and tlar1d
capped EOH 304-675-6679
Upstairs 3 Rooms &amp; Bath (1 Bed
room) Furn shed Clean Reier
ence and Deposit Required No
Pets 614-446-1519
Very clean 1 bedroom furnished
apllrtment 614 992 5304 or 614
448 3091

450

Furnrshed
Rooms

Rooms lor rent week or monlh
Starting at $120/mc Gall a Hotel
614 446-9500
Sleep ng rooms with cooking
Also tra ter space on r we All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m
304
5651 Mason WV.

n3

460

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 Ton Cenral Air Conditioner
Package System 0 Spill System
$1 250 tnslalled 5 Yr Warrantv
All Parts ~ 800 287 6308 614
446 6308
3 wheel golf cart good condition
$500 614 992 5388
8 truck camper 39 Ford Coupe
for parts 1979 Olds 88 mise
Volkswagen parts double reclln
er oouo h &amp; recliner and ml
crowave 614 949 1.:146 after

5pm
AI Conditioners 5 000 12 000
t 7 500 BTU s Couch /Chai r
Computer Table Desk /Chair
Washer /Cryer 614 44fN224
ATS nc 011ers RCA 18 d glial
sa tell te dish Big Screen \e e
visions SEE and FEEL the AC
TON over 175 channels ail br as
ow as &amp;29/mQnlh Buy DIRECT
and SAVE Call TODAY lor NEW
FREE color calalog 1 800 553
5443
Boors By Red Wing Chippewa 40
To 50 Degrees H H Brown
Gua anleed Lowest Pr ces The
Shoe care 614-446-.4222
Coffee tab le 2 end tabes 3
lamps table w/4 chars stereo
wheel cha r w/removable arms 45
&amp; 33 113 records 304 675-4023
Comma clal PA System 4 Speak
ers 2 Large Meta Horn Speak
ers Needs M1ke $100 OBO 614
245 94.48
Concrete &amp; Plas lc Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH
1-800-537 9528
Coolerator Dehumidifier $65 Low
rey Organ $125 614-446-0924

c allrnan

10 Table Saw $300
Ya d Man Rld10g Lawn Mower 15
HP Au to Tran smission Power
Steering $1 100 22V 500 Gallon
5 HP: Air Compressor $500 614
379 2720 Af1ER 6 RM
E e~;tr c
Scooters
S airway
Bowman
7283

Wheetcl'lairs Etectr c
NewiUsed Scooter lilts
Elevators L:lll Chalts
s Homecare 614 .446

FOR SALE
FOOD BOOTH
TRA LEA Well Equ pped In
eludes Gas Gr II Sink lWo Re1r g
erators Ample Storage Cablne s
Fan And Ins de And Ou1s1de
Counters Plus Front/Back Roil
Out Awn ngs Good Condition
Price $1 500 614446 1897 614446 1410
Harvest Gold Automatic Washer
Range 0 shwasner Mattress
Matching Box Spr ngs TV 2
Wheel Trailer 614 446 2976
IBM PS/1 388 personal computer
4yrs old OOS 4 0 40 MB hard
drl'o'B wl 3 112 doub e d sk elf' ve
1 MB Ram modem keyboard col
or graphics mon tor windows 3 0
m crosoll works elCpress publish
er Lois ol soltware TeacMer
owned $70&amp;. 30_.-675-5688
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Re~alred New &amp; Rebu It n Slack
Call Ron Evans 1-600 537 9528
King Woodburne Frost Free Re
lrlgerator Gold Color Sell Pro
pe led Mower &amp; McCul la Wee
dealer Both l1ke New 614 388
8559

Merchandlae
Wasner !hal works &amp; d.ryer that
ne eds repaired $75 both 304
895-3869

550

Bu1ld1ng
Supplies

Block Orick sewer p pes w nd
ows lin els etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

Once A Month ,_.ea program
need heip1 Ask R&amp;G Feed and
Supply ~t4 992 2164 about the
HAPPY JACK 3 X FLEA COL
LAR K 1 s cotn mae and lema e
adult neas Available 0 T C
•

2 Female Chows AKC Aeg is
tared 9 Weeks Old 814 446
8861
6 Week. Old AKC Cocker Span~el
Puppi~s ShOts &amp; Wormed Dew
Clawed 614 256-6887
9 Non Registered Basset Hound
Puppies 4 Weeks 0 d A ready
Weened From Mo!her Makes
Good Rabbit Dogs $25 P ece
614256~41

AKC ChOc Lab Pups Ready To
Go f\lter 6 Weeks June 26 614
&lt;46 9582

Shaded camp sites 112 ro 1 112
acres Waterside boating lo rlv
er electriCity county wale all
year round 304 576 2610 or ~
601 7~8 5445
MERCHANDISE

Dryers Ranges
I
grators 90 Cay Guarantee!
French Cily Maylag 614 .446

Household
Goods

7795
Carpet &amp; Ylnyt"ln Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Panernt 01 Kitchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
VInyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446-7444
Country Furniture Furniture lor
Every Room 6ml At 2 North PI
Pleasant 304-675-6820
.._
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furnish ngs
Hours Mon Sal 9 S 614 .ua
0322 3 miles out Bulavllle Pike
Free Delivery

Loveseal w/lactory Scotch guard
ng exc cond S200 1 m 304
675 5115
Memorex 8 mm Camcorder W th
Case Battery &amp; Tripod Serious
tnqu rle• Onl\&lt; 614-448-7081
One Drake Satelt te system $600
One F sheriYamaha stereo sys
tem 1300 304 882 3446
Pageant Dress Teat &amp; White
Size 1I With Socks Pantaloons
Ha r Bow ShOes ShOe C Ips $75
6 t4 446 0912 Julie
Relr gerators S1oves Washers
And Dryers All Reconditioned
And Gauranteed $100 A no Up
W II Deliver 614 669-$441

AKC Reg s1ered Cocker Spaniel
Puppy Me.le Bull &amp; While
Wormed Vacc naled Champ on
Bloodline D o a 3/2/95 $200
614 379-2728
Birds Iguanas Tarantulas mice
Fish TanK &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Awe Point Pleasant
304-675 2063
Dog Obedience Classes Th e
R ght Paw Tra mng Center For In
!ormation Gall614 446-1864
Professional Dog Groom ng Vln
ton &amp; Rio Grande Area 20 Years
Experience For App o ntmenl
245 5054

Pure Bred Oalmatlon Puppt.es
Ready To Go Two Weeks 9
Males 1 Female $150 614 245
5739

l Dl DIJ T KillVJ SH~
HIID .STI\U) uP CCMICS
KRFORJ'v'lil.X:&gt;

570

Musical
Instruments

Wirl tzer Plano 614-446 4823

T$. 11-\E (!-\~~ S

1-JGKi CH

HARK II I REAR
TH SUPPER BELL

610

Farm Equ1pment

Discount farm tractor parts 1or
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
Siders Equl~-o :~en! Co Hender
son wv 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3917

a

I()

'

South

\\f o,t

"\r,nh

1•
3•

Pa li

J. '\T

Pe:~ ..,..,

i

'T

Pass

Pa ..,..,
Pa l,l,

'\T
f'a &lt;.,t,

Pas s
Pa s"

B'

PEANUTS
OKA'&lt; HERE WE

WE DON T AGREE ABOUT

60 UP THI1.0U6H
THE OL HOOP

DO WE

AN'!THING

1

'

/

nl(l~ad

630

Livestock

BORN LOSER

~v

~

'
~
"-lHI\T I) f\1~ lDJQ OF INTEl1ell II'\

~

_ CAt-1 YOJ R((0MJ.i£NDI\ LJ.AS~IC
,-,.NU..t.l. Fa&lt; MY Htf-&gt;BN-lt&gt;"

Jersey He !e 15 Months Old
Farm Equ pment 61.f 245.0610

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"ere' en cle\er at schoo

.,

Ertc
The\ dtd E'en ttme the
teacher asked a quest ton I •as the
firsllo pur up m1 hand

TH( Ul';:DilY

640

Hay

&amp;

Gr~1n

71 0

Autos for Sa Ia

65 Mustang sl'larp $5500 614
002 5532
88 Serena. 4 cyl automat c
12800 OBO 614 992 7546
1978 Chevy Impala stat on wag
on 51 700 miles good condition
614-965-3919
1979 Trans Am black 400 en
glne t tops auto real good cond
$2 400 304 675 1215
198 1 BuCk Regal 350 Engine
Runs Good Good TJres Vet Ral
lys Wheels $1 200 304 675
2352 AI er 4 30 P.M

Three 6 ilghled jeweler showcas
wllocks and corners l Qhted
1 wlletters 304-87~6236
Uniden cellular bag phone wllh
portable antenna an.d battery
pack like new $150 OBO 304
675 7879

446~109

Xc

1987 Honda Accord OX, exc
conq ,, well equipped auto
76 OOoml $5 200 304-675 3641
1988 Chevy Cavalier Air Au
lomattc New Alternator 2 New
TiresJ 65 663 M las GoOd Condl
tlon S 500 Or Bs .. 1 Oller 6~4
446 4763
•
1989 Mercury Grand Marqu s V
8 Au1omallc Loadea M nt Con
d tlon 72 000 Mi as SS 500 614
441.0114
1989 Oids Calais Air Automatic
tOO 000 Miles 4 Door S:! 900
61.4 388-8575 AI er 4 P.M

p J

v

B V lj X

T V J

R

E 0

AFWXFMD

l~lto~ ~y

low to forrn

Go

10\lr warda

\ r....,s,.,..u-.--F....r ..:.E~~

. I; I I I' .

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THIS! SQU~A!S

V1rtue After Newsy· Torque OVER FIRST

.---'

One horse lover to another "My new horse shows me
a lot of respect When
come to a fence he stops and
lets me go OVER FIRST '

we

!THURSDAY

ROBOTMAN
&amp;flAB T~~ C~M-~A
C~ACKEIIS 1 fLOO~~
'EA MAMMAL ~AS
&gt;~~ TDF~D

1

UJI

C&amp;C General Home M~
lenence Painting vinyl sldi!IIQ.
carpentry doors windows bathl
mob le hOme repair and more ftw
free estimate call Chet B U ~
6323
".
Joe s Home Maintenance vlf'rll
siding roofing exter.lor pa nllng
power washing !ree estimates
614 992 4451

ASTRO-GRAPH

P olesslonal 20yrs experleQce
with a I mason brick block,.&amp;
stone Also room additions . ta
rages etc Free eatlmates 304
882 3406 or 304
9550

BERNICE

m

BEDE OSOL

Ron s TV Serv1ce speclallz ng In
Zenith atso servicing most other
brands House calls 1 BOO 797
0015
304 576 2398

wv

IIi

Res denlial or co~rc al wlr n~
new service or·repalrs Mas1er 'i:li
censed elictrlclan Rldenow
E ectrlcaJ WV000306 304 675
1786

TO

SCRAM lfTS ANSWERS

GuYS'

Appliance Parts And Service ~~
Na~e Brands Over 25 Years Eilt
per ence All Work Guarantem:l
French City Maytag 614
7795
1

COMFORT ASSUREO DEALEQ
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps Air Condition ng fi
You Don t Call Us We Both Los~t
Free Estlmalea 1 BOO 287-6308;
614 446-6308~ 002945

WOlD
UMI

•

W TH ME' LET 5

•

Refrigeration

NWHV

'::~:t:~' S©RcijlA-&lt;Zt.~s·
CU.Y I 'OUA"
0 four
Reorrange ~Htrt of tlo!e
tcrombled words !a-

YOV T6 (,E"T
S ( ;o:._ ON
i HE. I"\

j

Electrrcal and

WPYPJH

PREY OUS SOLUT ON n Hollywooa a ma age s not Ia 1fe but untt you
I nd a newagen - / Column SI J Jul a Llewellyn Sm th

NOBODY WA.NTS

I M DOING IT I M
RIDING 1HE Z IPI:f'R I
WHO \.Ji'.NT!I To COME

1

Freeman s Heal n~;~ And Cooling
lnsta atlon And Serwlce EP4
Ce II ed Residential Commercial
6 4 2561611

V M D

AVFAOK

GET ANSWU

HIGH PRICES. ~HOP THE CLASSFEDS.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llelime guaran11•
Local relerences furnlahi!ICI t4f!t
(614} 446 0870 Or (614) 2lt
0488 Roge s Waterproofing ~~
tabhshed 1975
'

840

X U 0

V M D

I J NCB

I

STRI&lt;£ lo 8WN N Tl-£ Wilt Clol

&amp;

C MN H M 0 R R

"'"

XN

WPTPXVXPNJR

~ UNSCI~MBLE l!TTftS

Home

rlumblng
Heating

~ .ta_\~ C: &amp;ISI 'J
~r,-;a t
'••''

"~

R

S L

Luis Campos

reversal

SERVICES

820

by

N F X 0 M

ENTVJ

8

89 Terry Resort calnper 35 Mlf
contained B141l115-4306

TRANSPORTATION

,,•

XUD

&amp;

Improvements

17 Wedding
worda

•

1992 Holiday Rambler Atummte
With Canter Sllt19 614 245 5648
614 441.0184

810

11 bimmtal

7 NoveiiS1

mtaauree
51 Edge

heart three m hand played a dub to

197-4 H lo Sell contained -or
Eleclrlc Camper Good Condition
$2 500 614-367 7891
•

Troy belt plow 7hp $700 CaN af
ter 9pm 304-675 5950

10 Brtokloot
juice

6 Pos11ve

Do \OU remember\( ur ~ chao da\S
"tlh affectton or "t1h dread' On I he
"hole I enjf)\Cd mtnf.! But r \\.&lt;JSn t as
cle\er as Ertc \iorecombt a Bnttsh
corned an \\hose strct ~ht man \!las
Ernte \\ tse Here IS one of thetr scenes
Emte The' must h&lt;J\ f' th o u~ht \OU

Motor Homes
New dea 7E6 Diesel Unlsystem
Wit h Combme &amp; Grain Table
Good Condition $3 500 New Idea
2 Row Corn .P cker Good Running
Conoltlon $1 200 John Deere 4
Row Corn Planter Good Ferhllzer
Compartments $300 Eerlihzer
Spreader 3 PI Hitch Moun! $150
300 Gallon Sprayer With Booms
3 PI Hitch MoUn! S200-"J 614 245
5515

holder

4 NeWI
5 Doublful

Ph111tp ~lder

New gas lankS one ton truck
wheels radiators floor mals., e1c1.....
0 &amp; R Auto Ripley WV 304 3 ,_
3933 or 1 800 273-9329
Campers

3 Artists patnt

•K

Budget Transmissions Used &amp;
Rebuilt Ail l}tpes Accessible To
Over 10 000 Tran!lmlsslon Al8o
Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Ptales 614 37!1-2935

790

Mexican
peninsula
2 Seclude

w...

dwnmy s king and ruffed the heart five
m hand After cashmg h1s two remam
mg trump v. nners Sou th led a dta
mond to dumm) s queen drew Easl s
last trump dtscardmg h s club loser
and cla1med It was a classtc dummy

I

&amp;

DOWN

East
Pa ss

Ertc \au bet - b\ 1he ttm e I got
back the questton had been an
s•ererrToda' s deal features a texthook
pia\
After ~orth had used the Jacob\
Forcmg Ratse South sho•ed a stngle
ton or \otd tn hearts \\t1h hts rebtd
North s ti.\e no trump promtsed that all
four aces \\ere held and expressed m
tereSitn seven South Wlth hts •onder
fultrumps was happy to obhge
South won lhc opentng lead \\t1h
dummv s heart ace and played a spade
to hts ktng prepartng to c ia m But
when West dtscarded there us st II
work to be done
South could hope for a 3 3 cub break
or for East to have at least four cl ubs
Bu~ he spotted a better I ne He pia) ed
a dtamond to dumm; s Jack ruffed the

Motors

£'

52 Chem 1ut1
~3 Nol working
(sl }
54 - ot Wtghl
55 Danger color
56 Reach across
57 Israel s
Golda-

11 Sludy
22 Semooter
23 Alrlcon
animal
25
26 Flutlon
30 Hand
w1rmer
32 Diving bird
34 - rwrna
35 Native ol
T•l Aviv
38 Slack•r
37 Wanderer
38 Anllooptlc
liquid
39 Unlocked
41 Mop obbr
43 Mo Solhorn
46 Hoolbool
aound
47 SeowHd
50 Printer 1

Em(e That uas cle\ er

.fRANK &amp; ERNEST

1979 Starcrall 16 $1 000
882 3661 alter 7pm or 30_. 882
2524 (James}

49 L1za-

51 G1ve oH fumes

The textbook
play worked

Accessor res
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

A

RINGIN'

Motorcycles

Auto Parts

1

,.•

, BARNEY

198 7 Harley Oawldson Sport~ler
$1 100 12 000 Miles Good Condit on 614 388 9254 Betwee,. 9
AM 1 PM

760

:J ~

" 1( !J
• I( 4

46 Acltng group

48 Harm

Vulntrahl~ East \\est
Dealer Sr uth

Seen AI Gallipolis Dally Trib!M1e
825 Third Avenue Gallipt}is
OhM&gt;
:

for Sale

J

III (/I

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250

&amp;

I

Answer 1o !Jrewloua Puzzle

Yemen

., ~ r

72 000 Miles $6 000 Can Be

Boats

c;

~

.

91 Chevy s ~o retl 4 ely. 5 w.o
alium wheels AM/FM caueUe
$4400 080 614992 4518

750

E \ST
a I fJ 9 8

f

•1
\

II

&amp; 4-WDs

,J

6. \ K(Jf :"J

86 Chevy s 1o witl'l topper ~w
lire! &amp; axhausl 35 000 milts
$4 000 614 992 5988
614
or
992 2648

Vans

•• K
0

94 Ford Ranger 4x4 heavy dwtv
loaded $1200 worth of extras
S17 000 4 000 m1les 614 9~2
5532

730

~\ ES

\

'fJLTH

Trucks lor Sale

Rabb s All Sizes For Pet Or
Butche 55 $7 614-446 3845

986 Cu1tass Oids 442 w th
20 100 M tes Leaded Lots 01 Ex
trasl ShOw Room CanOl! ol 614

__

720

7 40

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gal on
I
Ron ~vans Ente prlsas
Ohio 1 800 537 9528

1.:.:.::.:.::._:~.::::.,.

EEK&amp;MEEK

92 Ford Probe GL less t~an
so 000 miles S7995 614 843
5151

Professional Pet Groom ng By
Male Leave A Messag~ 111 Get
Back 61H56 6550

1986 GMvy Ge eCrlly 4 cty AT
great gas mileage good con
citon.lt700 6 14 992 5388

Various Shelves &amp; Displays $50
10 Spd B eye e $10 Garden Till
er $15 Portable Scales o 60 lbs
Good Condl!lo 1 $30 Aetrlgerato
160 814-2455515

exhaust new brakes $800 614
992-6833

"&gt;

3
t K Q J
A I K 2

1994 Saturn SC 2 au Colo~ 5
Speed Power Sunroof Allov
Wheels Air Cassette Deck Low
Mileage AsKing Sf3 900 Aller 6
PM 614 245 9164 Days 614
4.46 2107

82 Chevrolet Malibu Classic new

J 1 J

•

1994 Pty~muth St.ndance 4 Door
12 000 M les Excellent Condition
Auto A r 19950 614 256 685~ or
256-6329

1993 Ford F 150 &lt; WD 5 Sp&lt;;od
Air Conditioning 22 500 Mit~&amp;
$12 300 614-367-7755

S de b~ side refr gerator freeze!
$125 Small refrigerator $75 Elec
Ire range S75 304-576 2644

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olve St Gallipolis New &amp; Used
furniture healers Weatern l&amp;
Worl&lt;bOOJs 614-446-3159
'\

A

1994 Buick Skylark Custom 4 Cy
IInder AC TlltiCruise $13 090
Miles $11500 OBO 6144.a1
1593 AlterS

6,"

1981 Ford G anada Great tnterl
or And Exte lo r Low Mileage
614 256-1012,

Used Wood Garage Ooo 16'x8
W lh All Hardware And Automat c
Opener With 2 Remote Cant ols
$150 614 446~342

1991 Ford Taurus $:3195 1993
Chevy Lum1na $7350 1992 Olds
Cutlass loaded 57350 1990
Chevy Corsica $3495
1988
Mercury Sable loaded $2995
1988 Ford Taurus $2.495 H~B6
0 ds CUIIBSS $1695 1986 Ford
truck $2195 1989 GMC S 15
sharp $3695 1211 truck cam6b
exc shape $695 scotty s ~d
Cars 304 882 3752

AKC Registe red Golden Retr eve
~mPPies adorable light blonde
'!!ffi'ady July 15th Cash on yl Call
614 992 7651
1990 GMC 1500 series 4 wheel
AKC Female S berlan Huskv Pup
Clrl'w'e $14 000 304-675 5785
1 112 Blue Eyes Dark Mask
F
F
1
Rare Beaullfull S125 614 446
1995 O(d 150 Sc~l ongbsd
8627
auto air cru se tilt 304 675
.;...:..;.______________ , 1_700~9.;___________~

Sears Kenmore casement air
cond 1 one r 10 OOOBTU 1988
Nlssan 200SX 5spd loaded Hu
mid 11er 304-1175 2790

Side by s de
lea &amp;
water n the door
1325
G E Refrigerator like new 1 year
wenanly $325 S de by Side Ae
frlgeralor Coppertone 1265
Upright Freezer 16 Cu II $150
Mayfag Wffnger Washer S150
Automatic Whirlpool Wuher
S125 Whirlpool Dryer $95 Hoi
point Dryer US JOin Electric
Range $95 Skaggs Appt.ances
76 VIne street GaHipolis Oh
614 446 7398 or HIQ0-400-34911

71 o Autos lor Sale

ALDER

1984 Ford F 150 Runs E&gt;eceilenl
AKC Golden Retriever Puppies
S2 200 080 614-441 0034
Will Hold Wilh Deposit $1 SO 1986 Dopge pickup 112ton a4to
Each 614 388-9243
ps good cond ton wlllberglau
AKC Reg Bqxer puppies males lopper 127 OOOml 13 500 304
only 1176 304 675 2527
j.-67_;5_;2.;.83_;5;_..,-----.,.-

Space for Rent

3b9Ciroom hOuse all etectrlc Ma
son S3251mo S150/depasll to
rent or $32 500 to sell 304 773
5934 alter ( 30

3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home 1
Acre Fami y Room Living Room
Kitchen Full Basement Central
A r Lo.cateCI 7 .Miles On St At I:.:;;;..;;;;..;:;::.::.:.;;:.::.;.:;_::___
1so Past Holzer Medica l Center Nice three bedroom home In Pt
More lnld- 614 44, ~ 154 After 5 1 P_:Ie:.:a:.:'":.:n:.:.\:._6:.:1.:'-;.:9il.:2:..:
58:;58:::.._ __
PM
1'
One bedroom house In Pomeroy
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heat Pump ca after 6pm 614 992 2009 br
304 773 5707
Gas Furnace I Acre Garage
Addison Area $62 000 6 4 367
Small 1 Bedroom Houae Near K
7267
Mart S300 Plus Gas &amp; Electric
614 4-46-1822
Four bedroom hou1e lor sale
free gas two &amp;tory approx 3 acr
Unlurmshea 2 bedroom house
~' Brad]My M•o. 6l4,ll!l2-61{!g.
nlt:e &amp; clfJBn -no Inside pets rei
Haute For Sale Rent 6 314 fw1 es erences reqwred $200 deposit
Poulble Land Contract 6778 $275 a mon1h rent 614-902 3090
Lincoln Pike Patriot OH
420 Mobile Homes
Priced cheap to settle estate 5
for Rent
room one atory house 2 bed
rooms bath carport patio base
2 Bedroom Mobile Home Mill
ment aut of all flood waters vary Creek Road $225/Mo + S100
good location &amp; ne ghborhood to
Doposll Aequ red 814 441--0968
cated- at 632 Grant St Middleport
on o $25 ooo 614 992 7047
2 Bedroom Trailer On Upper Ro
614 7d 2550 or614-384-63S4
ute 7 $275/Mo 614 446-2515

VI RA FURNITURE
614 446-3158
Qual ty HOusehold FlXriture And
App lances Great Deats On
Cash And Carryt RENT 2 OWN
Aod Layaway AliO Available
Free Oei!Wry Within 25 M les

540

51 0

Nlca 2 or 3 bedroom house lor
rent with option to buy In Pomer
oy $350 a month &amp; depos 1 no
pets Inside 614-698 72_.4

Kenmore 30 almond gas range
plotless gnlllon GE avocado 26
cubic 1oot side x side refrigerator
WI Ice maker both eltceflent con
dltlon $275 each, 614-992-6594

2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water Sewage Paid S295/ Mo t
Depos 1 6 4-446 2481

3 BR carport Downtown Privacy
$340/Mo + Security Deposit un
lurnlshed 6 4 446 0332 (10 5
Ony) Tope Furniture

House 2 Bedrooms Utility 1
Bath Central A.lr Garage AU
Electr c 5395/Mo Pius Ut lilies
No Pets 614 448 1358

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhera dryers refrtgerarora
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Street Call 614 446 7398
1-6()().-3499

540 Miscellaneous

hunting lrlp
45 Cepl1ol ot

'

F day July 7 1995

A more acf ve soc al calendar m1ght wa t
m...the off•ng 1or you n the year ahead
More 1nvolv~nts w1\h fnends old and
11ew could ~en new v stas and ~nter
OSI5
CANCER (June 2J.July 22) lnst net vely
you U know whal to do and say today to
I"Ra~e everyone feel haPl! er Because of
tt'll5 marveleus at! 1bt:1U! tnd1cators show
~u to be me center of allenuon Get a
Jurnp on hfe by understand ng the nllu

year~~~-i~:~~~::-

cnce s hal
you n !he
Send lor your Astra G aph pred chons
today by ma I ng $2 and SASE to Astra
Grap h c/o th s newspape P 0 Bo)(
4465 New Yo rk NY 10163 Be sure to
state your zod1ac s gn
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Try to mamta1n a
low prof le loday You w II be more elfec
1 ve I you gu1de th ngs from !r'le back
ground es pec1aily n your cu rent dehcate
5 um on
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) The more
people you have around today the better
you I Ike 1 See!&lt; set! ngs where the
actiOn 15 and get nvo ved ftrst hand
LIBRA {Sept 23 Oct 23) Lady Lucls
could pay spec al a11en11cn to you today
espec a ly n Sltu~t ons perta n ng to your
career or f nances These spats could
make or break you
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) It you re
prepared to accl!pt l1fe s happen ngs
ph losoph cally today eve yth ng should
ult ma lely work out to your advantage
Rema n hopeful
SAGITTARIUS (Nov ~3 Oec 21) You
w I possess a remarkable faculty tor
be ng able to make lhe most au l of the
)ea st today Assoc ates w u see th•s and
m ght try lo hop on your bandwagon

now 1n a eye (! where you should ··~··· ,
en ce a more e~~:pans ve populanty
Casual acqu tunlances m ght start th1nk
ng of you a s a spec alfnend
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19) Do not
hes tate to e evate your s ghts a bit today
concern ng your amb t ou s obJect ves
The more mean.ngful the ta get the
ha der you re I k.ely Ia try
PISCES (feb 20-March 20) n orde to
br ng o ut your t ner qua t es you m ght
reqtJ e some type of st mula! ng cha t
le1 ge tO!lay It could be a game or a bus
ness dea
ARIES (March 21 April 19) Focustng
you .;, anent on on your lam11y today w 11
enhance your feehng of belong ng and
simultaneously contr bute to the r sense
of secur ty
TAURUS (Aprtl 20 May 20) Constder
able pleasure ca ll) be denved today by
bemg brought up 10 'ttate about your
fr ends ~ ng up your !avonte news hawk
for a t tile ch tchat
J
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) You are n a
br el cycle where your earnmg ab hiles
coul.d be cons derably he Qh'tened If
you re prepared to produce the eompen
sat.on you war 1 shou d be there

...

0

I

JULY 6l

�•

.

.•

.

Page· 1o • The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery~
.
.

Thursday, July 6, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hubbard
Tourney

Pick 3:
4-3-0
Pick 4:
3-2·2-4
Quckeye 5:
1-5-17·19-20

:'results
Sports, Page 5

Low tonight 55 to 60. Partly
cloudy. Saturday, sunny , Highs
in the 80s.

•

Val. 46, NO. 49
Copyright 1995

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
L~ss Than Factory
I · Invoice on Most
Models.

I

"
•

"

A_
EP ·loOks at possible staff reductions
..

MARSHALL McCORKLE

Sales Consultant

Sales Consultant

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
'surveying, preserving and
marking Civil War sites in Meigs
County, and ways to fund the project were discussed at a meeting of
community leaders and officials ·
Thu.rsday at tbe Meigs County ·
Museum.
Alan C. Tonelli~ archaeology
manager for the Ohio Historical
Preservation Office, met with the
group to present information ·on
activities relating to the archaeo·
logical research needed to establish
authenticity, along with the survey
costs, and possible sources of1"unding.
· • Referring to the Buffington
Island battielield, Tonelli said that
it needs to be preserved because it
is Ohio's only Civil War battlefield
itnd ~'"l-!!S..iG~W)l" }t ''lies unpro.
•.u'.w~ ~·'~Te'('fa;.d threatened by inappropriate tlevetopment."
· He said that the survey would
include preparation of a historic
context for the battle, a historical
and architectural survey of old
Portland and battle-related buildings or strurnurcs in tl1e area.
· Marking significan! events of
the battle and action relating to

FINAL WEEK·E D
USED.&amp; TRUCK·CELEBRATION
'

SALE ENDS CLOSE OF 'BUSINESS SATURDAY, JULY 8
'1994 MERCURY COUGAR

1993 FORD F150 .4X2.

APR.

•99% FINANCING

auto., NC , AM/FM cass., tilt.
lcrtJise,, PS, PB, PW, PDL, pwr.

RD AEROSTAR XLT

, 6 cyl., . automatic, air condi·
ftion,;na. AM/FM cassette. long bed,

length, V-6, auto,, air
tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW,

UP TO 36 MONTHS .
1992 BUICK CENTURY

. V-6. automatic, NC . AM/F-M. cas·
. PS, PB, power door locks, tilt,
ICILIISO.

IA•rtomlatiic, air cond., PS, PB, PW,
, tilt, cruise. AM/FM casseHe.

New Cars &amp; Select Used Cars &amp; Trucks
*TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS
,.

more.

$9449

1993 FORD TEMPO 4 DR.
ing, PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise.
AMIFM casseHe, more'.
1955742

power windows, power ·door locks,
rnuch more.

~159 Mo.'

1992 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS
V·8. auto .. NC . PS, PB, PW, PDL,
Pwr seat, tilt, crujse. AM/FM
cassette.

1992 FORD T·BIRD LX
power seats. mote.

V·S, auto . air cond., Af.\IFM ster·
eo, PS, PB. PW, POL. lilt, ABS,
etc.

s6,949
1991 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

V·B, auto., air cond .. AMIFM cass ..
tilt, cruise, PS. PB, PW, PDL, Pwr.
S!l,al. Only 34 .000 milet

$8949
1991 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS

$15 449
1991 CHEV. CAMARO Z·28

V-8. auto .. air cond , PS, PB. PW,
PDL, Pwr. .seat, tilt. cruise, AM/FM

V-8,·auto. , air cond., PS, PB, power door locks, tilt, cruise. AM/FM

casset1e. ·

cassette, more

-

_s9,949

24 MO.

_$199 Mo.'

24 MO.

$

,,

9,649

5

V-6, auto., a1r comtitiomng. AM/FM
cassene. tilt, crui,se. PS, . PB, PW.
POL, Pwr. seat, etc. '
#20830

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Pre&gt;&gt; Writer
WASHINGTON - The gov·

17,949

A~socJ~tod

ernment-owned corporation in

charge of processing uranium for .
nuclear power plants should be
sold to private operat'tlrs by next .
its president said.
·If President Climon approves
the U.S. Enrichment Corp.'s trans·
formation plan, it would be the

xear.

199 Mo.'

bigge st gover_nmeni-Lo-privatc .

1·993 FORD MUSTANG LX
P$, PB, PW POL
#946921 .

1

24 MO.

1993 FORD TAURUS

V-6, auto . air cond ., AM/FM cas·
sette, tilt , cruise. PS, PB. PW, PDL,
Pwr. seat. !ll6re.
'#20790

.

FORD EXPLORER XLT 4

XLT. V-6, auto ., A/C, @ , cruise,
AM/FM ca~ .. PS. PB, PW, POL,

Conversion,~• auto ..

more.

cassette, .more.

1992 FORD F150 XLT

air cond., PS,

. $13,949
1992 PONT. TRANSPORT

auto., air conditioning; AM/FM
cassene, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
POL

* ALL PAYMENTS QUOTED ARE 24 MONTH RED CARPET

$15,949

$9,949

LEASE 0 THE PLAN". PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON $2,000
DOWN .PAYMENT AT TIME OF DELIVERY.
WARRANTY INCLUDED ON ALL CARS;
'

STATE TAXES NOT INCLUDED.

'

Interest raJe,
joblessness
post declines

PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM

. $18,449
~-6,

'.
1990 DODGE 250 VAN

V·B, auto., NC. tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette, PS, PB, PW, P,DL!, much
· m~re, low Jlliles.

0
0
Co~v~~s~o~
v~P.
~~~
2J.~~eruise. AM/FM cass., PS, PB, PW. ·
POL, more.

$10,949

cmcri11g a period of greater compclition,'' he saiU.

The study will delve into all three of AEP's major functions- generation, transmission anJ tlistrihulion.
.
Any chang~s resulting rrom the analysis will mainly be internal.

Hagelin said . Cus tomers will experience no change in their utility, except
for "gt"catcr improvmcnls in customer service."
.·.
AEP serves more Lhan 2.9 million customers in Ohio. West Virginia,
Virginia, Kentucky. Indiana, Michigan and Tennessee.

Eastern
vo-ag
dropped

.

''

High cost, small .
enrollment spurs ·
board's decision

Morgan's Raid in Meigs County
with highway historical markers
would be a part of the overall project.
· Because the battlefield lies on
lxiu\ sides of State Route 124 near
Portland, and because it is only a ·
few miles from the Ravenswood,
W.Va., bridge, making it accessible
to highway travelers and touris ·s,
Tonetti said it is highly possi le
that the project could quali for
funding under the lnterm
orface TransportJition Enhance lj!nt
Act (ISTEA) of the Ohio Department of Transportation.
He estimated the cost of the pro·
ject of surveying, designing, and
installing highway bistoricaJ.maftC.
ers at $56,000: If ISTEA furids are
awarded for ti1e project, then locallx, only 20 percent ill that amount
w&lt;l'uld have to be raised.
Of U1e total amount, $35,000
would go into the archaeological
survey, and that mnount could he
reduced somewhat if volunteers are
,available to assist, Tonelli said:
Margaret Parker, president of
tile Meigs County Historical Sociely, reported that $7,600 has
.already been pledged toward the
project. That amount includes

Jly GEORGE ABATE

Sentinel News Stal'r
Eastern High School students
will not be able to take pan in the
vocational·agricultural program
this year, Eastern Superintendent
Ron Minard said Thursday.
.
The Eastern Local Board of
Education voted to stop funding for
the prngram at a speci:1l board
meeting Wednesday night: Minard
s~id. About 20 students, mainly
seniors, had enrolled in this pro·
gram that Ulught planting schedules
preserving and marking Civil W10r sites In
EXP~ORING PRES!l:RV ATION FUNDING
and
use ora.emicals.
Meigs County. Attending in uniform was David
- Alan C. Tonelli, left, archaeology manager
The
agricultural program had
Gloeckner, right, a local member of the Civil
with the Ohio Historic Preservation Office, met
been
avuilablc
for half the school
War Re-enactors. (Sentjn~l . photo)
with local organization representalives and offi·
day
,
Minm·d
said.'
cials Thursday lo discuss fundinl( surveying,
f
The tx~ud dropped the program
$5,000 from th e Meigs County lie agency cim apply and take the patihle witil preservation. ·n.,t type due to management problems, high
Commissioners.
responsibil)ty for managinJ! the of digging could damage the hattie- cosL' and low student participation
I hat prevented adeqmite state reim1 Neith er the Meigs llistoricat' money. Deadline for filin~ for field site. it was noted.
· Once the tirst phase, completing bursement, he added .
Society nor \be committee mga- ISTEA funding is Sept. I. AWar&lt;i'
The state p'uid the district
the survey anti pulling the mark-,
nized for site preservatiqu , the will be made in the spring.
Portland Historical Preservatiou
Tonetti ·s;pd it's his feeling that ings in place, has been $17,920 fnr the program, but it
Committee, could act as the appli- the area has not changed much complelctl,the!l a second phase of annually cost the district an addition:u $12,000, Min:lfd said: ,
cant to ODOT, according to the since the battle. However, he did acquisition of historic silcs might
The district had been interview·
archaeology manager.
stress that sand and gravel cmnpaHe said that only a state or pub- . nics' work near the site .is not com(Continued on l'a~e 3) ing for a teacher for this year since
the position wa....; vacaled al the end
of last school year, Minard said .
The progrrun had existed at Eastern
for at le:Lill5 year,~; .
j
..
.
.
'
'
Wit11 the extra' funds, the district
privatization plat) offering two years ago Congress ordered the that snag by agreeing to give tlw burg, J{us~iia , the Ohio "plant now may • replace the additional funds
U .S. government's enrichment Rus sians a $100 million atlvancc ha'\ received 42 mclric tons of om- for a new teacher in UIC math-pro.sales options was sent to Clinton,
nium tlmt was taken from tlisman- gnun, he added.
If approved, by early next year monopoly to be sold and operated on future shji)JnC)!!!i,.Ijlnhers said.
.
~- ...... Tlie're is a rccommi tmeilt 'to
llcd SS20 mi ssiles and diluted to
U1e ·&lt;;arporation should be sold for as a fur-profil business.
At Wednesday's meeting, file
between $1.5. billion· and $1.8 bil· ·
In addition 10 competing with mak e this deal work," Timhcrs Iess· tl1an-bomb strength.
tlO:lfd :dso itucrviewcd tile last set
lion, plus an "exit dividend" of up the, Europeans for enrichment husi - said.
1
Wc_apons·gflldC uranium _~:on· of :lfchitcct. who may design U1e •
to $800 million·. ·
.
, ness, USEC is the buyin)l agent for
Alcxahdcr Chcmov, president of tains about 90 percent of the iso· plans for new school buildings,
The corporation operates urani - a deal brokerqd to gel bomb-grade t11e company that is. acting '" agent tope U-235, the r.art of uranium Minard said. .
um ~nrichment plants in Piketon, uranium out of U1e former Soviet for the Russian Federation's Min · that can be used to make powerful
At the next school bmtrd meetUnion and badly needed currency istry of Atomic Energy, said the explosions.
Ohio, and Paducah, Ky .
ing at 6.:30 p.m.. &lt;Ill Tuesday, July
Th e 1wo gaseous t.li·ffusion . to the new Russim] govemmenl.
deal ''right now has full support
Power plants usc uranium with
I K at the high school crdeteria, the
plants blend uranium imo the con·
The $12 billion deal had hit a from !loth sides.''
between 3 percent and 5 percent of board will ch&lt;xJse from live an:hicentrations· needed by powet snag because of contract provisions
"This is a hi storic day," Chcr· the isotope U-235. Before loading tccturallinns.
thai furccU the Russi:m s lo accept nov lOili a news confcrcllCC Thurs- ·it into huge canisters, the Russians
plaht.'.
Th~ firms unUcr consiUcration
,European uranium enrichment only two-thirds payment on deliv- y d~y. "Our lives will be a little blended do"'n the weapons-grade :lfc Vr~tgn &amp; Cassidy of Marietta:
enterprises. have be; en grahbing cry. Durin g meetings with Vic e more safe.",._
uranium so that it became low. Burgess
&amp;
Niple
of '
inLTeasingly large chunks of world - President AI Gore last week in
· With t11 e arrival Thursday or a cnridtcd ur;mium ; perfect for elec- c:olumlms/Parkershurg, W.Va.; ·
wide enrichment business, so two Moscow. the· U.S. smoothed out second shipment from St. Peters- tricity production hut useless for Firestone &amp; A.ssociatcs of Colum·
bomb-making.

1993 CHEV. '/.TON VAN

$239 Mo:

24 MO.

switch since CQnrail was sold for ·
$1.6 billion in 1987.
_ William ·H . Timbers Jr., president of the new corporation, said
Thursday that tile tina! stage of that
. transition began la11 .week when a

auto., air conditioning: AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, power windows, power door locks, power seat,
· leather, etc.

Flareside 4X4, V·B, a~to., air
ond., tilt, cruise, cassette, PS,
B. POL. low miles.

24 MO.

$239 Mo.'

'

'

Convertible, 4 cyl., auto .. air condition!ng , AM/F~ cassette, tilt; cruise,

•

....

Clinton to ponder sale of nuclear enriChment,facilities

leatt1er

5

1993 FORD EXPLORER

1993 FORD T-BIRD LX

1993 FORD F150 XLT

ttl Conversion, V-8, automatic,
cass ., tilt. cruis~. all power,

sette, power steering, power -brakes,

1992 CHEV. CORSICA

$11,949
'V·6. auto .. air cond., PS, PB, PW,
POL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass.'.

Station Wagon. 4 cylinder, auto ,
air condrtioning, PS, PB, AM/Ft-1
cassette, luggage raek, more.
#20570

1994 FORD F150 XLT

51 : V-8, auto., NC; AM/FM cass., tiH ,
ruise, PS, P6, power windoW. power
oor locks, short bed.

1994 FORD ESCORT 4 DR.

4 cyl., auto., .air cond., AM/FM cas·

1993 MERCURY TRACER

auto., air cond., AM/FM cassette , tilt, cruise, PS,
PB. power windows, power door loc~s. power ' seat,
keyless entry, more.
-?'

,,

4 cylinder, automatic, air condfion-

24 MO.

1993 LINCOLN MARK VIII

Mo.",

.

'"

ing in some areas l!lld the study hopes to determine how U1e company can
become more responsive, Hagelin said.
"The un&lt;lerlyitig reason for what's happening is that our indu.&gt;try is

· CGiurilbus Souti1em operates the James M. Gavin plmlt in Cheshire .
By KEVIN PINSON
Another AEP subsidiary: Appalachian Power, operates the Philip Spom
OVP News Staff
and Mounlaineer plants in New Haven, W.Va.
·
In an effon to remain competitive, American Electric Power is con· Twenty-one major plants U~toughout ti1e 'region are part of the AEP
ducting a "functional realignment" study that could mean pink slips for
frunily.
"
,
some employees.
,
Hagelin said it is too premature to say how manyjobs anJ whnt kinJ or
, "We're exploring all of our functions within AEP and in the next sev·
positions could be elimimted. Decisions will not be made umillate in tile
eral months we will be looking at our organization," said David Hagelin,
.
senior media representative for Ohio Power Co. and Columbus Southern - year.
"There are a lot of things to consider.h's likely that some plmlrs will
Power Co., two of AEP's subsidiaries.
see a more substantial reduction than other plams, but to say what plants
"As a part of this process, AEP is going to be looking at stJiffing need.l
will be most affected- we do not know yet."
and it is likflly that there wi:J. be reductions at our fossil fu el power
plant.,."

County explores
Bu~fington Island
site preservation

DELMAN CHENEY

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A MuiMnllldla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 7, 1995

$7449
'

•

ra~e

Prime

drops
I

LeadirKJ banks dropped their p1ime rates
Thursday. Banks use the prime rate as a
base lor computing interest charges. .

12%

Industry rate '

WASHINGTON (AP)- The o
nation's uncmploymeni rate edg
8
down to 5.6 ·percent in June as a
, rebound in hiring fQr the service
and construction industries helped
offset a continued slide in manu·
6
factoring employment.
CPhe ·Labor Department said
today ti1at payroll employment rose
4
by an unexpectedly large 215,000
last mopth. The governmet!_l also
'sl\aiply revig!d up'ward the payroll
2
J¥!rfcirmmlce in the two pteviou~
month s, showing" that the labor
market was not as weak during that
0
period as previously believed.
1995
1994
1990
1991 .
1992
1993
The new report came one day
after tbe Federal Reserve cut a key
in teres! rate by 0.25 p_ercemage April and i-:fay did not change their' slrcnglh in the June report came
· point, the first rate reduction in view that ti•e econpmy was in need frotn special factors incltH.ling one
extra week betwcen;'Urveys, giving
near! y three years. The federal : of hclr ftom a rate cut.
funds rate was cut to 5. 75 percent.
''This report shows the econo· · employers more time to hire peoThe Fed made the move after a my isn't collapsing but it is still . pie, and a big improvement iti
slew of statistics gave rise to •con- struggling," said Robert Dederick, weather conditions that boosted
,
cerns that tl1e nation was headed an economist at Northern Trust Co. construction jobs.
·The botfd market was j@lted if!ifor a recession .
in Chicago. "The real question is
While the Fed ac ted without whether the weakness in manufac- tially by U1e strongcr-than·expected
:___ kn!)wledge o,f ·what today's une111- turin{ will spread to the re st of the unemploytOent rcpor~ but it quickly stabilized and recouped some of
ployilJCnt report ';vould show, ana- · economy.''
·
Iysts .said the upward revisions in
Dederick said that much of the its initial losses.

•
'

hu~ ; f-anning &amp; 1-fowie nl' Col urn -

bus: and Kellem &amp; Associates of

Existing businesses to get
tax breaks in jobs pac·kage
.
State

COLUMBUS (AP) · development oflicials do not ."want
existing busi nesses to feel left out
when Ohio starts granting · tax
breaks for new investment .
"Many people believe our existing businesses are being ignored,"
Development Director Donald
Jakeway said Thursday. He testi fied before a House committee
meet ing called to discuss part ol
Gov. George Voinovich's economic developlllent package .
The bill would give the state ·
another weapon to use-ag.a inst-.
states that, wnuld likc 'to attract
large Ohio' manufacturers , Jakeway
said. It would provide companies a
tax credit equal to 7.5 percent or
the .cost of buying ne.w equipment
or retooling existing•machinery • 10 percent if the husine.~&amp; is in targeted urban or rur:d areas.
He characterized the measure a~
more a joh retention tool than a job
creation tooL

Columhu~ .

·

Earlier ti1is year, the boarJ met
witll .state officir0s to discuss
acquiring ahcml

$X million ill state

''The se tax credits will be

building a."isumce funds. The stJite
h;c, paid abput 80 percent of build-

'wimlfnll ' tox credits in the sCnsc

in g costs fnr cnnslructinn in lhe

that the investment decision has pourer di stricts, Board President
alreaJy been ' mad~ and cannot Ra'y Karr had said in a previous .
therefore he a result of the tax interview wiU•The/Jai/ySentinel .
incentive," lhe Legislative Budget
; rhe board could offer at least
.9 1'fil:c analysis saiJ.
.
three options
10 residents, Karr ·
Altogether, the budget analysts said. They include:
·
estimated th e tax break will ·cosl
• crectin)ta new centralized elethc s~llc about $23.5 million a year, mcn.tary building.
w1th local govcnuncnts losing a lit"·
•
constructing
a
new
tie more llHin a $1.2 million a yellf.
junior/senior high school and then
Thai did not worry Rep. Robert consolidating some elementary
Netzley, R-Laura, who said the . schools i~' thc current high school.
""'" ,&gt;heuldn't tax husinesscs at all
• ili:veloping two Sll)aller build- oU1cr than to recpup the cosL&gt; of in gs for kindergarten through lifth
fire, police and other loc.al services.
grade and sixth throu.gh eighth
"They're the ones who create grades.
the jobs," Laura said'.
Once the architectural firm is
R~p Jack Cera, D-Bcllairc, sug· · hired, several public meetings will
gcst'cJ tipping ti1c tax credit more be held to decide which type of
_in favor of economically distressed new school will be built, Karr said.
llfcas.
The di$triCt wi II not a1sume any
" l ·don'•t
1u
cos t s untt' I a 1evy ·" passed , Karr
I sec why we ·'c.· hou'·'
continue to pmvidc. a 'wx break 'to
·d. The district has estimated the
areas tl_lat life· expenencmg . growth, le to toUII 5 mills.
·
0 cc an architect is hired a fea- ami that growti1 ts gomg to take
pl~cc anyway;" Cera said. .
sibilit study needs to be c~mpletOther lawmak ers were enn- _.. ed a submitted to tile state offl. ccrncd wi th the speed the bill is cials
October Minard said The
gat.hcring thmugh t11c Legislature.
stJitc needs to ap'prove the is.~~e for
the brdlot.

' Howevcri a legislative anaiY,sis

showed that more than half the tax
money the state e'xpccts to lose
through the PJOgram is goj ng to
pr9jects that were going to Ohio
an)'lway. ·
. .

..

..

.

.

'

"
I .

•

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