<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8821" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8821?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-07T03:32:57+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19244">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/5321d7ef07fd097fe497ee5c01662a61.pdf</src>
      <authentication>95f18d2b35335d74838851f1008c1742</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28422">
                  <text>•
••

•

Ohio Lottery
s nine

Pick 3:

to

270

Pick 4:
6224
Super Lotto:

play

2-7-17-25-27-45

..

864101

l

...
. .. ..
....
t •.... ·•
! ..

.
'.
.
'.

.I

\

, :!' .• • •

•

:!'

.•....
.• .

e

r ~ .~ ,

)' J • •

' .
•' ·
•• •
• .· •
• .• ..
•

'

"• .

•

:!' ; ~.

•

"·
... "'

-..

....

..

~-N0-21
.
Ohio 1111'-v Pullilllllng Compalny

O!tl'f·

.• .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May.15, 1997

•

~y BRIAN REED

sentinel News Steff
: ·The Eastern Local School Board
aj)proved· personnel for the 19971991tschool year when .it met in regu1u. $eSSion Wednesday night.
: •Apjlroved as classified substitutes
were: Joan Calaway and Diane NelSOli) aides; Jnzy Newell, Joan Cal!1\tay, Ethel Lambert, Geraldine
Holsinger, Heidi Elberfeld, Debra
lt'loni. Barbara Barringer and Helen
Frilnk, cooks: Sheila King, Charles
$argent, Gary Holter, Pat Buchanan,
~'!'hy Sargenr, Florilla Baker, Gladys

..

.
.

....
..

1991
.

.A 28-year-old Middleport man
was- sentenced to three-and-a-half
years in prison Wednesday afternoon
on-charges stemming from the March .
.14, 1995, death · of a Middleport
wqman.
· -.. Robert "Fat Boy" Scarberry was
·accused of selling fire to the Middleport home of Theresa Rodarz
Srone on March 14, 1995. He was
·lii'rested March ·1s by Middleport
·Police &lt;;hief Bruce Swift
: Scarberry pleaded guilty to
·ch)lrges of arson, burglary and negligent homicide.
·· .
· Meigs County Prosecuting Allorney John R. L.entes said Scarberry ser
a: fire in rrash outside the resid~nce,

.

..

·Sspd, V6, powa stcaing, 4wheel andJock brakes, As IDw AS.••

•

1

'•

'

i

consecutive senrences were
ihough
· tc

-~:E~~t~=~~~i~~~

· ,was related
ro ' · ~
~~~~i~

"··· ~'!1

of the Middleport
woman was
to tbe ·fire and Scar"
berry's negligence, but there was no
evidence that Scarberry intended to
cause a death, Lentes said.
·Firefighters responding to the
lilazc found Slone's body lyinB crum·
behind a television set in the livini!Tix&gt;m.ll was hiler determined she

••
•
•
•

•

•

•·..
y

.

'•

..

.,

..

· ·~ lS Packagt;·Sspd, powtt stra~ alnmimun
wiJ«Js, ait, AMIFM c:BCtte, As low
As...
.

.··.

....

'

:

..
h

..._.

•

,•

•

•~-:

..

,.

',•
~
~

•.,
•••
••

•

'·r••
"

~-

recyclable• Into a pickup truck with as'sistance
from Meigs County Recycling Coordinator
Kenny Wiggins and fellow MHS junior Marquita McClintic, raar.

.

1'

By oi!M,FF.lEE.I/IAN _
Sentinel News Staff

.

.

-wlielf;W'eomes iq"'iiiilipg~rhe ­

who arc accusing us to cmnc and look ·

at the facts ," Mitchell said.
Heath claims St. Vincent ofticials ·
arrested him as part of. a scheme to
money from wcallhy touristS".

c~lorl

s!milar program in Meigs County,
. . Currently McClintic and See are
ihe only two studcnrs liiindling the
program, but 'they plan to recruir
two more studcnls to take over
when they graduate.
"We get help some time," Sec
explained.
Wiggins said the two have col·
lected well over five tons of recyclable material since they started
last September.
Although most of the recyclables consist of paper products,
the lwo said. they c.ollect "pretty
much anything."
They also said that Wiggins has
been' good lo help out.
Meanwhile, Wig~ins said he
admires rhe girls' taking the iniliative to begin the program .
·
"They rook it upon themselves,"
he said.
'
AI SJHS, a similar program has
been staned under the direction of

.teacher· Bill Bacr.
the rccyclahlcs arc picked up in
conjuncti9n with the vi IIage's curbside recycling program.
Two eighth-graders. Matt Warn'
er and Matt Neiglcr. assist in the
recycling efforts. The youngsrers
collect lhc rccyclablcs .. wnsisting
of office mix . cardboard. newspaper. magazines and catalogs .. and
take them to a collection point.
So far. Wiggins said about four
tons of material has hecn collected at the junior high.
"There is a lot of paper that goes
through the schools." Bacr said.

Heath was charged with murdering
his wife, llorrainlll 'iri l)t. \Jinoentlast
year.
Heath alleges he paid $25,000 ro
get his confiscated passport. Mitchell
said the money Hcalh wired to his St.
Vincent lawyers was paymcnl for
their services.
.
· Heath's case never went to trial
because of insufficient evidence ,
Mitchell said.Lnrraine Heath's m'urder.remains unsolved .
:
- " We arc inviting (South African
ol'licials) U&gt; take responsihility of the
investigations into the death nf nne of
their dtizens," Mitchell said. "We
will give them all the· coopermion
they need:" ·

Bacr said the rrogram is "doing

real goOd" and said plans call for
adding 'plastics for the upcoming
school year. in addition. the stu·
dents wllcct aluminum c;ons: with
lhc resulling money being turned
over to the student coundl.
"My hope is that it will carry
over to the home," Bacr said.

Wage bill
'is sent 't o
full House

''

t

f.
.
.
• ·alDSMUBILE·•lEKIIS

l

.,.

•..

.•••
"

I•

•

•

''·'

'

I

'

.. .

•••
"

.
".

.. i :

•

'

.

.

I

.~

W!

I

•

•II

By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Pre5s Write~

COLUMBUS - Democrats and
lahor union s have on'c more chanc.:c ,
to keep Ihe stale's prevailing-wage
law intm: t.

.

that the banners to be attached to the
·new period lights will arrive this
Sentinel New• Staff ·
A plan for downtown landscaping week.
Members were requesled to join
was presenred and approval given to
·Pomeroy·
Councilman John Musser
move forward ·on work along the
and
a
work
crew Tuesday at I p.m.
parking lot's center section when the
Pomeroy Merchants Association met to begin a downtown spring cleanup.
do some painring, and install the colWednesday.
orful
nags along ihe rivcrfronl in
Esldie Hupp Landscaping was
prepararion
for Memorial Day.
hired to do the job at a cost of $1 ,545
Among summer activities men' wilh !he pr(/ject ro be completed
before.Memdrial Day. The landscap· tioned were the Great Ohio Bicycle
·ingwiil include deep root plants. like Adventure which will move through
hosta and lilacs; which will withstand · Rutland on June 19. Sue Maison !lf
the Meigs County Chamber of Comrhe flooding Ohio. il was reported .
To be considered later will he merce met with the mcrchimts to ask
·developm,ent of t.hc · s~ctions along the for volunteers to work ala luncheor&gt;
upJl\lr and lower parktng lms. Cost for f&lt;;&gt;r 3,000 bicyclists to take place at
!hose sccrions is $3.500 and $2.504 the Rutland Civic Center and to
respectively. ir was reported.
invite merchandise displays . Maison
Sources for assistance with the . suggested that merchants usc the time
· landScaping cost were Cliscussed.
to showcase the county as individual
' h was mentioned that funding merchanls, a village 'and an associ a·
might be secured from rhc Meigs tion.
County Commissioners who Monday
Diana Lawson announ~cd that
gave $5,000 to Racine for lights on a People's Bank will sponsor a perfor·
ballfield . Bobbi Karr will attend mance of the O.U. Communiversity
, Monday's meeting to discuss a dona- Band on Tuesday, June 24, hopefullion.
·
ly to take place in the new amphithe·
Susan Clark, president, reported atre. She proposed an an show to be

held in conjunction with the musical
event .
·
Dottie Musser asked for partici·
pation in the Relay for Life ol' the

where it touched down jusr northeast
of Wilmington, It also reportedly
rouchcd down along U.S. 22 lind state
Route 3, meteorologist Ryan Sandler
said.
The funnel cloud move,d northeast
into Fayetre County, where it touched
down rwo miles west of Jasper Mills.
The slorm also produced l-inch hail
in Washington Coull House .

'.

But th ey will race an uphill hattie
on Lhc House lloor c.Juring lm.lay 's
vote on a hill th ~at is attempting to

American Cancer Sot:icty to take
place at the Rock Springs · Fair·
grou.nds, July II. She said a m,cmor·

repeal prcvailinJ:l ·Wagc rcquircmcnl s
on M.:hool t:onslrUt.:tion prujccts.
The provision to e liminate part of
the prevailing wage i .~ indudcd in a

ial luminary service ~nd muskal
entertainment will be a part of the
program. Teams consist ·ol' 15 memhcrs each paying $10 with individ u·

hill th at,would speed up dis tribution
of $31XI mi II ion li&gt;r school construction projects' But debate. ahout .the

als also securing sponsors. she

explained .
Musser was named treasurer.
replacing Vicki . Ferrell who is no
longer i·n business in Pomeroy. She
reported $4,839.09 in the ge neral
'fund, not including $455 made on the
fashion show, and a $50 donation on
the cost of the banners from the local
Carpenters union . IL was also noted

that there is $1700 in the Christmas
hulh fund'.
.
Displayed at lhc meeting was a
Pomeroy Fire Department hear. a
limited edirion created hy the Ohio
River Bear Co. in celebration of the
departmcnt:s I50th anniversary. The
bears arc b&lt;;ing sold for $65.

Tornsdo blows through four counties

•'

t

•
•

crs' freedom stopped after South
Afri~an cltit.en Allan Hcalh made hi s
charges.
St. Vincent ol'fidals deny the allegations.
The Foreign Ministry is asking
South African officials to come to St.
Vincent, Prime Minister Sir James
Mitchell s·aid late Tuesday.
" We arc calling on all the people

Area students help make
world cleaner place to live

"I just can't: get over it," We~­
"Next year, we're g9ing for a ton."
'That, according to P(ll!leroy leiter ersmillcr said. "We can really use this
carrier Jim Pullins, is the goal for !he food. I've already' been able to help
leiter carriers at lhe Pomeroy Posr families wirh rMse donations."
According 10 Pullins, food was
Office. who collected I, 700 poun\ls
of noll· perishable food last wee"end · collecred on routes in Pomeroy,' but
items were also ilbnated by ipdivid~tiring their annual food drive.
uals
throughout rlie county, including
.tlie food collection effort was
·Racine,
Rudand" and olher areas.
heliNn conjuncrion with lhe Narion·
· al • Association of Leiter Carriers' Those items wel!,brQught in to the .
Njlibnal food Drive. Food donared Pomeroy Post O!!).~e.
Local grocers •lso contributed to
bY. ~ral customers was donal~ to
lhC
effort·: Bia B~ FIJO!IIand, Pow- By The AIIOCIIted Prell
theMe~s !Jnited Methodist Cooper· .
A rornado blew through four
ell's Super·Valu and )Crop:.
at!Ve Plrish.
Ohio counties Wedne5·
sourh-central
· ·~1be carriers rMre in town can
• ; 4-t yew's effort' yielded 1,2SO
day
evening,
but never hir a ciry or
only uy a bia '!hank you' to everypollncb of fQOd for local 'Jieedy..
residentill
area.
the National Weath'Ai::corclinJIO Berry Weyersmiller, one who helped," l!ullins Slid.."Onc:e
~
1M ·eciordinaror of the Parish's food aaain, the'pe~ Q(J'omeroy and !he er Service said.
No
injuries
or
strucllltal
damage
baiik;...lhil year's donation· frolll rhe surrounding area haVe dem~red
were
reponed
.
ieu.F·:curien is !he biagest sinsle l.heir generosity. E..-y dOIIIIlon wu
The tornado was first reported
dodillion of food ilems ever received patly apprecialed.l'
about S p.m. in Clinton County,
in .~.puiah's 2S-ycar history.
l

.r

I
I

FOOD RECEIVED • The letter carrier• of P.omaroy collecWd

~~meroy letter carriers
~ollect 1,700 poun~s of
ii)od during recentdrive

....

·f.~

•

~

:oyer 1 700 poullde for the Melaa United Methodist Caoperatlve
iP.Irteh' saturdiY,. Pictured wflh some of thellema donatad are
:.,uer carriers Jim Pulllna and Cerl Carmichael •.and Betty Wey·
?etamlller, coordinator&lt; of tha Cooperative Pariah food bank.

.
,.,

••'

.

on

··.·.

• '••

Studeirts at Melga High School and Southem Julllor High have been participating In recy·
cling project&amp; alnce tha beginning of the current ecl!ool year. MHS junior Amy See loads

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

"

•

Arturo Diaz. has said negotiations _to
pay up to $1 OO,OtXi to huy the Fletch-

.

"

·

One . of the Fletch.,·s' ilttnrneys.

Merchants hire Hupp Landscaping for
downtown
project at a cost of $1,545.

..••' .

•
•

hanged if convicted .

world a•eleaner, place in 1-"hich to .
live, some 'Meigs County students
are unwilling to simply stand on
the sidelines. ·
Meigs County Recycling Direc·
lor Kenriy Wiggins pointed out two
Meigs County schools rhat have
acrive recycling programs: Meigs
· · High School near Pomeroy and
Southern Junior High School in
Raeine.
· MHS juniors Amy See· and
Marquita McClintic began the
.recycling program at tbeir school
with assistance from rhe Meigs
County Recycling Office which
provided the recycling bins and
picks up the recyclable marerials
on a.regular basis.
McClintic said a ·school she
allended in Columbus had a recy· ·
ding program and wanted to sec a ·

.

•

KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent
Denying claims hy a West Virginia
couple and South African citizen that
they .were hribed to get 'out of mur·
der charges . Caribhcan oiTici.als have
invitcJ .South African police to in·VCS·
ligate .
,
James and Pcnella Fletcher of
Huntington arc charged with ·murdcrine water-taxi driver Jerome
.Jose ph. Their trial is scheduled io
start in June and they could he

had died of smoke inhalation.
Following; his arresl, Scarberry
was initially 'charged with aggraval·
ed arson and murder. lffound guilty
of murder, Scarberry could have
received life' fn prison.
Lentes also said Scarberry had a
prior felony convicrion for drug trafficking.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill accepted
the pleas of gtJiity to each charge and,
. as recommfn'ded by Lentes, senrenced Scarberry 10 the maximum on
each counr: two years for arson, 18
monrhs for bilrglary and ·six monlhs
for negligent homicide, a misdemeanor.
Lentes rold•Crow that rhe maxi-

~;~~~~:;~i~n~.ther~ars~on charge, m~m

.•

By DUGGIE JOSEPH
Associated Press Writer

$carberry sentenced

..

•

Mitchell
invites "
inquiry

..

Barker,' Rosemary Fluharty. Paul
Brannon, Sandra McKay, Maxine
Thomas, Susan Castevens and
Rebecca Bentz, custodians; Duke
Pullins, Gary Holter. Paul Brannon•
' Randy Lee an&lt;l Lester Stewart, main·
tenance; Janet Life and Diana Nelson.
accounts payable: Janet Life. Joan
Calaway, Diana Nelson, Laura Hawley, Janet Hoffman. 1Linda Bentz and
Rebecca Bentz, secretaries; Duke
Pullins, Tom ,, McKay and George
. Basim,. ~echanic's: and Arch Rose, .
Kay Glihlan; ~oe Maste~s, George
Con~ued on page 3

'

2 Sectlono, 12 P119e1, 35 cent.
A'Gannett Co. Newtpeper

~·astern approves
.........---School recycling-----i
personnel contracts .·
.

..

'

Mostly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In the upper 30a.
Friday, partly cloudy, high
near 60.
·
·

Kicker:

It was seen again on the ground

along state Route 13~ ncar Clarksburg in Ross County, Sandler said.
. Abo~t 7 p.m., the twister touched
down again ncar Greenland in north·
em · Ross County, he said . It rhen
skipped alo~g lhe ground toward
· Andersonville before lhc weather
service's spotter lost sight of it.

proposal ha s centered on whether the

state will hcncflt hy getting rid or pre·

·

vailing wage
Mcmhcr!'l of .the Hou se Finance
C0111111ittce Vi&gt;tcd . 1'1· 11 Wednesday

night' to send tlic hill to the Repuhli ·
can-controlled House. if the propos· ·
al passes. Go \i. Gcm!!c VoinuvidJ
would likel y si~n il into

lt~W .

Union· leaders ·have said the hill
could cost some construction work·
c&gt;·s ahout' $·1.500 each year. Repuhll-.
cans have said it would save millions
hccausc the stale now pays union negotiated wages w all sciHJrJ) constructi.ml workers.

An attempl hy Democrats
' Wednesday to take the issue out of
the hill failed . Most thought it should
h~vc been considered in a separate
bill.
Rep . . Vernon Syke.s, D:Akron,
said it was wrong to target construction workers without cutting the
money J&gt;aid to ilrchit~cts, contracrors
and even lawmakers .
" How many of us arc willing to
take a j 0 percent, a 2Q percent, or a
30 percent pay cut '! " Sykes asked .
~ut Rep. E.J. Thomas, R-Colum·
bus, defended the elimination Qrprc·
C011tinued on.Page 3

'

•

•

• .1

·'

�f

•

Comm.enta

Page2
Thui'Hiy, . _ 11. 1tl7

.

The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6fisfJd in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomer.oy, Ohio
614-1192-2158 • Fu 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publleher

•

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

n.. Sentinel - - - . to 1M fldlttK ftrJm -

on • btoad ranf18 of 11/&gt;pb.
" ' - ) INive lila bHI tiNinc. ol '-~111
T'ypfld #at·
- .,. prwtorrwt and 1111 may ba ad/ttd. E..ft lftollld Include • ....,.,.., ...
tlaythn. pllone numbor. 5p«:11y • dmlt,.,.'o • ,.,..,._to • , . _ , olflcM
or - · Moll to: lettoro to 1M Etlllor,
SOnllnel, Iff Cocut St., l'omoloy, Ohio

Shott_,.. (300 -

467ft; or, FAX to ff4·H141S7.

pub/1.-.

n..

Letters to the editor
Volunteerlsm

•
• Dear Ed1tor
~
Volun!eensm has become the
• theme across the nat1on The summ1t
• m Philadelphia, hosted by President
• Clinton, has -c:ontnbuted greafly to
emphas1ze the Importance of volun: teenng.
Opportunities to volunteer are
• everywhere m Amenca no matter
• what one's mterests onclude Head
• Start classrooms, hospitals, nursmg
• homes, fore depanments, homeless
: shelters, literacy programs, or even
_ pockong up litter along the road are
ways tor Amencans to 1mprove theor
commun111es by volunteenng. Devol·
ong two hours each week to help
someone that you may not know and
are not gomg to rcceo vc a paycheck
Irom woll have ots own rewards
I am a volunteer wnh AmcnCorps.
a natoonal serv1cc program Hllllated
by the Clinton Adm1mstra11on
AmcFoCorpsmembers of all ages and
backgrounds are placed m natwnal ,
state, and local nonprofot organizations acro.s Amenca m order to help
meet communities' needs I am wo1k·
mg at the Chold Care Resource Net·
work (CCRN ), Portsmouth DIStrict

.

Office. As an AmenCorps member
woth CCRN, I educate parents and
ch1ld care prov1ders about the Importance of quality child care and education. AmenCorps has g1ven me
many opportunities to ass1st our commumty. I have part1c1pated With
FEMA, after the floods on the South·
em Ohm counties, renovated a semor
cot1zens center m Zanesville; planted
hundred~ ot trees along an Athens
creek bank, and worked on many oth·
er commumty serv1ce proJects.
I have gained a lot of valuable
expenences and 1mponant lessons
from my volunteer ume wnh Ameri·
Corps Most of all, I have learned
w1lhngness to seek opportunities to
volunteer wherever I am If anyone
would like to d1scuss voluntecnng,
AmeroCorps, or the Chold Care
Resource Network, I can be reached
at 1-800-577-2276
Smcerely.
Heidi Evans,
' AmeriCorps Member
Portsmouth
Child Care Resource
Network
serving Meigs County

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
_
Excerpts of recent ednon~ls of statewide and nat1onal10tcrest from Ohm
, . newspapers
Akron Beacon Journal, May 8
G1ve Cleveland ns due. The city put on one fabulous show Tuesday as
11 played ho&lt;t for the first t1me to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 10duc11on ccrcmomes

It 's long overdue After all, on 1986 Cleveland's rock fanat1cs outvoted
fans 10 other ClUes for the honor of bu1ld10g a temple to enshnnc the top
performers and paraphernalia of rock musoc
But for II years, New York and Los Angeles played keep-away w1th the
North Coast for the honor - and the b1g bucks- of the onducttons
Stars were shon10g everywhere 10 Cleveland's sk1cs Whether they were
on stage. 10 the audience or on the fans' eyes there was no denymg Cleveland's hard-earned spot m the rock galaxy.
The Middletown Journal, May 6
State lawmakers arc cons1derong a b1llthat's desogncd to speed up the dos·
tnbuuon nf some $300 m1llion in puhlic school construction money The bill
has come under lire, however. lor a ccmtrovcrslal prov1s1on.
The dosputcd prov1s1on 10 the b1ll chm10atcs Ohm's prcvailmg wage rule
that rcquores the state to pay umon-negollatcd wagc!Pio all school cnn&gt;tructoon
workqrs
School construcuon workers arc naturally 1nccnscd about the provos1on
because cstunatcs mdocatc they would lose about $1.500 a year 11 the pre-· vailong wage requirement Is scrapped
Senate Republicans estimate that the state would save millions 10 labnr
costs
~
Although 11 may be pa10fullor constructl&lt;ln workers to accept. ah&lt;~ndonmg
" the 101lcx•ble prevailing wage requ1remcnt w1ll make sense to most tax-conl"'ious Oh1oans It should enable many struggling school d1stncts to do more
with hm1ted constructiOn dollars

y

;.!•

~

M

The (Toledo) Blade, May S

•
•

' •

Here's an expenment
Take an 1dca that 'l_padlockcd huildong that held a faolcd retaol cnterpnsc
~an be transformed 1010 a maJor auraruon Add the propositiOn that sc1c~cc
~an be enJoyable and mstrucllvc: Heat wnh the enthusoasm ol a group of
people who behcvc 10 a new enterprise for Toledo
The result: The Center of Sc1cncc and Industry
The winn10g formula os simple. and 11 works. The sc1encc museum docs
make sc1ence tun. And 10teres11ng It prov1des exh1b11s that mvolve people
and make them th10k
G1ven all the good thmgs about COS! 10 downtown Toledo. 11 perhaps
shouldn the a surpme that tens of thousands of people would want to enJOY
cve!)'thing tha museum has to offer: The ,fact that more than 100.000 people have passed through the doors s1ncc 11 opened March I 1s remarkable
COS! officoals had,proJected 250,000 visitors In the first year. and the
lace is 40 percent of the way to 1ts goal on JUSt e1ght weeks.
Th1s· IS one sc1ence expemncntthat has gone off with a bang

.. P
•

fhillieolhe Gaz~e, May !I
They came, they helped and now they arc leavmg.
The folks who rolled mto southern Ohio m the wake of lhe early March
proved that Qne part of the federal government IS workmg well. Flood
t1c11ms on 17 southern Oh1o counues got aid they needed quickly wben Fedfl'&amp;l Emergency Management Agency employees set up shot.
Smce March 7, as many as 237 workers filled FEMA's temporary head·
quarter~. rccelt;mg more than I0,000 applicattons for disaster assastance and
doltng oot more than $12 m11lion m hous1ng money to flood v1cti.ms
That's a lot of 11mely help

nooct

·.

..

•

'I

..~

•

.

,

OHIO

.

what t1me ot is? Raos1.ng children 1s
not only the ultimate onvestment, but
m fact, the only mvestment. fToday's
mfants w1ll pay the Soc1al Security

~as

only 52,550. Tllat trend is anuchild, or m the demographoc argot.
"anti-natal." (The numbers have
been compiled by C. Eugene Steuerle and Gondon Mermm of the Urban
Institute.) ·
.·
Ben Wattenberg
The proposed $500 cred1t would
only be a small step m makmg up for
taxes to finance the retirement of lost time. (It would take a cred1t of
tomorrow 's el&lt;!erly.)
about S1,300 to put us even with
Money helps on ra1smg children 1948 ) Moreover, bOth nlaJor pres•·
Extra money may mean that a mom dent1al candidates m 1996 pledged
may not have to go to work for a few that they would push for the $500
years, that day care can be of a h•gh- credit, not an ms1gmticantthought as
er quahty, or that dad can take the we are each day regaled wnh storoes
kids to a ball g~me. It can make 11 of voters steeped m cymc1sm.
eas1er to send a child to a pnvate
It 1s swd that $500.~&gt; too hule to
school, wothout waitmg for the argu- really help fam1hcs. whereu.~ some ol
ment about "vouchers" to be the straight econom1c mccoll ves
resolved
might show quicker result- Too ht·
I remember when a pregnant tie ? A family With two ch1ldren
woman JOklnJ!lv was said to be car- would get to keep an additional
ryong "a deduct1on " Back in 1948 $1,000 of theor money each year.
the federal dependent exempt• on was Over the 18 years of childhood,
worth $600 per ch1ld If that exemp· that's $18,000. That may be a triv1al
loon had kept pace woth mflat1on and matter to the tax philosqphers, butn's
mcome growth, it would have been not a small sum tor many Amencans.
worth $10,042 m 1996 Butn didn't Moreover. the credit would be an
keep pace The exemption m 1996 econom1c stimulus in 1ts own nght,
'

NEWS ITEM: CHARITON HESToN ELECTEP

J~r VICE P~SIDI:NT oF THE

N.R.A.

L--------------------------:----------,---..,..1

recip1ents woold spend the money on
goods, serv1ces and even on mvestments, hke mutual funds
T'wo thmgs should be clear as th1s
debate warms up First, like most
thmgs in the economoc realm. 11 is
about hfe at the margtn It is not a
panacea; 11 can help some at the proposed level. It would help more if 11
were made to match the proportiOn·
at value of the 1948 exemption.
S1mply put, a children's tax credit IS
the equ1valent of a European-style
child allowance. without running the
money through a nosy, centralized
governmental bureaucracy
Second. 11 IS red1stnbuuvc. It
helps those rearing children at the
expense of those not currently rear·
mg children. It gives help to the
strapped from the less strapped. ()f 11
did not do that, as Steuerle has pomted out on congressional testimony,
any m•ddle-class tax fix becomes
mostly a payment to the middle class
from the m1ddle class.) The tax credIt is the purest form of "pro-natalISm." wh1ch 1s exactly the broad polICY we should be lookong at.
It has become very dofficult to
ra1sc children in America Young couples complam that two earners are
needed to make ends meet, and so
children suffer from tack of parental
face umc Divorce, separation and
out-of-wedlock birth Jypi¢ally create
smgle-fam1ly households lackmg onSite fathers and cash. Day care 1s
often unreliable or expensive. Our
schools arc nothing to brag about. Is
11 any wonder that the Amencan fcrulny rate 1s below the replacement
level and has fallen for six stra1ght
years·&gt;
The $500 cred1t os useful m 1ts
own nght. As Important, IS the si_gnal
11 would send Remember what
George Bush said in New Hampshire.
"Message We Care." It's llmeAincrICa became a pro-child nation wuh
pro-child pohcoes.
Ben Wattenberg, a selllorfellow
at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of "Values Mat·
ter Most" and is the host of the
weekly public television progrtlm
"Think Tank."

hcans that woll lower capital gams
rates, Impose some premiUm oncreasCS on wealthy Mcd1carc rcc•p•cnts,
and reduce long-term domestic
spendong .. wh1le rcorocnt10g ot
towand educatiOn .. Clmton IS clearly stecrong toward the " New Democrat" moddlc, as he prom1scd 10
1996.
Clinton's allies 10 the endeavor arc
the conservative Blue Oog Democrats and the moderate New Democratic Forum, who don'tdom10atc the
Democratic Caucus in Congress but
arc gaining strength.
What Clinton is do1'ng 1s clearly
work10g .. economically and ~liti·
cally The stock market 1s rockeung,
unemployment and mtlatlon have
rarely been lower, and only the
cranky Fed os preventing an ceo·
nomic boom to roval Ronald Rcagun's. hut With the deficit falhng
Polls consistently ~ ~ow that a
maJonty of voters think Clinton
raoscd money Improperly or even 11tc·
gaily dunng last year's Ci'mpa•gn, but
hos overall approval ralm~s are stilt
m the h1gh 50s. wh1ch uan only mean
that the-country li~es th&lt;Jt he 's gcllmg
thmgs done. That\ clearly,, lur cry
from 11 presidency m "dnlt" ..
Dowd 's word.
Maybe Clinton ncc~s In remmd
Klcm and others ol what ~1s "'grand
agenda" is As 11 happens, he 's sched·
ulcd to do so m a scr1cs of commencement speeches thos month, m
wh1ch he Wilt return tu.hos campaogn
and maugural themes
Whotc Hot~sc a1des say that the
speec hes Will set lorth the ha."c

same 11me. "For some people," he
By Morton Kondracke
What are Maureen Dowd and Joc says, " unless we're havong a fight
Klem onhalmg? On the heels of a hi s- and losong, 1t's not mterestong."
tone balanced budget deal and a VIC·
The budget deal. even 1f it was
tory on chem1cal weapons control,
they're dcclanng the Chnton presi- Morton Kondracke
dency "defeated'" and "empty "
It"s crazy What's amazmg os that sealed by the nearly mag1cal arrival
Clinton and the Whole House staff arc of $225 billion m suddenly discovable to juggle multiple scandal ered money, st11l represents a tnumph
mqumes and subpoenas and sull of the politocal system and a fulfill·
funcuon so strongly on both foreign ment of the voters' l996comrnand to
and domestic pohcy
congressional Republicans and the
Not only IS Clintcm fulfilling hos Democratoc Wh1tc House to get along
election prom1sc to steer the country and get thmgs done
.. and the DemocratiC Pany .. toward
Moreover, contrary to some cnt1·
the center, he 's also got hog tests to cosms, Chnton took a b1g nsk m
come on taxes. Chona. trade and dcc1dmg to go for a deal As of
NATO
recently, before the Congrcssoonal
And. that 's JUSt at home Abroad, Budget Offocc "lound $225 b1lhon
he's working on an endangered Mod- 10 extra revenue over five years, Clindie East peace plan. a potential Kore· ton was about to s1gn a deal that
an catastrophe. and Russoan acccp· would have spht the Democratic
lance of NATO cxpansoon
Party, alocnattng hom from the people
Yet Dowd. on the New York he needs to support h1m m cnm10g
T1mcs. declares that the Clinton prcs- scandal trmls.
odency has become so delcmed. sn
Hi used the $225 holhnn mostly 10
aomlcss so anomoc, sntcchmcalthat appease Democrats .. by chmonat10g
Gcmge Bush now looms as a goant ,, reduction m ~,;o~H&gt;I-hvmg mcrcaswho bestrode the earth amb1toous cs for scmors. prnv1dmg more; moncompare~ woth Clmtcm dnlt ..
ey lor education and ch1ldrcn \health
And Klcm. 10 The New Yorker. Insurance. and cmunng that some
wntcs that "there 1s ,, strange empti- ncMy legal ahens won't he cut ntl
ness, an un-Clintnman onactovoty, 10 wcll,ore
the llrst hundred days of h1s second
It's still not dc,\f that the deal Will
term
He seems to have no grand won over all Dcmncr,ns Liberals
agenda, mdccd. nut much at all 10ctuding House Mmonty Leader
appears tn be happenmg "
D1ck Gcphardt (Mn ). arc wa1110g to
Whne House commumcat1ons sec what the unpact nl the new 1&gt;\td·
ch1ef Don Baer correctly labels such get's tax and spendong provos~ems woll
analyses "JeJUne" .. empty, pro- have on vanous m&lt;omc groups
foundly cy mcal and effete all at the
Still, m cuttong a deal w1th Rcpuh-

•

'

,,,

•

PA.

• IColumbu~f 62' I

GALLIPOLIS · Auct1on results
from the May 14 Galhpohs Producers Livestock Association·
HOGS Butc~r hogs, $44-51.50,
Boars, $38-42. Feeder pigs· $30 and'
down.
CAITLE· Steers steady Second
Wednesday of each month Cho1ce,
$67-69; Good. $60-63; Holstem,
$59-63; He1fers, steady Cho1ce, $66~8. Good. $60-62.
COWS· Price trend • Steady
Standard, $40-$52.50, Standard, $4().
52 50; Uuhry, $35.38, Bulls • Price
treand, steady. Butchers, $41-55
FEDDER CAITLE Price trend,
steady. Steers, $66-72 He1fers, $6269, Calves, Steers. $75-91; He1fers,
$66-74; Back to the farm babes,$145
and down Feeder lambs · S93; aged
slaughter sheep, $18
Feeder cattle and bood cow sale
Wednesday. May 28 12 noon

..
.

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Tomght Showers hkely north
Panty cloudy central and south wnh
a chance of showers central. Lows
from the m1d 30s southwest to around
40 nonheast.
Friday .A m1x of clouds and sunshme. A chance of showers northwest
late m the afternoon. Highs from the
• lower 50s northeast to near 60 south.

Dean R. Circle

Dean Ray Circle, 64. of Galhpohs, d1ed Monday May 12, 1997 at h1 s
res1dence.
Born August 8. 1932 in Athens County, son of the late Gilbert and Gay
Eden:Jd forecast
McDonald
Circle, he owned and operated Circles Restaurant and Catenng
Fnday night A chance of showbusmess
m
Galhpohs
ers Lows from the upper 30s northA
graduate
of NelsonVIlle H1gh School, he attended and graduated from
east to the m1d 40s south
Saiilrday A chance of showers. Oh1o Univers1ty He was a member and former deacon of the Forst PresbyHighs-from the upper 50s northeast tenan Church m Gallipolis and a former member of the Gallipolis Rotary
club. He served eight years on the Galhpohs C1ty School Board and served
to the'JI)id 60s south.
Suolllay... Dry Lows 45 to 50 and as a Pres1dent of the board He was a member of Mornmg Dawn Lodge 7.
the Scott1sh R11e Valley of Columbus. the Aladdm Temple, Gallipolis Shnne
lHghs 65 to 75.
Club
and the Cliffs1de Golf Club
Monday ... Dry. Lows 50 to 55 and
SurviVIng
are h1s w1fe, JoAnn Wmter Corde ?f Galhpohs; two daugh·
h1ghs m the 70s
ters, Jane Morfill of Boston, Mass., and Ann Dav1s ol Columbus, two step·
children. Pam Caldwell of Gallipolis and Raben Allen; five grandcholdren
and a step-grandchild
Servoces w1ll be 2 p m Saturday at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
temperatures m the upper 40s and woth Rev AI Earley off1c1atong Bunal w1ll be at a later date at the convcm1d 50s tonoght for mpst of the state
mence of the fam1Iy Fncnds may call at the funeral home Saturday at I p.m
Some parts of the state could drop unulthc ume of servoce .
down to the upper 30s tomght A b1t
In heu of flowers, contnbuuons can be made to the Amencan Heart Asso·
of warmmg w1ll bnng temperatures coauon, 7320 Greenville Ave, Dallas. Texas 75231 . or the Jr Golf Club at
back 1010 the 50s for Fnday
Cliffside Golf Course, 110 Chft'side Dr Galhpohs. Ohto 45631.
The record h1gh for thos date at the
Columbus weather stat1on was 92 set
on 1991 . The record low was 36m
1984. · ~unset today will be at 8.39
p m. Sltnnse Fnday woll be at 6·15
,
Umts of the Me1gs County Emer- pon, Joyce BJevms, VMH.
a.m
MIDDLEPORT
gency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded mght
4.52 p.m., Cole Street, Joyce
calls for assistance Wednesday Unots
Blcvms VMH;
respondmg mcluded·
9.35 p.m .• Middleport Volunteer
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Fire
Department to R1vervocw Street,
3 53 am., Frank Road, Pomeroy,
• Simmons ' and Sandy Needs The
gas
leak
at the James Hudson resiboand hored lise Burros as a tutor for James Richmond, Holzer Med1cal
dence
a high school student who needs Center. · ·
1
10· I'7 a.m.. Anne Street. Wilham POMEROY
home;instructlon. ,
4·29 p.m , H1land Road , Dorc
The' board approved a contract O'Donnell Veterans Memonal HosArnold,
HMC
wnh Tr1-County Vocational Sch?ol potal.
REEDSVILLE
2·58 p m , Meogs Mmc 2, T1m
_Board of Education for the Education
3·07 p m , state Route 124, Jusun
Neal.
O'Bleness Memor1al Hosp1tal:
Medo~~Resource Center to prov1dc
9·08 p m., Race' Street, Middle· Barber, HMC
services to the d1stnct
.
May,27. 28 and 29 were approved
as early release days for graduaung
senoors; and semors were exempt
from tafung year-end exams
For&gt;the school bu1ldmg program,
the ~\d approved the payment of an
mvmce from the architectural firm of
"I seen th1s humongous obJect
DENVER (APJ R1chard
Vargo, Cassady, Ingham and Gobbs
for pnn,ting costs, ~h1ch reproduced N1cJjols was runnmg late Hos w1fc commg to us out the aor. And 11 was
drawmg' and spec1ficauons for the was wa1tmg m the lobby of the spmmng hke a boomerang And you
recent b1ddmg process. The bo~rd Regency Towers ncar the Oklahoma could hear thiS 'WOO·WOO·wOO·WOO'
~lso apl!\'oved a rcsoluuon authon z- C1ty ledcral bulldmg so they could nmse. And I looked and I seen ·~ . and
mg F1ftiJ Th1rd Bank ofCmcmnat•to take their nephew, waotlng alone m I told her - I sa1d, 'Get down "'
place 1he dostrict's bonds for sale the car. to a doctor 's appoontmcnt
The Ryder truck axle smashed into
the
Ford Festlva's wmdsh1eld, onap·
Jurors on the tnal ol Tomothy
effective Wednesday
McVe1gh viewed black-and-wh11c pmg the rear end ol the compact on
Tho board also.
surveillance
pictures olthc lobby as the aor and dnvmg ot 10 feet back·
· Approved an cqu1pmcnt lease
Nochots
met
h1s
wofe and walked out ward w1th h1s Wile, Bertha, and
w1th G&amp;J Pcpso-Cola Bottling Comthe
doors
at
20
seconds
after 9 a.m .• nephew. Chad, ms1de
pany ,
N1chols raced after the cur
· Approved a rcsolut1on agrecmg the final frame the camera took that
"I grabbed mY wofc. and I grabbed
day
to partiCipate on all state and federal
Chad,
and I kind of ho-vered over
"I
took
about
two
steps
when
programs,
them
hkc
an old mother hen and took
there
was
a
terrd1c
explosiOn
·•
the
. Approved a depository agreeo!l
across
the street wnh them." he
maonlcnagcc
worker
testified
ment w1th Bank One. N.A .. for the
perood of June I. 1997 to May 30. Wednesday. "We h•lt heal and pres- smd
sure and 11 kmd of spu~ us around a
1999.
·Approved student accodcnt on sur- httlc bot
"I grabbed her and she yelled out
ance through Brogan Warner !nsurgomg on! I thought the boil·
Am Ele Power .........................41
'What's
ance Serv1ccs for the 1997-1998
Akzo ......................................61\
crs blowcd up .. We made a lunge
school year.
AmrTech ...............................63'4
. Renewed an agreement wnh lor the car because my little nephew
Ashland 011 ...........................4~•
LandiS and Stacfa. lnc .. for panel lev- - he was on the car...
AT&amp;T .....................................32\
A hlc!Ck away the ICdcral htuldmg
Bank One .............................. 42'!.
el mamtenancc and on-line techmcal
wa.s blown apart hy a bomh h1ddcn on
Bob Evans ............................ 14'1.
support scrv1ces,
a
Ryder
truck
the
same
truck
the
Borg-Warner ................•....•..:48'1,
. Set n spec1al meeting on TuesChampion
............................. 17Y
.
Regency
Towers
secunty
camera
day, May 20 at6 p m to d1scuss supCharm
Shps
..................
:
....
5
1~·
caught dnvmg by monutcs earlier
plcmcntal#;;ontracts.
City Hotdlng ..........................31 7•
• SettRc ncx1 regular meetmg on The glare obscured the drover's lace
Federal Mogul .............. ,.......... 29
Had N1chols left hos JOb at the
Gannett ...................•.•...........92'1.
June 18 at 6.30 p.m
Regency apartment bmlding on time.
Goodyear ................................56
he. hos w1le and nephew would have
Kmart ..................................... 14'1.
Lands End ............................. 28\
been dnvong past the Murrah buold·
Ltd. ........................................ 19~.
mg when the blast nppcd 11 apart. he
Continued from page I
OVB .......................................32'1.
saod .
One Valtey ...............................39
va1hng Wflle saymg II would save
Instead. the couple were caughtm
Peopl...................................32'1.
the state bf.twcen 5 per&lt;;ent and 7 per- a maelstrom of smoke, glass and
Prem Flnl ............................... 16{•
cent on sc~oo l bulldmg proJects
chunks of cars and bulldmgs as they
ROckwell ...............................67 '4
"That' S15 million that will be tned frantically to unstrap the scat
RD-Shelt ................................189
spent on someone 's children.'' saod belt of the or I().year-old nephew.
Shoney'e ................................ 5~
Star B111k ............:................. 41 ~
Thomas. who added that he supponed the concept of requmng prevail·
Wendy'e --····~························23'1.
Worthlngton ..........................18'!.
ing wage on other public projects
(
" Any fynher attempts to get nd of
Stock raporta are the 10:30
Children's
fishing
derby
prcvallmg w~ge m this state will not
a.m. quotes provided by Adveat
A ch\ldrcn"s fishong derby wall be
have my s4pport," he sa1d.
of Gatllpnlla.
The fi11ance committee d1d held Saturday. 9 a.m. to I p.m.. at the
remove a sect1on m. the btll that Fotked Run Sponsmen's Club on
would have 'ICquired diSiriets in the Curtis Hollow Road near Long Bot·
stale's buildl,j!·BSSistance prognun to tom. All children are welcome to participate.
took at alteroat1ves to new schools
FRI. SAT, SUN
Tbote alternatives included shanng
DfiiW
IAJIIMIC)RE IN
Dance set
buildinas a~ FOnsolidaung districts
SCREAM"
A round and square dance wtll be
But Rep ,.Thomas Johnson, R·
!AND
New CotK:oid. Slid the alternatives held at the VfW Post 9053, Thppers
VAL KIUIIR IN
may be incl~ m lhe final version Plams, Satunlay. 8 to II p.m Guy
THE SAINT..,,
of ~ bill, whicb has been strongly Thomas and True Country will prooppoiCd by l.bor unions.
vide the musoc.

Chilly temperatures to continue
; By The Associated Preas
•
• Low pressure and a cold front over
• Lake MIChigan ana Indiana will push
across Ohio tomght, causing showers
• and a few thunderstorms, the Nauon; al Weather Serv1ce said.
'
H1gh pressure will bli building
back into the area tomght and on Fn• :. day an~ th1s should put an end to the
· ' wet weather over all but lhe north·
' • eastern parts of the state by Friday
:
Plenty of cloud cover will keep the
•

!

Meigs EMS logs

a calls

Eastern board
.
. ...

Clinton purpose ol cqu1ppmg the
U S. population woth the cducauon.
sk1lts and economic conduoons they
need to function m the new mlormatlon-agc economy
He also may take on the ah1dmg
national ossues of race and class
mequality,though 1t 's not clear what
he 'll say
Next month, after the specchps,
Gltnton 1s set to wage 11 battle over
MFN trade status for Chona, With the
left of the Democratic Party and the
r1ght ol the GOP agamst h1m.
Down the line, there w1ll be anoth·
er fight over Congress' grantmg fast·
track authority to reach trade agree·
ments. The NATO debate J.!Cls slllrl·
cd after Poland, Hungary and the
Czech Republic arc formally inv1ted
to jom in July
Beyond that, there w1ll be budget
rcconc1hat1on ncgouat1ons, w1th the
Whnc House already threatemng to
veto a tax h1ll that includes cap1tal
gains mdcxmg or other provtsions
that swell the deficit m the yean;
heyond 2002
Th1s 1s nut the schedule ol a White
House locked m "mystifymg torpor"'
or "strange empuncss." Th1s admmistrauon may yet be brought down by
scandal, and that Will be a tragedy
hecausc th1s year poliucinns m Washmgton arc realty domg what the pen·
pic sent them here to do It may nut
be exc1tmg, butn's graulymg.

Condnued from page 1
Basom, Rhett Milhoan and Benjamm
,,~ Upton, bus dnvers. • ·
, The followmg were approved as
. ' certtfied substitutes· Nancy Jo
Aldridge, Robert Austm, Deborah
Barber, Dorothy Bentz, Betty Boggs,
: lise K Burris, Craig Butz, Christi A.
Colhns, Sharon Edmonds. Lmda
. Faulk, Kathy Jean Oarnson, Michelle
Gillilan. Lucille Haggerty, James
Hayman, Kelly Henry, Janelle Hme·
man, Jennifer Jones, Kelly K1sner,
' Vinas Lee, James Ryan Lemley, Dar·
• ing P. Logan, Tricia McNickle, Tanya
Meadows, Melmda Norman, Wilma
· Parker, David K. Ramey, Doane R1cc,
Angela Rigsby, Nathan Robmette,
. Heath Savage, Kristl L. Skinner,
Nancy Wachter, Grace E Weber,
Maxmc Whnchead, Donna Wolf,
A th
J Xenos and Pamela
z 1~kl:ny
'
The board accepted the res1gna;; uon of Nancy Scarbrough as a tutor.
:: The follow1ng students were
, approved for open enrollment. Aman' da Michelle Roush, M1chael O'Nall,
: Casey Dean McKnight, Amanda
' Nicole McKnight, Kmlyn Nicole
, Reesman. William Joseph Deem ,
~ Trav1s Lee Kocn1g , N1kolaus
Richards, Marsha Nicole Persons
• ' and Trenton M1chael Koemg.
:·
In other personnel matters. the
l 1, board approved the request of Angela
: Houck for sock leave and mnternny
: : leave, and approved the apphcauons
• for professional growth of Deedrah

(Morton Kond....,ke is ell:eculive
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)

·..
""". . ----------------------~
The Daily Sentinel

••

!USPS 313·960)
Pubh~hed e~~y nrtemoon, Monday throush
Friday, Ill Co••rt St • Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
01110 V:iUey Publl1hms Compooy!Oanneu Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Pll. 992-21!6 S..:ond
clnn poAinge pa1d at Pomeroy. Ohio

he part ol hos political legacy
" I' vc spent a lot more 11mc w1th
African-Amcncans than mos.t pohti·
cmns have - most whnc pohll·
cians, .. the prcsodcnt said during hos
1995 meeting with the black colum·
n1sts.
Now it's time for him tu show that
he's learned somcthipg.
·
The pres1dcnt says he supports
equal opportunity, but not equal
result~. Affirmative action opponents,
on the other hand, demand equal
results as proof of equal opponunity.
In theory, 11 can be IIIJUed ihat both
positions make sense. In practice,
c:ach has been used selectively to
lavor wh1tcs over African-ArneriQns.
Chnton can't bnng u.~ toaether if
he docsn 't understand what it is tMt
tears us lplll. Whatever his plans for
bridrina the racial d•vide, he mull
hegin by convtncina Afi'il:an.Amer·
teans tMI he is an honest ~
That won't be cuy.

'

I,

MeMber: The Auocutted l'rt-!1!1 nnd the Oh10
New1poper A11M&gt;cinlioft

... POSTM~STER l Send DddreJI' CorretiiOft!l to

1'he Dnily Senhncl Ill Coun St • Poltlfl'oy.

.~ Olno 4576'1

)

SUBSCRIPTION RATilS
I)' C.rrltr or MotOI' Roult

'

On&lt;wm. . . .. . .. ... •
On&lt;M- .
On&lt;Y..,

...

. $200
.. • $870
$10400

SINGLE COPY PRICE

' Daily ... .. .. .. .. .... . .. .... .. 35 c....
'

•

Subscribel"'l not delirina to pay lite cnmer may
• ~ mnilln advance dtrecl to 1be Daily Senu..el
, 1 on a dne. 11"' or 12 month bull. Cftd1t wdl be

~--hNo '"bl&lt;ripliOA b)' 111111 permined In 01111

- -corrier-lo l\'llllllle.
PwbiLiher ....... rhe riaht 10 adjUM l'llel dlr• ( ,., ..., nbtcriplloo period. Subl&lt;ripdon -

1

=

ft\ly be \l...k
tpda&amp;

or me • '

I

b)'&lt;..........
• ,

MAILSUIICIIFI'IONI

·-Mo4ttt~
' ·
13--·
"""'"""'"'" ''"'" "' $27:10
- . . ..
...... .................. S!JIZ

-

I

sa-............... . ....... ~.stou11

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

~~.12125
'
flllllltl-~
.................................

I

••

..

1

I

and George Hilt in 1962. There are now 35
etoree In the chain. An Informal birthday party ~
will be held In all .stores Saturday with tree hot
doge and beverege tor cuetomera from nOOl\ •
until 2 p.m. Blrthdey cakes will be senied In all
the stores at 2 p.m.

STORES TO OBSERVE 35TH ANNIVERSARY - Quality Ferm &amp; Fleet Stores will
observe their 35th annlvereary on Saturday,
May 17. The flrit Quality Farm &amp; Fleet Supply
location Wile a renovated grocery store In Hudaonvllle, Mich. H was opened by brothers Jack

New veterans monument
set for May 24 dedication

Clinton unclear in mes.sage on. race "relations
By DeWAVNE WICKHAM
move
uatcs he will not allo~t: states under
Gannett News Service
So what should the preSident say pressure lrnm the federal government •
B11l Clinton wants to talk about to the graduating class nl the ~i,stnr- to dismantle the segregated h1ghcr
raec FClauons
ocally black Maryland school - the education systems they built to do so
The pres1dent1s gmng to give sev- alma mater of NAACP prcs1dent at the expense ot black colleges and
eral addresses on commg days ahout Kwc1si Mfume, wntcr Zora Neale umvcrs111es. The attempts by some
thos natmn's most ontractable prob- Hurston and Parrcn Mitchell, the states to merge black schools mt/1
lem The speeches, the first of wh1ch state's first black member of Con- wh1tc mstitut1ons - and out of cxosos expected thts weekend at Morgan gress?
tcncc - os a cymcal ~csponsc to thos
State Unoversity, are meant to ready
To begm w1th, he should say he legtllmatc demand, he should tell the
the natoon for a presidential initiauvc w1ll do what is necessary to ensure school's graduates.
to do something about it.
that the backlash agamst affirmative
And at some poini Clinton ought
Just what Clinton intends to say action doesn 't put college out of to assure them he will 'light Congress
-and do - about our rac1al troubles reach for future generations of black for the fundmg needed tn reduce the
IS unclear. But 10 a Whne House
students He should tell theq~that it's growing backlog of employment dosmeetmg with a group of black . unfatr to rcqu1rc hlsloncally black cnmmallon cases in the Equal
columnosts shortly after the Million higher education institutions to have llmploymcnt Opportunnies ComMan March, he left himself httle wig- the same admiss1on standards as mission. Wothout suc'ha,cummlllncnt,
gle room around an aggressive white schOols.
some members of Morgan\ class of
response to our rac1al d1v1de.
He should say that as long as '97 may see their dreams for a dc&lt;;ent
"The last thing I want to do is to majority-black publtc school dis· JOb tum into a Iona nlpmarc
study a problem that we already tncts laclc. the fundmg and resources
The word lealunr out or the Whnc
lc.now aboat, and to gtve any of us , of those dominated by whites, an House is that Clinton plans to create
tncluding the president, an excuse for affirmative effort must be made to a comm1ssion, or convene a )li'CJi·
inaction," Clinton sa1d. "I don't open college doors to a brolld cross- dcnttal conference.' to lf'PIIlc with
want an excuse for onaction; I like to section of African· Arnencans.
the problems our I'IICial division eredo things, and I hke to see things
Clinton should tell MOIJIII's arad· ates. It is sAid he lftnts this ell'on to

pril h1gh temperatures

IMansfield Iss' I•

Despite naysayers, Clinton's riding high

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

GPLA results

Weathe 1

Friday, May 16
AccuWealhcr• foteelllit for daytnne

Is America pro-·child or anti-child?
By Ben Wattenberg
Amenca is a pro-child natJon
With anti-child poliCieS
There IS senous talk on Cap1tol
H1llthatthe proposed $500 tax credIt for children w11l be substantially
reduced .. perhaps to $200 Why'
There IS only a fimte 3111ount of money in the alleged budget agreement
for tax cuts, and that amount cannot
accommodate the $500 credn as well
as the other proposed tax drawdowns for estates, IRAs, capital gams
and college tuition
ld10tic. The tax credit for choldren
os by far the most omportant Cunously, 11 os the one that gets the most
cnUc1sm, sometimes by supply-s1de
conservatives, those great populiSJ
tnbunes, who say n's not the way to
cut taXes because, get thos, "people
woll only spend 11." In supply-speak,
that means the money won 't be
" mvested" or "saved."
The planet these parucular supplymans mhab1t os unknown to me.
Raismg children os not an investment? Toger Woods doesn't play
golf1 Stephen Hawkong doesn't know

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio·

Thursday, May 15, 1987

2

"

_ .._, _____ ..____...........72

Running late may have
saved one family's life

Stocks

··-

Wage bill...

Announcements

.'

-·-·-

'

The new Racme Veterans Monu- hold stone markers bean ng the name,
ment will be dcd1cated at a ceremo· rank. branch of scrv1cc and &gt;erv•ce
ny Saturday. May 24 at the Amcncan dates ol area veterans The monument
w11l also feature park benc hes and
Leg1on Post 602 m Racmc
Work began last fall on the mon- landscapong lor Vtsll(lrs
The ded1cauon wo ll he begm at II •
ument, located beside the American
a.
m
w1th a lunch .n 1hc American •
Leg1on hall and across from Star M1ll
Park Much of the work was done by Lcg1on Hall. The guc't speaker w1ll
volunteers usmg donated supplies. be the Rev Charles K1rsch, w)lo t
The Yollagc of Raconc supplied some hegan h1s momstcotal c,\reet 1n the
equopment wh1lc the Amencan Racine area m the late 1940&gt;.
Project coord1n.1tor Carroll Cleek ·
Leg1on Post provoded the land
The monument consosts ol a 30- saod names can be .1ddcd to the mon·
by-30-loot concrete slab wh1ch will umcntat a later dmc

Pomeroy Court News
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
processed 27 cases on Monday mght
m Mayor's Coun.
Forfe1tmg bonds were. Joseph
Runyon, Conconnau, disorderly con·
duct, $83; Roger Dale Roush, Park·
ersburg, speed. $67; Melanoe Sm1th,
South Webster. speed. $76; Daron
Logan, Middleport, assured clear
distance, $63. Lcllcoa D. Hart,
Guysv1lle speed. $71, M1chacl
Robens. speed. $64, Dav1d C. Warth,
Hartford, W Va, B1lly Sergent. Galhpohs. open contamcr in a motor
vehicle, $63, B1lly R1chcndollar.
Ironton. sped, $69, Oscar Salmeron.
Ch1cago, Ill • ex pored . rcg1strauon,
$83, no operator's license, $83, speed.
$83, Cynthia J. Bateman, Athens,
speed, $69. Gerald Curry. Pomeroy,
no taol lights. $63, Cathy Clifford,
Long Bottom, speed. $66
Fmed were. Valcna Rogers, Poont
Pleasant, W Va , cxpucd rcg•strat1on,
$63 and costs; Crystal! Gheen.
Racone, no seat belt, $45 and costs,
traff1c hght vwlauon, $63 an~ costs.
T1mothy Gheen. Long Bouom, lol·
tcrong. reduced to costs only. Kevm
Arnott. Racmc. FRA suspensoon,
$150 and costs, speed, reduced to

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
' WEDNESDAY ADMISSION
Wolliam O'Donnell. Pomeroy
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES ·
None

costs only. Kombcrly Fetty. Pomeroy,
FRA suspensiOn , $150 and costs, 30
day vch1clc 1mmohohzat1on.
Rebecca Swondcll.' Moddlcport.
FRA suspenso on. $150 and costs. Jay
Day, Racmc, no motorcycle endorse·
ment, $63 and costs. Donald Yost. ·
Rutland, lollenng , reduced to costs
only, Vincent Stunc, Moddlcport, no
operator's license, $6~ and costs;
Dav1d Sm1th, Racmc. pubhc mh&gt;XI·'
catoon, S113 and costs; Terry D Day,
Pomeroy, consummg underage. $88
and costs, Ronme Lee Dugan, Rut,
land, fall"' to comply. Steven W.
Walker, Sossonvillc. W Va , expired
rcgostrauon. $63,and costs
I

r- STARTS TOMORROW""\

GROSSE POINTE
BLIINK
9 ::10 DAILY
1~20

71MEES SATURDAY/SUNDAY

(a)

,..--- NOW SHOWING ___,_

FRTHERS'
.,

·· ~ nll

DRY

M o IIAO!:II I • •, ,...

7•10 1 9:20 OIULY

MATIMKR&amp; SAT/SUN 1 10,1.20 IPG1ll

THE FIFTH
ELEMENT
...... . . ."""""'"
.,._
1 00 9 . ] 0 llAU.T

~TINBBS

SAT/SUN I 00 ];)Q

R

BRERKDOWN
•• •uRn ,. ,,.. "'" ••
~

1.20 ').10 DAJI..Y
KATINIKS SAT(SUN 1•20 )•tO IR.

RUSTIN
POWERS
7:20 q 10 DAJI Y
TUlliS SAT/SUN

1.20,1 ~ 10

IPC1l

IOMY &amp; MICHEU "S
NIGH SCHDDL REUNIIN
7:10,9 . 20 DAILY
MA'I'JN88S SA'!'(SUJI 1:10 , J:ZD (RI

•

TIM ALLEN IN

UOLIJIIND
oo """'"''" • •r.n
~u ~...,.

7:00,9 JO l.ll!.l t.Y

JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE,.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY

ANACONDA '""

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

MATINBIS SAT/ SUN l • OO,l r JO IPC1ll

LIIIR
LIIIR
'fll0 9:l0 DAILY
1

MATlNBKS SAT/SUN 1 10 ,). 20 (PG1 3 1
CONING SOOitl ''niP. LOST WORLD'
I

' ADOIC1'ED TO I..OVI!'

Cl~ C~TIFICATIS

AVAILAALEl

IN MEMORY
Funeral services for ATC James Mills, U.S.N.
were held on Oct. 9, 1996. Officers and men of the
United States Fort Fisher (LSD 40) burled at sea
the remains of James Mills.
U.S.S. Fort Fisher (LSD 40)
conducted the burial-at-sea
ceremony In a calm sea
enroute from San Diego to
San Francisco, Calif. All
military cus.toms were
observed and all proper
respects were paid . II)
memory of James, son of the
late Russell Mills. Commander S. B. Markey, U.S.N.
and L. T. Edward P. Kearns Ill participated as the
Protestant lay readers.
,
The ceremony took place on the flight ·deck
shadowed by the United States , flag flying
proudly. A seven-member U.S.N. Honor Guard,
dressed In dress blues, provided a 21-gun salute.
The cremains were carried to the starboard
side of the flight deck In company with the .......... .
Flag and scattered to the sea.
Sadly missed by his wife, Sally, and his
mother, Allee Mills, sisters, Adrlen"' Munns and
Rae Ann Gwlazdowsky, Brian Nutter and many
friends.
1\

•

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

'

'

'

.

'•
'

I

Heat notch 96-81 .victory·over Knicks to force sixth game
By JOHN PACENTI
MIAMI (AP) - An ugly brawl
' could end up looking pretty good to
1
• 'the Miami Heat heading into Game
. 6 of their Eastern Conference semi, final series against the New York
·
Knicks.
.
,
1be melee in the final minutes of
the
Heat's 96-81. victory Wednesday
-r

night could result in suspensions fm
Knicks players who came off the
bench to join the tig~t. Miami Sfl!"· .
ing forward P.J. Brown and Knicks
backup point guard Charlie Wru:d
also are subject to possible suspen·
sions for getting the melee started.
. "Certainly I'm very concerned,"
New York coach Jeff Van Gun.dy

Scoreboard

...
''

..

I 2 .676
1'6 590

Octroi!

1,7
].2

9 ',~

22

.W~

10

2 .~

l7.'i

2~

I -~

flU~

......... .. : ~ )
;\nuhe•m
... 17
0;1kland .......
. In

l.'i
19
14

5K1

.,

(Lieber 1-4), 7:05p.m,
'
Htl\I SIOn (f1oh 4- ~)
P:hlludc:lphill
rl..citer 3-Jl. 7:0:"i-p.m.
San Fr:m..:1sca I Rueter 2·0) m Montreal (Bull miter 2-4). 7 ::\~ p.m.
Los Angde11 (Purk 2- I) til CINC INNATIIMorgnn o.4).7:l 'i p.m.
ColoruJo (Rirr.. 6-4) :u N.Y. Mc:t s
tCI;~rk 4-2). 7:40p.m
S1. Louis (Alan Benes ~-41 AI Atlanta
tSmnlt7. 4-h 7:40p.m.

-'

a.

-'
l

,..

.'1 ' ·

Wei'iltm Diwilion
Tua~

Basketball

,.

~7 :

~

400

"

Wednesday's scores

'

Wednesday's
second-round score .
Miami%. New Yurk HI; New York
. leadli ~ries ~-2

Friday's games ·

-~

Saturday's game
Set11tlc ill Huuston.

·

p.m., it'

Tonight's game

IA IJrc:d 1 - ~ / , X · O~ )UII
Detroit fl110mp~un ~- 21m K an s~~ City
{Ros:Jdo J- l ). H:O.'i p.m.
N.Y. Y&lt;~nkec! (Mcndoz:1 2· 11at Texas
(S:mtana 1-m . Md5 p m.
Milw&lt;tukee (McDonald 4-2) 111 Anahciin (FiJi ley 0-3). 10:05 p.m.
Balli more (Erk kso n 0-I) m Seuule
lManim.'l 1-., ). 10:05 p.m.
Chic&lt;1g11 White So.1i I Ah'nr~z 2-4 ) 111
Oakland (Admn~ 2-4). I &lt;Nj'if p.nL

Dcnui1 :11 Ctllorado. K:,1() p.m.

Friday's game

...

lti
19
24

.b67
.SYO
.:'i!'i6
. ~n

JOK

Ctntrul ()lvldon

'"

...

N y H:uij!.CfS :II Ptuladelphlil. 1· m

I~

Houston .......... ....... 2.1
StLouis ........... 17
Chicngu ................. ll
CINCINNATI ....... II

19 · .S2S
21 .447
1fl _2f.J7
26 .297

Divis~ .
Sun fmm.:i~cll ........ 2~ 13 . 6~Q
Colorodn ............ ...22 15 . !i9~

-.

-•.
•

•

3

H'·:

•

S;m

·••
"-..
•
~.
•....•
.....•
.••
...•••
......

Frnnd~..:n ~ -

CINCINNJ\'l"l

ll£11\ 1996

CHEVY .. £.Wl 1997 PONT.
CAMARO Z·28 ..
Convertible, va; PW, PL, air,
GUN~ _.,. .

•.
..
.""'·.
.

t)AKLI\ND RAIDF.RS : Rt·· ~ itnt.!d
OT Rnhcrl Jctllci ns.
~1::1\lTLE SL::J\HAWKS Si~IICtl TE
Deems Mlly . ·Ht:kii."Cd TE Cnkma11 IJI."II
and en Sdwyn Jnnc.~ .

tiO)

Hockey
Nutiunal Hm·k~y l.~u~u"

Tonight's games

UUHAI.O SJ\Af\ES rir.·d John

San l&gt;i~ttn &lt;Hitchcuel ~-Jl :u Chica·
t!ll t"uhs ICIL'ilillo 1-5). 2:2011.111.
'Cnlorado {hailey ~-2 1 :11 Piu sh u r~ h

Mnr.:_klcr, t:t.!nt:ralm&lt;mH!!•'r.

J•HO ENIX COYOTES

S1~nnl

&amp;-anGa~mm .

(C'ofdnvil 2· .1). 7:05p.m .

-

·
cruise, ~eyless entry.
Was $27,797
.
.

NOWONLY

Was $39,814

-,

[I

¥

"

TRACKER

Much, much more.

2 TO CHOOSE FROM I

Was $15,889N_ow
' ON' I 'Y
·
"'

~&amp;£Wl 19tJ7 GEO

1997
SEDAN DEY(JLE

MtW\

.. J!I.'

••, .
....

4X4 ~ Fun - Hurryl

.

Was $16,629

NOW ONLY

II

NOW ONLY

..• .

.""

~~

.....,.,_ ,..
·~

... r

..•-·

M£Yil 199.7 CHEV.

M£111 1997 CHEVY
MALIBU

CAVALIER

4 Dr., aulo.; air, ·stereo. Must Seel ·
SAVE.:. SAVE- SAVE
3 TO CHOOSE FROM I
IW•••
$13,492
Was $17,091

.

NOWONLY

515

NOW ONLY

966 .~$1

lllWl 1997 OLDS

ll£1111997 OLDS

CUTUSS SUPREME

V6, auto., air, stereo.~more .
2 TO CHOOSE FROMI
Was$19,825

"""''.

..•..
~

•a

~ --

w :·

-..... .
..,.

"' "
••
....
.....

NOW ONLY

767

51

5

...~

•
••• ••

!..
.•
••

.•:
;..
.
•
•
/II

I....
:.

i'he tource people rely on most for
automobile ads* .

•..
••

•

7%
'
'

Get ..-ore Impact In tha newepaper.

.:;;~

:::;,
:-;-·
.......
:;::;
_ ,

~·

;~;

4 cyl., auto., air, PW, PL, PS, PB, rear defogger, tilt, cruise, AM!FM cass., only 18,000 miles. Blue. ·
· .
96 BUICK PARK AVENUE Loaded, 27,000 miles. Beige .................................................................................................u •••••$21,800
95 CAMARO
·
..............................................,..........................................$12,900
V6, 5 speed.' ps~:·ps·:;i~:·AMiFM~;;::·tiit:·~;i;;:·;iti~:-~h;;i~: ~.t~ps, 23,~ ~iles. ,,.. .
.
.
.

R.H'kTilpt

The Daily Sentinel. The Welcome Medium.
••

·;1(·~ · .. \It'd

LLt tJ .... s t1 n~·J ~~ u

I

UPdll

Ill!

::;·•
":.
'!' ~•

!:.
.....
:=:

::

•

~ ~~------~~-----------=~----~~~-----,

~~

Middleport Trophies ·
.and Tees

'

I

'

'

"

'

. By RONALO BLUM .
NEW YORK &lt;APJ .- George
Stembrenner's legal strategy agumst
husebull ts becomtng clear. His
lawyer, criticiling haseball 's executive cnunci1. suys some owners ··arc
trying to take some of the Yankees' .
money for their teams." ..
. A day at\cr Steif!hrenner was
suspended from baseball's ruling
body i'or suing the sport. Yankees .
lawyer David Boies said Wednesday
the suit prohahly will he served with·
in scvcml days. which would lead to
an injunction hearing . The Yankees
and' Adidas sued allcr haseball told
them they could not sell T-shins at
Yankee Stadtum .contarntng logos of
!loth the team and the company.
"Every memhcr qf' the execuuvc
council has an interest in the out·
come." Boies said. "One of the car-

1211-010-3=7 12 2 '
2112-0 10-&lt;1=5 7 I

dinal principles in this country i~ you
shouldn't have an interest .when
you're a judge in the _case ...
Acting commissioner Bud Selig
declined to reply to Boies' remarks.
"It's not worth commenting
ahout," Selig said. ·
The Mnjor league Agreement
pruhihits · teams and owners from
suing the commissioner's ol'licc.
The ci.ecutive council - eight owners or their rcprcscnlalivcs nnd lhc

two league presidents - has ·ruled
· ha,chall since Fay Vincent 's li~rccd
resignation on Sept. "/, 1992.
"The rules limiting lawsuits
agt1insl the commissioner were .
bruught in at a time when you had a
commissioner who wus a neutral
person ahovc and ~epurate from the
panl\:hial intercsls nl' the clubs, able
·to
quasi-judicial functions,"
. said. ·

Trackless Carpet
•Thick, heavy pile
•100% nylon
•Scotchguard
•32 colors

SALE

$1600

Sq. Yd.

Sculptured Carpet .
• Continuous filament nylon
• 12ft. wide
• 8 colors

SALE

$1499
.

Sq. Yd.

· Berber Carpet
• Easy care Olefin/Nylon .
·• Great tor kltchenal

s1 o~~d.
Installed

.SALE

$12~~d.

QUALI1Y CARPETS AT
, AFFORDABLE PRICES
• Free No Obligation Quotes
• Satisfaction Guaranteed
• Furniture &amp; Appliances Moved Free
• Free.removal of old carpet ·

installed

Store ours
9:30-5

GIM128

Monday Nlaht

180 N. ~Avenue

\

'

.

•18 Colors

•100% Oldefan Pile
•18 Colora
• Soli resistant

\

'

.

LeveVLoop Carpet

SALE

OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5
,.

ROLL
VINYL

Berber Special

•hft..,: 71rt I..,.X. lokrlw F.jfR-IIHfiWIJ .'tNtWJ ht• C.1ntH."'I Mnr.artlt. lnu·rYK·w! h•• ~ lmhn.m. Mtu11.·.t.
~.

NO·W~

17 Patterns in stock
12ft. wide
Sale

J

',O(J ( m dr JvL·
lor ~~1 1 BJrLUS

1 'tli.V

d IHCP 1 ,lr lltn•,' H~,k

e)G\WEII

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

it--

-96 GMC K-1500.Jii'ICKUP 4X4, V8, auto., air....................·................................................. ~ .............................._
................ ~ ..•.•.•$17,895.
94 GMC SIERRA PICKUP V8, auto.1 PS, pa, air, tilt, cruise ....................................................................................................$13,983
95 TOYOTA TACOMA PICKUP 4X4, Ext. ca.b, low miles .................................................:......i.......................... ~··.········..········· $14,~ .
95 JEEP WRANGLER 4X4 Soft o~tp, I()C)ks good....;..............................~ .........................~,·~'"· ..................................................... $8,800
95 CHEVY SUBURBAN 3/4 TON 4X4 Loaded, leather, wtute, Ext............................................................................................
_
$26,90C)
89 OLDS DELTA 88 V6; a'uto.,air, extra clean ..... ~ •• ,.........................................·......................................,................................... $3,ac;»o
8'7 OLDSMOBILE 98 Auto., air, V6, runs great ................................................................. ,.~.........................·.·.:.-......~ ................. $:4,200
94 FORD RANGER, Air, 5 speed, PS, PB, bedllner ··~..................................................... '"'·······............................... ~············· $$8.195
92 GMC JIMMY SLE V6, auto .• air, PW, stereo,tih, cruise .................................... u .......~·· .............................. ~···············: ......... $1,485
95 CHEVY BLAZER LT 4X4 Leather. CD player, more....................................................................................................~ ....... $19,~
95 CHEVY BLAZER LT 4X4 25,000 miles, one owner,
.
$21,496

h~-A used

r.Aag6tl~es

••

~

95 CAVAUER LS 4 cyl., auto., PS, PB, PW, AM/FM cass., tilt, crutse, 38.000 m1les. Rei:L .. ..... .............................. ............... $9,800
96 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 LS Loaded, 31,000 miles. White........................~...............,......................................................$17,995

19% '

\

· -=

96 CORSICA ........................................ ~ ...........................~................................................. .,....................................................... $10,900
. 71%

TV

•..• .

!,..

o

shopr""

:•

~:.

"" '
" ' ·•

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

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

.Weekly rewei!Niptrs
Qr

..••

96 MONTE CA.RLO ~S, Red, only ·7,000 miles .............:,..................................................................................~."•••••• ~ .................$15,9110
94 CHEVROLET CAVAUER 2 DOOR Auto., 4 cyl., PS, PB, 42,000 miles. Purple ............. ,................................................ ~ ••• $7,650
96 BUICK PARK AVENUE Loaded, extra clean. 32,000 miles. Maroon ..................,............... ~ .............................................. $21 ,BOO
96. PONTIAC 'GRAND AM
·
..................................................................................
.
$12,400
V6, air, tilt, cruise, PW, PS, pow. windows, 4 door, 32,000 miles. Red.
·
·
· ·
95 MUSTANG
• .. ........................~.................................................... $13,800
va, air, auto.; Ps:·?a:ti}i·:;;;;~~i:;~·i~~·~~~i;~i:'AMiF¥';~;::·~;;;;j;:·~~~ 13,000 miles: Blue.
.
. 93 GEO PRIZM
·
•
·
o~o ~ooooooooooouOoouoooouooooooooooooonoooooooooooooooo $7,900
4 Dr.• 4 cyl., 5 speed,air, PS, PB, AM/FM cass., tilt wheel. Extra clean, 32.~ miles.
.,, .
·
·
95 PONTIAC FIREBIRD V6, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, air, AMIFM cass., 27;000 mtles. Red , .....,.............................. ~ ..................... $12,900

v:s. Dally _,epapere

••

~

::·

'

.

.·

t•

•-

USED CARS '·

A!;cel~rate your auto sales; advertise in the newspaper.
Customers are 7 times more likely to use the newspaper
tha~ cel~vision as their primary ad source.

.......

can go back to Florida State. "
to ru'l\.ble'?"
Ward, who won the 1993 HeisAft~r being physically outplayed
FLOOR
man Trophy as the Seminoles' quae· ' by th~il&lt;nicks for most or the s.eries,
COVER·
terhack, denied he tried to hurt · the Heat finally responded in Game
lNG
. .
5. '"Illty . were trying to test our
Brqwn .
"I was just t~ying to protecl
manhood," Hardaway said.
myself." Ward said. "I'm not going
Miami led 35-34 althe half, then
to let anyone treat me like I'm a lit· . started hitting jump shots in the sectic kid."·
·
ond hal f. The Heal got good pro· Van Gundy said it is not an auto·
duction from their shooting guards,
matic suspension to leave the bench,
with Voshon Lenard gelling a teamand tliat only ·Brown should he kept
$6.99sq.Yd
high 21 points an4 Willie Anderson
out of Game 6. "If on every blockcoming off the bench to add nine.
out you had the right to hody slam.
The ,Knicks were led by Starks'
then . this league would be the
21 poinis, but were anemic most of
WWF,.. he said. . ·
the night. They we~e outrehoundcd
last October.. NBA executive by Miami 42 -31.
Reg. $21.00
Rod Thorn said in a memo that any
" (The fight) will take away the ·
player who leaves the' heneh area in focus on how · really poorly we
• 9 patterns • 85 Colors
con~tion with an altercation is subplayed." Van Gundy said .
• Plain Berbers • Patterned Berbers
jec1 to an automatic one-game sus·
Miami says it is ready for an
pe11sion and a fine up to $20,000.
intense series ·to get Cvcn meaner on
Except for the possible sus~en~ Friday night. Heat players said they
special
sion of Brown, the fight played nght - have to allow the emotional noose to
into the Heat's· hands. After the hang New Ynrk .
game, several players came out of·
· "It's going to be real nasty," ·
the showers singing "Arc you ready Hardaway said. ·
lnstaHed with

..

•

E
..

:'~

. . .K

Trimhlc
Southern
WP-Truce .
LP-Dill

!ffoor Covering Safe

NBA playOffS. •• "'l:&lt;~~on_tin_ue_d_fro_m_P..:.age_4_&gt;---:-

•·
,.;

error.
lngjn1 t!dlb

·12Lntferson 's

~,

.......,

Burn
..• rubber.
:..

SECnQNAL CHAMPIONS- The
Marauders won their third
stntlght DivisiOn II aectional
championship Wednesday
evenlng by pounding top a,eded Jecks~i!ft 14-0 at Jackson. In front
are (L--R) Pet Martin, Ryan Ramsbur~~r Bl'tld Devenport, Robert
Quells, Nathan Halfhill, Brad Whltlatch'1 Rick Hoovar and Scott
George. Behilld them are Collin Roush, Steve Rice, A.J. Vaughan,
Steve McCullough, Jaaon Mullen, Chrle: Roush, Tony Dugan and
Jeremiah Bentiey. (Sentinel photo)

.,. ~

•

•

' •

.

$23,995 13978$13,995 ~~ $35,502 13916 $14,3'33

F&lt;Hllball

Nutlunul Foothull l~u~:ul­

~

'

'

Nutional UaKue
CINCINNATI REDS: S i ~m::d RHP

WednHday's scores

••

·~·
~

0

· Gmvanni . Carr:~r:L .
•
COLORA"I)O ROCKIES : PJ:u:ctl
RHP Dill Sw111 un llw 1~ - d:t y dt sul'!ktl
li st. rc=trOill.'ll\'t: 111 May 1.1
~T . I.OUIS CI\RI&gt;INJ\tS : Phh.:ctl Ill
l.&gt;rnilri Yuunj! unlht' l.'i-day lli~01hk·ll list
rctroa.:ti11c In May I I . Rc~· allcJ IN!'-' Mih·
Gulim frmu Loui~\· ilk of thL' Amcrh::m
J\ssuciati•ln.

K ~,

Wtstem

Monncnl 1( Sau l)iegu 7
·
i.o~ An~lt:J; 6, Chic:ago Culls 4
St. Li_.,~ 12. Phil:~delrhia .~ .
Houston I. N.Y. Mt:1 ~ 0
l'itt~hurtth 15. CnlnnnlnlO
Aoridu 4 . Atl:mta .\

'

.......
_

RHP Ginvnnni Carrma
OAKLAND A'S: Optiootd OF (::rnk•
Young to EJ~mltln uf the PCL. RecalleU
OF Patrie~ Lennon f'mm Edrnnmon.
TEXAS RANGERS: Pl&gt;~t.:L'll 28 Mark
Md.A mm"t: nn t~ ! ~ ·day di~ilhleU li:il

6

IJ

$18, l60

13972 $20,960 1#3977 $10,118 13991$23,342

er's choice and Trace reached via an
error. A J_ne Snyder singled brought
home Miller with the tying run.
Southern again answered the call.
Joe Kirby doubled with two out,
Lisle walked and Michael Ash had
an, RBI single to tic. Southern ioadcd
the bases on a Corey Williams walk,
hut the la.'t batter struck out stranding three potentially dangerous runs.
Southern ·led 5-4.
As Pork Dill pounded away at
Trimble 'all went well through the
sixth. Then in the seventh. with one
out, Trace and Snyder each singled.
Joey Scaggs douhled hor,ne a run. ·
then Todd Wiser and Shafer each sin·
gled for live consecutive hits a.' THS
· took a 7-5 lead.With the help of a
double play, Southern went down in
order.
Shaler was 3-4 l'nr Trimble. Zach
Miller. · Snyder. Wiser and Tra,;e •
, each had 2-4 nights. J. Scaggs had a ·
double .
Southetn hillers were Lisle who
was 2-3. Kirby who was 2-4, May·
nard atriple. Sisson a double and
Ash a single.
· '
Tmcc was the winning pitcher of
record, giving up seven hits, having
six strike outs and four walks. He
had twn errors. Dill gave ·up seven
runs. allowed 12 hits. fanned one and·
walked three. Southern made nne

-Yankees' lawyer criticizes
baseball executive council

.,-·
.....

· NOWONLY

.NOW ONLY

(17)

.J,

·· BALTIMORF. ORIOLI~ S :' Rt'lcase(l

II ' ·

.WJ

NOW ONLY

NOWONLY

ot

....'

Auto., air,tilt, cass., short bed, V8.
Was $19,655

Was $25,364

By SCOn WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
· leading 5-4 going into the seventh innmg, the Southern Tornadoes
saw therr lead evaporate in rhe midst
a three-run Tnmble rally as the
Tomcats rolled on to a 7-S sectional
championship baseball victory in
Racine Wednesday night.
Soothern, pending a league meeting that . may count the Trimble
game as tournament and league. ends ·
the season at 13-13 and would tie for
the TVC championship at 11-4.
however. should the Southern·Trimble game be rescheduled there would
HOOVER SCORES- The Melgl Mereudel'tl' Rick Hoover
be another game to play.
. si:oras lri front of Jackson catcher Craig Byler during Wednesday's
Trimble moves on to the distrtct
Division IIIIICtlonal final In Jackson, whera the Marauders won 14tournament. .
0 to move on to district action next week at Lucaevllle. (Sentinel
Trimble look a 1·0 lead in the fir:;t
photo by Dive Harris) ·
inning on a Zach Miller single, a Roh
Woods sacrifice and a Brady Trace
error scored the final rim Tor Meigs.
first of three pilchers picked up the single.
I
·
Jackson loaded the bases in both
loss. The trio gave .up 14 hits.
Southern.
came
right
back
wilh
the fourth and fifth innings, but each · walked four and struck out three.
two
runs
in
the
bottom
half
of
the
time Meigs came up with a big
Georg~ had a single,_double and
inning.
·Matt
Dill
walked,
Petie
Sis·
defensive play to end the threat. In
triple to pace Meigs at the plate. son reached on an error and Travis
the fourth inning Chris Roush lett his
Chris Roush added three singles. lisle doubled home hoth runs.
feet to glove a line shot between secWhitlatch added.a douhle and a sin·
Trailing 2: I. Trimble scored twice
ond and third to end the inning. IQ
gle. Dugan and Bentley each chipped more in the second inning when
the tifth inning. with the bases loaded
in with a pair of singles. Hoover Chris Shaler and M. Dmke reached
George uncocked a wild pitch, caichadded his home run and Davenport on a !ielder's choice, T. Paris·singled
er Jason Mullen chased the bull
had a single.
·arid Zach Miller singled.
down and made a diving tag off the
Wofford, Joey Boggs and Jason
Petie Sisson doubled with.one out
Jackson base runner to end the
Biowo had the three Jackson hits, all
to
lead
off the Southern third. Jesse
inning.
singles.
Maynard
tr'ipled him home, then Joe
George struggled at times with his
lnnjne lll1ab
Kirhy
ripped
a single and Travis
control. but the senior we_nt the
Meigs
3Nl-230-0=14-14-2 · lisle singled scoring Maynard, but
route to·pick up the win. He gave up
Jacksun
fKKl·fXlO-fl=0-3-5
Kirby stalled at second. Thai gave
three hits , hit two batters, walked
George (WP) and Mullen
Southern
a 4-3 advantage.
li.vc and struck out II .
Wofford (lP), Coyan (3), RaO'crThat
score
stood until the lirth
Jackson ace Shane Wofford the
ty (S) and Byler
when Zach Miller reached on a licld·

~

Amtric:an Ltagur

\
~ ··

. Stl~

.

V6, auto., air, stereo.
· Was $11,582

-•.-.
. ,.

C1500 PICKUP

Transactions

lill

I tr:
2

V6, 4X4, air, stereo, more.
Was $23,705 .

MlYil 1997 CHEVY

'two and hit a baUer to load the bases.
George induced Jason Brown to
· pop up to second to end the inning.
The Marauders blew the game
. wide open in the second inning sending II batters to the plate scoring •ix
runs. Jer~mi~ Bentley singled 10
start the iJ!ning his first oftwo in the
inning. Qualls then reached on a
Jackson error before Brad Davenport
line a single over second s.oring
Bentley. The Jackson cent~r ticld&lt;..r
in an auempt to throw out Qualls nt
third threw the ball high and into the
lronmeq: dugout, Quails scored on
the erro~ and Davenport moved to
second.
·
George singled and stole sccQnd
and Tony D(lgan singled in two runs
giving . ,Meigs a 7-0 lead. Rick
Hoover on the first pitch to him hit
a laser clearing the 330 sign in left
field for his sixth home run of the
season &lt;~nd Meigs was on top 9-0.
. Aftd~. tlie M~ra~de~s went down
m order tn the thtrd mnmg, they went
back to -work in the fourth . Dugan
and Hoover walked to lead off the
inning._ and Chris Roush followed
with an RBI single with Hoover
being thrown out at thtrd and Roush
goipg to second on 1he throw. Roush .
went to third on a passed llall and
score on a sacrifice fly off the bat of
Ramsburg to give Meigs an II ' 0
advantage. ·
,
.Meigs closed out the scoring in
the fifth inning George doubled to
lead off the inning and Whitlatch
reached on .a Jackson ertor. Dugan
singled to drive in two runs and after
Hoover walked another Jackson

Trimble g~ts past
Southern 7-5
to win sectional

1&lt;¥. ,.

Baseball

,

..
'"...

Dctrnil al Cnlor.1l.lo. 7:.1011.m

. ~26

Los Antteb ..... ...... 21 I~
SunOiego ...... ....... l-1 22

.

Saturday's game

.

Pilt.~hurgh ............ . 2f1

·

...

fl .lll .

NL standings
Eastrrn Oivl,loo
Yi. L .f&lt;l.

1997 CHEVY MUll 1997 CHEVY M£Yil I
5·10 PICKUP
VENTURA VAN
BWER

ne ~:cS-

NUL conference finals

CLEVELAN D IHcr shi ser J - I J.at

•

~

Hockey

Tnront o &lt;Clemen~ 6-1}). 7:l'i p.m.
Buswn (Hammond 1- 1J :11 Minm:sm11

I~

OVERSTOCKED ! OVERSTOCKED!
OVERSTOCKED!
HURRY! HURRY! DIJRRY!

Miami at New York. ll ~. Ill .

~he dcrll -! "1. 10 · 1!~ fl.m

lfl

'

Friday's game

Sctinle (Fmero 4-l ). b :~ :'i f'.m.
[kuoit (Oiilltlft"S 2·2) tl,l Kan ~ as City
Co\ppier 4-2). ~ : 0~ p.m.
.
N.Y.·Y:ankces (Rogers 2- 11:11 rexus
lAlbcrio 0-0), ~ : 3~ Jl.m.
Baltimore (K;mucniecld 2- 11 at An:l·
'
hcim IDickson ~-I I. 10 : 0~ p.m.
Milw tmlu:c (Karl 1 -~) ill Oakland fTc I·

Atlanlu ...
. .. 26
Floridi1 ..
. ... 2J
Munlreul. .
.. 20
Nc=w York ...... .. ... 20
PhJiadt:lphiiL ... ..... 14

.

Tonight's game

Tonight'• gam••

Ium

r.

HoliMPnHt Scat lie. I) p.m.

Chu:ugo White Sox ( Drabtk 2+3) n1

"·

·

\.

·-..
The Marauders are now 18·7 on
::;_: the year and' will open district play
on Monday, May 19 at Lucasville
· :; :~ Valley High School against ~arren ·
=:;. Lot;al. The Warriors ( 15-8) defeated
:;,:.., Gallia Academy 12-6 · Wednesday.
;"-~· Jackson closes out its season with an
• - 18-6 record.
·
~ Meigs jUil)JI!ld on top of JacksQn
.... ace Shane Wofford right out cif the
::: chute when Scott George hit the sec·
::; ond pitch of the game off the right
:;~ field fence for a triple . Brad Whit·
:;::· latch then hit a shot over the head of
:::. the center lielder for a double giving
: •• Meigs a 1-0 lead.
•·.
One out later . Rick Hoover
• -- walked and Hoover and Whitlatch
,,-· pulled oiT a double steal putting run-'
:-~- ners on second and · third. ·Chris
:,. Roush then lined a shot down the
::: third base line to give Meigs a 3-0
•',. ·~ Iead.
-·
In the . bottom of the inning,
'"•· George retired the first two batters,
..-.. bulthen hit a wild streak and walked

'

'

NBA playoffs

Turnnro 7. Detroit 2
·
N.Y. Yank~' 6. Minnes ola 5 t 121
Te11..11 ~ 4. C LEV E LAND ~ I 101
KanSilS City b_. Uogtnn 2
Oi!klrmd 7. Milwaukee 4
Anaheim 6, Baltimorr .'i
Seanle 9, Chicago White Snx 7

'.

•
-'

eAre

Flurilla (Hellinp: 1·2) m Pin s bur ~h

j

541
.421

Centnal Dh•isiun
Milwllukee ..... ,....... ICJ 16 .54J
Kt~n s~sC hy ........... ltJ
17 .5211
CLEVELAND ....... IK 19 .486
Chicugu ................. 14 22 J81J

Sc:atl k:

.,

""·~ naments.
:'

San Dic~o (Alih by 2-2) Ill Chkago
Cubs (Fuuer J-J). :\:20 p.m.

.W L r&lt;L .Iii

Meigs scored early and .often and
coasted to a 14·0 victory over top
seeded Jackson to win the Division
II sectional championship Wednesday evening ' at Jackson . High
School's Haller Field.
it's the third sectional title in a
row for coach Scot Gheen's Marauders, and it is the second year in a row
that Meigs has knocked Jackson out
of the tournaments. last year Meigs
defeated Jackson in ihe first game of
the dis.trict en route to the state tour-

"

...

Friday's games

Baltimore ..............2~
New York ....... ·....... 23
Torontn .................. 20

M inm:~o tu ........... 15

By DAVE HARRIS

Sentinel Correspondent

NA Tl (Moraan 0-41 . 7 : ~~ p.m.

Eutem Di~ision

............. lh
... ....... 15

New York 's John Wnllace jumped
Brown, Ward and Starks were
on Brown, and players from both ejected because of the fight. New
teams joined the pile . .·. •
York 's Charles Oakley was thrown
Before order was res(ored. sever· out just two seconds before for
al Knicks - ·including John Starks, throwing a punch at Mourning.
larry Johnson and Allall Houston "I expected it after they got frus left their bench to joili ' the' melee, ll"dted and we were pulling away, "
while the Heat ·player}: not in the said Brown, who had his best game
game stayed on the sideline.
of the series with 18 points and 12
According to NBA policy. leaving . rebounds. "He (Ward) went after my
the bench to join a tight fan result in knees. If he wants to play football , he
'
1
a susper:'s1on.
(See PLAYOFFS on PageS)

m Monneal (Herman~on I-21. 7 : 3~ p.m. .
Los Angc:~s fVnkles 1-4) 011 CINCIN-

AL standi,ngs

Bo~ l on

.tum · around,'' the Heat's Alonzo
Mourning said. "To tell you the.
office.··
.truth, some1hing was bound to hap·
Miami, still on the brink of elim· pen.''
ination, goes . back to Madison
The fight started when Ward
Square Garden on Friday night trail- backed into Brown 's legs as Tim
ing 3·2 in the best-of-seven series. Hardaway made a free throw, giving
The Heat are 0.4 away from the Mia- Miami a 9(). 741ead with I :53 left in
mi Arena in the playoffs after post· the game. Brown wrapped his ann
ing the NBA's liest road record (32- around the smaller Ward's waist, lift·
9) during the regular season.
. ed him .and threw him to the noor
," I defini1ely felt the momentum behind the baseline.

S;m Fr.nn:i~~.:o (VanLandingh:.lm 1-21

Baseba ll

Ium

said. " You want to play with your
full team, but that's up to the NBA

The Dally Sentinel • P • 5

shuts out
Jackson 14-0
in·. sectional.final

-~

Brt1wl puts at leaat six In line for .suspension

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ - Meigs

Pllat4

Th&amp;.ndlly, Mey 11, f18'7

'

'

Thunday, llay 15,1997

•.

VIH

til 8:00

i

••

"

'

'

•

�..• •.•
Pllge I• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thunday, ll8y 15, 1887

Pi.r ates top Rockies
15-10 to sta,y tied ..
for NL Central lead

HITS CLUTCH HOMER - San Francisco slugger Barry Bonds
watches his drive leave the vard for a home run In the 1~h Inning
ot Wednesday night's National League game against the host
Clnclnn11tl Reds, who_lost 4·2 because of thai tie-breaking hit. (AP)

Bonds' clutch HR
helps Giants tally
,·4-2 win over Reds

I

By JOE KAY
land. Bonds is learning to accept the
' CINCINNATI (APl - Tired. of llm ttations pitchers are putting on
betng walked so much by Cincinnmi him About the only time he'll get to
Reds pttchers. Barry Bonds has swmg the bat is when a pitcher can 't
tound a nickname for manager Ray afford lo walk him.
Knt ght. .
.
"In those situations, your success
.. He calls me chicken," Knight rate is not gomg to be very htgh,"
said . "The last two years whenever Bonds satd. "I've just got to bear
1 sec him. he says. 'Hey, chicken.' I down 'a little hl!l'der, to focus more on
say. 'I'm going to keep bemg a the relievers than on the starters."
·chtcken.· ".
.
Left-hander Mike Remlinger (0Kmght showed a rare moment of ~) got a visit from pttching coach
hruvcry agamst Bonds on Wednes- Don Gullett before facing Bonds
day night. and paid for it. Bonds hit wtlh one out and none on m the lOth.
a tl c- breakmg homer m the lOth
"He said to go right at him, "
tnnmg. lcadmg the San Franctsco Remlinger satd.
Gtanls to a 4-2 vtctory.
Giants manager Dusty Baker
Bond&gt;' stxth homer sen I the expected as m~c h.
Giants (23- 13) to their fourth cun" It's a tic ball game. He got away
secutivc vtctory and their best start wtth it (walktng Bonds) a couple of
since 1973, when they began the sea- ltmes. pulling the winning run on
son 25- 11. It also sent the Reds (II - base." Baker said. "You keep doing
26) back in time with their worst that and sooner or later it:s going 10
start in 47 years.
get you. So I was not surpnsed al
~either side expected it to happen
all :·
this way.
When Rem I ingcr missed with
The Reds walked Bonds in twu of fastballs tn fall behind 2-0, Bonds
his first four plate appearances ttgured he was headed to t1rst. After
Wednesday. The ntght before. they Remlinger threw a strike with the
walked htm to load thebases for Jeff' next pttch. he backed out ollhc box.
Kent, who hit a grand slam lor a 4- sensing he might get a chance.
I wtn .
"It's been.tough for me," he said.
During Knight 's brief managen- "I don't get many opportunities. It's
al ten lire. he has steered clear of hard to get aey kmd ol' rhythm going
pitc~ing 10 Bonds and Flonda's
at times."
Gary Shcftield when the g.amc's
The next ptlch was a cut fastball
close .
that s t~yed up and over the plate, and
"He's going ~o beat you," Kmght wound up in the second deck in
satd of Bonds. 'He's the best I've _ tight-center field .
Jen· Brantley relieved, loaded the
ever seen at httting home runs tn
clutch sttuations. -He doesn't get a bases and w~lked Rtck Wilkms to
base hit. He doesn) get a double. He force in another run and seal a game
hits home runs."
that neither team could gel a gnp on
Bonds hasn't done it very often until the lOth.
this year. mamly because teams
Osvaldo Fernandez gave up
won' t let him. His II intentional Willie Greene's fifth homer in the
· walks lead the maJor leagues.
second mning and Darryl Hamilton
He wentthrough a 1-for-16 slump singled home a run in the fthh off
he fore taking off last Satu·rday 10 Pete Schourek to ttc il. It went to the
recover from the nu. On Sunday. he ninth 1-1.
homered and doubled in an 11 -5 wtn
Greene, playing third, let Hamilover Chicago.
ton 's IWO·OUI grounder bounce otT
Wtth Matt Williams oflto Cleve- hts chest for a run-scoring error.

By The A..ocllttcl Press
If the PiJtsburgb Pirates play
more exciting games like this, they
won' t need gimmicks to bring in
tans.
The Ptrates. who recently held a
promotion where players greeted
fans at stadium turnstiles in an effort
lo woo them hack. used a mnc-run
eighth inning Wednesday night to
rally past Colorado 15-10 and stay in
first place in the NL Central.
This young Pillsburgh team. with
a payroll of just $9 million. or $2
million less than Albert Belle is making this season, overcame leads of 63, 7-5 and 9-6 before Kevm Young's
two-run pinch double put them
ahead for good. AI Martin then fin·
ished off the Rockies with a grand
slam to cap their most dramatic rally since their division title years earIter this decade.
" It was a wild and exciting finish.
This ts a prime example of this
team ," Martin said. " Everybody
Iold us we would lose I 00 games.
But we'll scratch and claw and fight
to the fmal uul every night. "
The Ptrates. who lost thetr previous three by a combined 22-7 to
Atlanta . . were 1- 17 when trailing
after seven innings. The Rockies had
been 21-0 when leadmg after seven .
"That was a nice comeback,
especially after the Braves kicked
our rear ends," Pirates manager
Gene Lamont satd. "Anytime you
come back it helps your confidence,
whether you're a veteran team or an
inexperienced team."'
Last week before a game with
Atlanta, the Pirates shook hands,
posed for pictures and even
exchanged hugs with their fans as
they made an attempt to bring hack
fans turned off both by the strike of
1994 and Pittsburgh's pour play and mismanagement
Players and the P~rates' front
oft1ce insist the move wasn't a pubhcity stunt. but a thrilling vtclory like
. Wednesday night's could go a long
way toward reviving tnterest
Pittsburgh, which remained a percentage pomt ahead of Houston m
the Central Division, stranded II
runners - eight in the first ftve
innings - but won it with thctr
biggest mrimg of the season.
Walt Weiss' two-run double in the
top of the etghth off eventual winner
Marc Wilkins (3-0) made it 9-6, but
Martin and Mark Johnson started the
Pirates' half of the inning with singles otl' Mike Munoz.
,
"Their offense is just a powerhouse, so you know you've got to
put up a lotofrunsjust to stay in the
game," Young said.
After Bruce Ruffin threw a runscoring wald pitch and Tony Worn·
ack and Jermaine Allensworth drew
the Ptrates' II th and 12th walks,
Martin h11 his first career grand slam
and hts fourth homer of the season.
" II ·seemed like a stream roller
once the first guy got on," Reed said.
"Then there were the walks and the
ball lo center and ... boom. boom.

boom. To mess it up that way is frustrating."
The nine-run inning was the
Pirates' biggest since a nine-run
in~ing on April 30, I996, against the
Reds. ·
In other NL games. Montreal
topped San Diego 9-7: L&lt;ts Angeles
mpped Chtcago 6-4: St. Louts routed Philadelphia 12-3: Houston
nipped New York 1-U and Flond;~
edged Atlanta 4-3.
Expos 9, Padres 7
Rqndell White hit a go-ahead RBI
double in the eighth inning as host
Montreal topped San Dtegu in a
game that saw the Padres have twn
pttchers eJected for htlting halters.
Marc Valdes (1-2) got the win,
and Lee Smith got the final out for
his third save this season and the
476th of his career.
Trevor Hoffman ( 1-3)· was the
loser.
'
Dodgers 6, Cubs 4
Nelson Liriano doubled to start a
game-tying rally in the eighth, then
hit a two-run homer tn the ninth as
Los Angeles won at Chicago.
Mel Rojas (0-2) took the loss.
Antonio Osuna pitched I 2/3 hitless inmngs m his tirsl maJor league
appearance of the season, and Todd
Worrell threw a one-hit ninth for his
II th save in 14 chances.
Cardinals ll, Philiies 3
Ray Lankford had three hits,
including a two-run homer, and
pinch-hitter Gary Gaetti doubled
home two runs in a three-run fifth
inning as St. Louis won at Philadel-'
phi a.
Cardinals starter Todd Stottlemyre (2·2) allowed three runs and
live hits in six innings. and helped
himself wtth an RBI double.
Phtlhes starter Calvm Maduro (34) gave up nine htts and live runs m
4 2/3 innings.
Astros 1, Mets 0
Darryl Kile (3-2) pitched four-htt
ball for eight innings, and pinch-hit·
ter Cratg Biggio htt a sacrifice lly tn
the ninth as Houston won at Shea
Stadium.
· The Aslros stopped a three-game
losing streak and ended the Mets'
four-game win streak.
Rick Reed blank~d Houston on
live htts for eight jnnings, and the
Astros won 11 against Greg
McMichael (3-3).
Marlins 4, Braves 3
Edgar Renteria's RBI .~inglc
scored the go-ahead run in the seventh inning as visiting Florida denied
Denny Neagle's bid to hecome the
NL's tirst seven-game winner with a
win over Atlanta.
Neagle, who has won six straight
decisions. left with a 3-2 lead after
six innings. but Mike Bielecki ( 1-3)
couldn't stop the Marlins.
Flortda's rally made a winner of
·
starter Kevin Brown (4-2), who
allowed three runs and seven hits in
s1x mmngs.

Robb Nen got his I Oth save
·despite loading the bases m the nmth.

Rangers down Tribe 4-3 in 10 in~ings
ARLINGTON . ·Texas (AP)
The Texas Rangers won the battle of
the bullpens because doser John
Wetteland was willing to go above
and beyond the call of duty.
· Wetteland struck out three m two
scoreless innings and . Btll Rtpkcn
' drove in the winning run with a lOthinning sacriftec lly as the Rangers
beat the Cleveland lndtans 4-3
Wednesday night.
Most closers arc used for only one
mmng, and rarely in a tic game . But
Wcncland told manager Johnny
Oates he had no problem starting the ·
ninth inning of a 3-3 game.
Wetteland (2-0) allowed a smglc
to Julio Franco m the mnth. but
Rangers catcher Ivan Rodrigue z
threw out Franco attempting to steal
second. That was Cleveland's lone
baserunncr off Wetteland .
" If I pitch like I can. I can get out
of an inning in 12-15 pitches and still
be fresh for the next inning,., Wetteland said. "I' ve always wanted to be
treated like any other pitcher...

Oates appreciates ·that bulldog makeup of this tea,(ll."
fourth homer, a liner into' the left·
Juan Gonzalez opened the IOth field stands.
attitude.
Justice's RBI double in the scv" We don 't want In make ~ hahit wtth hts third htt, a single off Albie
ol that," Oates sat d... But he does- Lopez (0-2), and was replaced by cnth put Cleveland ahead 2- 1. and
n't even look at you iwicc when you pinch-runner Damon Buford: With the Indians took a 3-1 lead in the
ask ham to do 11. I saw htm do at last Buford running, Clark stngled to eighth on Jam Thome's sacrilicc ny.
year (for the Yankees) against us. If right and took second when ·Brtan
Thome hit his seventh homer of
il was good enough last year and he Gtles bobbled the ball. ·'
the season and the IOOth of his career
was strong in the World Series.
Dean Palmer was walked intcn- to gtvc the lndtans a 1-0 lead in the
that's good enough l(n us.··
tionally to load the bases. and Mtkc fourth .
Again, the Rangers registered a Simms followed with a hard
Nagy, who had won four of hi~
comeback win wtth the help of a grounder to shortstop Omar Vit.quel. previous five decisions. followed a
who forced Buford al the plate .
shu.tout wm over Detroit on May 9
bench player. .
,
Ripkcn 's bases-loaded sacrt lice
With Cleveland's outfield rlaying with another strung performance hy
ny scored Wtll Clark with the win- m. Ripkcn hit a lly to left that was . allowing nine hits over 7 113 innings.
ning run after the Rangers trailed J. caught by left fielder David Justice.
But Cleveland continues to strugI 1n the ctghlh.
who was too deep 10 'make any play gle, falling lo 18-19 and losing fnr
the fourth time in five games.
Texas has won five times in its on Clark.
last at-bat and has come lrom behind
Indians starter Charles Nagy was
" We can't seem to get any
tn 12 of its 21 victories thiS season. protecting a 3-1 lead when Texas tied momentum," Nagy said. "We. win
"You need 25 guys to be suc- it in the eighth.
one and then we lose one. We can't
1
Rodrigue~ opened with a triple
get above that .500 mark. "
cessful ," said Ripken. filling in for
injured second baseman Mark and scored on Rusty GrGcr's ground·
Rangers starter Bobby Witt, seckMcLemore. "The hi~ boys arcn 't out. Gonzalez, playing in his 12th ing to become the thtnd Rangel's
able to do it every night. That's why ·game after missing 24 .with a lorn pitcher to stari a season 7-0, allowed
we' re successful,' because of · the thumb ligament, followed with his seven hils in etght innings.

'2.---.

Stairs' HRs help A's down Brewers 7-4
gone hack-to-back. In the fourth,
By TOM WITHERS
· Canseeo followed Statrs' two-run
AP Sport• Writer
hlusl with his eighth homer of t~
If the Bash Brothers have an iniseason.
tiation ritual. Mall Sta~rs . miglit have
Statrs added a solo shot in the
passecl it. .
seventh,
his fifth, for has first career
Stairs homered twice Wednesday
multihomer game.
.
nisht as the Oakland Athletics
" You see ~ose hit a bomb to left
snapped a seven-game losing streak
ticld and then Mark just about lakts .
with a 7-4 win over the Milwaukee
the
doors off the wall in center
Brewers.
field,"
Stairs said. " It just loosens the
Jose Canseco also hit two homers
team' up a lot. It just seems like it's
llDd fellow Bash Brother Mark MeG·
contagious when you get the big hits.
wire hit his I 3th homer as the A's hit
It's fun. "
five homers .in a game for the first
McGwire, who snapped a 2S at·
.time this seMon.
bat
homerless ·streak thai was his
C•nsc~o and McOwire hit conlonJiest such drought since 1994, also
secutive sOlo homers in the third
had an RBI sinsle in the first and an
i~nina, the lOth career time they' ve

infield hit in the seventh.
Only 6,319 fans attended the
game, the smallest crowd in Oakland·
since April 22, 1996 - when 6,021
watched the A's defeat the Brewers
6-2.
.
Oakland starter Ariel Prieto (3-2)
allowed two runs and six hits before
leaving after 6 113 innings with back
spasms.
Cal Eldred (4-4) allowed six runs
and nine hits in six inninss for the
Brewers. He ·matched a career worst
by allowing four homers, lnd hid.
feW kind words for the Oakland Coliseum - which was considered a .
pitcher's part before its redesisn
turned it into a hitter's pll'ldisc.

•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

•

Take time out t0 see traveling Smithsonian exhibit .in M~Arthur
By BECKY BAER ·
•Melga eou.rty Exten•lon Agent
-Family and Conaumer Sci·
anceal Community Develop-

area.

side, do you ever look at the barns until 5:00p.m. at the Vmtqn County
It is called "Barn Again: Cele- you see and wonder i( the~ are still Communt!Y Building in McArthur.
brating an American Icon." The . being used? Have you wondered
In the morning, the wqrkshop
uhibit will be ~laycd at the Her· how they might be renovated so they will address topics that deal wllh the
ben Wescoat Memorial Library. I20 can be used? If you have, you may history, culture, structure and rehaNorth Market Street in McArthur, also be interested in a workshop that bilitation of barns, as well as the
from May 22 tlirough July I I. This will be conducted by Brian Raison, economic incentives for restoration
exhibit is only o'ne of five presenta- OSU Community Economic Devel· · and property tax issues. In Ohiu
tions given in Ohio. For more opment Extension Agent m Vinton barns have already been renovated
details, you may call the Library at County in conjunction with the and reused in many different capact614-596-5691.
Smithsonian exhibit. It will be held ties. You may want to check out preAs you are touring the country- .Saturday, June 14 from 8:30 a.m. serving or changing your own barn

.ment

. Do you like to drive through the
rilral countryside, enjoy the landscape and view the sights? Do you
.[Jke special note of the old historical
'barns that you pass? If so. you may
·lte interested in a Smithsonian lnsti·
tuie el\hibit that is coming to our

1996 FORD
E$CORJ

10 be~omc

a building that will be .
useful for other rurposc•.
Followmg lunch on the site, there
will be a tour of barn s. incl uding the
octagonal "Shurtl Barn." The day
wtll end with a vis it tu the Sm ithsonian cx htbit at the librar:,: For
more informati on, call Bri an Raison
at the OSU Ex tcnston Office in Vinton County, 6 14-596-5212.
If you would like io partictpate,
you may send your name, address

and o, check fur
$8.00 per persun I!&gt; OS U
Extcnston. Vinton County,
McArthur, Ohto
4565 1. The fee
incl udes
not
oill¥ the wurkshop and re ference matcnal s, hut also lunch. The
deadline for regtstering is May 31 .

~

ve, auto, air cond, AMIFM

. Dr, 4 cyt, auto,
cond, AM/FM can, PS,
PB, MORE.

caaa, tilt, crulae, PS,
PW, POL.

Ohio University- '•
College of Osteopathic Medicine

ONLY 8,000 ~ILES

ONLY 12,000

Family
Medicine

Good music reduces the bad
hormones caused by stress, pain

By SULIPSA LUQUE
San Bernardino Sun
Music can relieve st,ress, whether
the stress comes from the workplace
or something more serious - like a
major illness. ·
using these !!rugs. Another factor
And now a leading pharmaceutithat your doctor must take into caVhealthcare company is dastributaccount is the likelihood that your ing a video used in research done by
infection is caused by a virus rather a Lorna Linda University researcher
than a bacteria. Despite common who has studied the role music _plays
misconceptions, antibiotics are use- in reducing bad hormones caused by
less against viral infections.
stress and pain.
Once a decision is made to use an
Dr. Lee S. Berk, an assistant
antibiotic, your doctor is faced with research professor of pathology and
the difficult decision of which one of laboratory medicine, recently told
the wide variety of antibiotics will the Society of Behavioral Medicme
be most effective in this case. As about music's effect on psychoneuyou can see, your doctor's decision roimmunology - or how physical
on an antibioti'c for your child's ear and emotional states relate to the
infection is based somewhat on edu- human immune system.
.
cated guesswork.
"We know from our study that
A chronic midCIIe ear infection, (music) changes the psychoneuone characterized by a painless roimmunology by droppiqg the
infection that contidues for weeks stress hormones," Berk said. "It's
and in whillh fluid accumulates more than a distraction as in taking
behind the eaN!rum, is an even more the patient's attention away."
perplexing Jiroblem. In this type of
Berk's study used a videotape
infection, the ~ng is impaired to that blends music, "enic imagery
some degree because of the fluid and positive sta(ements to reduce
behind the eardrum, and the ear-feels levels of neuroendocrine hormones
full - but the ear isn't painful any which suppress the immune system
longer. Antibiotics are often pre- when stress, pain and anxiety kack
scribed for a period of. 4 weeks or in.
·
more to treat this, but the benefits of
''These substances are detrimenthis therapy are ~ven less clear than tal when we are·sack," Berk said.
HEALING POWER • Mualc to your ears niay translate Into healing for your body says Dr. Laa S. Bark,
are those for acute otitis media.
The study used 10 people suffer- an asaletant resaarch professor of pathology and laboratory medicine. He Ia conducting studlea on
It is hard "for parents and physi- ing from cancer, chronic pain and music's effect on paychoneurolmmunology - or how physical and emotional states relata to the
cians to patiently wait as a child suf- reflex sympathetic dystrophy (a cer- human Immune system.
·
fers with an, ear infection. We often tain kind of pain that occurs after Sharyn
Arnold,
Smith Kline chemistry of a person's body."
them, but it can change things,"
recommend antibiotic treatment bone or soft tissue injury). Beecham's director of communicaThe music therapy also can be Berk said. "It might not be quantity
when we know that the chance of it Researchers drew· blood from them tion programs. ·"The inspirational useful for people made sick by pres- on extending life, but it is quality in
providing relief is less than perfect • before and after the patients viewed videotape can help people get sures of the workplace and finances, enjoying life more. "
but still the chance of benefit exists. "Affirmations for Getting Well focused and in touch with their emo- he said.
Patients can use the video m
This is why your children are giyen Again." .; ·~ .. '
tional health, imd that's potenlially
"We are so susceptible to condi- combination with chemotherapy to
antibiotics for their ear infections.
The levels of three of the neu- beneficial."
tinning that if we take something control stress, he said.
What we also know is thai otitis roendocrine hormones dropped
Cancer patients commonly antic- that ts calm and heali~g it translates
"The brain is impacted by what it
media is increased in children who between 16-20 percent after they ipate nausea and vomiting before into changes in the immune system, perceives. What we are trying to do
are in day care, panicularly day care viewed the video.
even taking any medtcatton, so the which can translate into chances of is change the negative to a positive,
out of the home, those with another
SmithKliM Beecham, which has serene white beaches of Kauai, cas- surviving life," Bittman said.
and it all translates into physiolochild in th~ family having otitis annual pharmaceutical sales of $12 cading waterfalls and peaceful sunAnctent cultures used sound to gy," Berk said.
media, bottle fed babies, and panic- billion, has signed a contract with sets can have a positive effect, said effect the chemical balance of the
"It's more than just sounding
ularly in thqse exposed to second TouchStar to distribute t~e video to Barry Bittman, neurologist and med- brain. The positive statements were mystical, a fantasy. There's medtcal
hand smoke, Unfortunately, expo- oncologists.
.
ical director of TouchStar.
added to remove the feeling of help- reality. There is real potential for
sure to second hand smoke is the
"Clinical outcomes can be affect" This is a guide for the healing lessness from patients and return to healing in music, tmagcry and posionly one of these risk factors that ed by the state of the patient's men- · JOUrney within." Bittman said. " It them a sense of control, Berk said.
tive affirmations."
can easily be changed for most fam- tal and physical well-being," said really can change the immunity ·and
"(It might) not necessarily cure
ilies.
"Family 1\;ledldne" Is a weekly
~olumn. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
care available. Refreshments proUniversity Colleae of Osteopathi~ · The Community Calendar is the home of Phyllis Skinner.
published
as
a
free
service
to
non·
vided. Sponsored by Ohio DepartSALEM CENTER -- Star Grange
Medicine,
Grosvenor
HaU,
profit
aroups
wlshina
to
announce
RACINE
••
Racine
Post
602,
ment
of
Education,
Offtce
of
Famtly
and
Junior Grange, fun mght,
Athe~, Ohio 45701.
nieetlng and specl81 events. The American Legion, 6:30 meeting, and School Partnerships and Wash· potluck supper, Saturday 6:30 p.m:
calendar Is not desiped to pro· dinner to follow. Thursday.
ington County Schools.
at Salem Center hall.
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. ltenu are printed as space
MARIETI'A •• Public forum on SATURDAY
SUNDAY
permits aad cannot be guaranteed school and family involvement,
RUTLAND
Believers are
MIDDLEPORT
Missionary
to nm a specific number of days.
Thursday, 4 to 6 p.m. at the Wash- Receivers rally, Rutland Church of service, Wesleyan Bible Holiness
THURSDAY
ington County Career Cen~er, State God, Rutland, Saturday, 7 p.m.; Church, Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Ruth
RACINE •• Racine Orange 2606 Rou{e 676, Marietta. Emphasis will Sunday, II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Devall, speaker.
Sinaloa, Mexico: It is located just
south of the Tropic of Cancer and will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. with be dn working together for education with opinions to be shared on
REEDSVILLE ·- Reedsville FelPOMEROY •• Calvary Pilgrim
has mild weather all winter long. inspection. Harrisonville will visit.
how parents can be involved in Chapter, through Sunday, 7 p.m. lowship Church of tbe Nazarene,
The city is located diagonally oppo·
POMEROY·· Rock Springs Bet· schools and how schools can wel- each · evening. Rev. Earl Newton, revival, Sunday through Thursday, 7
site the southern tip of lower Southter Health Club, Thursday, 1 p.m. Iii come family participation. Child evangelist.
p.m. nightly.
ern California, Mexico.
The area is noted for fishing,
mining and have one of ·the most
.. .... .............................................
.. . . ..._..............
_.._ ........
popular resorts on the Pacific coast.
..
------- -- ------- -- - - -- Local industry,and commercial fishing, especially shrimp production
lnd processing diversify the local
economy. Major _exports include
$699.00
.
· - - -------- -----··
minerals, lead, copper, gold, silver
and manganese, and fiber, panicu290 N. 2nd
992-3684
Middleport, OH
latly cotton.
The town boasts of the second
•
tallest nalural . lighlhouse in the
world,, rising 147 meters (441 feet)
&amp;UP
above sea level with a light visible
Beginning
our
24th
year
of
serving
our
customers
for 48 miles. ,
In Melg~. Mason, Gallla and surrounding cOunties.
Leading up to next year, the Las
Altas, Mexican ~arnival, will celebrate its lQOth anniversary. This
year's carnival poster features a pic·
ture of Miss Loaiza.
In opening her program, .Loaiu
showed a typical Mexican doll and
aavc each Rotarian a Mexican' coin
(eight Pesos equals one I.Jnitcd
States dollar) and a ribbon with the
Moaday, May 12
17
three colors of the Mexican flag:
green for independence, white for
religion, and red for union.
The major religion of Mexico is
QUALITY- Top Quality· Name Brands
Catholic. She also showed a video of
.SERVICE - Special Order, Adjustments, etc.
Mazatlan's notable buildings, countryside and industries.
PRICE -Competitive Price Structure,
In closing, she thanked the local
Lower Prices On.Most lines
Rotary club, the school and hcJ host
IIEID - 81JOI.U'S - KNIVES - l:APS
families for a very enjoyable stay in
Meias County.
•Rid Wing
Two Locations:
•Levi's
When asked what she missed
Gallipolis
•Georgia
1512ndAve.
•Wrlngler
most while being absent from her
Middleport
•C.rollna
81 Mill St.
•Judn
home. she replied "the spicy food."
•DoubltH
•Tony Lama

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Mcl!iciJ!C

....

l; : Question:

My children, particum)l youngest, who is 2, have
~tible with frequent middle ear
~&amp;(«;lions. I've read that antibiotics
raiiy not help this condition, but our
~tor prescribes them. What is the .
current thinking about middle ear
infections?
Answer: From your description,
_it appears that your child has had
i'epeated episodes of what we doc.ti&gt;rs call "acute otitis media." Acute
means that each episode is :'short
'and·severe" rather than "long, drawn
·aut and chronic." Otitis is Latin for
"inflammation of the ear." Media,
likewise, refers to the location in the
:"middle" area of the car.
. · Before I proceed further, I need
to provide a brief lesson on the
.aflalomy of the ear: The middle ear
area is a small, enclosed area located
jmJ11ediately behind the eardrum. It
is sealed off, except for a tiny channel that connects with the sinus area
behind the nose. The purpose of this
. eonduit • called the eustachian tube •
is to equalize air pressure behind the
eiirdrum with that on the ·outside.
. The space provided by the middle
eai and the "pressure release" furnls.hed by the eustachian tube normally allow the, eardrum to vibrate
·freely when it 1\ struck by sound.
When there is pressure or lluid within .the middle ear space, the movement of the eardrum is impeded.
This results in decreased hearing
and often in car pain.
· Middle e'ar i'nr.l.ltions result from
bacterial or' viral infection of the
eustachian tube and the middle ear
space. Pressure and fluid accumulate
in the middle ear causing symptoms
that all parents recognize •• a fussy
child -ulling at his or her ear. There
are a number' of antibiotics your
doctor might prescribe to try to hasten relief. ; Amoxicillin, the most
common, produces a cure in 60 to 70
percent of those taking it as do most
antibiotics used for middle ear infection.
: However, since 40 to 60 percent
of acute middle ear infections dear
Uf' . within tWO weeks Without. any
aritioio!ic therapy, some authorities •
b11t
. . not most recommend against
~irly

1995 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
Signature Sarles, VB, auto, air cond, AM/FM
all power,

1995 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
V8, auto, air. "qond,
AM/FM can, tilt, cljllsa,
PS, PB, PW, POL. MO.RE.

,.

cae1e,

1995 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAl
VB,1uto, air cond, AM/FM
ca. ., tilt, C~UIH, all D01W·I
er, leather, LOADED.

/

ONLY 11,000 M~lES

ONLY 19,000 MILES

1995
. MERCUJtY
.

1995 FORD
CONTOUR

4 cyl, auto, air c:ond,
AM/FM cass, crulae, PS,
PB. PW, POL, rear spoil·
er.

cyl, auto, air
AM/FM casa, cruise,
PB, PW, POL, several
stock.

MYSTI QU~ ·

ONLY 12,000 mUes

...

1997 FORD F250 HEAVY DUTY

7.3 Turbo Diesel, s~'spd, air cond, AMJFM cess,
(

PB, 4x4

.

1995 GEO
TRACKER 4x4

LSI Convertible, 4 cyl,
auto, air cond, AM/FM
. cau, MORE.
)

REAL FUN IN'i THE
SUN VEHICLE
I

1996 CHEVY
5·10
Extended Cab; 4.3, auto,
air ·cond, · AM!FM caaa,
tilt, cruise, PS, PB, More,
atepalde 4x4.

l

•

•

ONLY 8,000 MILES

1996 FORD·
WINDSTAR

I

V&amp;, auto, air cond, AAII/FIII
cond, AM/FM c888, ....... ,.... caaa, rear A/C, PS,
cruise, PS, PB, PW',
PW, POL, tl,lt, cruise.
MORE.
c

'

351 va, auto, aft cond,
AM/FM c.u, tilt, 'crulaa,
PS, PB, PW, PDL?,(LT.

LON~' BE

"This ballpark makes you want to
puke," Eldred said,
_
,
Elsewhere in the AL, it was Seat·
tie 9, Chicago 7; Kansas City 6,
Boston 2; New York 6, Minnesota 5
in 12 in'nings; Toronto 7, Detroit 2;
and Anaheim 6, Baltimore 5.
Mariners 9, Wblte Sox 7
A\ Seattle, Ken Griffey Jr. hit his
major leasuc-leading I 7th home run
and Brent Gates hit a three-run
homer during the Mariners' five-run
founh asainst Jaime Navarro (3·2).
Griffey,' who !jet a major-leaaue
record with 14 horners in April, connected off Carlos Castillo in the sixth .
to give the Mariners a 7-3 lead. ·

1995 FORD
EXPLORER
2 DR, sport Pkg, 6 cyt,
apcl, air cond, ANIIFI..-:.:ttl
c.sa, tilt, cruise, an IIO'Wof
ar.

ONLY 17,000 MILES

·: ·
ALMA LOAIZA
· : · )llm\l-Oaiza. a Rotary excha~ge
student from Mazatlan, Mexaco,
gave her (arewell speech to the Mid~lcpon-Pomeroy - Rotary Club at the
group's Monday night meeting at the
Hcaih Methodist Church in Middleport.
· ~ Loaiza carne to Meigs County i,n
Xu'gust, 1996, and will leave for
home on May 29. The local club has
.. been her host in the exchange pro-

. grtim. .

~ .'i'hC proaram, designed to pro. rriole good will internationally, is
.p~ of the International Rotary Pro-

gnun.

.

•: Since coming to Meigs County,
Loaiza has been a aonior student at
Meigs High School and will grldu, li~ in May. She has already gradual: ed from her lligh school in Mazatlan.
· . qurinl the year, she has been a
guest in the homes of three local
families: John and Linda Smith of
Sal~m Center, the Robert Buck fam. il)' of Pomeroy and the Paul Reed
family of Middleport.
•
. : Mazatlan, .:cording to Loaiza, is
..OnC of IWO 11111jor cities in 'the state of

·.
. "

•'

•

--

~

~

1

0IAINI 'I8

4x4, XLT, V6, auto,

1995 FORD
F150 4x4

calendar-------

Foreign exchange ~student
bids Rotarians adios

'

·1996 FORD
EXPLORER

-------~Community

••

t

CT. SOLITAIRE

REG.

NOW

$399°

0

ANNIVERSARY BANDS

Anniversary Sale

$99

tllru Saturday, May
20% OFF Our Evorjday Prlco

.9Lcquisitions
.

!fine J ewefry
ill

'&gt;

•

�Page a•The o.lty Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
0

Memorial Day services schedulee fo,r Saturday
.
'

Miller wins
scholarship

Second Annual Civil War Memorial Day service will be held by
Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7, Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War Sat·
urday at the monument at the Meigs
County Court'house .
The service will begin at I0 a.m.
and those who have ancestors lisied
. on the statue are urged Ill participate
in the tribute. In the even! of rain a
tent will be erected at the site for the
service.
Plans -for the event were made at
i a recent meeting of the camp in Mid·
• dleport. The program featured the
. ·newly published book "Last Sleep--

eo

• -~~ oW

honored at the Memorial Day ser- rently. ne1otiations arc still continuvices on Saturday.
ina with the s~ and aravel compa1be camp voted on delegates to ny. 1be U.S. Corps or Enainecrs has
the upcoming Ohio Department not yet announced a hearins on the
encarwment to be lteld in June. Ter- proposed loading dock; nor has an
rence Cummins of Spencer, W. Va., archeological study required of the
and Dale Colburn of Pomeroy were site beeri set. The commander com· ·
selected as delegates. The camp also plimented the Meigs County Pioneer
passed a resolution requesting the &amp; Historical Society on the rcceitt
Ohio Department S.U.V. to donate bus tour of the battlefield for local
m'oney to the planned new statue of . and state leaders. Keith Ashley repGen. William T. Sherman at Lan- resented the Sons of Union Vetemns
on the tour.
caster.
A report on the 'preservation of
The next meeting of the camp
the Buffington Island Battlefield
was given by the commander. Cur· will be Monday, July 14.

r-----Piays planned------.------.

J.R

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Tl~ of NYinllllth

COil labor , . . ,

'.

Hook-up ct~ervu?
We'll inetctl or but
''
enyolller
· · compethor'a price?

•New Homes

.

SR _
33 Pomeroy, Oh.
992-1330

'

'

· M-SN

·Golf Lessons

GoH Sales, Club

Repair, Custom
Orders, Awards,
l;ngravi[lg

I '

'.
'''
I;

'·'
'·'·

i~

e..
-' · }---.--__,-.,
GlfliD
PSYCHICSIf

,• '

l.

'·

Caldwell to
graduate
from KSU
Roberta Caldwell will graduate
Saturday from Kent State University
with a bachelor of arts degree in
political science and criminal justice. She plans to enter law school in
the fall . Caldwell is a 1993 graduate
of Southern High School. She is the
daughter of Howie .Caldwell of
Radnc and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Lavender of Syracuse.

.

.

.

These students are cast In roles In "Under JekYll's Hyde," one of two plays and four monologues to be presented It the Melge
Junior High School on Friday and Saturday. st 7 p.m. in the school auditorium. Pictured In front are principals, Cara Ash, Dustin
Erlewlne and ian Story. Also pictured, back, 1-r, are Sarah Clifford, Chris Pickens, Andrea Krawsczyn, Adam Shank, MJcheel Dey,
Shannon Price, Beatrice Morgan, Ashley Hannahs, Shand I Bobb, Alison Hays and Tiffany Quells. Tha performences ere under th"
direction of Amy Perrin,
. Krista Johnson and Susan Metts.
.

The British are coming to your garden via a revamped idea book
By ·LJSA FAYE KAPLAN
GanneH News Service
Sometimes it's hard for old gardeners to think of new tric.ks. That's
when the adventurous planter turns
to far away lands and borrows foreign techniques that seem new here.
At least, that's the theory behind
the new edition of "Ideas For Your
Garden" (Reader's Digest, $30).
Originally published in England in
- J995, ..'it has lieen re-edited and
released for a U.S . audience.
"Ideas " contains "Imaginative
yet practical ideas. that surprised
me," says Rosemary G. Rennicke.
who reworked much of tho hook to ·
apply to U.S. gardeners and gardens.'
"ancj I've been working on garden-

ing books for 20 years.•·
. bark of birch· trees against the red how a garden · will loo.k from a years and has also served as director
The ideas spring from some leaves of a Japanese maple; choco- kitchen window or through living of the United Methodist Cooperative
. essential differences between British late cosmos with apricot roses. .
room French doors.
Parish. He has accepted a call to
and U.S . gardens. For instance, .. . Further. the , Englfsh often plant .. '.'ldc_as" shows how_. to adpat Celina where he will serve two Unit.
many U.S. gardens sprawl over sub- gard,ens with different purposes in these British sensibilities to U.S. ed Methodist Churches.
urban lots where "space is not an mind. For instance. they ' ll plant soil. The book contains hundreds of . Speaking on behalf of the as.sociissue," Rennickc says. "The English "memory" gardens to celebrate a luscious color photographs of glori· ation, the Rev. Fr. David duPianticr
generally have much smaller spaces birth or anniversary. And they ous gardens, plus color and annotat- thanked Baker for his dedication and
and arc concerned with . smaller design gardens " from the inside ed illustrations and tip boxes on how commitment to "bringing the love of
plants. Here. we tend to plant RO· out. " Rcnnickc say&gt;. focusing on to create c•traordinary gardens.
God In the people of Meigs County," ·
foot tall Southern Magnolias
'
because we can. "
England's cool and moist climate
is fairly uniform, while the United ,.====~~~==:r---------,---:---:====!:===:----.:.....
States has nearly a dozen different
To place •• •d, c•ll
growing climates.
The Engli~h also pair plants. trees
992•2156
I would like to thank allthoae peclple
and colurs not often linked in U.S.
helped
.make our Tet)th Academic Banquet
Public Notice
gardens and yards. such as the white
aucceae. It definitely proves that It tekea a
village to ralae • child. The itaff, atudenta,
. JuIy 21 .
990
PF for tht Kllllllt
the local greenhouses end bualneaeea, and
scsston.
F
ounl!~llon Bern1rd V.
perenta all joined together to make an:
Open registration lin Summer I
Fultz, TruiiM, II evelleble
''
is scheduled for June 16 in the atrifor public 1n1p~ton It
enjoyeble
evening tor all. .
.
· .,
urn of the John W. Ben:y Fine and L~;;:~~~T.::u:::-.J B•m•rd V. FultZ Lew Oftlce,
A spacial . thanks to Jennifer Sheela for:
Performing Arts Center, 9 .a.m. to 2
111 1/2 W. S1cond StrMI,
making the time to be our guest epeeker, to,
·
· f h
d
·ToSpyrh•B.. r8uysln
Pomeroy, Ohio .45788,
p.m. RegJStrnllon or t c secon scsrhe Closslfleds.
during r•gullr buelntll
Debbie
a.-r for her delightful decoratlona, to:
sion will be on July 21. For. more
houre for • period of 180
Mlcheele Kucama and the Jr. High ataff for
infonnation residents may contact
deya aubatqutnt to
.
Lilllt
things
~......
111
the University at 1-800-282-720 I.
A
pu,......,uon of le notice. ·
preperlng a dellcloua meal, to Dlene R:~: !l
Ext. ?209.
art Wo[~h lot
~. ~~: ~ ::: ::· ~~~ 18, 111, and.,her F.H.A. atudttnta for ell their. help, 1
to the Raclnl! Home Netlonal Bank for pro- :
tht Classifiiwl Stdionl
vldlng leallng memento• of the evening.
·
ANN OU NCE: MI: NTS
Sincerely,
Janice M. Curry, Chairperson

rh/~n~':.~~~~oc;Form

·Friday final day to register at URG
LUCY HOWERTON

Howerton named
national honor
roll win·ner
Lucy Howerton. daughter of
Phyllis and Virgil Howerton, of
Middleport has hcc'n recognized for
academic achievement as a United
States National Honor ·Roll Award

Students wishing to rc~ister for
summer session t.:ourscs at 1hc University of · Ri&lt;&gt; Grande and Rio
Grande Community College may do
so through Friday of this week.
Registration is being conducted
from 8 a.m. until 'I p.m. at the university's records office located on
the main lloor of Allen Hall. First
kssion begins June 16, the second

winner.

Flsblng
Derby

GUN SHOOT
LEGIO.. FARM

Racine Gun Club
Sun: May 18 7 am
-noon
Prizes - GiftsFood
Members may
bring a guest.

I. ·l.·HOLLON
TRUCKING

BAILEY RUN RD.
22 Rifles • 22 Pistols
.20 o.g., 12 Gwp
&amp;410's
SUNDAY .
St1rt1 At I P.M.
PRikWelcontt

. ·'GOODNm'S
QUAUTY ROOFING
304 882-3541
Free Eetlmates

3~··

$

'

1

949-2188

u .• permln.

~rv-U

TrJ Ut Out For All
Your Photoflnlshlng Needs

(118) 145 e•M

THE MAPLEs·'

'5!

~ -~ 14·9&lt;~2·70~2,~~w

MabUaBDIBa

,.,tlf.
-

..........p.

,!

I

(Paymenra baaed cin - a d orad~)'

•

!11/17 1 mo. pd.

, New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
'· Garages • Replf1cement Windows
.,
Room Additions • Roofing
" I COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES .
614-992·7643

. ·-· ~
\J-

serving Southeastern O.H &amp; WV .
1-8CJ0.872·59671391 Safford School Rd.,

'

.

537 BRYAN PLACE

MtODLEPORT
192·2772
8:00 e.m.-3;30 p.ln.

iReplacement Willllows
•Build Garages . ·
tSiorm Diers &amp;
~ Windows

•R• AMtlons .

-Roofing

Electrical- Plumbing - Carpentry
Repairs·- C~nversions -Remodels

.

· OH

.u,p c;oncrN Worl! ..

•New Homes m ·

•Garages

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

•Complete
Remodeling ·-

S~op &amp;

Cotnp,"le

., Top •Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

' FREE . · . ·
ESTIMATEE 1

·

'

985.4473 ' .

11a""
.,•

Free Eslinanle•

..

'

$4.00 tor meal
/Public is invited

DOnation

.. '

,_, ''"' ' · "THE MIDNIGHTS" Uve
Saturday, May 17

'

10 p.m.- 2 a.m.

'

)
'

ilvites Y01 to AHIIII Ow A1!11al Heell. Fair
', ' . , 16, 1997; 11.-4,. '

,.
•

'

town house. furniture, clo1hes, inl·
anti clolhll, hoult ware, home
In ferrlor.
Thur. Filday, aaturdiy 10-4. A·

Serv·U
(619) 645·8434

ma.

IeKe

Framo on Cora Mill rd. Kids/Ba()r
LG ·~ E
·-· '""• " ·
Pomeroy
'
Mlddlepon

clo• -

1 VIcinity

HAULING
··Limestone
• Gravel
• Refuse • Etc.

Umastcme &amp; Grevel
Septic S,ystenis
Trailer &amp;
House Sites
Reasonable Rates ·
Joe N. Sayre

Sayre Trucking Co.
614-742-2138

2mf07tfn

eluding Bpnu$ plan:~ paj~Hgi! ­

day before lh• ld II lo run,
Sunday l Monday edition•
1 :G0pm frtdiV.

yancement OppprtunUje• proli&amp;
§Doring Prqpram and o Cgmoeti,

day, Ma~ 17 across from Beech
Grove In Rutland. LDts of mite.
and children's cloth8s, tons ol
bOy'a clothea. elze S to 18, furnlll.lta and dlshel.

Q-4.

TV, bikes, furniture, liule bit o.l

everything, lallow signs, Rt 82·on
Dead Mans Hill.

YARD SAlE-Friday &amp; Saturday,
May 15 &amp; 18 . .Dunham Road,
leon. Quill tops, small toys,
aiUifed arnmtlo, jow1hy, 1tc.
Public Sale
80
and Auction

0

Absolute Top Dollar : AU U.S. 511~er And Gold Coins,· P.roolsets,
Diamonds, AnliQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currenc~ •
Stet"l ing, Etc-: Acquisitions Jewelry

. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A..enue, Gallipolis, 814-4-48-2842.
Antiques, furnllur!i), glasa. c:hlna,
cains, toys, lamp!l, ouns. taola,
estalel; also appraisal&amp;, Osb~
Martin, 614·992-7441 .

top prices paid, Riverine Antiquet, Pomeroy, Ohio,
·Russ -Moore owner, 614 ·9922526.

.

25260

Clean" Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Model! Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1·900 Easlern /WOOJe, Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal-

Roan••

Free Estimates

614/992-7274 .·
Roofing· Gutters~ .
Siding

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals
DATESNOWUI

1·900·776-4549 axt2878
$2.99/mn 18+

40

Australian Shephard, black &amp;
white male, neutered 5-13-97 .

304·773·9181.
Benjt typa dog, good

&amp;

houoe

Quelhy Work et · ·
a Fair Prlcel
550 Pege St•
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Ho'"' Ph.

·-

614-992·3120
Don Gnry, Owner

· Wan led to buy utH.id MObile
· Home, call 614·446·0175 or 304-

MEO.IDENTALSALES
SSOO -12,000 !Month

You l'.nov1. No ~sk No Cost. Save ,
Your Provider Cona~ct Big SS .•
\ledical Sales Exp. R'lq. 800·297·

.2877.

.--...•

Medical Billing Clork/OIIice As·

alatant-l~o~ll-time, benelita. Send..
resume tO: Boa G· 15 cfo Point Pleasant Register 200 Main St..;,
PL P$easant, WV 25550.
...,

•

-lcot Billing Speclolloi/AIII•
tant Office Manager

. ..

A growing medical office in Point
Pleasanl, WV is Seeking candi·
dates for th, ·position ol BlUing
Clerk/Assistanr Ollice Manager: ·
We are seeking a deiBil o·rlenled
person with eJ~c:e!lent cOmmuni·.
calion sk ill&amp;. This po1l1ion ra-· ·
quires a commanding knowledge
ol CPT-4 and ·IC0-9 coding and
medical ollice procedures. To be ·
considered you must hiYI a
minimum of 2 )'8111 tull·tlme
medical blllln9 experience. Ex·
porlence with Electronic Medical

Billing

(EMC)

and tha Medical

Manager software a plus. Salary
commensurate with eJtperience.
Complete benolit plan. Send
cover letter, resume and salary
reqUirements tQ : Bolt CW· \5 c/o
Point Pleasant Register 200
Main St . · Pt. Pleasant, WV

Now Taking·Applications At Domino's Pizza in the Gallipolis and
Pomeroy Areas only lor: Oriver!l

Wantfld lo buw : used church
pews: anr condi1on. Call 1- (GH)·
286o4394

one part-lime licensed Prarical
Nurse (LPN) posllion Is avaitabe..
a1 Mclin St. Health Clinic. Oualifi·
cations include lic:onsure rrom an
acredited· sc:hool . Tho .qua!illed
candidate wjll rake vital signs, ~o
screenings. give ordered I hera ·
pies,and attend in euminauon ol
patients. If intereSied, please
send resume lo : Oak Hili Com·
munit)' Modk:al Center. Attention '
Brenda McKenzie, 350 CharloUp

Wante'd: U&amp;ed Hardwood Flooring
In ·Good Condilion. Call 614-245-

5887.

EMPL OY MENT
SERV ICES

675-8904.

•

Frte Shepherd mi• pups, nine

Avor'&lt;le, Oak Hill, 45656 EOE
PERSONAL
··
110 Help Wanted
1
CARE AID~S ·
AVON I AU Areas I Shirley Tho G!IIIIO County Coundl on Ag- 1
ing ~Senior Resoun;e Center) it
Speari. 30H75-142e.
curromly accep(ing applicatons !
100 Points Of -•1
' tlr weekends Md/ or part-time ,

Giveaway: .1 Free Sp1y and 1
Free. Neuter For C~ll Of. Dogs In
Honor Of Be Kind To Anlmal

Make Friends For lila While Pro·
moting Global ltarmony. Oocame
An lntornalional Exchange Coor·
dlnaror IIEC) Wilh EF Foundation

not lea~ 304-875-3422.

Free killen&amp;, all colors. 6wka old.

-a

304·8112-3551 leave me1.,1ago.

old, asH 8t•·99H515.

Week. Good Only

~rom

Mey 11! •

1Slh. Sand NRme, Address. Tela·
phone Number To: Gama Counr~
Animal Welfare L..gue, P.O. Bo~

218, Gallipolis, OH •5831.

More Wood To
388-8472.

Gi~eawayl

For Foreign SJUdy, A Non-Prolil
High School Foreign Excbanga
Orgamzallon Oedicatod To Furthering Cul1ural Aw:ueness. Help
To Place Studenls From .Around

The World Wtth F.nmilies In
6U·

Southern And Control Ohio. Work
With Ex, hange Siudenls, High
Schools, And Host Familie$. This

One lot ol Planed .Oak Pieces Position 11 Not Paid, Expt-nses

Random Length 614-oj48·2•11l

Are Reimbursed, Travel Opportu·
nilies. For Uore Information Con-

Syracuse . 992·5776 ·
Nmu Ope~ Jo'or Spring

home In eounf1Y. 304-773-5201.

vary lriendly, uood wlchildren, to

tao! Cathy Bruck~tt At 1·BOO·
871·2526 Or 513·87HS48.

ARbblts 814-388-9123

Able

Reg . 2yr. aid Basset! Hound.

mas biHt at harnelal wotk: 1·800992·6356 or 30-4-682·2645. Ind.
Rep,

304·875-71l53.

llJif ooiOrd, mod. siZed, male dog.
Mull lind home duo 10 !tucking
job. tillll (114)-4-41-ol20l .

60

Lost and Found

Avon

Reprt~entati~es

needed. Earn money lor Christ·

'

""'*" ,..

-•1:1
-.ao

In-

Rd.~7&amp;-'1314.

personaJ care aide. Must hBWI ·
:
1nwel in GaUia counry. Job de- .·
. scription ah:d applications ava~ ·
able at the Senior Resource Ceo-

own wnsportation and wiiHng 10

tor, 1167 St. Rt. 160, ln&gt;m 7:00am.
untll3:00 p.m. Monday mN Frl·

day. Tl'is po~lion lslmrnediOtety '
avallabkt. An Equal Opportunity/

Alllrmativollc;tion Employor.
RENT-WAY

Tho Righi Way
Join Utln TheWinner'eCircle :

'

'

Our recenl merger mny prowl~
you an opportunll~ to move to
fle Inside track with an outstand-Ing retal -purchase co'mpany, Full
lima posirions are available tu:
Slore Management
Accounta Man...,

Cullomor Sorvloe -cleto
• Mon"ll....,ITrol-

Our impf8SSIY8 tomPtntalion

Avon U ·S 18 /Hr, No Door -To · package lnc:ludos a oompotitiw
Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; -Relax· atarling role, peid vacation, sick;
ing, 1-1100-7311-0184indlolo/rop.
and holiday timo, ..011K) iavirlgo ,
ond more.
'
.
AVON $8 .$11/Hr. No ·Door -To pion,
II ~ou have a)lplr ienca In the •·
·DDDr, Quick Caahl 'Bonuseo' 1· rental
Dr rellil industry, or you ....

Loot Boogie vicinity of 588 ond al()-827·&lt;1640 lnd/SII/Rep.
Safford Sohool .Ad. Wooring Tan
CDiillr.and Fin Colillr. Call 114·
BUSINESS DIRECTOR
-85oli
EARN SIX FIGURE INCOME
Walk with INolno..
LOST; Oalmollan tall _ , RL 2 quoolingvaiUIIIDn
11por11; be ..
oSitrubbel}'
nMr Paul'l Enon. He anewer1 lniOfmtdorr lor buYI'S-MWI or
10 Pongo. Contact 30•·175-5!130 ............ n-eto-8414
We honor Golden ·
" llllt ..., owe!!~' hin.
Buckeye Cards
Computer Uoera Nllded. Work
LOST:
Holfor,
tomato,
'Dieckl own hou"' •20k to UOklrr I·
Open Daily 9-5 Sun 12-5 ·
lice,
ol TNT 1100-341-71. II&amp;Oe.
ot/7tfn
.~

tlve lor the Interior Wood Pro·
ducts di~ision ol an astablished
area company. Qualified lndlvid ~ .
ual mu&amp;l be experienced in the
area ot wood produc:ts measure·
mente and sates.· Candidate
musl be a Sett-.starter and highly
dependable . Salary plus com ~
mission. flex ible work schedule.
Send res\Jm&amp; with compensation
history to : 2624 US Rt 3~ S\
SouthsldeWV 25187.

-Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber
Or Vacint Properly With T1mber,

Part Chow, approx. • -amos. old,

~'$1.25 .

Home He1llh Aide needed for
adult cases in Gallipolis area. Pt.
shihs available. Please Call : 1·

255SQ. .

IIIIIINris Greeillause
Set.. oil

ErT'j)loyer.

675-5965

bi'oken, female, likes kids. 304·

Dog nouaa free tor removal, doits

··~····

773·~

814-38&amp;-9906.

Sarv·U-61 11-645-8434
Giveaway

Parl time and lJI timo potlliOna
available, srudonts.and aanlor cit· ...
ltensapplicants wetcoma.
•
Resumet1Applica11Qns Availabkt,
at Eastrran's Foodlard Super·
markets, an Equal bpportunily
~

Profit Froin lntros To Providers

Anli~u.es,

Rt. 1, Box 44-C
Mason, WV

.tivt W.gt Structuct

1100·518-2273
.
Moving sale·kllchen table, TV,
bedroom ouile, bunk bods, mu&lt;h HOME TYPISTS.
.,
m~re, Roekoprlngo Rd,, Pomeroy, PC users needed. S•5,000 InSaturday, 11-5.
'
como ·potentiaL Call 1-800·513·
4343 Ext. B-9368.
pt, Pleasant
IN 1ERIOR WOOD
&amp; VIcinity
PRODUCTS
Yard Sote.fri 16th &amp; Sat 17th 9-? EstimatooMar~eting Represen~­

vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304·

00.5

"'

All Yard SIIH Mull Bi Paid In

773-5785 Or 304·773-5447,
90 Wanted to Buy

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

£hula J.. B.;ustoft, CDPMA
Financing through Norwell Flnenclal

sln&lt;tudong: Top Managomenr and
Department Heads, Meat Perton•.
net, Produce and Dell Clerks,
Cake Decorators, Geshl trt ·an~
Exoellent bonelito packo!e In·

Large 4 family tiaro110 ule, Friday
18th, 1 day only, Baum Additlorl
behind Skat ... ·W.~. rain or shine,

BIULIIIII
BXCIVAtlll.

'

Esl•bliahtd, Growing ; Locally
OWned Company aeeklng enthu·
alastlc appUcon1s lor variouS po~liOnL
loc:al opporMitiea in an posit;on

Grocery Clerks.

Huge 5 'lomllr yard oale· Sotur·

.Will h•ul-.}ust c•ll.
Reasonable Rates ·

· FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773·5822

Wanted

Advonee. Dotdttno: t:oopm tho ef'n:'.tt1P!Jauf.1~, 1 clli:'bin/'.

-Rubber 11888 &amp; elephant
ears $5.50
oCannas $2.00 ea.

there will be Free Cholllltetol Checlta, Hnrlng
Screening, Tl TeatlnJ, Adult • Child .lmmunl·
J1t1on .1 p.m.4 p.m. end Reeplratory EYIIuallon.
Door ..... will ... given • ,.,....mente.will ...
eet'UICI. Vlnd~ willie an 1111 with lnromiillonil
hncl~·
.

112·2825

May 18·11; 9:00·5:00. Addison Exportorieed Supormarktl Holp

Barr, H. Rowton, D.D.S.

· • Pansies $6:50 ftat
• All vegetable &amp; bedding
plants $6.50 flat
• Blooming &amp; Follege '
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
o41n. Assort. Pots

AIJW)I !tJ('! t.H rJ I '•

lllaeK IMler

Presents

Ave, oolt, Sweeper, Clothing , Have Hand Tools &amp; Trantporla·
Silver Ctttllicalet. Marbles. Jew- tion, Call Mike Marcum 614·2-45oliy, lola mile:
.
0437.

r

.

~-&amp;~~~11

WAYNE'S PLACE

frld8f, Saturday 1071 Second Experienced Roofers &amp; Carpent·
era 3 Veaia Exper ience, Must

1·900·263·2700
EXT. 6925.
$2.99 per mln.
Must be 18 yrs.

~ .MASON .DENTAL CARE

'

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Fri. 9 til 8, Sat. 8:30 to 12:30

Daily Horoscope,
up·to•date soap
results. Call now!

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

velopes AI Home. S1ar1 Now. No
Experience. Free Supplte&amp;, lnlo.

No Obligation. Send LSASE To:
N;E. DOPt 1351, B&lt;" 5137, Dla·
Friday and SaDirclay 588 Orchard _mo-cnd_Bar_._c_A'-::9_176_5.,.
. --::-:-:Hil Road Route 7 SO.I!1 10 CllpptrEc ·
E
t
p tA
Mill, turn right. Follow Slgnt.
asy Work I xc:el enl aw
s·
·
semble Pfoduc1s ar Home. Call
Children• Clothoo. Nlntendo, Toll Free 1.800.46 7-5566 EXT.
Western Boakl, Bicycle, Storm 12170•
door andToyo ·.
----::--::-::---:-

·"BuQd Tour Dream"

D. C.a~'s

1\aesdays and T,hursdays
'
.
,.. Se~&amp; ~m 4:30 - 5:15

••

"PANAMA ROSE"

B'- Salt 2 tamllln lott ot _..
rything. H2D Sunnt Or. OH HC·
ond A...Titur · SaLh&gt;&amp;

RicK Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, compt11e
auction service. licensed
168,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304·

AT

Heights, Pomeroy

ed Earning Potential. Ftoxeblo
Houra. Phone Carley 1-(886)•772·
2455 ,
Earn 11.000 Weekly Stulling En·

388-9443 . .

FREE ESTrMA,TES

~ulbetry

Pon!ei'OY, ~-

Stick/MIG Aluminum ~eldlng

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

at C-"!td'l,

Oigilal En~enainmel ordet Takeri
Needed $15.00 Por Hour. Unlimt·

Lemley's Auc:tion Service, leslie
Lemloy, Auctioneer. Household,
Estate, Farm Salas. Phone 614·

'EVENING MEAL
MEIGS ·CoUNTY SENIOR CENTER

Doli -l&lt;erlouhler nMdtd. lolull ·

1&gt;1 1lyra. Did. Apply
In HerldonDn, WV.

-·-lhodarllolo,.lhotd
Ia to run.Sundly
tdlllon • 2:00 p.rn.
Frlday.llondlytdHion
·10:00a.rn. Bttuntay. ·

814-.. 1-1059

HARTWE'
. HOU$.E u

VICinity

&amp;1, Van! S..llull
.. ......... Ad_.
DE•rx IE: a:OO
. p.m.

Blnk· Lab and Coon Puppies

(FRII! ESJIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG II .
812-41211·

•

20 Yrs. EJCp. - Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

a.

Custom Homes

811'1
Qa&amp;lft

.New Location: 2 mlln off At. 7 on Rt. 124

FRIDA'( AND SATURDAY
. MOOSE LODGE 731
By Popular Requestd, Band

992·2483

ROBERT BISSILL
CONSTRUCT~~N

.

oftiiiiiiOt a.ExllltOr ' ·
pelnllng

Ucensed • Bonded
Insured

Foundatlone, ·
Drlveweye.
Sld.Welkl, Patloe,
Garage and
Bailment Floors.
Free Eetlmatee.
In au red
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES
742.0304 .

MGA Construction Services

·MOBILE HOME
.·. ~EATIN~ ~ COOpNG .:o

J&amp;l SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

..

BISSELL BUILDERS, .INC~

•Free 5 Year.Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat ·

-New Gereget
olltctricel • Plumbing

· Cheater, Ohio

At=-·

Cu~tomot StrYico
.,_ 1'111-Timt F a-•
Dei• p.,. --. SWan~ euService, Tolophon&lt;1, Gtl*ll Of·

.

•

. (614) 742-3800

CONCIEIE
SEIVICES

Sat:, June 7, 1997
&amp;P.M.
Melgl Co.
Fairground•
Sponsored by
Melgl Co. +H Horae
. Committee
For morelnlo .c1ll Pem
185-4489 or Llae 1411-2052
. AucttonMr:
Rhea Milhoan

(No Sunday Calls)

Easy Bonk Rnandng
·
• Air Conditioners lll$1alltil''28ila a month
: Heat Pumps lnslillltd 138" il monlh
:

--2ND ANNUAL
TACK AUCTION

614-742·3411 .

.......

oftoom Addition•

985-4422

"

POMEROY, OH.

614·992-5479

Remod.ellng
Kitchen Cabinets
VInyl Siding·- Roofs
Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAI9''

¢-

113 W. 2ND ST.

New ConlltructiOrl &amp;

ft.:

Must be 62 years of age or handicaptled.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements'
~For further details call t~~Y.

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

Gall Us For A Free Es~rnato
· 6W'T42·3090 .
614-742·3324
614-742·3076
• 71

in Pomeroy, Ohio .
,
~ants are computed according to:your
1ncome. Lovely apartments featuflng
wall-to-wall carpeting, with aiL
. appliances.
· () · ·

'

360° Communications

Suri1et Heme
Cen•truotlon.

WICKS
HAULING

~1711

CELLULAR PHONES

3351 Happy HOllow Roa~
MiddlepOrt, Ohio 45760
New Homes, AddKions, ·
Roofing, Siding. Pole
Barns, Decks, PalnUng,
Garages, Porches.

9(.

'

_,__

IIOIH lmpron••••

:V;71WTFN

: Will Your Utlllt,es·Put You
In The .Poor tto41s~? . Jfj.
Consider: · • ."lJi'

· YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SElVIa

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re.Corea
Ale Condenaeri/Hou Assembllea

From original 110 or 135 C-41 process rolls.

'@I

MUll be 11 yra.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

'

COOKING DEMONSTRATION

Gutter Cleen,tng
Painting•
FREE ESTIMATES

Aeration Motor oSale1 • Repeire
. Cleaning Septic Syateme
Pon·A..John • Rantala • Serviced Weekly
No Extra Charge for Evening• or Weekend• ·
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Daya A Week

KINGS'

',

1-900-(484)·1 020
Ext. 1412

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand ·

'

Down•

'

1

Howerton auends .Sradbury Elementary. She is the granddaughter of .
Marjorie Miller. Middleport. and
Lucy Perigo of Melbourne, Fla. Her
name will appear in the official yearbook of the United Statd Achievement

- 'Jhe Friend• of the Melge
County Public Llbrery ere lporl•orlng 1 vleh to the llbrery by
cookbook euthor Dawn Hell of
Sweneon. Her cookbook, "Down
Home Cookln' Without the Down
Home Fet" 11M IOid over 87,000
copielln the pest 12 monthe ••
wee Hlecled •• one of the"Beet
of the a..t• cookbooke by Quell
· Ridge PrMI_. Hell will be 11 the
llbrerv et 7 p.m. Frldey to telk
eboul her cookbook end to
demanetrele reclpn. Her book
will be for Hie with • portion of
111e profhl t.o go to the Frlende
of the Llbrery. ·
·

LIVE!!!

The Meigs Cimnty Ministerial
. Association on the occa.,inn of his
last meeting as a member ·of the
group, honored its longtime trcasur·
cr. the Rev. Kenny Baker, with a ccr.tilicate and pen and pencil set at a
Trin'ity Church l.unchcon Wednesday.

Me?;,kc~o~~:y P,~:";h~h;~~~e;is~~

.

ROOFING
.
'
,..
NEW·R:IR
. Gutters• ·

Sensatiolal Results

Ministerial
Association
honors
Rev. Baker

·614·992·7119

ll50 Condor ~~: ' . ' . PO!IIPI'QY, Ohio 45769 .
A oM.;ti/ii·on Nichols Metsl, INc.
· Phone: 614: 992-21106
Fax: 304·773·5861

'

WY IO'n477

POMEROY, OHIO

'

, Howard L WrheHI

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-ICJO.H1-MOO

JICK'IIE"'C I
POI7-A·JOII SEmCE

.. ~achll!f~ W~lding Shop .

" ....,
... h.-e..
st.-e.;.;r,_o..h,.l,.o_-

;:

812-4118

· Big Bit Fabrkation,

~ohn T_.ord 11 .•,,

!'
. _

11 o Court St.

Steel S.les, Weldi111 Suppl~, Industrial Gas
Radietor Repair &amp; Replace)Dent
Monday-Frj)y ; 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
SaturdaY,' 8:00 a~m. • 12 nocn

:• Kountry Klub
'

"FACI'Oift'
DIRECT
PRI£:ES''
Quality Window Systems

.

70
. Yard 8lle
===:;:::::::::::===
Ill••
Skilla Needed. Cell For An
OIHipolla
Appo~ntm~nt; 61 4-44i-2Zt4

(Lime StoneLow Rein)

26 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Complete Ml\cl!J~ Shop Senke Fabrlaatlon

The

'

•becks
•RObflng
•Siding ·

•Additions
•Remodeling
•Garages , .
"Stop pulling 'OJf those RUJch needed
h0111e ;,Rpr"'lemenll. ~· CaU Today!
992·2753 Free Eatlmlln 992·5535

3a AUTO CUNK.&amp;
24 HR. TOWING

'

· REV. KENNETH BAKER ·

_.........,.1.,_,..,,

c.,.._,_t1oo. -

•0

Middleport resident Michelle L.
Miller has received a trustees scholarshtp from the University of Rio
Grande. Miller is a seni!)r at Meigs
High School. She plans to major in
education. She is the daughter of ·
Davey J. and Shirley Miller. The
scholarship covers partial tuition for
qualified applicants.

... _.... Ful Md
a.. _ Ro!...llor Co...,llologt
Part· Tl.,. OuarantH&lt;I weeu

toot on Orahem lcllool Ad. In
-1•1•)·
Ul-•207 J . .. (8U)·•41·2231

'

The Battle of Droop Mountain." The state of West Virginia as a Union
author, Terry Lowery, Charleston, state having seceded from Confeder·
W. W.Va. spoke on the battle fea- ate Virgillia:
tured in his new book which
Keith Ashley, commander,
occurred near Hillsboro, W, Va. with reported on the April 27 cerelJlOnies
two Meigs County units being at Georgetown, Ohio, honoring the
involved in the battle --the 91st Ohio I 75th anniversary of Gen. Ulysses
Volunteers and the Second West Vir· S. Grant. Georgetown was his boy·
ginia Infantry.
.
hood home. Ashley presented a
Union General William Averill memorial wreath in behalf of the
defeated a small Confederate force Sons· of Union Veterans at the cere·
led by Confederate Generals John mony. Similar services were held in
Echols, William "Mudwall" Jack- . New York City at the Grant's tomb.
son, and George 's. Patton. Some
The death of the camp's senior
Civil War historians credit this battle vice commander, Jerry Devol of
with having established the new Mariena. was reponed. He will be

110 Help W.tlld

LOll and Found

looking for a challenging caraer·
opportunity, Rent ~ War ma)' be
the ticket for you. A.n •bl~t)' -.,
~

r•

locelo ,, not ri!&lt;!Uired, but can .... .

hance your opportunity tor

ca,.. ~

ednrtciiiMIIW.

Appllcollonl are occtplod at S
Ohio Rt- Pl.... Gallipollo, Ohio ;
erae Alfii·Wor IIDrtl, Dr IUbmlt : .,
·your rnumo in COli~ to m. J
atiiWIIddtua.

1.1

�~ lily 11 1117

,...10. The Dally Slntlnll

The Dally Sentinel• Pege 11

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

-~~~·~~·~--~--------~~~~~~~~==========~========~=============
ALLEY OOP
DIDOI:
·'
NBA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

•

r

Pomeroy •lllddllport, Ohio

-·-Pullla

•

PHILLIP

ALDER

•

-- ~
fOI'Rent
·11188 OokMod 14170 211&lt;, 2 bofl,
8xl2 ded&lt;. on renlod lo~ opl)onal
IOXI2 _
i torago
304-1175·
8051L
_building.
_
1993 14x70 Vtrr Awa ctiv,e,' Prl·
2 Bedroomo, 2 Bath House, On
1t Acre• Located At Soward•
Rldae Roed, Crown Cil)', Available
To

Buy

June 11t, Inquiries Call

114-258-1559.
Postal Jobs 3 Poaltlona Available, No Experience Neeesaary,

For lnlormatl on, Call 1·118·784·
0011 En 8013.

3 Bedroom hOuae In New· Haver.
central air, partial baaemenl.
Priced .. SOil! --3772.

38r, 2i&gt;ath, LR, DR, kiU:hen, 1car

vate Rented Lot, like New, Many
Extrao, Wilt Take Par
44HI701 .

orr, a14·

1904: 1 ~X80 llrandr Wine 3 b&lt;.. 2
full both' 3 an ca., laundry room.
Heat hump, underpinnjnv, many
OlllrU.(814~44Hl155

1998 Oakwood Troller. $2,500/
and anume paymenta.

garage, tenced in bac:k yard .

Tile Southam Local School Dis·
trfct haa IN following coaching
poaidon• avt~Hable ror .tt-• 1QSI7·

II

~ehool

rear ; aaaittant high

achool football: junior high football: ualotont high achool vatlor·
ball: junior high voiloyboll; junior
high bon balkalbail; junior high
glrla basketball; vanity c:heer ~
reading adVIsor; and junior hlgt'l
IChaol chearlaading advl1or. All
appllc:anta must poa1e1t or ac:·
quire a aport. rnecic:lne ctrdftcate
and a CPA cant. PlaaN und lnqulrlel to Mr. James lawrence,
Superintendent. Southern Local
· Schools, Box 178, Racine, Ohio
45111 . SLSD Ia an Equal Oppor·

Priced on Inspection. 304-875-

4428

dar• or 304-1175·7788 from

7-9pm
AJH~N9 W?fiYUQE CO
Flnanc:Jng ,..;Joble lor HoUMS
and Mobile Homos. New or uaed
purclleaao; Roftnanclng;Bill conoolidatlon: Lind Gontrae11. hlo
epptlcalion IN: Allevalo of cradl
caN llldey lor a free analyalal
800-!1211·14021111+512-

New-1997 14 Wlde· l both, $699/
dawn, 1139/mo, with approved
credit ca11 HIOO-e91·6777.
1997 14x70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$995 down, $1951mo. Only 11
Dakwaod Hom.s, Nitro, WV. 304·
755-5811519~7 uxeo
$1 .~!ill. down,

3 or 4 Bedroom,
$229/mo. Free air,
skirting, &amp; d,iiVary. Only at Oakwoad Homos Nll!o, WV. 304· 755·
5885.
111117 14al0 311A1211a
Waltor/Dryw, Dlahw.FrH Dellvory • Sol-up
11180 Down-1217 Mo 372-3400

I

Beaut•ful three bedroom, 2 t/2
bath log home for nit, large liY·
ing room, ~usL kitchen, tun fin·
i1hed basement. exquilite w~d ·
-k. loll, largo whirlpool rub, skylight, heat pump, CA, satellite,
tuniii'E~.
2252 aquara feat, $77 ~coo QBO,
Ohio Vallov Benk wtl olfor b aale
Wanlld: 38 People LON 18 ·25 614-742·2581. .
Pound• In Tho Next 30 Dayo. Bfld&lt; 311 with Detached Brick Ga· a 198G Champion mobile home,
Natural, Guaranteed! 1·800·890· rage, Second lor For Trailer or S...ial10381861507. Public auc·
lion will bo held at tho OVB onnoo,
2295.
Largo Garden, $55,500 In Radnor 143 Third Ava, Galllpollo, Oh on
(614) 245-5486
. . 5.'17197 at 10:00 AM. l.tiH will bo
Wlnlld
I )IOU hiYe aold before: we are
For sale, 1 bedroom home In Po- oold to hlghaol bidder "aa Is"
looklng for past aale1 usoctatas,
meroy, will sell on land contract, wllllout expra11ad or lmpl"" warranty and mar be seen by conouch u : Kirby. Marr Kay, Avon,
814-992-5858
tacting Keith Johnaon 11 (814)·
M.latlzing , Tupper Ware,
Home lnl«ior, ect.. Unlimited
In Harrisonville- home and two 441·1038. OVB rtltrYel the
-ring Allantlal, Freacton, ftaJd.
Iota, ideal lor young or retired right to accept or retecl any and
all bids, and wilhdraw properry
ablltr. Beu Pay, IDP cornms·
couple, call614-742-3128.
from sale prlot to &amp;ale. Terms or
llono, bo- pn~Qram. Ph. Shena
Newly remodeled three bedroom, Sale: caah Or Cordfied Chock.
H886J-772·2•55
- · ' - - ' - - - - - - - ana and 112 bath horne in MiddleWANTED: Alllllant Director of port, 6 t4·992·3465 a!lor Spm.
340 Business and
Nur~lng ror 138 tong term care
Buildings
unit. Applicant• must pones One t.IHa From Citr Limit Of GalliBaGhelora Degree or cerdiAIIon paUs, All New Kirchen, Window &amp; Land and Building. Crawford'o
aa gerontological nurse. Please Siding, $35,000, 814·387-0403.
Grocery, Henderoan WV. Pricad
respond by 5120187 tot Donna
an lnopection. Call 304-675-5404
Northup, DON, Lakin Hospital, Syracuse- thr8e bedroom, one or 304-e75-1408.
304-875-0880, axt. 12•. Lakin and 112 batho, LR, DR, family
room; oak kllehen, new catpet. full 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Hoapilllla an EEO omployo&lt;.
basement, electric furnac:e!heat
pump, two·c:ar garage (28x32), 1 AC &amp; 2 AC lots for sale m
180 Wanted To Do
one and H4 ac:res, nice, 614-992~ Scenic Valley Subdivision.
24 Hour In Home care For Elder· 5175.
Wedge Realty, Broker 30•-875·
ly Or Handicapped, 814·•41 ·
2722. .
Three
bedroom
ranch
in
Meig
s
0000.
County, one and 112 baths, cen· 1.35 Acres 2•wes trailer 'Sbr, 2
ANY ODD JOBS: Exterior paint· Ira! air, larqe garage, beaul•lul bath, cable, city water, out build·
ing, shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, counlr)' selling on one .ac:re, Red lnga. 304-576-2541 . $27,000
landacaplng, sidewalks edged, Hill Road, Daf111111e. Shown by ap- 080.
lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304-675- pontrnant on~. 614·742·233 7.
7112.
For Sale Or Trade ; 40 acres 5
320 Mobile Homes
Miles From Gallipolis, on State
BabySitting- daycare ava•lable in
Route 218. Will Sell All or Parts.
for Sale
~ home M-F, 8·8, lower end of
6t4-251H1574
M•ddleport by ballpark. Caring,
"82 Commodore, Ua72. three
crusting mother of one, personal
Attn: Hunters &amp; Flthermen . 15
referencea available, 814-992- bedroom, one bath, $9500, 614- acres rolling hills wt2 wooded ar·
985-4282.
..ell.
eas &amp; pond. 15min. from Holzer,
close to Vinton area. Beautiful,
14~65
Mabie
Horne
62
Dakbrook
'Child c:are in my, home, referenc$16.000.304-675-7609.
:
good
conditon,
with
extra
fru
. 11 MYoble, 614-992-e&amp;42.
nishlngs. Priced to sell! Call arter
Prime Acreage 3·1 acre pardals,
Experienced carpentry and remo- 6:p.m. (614)·258-1 t69
excellenl buildinq sites In Ma·
deling. Inside and outside,
son. Serious lnqutrea only. 304 14~~:70 3 Bedroom. Nicely fur·
decko, vinyl aiding, add·on addl· n1shed,
On One Acre lot, New 882·3772
tiona, cabinet refac:ing or newly
Wall, $28,000. (814)?56rebuilt. Rererencea-Free Esti· ·Drilled
Several 5-acre parct11
6216
matoa. Jm Shuii30H75-1272.
$7,500 eac:h
,
1972 Vlndale, with e~epando and remote, beautiful land; Meigs
George• Portable Sawmill, don't deck. (6141· 448 -7556 after ·caumy, Scipio Townohlp. SR 692
haul your logs to the mill just call 7
L
ijust off sJ:lt-43). OWner financing.
30H75-1957.
:oop.m. ., eave mes98ge.
Call for good map. 1·614-593·
1974 Schultz 60x10 With 1.52 8545.
· '--car., 81 4-446-3103 ·
Aroo, 614-379-2652.

car.

--

Profelllonal TrH: Service, Srump

1084 1.. x70 Schultz, two bed-

,uronce, Bidwell, Ohio. 6t4·386f646, 114-387·7010.

room, stove and refrigerator, air,
oskl~ $9000, 61 ._ 593 •619 1.

~emoval, Free Estimates! In·

·~

RENTALS

1 BR 1\pl Clooe ., - . , Na Pltal
(814) 446-2072

50120 ioll mllal lleavr gauge
building; diomanlled, roady to
movo &amp; rouaomblo. 304·175·
2858.

2 Bedroom Apltrtmonl, Adjacont
To Unlvoralty Of Rio Orondo
Campua, Available 11/1107. 111•·
215 ~··
2 Bed100m Aportmen~ $395/Mo.,
1100 Dopool~ All Ulillllea Paid, No
Pata.l11 u8 3437.

Baby bed, high ehalr, car seat,
ltrollar &amp; Ming. 304-875-4541.
Bantam 3 Flahlng Baal, Set 01
Golf Clubl, 814-446-7123.
Bedroom HI, quHn 1750. Wing
chair $80. Caffea &amp; 2 end tablll
$125. Ralrlgaralor $500. 2r TV
1350. Waohor &amp; electric dryor
1350. 5 Sholl bookcuo 130.

2 Btdrooma In Galli polio, No

Pall, Rofarencea, Water Paid
,250o\lo.,l14-388-1708.

304-882-2001.

2bdrm. ap11., total alactrlc, appllanceo furnlllled, laundry rDOm
lll:llitleo, do• Ia school in town.
Appllc:atlons available at: Village
Greanl\ptl. 149 or call 814-992·
3711 . EOH.

Big acrHn TV tor aalo: Raaponalbfe party to taka on sma!l
monthly J111Ymentl. Good credit a
11111lCai 1-800-71JI.1B57.

B.EAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Booll By Redwlng, Chlppellba,
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Rocky, Tony Loma. Guaranteed
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood Drlvt Lowest Prices At Shoo Cola, Gal·
lrom $280 1o $334. walk to ahop llpollo.
&amp; movltl. Call 61•·446•25~6. BOTTLED WI~L POWEAI LOSE
Equal Hauling Opporl.lnily.
·up to 30 J&gt;Ounda, 30 DAY MoN·
Beech St. Middleport. ~br fur· EY ·BACK GUARANTEE I Natural,
nlllled apt, utilltiea paid, depoaK Doctor Rocammondod, 81•·••1·
&amp; ,.~anon:eo. 304-812-2588.
1962, Free aamplas.
Downtow~ Galllpollo: Modern 1
Badroom, All ElectriC, Carpotld,
Comploto Kil&lt;hen. Electric Haat/
AO'Colldllloilillg, 814-446-4313. '

B&lt;own Topper !&gt;r a Fun Size Pick·
Up, 8ft lang . Good Condition.
(614~251-1012

Girls tO-Sp. Bike $50.00. Studio
Couch and Chair .30.00 (614)44e-4944

Furr&gt;lhod 1 bedroom upperi8Yal.
Utlloliaa paid. lelia! lor lor 2 (&gt;80·
pie. l255.mo. 1100 depoait.
Reference• Required. (EJt-4)·
446-1340
Furnlohed 3 Rtromo &amp; Beth, No
1'1111, Ralorence And Depo~l Required,ll1~1511. ·
Furnlohed 1\partmanl 1 !ledroom,
D39 Second Avenue, Galilpoli!l,
1295/llo., Utilities Paid, 614·44&amp;~- Alter 7 P.M.

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Problem•? Need Tuned? Call tht
plano Or. B14-448-4S25
Handpalnled Slatoo. cllooaa from
variety or place an order. Grear
glh Idee. 1814)-4411-420 7
One Eaz.lJit Weight Distributing
Hitch 1,000 lb. $200, Phone: 814448-87• .

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bedtoom
apartments lit Village Manor and
Alvoraide Aparlmentl In lllddlepor~ From t238·$304 . Call 614·
992-50&amp;4. Eq"ual Housing Oppar·
lunilea.
Modern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart·
mentl, In M•ddlepo(t, ate,

Hot tub•· aak about Jcratch &amp;
dent and factory uc:Qnda. As low
81 $111911, 304-295-6965.

~~i;~~~:r•=fll~r~en~ce~,~d~a-J
614·992·

1 have a largo llloction of ~ne
cerdo, "Magic" tho Galltof1ng in·
eluded, thousanda of comic
booka and a hugo collec!lon of
sparta cards. Old a~ new Star,r
wara No
coys
aiao Included.
Lara
deal!
reaooneble
allar rol\lsed.
Cal614-949·3098 alter 6:30pm.

Nice two bedroom apartment in·
JET
Aa&lt;lnt, $250 month pluo utilities
AERATION MOTORS
and depaalr. refet"encas, 614-992- Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In SIDCk.
71143.
Call Ron Evan' 1·800·537-9528.

Partially furnished 1bedroom,
udlideo paid. 304-e75-2722.
Small furnished apartment, 1br,
ideal for 1 penon, no 'pets, no
amokers,•reterencea &amp; deposit.
304·675-2651 .
Twin Rlwr1 Tower, ni?W a"'e?ting
applk:ations for tbt. HUO subsldized apt. for elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304-675-6679.
Two bedroom apartment in Mid·
QleporL no pets, 614-992-5858.

450

Furnished
Rooms

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also trailer space an r•v~r. All
hook-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5651, MasonWV.

460 Space for Rent
Oown10wn first floor office space.
air ConditiOned. New carpet. Call
(614) 448-4383 8 a.m.-Sp.m. mandar flur ~!day.

Like New Nordic Track Walk ~it
Treadmill, Like New, Whirlpool
Automatic Washtr, 614·3877814.

MER CH ANDISE

510

Househ9ld
Goods

A
Recon di11one d
App II ances:
Washers, Dr~ers. Rangea, Refrl·
gratora, so Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614·446·
7795.
.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W18 h
d •
.rrigeralors
ers,Skaggo
ry rs,
r
rangu.
,Appllances,
76'
Vine Streot, ·can 61•·446·7396,
1-8Q0..4D9-3CQ9.

Hot Point electric atove $100 .
304-456-1677.
Hutch w/Matching Table · &amp;6
Chalfa. Cedar Blanked Chell.
Woll Mirror, Desk. Oak Baby: Bad.
(814)·379-2388'
Queen 112e waterbod, like new,
twin hoataro, twin water bags,
bad frame 304-675-4127.
Used Furniture: 130 BullVIlle
Pike, Baby bad. play pen, caflaei
and tabloo. nlght .llands, desks,
drouors, couches. ohoiro, rock ,
eri, bunk bed set, much more.
61'4.~46·4782 HRS 10· 4. Wo buy
usad tJmiWra.

530

AmJques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Haura: II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 6:00 p.m.. SUnday 1:00 10
e :oo p.m. 814 - ~92·2528 , Run
Moore owntr.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

614-992·41411.
SPRING SPECIAL: Central Air
Condltlonera: 2 Ton "$1.195: 2 1/2
Tan $1.295: 3 Ton $1.385; 3 112
~on
" $1,5~'
.,, 4 Ton $1,8ft5•
"' , Prien
Abava Include Normallnllalla·
lion. Full 5 Year Warranry. ·u You
Don't Call Ua We Both Laoel"
Free Eauma1111 Add-On Hear
Pumpl Only SUghtr Higller. CoH
us Today. 1987 11 The Twanrz
seventh Yoor In Tha Healing
Cooling Buainelll 814 •44e-s30B,
I-800·29 I-OOG8.

..

in-ollltllw.
( ) o r - . . horolly

~--d
..... la'ln . .

Mlur ,.,an.,..,.
GIIPOIIIflllr ..._,

I

wv.

.

'J '

HAPPY JACK .T RIVERIIICIDI:
Recognlzad Salt &amp; Eflacllvo
Againl! Hook, Round, &amp; Tap•
worma In
&amp; Cata. Available
0 · T·C AI ROWNS TRUIT•
WORTHY HARDWARE /IH·
448·8828 &amp; J D NORTH PRO·
DUCE /1114-441-1833.

D"&amp;'

Women• Seiko Gold Watch: &amp; 14
Carat Gold In Diamond R1ngo 7
Earring1, All Verr,H•Gol 614-441 ·
1116.
.

550 .

Building
Supplies

~~,Gold.

2 Bu

6 7 I 4

3 ..........

4c-, •.g.

•A

a

tJI76S

s4

.

5 Brttllll Navy

• 9 76 3

Ppmeranlan For Siuda, Very
Small Proven For Information,
814·448-3049.
~;..-:-;..::._:;;:-:--::--:---1
Purobrad Siberian Hurkr pup·
plea, blue ay11 , whitt, gray &amp;
whlll, pretl)' maska, 1 male, 2 fa·
•-""
$130 each call
::\"4':99;~1/.._now,
'
Reoistered Hlr;nalayan blue point
malo kluan: alao atud serviceShtltio, Hlmalayon,.Shit·JU; 61 4·
992-21107.
Six miniature Collie pupt, full
blooded, 1125 each, 614· 742·

2050.

570

""'sica

I
Instruments

Kiinball Con,alo Piano, $1,200:
1980. (114~2~5-5789
Star-Guitar, Clteahlre, Ohio- loll·
ons and instrument•· plano, gui ·
Ill and clf!IITII, 614-387.0302. .

Will give plana lessons in m~
home to b~inners, .advanced
student• and lldultl; 111:0 teach
chording and tranopoolng. Diller·
ont arrangomamo and rhylhma. II
lnleratlld ceH B14·992·5403.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Vulnerable: Eut-Weat

lntorlor, oxcallenl condition, ,_
dor~.\:2 ,000 milo a, a 14·24 7·
3QO '

~

· Dealer: South
South

.

'

BARNEY

(new l!'le) at,
litllta, txp. cond.
lor $11 .300

1•

)

51

I

"89 Well Cmh Scarab Excall, 350
mag with I&gt;Uttr cabin, cu~tom 110u1
trailer, aacellent condulon. low
houra, $15,000 OBQ, 614-949:r
.
1995 """he z,28 32,7?7 Mlleo, . 2079.
PW, Windawa, &amp; Lacko, Tilt, 1Sit Alumir,Um' Boat 18 HP Even·
-Crulao, Base Spnkora •t2,800,
rude Motor and Trallef, Electric
080, 614-446-7380.
start $700 614-256-6434
1995 Ford Canl&gt;ur SE, V-8 au17 Catabelle, good uador 70~
comatic: ~ all power,· champagne
Evenrude.
New P,OWflt Hea~ .
color, 31.000 milaa, 111,000, 814$6,000. 080(614)·386·6920 al'rr
742-3021 .
Spm.
.. .
I
111g5 PlYmouth Noari. Bladt. Four
.18.5
loot ,S~aiDs ski boa~ 150 f1&gt;,
Door, ~ Air, 20K '17,050 0110.
Suzuki, e.s. "1Jh,
kep~ •·
614-256,11340 'or $14-258·1417
cellent condition. $5500, 614·94,·
1896 Monte Cillo LS fully load· 3403.
ad, 11111118fl30!1-874-4859.
1988 Bomber Fish &amp; Ski B•J•
95 T-!ljrd Annlvtroary Edition, Boat, 115 HP, Marinm Motor, ~8
V8, Su~rool, Loaded. 28 K. Call Pda. Mariner Trolling Motor, lf·
wrenca De_pth Finder. Ski Bilt,
after 8~1"· (614~258-1188
O'brian Tube, Duel line Weill,
A Natd":A Car? No Credit, Bad Very Good Condition. 614-441Credit, Benkruptcx? W. Can Haip 0229.
Re-Eotablioh Orodlll llull Make
$150 Waok Taka Homo, 15% 1991 16
Down On Cash Or Trade To
Qualify For Tills Bank Financing ..
No Credit Turn Downsl814-441·
1994, 888 Sporllltr 4,700 Mileo
Excellant Condition, Loll•Of Ex·
tmo. $ ~,500 Firm. 814-379-2908

.

FRANK &amp; li!ARNii!ST

ga-

'

--·

·'

, THE BORN LOSER

-~

,.

.. Y£~ ... FINE ... T~I/... YO\). ..

~

WELL/ &lt;C::d AM. ...

0807,

1994 t.larada 18 Foot Open
W/SUJ'i Deck, 4.3 liter V8,

Cruiser, Am Fm Cassette, and
Acce110ry. 614-256-6393

Pick-Up Dlak 1225: Ona R9W
New .$1
5 HP Tiler
8Ft.
Cutter Finish Mower,
E•cellenr Condition $575 81•~
44fl-4053
FARM TIRE SERVICE
Tractor, backhoe, okldder. mobile,
service. New &amp; used tires anc
whaelo. 614·698·3438, 814·698·
6471 or 11118111ngo 614-593-8942.
AGRICULTURAL LIME SERV·
ICE .
RoiD~Ier b aalo. Wizard rear,.,.
IIIIer, 5 ltp.', uaed very info, behind
Rutland Furniture, call 814·742·
2423 allor 4pm.

UnliSyatem Power Unll w/Com·
bine, Fertilize Spreader, Corn
Plenter, Spraror. (614)·245-5515
Aller 5:pm

WI make hydraulic hOH aoumbllll. Sldar'a Equipment 304·
875-7421 .

Chevy C"aviler 93; 4 door ac,
auto, Amfm radio. antl·lock
·brake •.1--av,raae miles. e~~:cel.
condilitt~. $3,500. (614)·379•2967
Credil Rroblems? Gauranteed fi·
nancinu. 10% Down, Payments
Aa Low"Aa $180 Per Month. No
Turn .Dclwnol Call Ruth 014·441-

2897.
Unlurnlahed Two Bedroom· Apartment Upstairs, 322 Thir.d Ava .•
Galllpoll1.&lt;614·258·1003 Cell Bat·
weary 9am ID 9 pm.
Upton Uud Cars Rt. 62·3 Mlloo
Saulh of leon, WV. Financing
Available. 304-456-1069.

720 Trlleks for sale .

'87 Ford Ranaer, new engine,
ch.uch and prenure plaJe, liraa,
Your New Buah Hog Dealer for . pa1n1, one roar age, $2~0. 61•·
Iliad"' Backhoa' Cuttart, FINah 849-~.
Mowers, Loaders, Etc. fa Carmldtul'l Farm &amp; Lawn, 614-446- 1878 Ford F- 150, 390 engme,
good shape. Also spare truck
2412. Or 1-800-584-1111.
porto. 304-675-.980.

630

Livestock

Zli ~And Chi·Aogns Buill
ft------bl y Prl cad, E•·
Far Sa ._...,.
collont Brtodlng, Slate Run

Fam., Jacklon~14-2811- 53QS..

eo· bay trail ~orat; s•• gentle
brokt mart: horoe, bUggr, one
_goqcl._:erull8-724•.

1500 Pounds, Call Allor _8 P.M.

Hamp. SUflolk C"'u Ono Ram, 13
E..."ai2Lambal14-f48.1158
Rl~lng and Buggy Horooa 81•·
.,_liD

lWa yur old Paint Mille, Grein
Braka, 4718 Paulot.Rcl; Patriot

OltioinCectnuo.,.

.

1982 lnrernational dump truck,
diesel, 5 &amp; 2, eir brakaa, $5,500,
614-992-4111.
1983 lnternarionat, 1 112 ton
flatbed. hyd. lilt gate, 345 gaa,
.up., low miles, Navy 1urplus,
$5,000, 4·992-~111 .

1965 ·. 'd flongor •x.l, rebuild
cop 112 of motor 1 transrr111ion.
$2.500, or triode tor. v,n. (814)·
256-&amp;BOq . • ,. ,, ' .

Poas
P•sa

4NT

a•

East

PQI

All pan

It was still bridge, .
even back then

ltD4 Sunblrd 41,500 miloa, aok·
lng $6,0110 ar Ball Oflorl 304-8752482 or 304-175-1117 ar 30H763215afler 6:30pm. MUST SELLI · ·

Auto Loans: AutO Dealer Will Ar·
range Financing ~ven II Yau
H;~Ve Been Turned Down Before.
No Cradil,
Bur·

Weal North

Openinslead: • K

-RS 47,000 miles,
plarer, car phone.
304-875-3813 anor

Pall Plua, Silver Bridge Plaza.
814-441.0770.

LBI=••..:k::A::n;:.g_u_a":B:-u-::II-:3-:Y::-e-.-,.-o=-1:7d,

Call TODAY t-800·711.0158.

1812 Alndac Flrablnl. auto. V-1,

T·IDpl, . ., color, 1111 power, .,.,

Pet Shop Far Solo: GrHI Loco·
lion, 0w11or Retiring Soon; Strl0u 0
lnqulrioo Onlyl 814-4-1'.•7!07• . ·

wOittTannlng Beda
TAN AT HOME
bur DIRECT and SAVEl
cornrnen::ialltlama unila from
S1QII.
Low monthly payrrenli
FREE color catolog.

' EUt

• A J 10
•Kt1543
• 4 2.
• K J

Fronch Lop Bunnl11, Barn AprU
5th, 110-814 ... 11110 •

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

r;~~R~a;n~E1va~n~s~E~nt~e~rp~rl~sa:::•·
Ohio, 1·800·537·9528.

10

1A-

• ·" Q 2

South

.t.OHA 95 Golding. Wlfh A CAN
DO ATTITUDE. Quiet &amp; Makoo
Trail Ridoa A Pleaaura, Shown
SUccllalull,. Wawld ,Make Nlco
4·H HarM, tS Sorrtl Wkh Fla~
Mono 1 Tall, $2,800 OBO, 814·
3711-21132.

·
a, wind·
11• CT Diamond Marquis solitalnl Block, brl&lt;k, ., ,.,., pt:r.
Er_..- Ring. S275 Firm 114. owl, liNtla, el:. Clau a Wlnteri.,
•Rio Grande, OH Call .614·245·
441-1101.
5121 ,
.
.
15ft X3e· Round above ground
Pets for Sale
pool. wlfilttr, aolar $OVer, linerf 560
some chemical•: Uud :Z:moa
onlr; $300. A Boar cat table top 2 112 Old llale'torklhlro' TorrJe;.
acanner $50.00. Supper lntin'tt
t3IIG
No gamoo, $75.00 ·(814)·2455323
2AKCRoa-1-..r.,r.Jo.
2·121n. JL·Audlo oub wolftra, male, 17riiol. .old. t300". 804'.
proc.lolon power amplifier. 304· 74341184. ' •
175-4713.
Sh,ap ·Pot GrHml~g.
Hy~ra • Batn. DO"
20 hp. WhHihoroo Hwdro drive
G*argea CfHit Ad.
Ond lift. 4r CUI, f2300, 114-lg2.
20113.,

nllhad and uniUrnlahad, aecurltr
Llmltad Offill 18G7 doublewlda, d_..l r~&lt;~Uired, no pera, 11 4· • • hoavy corruga(ld plpo, 10011.
3br 2bath, $1 7911 dawn, 127111 1112-2211.
.roll, 121.81. PAlNT PLUS HARD·
moftth. Fret dtliverr I aet_up.
1
Badfeom
unturniahed
Apart·
ont, at Oakwood Ho.,.l, Nitro man~ Range. RIMgorator, DIIPO· WARE. 304-11-.
304-75UIIS.
.
nl, Garage prcwlded. wac•r,
1817 !4x70 lhrH badrDOm, -ge. Oartlage Paid, Depollil
lnoludaa 1 monf&gt;l FREE lot rtnl and releroncn Required, 131
Ontr fl81 .81 par month with Firat /We. Raat, O.lllpolla, &amp;I~+
11050 dawn. Call. 1·100·137, -~~~~1
323&amp;
Furnlahed .1 hdroom 1\pertmenl
lenk llopa'ol ~ll lott, Upolllra, AN Utilltill Paid, 154
. 30+ , Second Avanuo, Galllpolla, No
ownor finMcint oval
..... 1.1 -111!23- .
l'H-7181.

• 10 8

Nice Home lnteiior. Call 304-8757169 Anytime.
'

1913 rille bayonet, $2•.50:
WinclleaiOr modal 12, 1349; 32
automatic, $46; 38 revotver, $45;
stamless steel 357 with e· barrel,
S169; air conditioners, $•0 up;
MAC arid snap-on tools; fishing
poles ; Yamaha llat-top guilar wl
case. S135. No trades please, all
guns must go. Dave"a SW&amp;p Shop.
4 miles north or Pomeroy, next to
Arthur Treachar's Fiah &amp; Chips.

'"'

.

• 2
oKQ

10% OFF all larm tractor partl.
Sidor'o Equipment. 304 ·8757421 .

RCA digital IIIBIUte dlah, $700
OBO, wood healing 11ove, SIOO:
614-949-7700

'

. 't

• 9 8 53

61 o Farm Equipment

Almeroy Thrift Shop- ,_
furniture, children 1s .sutnin!or
clothes._ maternity clothll,
items and latge toys . Call
992 3725
.
'
Pro-Farm Arc S-ID Cra•s Train·
tng Systems $100. 614·256·1313.
Queen euze waterbed Wlbook·
case head board wlmirror, good
heater, new mattress, mauress
cover and 1 aet of aheels. Ask·
lng $125 but Will negotiate. For
more inlarmation coil 304·&amp;62·
2997 ·

· EEK&amp;MEEK

111-tll-11

AKQ2
•QJI076

Weal

Lincoln welder s.a. 250 Perkins.
304-875-7071 aher 5pm

=·s::a

1 and 2 bldloom tpe•••na..fur·

"tOg•l tank aet up
Tank &amp; Pat Shop,
Avo. Point Pleuanl,
2083.

·

~t::t~fJ;::~~~-~
Remington &amp;70 Winamaster,
i
$215 : Ithaca model 37, $219:

41 o Houses fbr Rent

N

.'

Outboard Motors Sales .
of ill .autboards, ce&lt;hlied
lc. Marine 'Servlcts,
Stroot, Srrocvoe, Ohio.

r.=====;----,- ·

814-992·6520.

·• cALVIlli

ANNNO.~ ~

Plo 120 1:! Ft}!all lloaL Tralltr.
3.1 HP Molar, Batter~ Charg~r.
Accessories; ~ew, Never. Used,
,1,1100, 614-448-8325.
)

760

.
Auto Parts &amp;
. Accassorles

304 Jeep angina. 304-e75-5730.

.....~~~

I
I

1

Budqet Price Tranamlsaion ,
StorUng at $99.00 and Up, U
1
Rebuilt, All Types, Over 10,0do
Tran1mlasiona, Acce11 Tranll+r
Cuoo &amp; Rear Endo, 614·24·5677
.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
byLulaCam~

c.tabnty Ctpher CfYPIOOrtma art tfttted fnlm qootaiiOM by III'TIOUII)eOple. pat! and preaenl
Elldlletler in thl ciPher ttandllof ano4her. Tod.ty't Cfue: T ~PQU~It W
.

'S 'Y D

NDDO

s

URWDLSOF

so

ROD

APPOI&lt;OL
URCHL

PSOADK.'-

F R

PDT

URCOX

X Z 0 W

VDXDK

R ' J! .RRHD ;
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The 1oughestth1ng atiout &amp;uccess is that you 've got
·
.
to keep on being a success .• - frYing Be~in.

'~:~::~' S©\\~lA-LGt.trs·

WOlD
UMI

- - - - - - Ultd loy CLAY I . POlLAN - - - - - -

i"' Reorrc:nge

l1tters

of the

.;~ io;,r scrambled words be·

I
I' I I I 1

:·.v to form four simple words

LACERD

2

ORAGN

' I I~ I I

I

==p=E=Y=M=T~,_..:",
Is I I' I .
--:~-:--:-"7"-:--.,

..
One down and out fellow to
another, •it you can't pay your
bills be thankful you are not the
one who holds the - - -- - - • ·!"

;;...TI_;;;,,-_-;1 0

GOGJEL

-,,r:i7r-ili':6~T",

Comp le1e 1ho chuckle quoted
by ldh ng in the missing words
-....l.-..L........Ii..-...L-.t..;......l ~ou de~elop from step No 3 below.
•

\

~

.

~ P~I N T NUMBERED .

·~ LE77ERS IN SQUARE~

New gas tanka, 1 ton tru~k
wheels &amp; radiatora. 0 &amp; R Aule,
Ripley, WV. 304-372-3933 or 800-273-9329.

790

By Pbllllp Alder
I once saw a alan betdde a railway
track; "Thank you for oblenlng Rule
90." Does any reader know what Rule
90 is? ·
While 1 waa In Kobe Sound, Fla.,
earlier L~ia year, Marlin Emmell lent
me an interesting book. Entitled
"Contract Bridae," It was Written by
Frank Covert and published in
Canada in 1966. It is a 70-paae, inyour-face Introduction to the &amp;arne,
whiclll enjoyed readina despite the
numerous printing erron. Covert includes a vaal amount of material and
even comments on the laws and eli·
quette ol'lhe game.
.
As all the book's deals were taken
from newspaper columna, I will give
you one declared by Emmell, who
comes from South Africa.
Followina a svelllah auction,
Emmett was in six hearts. After West
led the diamond kina. how did
'Emmett continue?
If you play a trump immediately,
you will go down, as the opponent&amp;
will cash a diamond trick. You must
get rid of that diamond loser bef?re.
touching trumps. The ob~ous parilin&amp;
place is on dummy'a third club. So,
Emmell won trick one, played.a club
Lo his king &lt;the honor from the aborter
side firsll , and took two more rounds
of clubs, discardina his last diamond.
Only then wu it safe to lead a trump.
Covert furnishes 62 points to re·
member, not 90. The laal Ia: "Before
you play after the openjng lead, count
your losent ond count your winnen;
then plan the play! Then malt:e your
play!". Martin Emmell's pme hal lm·
proved immensely in the l11t three
years, in no small measure because
he follows this routine.

EVER'I'

MORNIN6
HE ...

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

oSCRAM.J.ETS ANSWERS

Hsnglir. Mound · Jerky· Fellow- WE READ
The English teacher lold her class that the best seller
lists indicate the books that we buy not lhe books that
WEREA£l.
.

1972 Model camper 8x18, I
Good. Condition call 8t4-25._.
6544

I

1987 36" Sierra Camper an.
1982 Chevrolet SUbulbon Cam!&gt;'
or SP..Iol, all hoQk u~o. both 14
e~~:c:ellenl condhlon, $12,500, c
814·0112...000. .

ITHURSDAY'

I 994 Tli&gt;Qo Mantona1 29 f~. loa ed, ilaaps alx, lull bam; quti
ai.r• center Hd, lot~ of
18.000 milaa, below bt!ok. will ""·
11188 R!oftgor ·70,000 Actual Mileo alder trada In of pontoon boat a
Runs ~re 0 t, $2975, Rugor,22-P4 Van. Can be seen at 38 Hud~
Middleport or call eu,
Automo¥&lt;:; 1200. 814-4&lt;48-.27 • Streer,
812-4103.
1
1980 Sc:olldalt Half Ton Short
Bad Chavy Pickup E1collen1 8fc truck campai,.ice bo111, stove
Condition, 814·441-3570 Alter 12 furnace, air, good for hunting
llahlng. $375 or will trade fo
P.ll. $7,500.

MAY15I

'I

·atoraga

·~-304-675-1185.

1982 DO.tgt 150 va, ,Auta, Nice
15785; 1tDO ·Tarata Plck·Up Aaouma loan, no monor.down IQ~
• .1UU5j_1UIII S10 'B1a..r $4715: qualifild buyer. 111M tth. Dulc,;
fully self contalned 1• In ~
lgsl ••rota ••4 Extend Cab man,
hitch &amp; electric brake .•
altarp. 1988 Goo Trockar U9U5. cludea
304-t76-5S22.
J, :
B &amp; Q Aula,111!eo..Highwoy 180 .
I
North. Bl4-4·-

SERVICES

ABTaO·ORAP..

710 Autos for Sale

. ..__.

'78 Dodge station wagon, clean,
lito - , _ , 318 anglno, 1800,

f.Jnc:ondltlonal titetlme guarana...
Local re..,en~l fl.irnflhed. Establlwd 1875. Call C614) 446·
Or ·800·287-0578. Rogers

1884 .Mercury · Marqwla good

-Col 304-1175-4553.
11184 Reliant SW, Runt Good,
UODOBCU14-112-41111.
IIIH Suburban SIIYorado, 414,
4IIK Milo!, _Srd Saal, Towing
Pli:tlage. rront and RHr AC, 4
Extra Mowntad Studdo~ Snow

T1rM. E - ~tton. 18.000

.,.,..,_,111

Ull7 Ford Tompo DL, I apoad,
air, ,_ "'"· •rp. fligh mlloa,
bul '""' . -••• 11110, il•-tafi.

4311.

1 - DodGe Ram· I SOD 414 SLT
~mlo. Mow Rlmo ..... 33Tirea.
Loadadl ea,OOOK f17,000, 114·

m-2114.

11115 ,..,.,. lMa!Nt 4U, CtUIN,

111.-l'loik
om-lm ll'llf,
5apd,
leht · blul,
n.100m1111, uking 113.300.
304-1171-32110.

'

'.

CA.NC:ER. (June 21 -July 22) This
is a good day,.ro Iackie those mental
BERNICE
chores yuu"ve been pulling off. Your
thinking n:mains clear and your work
BEDEOSOL
could be ca11ier than usual.
·
LEP (1uly .23-Aug . 22) Financial
prospccrs continue to look cncoura~:
ing, so makc'lhc ml1s1 of these prof·
itahle aspccls. Seck out ways today to
add
ro your ri:soun:es.
· ' Friday, May lli, i 997
. . ..
V!ROO
(Aul. 23·Scpr. 22) In
' Your desire for a beller posruon an .
involvements
wilh others today, your
your chosen career, ·path will be
sr~onger than ever in lhe year ahead . original inclinillions will be unselfish;
It is ihi~ drive and detennination that i however, this altillidc could chanae
rather quickly." Be careful.
will bring you victory.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) An
TAURUS (April 20-May 2~)
Endeavors that are in the embryonac annoying .condition that hu he_ld
in ill 11rip will lose mosl of liS
StaBC are likely to hold ·the most you
power
on you tOday. This will be duc
appeal for you today. Put che old IIUff
to
your
newly-fotmd courage.
on the bao:k burner momcncarily and
SCORPIO (Ocr. 24-Nov. 22)
develop the new. Oct a jump on life
Business
and pleasure make a(fivor·
by undentandi!ll che inHuences lhal
able
blend
today, so if _you're 1rying
ao~ you in the year ahead.
OEMINI (May 21 ·Junc 20) Your to cut 1 dcirl, sprinkle commercial
priorities will be in. pi'oper order chit--c:hat with small talk.

21) Scroilg, ambitious surges today
wi II ,endow you with thai second
effort requited to pull off the impossible. Go for the big scoa:e, it's reachable! .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Challenges to your inrcllecr will be
welcomed. today. The .to~gher they
arc. the beuer you ' II like ir, provided
you operate In game mode.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. i 9)
Y~ could be exceptionally sharp in
business meuers today. especially in
collectjve endeavors. Do not abdicale
your leadership role.
. PISCES (Feb .. 20-March 20)
'Today you will enjoy more success in
activities that involve 'teamwork
rather rhan independence. Do not
operate as a loner when there arc
willins allies.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Aftilude wise, you're apt to be all fired·
up and ready to roll today. Gel an early ~tan, because ypu should produce
rwtce as much as usual.
Copyrighrl997 by NEA, Inc.

·,

&lt;

I

•I
I

,'
1\

I

�Ohio Lottery
•

Sonics
defeat
Rockets

Pick 3:
9-4-7
Pick 4:
4-7-2-9
Buckeye 5:
3-1 0-19-36-37

Sports on Page 4

M'oatly clear tonight,
chance of ahowera aHar
mlclnlaht. lmn In lha 401.
s.turilay, cloudy, chance
of rain. Highs naer 70.
•

•
• Vol;

41, NO. 22
Ohio v.Jiey PublllhiiiiJ c:omp.ny

•

2 s.ctiOne, 12'PIIQM, 35 centa
· A GMwlllt Co. New8peper

.

Pom...Oy..Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 18, 1997

~1117,

'

:Small bus:iness owners .to feel
.

·.

'

'

'

pinch of any sales tax increase
.

"

· By BRIAN J. REED
· Sentinel News Staff
. The likelihood of an increase in
· the state sales tax to fund education
: reform is loomi~g. and small business
: owners in Meigs County may feel the
· pinch, if it is included in the ultimate
· reform package.
·
· The Ohio Supreme Court, which
in Mate() deemed unconstitutional the
: me,thod of funding public education,
· has .placed .the burden of changing the
system with the state legislature. ----.,
Last week, State Rep. John Carey,
R-Wellston, said it is too early to
determine wheth~r a state income tax
will be a component of the total revenue required to remedy the funding
· formula.
However. State Sen. Michael
Shoemaker, D-BCJurneville. said
Thursday that Carey and his fellow
Republicans arc hedging on the issue
of raising revenue, and that a sales tax
increase would likely be part of the
plan. .
.
. "The remedy for this problem is
· strictly in the hands of the Republicans," Shaemaker said. "They control
the govemor'.s _office, .the House of

'

'
Sc;ual10t!huoae
frOm. 3doOr 1:
. 4door models In

' Mock Y.lrbJS
·"f·lpn..nt and
mlonll.
.
•Cnmelna

Representatives and.the Stat~ Senate.
Of course, they don't want to mention
increasing'taxes."
Both,Carey and Shoemaker agree
that a decreased reliance on local
property taxes is at the heart of any
solution, but both caution that property taxes probably will not go down

10 put

'

'

a limit on what he would sup- the prospect of an increase ·in the
p&lt;)n in the,way of a sales tax increase sales tax, fe11rfng the effecJ it might
- I percent. if it is part of a "total have on the retail economy.
package," which provides a satisfacRoger Geiger of the Ohio Nationlory soiiiJion to the funding problems al Federation of Independent Busifacing poorer school districts. ,
ness said that a significant increase in
"I will do w~atever needs to be taxes could mean "real pain" for
done to fix the system, but I don't small business owners.
know what that is yet," Shoemaker
''The wrong package could banksignifi~~tntly.
"What I ho(lll happens is ihatlhere . said. "When they show me a real · rupt a significant number of busiwill be less reliance on local proper- remed:y, I"ll support it, but not until it nesses," Gejger said in an editorial
ty tax~· Shoemaker said, "that is, is a real solution, not the partial solu- issued lasi week. "The irony is that
this would mean fewer j9b opportuthe fr · . ency that local school dis- lions that I've been hearing."
"1
would
not
support
more
than
a
nities for the very students the court
tricts approach the voters for taxes,
I
percent
increase
in
the
sales
tax,"
be
·
set
out to help."
and the-amount of millage they have
said. "We have ·a $3 billion problem,
In· economically-depfi:Ssed areas
to request will diminish."
State supj:lort of local schools has and the Republicans don't seem to be like Meigs County, where the retail
diminislied through the years, accord- ·concerned about it. I will not support . economy remains tenuous at best,
ing to Shoemaker. He said that the 70 something that doesn't provide a retailers could be especially llurt perceril support once provi~d by the complete solution to the problem." · especially when access to state lines ·
In his commentary, Carey said that . is so readily available. . · _
state has diminished to near 40 per,
In West Virginia, the state sales t8x .
cent today, in spite of the state sales there are several ideas for raising the
funds
necessary
to
achieve
funding
is
6
percent, the same as in Meigs
tax, first levied in 193S, the state
·equity.
County,
w~ich has a 1 percent counincome tax, initiated in 1972,and the
Acanrding to Carey, "these ideas ty sales tax i~ place as well. Howevstate lottery in 1974 - all of which,
Shoemaker said, were supported by include, but are not limited to, e~- er, if the state sales tax would
marking the state perSQDal income taX in~ase as much' as I percent, it
the education community.
.
could be a factor driving local retail ·
Shaemaker is hesitant to commit or staie sales tax.:·
to supporting any plan until details · Small business owners across the buyers to West Virginia. · · ·
are announced, b.ut he did not hesitate state have already begun to wince at '

?· . receiv~ $l?OOQ$cb~

)'OIIl'tlest~

Wday! .

··frOM'Win,Qett-

I

A BIG EFFECT - The equity In achool funding laeue could
atrlke ·ctoM to home In more wayalhan one It a statewide sales
tax lncreeM Ia Included In funding ·reforms. Small-town merchanta, such as Pomeroy's Fabric Shop, uen above, equid feel
a pinch It ·c.uatomera were to take lhalr bualneaa acro11 state
linea. Gina Thomas, an employee of the store, Ia Men aa aha
helped customer Melinda Mclain of Po1111Jroy.

House ·rep~als part
of. pre.v~i,Yfl~. wa.ge ·
· ... ~.9J,LUMBJ{S. (~P)- While House lawm~rs (i.ecided to repeal part of
tlie slate's prevatlulg-wage law some were sitU a btl confused about what
i!llpact it might have.
Elimination of prevailing wage on school building projects was approved ·
57-39 Thursday in a Republican-hacked bill thai would also speed up distribution of $300 million for those projects.
But there has been much debate about whether getting rid of prevailing
wage would save money. Republicans think it could cut about 15 percent of
school construction Costs- $45 million of the $300 million. But Democrats and labor unions believe it would hurt V.:orkers and increase cost overruns.
"I have never rea~ or heard so much conflicting information," said Rep.
Sally Perz, R-Toledo. ''Prevailing wage may or may not be a part of the costsaving formula. We really don't know."
PerL said the issue should have been considered in separate bill because
not enough,time was given to study it. The bill moved through both the Sen.ale and House in one month.
.The wage law guarantees that construction workers get union-negotiated
pay on public building projects such as roads, libraries and schools.
Rep. Rex Damschroder, R-Fremont, said estimates showing that the stale
could save 15 percent should not be ignored.
.
" We hav~:to spend the taxpayers' money the same way we would spend
our own money," he said. "We have to spend the money on. the schoolhouse
·,the same way we would spend it on our house."
But Rep, Joan Lawrence, R-Galena, doubted the bill's overall impact even
ihough $he voted for it.
'
·
"We will spread the dollars a little further, but it won 't be dramatic," she
said.
Labor unions and their members are convinced it will hurt their pay.
. "It's not only going to affect union people, it 's going to get everyone,"
s~id Jim Reid, a 50-year-old bricklayer from Cincinnati.
·
Rep.•Vemon .Sykes, D-Akron', failed in his attempt to take the issue out(
of the bill. His amendment was tabled by a 49-46 vote, effectively killing
the idea without forcing lawmakers to vote on "it separately.

Three members of the 1997 gmduating c;lass of Southern High School, tion. .
.
.
.
an Ohio University junior who resides In Syracuse, and an Elktdn, Md.,
·Allen, son of Roger and ',BCVetly Allen of Syracilsc; expects-~.. ,,..--·high school 9enio~ have been selected ~ rei:ip- the University of Rio Gmnile, where he will
' '
ients of $1,000 .lil;holarships . for the 1997-98 study for a bachelor's degree in communicaschool year from:l!le Ernest A. (Bud) and Max- tions. He then Intends to obtain a master's
ine Spencer Wmgett Memorial Trust Scholar- degree at Ohio Uiliversity before pursuing his
ship Program, · t~, was announced · today by · goal of being a Writer.·
'
·
Trustee Robert Wmgett.
·- In addition to being a class honorarian at
· Winners fro1111,·SHS are Amber Darlene Southern, .be was an Academic Banquet partieThomas, co-valedictorian; Brian Marvin Allen ipant for four yt1111, participated in the Quiz
and Tonia Nicole,Nlizarewycz, both class bon- Bowl and was a member of the football ieam. .
omrians. Scholarsltips were also awarded to
. Nazarewycz; daughter of Phyllis J. and DouAndrew W. Fields,,v;ho is majoring in mechan- glas C. Rees of Racine, plans to intend Ohio
ical engineering lll OU, and Evelyn . Eaton UniverSity and major in pre-pharmacy. Besides
JoneS, a member of the 1997 graduating class being an SHS class honorarian, Thnia has been
of Elkton High Scllool.
a member of the National Honor Society two
Thomas
The perpetual scholarship pro·
years, altd served as its reporter.
gram was established in 1993
She also worked on the school
from proceeds of the estate of the late Mr. anci!Mrs. Wingett,
ycarbook·lhree·years.
longtime Meigs County educators who resided in Racine.
Fields, son of Larry W. and Linda L. Fields of Syracuse,
Residents -of Sulton .1Qwnship and lineal descendants of
graduated from ~uthem High School in May of 1994 with a.
grand nieces and nephews -of' the Wingetts,.wherever they
3.6 OPA.
·
reside, are eligible to apply for the scholarshipJ- ·
In high sehool, he wfS· a member cif the National Honor
Winners are selected by a four-member OO.d on the basis
Soci~(y, the vm:sity baseball team and the varsity golf team ..He
of test scores, academic performance, exuacurricular activiearned a place on the second team All TVC in golf and was on.
ties, character, versatility and other potentialities for success
the TVC all-academic team.
·
in college and post-college life.
'•"
He has earned many academic honors and awards at OU,
Scholarships are renewable for three additional years or
including being on !he Dean's List every quarter, the National
until such time as the winners have completed requirementS
Dean's List his sophomore and junior years, the National Colfor a degree, whichever is sooner. A total of $:z.1,000 has been
legiate Engineering Award and 'the United States Achievement
distributed in previous years since the stan of the scholarship
Allen
Academy Award. He has maintained a 3.68 GPA in college and
program.
i&lt;
is a member of Pi Tau Sigma, a national honor society for
Miss Thomas, daughter of Jim and Darla Thomas of Syracuse, will mechanical. engineering students. Fields is married to the former Aimee
auend 1\itlskingum College in New Concord, where she.will study busi- Elliott.
ness, p~otograpby
journalism.
Miss Jones, daughter of Mary Neal Jones
' She is a member the National Honor SQci- (great niece of the late Mrs. Wingett) and Barry
ely at Southern, on e All A honor roll for all A ·'Jones, will gralluate from Elkton High
four years of high school, active in class gov- School in June in the top 1S percent of a class
PIKEVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Ashernment and sporis, serving as class vice preai- of 187 and will attend St. Mary's College in St.
land
Inc. and Marathon Oil Inc. have
dent for three years,; as a member of student Mary's City, M!l.
confirmed
a long-rumored merger
counciland as captain'ofthe school's volleyball
She has ' been a National Honor Society
that would create t!te nation "s fourthand softball teams. .'' .
. ·
.
•· member for three years, received the Minds in
largest petroleum refiner.
· ·Amber has served c&gt;n the yearbook commit- .Motion academiC/athletic excellence award
The. alliance would give the new
· tee for three years, office assistant, two years; (our years, on ihe Athletic Honor Roll four .
company,
which has yet to be named,
statistician for the bors:varsity and I'C$Crve bas- . ·years and received the Un,ited· States Achievea combined refining capacity of
ketllall teams, three years; senior class play ment Academy National Mathematics Award.
around 930,000 barrel's of. crude oil a
member; school ma~ne, two years; student
She has been a member of the de~ate team,
day- or 6 percent of the U.S. total.
council, two years; proln committee, two years; a student aide, member of the Key Club, on the
Jones
The company would be based in
alld Meigs County Junior Chamber of Coin- school tennis tum three years and volleyball
1
Findlay, Ohio, which was Marath.on's
mercc, one year.
' :
•
team, four years. ·
·
She was a Southern Academic Banquet parti4lpant for four years, the
She received the spor1SmailshiP, award·for tennis and helped organize a · headquarters before its move to
Houston. several years ago.
Meigs County Academic Banquet, two years, •Oil Tri-Valley Conference canned food/coal drive, as w~ll as Initialing a drive to get a new senior
Fadel Oheit, senior oil analyst and
Academic Honor Roll, three years. In volleyball1fmber was an All-TVC softball league.
~
·
director
of research for Fahnestock &amp;
selection two years, as well as being 'MVP one ye~r, received All District
Members of the Wingett Memorial Education Trust board of directors,
Co.
in
New
York, said Thursday the
13 r~cognition two years, and was an All State sttec,tioo. She was 011the in add!tion to Robert W"mgeu, trustee, are Mrs. A.E. Lee, Douglas Little
· merger would Create "tne powerv~rstty softball team at SHS for three years and •'\f.\11 League TVC sclec- and Juilge F~d W. crow III.
house of the Midwest region."
"They could probably have at
least ·50 peri:entlllarket share above .
their nearest competitor,"' Gheit said,
*! t
•
•
"They tire very logical partners.
They. complement each other. They
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Legis- in "'stranded ·~osts"' they would face
That 'includes the cost of power to residential customers.
"'The views of residential con- have tremendous focus in the Mid'lature must see to it that residential · pnce competition is introduced, the 'plant construction, which the utilities
Public
Utilitits
Commission
of
Ohio
sumers
should be heard in this. west and they will 1be a formidable
have
spread
out
oVer
decades
tn
cuscu'stomers aren "t stuck with the tab
debate."'
Tnngren
told the commillee force. "
.
tomers' bills.
for costs utility companies won't said ThursdaY.
1
The companies have signed a letStranded 'Costs are those that
Ohio Consumers' Counsel Robert
Sen. Bruce Johnson, co-chairman
want 10 pay if the industry is deregulated, the state's consumer advocate Ohio'.s utilily mooopolies, under Tonsren told the Joint Select Com- 'of the commiuee, said the issue was ter of intent for a deal that would give
· PU(;O regulation, can pass on to cus- mittee on Electric Dcreaulation that among the most important facing th~ Marathon, a division of Pittsburghsaid.
based USX Corp., 62 percent own1be utilities could try to recover tomers, but won'! be able to charge lawmakers shoulcl malic sure that panel.
· most of those costs aren't passed on
ership in the joint venture with Ashbetween $4.1 billion and $11.7 billion in a competitive market.

Ashland, Marathon make
reports of merger official ·

rr,

.

•

•

~Stranded' utility der~gulatlo·n costs may hit $11 billion

'

CHEVROifl• OI.IISMOBilE •

•lOYOia

.,.
Gewuhc.

'

·-'---·-

'

I

i
J

..

j

'

land Petroleum Co. - Ashland Inc. 's
largest operating unit. Ashland· Inc.,
based in Russell. Ky., will have the
remaini'ng 38 percent
The new company would have
5,400 reiail gas stations and convenience stores with pumps in 20 states,
from Florida to North Dakota. The .
combined ~sset value of the new
company is 'estimated at more than $5
billion. If approved by fedtral regu- ·
lators, the move would be the culmi'
nation of Ashland Inc.'s push to make
its sagging refinery division more
profitable and quiet shareholder discontent.
"The combination of Ashla.nd's
and Marathon's refining·and marketing business will .create a stronger,
more efficient company with greater
prospects for Ions-term job creation
and .better ability to provide enhanced
shareholder and customer value,"'
Ashland Inc. chairman and CEO
Paul W. Chellgren said Thursday.
But Citizen Action, which bills
itself as the nation's largest·consumer
watchdog group, said the merged
company would be too dominant.
The group said it would .oppose the
merger before the Federal Trade .
Commission. ·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="400">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9782">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28424">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28423">
              <text>May 15, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1057">
      <name>circle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
