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Ohio·Lottery

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Pick 4:
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Buckeye 5:
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ctlll', Olllo YIIIJ-r Puilllehllll Camp ny .

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5spd, V6, power stferio&amp; 4 wheelanti.lock brakeS, As IDw As..~ . .

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Southern Local·District Board
adopts ·new insurance policy
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The · Southern Local Board of
· Ed~~&lt;:ation adopted a new insurance
policy ·for district employees at its
regular meeting Monday evening at
Southem High S.chool in Raci~.
· Following presentations on tradi·
tional insurance packages, the board
. voted to go with a self-funde!J insurance program administered by Mcd. ical Claims Service of Ravenswood.
W.Va.
·.
·
' Super.iniendent James Lawrence
. said the insurance plan·. which takes
effect July I, is similar to a plan car• ried by the Meigs Local School District. ,He said renewal rates on the
exisi(ng health insurance plan . for
which ihe district paid $34.000 a
. month; were going to go up 32 per; cent.
.
: · l'n other business. the board
: approved thC shifting of some class·
· cs within the district.
, Next fall. under the plan., the
: l'jrst-gracle · class at Syracuse Elc- .
· me!ltary will be moved to the k.indcr·
: garien building adjacent the junior
' high school in Raci!lc. while first

IS Poc~ 5spd, Puwtt St1D1n8, aluml- ·
wlveh, air, AM/FM rnss Ur, As l,owA\.. ·
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~ FBI:

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by the Federal Emergency Managemcnt Agency, since the damage was
nood-rclatcd.
·
The apparent low hiddcr for the
new system was Southern Heating
and Cooling of Racine, with ·u bid or
$49,380. Other hids were received '
rromWarnerHcatingandCnolingof
Chester, $50,990; Essential Heating
and Cooling of Point Pleasant, W.Va..
$53, 196: a~d Jn~nsc1n Contrnls p f

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l)lc btds wen: tabled pcndmg
review hy the Prosecuting Attorr1cy.
. The commissioners awarded . a
bid for u used brush truck for the Scipio Wluntcer Fire Department. The
truck, priced at $20,000, will he purchased .from the Bohemia Fire Dis·
trict in Bohemia, N.Y. upon com·
r.lction of the necessary documents.
.The truck will be paid for from CumContinued on Jlllae 3

Prosecutors charge McVeigh
also demonstrated tbe explosive pow~
packed
the explosives. in a rented
cr of am!IIQIIium nitrate, a fcnilizer
that McVeig~ is accused of buying in Ryder tru~k in retaliation for the fatal
latge Qllantitlcs from a farm supply FBI raid on the Branch Davidian
complex ncar WI!CO, Texas~ 1wo years
store. . .
,
· ·
·
. In 1993, lhc FBI had exploded beforehaml.
The bomb work and expl,osion left
several ClUJ in the New 'Mexico
~rt 11sins · 1,250 po!Jnds of urea MeVeigh spattered with clues, P.rQs·
nitrate, simihtr to ammonium nitrate, ecutors charge. ·
.Bunneistcr
said
e~plosivc
materas a test of what til ·loolt fbr' in !iUCh
bombin~~ A videolipe of~ test was ial was found on bo.th of the T-shins
McVei1h had on : a dark blue base-'
shown MOIICiay. \
.
· · One jur« psped and ·Victims ball-slyle shirt and, over that, a shortwinced u a fireball from the tesucnt sleeved whilli T-shirt with a picture of
tires flyin1and destroyed 1hrcc vehi- a tree drippinJ willl blood and 1he
olea. Thumount of lftl ailnlll Uled 1'hon!as Jefferson qUotation: "The
,.._ one-flillrlh the IIIIOUIIl ohm- tree of llbeny must be refleshccl from
lime to time wiih the blood of patrinium niltlle believed liHd in •
ou and tyrants."
Oklahoma City !Jodlb. .
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and emotion.
Story told the jurors \hey would
lind reasonable doubt in the state's
case and attacked .the prosecution's
lack or evidence .. including tlic lack
of corroborating medical evidence.
"This case turns on (the victim's)
word against Darrell Barney's word,'~
Story said. '"Anyone can be accused
of anything."
Following opening · arguments,'
Lcntcs called his first witn~ss : the..
alleged victim, who recalled living
with . Barney throughout. her child-.
hood.
.._
She said Barney would wait unt.il ,
his wi fc was at work and theu send·
the children in (he household nut t~;
pluy hcforc raping her. Sometimes the
Continued on page 3

woman, 39, killed in SR 554 wreck

Explosives residuefo~nd
pants, shirt
. on McVeigh's
.

\1'~

·~

sys;~in 'and·i ~~tilll~tion is being ra'id Nii~i. Vv.~a.,. $(10.i!li&lt;t . '", '.

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He showed the jury schonl pictures ofthe alleged victim taken during the rour year period anq said she .
was forced til have sex on a weekly
hasis during the summer, and at least
nncc a month during the school year.
"She sulfcred every kind of dcgra·
dation th~t a child can imagine,"
Lentcs said.
During his opening st~lcment,
defense aunmcy Steve Story said that
Barney will take the stand in his own
deli:ilse. ·
·"The allcgatinns in the indictments
arc absolutely revolting... they arc
also not true," said Story.
"(Barney) is presumed innocent...
he docs not have tn say anything," he
said, adding that the jury should
judge the ca.•e em the evidence they
hear in lhc cnurtnKJm, n&lt;Jl on passion

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Testimony begins in Meigs . rape case

·cheshire

of McVeigh's black jeans whjlc an
unidentifiable trace amount was in
,the left p9cket. .
·
: tying Tinl'othy McVeigh to cxplo- . ·..:Traces of the m~tcrialwere fo)lnd
: si~cs, an FBI agent Slid the only u!ii; on clothing McVe1gh was wearing
. for a fine powder fouhd on the Okla- • w~ pulled over on. an int,~;ntate
. home bombing suspect's panQ, 'T- north of .Oklahol'I)D City .abQut an
·.shirt and carpluas is to &amp;tpnatc a • holD' after the b!Jmbing. ht: said. 11Ie
. bomb.
· powder also showed up on earplugs
; FBI chcmill Sleven Burmeislcr .in his pocket. Burmeister tcstincd,
:said Monday he .was "n'oe aware of
~cVeigh faces the death penalty
.:any oCher·way" the explosive powdci' in die federal building bombina that
·known as PBTN would show up on killed 168 people !llld injured SOil, McVeip's clothiaa oCher than by his the 'Worst act Qf terrorism ·On U.S.
·hil~hcd a clllona10r c:onl.
IOil. Burmeister was scheduled to
·11 lllll thll Mc'*iJh. 29, ftiiP to the stand today for addi· ~Cribb* nota in COUll with ~~~ tional cioswxamination.
rl&amp;llt hind, BtniOisler ..Ufiecl lhe
Ia lddilloR to trylq to ~nect
Jllrm wu found 1ft the rllht po~:bt Mc:yciab 'to PETN. 1he prosecution

~TIIYBia·

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Opening statements and testimo'
j· .
.
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ny began ·Monday afternoon in the
graders now auending school at the da N.orman, David Ramey. Angela Meigs County Common Pleas Counkindcrganen building will aucnd sec- Rigsby, Nathan Robinette, Heath room in the trial of a Meigs County
ond.grade at Letart Falls Elementary. Savage. Kristi Skinner, Rita Slavin man accused of n~mcrous scK crimes. .
Asp~cial education class currently at (tutor only), Margaret Guinther,
Darrell Barney, 42, Shade, faces
Lctiirt Falls will he moved to Syra- Anthony Xenos and Pamela Zirkle. . four counts or rape, 'eight counts or
cus'c to make room for the second
, The following were approved as scKual bancry 0111d four count• or felograde class.
· non-ccrti(icd sullstituics for .the nious sexual a.o;sault. He is accused or
· Aggravating the situation arc ·large upcoming school year: custodians.-- having sc.x with a minor relative over
fifth and sixth grade classes in the · Linda ~dkins, Jeff Beaver, Becky a four year period from 1993tp 1996.
district. along with a large second BradfOrd, Larry Ebersbach, Jennifer
Prosecuting Att\)mcy John R.
grade 'Class. said Lawrence.
Michael. Wallace M&lt;lrris, Teresa ·Lcntes told the jury -- consisting or
'10 personnel matters, the board Miller, Judy Parsons. Becky Wilson, eight women. 1our men and twv male
rcnc.wcd an extended service contract Barbara Lane, Bob Arnott, Donald alternates -- that Burney began .havforhAnron Sayre in agricultural sci- Boggess; Stacy Bumpus, t .huck ing sex with t!IC ulleged victim begin-·
cnc~ and hired Carla Shuler and Don · Williams, Lois Wolfe and Donna ning in 1993 when she was in the
Dudding to teach summer school at Taylor; cooks-- Linda Adkins, Becky eighth grade. lollowing the family's
the high school .
.
· Bradfprd; Melissa Grucser, Pam Dill, move to 'Mcigs Cnunty.
The following were approved as Linda: Harmon, Janet Manuel, Terc·
sub~titutc 'teachers for the upcoming sa Miller, J~.dy Parsons. Donna rayschool year: Nancy Jo Aldridge, lor, Bc~;,ky Wilson, Debbie Williams
.
Robcn Austin. Carissa Bailey, Deb; andTinnGray; bus drivers ·-: William
orah Barber. Dorothy Bentt, lise Downie , William Justis, Delbert · · · A Cheshire woman was killed in said.
The patrol said Turner w~s ca.•t·
Burris. Christi Collins, Sharon · Smith, Ron Wilson and David a one-vehicle acci~ent late Monday
bound
wh.en the pickup truck she
on
State
Route
554
near
Cheshire,
the
Edmonds, linda Faulk, · Michelle Williams; substitute aides· - Sally
drove
failed
to navigate a curVe, went
. Gillian . Lucille Haggerty, JQ'I)lcs Caldwell, Connie Chevalier, Juilnitil ·Gallia-Meigs Post orthc State Higholf
the
left
side
ur the road and str.uck
Hayman, Kelly He!'·ry. 'Janelle Hine- Frederick and Bec,ky Wilson.
' . way Patrol reported.
Sheila S. TUrner, 39, 433 Roush · a tree .
mlm; Jcnnifbr Jones, .Kelly Kisner, .
In other business, the board:
The pickup was severely damaged
Lane,
was declared dcac.l at the scene
Fa!lllic Lee, Ryan Lemley, Darlh
-- .~pproved membership for the
in
the
accident, and the hndy was lat·
of
the
10:
10
p.m.
crash
hy
the
Gallia
LQ'Ian. Paul McGuir~ . Tricia high·school and junior high school.in
cr
released
to the McCoy-Moore
County coroner's omcc, troopers
McNickle. Tonya Meadows, Mclin· Continued on PriF 3 .
&lt;
.

: By STEVEN. K. PAULSON
· AaiOCI.ted Prell Wrltw,
DENVER -hi the first cvilfel1!:e

CHEVRDIEI• DlDSMDBilE

....

By aftl~~ J .''RI!t!o' '' . · ' .
Sentinel Newa Staff
· Bids for a new heating and air
conditioning system for the Meigs
Col!nty Courthouse were opened
when the Meigs County Commissioners met in regular scs~ion on
Monday.
The new syst~m will replace one
destroyed in a slip behind t~c courthouse in March, following heavy
rains and: flooding. The C8!lt1'or the

··
pilllntl a flower on
face
· 5-yeer-old Tiffany Reltmlre.ln
addition to food and tun,
awarda'· a.nd ' recognl~lona
were dlatrlbuted at the .e vent. .
'

Vaughan said he would contact replacement of meters on Second
village solicitor Christopher Tcnoglia Street, west of Coun Street. Mayor
to discuss Options for enforcing the Vaughan said that the meters would
curfew ordinance, including the pos- need to be replaced by village crews:.
sibility of citing parents or children rather ·than a private contractor lUi
originally planned, due to the tools
who repeatedly violate curfew.
· ••
Council voted to pay $750 lo\lfard required. '
Councilman Larry Wehrung note~
landscaping in the downtown 'business district. According to Council- . that guardr;~il wa.• still needed in sev...:,
man John Musser. who made the eral areaS.
Council
mcmbCr
George
Wright
motion to provide the funding, the
project is under the 'direction of the asked about the status or Cleanup of
Pomeroy Merchants Association. The homes on . Chester Road. Vaugh'~)!
merchants will plant and maintain said that the health depanmenl hli.&lt;
perennial flowers in the area between· indicated that the problem is · nq,t
the street and the municipal parking health-related and must be handled
lot The estimated total cost of the by the village, hut noted that some
cleanup ha.• ·occurred.
'
project is $1,500.
Council
also:
Counciracceptcd the resignations
- Met in executive session to disor Police Chief Gerald Rought and
cuss
.personnel:
Dispatcher Ellen Rought, who are
: Approved flllyment or bills.
retiring. Their resignations arc effec· Present, in addition to .Norman,
tive August 22.
·
Councilman Bill Yo~ng opted the Musser, Vaughan, Young and
need for repair to .the village hall .Wchrung. were council members
'parking . lot, and inquired about. Geri Walton and Scott Dillon and
Clerk Kathy Hysell.

Racine firm low bidder for new
.
.. .-.i..ng, ct!r
.c~.n~,ition,~. ng · ,~y~t~~ ~
.

total - attended the
ev• marking the end of the

•IChool y.r. AbOve, a

4WD, air, AM/FM, 4 dQpr,

Curfew problem aired :'
by Pomeroy Council

For courthouse project

people

~

A Glnlllll Co. N.....,..,.,

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnll Newa Staff
11Ie increasing problem of curfew
violations by juveniles in Pomeroy
was discussed Monday night, when
Pomeroy Village Council met in regular session.
·
·
Mayor Frank Vaughan said that he
had noticed·a.o increase in teenagers
walking on the streets after the dusk
curfew. Patrolman Mark Norman.
who_attended the meeting, said that
curfew violation cimtions were issued
regularly, but were not aly,;ays pursued by the Prosecuting Attorney.
Since tbc citations arc processed
through county eoun, rather than the
mayor's coun, the violations must be.
filed l;ly the Prosecuting Attorney, he
said.
Several business lots in Pomeroy
are becoming popular gathering
places for teenagers, Norman said,
especially on West Main Street, and
those areas arc targeted. as enforce·
mcnt areas.
·

· ·star Mill Park· In Racine
wu the acene of the annual
picnic tor Melga County'a
Hnd Stan children and their
parenta. Approxlmataly 160
klda, their parenta, and Held
Stan employeea - about 375

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue...Y, M•y 20, 1997

•Head.Start picnic-.· ...____.......,

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Moa,ly cle1r tonight,
Lowa
In
mid
401.
Wedneadliy, aunny, . high
In eo..
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Funeral Home in Vinton . ·
It mark"!~ the second raiality nl' th~
year in Galli a County investigat~ tiy
the patrol. The first was un March 2,
when Charles T. LaFollette, 76, Butler; Ky., drowned when his car
entered high water on SR 7 ncar .
Eureka.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sbeet, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-1182-2156 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co.

Newspa~r

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

o-n.1 Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controlllr

JlJe Seallnel Mlt'c:CWMI ,.,.,.. to tiN «&lt;ltor from ,..,.,. Oft I IJIDad ,.,. of fOI*I.
Shott- (»0 lftltllo
haw lhe-· - d , . , , . - - . !)'pod lot·

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11o -• ·
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-•nd
. , -" " " " " " -I'MY
. s,_,Ny
"""Eocn
,,..
.. • •..-...... .., • ,..,_or letter. , . . 10: L.,.,. to tiN Editor, TM SMrtnel, 111 Ccut St, ~~' 01t1o
4S7Ji; Gr, FAX 1D 114--31$7.

Tu11day, May 20, 1817
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on our mmds."

Last week 's vote by House lawmakers on the prevailing wage rule, wh1ch
will soon be s1gncd mto law, will take away the gua~antce that construc11on
workers get umon-ncgouated pay on pubhc school projects. Labor un1ons
believe the move could cost workers as much as $1 ,500 each year.
Speaker JoAnn Davidson. a Columbus Republican, sa1d she doesn't think
the GOP-backed ISsue will change the ~tate's pohticallandscapc. Republican&gt; have controlled the Oh10 House and Senate since 1994
" I' vc never mn an clccuon tn wh1ch lahor d1dn't try to beat us: · Davidso n sa1d
Rcpuhhcans lately have enJoyed a &gt;tUrpnsmg amount ol support from
un10n members. who tradllwnally hack Democrats. An Oh10 Poll released
car)1cr th iS month showed that 66 percent of union households gaYC Republican Gov. George VmnoVJch a favorable rating
John Green, d~rect01 of the UmvcrSity of Akron 's Ray C. Bliss lns11tutc
tor Applied Pohucs, last month wamcd that Republicans couid 'angcr unmns
enough th?t !hey rc-cncrg1zc the labor mgvcmcnt.
That "already happen mg. sa1d Rcgg1c Hohenberger. a sheet metal worker from Toledo. He was among 700 union members who took the day off
Thursday and rode buses to Columbus for the House vote.
·
"Last week they stnpped workers· comp." he s~1d. "ThiS week they're
gomg after workers' paychecks"
·:You're going to sec us get a lot stronger ..

Today in history
By The Associated Press ·
Today IS Tuesday. May 20 the 1401h day of 1997 There arr 225 days
left m the year.
Today 's H1ghhghtm Htstory
,
On May 20, 1~27 , Charles Lindbergh took off from Rooscvcll Ftcld m
Long !~land , NY , aboard the Sp1rn of S1 Lou1s on his historic sulo n1ght
to France
On th1s date:
In 1506. Chnstophcr Columbus died m poverty m Spam
In 1861, North Carolina voted to secede from the Umon.
In 1861 , the capital of the Confederacy was moved from Montgomery.
Ala , to R1chmond, Va
·
. In 1902, the Umtcd States ended Its occupatiOn or Cuba
In 1932. Ameha Earhart took off from Newfoundland for Ireland to
become the f1rst woman to fly solo across the Atlanltc.
In 1939, regular trans-Atlantic Dlf service began as a Pan Amencan All' ways plane, the Yankee Chpper, took olf from Port Washtngton, N y . bound
for Europe.

Berry's World

•

"About those documents concerning the cam·
paign-flnsnc. probe that were subpoenaed SOCKS ATE THEM."

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0 HI 0 \'J! .,j t i " ' I

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Wal •day,Ma)'ll

•

By San Eckel
•
Members of Congress want high·
school teachers to tell their students
that sex outside of marriage "is like·
ly to have harmful psychological and
phys1cal effects."
Well, I guess they ought to know.
Part ofthe new welfare leg1sla110n,
the directive sets aside $2SO million
f01 states to fund abstinence-only pro·
grams, rather than ones that give
.teens information about btrth control.
In other words, they 're paymg
schools to make teachers keep then
mouths shut
Many state leaders have balked at
the regulation, and have dec1ded to
dechne the money rather than ge11n1o
· a situation where teachers mtght be
legally forbidden from answering a
student's question on a controversial

issue. Connecticut sta\e representa·
live Mary Mushlnsky says her state
will be passing. "We ought not to
pursue (the funding) if it comes with
handcuffs," sbe told the New York
Times.
Critics have also po1ntcd out that
som&lt;!abstinence programs favor fear·
mongcnng over education. A recent
report quoted a video m which a sfu·
dent asks what would happen 1f he
had sex before marriage. "Well,"
says the instructor, "I guess you'll
JUSt have to be prepared to d1e And
you'll probably take w1th you your
spouse and one or more of your ch1l·
dren."
.
Of course, Congress is not the
only enuty that 1s actively limning the
rights of teen-agers The Supreme
Court has ruled that schools have the

right to search students' Iocken and
to tcststudent athlel.es for drugs. Over
the years federal, Slate and local govemments have restricted teens' rights
to welfare benefits, medical attention
and even mobility. Curfew laws are
now in place in 75 percent of all
major U.S. cities, with policeenforced curfew times as ea~tY as 8
p.m.
And then there are the schools
themselves. There is the school that
had an 11 -year-&lt;Jld girl arrested for
packing a steak knife in her lunch
· box. There is the school that sus·
pended an eighth· grade boy for popping Alka-Seltzers. There Is the
school that revoked a science-fair
award because the project tested
condom reliability. There ts the
school that banned the ·'Goose·

bumps·· books. There is the school
that revoked a semor's National Honor Society award-- and informed the
colleges he was applymg to of their
action -- because he created a Web
page that parodied the institution.
And there is the school that denied
two African-American students their
high-school d1plomas because they
wore Afncan tribal cloths over their
graduation robes.
Oh, and d1d I mention tbe 12-ycarold g1rl who spent the night at achil·
drcn 's dctentton center because she
refused to visit her father, who, she
said. threw a gu11ar at her and told her
that her mother and grandparents

By lan Shoales
I read a few weeks back that German author~ue s were womed about
the state of the Berhn Wall. If what's
!ell of 11 IS gomg to be preserved as
a monument of the Cold Wa1, agamsl
the ravages of souvenir-seekers and
polluuon, somethmg must be done.
Just some 10-odd years ago, PresIdent Reagan was urging Mr Gorbachcv to lear down the wall Now
we want to lammate the rums . The
mind boggles
Speakmg of laminated rums, I've
been following the controversy sur·
rouhdmg the Frankhn Delano Roosevelt 1'1\Cmonal W!lh great mlcrest
Some of our more vocal whcclchaucd citizens have been loudly
ms1stmg that FDR be portrayed as the
paralyzed man he really was, instead
of tlic rffiiil FDR 1magmed h1msclf to
be Even from beyond the grave.
Roose veil won. of coursc.hal a guy.
The so-called "Tobacco G1ants,''
however, have not to my knowledge
demanded that FDR be pictured with
hJS trademark c1garettc, JUtting frnm
hiS mouth at •Jaunty angle m 1ts stylISh holder. Even from beyond the
gmvc, Roosevelt probably just let that
one go.
After all, th1s could all lead to

Memonal Turnoff! Where's the Lib·
crace Rest Stop? The Sinatr~ Stealth
Bomhcr?
We have all these M~monal
Turnoffs named for lcgJSialors even
our parents can' t qu11c remember.
What 's wrong with nammg a few of
them for the Elvises, Libcniccs and
Smatras of the world'' Sure, they 're
nawed. We can't all be perfect. hkc
poht1c1ans.
'
Lam mate the rubble. Why not 1
Every time a movie IS set in L.A.
there seem to be two nbhgatory
shots: One . ,. of a topless woman
gyralmg around a metal pole , the other ts a picture of the spinnmg donut
of, I believe. Randy's Donuts. (I last
saw the spinning donut in "Volcano."
Thankfully, it was not destroyed by
lava.) Wh1ch of these two shots a
filmmaker uses depends upon
whether the movte is rated R or PG·
13. Arc these shots cliches or,nation·
al treasures 1
If we want to laminate the classics
hcfore they become dust, 'l'llat 1s a
class1c? Is "Dances With W.11lves" a
class1c'' Is PreSident Clinton, a clas·
sic? (Pause for &lt;lcnSJvc laug~ter)
Wtll we lammate Andy Rooney?
Howard Stern'! What tf we had to

By OeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON At the
moment Bill Chnton apolog1zcd to
the surviVors of' a fedeml government
study that left 399 black men with
syphihs untreated lor decades, I sat m
front of a tclcv1sion hslcnmg to him
and pondcrmg a box on my drtver's
hccnse renewal form.
•
"Please check if, upon your death.
yuu dcmc to help others by becommg an organ donor," the words
1bovc 11 read
- I tlidn 't.
\
The pre&gt;~dent's statement of con·
trition ·came 25 years artcr the
Thskcgee syphilis study ended- and
too late to assuage the fears that many
African Americans have about the
way the medical profession treats
black people.
My heart tells me that giving away
my organs at death so that others
might live is the ngl\tthing to do. But
my mind warns me against grantmg
unknown doctors the riaht to harvest
my vital organs.
How do I know that physicians
anKious to s•ve the lire of another
won 'I pull the plug prematurely on
111ine? How can I be certain that race
won't be a factor in such a decision
- as it was with the government doc·
tors who fqr 40 years denied treat·
ment to black men who contracted
syph1lis in Tuskegee, Ala.
"What was ~one ~annot be

choose between them'' lt may come
down to that, you know. What wtth
the Internet and all.
We're creeping toward an Amer·
1cu of instant disposable classtcs In
other words, we've pretty much
embraced the econumy of the hll.
Oh, there arc a few exceptions,
like "Shng Blade," but even thiS
wopdcrful movie ach1evcd a h1t sta·
tus that was way nut of proportton to
11s quahty I say lam male 11 anyway.
I don't want round my house w1th a
Kaiser blade. even 11 he docs call1t a
shng hladc. IHey man. I've got a
fam1ly.) ·
What I'm really hoping is that
FDR w1ll throw off hiS lap blanket,
nsc up. grat&gt; a m1crophonc and a
smoke, and get us all back •on track.
But that would probably violate the
laws governing the separation
between church and stale. And w1th
our luck. if a :,tatue should come to
life. it'd probably be N1xon anyway.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoalc~ newsletter, call 1-KOQ.989DUCK or wntc Duck's Breath, 408
Broad SL, Nevada C.ty, &lt;;:A 95959 )
lan' Shoales Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

...

Clinton's apology too little,

w.~y

too late

'"

undone, but we can end the silcn~c ... Amcn~a~s hchcvc AIDS " II man· overcoming the · legacy of the
Chnton told a White House gathering made diSease dcsitmcd to kccp'down Tuskegee experiment, he has to do
much more.
that mcluded five of the c1ght sur- the black populatiOn.
In a gesture intended 111 deal wuh
Tn begin w1th, Clinton should find
vivors of Tuskegee study The decision hy government doctors to let the fears that generate thcse trouhhng a way 14&gt;r the government to fully
these hlack men sulfcr and d1c !rom reactiOns. Chnton announced dunng fund Tuskegee's buJCthbccntcr and
a trcatahle venereal diseuse "was his speech the government will g1vc make aucnduncc there a requirement
Tuskegee Institute, a historically for all puhl ic health service doctors
shameful," he su1d.
He's right: It can't he undone. but hltJCk sehcMII that was nnt mvnlved '" involved in medical research.
the syphihs study. a $200.000 grant
He shuuld also duccl the Dcpaft·
can it be overoomc 1
to
a1d
the
university
10
creating
a
The awful legacy of the Tuskegee
!l'Cntnf Health uod Human Services
experiment is that it has made mil· ,Center 141f Bmethics in Rcscan:h und to launch a high·pmlile na11oJial
'
hons of Afncan·Amcricans distrust- Health Care.
campaign aimed at convinc1ng
That's a p1Uancc - abuut $Sll0 for Afncun-Amcricans that the proper
ful of doctors and mcdiual c•pen·
mentation Wh1le mc1dcnls of heart each df the Tuskegee men g;Jvcrn- ethical satcguards arc in place fpr
attacks and ~trokes among t&gt;lack menl doctors treated hke the scum ul them to take pan in mcd1cal cxpetl·
' •and tu become organ
'
men between 35 and 59 IS h1gh, our the Earth. Clintun's pledge f'lls far mentation
:
participation in studies meant"! find short of a se11ous oommitment to donors.
Nothing short of such an aggres·
ways to rcdu~e our vulnerability to such an important undertaking. It's
these discuses is low. Sn, too, IS the not enough for the president ll&gt; say sivc effort wtll overcome the lingernumber of black organ donors
he's sorry for a cnme commiJtpd on ing effects of the Tuskegee syphihs
Roughly onc-thtrd of the people the watch of others. If he wantll to be l'(udy- or convince me that il is safe
awatllng organ transplants arc taken seriously when he talks about ftw me 111 become an organ donor.
African-Americans, but just 12 per·
cent of org~n donors arc black. This
'
gap between those in need and those
five years ago: Proclaln1tng his innocence to the end, Roser Ketth Cole·
who a1e willing to g1ve dooms many man was executed in Virginia's electric chair for the 1981 rapc-murde{ of
who could be saved to an early grave. lfis sister-in-law, Wanda McCoy.
.
•
While some black transplant pallents
One year ago: The Supreme Coun struck down, 6-3, a CoiOJ'B!Io meaget organs from people of other sure banning law1 that protect homoseKulls from discrimination In anotb. ·
racial and ethnic groups, scientists er decision, the coun curtailed, S.... huse jury awards aimed at punishink
say their chance of survival increas- or deterrin1 misconduct.
.
es when they come from w1thin their
Tbday's Birthdays: Ac1or JIIIDCI Stewart is 89. Sinpr Joe Cocker. ia S3.
race.
Sinpr«trcss C. isS I. Mulicilll WlrNn Clnn {lllu.vox) ia 45, Ron RD ,
And given the deadly impact the Jan is 39. Rock musiciu Jlllli Wtedlin (The Oo-Oo's) Ia 39. NM1t
infamous sypbilis stUdy had on black son Pinebot I• 38. Actor Thny Ooldwyn Ia 37. Sinaw SUIIia Cowlill (1lbe
men, tt should come a liule surprise Cowsills) is 37. Sinaer Nick Heyward (HaimlliOO) is 36. Acuwa MIDdy
that a significtftlt nwnber of Arrican· Cohn is 31.1loc:lt musiciltn Tom Clomllla (Belly) ia 31.

8,_

A

•

•

Cecil C. Bolin

•

Cecil C. Bolin, 6S, of State Route 681 in Albany, died on Monday, May
19, 1997 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., fol lowing an utended illness.
He was born in Athens County, son of the late Zern and Faye Steinmetz
Bolin. He was a self-employed logger. He was a veteran of the A11 Force
and of the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict. He was a life memher of
the Albany VFW Postii98S3 and the Korean War Veterans Associallon .
Surviving are his wife, Carrie Ptckens Bolin; a sister, Zelia Peck of
Albany; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers, Delma~
Bolin and Donald Bohn; and a sister, Louise Green.
Services will he Thursday, May 29, 1997 at 2 p.m. at Bigony·Jordan
Funeral Home tn Albany w1th Rev. Darrell Clark officiating. Burial will fol·
low at Wells Cemetery. Mihtary graveside rites will be performed by Albany
VFW Postll9863.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday.
Tbe family requests no food donations.

•

•
;

•

WVA.

~ Clifford Might

were .. wicked ••?

The last example is extreme and,
like many of the above-cited exa~n·
pies, the result of exlrCmcly bad judgment on the part of one or a handful
of adults. However, such breaches
con exist because young people have
very few rights in this society. In
almost every instance they are
assumed to be mindless and weak,
empty vessels helpless to whatever
wh1ms and no11ons arc pat before
them.
Unless, of course, they commn a
crime. Then they mtraculously
become rational and clear-headed
Then pqlitlclans cry out that they be
treated like ndults.
That is what happened early th1s
month. when the House of Rcpre·
scntativcs passed a juvenile crime bill
that would send $1.5 hillion in hlock
grants to states that try teen-agers
accused of vtolcnt cnmcs as adults.
The bill also stipulates that the fed eral courts do the same
In the words of my friend Chmsy, this is totally bogus.
Arc teens muonal adults or form less mfanls'l Obv1ously, they arc nc1·
ther. But if we are going to insist that
kids who commit c11 mcs arc treated
a&lt; adults, perhaps we should a!lord a
hulc of that sa1,11e respect to their lawabiding cohorts.
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Clifford Ross Might. 81, Vinton. (Danville Communily) died Monday
May 19, 1997 at Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport.
BomAugust13, 191S at Rutland, son of the late Grace Mig~ll, and was
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloud)' Clou:iy rea1ed
in the home of his grandmother, the late Effie Wilt. He was a rehred
farmer,
a member of the National Farmers Organization, and attended the
' ''
Danville Hohness Church.
Surviving a1e his wife of 59 years, Evelyn Sigler Might; a son, Clarence
(Jessie)
Might ofVmton; two daughters, Ellen (Stmon) Johnson of Pomeroy
'
and Joyce (Angelo) McDaniel ofQifton, W.Va.; two half-brothers, Don BM·
ly...Otherwise fair. Lows from the rell of Langsville and Ben Barrell of New Haven, W.Va.; a half-sister, Naomid 30s to lower 40s. Highs in the mi Hunter ofNeslonville; nine grandchildren, 15 great grandchildren, a greatmid and upper 60s.
great-granddaughter; several meces and nephews.
:f.riday ... Fair, Lows in the 40s.
Services are 2 p.m. Thursday at the Danville Holt ness Church, w1th Rev.
Hiibs in the upper 60s to mtd 70s.
J D. Young officiating. Burial will be in Gravel H1ll Cemetery. Friends may
i aturday... A chance of showers call at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, on Wednesday from 2-4
ani:!. thunderstorms. Low in the upper and 7-9 p.m.
d'to mid SOs. Highs mid 60s to mid

:Today's weathef forecast
\

Ohio
Tonight...Partly cloudy north and
mostly clear south. Lows in the
upper 30s to mid 40s.
Wednesda~ ... A mixture ilf clouds
· 8nd sunshine. Highs from the mid SOs
• northeast to the mid 60s far south.
, Extended forecut
Thursday...A chance of frost ear- ,, !71ls.

,

Walter C. Zwies

Interest rates may increase
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
· ~ unusual degree of uncertatnty surrounded today 's mcellng of Federal
• Reserve pol,icy-makers, who were
considenng raisins interest rates for
·• a second time this year.
As the Fed meeting got under way,
both stock and bond prices fell as
traders nervously awaited the out·
come. By mid-morning, the Dow
Jones average of industrial stocks had
fallen 67 points to 7, I 62.
Before the first tightening on
. March 25- a quarter-point increase
to S.S pen:ent in the benchmark rate
on overnight loans between banksanalysts knew what to expect.
In a string of congressional
appearances, Federal Reserve Chair·
man Alan Greenspan had telegr1pbed
his helief the Fed needed 10 f'dlsu rates
· pre-emptively to prevent strong economic demand from spilling over into
an acceleration of inflation.
Now, all analysts have to go on 1s
a speech Greenspan delivered May 8
to New York University in which he
• said, "While there is scant evidence
· of any imminent resurgence of ipflauon at the moment, there also appears
to be lillie slack in our capacity to
produce."
Some analysts, focusing on the
first part of the key sentence tn
Greenspan's speech, thought the Fed
would watch tncoming data until its
July 1·2 mectmg before deciding
• whether to raise mtcs again.
Those focusing on the second part
believed policy-makers would bump
,

~ Tes'timony

up rates today as a son of monetary
insdrance policy, to make sure growth
slows enough to keep a hd on inflation.
"The most recent data have been
so mixed that-11 leaves analysts ...
with strong arguments on both sides
of. the question," satd economist Stu·
art\ Hoffman of PNC Bank Corp. in
Pitiurgh.
the one hand, the economy
ex ded ata rapid 5.6 percent annu·
al rate in the first quarter, the best in
I 0 years, and the unemployment rate
dropped to 4.9 percent in Apnl, the
lowest tn nea~ly 24 years.
On the other hand, consumer
prices during the first four months of
this~ advanced at only a I.S percent annual rate, less than half last
year's rate. And it's clear growth has
slowed tn the second quarter. Both
retail sales and factory prodJJCtion fell
in April.
All the uncertainty has driven Wall
Street crazy. The Dow average, after
-htuing. 7,085 on March 11, two
wee~s before the last Fed tightening,
fell to 6,392 on April II . It recovered
to a ncw .high of7,3341ast Thursday.
In the end, the decision on
whether to raise rates may htnge on
political considerations. analysts said
The · rate increase in March drew
protests from groups rangtng from
the AFL-CIO to lbe National Associat1on of Manufacturers. And House
Min0111y Leader Dick Gephardt, D·
Mo., and 64 other members of Congrc~s sent a lcucr to Greenspan urgmg h1m not to raise rates again
1
begins.c.onllnuedfrompaae

'

I

' inctdents would happen in the show· to break apan . Eventually she told a
er and occasionally Barney would classmate. hut recanted her allcga·
: make her wear her stepmother's lin· tion~ because she was afraid of her
•· gerie, high heels and makeup, she tes- sec rill gelling out.
: tified_
·
Judge Randall Kncce of Ptckaway
She then identified several items Coun'ty, bearing the case hy ass1gn·
~ of lingerie presented as evidence.
men( ended her testimony for her the
She said she could not remember afternoon with testimony conunuing
: the exact dates of the alleged inci: at noon today.
; dents. When asked why, she respond·
Rape and felonious sexual ~ne' ed, "because 11 happened so often."
tration arc aggmvated felonies of the
: She told Lcntes she was afraid to first degree pumshablc by a maxi·
• tell anyone about the inctdcnts mulh1ptison term of 10 to 25 years.
~ because she d1d 'not want the family ,Se&gt;lltal battery is a third-degree
,_..;..._______..,...,;;·,;;;-.... felony. punishable by four to 10
years tn prtson
Daily
If found gUilty on all counts, he
could
face between 112 and 280
(USI'IIJll-M)
years if sentenced concurrently.

The

Sentinel

Published OYf:t'l afltmoon. Monday _..,
Fridoy. In Coun St , Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohio l!llley Pvbllahina ConlfuyiO- Co.•
...........,, Ohoo 4~769, Ph. 992·Jil6. Seoond
c..,. pc111111&lt; poid all'otnin&gt;y. Oltto.

Stocks

M....-.r. The Associated Preu. •nd ihe Ohio
Newspoper A....,IMion.

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briefs-~

Accident investigated

MICH.

Why not laminate the rubble?
armed confl1ct between chain-smok·
ers and cultural the011sts at the base
ol the Lincoln Memorial (wh1ch
docs not in(jicale the great man's
depresm:e ' J'mot10nal state m any
way)
'
What about more mobile monu·
mcnts? Now that rock ' n' roll has a
museum, even Adam Dum~ has a
shot at 1mmonality U-2, not trustmg
in this simple evoluuon, has gussJCd
up 1ts new tour w1th gansh hghtmg
effects, gaudy costumes and irony U2 1s s11ll ocrformme the same old
overly smccrc Irish songs it always
has. but now 11 performs them among
even more fog machmcs. U-2 has
become, in effect, Elvis.
The nauon wants to bestow some
congressional honor or other on
Frank Smatra.
Kilty Kelley, ol course, his unauthon7.cd b1ographer, IS obJect mg. She
says he ·s a mobbed-up lout not
descrvmg of pubhc honor. I say gtve
Frank the medal. (Hey, I' ve got a
family, man!)
And what abuut Elvis'!
Whcrc's hiS monument'! Is Graceland enough? Is the Liberacc Muse·
urn enough for L1beracc'&gt; Where's the
Elvis· L1brary'! Whcrc's the ElviS

.........-·"'·-Local

A£cuw...- ...,._.for

..

Teen rights: The fight «go's on

Will wage debate
stir union rank$?
By JOHN SEEWER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Hundreds of construction w01kers wearing flannel shms
and baseball c~ps gal a ha~sh lesson in politics last week- it's all about
who has the votes.
Busloads of workers from around the stale filled Statehouse halls and
hearing rooms, all hopmg to persuade lawmakers to save a state law that
reqUires umon-scale wages on school conslruction proJects.
They went home disappemted and angry
Now the question is whether they w1ll take act1on Dunng th1s decade
uniOns have lost the11 pollucal clout and membership has dechned, but some
say the repeal of preva1hng wage and recent changes in workers' compen·
sauon m1ght energ1ze workers.
"They're v1rtually wakmg up a sleeping g1ant," M1ke Trcncff smd as he
sat m the balcony of the House chamber on Thursday
"The battle lines arc bemg drawn because we'll know who has helped
us and who hasn 't," smd the 44-ycar-old bncklaycr from Columbus.
Trcncff, however. 1s among only a few people in his umon who follow
poht~es and its 1mpact on labor He and a couple of co-workers lormcd a
pohucal commutce within thc1r un\(}n about live years ago. But he admitted u's diff1cult gcttmg others mvolved.
"Some take Interest for a wh1lc. then lose it," Trcncff sa1d "They don't
want to understand it. As long as they ' re gcttmg a paycheck, they'll go hom&lt;¥
satJSiicd."
They need 10 reahzc that "thmgs can happen here to hurt us," he added
That's why Treneff prom1scd that "voter registration will be the flr.st thing

.•
•

•

The Dally Sentinel• P8ge 3

,,

.

Walter C Zwies, 67, of Pensacola, Aorida, died Sundey May I 8, 1997
at his borne.
Born Apnl3, 1930 in Harwick, Pennsylvama, son of the late Walter and
Mary (Janu,s) Zwies, he ret11ed form the U.S. Nav.Y m 1969 after serving 20
yeaiS.
._
.
Surviving are his wife, Ardath A. Spires of Kyger. whom he married Feb.
14, 19SS at North Kingston, Penn.; two sons, Tech Sgt. Walter C. (Captain
Julie Ferrell) Zwies of Converse, Texas; and Wade C. Zwies of Pensacola;
two s1sters, Frances Cragnali of New Kensmgton, Penn., and Barbara (Teddy) Hanus ofPa~ma ; a brother, Teddy (Marga~el) Zwies ofPittsburgli, Penn;
and aunt; several mcces and nephews; brothers-in-law, Rodney (Patsy) Sp1rcs
of Kyger and Dennis Spires of Storys Run; and Sisters-in-law, Irma Bales
and Rna (Jocsph) White, both of Kyger.
In addition to h1s parents, he was preceded in death by an mfant daughter, Ruth 'Ann, and a s1ster, Verna Kozora.
Private gravcs1de serv1ces were 11 a.m. today m Pensacola umler the direc·
tion of the Faith Chapel Funeral Home. With the Navy Chaplain otTiciating
Burial will be at Barrancos Military Cemetery at the Pensacola Naval Air
Station with full military honors

Today's livestock report
Estimated receipts 28,()()()
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndtanaPrices from Producers LiveOhio direct hog pnces at selected
stock
Association:
buying points Tuesday as provided by
Hog market lrend,forTucsday. 50
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
cents
lower.
Market News:
Summary
of Monday's auctions at
· Ba~rows and gilts· mostly SO cents
lower; demand and movement light Hillsboro and Creston:
Hogs· steady to lower.
to moderate.
Butcher hogs: 54.00-59.75.
lji.S. 1-2, 230.260 lbs. country
Cattle:
steady to 1.00 lower.
points 56.05-58.00, few S8.SO; plants
Slaughter steers: choice 64 0057.50-59.00
70.00;
select 60.00-65 00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 52 00Slaughter
hc1fcrs: ch01cc 64 0056 50; 210-230 lbs . 47.SQ-52 .00.
68.25;
select
59.00-64
00.
Sows: steady to firm.
Cows:
steady,
all
cows
46.00 and
U.S. 1·3 300-450 lbs. 44 .00·
46 50; 450.500 lbs 46.00-48.00. down .
Bulls· lower to 1 00 h1ghcr; all
500·600 lbs . 48.00-52.00. few over
bulls
5S.OO and down.
600 lhs. 52.00-53 00.
Veal
calves: steady; cho1cc 135.00
, Boars: 39.00-41.50.
and down

Southern Local...
t~c

()hio High School Athletic AssoCiation.
•• Approved industrial technology
textbooks as adopted by the county
educa11onal scrv1ce center.
•• D1scussed the district's lacalton
on two building a.~sistance program
lists. The district is ranked flrst.on the
old hst until the end of June, 1998,
and 348th on the new hsl for huildmg asSIStance.
Present were Lawrence. Trcasur·

Coptmue4rroineue1

cr Dennie Hill. board President Bob
Collins and tlourd members Dave
Kucsma, C.T. Chapman. Marty
Morarity and Doug L1Uic

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSION - Roy
D. Runty, ~acinc
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
None .

Racine firm ••. _con_tl_nuec~_rro_m_pa__ae_l- munity Development Block Gmnt
funds.
Following an cxecullvc sesswn
with Department of Human Services
Director Michael Swisher, the com·
missioners approved a three percent
pay mcrease for employees at the
D.H.S , effective May 14.
In a wnucn request, Swisher said,
"our base rates remain well below
those in neighboring counlles."
"With the passage of welfare
ref01m lcgislauon, our employees are
being required to handle a multitude
of changes 1n regulations as well as
prosram expansions which make
additional demands on them daily,"
Sw1shcr said.
The fundmg for the mcreasc does
not involve addttlonal dollaiS from
the . county budget, but wtll come
from the department's state alloca·
lions, according to Swisher.
The board also approved the hir·
ing of Chnsti Shain as an Income
Mamtenance Worker Aide.
The board approved contracts for
administmtion of Title XX program
serv1ces as follows: to Meiss Coun·
ty Council on Aging, chore service,
$27,592 .24; Meigs County Council
on Asing, Home Health Aide,
$10,147.36; Meias County Council
on Aging, transporwion, SIS,OI3.88;
Oallia/Meigs Community Action
Agency, homemaker ae,rvices,

$33,631.73; Gallia/Mc1gs Communi·
ty Action Agency, Transportation
Scrv~cc s, $8 ,653 75; and Health
Recovery Scrvtccs, drug and alcohol
counseling. $17.200.
The contracts are cffccltve from
July I through June 30, 19911.
The board granted permission to
the Meigs County Historical Society
to place markers on county property
along the route of Morgan's Ra1dcrs
dunng the Civ1l War. The locations
mcludc the courthouse lawn.
The commtss1oncrs also:
• Renewed a contract wtth Bnnk's
Inc., to provide services relating to
the transportation of food stamps, at
a cost of $229 per month per m11lion
dollar value, plus mtleage expenses,
· Approved maintenance contracts
for copying equipment at the DHS;
• Approved a ,transfer of $1.000
from the county's contingency fund 1o
the commissioners' supply budget;
· Approved numerous transfers of
funds, totaling $72,000, within the
bUdget of the county engineer, representing flood relief funds from
F.E.M.A.;
• Appropriated $10,085 into the
Community Corra:t1ons program
blidaet.
Present were County Commis·
sioners Janet Howard and Jeffrey L
Thcimton and Clerk Gloria Kloes .

The Pomeroy Police Department investigated a minor acc:ident W·
ly Sunday.
According to the department's repon, Cha~les T. Ransom, 17,
Racine, was backins into a parking space at the Subway restaurant and
struck a parked car owned by Bill Spaun of Pomeroy.
Light damage was reponed to Ransom 's 1985 Ford and Spaun's
1995. Ford. The department reported that Ransom left the scene, but
later returned. He was cited for 1mproper backmg.

Meigs- Warren resume play today
The Div1sion II baseball sect10naltoumament ga10e between Meias
and Warren Local , which was halt!=(l m Lucasv1lle m the sixth inn101
because of rain, has been scheduled for completion today ai 4:30p.m.
at Meigs High School.
'I
The Marauders have an 11.0 lead 10 1he contest.

.

Heavy rains pound
.parts of southern Ohio
By The Anocleted Press
Heavy rams pounded parts of
southern Ohio and a woman wa~
killed when her ca1 skidded on a ram·
slick road and crashed 1nto a utility
pole, pohce sa1d.
Pohce sa1d Mehssa Sarver, 19, of
Fa~rfleld, was killed Monday after·
noon when her speeding car hu the
pole in Fairfield. Speed and the ram
were factors m the cra,h, pohcc sa1d.
A man who fell mto a ram -swollen
creek was missing after storms
dumped up to 6 mches on parts of
southern Ohio, authontlcs said today

The storm Monday night caused
flash lloodmg m communities not far
from where the Ohio River and nearby creeks flooded in March, killing
fiv e people and damaging hundreds
of homes
Otway Fire Dispatcher Il1lccn
Miller sa1d James Trotter, 18, of
Otway, fell mto Bcachfork Creek
ncar Ohm 3~8 10 the Scioto County
community of Otway Monday mght.
Trotter and his t&gt;rothcr were trymg to
retrieve a boat when he was swept
away The search for Troller resumed
today

Meigs ·EMS logs 9 calls
Units of the Mc1gs County Emergency Med1cal Scrv1ccs recorded
nine calls for asSistance Monday.
Units rcspondmg Included
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3.43 a.m.. Umon Avenue,
Pomeroy, Dorothy Robem, Holzer
Medical Center;
8·41 a.m, Nyc Avenue. Pomeroy,
Joan Landers, HMC:
I0:07 a.m., Seventh Street, Syra·
cuse, Raymond Cunnmgham, Vclcrans Mcmonal Hospnal ;
2·39 p.m , Number Nme Road.
Reedsville, Candy Mayes. St
Joseph's Hospllal ;

Meigs

6 p m , Overbrook Nursing Ccn·
tcr. M1ddl~port , Ernest Cart. HMC;
II :29 p.m., R1chards Road.
Racine, Kyle Sinclair, VMH.
COLUMBIA TWP VFD
7.32 p m., structure hrc on Mount
Union Church Road, no mjurics
reported. Scipio VFD a&lt;SJsted.
POMEROY
7:16pm., slate RoutG 143, Lee
Henderson. Martella Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
10:21 am , volunteer fire depart·
mcnt to John Strcclzsmokc odor

announcement~
I

Sorority to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Bela
S1gma Ph1 Soronty, Thursday, 6·30
p.m. potluck p1cmc at home of Ruth
Ann R1fnc.

glhlilty

Alumni Banquet
The annual Racmc/Suuthcrn
Alumm Banquet will be held Saturday, 6,:30 p.m at Southern High
School 10 Racme No dance Will be
Alzbeimers meeting set
Alzhcnncrs dJSeasc and related held, hut a spccml muSical program
diSorders support grou)l Will meet at will lollow. T1ckcts arc $10 and arc
I p.m Thursday at the Mc1gs Mult1 · available at Racme Home Natumal
pha.&lt;~c Scm or Center. Rebecca Sartin, Bank or hy cnlltng Sh11lcy Johnson al
mus1c therapist to be the guest speak- . 843-5279 ,
cr.
Committee to meet
Baulc ol Bufhngtnn Island planRevival services set
r..ng
Clllllmlllee Will meet WednesM1chacl Vance of Columt&gt;us Will
day,
5 p m. at the Mc1gs County
hold a two night rcv1val Fnday and
Saturday at the Harvest Outreach Museum \
Church on Riebel Road, Chester. 7
p m. each cvcnmg. Mary McDamcl IKES meeting changed
The Mc1gs County IKES regular
IOVIICS public.
mcctmg w11l be held Tuesday, 7 p.m.
at the clubhouse on Scout Camp
Memorial dinner announced
Tho Burlmgham Modern Wood- Road ncar Chester Trnp sh&lt;)Oting will
men w1ll have 11s annual smorgasbord slarl at 6 p m
matching lund dmncr Monday. II '30
a.m. to 6 p m. Food UVIIIlllhlc lor cal
m or carry out lor a dom11Jnn. Bukc
sale. Muncy will he matched hy
home ofhcc und g1vcn to Don Cullums and Lyle Sinclair. l)ecau-c nl'
health prnhkms and Medicare mch-

T!)e.Ligl)f

To

Cooler temperatures
By The Associated Press
Another cold snap is in the Ohio
forecast and frost IS possible Wednesday mght, the National Weather SerVIce mud

A strong cold front w1ll hnng
cOJ&gt;Ier and drier to the state, lore·
casters said.
Temperatures under clear sk1cs
tonight will range from the upper 3Ps
to the mld-40s the NWS sa1d. Read·
mgs Wednesday night w11l be eve n
cooler and there will be a chance ol
frost m the northern half of Oh1o.

By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
It's hard to save money when
your ne1ghbors keep buying
things you can't afford.

***

The weather bureau must be a
non-prophet agency.

***

It would be a cinch to live to a

ripe old age- if we didn't have
to work so hard providing for it.

***

You can read some people like
a book, but you can't shut them
up as eas1ly.
'•

* '* *

Middle age IS that 20-year gap
1n a man's hfe when he doesn't
have the nerve to wear a loud
sport jacket.

••

~~

Closing
satel

tverythl~l'

, Must Gol···

'
•

'

•

�Pomeroy • Middleport; Ottlo

The
Daily
Sentinel
.
P-4

:- Sports

.

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Corraap o."'ddnt

'

The Division II district tournament baseball game between Meigs
· and Warren Local was suspended
Monday evening because of a steady
rain t~at hit the Lucasville area.
The game was called' with the
Marauders balling with two outs in
the top of the sixth inning with the
bases loaded and Meigs leading 11 -

,.

JONES SCORES - The San Diego Padres'
Chris Jones Is safe at home aa Cincinnati backstop Eddie Taubensee holds the late throw and
· prepare11 to throw to another basa In tha fifth

inning ·of Monday's National League contest In
Cincinnati, where the Pedres won 13-6. Jones
scqred on John Flaherty's hit. (AP)

- Memberl of CIUI) SEO,
.younger off-.on volleyball team compo~ed of

At pres.~ time it was still undetermined when the contest will be finished. '
Meigs broke a scoreless tie in the
third inning and added another run in
the founh. The Marauders added five
runs in the fifth inning and rour more
in the siluh to take the 11-0 lead.
Marauder senior Scott George
gave the Warriors one hit and has
helped his cause with a solo home
run leading off the fifth inning.
Details of the contest .will be
printed when the game is finished.

..

.
L
·
I
I'
b.
II
...
·
·
·
t
·
:•·t OCB·t •t,VO
16~ a ,eam cap ures
1
•
•
I
WO l 16S In 1naugura season .
•

.... ...

TIED UP - Houston forward Chirles Barkley (4) finds hlmeelf
tied up by Utah trontman Karl Malone during Monday night'• Westem Conferenca final opener In San Like City, Utah, where the Jazz
won 101-a&amp;ln pert becauee of Malone's 21 polnta. (AP) ·
.

'

Padres pound Reds 13-6;
·Georgia
Jazz
notch
1·01-86
Braves win and Giants .lose· hires Jirsa
as men's win over Rockets

NBA Western Conference finals begin

I) allowed .two hits in four shutout his·ERA to 2.06. Rico Brogna home'
innings. Pete Schourek (2-4) allowed red twice and drove in four runs for
otT the bench to score nine points in
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
six runs anc! six hits in 4 113 innings. the Phi llies.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- This the second quaner when Utah pulled
Ashby strained his right elbow
Cubs 15, Giants 4
MVP stuff is all new to Karl Malone, ahead to stay. '
and came out in the second, and
Scott Servais drove in live runs to
Hukecm Oiajuwon had 3() points
so you' ll have to excuse his behavReds closer Jeff Brantley left after match his career high, set at Col:
ior Monday night.
hut didn't score in the fnunh period .
throwing only four pitch.cs in the orado on April 8, 1996. Visiting San . By PAUL NEWBERRY
He pnlclically .snuhhed David Clyde Drexler scored 13 and Murin
ATHENS, Ga. (APl- Ron Jirsa Stem. He gave the silent treatment to
ninth, Brantley has been disabled Francisco made four errors that led
Elic 10 for Houston, which wa.' play'
promises' to stay at Georgia a lot
once this season by a sore shoulder, to four unearned runs. ·
the fans. He made the media wait an ing just two days after linishing oil
longer than his predecessor.
hi other games, Atlanta beat St.
Steve · Trachsel {2-4) allowed
hour for a postgame interview. ·
Seattle in a seven-game series.
"Oh, yeah. I'm excited to be
Louis 7-3, Houston beat Philadelphia three runs and nine hits in seven
fie didn't even play up to his
"We looked like a tired team, but
here," the Bulldogs new basketball MVP standards.
9·5, Chicago routed San Francisco innings. Osvaldo Fernandez {3-4J
I thought we witUid have applied
coach said. " I remember when I first
15-4, New York beat Colorado 4-3 gave up six runs- just three earned
Still, the test of the Jazz gave sol- ourselves more," Houston couch
got here and ! 'was walking around. id backing to Malone on the night he
and Montreal beat Los Angeles 2-1 . -and eight hits in three innings.
Rudy Tomjanovich said. "I'm very
jogging on campus, and I thought to picked up his trophy a.' Utah defeatBrav~ 7, Cardinals 3
Mets 4, Rockies 3 ·
disappointed
that we didn't make
myself, ' I should have ·gone to ed Houston 101 -86 Monday night in
Chipper Jones drove in four runs
John Olerud lined a two-run
this closer."
school here.' This is home to me Game I of the Western Conference
with a homer and a double as Atlanta homer off Jeff McCurry ( 1-1) in the
The Jazz. whl1 have won their last
now.H
completed a Jour-game sweep at ninth. Colorado lost its third straight
finals.
20 home games, outshot Houston 44
. Tubby Smith lasted only two
Game 2 is Wednesday night, and
· Turner Field.
and fell to 2-8 on a road trip that still
year~ at Georgia leading the much of the MVP hype should be percent to :18 percent and linishcd
Michael Tucker went 3-for-4 with includes three games at San FranBulldogs to t~c first consecutive 20- finished by then .' That didn't stop with only 15 turnovers after com·
-a- single~ double and triple, scored . cisco.
,
win seasons in school history - . Malone from trying ~,o put an .curly milling eight in the lirst quarter.
three ·runs, drove in !mother and
Tlie Rockies broke up Armando
"There was some rust. hut there
before he ·wa.' lured away hy Ken- end to it.
made a diving catch to stave .off a Reynoso's no-hit bid on Jell Reed's
was
energy, too. So it all balanced
tucky.
potential St. Louis rally.
two-out homer in the seventh .
In a pre-game ceremony hosted out," Hornacek said.
Jirsa, his top assistant, wa~ pro- by the commissioner, Malone picked
Atlanta, which has won seven of Andres Galarraga hit a two-run sin· Houston gi11 a :1-fnr-10 cl'li1rt
moted
to head coach on Mond.ay by up his trophy as quickly as he could,
nine, improved to 30-13, the best gle in the eighth for a 3-2 lead.
(rnm
Barkley and "2-fnr-9 evening
athletic director Vince Dooley, who refused to say any . words to the
siart in franchise history. The CardiCory LidiC (2-0J pitched a hitless
fur
Matt
.Maloney. Olujuwnn . who
decided it was more imporllint to crowd, held the trophy up, spun
nals have lost eight of nine.
ninth as the Mel' won for the seventh
was
9-nf-14
from the field and 12maintain a link to Smith's winning around and sprinted hack to thcJ'n7.7.
Denny Neagle {7-0) gave up two time in 'nine games. New York (23for- 17 from the line, was the only
style than hiring a big-name coach . bench.
runs and five hits in six. innings. 20) is three games over .500 for the
member
of the Rockets to shmt
" I think continuity is the theme
Todd Stottlcmyrc (2-3) dropped to 0- tirsttimc since June 2. 1992 (27-24).
The whole thing lasted bare!&gt;' ahnvc-50 percent.
here," Dooley said. "I like the direc- more than a minute.
4 against Atlanta.• allnwing li ve runs
Expos 2, Dodgers I
"I played tcrrihlc," Burkley said.
tion
we're going.''
- four earned- and six hits in six
"I didn 't want to draw any more '"I just write it nff a' u had night. We
Jeff Judcn (4-0) won his ninth
or course, lhe hiring of Jirsa, who attention to the MVP than had were all terri hie and I was the leader
innings with eight sirikeouts.
consecutive decision sioce April 9,
has
never been a.hea!l conch at uny already been on me," Mai&lt;ine said . of the pack."
Astros 9, Phillles. 5
1996, leading Montreal to its seventh
level, is sUre to prompt snmc peopl~ "They wanted me tosay·snmcthing,
letT Bagwell homered twice to tic win in nine games.
With Malone nn the bench, Utuh
to
ask, "Ron who'/''
and I said absolutely not. I don't went on a H~O run early in the ~ec­
Judcn to •k a shutout intn the
Colorado's Larry Walker for the NL
"The proof will be there in the want the Tans to think I snubhcd
lead at 14 and got his I,IXIOth car'ccr ninth at Olympic Stadium bclitre
ond quarter fur a 31~24 lead. Foster
future,
" Jirsa said. "I' ve got a lot of them, bull didn 't want to get caught ,
allowing Todd Zcilc 's leadoff homer.'
scored nine points fur Utah in the
hit.
•
confidence in what we are doing. up in it because this game was hig
Bagwell homered ' to lead off a . Ugueth Urbina then finished for his
first ,'iCven minutes nf the quancr
Whatever is Jillid now about me, I tor us."
four-run sixth that put Houston sixth save.
hclctre Malone returned with the JUJ.z
think the future will take care of
But couldn't be at least have · leading by six.
Ramon Muninez {:1-3) allowed
ahead 4-0 lead, the third homer of
that."
thanked
the fans'/ Couldn't he have
the pight of( Calvin Maduro (3-5). both runs and five hits in six innings.
"We had a li1ur-point lead ~ und
Dooley
conceded
that
Jirsa
was
given the home crowd a little insight then all nf a sudden we're down
Bagwell homered off Ron Blazier
not his first choice lor the jolt, but into what this accolade meant'/
leading off the seventh .at Veterans
nine. That was because nl' their
Ni~ht baseball was introduced in
declined to say who was. Specula"Me talking could have goucn hcnch. They were terrilic," Barkl~y
Stadium.
1935 when the Cincinnati Reds
tion had centered on Dave Od&lt;im at, the other learn revved up In play, so said .
Darryl Kile {4-2 ) allnwcd one run
played seven games under the arcs.
Wake
Forest or Tulane's Perry Clark. I made it shon and swec.t. I turned In
and six hits in seven innings, struck
The margin stayed about ·the
(See JIRSA on Pa~te 5)
every dircctiori of the crowd so they same until Stockton ended the hull'
out ·eight an.d walked two. lowering .
could see it, und then I was out of with · a 3-poinl heave fmm 26 feet
· ·
there," he said .
•that bunked in tu give Utah a 49-40
Malone played - at least tior him lead . ·
- a mediocre game with 21 points,
Utah quickly humped its lcoo to
13 rebounds, live turnovers and a 6- .double digits curly in the third quarfor- I6 sh&lt;Ktling perlitrmunce. But he ter, then unswercd the pair nf runs
(Md.&gt;t,nolh14-J). I: 15 p.m.
Mnnlr:a1 tHcmmnsn n· 1-21 ai Alllullu
alsp
helped hold Charles Barkley \" Ht,ustnn made.
Hockey
lA'l mil U. ThampSllR -:1--2) :11 lh himurc
(Wtido! 1 -.~1.7-Wp. m .
·
12 points as pan or .a str&lt;!ng teamThe Rockets trailell 79:65 enter(t-:rh:hun 7- 1)..l:O!i p.m.
PhilmJciJ~il:. fi.J.'iler 3·4) ;11 Cllk:•~~~
·KIIn-"ll Cil1 0\Jiricr 4·:!1 at Cl.EVECub~ (Ca~lilln 2-:'il. K:O:'i J•.m.
wide
defensive
eflilrt.
.
ing
the fourth and pulled within nine
NHL conference finals
t.ANI&gt; (Hcrslu!ier -'·2). 7 : 0~ p.n\.
Pi t ubur~th ( l.\lii11.11 4-0) ;11 St. IA1Ui5
"You
lmk
ur.thc
slats
und
sec
that
poinfs
twice before Utah .finished
Tt1nmm (Ch:mcns 7-0) at \'II .Y, Y:m(J ;t~.;b11 11 ~). K:O!i 1'1.111.
kCI.'$ tRIIJ.CrA -' ·1), 7:-'S Jl.lll.
CINCINNATI ISmiley ,.l-1\1 Ill Hnu ~ Karl had a had game -· at least•fur them nil' ror good .
Monday's score
llo.d on (H:.mu11\1nd ·1· 2) 111 (' hil.' il~\1 ,
wn rHull !i- ]). K : ll~ p.m.
.
lh:Unil 2. Colur;1d11 I; lll:truil k·u ~t~
him - and it's g&lt;Kld ·because we
While Su1. (Dr:ahck ~- .\). !Ul~ JUil.
tn ~ 1\nl!~h.-s I Vuh.lc!i 2·-t) nt S:m
scrie~ 2· 1
Oakland (TelghcJ~r 0·2 1 til T('a:u
l&gt;kj!o 4Hih:h4.·nd 3-41: IO:O:'i 11.111. .
wnn .and we know he will be ha~ k .
.
·,
(S;ml &gt;lll&lt;~ J.()), MJ~ p.m.
Cu!urmlo Ulailt:y .t-:H.:tl Sao FrancisTnniRht';tpme
Jeff Hornacek suid.
stronger."
Frnm 1.929 to 1935, catcher ·
Se;auh.• tMurtinel. 1-·H :11 An11hdm
en (V:ml..;uuliltithunt 1'-:H. IO:O.'i p.nl. .
l'hihl\lelphin ''' N:'V. ltanJ!\!rl(. 7::UI
(Finley 1-.\1. 10:.\S p.m.
Hornacek
scored
19
points,
John
Mickey
Cochrane played on live
JUil ._
Wednesd.iy's Kames
Stockton
had
16
p&lt;)inls
and
13
'
.
pennant
winners
with two difti:rcn}
Muntrenl fRllllilll~r 2-~~ ut Atlanm
NL standings
' Nu R•nlcll WediiO!Iday .
, a.-.ists, rookie Shandim Anderson teams.
&lt;MndJuk4• 1t I ,IOp.m.
..
1
- Piusrn.rJ,h ((nrUnvn -'· ~ ""- St I .11t11s
. scored II and and Greg Foster camo
Ka., ltm DI¥1Mn
(Alan~"''' ,\..Jt.• I :.\!i p.m.
11Jund1y'• R•me
.rum .
»: L 1:&lt;1.

cage boss

By The Associated Pri!IS

Steve Finley was an unlikely
candidate .'to have a three-homer
game.
" I've been struggling so ·much
lately, it wa~ just nice to get loits,"
" Finley said after his three homers
Monday . powered the San Diego
Padres over the Cincinnati Reds 136. "1 don't care if they 're home runs
or not. l'.m just making up for a little lost time. "
Finley, reinstated from the disabled list on May 6, has hit four
homers in ihe last four days. He
became the first San Diego player to
hit three in a game since Nate Colben in 1972.
Cincinnati has the worst record in
:he major leagues at 13-29, the
;lub's worst start in 47 years.
"In my optimistic inind , we 're
~apable of putting together a nice run
of good baseball. even though
today's. game makes you puke,"
manager Ray Knight said. ·
Cincinnati hit into a triple play in
the first. Curtis Goodwin took off
from second and Barry Larkin left
first as Eddie Taubensec lined back
to the mound. Andy· Ashby c·aught
·tiM: bail by his leg and threw to shonstop Chris Gomez, who stepped on
second and threw to first to complete
San Diego's lirst triple play since
April 9, 1989. ·
. ."Tiie triple play really killed
us." Knight said. " I didn 't give
Goodwin the hold sign. My fault ."
At Cincinnati, Will Cunnane (2-

f.a!lttrn Dhbkln

»:

L 1:&lt;1.
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Tumntn ................. 21 19
De1rnit ... ;...
.19 :n

. ~2~

Baldmon:

....... 2M
New York ............. 2 .~

8o5tun ................ t~

2~

..&amp;!12

..aou

Ce ntral Divilliun
Kuns1u City ...........:m 20 . ~10
CLEVELAND., ..... 2U 20 .ml
Mi1Wotuka: ............. l9 211 .-IK7
Chi4:n.,._t ................ 1M 22 ..&amp;5&lt;1
Minn..:S01t~ .............. l1 26 --'"'~
W"'rm Di¥i..Mtn
11 .:\7:\
~Uk .................... 24 19 .:\5H
Annheim ................ll 20 . ~12

TCI.QI ..................... 2J

Oakland ................. 17 21

- ~~

•

-•.

•

Senlllc D. An:D.-im4

Tonlaht'S IIIIH!S

K.:r.nsa~ City (RU:s.:h 2-2l til CLEVELAND tNo(l)l~•l). 7o 0~ p.m.

Toroaro (HeniJC"n 4·0 at N.Y. Yllll·

keU (Prnine 6-1). 7:.:\., p.m.
Oelroit {Moc-hlc:r 2- .l) ar 8ahimor~
(Johuon 0.0). 7:JS p.m.
.

Mi•neiOfa (Rodripz 1-)_) II MiiWAU· .
""'(Eldred 4-~l. 8:0.1 p.m.
.
Boston (Wakefield 1· 2&gt; 111 Chi.:a1o
wtrire Sox (NiviWJO )·2), A:M p.m.
Olkland (P.rido l-2) at Teall IWin 60). 8:35 p.n&gt;
Seattle (fauero 4-IJ at Aaahreim
(Dic"-6-1). )0:05p.m.
M i - l A - :1-'l 11 Milw•ice

•

Athua ................... :1&lt;l 1.1 .61Jit
t·:hw·h.J:t ................... ~ 6 16 .flll.l
Mmltttal ................2~ 17 . !iK~
r"kw Y•vi.: .............. B ·20 - ~-'~
Phi l:kk.•lphi:~ : .......... lb 26 ..lKI

·Philadelphia tRam.15 0.0) 111 l'hi~:; 1 pu

Prushurtth ..............11

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2 .~

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~

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27
29

..\~7

7
9

C1NCINNAn ....... I~

. ~10

WtMnniHwW.O
Sllft Fruncisco ........ 2ol 17 . !I'K~
Lo• An,dt:a ........... 23 HI 1S6I

Colomclo ............... :2.' 19 .5-'R ,
Son DleJn .............. l6 21 ..190

I

I
I',
R

Mondloy's ..,.,res'
S1111 Diqo ll. CINCINNAT1'6
. Mon,..I2. Lol.....,elest
N.Y. Met• 4, COlorado 3

OtkDioC...,_ ' '· Sllfl Fruci~~:o-4

Hou- 9, Pl&gt;iladolphiol
A11ama 7. Sc. LouiJ 3

TOII!Pt 'a pr8a

(M:Itil )4) 011 San 1-"mnci~n

tRU&amp;."" 1-0).•U!i p.m.

and Chad Blount, who with the win

we~~~~!:~~:~~~~~.'~·coaches had

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)..2). ? :OS p.m.

a,nili,·tA.

N.Y. Men (Reed 3-l) ai Florida
(Brown 4-2~ 7:05p.m.

ton (Rc-ynukho44), K:O!i p.m.
Los An¥-eles tPar1c. 2-2l at Snn Di"-'j!tl
tnm Wumll 2·5}. IIH!i r .m.

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CLEVE~A~D INDms, Plmd

Basketball

NBA conference finals
U~llh

Moaday'aKOre
lUI. Hoo•lletn ll6; Utah 1ctU..,

rin 1·0

Ton1Pt'1 pme

Miami 111 Chh."nJU. K:30 p.nt

Wedlltldlly'• pme

Hoo~M

at Ulah. M:JO p.m.

Thundey'• pme

Miami II ONe..o. H:30 p.M.

.

A two-out walk to Miller in the
Trimble seventh was the nearest
thing to another Trimble threat,
Williams hurled a superb game to
pick up the win. He combined with
.Chad Blount the last two innings as
they sc·auered six hib, struck out II
bauers and walked four.
Southern's defensecommiued no
errors.

Trimble's Snyder sufl'e rcd the
loss with II hils, live strikeouts, two
walks and one Trimble error. .
Jpoip1 BdiJi

Trimble ,
000-030-0=3-6· I
Southern
522-000-x=9· 11-0
WP-Williams (Blount save)
LP-Snyder

Rio Grande .to host
AAU girls' cagefest
·on May's last weekend
Amateur Athletic Union girls'
basketball returns to the University
of Rio Grande Memorial Day weekend as the Redwomen basketball
squad and Bob Evans Farms host the
third annual Bob Evans Farms/ltio
Grande AAU Tournament for underIS and under-16 divisions.
'
The · three-day tournament will
begin Saturday ·at the Paul R. Lyne
Center in Rio Gnmdc.
Over the past two years, the IUurnamcntlla.' been successful in drawing some o[the topAAU girls' dub~
from Ohio and West Virginia. Both
previous tournaments .have produ&lt;-cd
sonic exciting results for , fans in
attendance.
"We've hcen t'onunnte to he able
attract some great teams with outstanding players to this tournament,"
said Rcdwomcn bead coach David ·
Smalley. "Many o( the players that
we've- seen come thruugh here over
the past two years have gone on m
play college hall or will be playing
at the collegiate ' level in the ncar
future."

Sixteen learns vied for the title in
the tournament's inaugural year of
1!195. There were 12 participants la't
year and 14 cluhs have entered this

However, this tournament has turned
out io be very competitive and'entcrtaining for the players and l'ans
alike."
In 1995, some 1.500 fans allcnded the three-day hoopfc.,l. Numbers
went up ,,, about 1.700 last year,
even with fewer teams. Similar
crowds are expected l'or this year's
tournament. . .
The under-15 bracket includes the
Hocking Valley Stars, the Lima Bullets, SEO Personal Best, the West
Virginia Intensity, Tri-County flom
Lesage, W.Va. us wcU•us an undcr14 squad out of the Chillicothe arcll.
The undcr- 16 division features
Hocking Valley, the Mariclla Magic,
the Ohio Players l'rnm Columbus,
L.T. Gyms out or Zuncsvillc, the
Athens · Lady Bulldogs and teams
thim St. Altlans lind Morg;mtuwn,
West Virginill, and Martinsville.
Ohio.
"It's llnnthcr good licld this year. "
said Sn)allcy. "These teams are comprised ol' S!l!lle really terri [ic hi gh
school players and we're looking furward to hosting them and their families."

Daily tickets litr the tnurnmncn t
arc $4·per person if purchllsed on a

year's cnmpclilinn.

daily hasis. Tournamcnl passes me

''The resJlllnse has been great,"
said Smalley. "Going into this in '':15,
we weren't sure how many quality
teams we could gel because this is
such a busy time of year for AAU.

available l'nr $10 each. Children
u'nder 10-ye~rs-old will be admillcd
free· of charge..
For more inrormminn. call 614245-721:1 .

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Monday'• Kore ·

Wtdllelday'a pmn

I~'::;:n~~~t~:o:a~.u~~tdt~~~~

Southern erased the Trimble rally
with a 5-4-3 double play.
Michael Ash led off the third with
a single, then after a Williams sacrifice, Tyson Buckley singled and
Man Dill had an RBI single for a 9. 0 tally.
A;lthough Southern did not score
again, they were well in the driver's
seat. Coach Mick Winebrenner's
club, well on the way to yet another
championship, saw Trimble score
three times with two out in the fifth.
but did not stumble.
Suuon walked, Parish singled
and Miller singled, followed by a
Woods double to close the inning to
make the score 9-3 ..

,

AL standings
laiD

. Sweet, sweet revenge appeared to
be in the eyes of tbe Southern Tornadoes as they torpedoed out of the
gate with five first inning runs, en
route to a 9·3 Tri-Valley Conference
baseball triumph that in tum placed
the Hocking Division crown on the
Tornadoes Monday night at WICkline
Field in Raci ne.
Only one week ago. the Tornadoes suffered a disappointing loss to
the Tomcats in the Division III sectional championship at the same
sight. Leading 5-4 going into the
seventh and final inning, the Southem Tornadoes saw their lead evaporate in the midst of a three-run Trim·
ble rally as the Tomcats rolled on to
a 7-S sectional championship baseball victory lasy Wednesday night in •
Raci ne.
Southern ended the season at 1413 overall and claimed the Hocking
title with a 12·4 overall mark'. The
game marked the last outing for
seniors .Jesse Maynard , Joe Kirby.

.
talked apout counting the tournament
game as both the league and toumaClub SED, a 16-and-younger vol- through IMPACT clinics by USA out of six matches.
·, SEO 's final tournament of the ment bout, however, because of the
.leyball team that has. drawn girls Volleyball. Many have USACAO
from Gallia and Meigs County high · Level One or' Level Two accredita- ·year was the regional championship imponance of .the game, the league
schools, completed its inaugural sea- tion. Some of the conches .arc USA tournament at the Columbus Con: ruled that another game had to be
.Volleyball National IMPACT cl ini- vention Center on . May 10. The played. That proved to be the (eathson earlier this month. . ·
The team. coached by Skipper cians.
locals won six out.of seven matches er in Southern's cap.
Southern struck early when Matt
A look at Club SEO's accom- and earned tirst place in their night
Johns()n of Middleport and Heather
in a 96-tcam spikefest.
·
Dill walked to lead off. With one nut,
Priddy (hee Sprague) of Gallipolis, plishments shows tltc following:
• At Kent State University in an .
Club SEO tinishcd with u 53-21
Maynard singled; Joltin' Jcx; Kirby
is an active participant of USA Vol,
ley ball, a non-protit corporation and open tournament, the locals fini shed (. 716) game record and a 26-7 (.788) drilled u.triple. Lisle followed in suit
'the span's national governing body 2-2 in match play and took fifth.
match mark.
and hammered a double, Michael
for the United States. USA Volley• At Parkersburg, W.Va., the
Recognized as contributors to the
Ash sini:lcd ·and Nate Sisson singled
ball is a charter member of the Fed- locals won I I of 12 matches en route program were University of Rio
to give Southern a 5-0 lead .
eral bitemational de Volleyball and to' claiming the Appalachian Junior Grande coach Patsy Fields and her
That came after Southern junior
players, Meigs High School admin- -. Corey Williams set the tone by
a member of the United States Tournament crown.
striking out two of three hatters in
, Olympic Commillee.
•In the Borderline Tournament in istrator Dennis Eichinger, MHS aththe first inning.
The services USA Volleyball pro- Oxford, SEO.won nine of 12 match- lctic director Rick Edwards, Oallia
H.S.
volleyball
coach
Sou;crn struck for two more runs
'
Academy
vides include youth junior develop- es and captured third out of 16
Jackie Knight and River Valley H.S. in the second inning us Pete Sissun
ment, regional and national compe-' teams .
reached on a fielder's choice, then
tition for male and female competi• At Chillicothe. SEO took fourth assistant athletic dirccor/vollcyball
coach Sharon Vannoy. They provid- . Maynard tripled and came home on
tors of ail age levels as well as out of 20 teams.
research, coaching education, insur• In the Temperance City Classic ed advice and information; facilities
a Kirby single.
Through the tirst three innings.
ance and a resource for all organi- . at Westerville South High School, and/or play.ers for scrimmages. ··
. Club SED was sponsored by Paul · Williams had retired the Tomcats in
zations involved in volleyball in this SEO took second out of 16 teams.
Davies Jewelers of Gallipolis. Mr.
order, facing the minimum nine batcountry.
With only six players on hand tcrs. After a Sulton single in the third,
Club SEO will continue to intro- Tanya Miller and Kim Sayre had and Mrs. Phillip Fraley of SFS
duce athleteno one of the nation's softball games for the Meigs . Trucking/King Kutter of Gallipolis,
{C · d f
p
4
lrSS, •.•ontmue "'"' age l
stronger junior region s. The ·Ohio . Marauders and the Southern Torna- Herald Service Company of MidValley Region, the nation's largest, does, respectively, while Gallia . dlepqrt, Dr. Harry Nchus of Gal·
Dooley said he realizes be may be
hltll more than 4,800 female players Academy 's Jennifer Mullins and lipolis and PDK Construct inn of . criticized for hiring a coach without
Pom~roy as well as the players' para prnvcn track record.
- ""~ ,more than 525 junior teams. . · River Valley's Angie DeGarmo suf,
cnts.
, · The OVR 's coaches arc cenified fcred ankle injuries - SEO won five

Scoreboard

Baseball

JohnRojas

. players from G!lllla and Malga County schooll,

•• are (L-R and anted) assllltllnt coach Heather
Priddy, Tonya Miller (Meigs), Valerie Kerr (Eaat.'
ern); Jennifer.Cornellua (River Valley) and head

.

Sentinel•

Southern beats Trimble 9-3
to w.in Hocki"g Division title

1117

Meigs &amp;
Warren
to resume
baseball .
.tourney
game later

0.

· The

,.

••

.'
••
•
••
•
J

�. , . 6. The Dally Sentinel
•

Tueedey,May 20, 19t7

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Vietnam Veteran remembers Ann's act of kindness
Ann
Landers
I!NS . Los At~ftlc•
nme:s SyNSic'• IWIII CreMliWS S)'Miie•lt.

'

•

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers. It has taken
me 30 years to write this letter and
say " thank you." What made me
finally do it was your column asking
to hear from doctors or nurses who
had married their patients •• or the
other way around. We.ll, I happen to
be a patient who married my nurse.
Here's my story.
I served m the Vietnam War and
was company com'!'anjler with the

173rd Airborne Brigade. In Man:h
1967, I was woundi!tl. Seven years
later, I married a nurse who had t-n
assigned to the evacuation hospital
and took care of
I often tell people Mary was the only good thing
that came out of that war. We have
been married for 23 years and are
very happy.
You don't remember me, I'm
sure, but I certainly do remember
you , Ann. Thirty years ago, in May
1967, I was the last guy you visited
in the Long Bien Surgical Hospital
in Saigon. Yo!Jr transportation was
delayed, so you were stuck with me
for about half an hour. I loved talking to you.
It has taken me until now to thank
you for flying halfway around the
world, all the way to Vietnam, to

me.

-Society scrapbookMOTHER'S DAY
OBSERVATION
Mother's Day at the Middleport
Un1ted Pentecostal Church was
observed with mothers being prese nted roses
'
All 75 mothers m attendance
rece1ved a dozen red roses. Fathers
and husbands were recognized for
purchasing the roses.
The Rev. Clark Baker, pastor,
Carl Nottingham, Sunday school
superintendent, and others boxed the
.
roses for the occasion.
Fathers '!'Ill be recognized Vl(ith
gifts on Father's Day.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
have made plans to have an ice
cream social on June 27, Becky
Pullins, adv1ses.
PERSONAL
The children and grandchildren
of Theodore and Becky Pullins Yisit·
ed them on Mother's Day. lbey are
Jean and Bill Osborne. Terri and
Justin Browning. Tom, Stacie,
Audrionna and Kirk Pullins, Denise
Laughery, Michelle Laughery and a
friend, Chris, Angie, Ktara and Taylor. Thetr grandson, Chris Spencer

of Columbus. telephoned during the
afternoon . .
GRADUATE
Tamara Hayman, daughter of
Dan and Faith Hayman, Syracuse,
graduated from Marshall Umversity's Lewis College of Business May
10 with a bachelor's degree in business administration.
Her concentration was in health
care management with minors in
accountmg and management.
She .plans to pursue a master's
degree after completing one to three
years experience in her field or
study.
MEMORIAL DAY PLANS
Plans for Monday's Memorial
Day observance Chester have been
announced. •
A chicken and ribs barbecue will
be held by the Chester Volunteer
Fire Department with serving to
begin at II :30 a.m.
Lineup for the parade will take
place at I p.m. and move out at I :30
p.m Everyone is mv1ted to participate in the parade . There will be nea
market and craft fair fo! anyone
wantmg to set up.

Stewart receives Taylor scholarship

cheer up the mtn who were hospitalized. I'm sure many others who
received nasty wounds in that war
remember your visit, too.
This is a sincere "thanks!" to let
you know that many of us don't forget nice things and nice people. -Ed Privette, Major. U.S1 Army
(Ret.), Lacoochee, Ra.
Dear Maj. Privette: Thanks for
the memories. That trip to Vietnam
in May was well worth the effort
even though it was 113 degrees. I
cannot recall anything in my career
that was as reward in~.
Dear Ann Landers: I would like
to comment on your response to
"Selectively Silent in the South,"
which I read in a newspaper while
traveling in Asm. "Selecti~ely "
referred to hos not talkmg m the

presence of his wife, who yakked
non·stop.
You were right to suggest that he
get some counseling to help deal
with his hostility. But how about
some counseling for his wife? Her
insensitivity must be a continuous
nightmare for him. After all these
years , she apparently has learned
nothing about the value of listening.
My own family sounds a lot like
her family. They all talk npn-stop,
constantly interrupting one another
trying to get the floor. I have sympa·
thy for "Selectively" and often
wonde~ if my family has any idea
why I spend so·tittle time with them.
Recently, I read an anicle with an
O' Henry ending. It was abo,ut highproced detectives hired by suspicious
wives who wanted their husbands

followed because they spent so Whenever Ellen is asked how IIWlY
many evenings and weekend after· children she has, she says, "We have
noons "at the off'tce" or "with out· fi('e .. two with us and three in heav-•
..
of-town clients." To their astonish- en."
Actually,
Ellen
has
had~
mi~
ment, they discovered these men
were driving around town, sitting in carriages, each within the first eighl .
the park or going to the public weeks of pregnancy. She didn't eve
library. They simply wanted a little go to the hospital. Would you •on!
peace and quiet. I'm sure this same sider those losses "children"? ·:
:
scenario. is played out in a go(xl Robinson. Ill.
Dear Robinson: I do not consider
many homes around the world. -miscarriages children. If your sister
M.G. in Brookly
Dear Brooklyn: Your letter needs chooses to, however, it does nOl
no comment from me. You said it bother me in the least -- and il
all.
· shouldn't bother you, either.
Dear Ann Landers': My sister,
Send questlcios to Ann l.aode~
"Ellen," and her husband have been
·
c...,ators
Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenmarried for I0 years. lbey have two
children . Ellen feels somewhat infe- tdry Blvd., Suite 700, lAs Anaeles.
rior because her husband's sisters Calif. 90045
have five and six children apiece.

Community:
calendar ·~

VMH service ·awards__,

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30 p.m Thursday potluck picnic ,'home of Ruth Ann R1ffie. ·
POMEROY "' Alzhe1mers diScase and related disorders support
group, I p.m. Thursd~y ut the Me1gs
Multiphasic Scmor Center. Rebecca.
Barton music therapist tn be the
guest speaker.
LONG TERM - TWo employees received awards for long term service at Veterans MemOrial
Hospital Friday. Recelvlng awards from Scott Lucas, administrator, from the left were Connie
Tucker, 20 years, an anniversary clock, and Tina Nelgler, a 15 year pin. Refreshments were
served to the honored guests and hospital employees attending the service award ceremonies.

TUPPI:iRS Pt.:AINS -- VFW
9053 . Thursday, 7;30 p.m. and
refreshments, 6:30p.m.
FRIDAY
CHESTER -- Michael Vance,
Columbus. speaker at revival services, Friday and Saturday, Harvest
04treach Church, Riebel Road,
Chester, 7 p.m .
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM -- Free cloth·
ing day ·will ·be held· at •tho Ha1.cl
Community Church DcWins Run
Roa~. \1 a.m . Saturday.

- · The. scholarship was established
under the will of the late Linnie B.
Taylor who was a resident of Rutland. h was her request that a scholarship bC g1ven lo a student who
reSided in the v11lage. Twenty-two
students have recc1ved more than
$17.000 Joan May 1s the trustee.

News policy

Workshop on forestry offered
Meigs woodland owners and log- forest sites to observe what has hapgers are mvitcd to ancnd a one day pened m the past and the condition
workshop on sustamable loreslry of the forest ecnsystcm today.
The program os dcsogncd for proJune 28 at the Vinton Furnace
Experimental Forest m Athens fessional loggers. lorcst landownen;,
foresters and others who arc interCounty.
The Ohio Farrn Bureau Federa- ested in the health and productivity
tion (OFBF) IS cooperat1ng with of Ohio forests.
Areg.istration fee of $15 per perMead Paper's Woodlands Division,
Hocking College, the Ohio State son or $25 per couple will be
University Extension and the U.S. charged. However. the workshop is
Forest Service in promoting the free for loggers who have graduated
workshop to those engaged in tim- from the Advanced BMP (Think
ber production, said David White, Clear) workshop, loggers wqo are
OFBF director of commodity activi- ccnified under the Ohio Forestry
Association's Voluntary Loggers'
ties.
The theme for the event is "Part- Certification Program or Kentucky's
nerships for Sustainable Forests ." Master Logger Program, and
Presentations w1ll include informa- landowners who arc Master Tree
tiOn about forest ecology, responsi- .Farmers.
Whote saod sustainable forestry
ble practices. and what both the
landowner and logger can do to pro- revolves around a stewardship ethic
which integrates growing, nurturing
mote sustainable forests.
Presenters and instructors include · and harvesting of trees for useful
Pete Woyar, Department of Natural products with the conservation of
Resources mstruct"r at Hockmg soil, air and water quahty as well as
College, Dr. Enc Norland. Asststant wildlife and fish habitat and protecProfessor of Natural Resources at tion of forest aesthetics.
For more information, residents
Ohio State Umversity. and Wayne
Lashbrook. forest stewardship man- may contact Mead Woodlands at
(614) 772-3836 or White at OFBF,
ager for Mead Woodlands.
Participants will visit a var1ety of (614) 249-2435.

TEN YEARS - Receiving 10 year service pins at Veterans Memorial Hospital Friday from
Administrator Scott Lucas were from the left Rosamary Young, Sherrlt Roush and Linda Jones.
Othere earning the 10 year award ware Sandra Sergent and Jane Huffman.

In an effort to provide our readership with current news. the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddmgs suhmiucd after the 60day deadlme w1ll appear dunng the
week on The Daoly Scntmcl and the
Galhflllhs Daily Tribune.
All cluh mcctmgs and other news
artiCles in the society section must
he submitted withm 60 days of
occurrence.
All hinhdays must he suhmittcd
within 60 davs of the occurrence. ,

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings• .
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and lass costly losses
than other age groups. So H's
only lair to charge you leaa lor
your Insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
even mora with our special
muld«ollcv discounts.
FIVE YEARS - Five year sarvlca plna -re ~led to thHe employ._ of Vaterana Mei'IOf·
lei Hoapltal Friday afternoon as a part of National Hoepltal Weak obaervances. From the left' are
Sc.o tt Lucaa, hospital administrator, presenting to Amy Baker, Chrlatlna McGuire and Carolyn
· Roush. Terese Stewart whp also qualHied will receive her award taler.

Children were screened nt Dcq's
poss1blc growth dcl~ys, changes in
hehavtor. death or a brain damaged Daycare and Gingerbread Preschool
child for hfe. The Ohio Depanment and Daycare in Middleport, during
of Health classifies Meigs County as the week of the Young Child Cele·
a high incidence area because much bration. WIC group nutrition sesof our housing is older and painted sions. immunizations days at the
with lead paints
Meigs County Health Department
Danger signals tnclude, but are and Carleton School.
not limited to. severe stomach aches,
For those who missed the sCf'ee!l·
frequent vomiting. or constipation or ings, Torres suggested that parents
frequent h;adaches, or constant ask the1r physician to do a lead test.
tiredness or poor appetite.
To present poisoning, she said
This year's testing was the fifth children's hands should be washed
free screening offered by the nursing before they eat anything since lead
staff to children ages six months to can be iq the soil, air, paint, water
six years. Children were screened, pipes, on the hair of pets, on toys
randomly. using a quick linger stick" painted with lead paint, and in food.
blood sample, which was then sent
Children's Hospital dietito Ohio Department of Heallh's lab- tians continue. to recommend you
oratory in Columbus for testing.
don't boil water (on the stove or in a

microwave) for formula use but
instead use spring wa1cr. Boiling
concentrates any' lead that might be
present in water. and using hot
water from lead pipes create a haz.
· zard.

pyramid, can help prevent anemia,
and al~o aids the recovery of the
child with elevated blood lead levels. Protein and Vitamin C rich
foods help the body use the iron that

Torres explained that when lead
is ' in a child's blood stream, red
blood cells will pick up lead bef~
tl)ey pick up iron, and the child may
have anemia. So, iron/vitamin C rich
foods . are especially imponant for
children with elevated blood levels.
For this reason the Ohio Department
of Health WIC program recommends "a diel rich in protein, iron,
plus all the other recommended
nutrients, following the four food
• groups, now known as the food

She cautioned against allowing
children to eat non-food items, sueh
as din, newspaper or peeling paint.
It is normal for young children to
attempl to do this, but parents ..tlould
not permit it:
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·collecting KISS: Rock band dolls, other items are sudden·ly things of value
By JANE B!JRNS
why they're worth ~orne money - because so many
It's just a regular white towel, with bright streaks of
The Dn llloluea ReglaW
people destroyed thc\m."
red. Simmons needed to wipe off his bass guitar after
. Call it buyer's remorse or a frightening experience.
Schwinden, 33, has t-n a fan since he was a teen- spitting fake bl~ onto the audience. He used tile towel.
Patty Sharer remembers that day 111 a garage sale in ager and once was in a band that opened for J(iss in Des tossed it onto a speaker and Schwinden got it.
.Illinois as both. The Des Moines, Iowa, woman, who Moines. He has much of his original collection, but has
"He tries to spit as much as he can on the audience
with her husband, Rich, deals in collectibles, saw dolls picked up m!lre over the years - much more. His col- and stage, but it gets all over the place," Schwinden
featuring the band Kiss for sale for $3 each, She passed . lection fills his apartment and ranges from a guitar once says.
·. " ltold Rich I didn 'I want them; they were too ugly," owned by Paul Stanley to a Kiss icy chain with a con·Experiences such as that make 11 hard for Schwinden
shenys. "We,didn 't buy them, 110d now you're lucky if dom inside. ·
·
.
to place a monetary value on his collection. What's of
you could get them for $100 (each)."
"I've met guys who have so much stuff, it makes me value to him, he said, might lie wonhless to somebody
else.
Items bearing the image of the makeup-covered rock look as if I have nothing." Schwinden says.
band suddenly are things of beauty to fans and collecWhat helped Schwinden 's collection grow was
As a dealer, Janey can put a value of $7S to $100 on
tors. The re-emergence of the band has made the value remaining a fan over the years: He didn't set his Gene some of the tour books he has. As a fan who went to
of such items skyrocket, from View-Master reels for $30 Simmons doll on fire as a youth nor give the rest to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, concerts in the late '70s and early
to Halloween masks for $150.
Goodwill when the band's makeup came off in the early '80s, he won 't sell.
"There's quite a ~ysteria over Kiss collectibles," says •80s.
" I've thougl,lt about it, but I went to those shows." he
Ed Janey, a collectibles dealer from Garrison, Iowa.
"In 1981-1982, Kiss was as unpopular as they could says. "Who could forget those platforrn boots?"
Items can be found in toy collectors magazines such
"It's almos! similar to the Beatles' stuff in a different get," he says. " Most fans were out of high school, going
era: It's a bit like the aging of America's Y9Uth as they to college, getting married. A lot of guys I knew sold off as Toy Shop, and are beginning to appear in toy collecgrew up."
their collections to me for din cheap. People just tor price guides that are sold with antique guides. Sites
Those who saved their onginal Kiss items now own dumped the stuff in droves."
'
on the Internet are dedicated to Kiss collectibles. Dealvaluable collections, thanks to those who didn't and who
Much of t\le memorabolia petople collect now was ers make appeararices at flea markets, antique shows and
thus unwittingly contributed to !he increased worth of available in stores. Schwinden has items he gathered by record shows.
what's left.
meeting 1he band or crews and while working for a proFans are collecting new items, too, including phone
cards, tour books and buttons. Kiss beer, sold last
"A lot of my friends destroyed their crap and had fun · moter. Some of it, he got just by .helping himself.
December at a concert in the Czech Republic, goes for
doing it," says Rik Schwinden of Des Moines. "That's
Such as the Gene Simmons towel.

S40 a can.

,
there's a great deal of crossover appeal to the older
items. Collectors might not be Kiss fans, but they might
deal in dolls. comic books, records or trading cards.
Then there are the toys. In a quirky marketing c8Jll&gt;
paign or the 1970s, the ban~·· music might have t-n
for teen-agers, but the toys appealed to grade-schoolers.
Mark Hoff of Ottumwa wanted the dolls or the Color-'
fonns as a youngster, but couldn't afford them.
"It's a pretty good gimmick," he says. " Now we're
all grown up and have some money."
In sixth grade, Hoff took a Kiss lunch box to school.
He still has it.
"The bad thing about that 1s that it made a great
hockey puck across the ice," says Hoff. 2&amp;, " so 1t's pret·
ty beat up."

. ..

Hoff has seen a Kiss lunch box in mint condotion with.·
the Thermos for sale at $200.
"Right now is a good time for money to be made, if
you have stuff to sell," Hoff says.
That's the hard part, Janey says.
"I don't have a lot of Kiss thmgs because they go out
the door so fast."

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is eaten."

Additional information 11ft lead
may be obtai ned from tile Meigs
County Health Department II 992·
6626, Monday through Frida~. from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Packets of inf111111a- .
lion on lead are available.

ULTRASOUND ACCREDITATION- Pleeaant Valley Hospital Ia the
first facility In the area to receive a th{ea year term of accreditation
In ultrasound (obstetrics and general, ultre.sound services) a1 a
result of a recent survey by the American College of Radiology.
$I:town are, left to right, Suresh Agrawal, M.·D.; Connie Davis, R"( (R)
ARDMS, director of radiology services; Laura Starcher, RT (R)
ARDMS, multi-modality tachnologlat; Gina Jordan, RT (R) ARDMS,
multl-modellty.technologlat; and Gerald Klein, M.D., and Lori Fox,
.RT (R), (M), CT. .

:Pleasant Valley Hospital
receives accreditation
Pleasant Valley Hospital is the
first facility in the local area to
receive a three year terrn of accreditation in ultrasound (obstetrics and
general ultrasound services) as a
result of a recent survey by the
American College of Radiology
(ACR.
The American College of Radio I·
ogy is a national organization servicing more than 30,000 radiologists,
radiation oncologists and medical
physicists, with programs focusing
on the practice of radiology and the
delivery of comprehensive health
services. The ACR Committee on
Ultrasound Accreditation evaluates
and accredits ultrasound practices in
hospitals and in pnvate offoces
across the Umted States.
"The ACR awards accreditation
to an ultrasound service for the
achievement of high practice stan·
dards after a voluntary evaluation of

its practice," explained ·connie
Davis RT. ARDMS. director of radi-

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~~.:~~7c~o~~~~e~h~~~:~~~~~es::: 1·t's
· 11·ke to be ~~ee of g~a ~~··ty
::uf~~:m::'ni~e ~~~~~.~~~~

~ER~

lJaaluaDGa SerYI-

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
112 8117

A party was held recently honoring Ashleigh Noelle Duffy on her
fourth birthday, April 13. Dinner,
c.ike and ice cream were served to
the guests.
Presenting gifts to Ashleigh were
her parents, David and Lori Duffy,
her brother, Jonathan Duffy, maternal grandparents, Jim and Sharon
Louks, maternal great-grandmother,
Elma Louks, paternal grandparents,
Jack and Jeannette Duffy, paternal
great-grandmothers, Icy Miller and
Gertrude Neigler.
Gifts were also presented by
Amy, John and Meghan Rice, t;ddie,
Kris, Amber, Heather and. Holly
Duffy, Jack, Lois, Michael and TYler
Duffy, Shelly Woodward, Kenny,
Julie and Clllllie Mankin, Richard
and Marlene Radford, Jim and
Oertrildc Roush, Sheryl and Mandy
Roush, Ann, Ryan and Mikayla VIID·
Matre. Mary and,Kelsey Myers.

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fac;:e ·
"
this -accreditation and this reflects ·'&lt;:."
dards tn the tndustry,' she cont1n·
ued.
+valuatmns are conducted by
radiologists who are members of the
ACR with special expertise 10 ultrasound. They assess the quality of the
work being performed as well as the
qualifications of the personnel
involved.
The reviewers report the1r findings to the ACR's , Ultrasound
Accreditation Committee .which
subsequently provides the practtce
with a comprehensive report.

Grace Episcopal Church
joins River Ben~ Cluster
The Vestry of Grace Episcopal
Church in Pomeroy has voted unanimously to participate with Christ
Church, Point Pleasant, Grace
Church, Ravenswood, and St. John,
Ripley to form the the River Bend
Cluster of Episcopal churches.
This move will strengthen the
ministry of all the participating
parishes by allowing thym to share
human and capital resources in order
to further Christ's ministry in the
region, says Fr. David duPlantier of
Grace Church who announced ihe
move into a cluster.
The initial clergy team that wili
staff the Cluster Parishes includes
Fr. David duPiantter of Pomeroy and
Fr. Jim Bernacki of Point Pleasant.
These two wests will be joined by
other lay and ordained team members over the coming months.
The President of the Cluster

WEIGHTLESSNESS • A collage
takes a pictured of the Vomit Comet a plene that produce• 30
of -lghtleasnees at a
time. Aatronauta use It for tralnlng •.Sclentlata, Including teams of college students, use It for exparlments. And even the crew of the movie
"Apollo 13" rented It fof filming acenea of -lghtlesenass.

~~~:ita~rvices at P,leasant Valley

Council, Jack Sturgeon of Point
Pleasant, said that "at this early stage
in the cluster ministry, working
together as four churches pursuing a
common objective, we have experienced genuine spiritual growth and
generous and friendly spirit of coop·
eration." Mr. Tom Reed of Pomeroy
will serve as the vice president of the
Cluster Council .
The River Bend Cluster will officially commence on Jul.,. I, 1997
with '11\e followi~g schedule of services:
Point Pleasant: Holy Eucharist
Rite 11 7:30; Holy Eucharist Rite 2,
II a.m.
Polneroy : Holy Eucharist Rite 2,
II a.m.
Ripley : Holy Eucharist Rite 2, 9
a.m.
.
Ravenswood: Holy Eucharist
Rite 2, 9 a.m.
.

Fourth birthday celebrated

Lead Screening results releas.ed ·- ~y Meigs Health Department
Results of lead screening held by
the Meigs County Heath Department in April show that of the 8 I
children screened, none were at risk
for lead poisoning.
Norma Torres, R.N .. director of
nursing, reported that 98 percent of
the children had no lead or levels
within normal hmits. while two children had a low level. and none had a
dangerously ~igh level.
The nurse said that it is the
department's hope that all the education and coun'seling provided, individually and in WIC groups has lead
to the decrease from 37% during
1993's lead screening to 1997's 2%
elevation.
"Lead poisonmg is a very serious
illness in young children leading to

The Dally Sentinel• Pege T

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to tmnounce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not desiped to promote sales or fund raisers of any
. type. Items are printed liS space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Mcogs County
Garden Clubs Association, Pomeroy
library, Tuesday. 7 p.m. to plan
Meigs County Fair flower show.

The Linnie B. Taylor Scholarship
has been awarded to Beverly D.
Stewart, a 1997 gr;uluate of Meigs
High School.
She ranked third in her graduating class of 155 studerits and is
enrolled in the medical laboratory
technology program at the Umversl·
ty of Roo Grande. She is tile daughter of Jim 'and Kathy Stewart of Rutland.

BEVERLY D. STEWART

TUIIIIIIy,May 20, 1197

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By KARL LEIF BATES
The Detroit Newa
HOUSTON - A world without
gravity would be a strange world,
indeed.
A paper airplane would sail for
hours. A spilled glass of !llilk would
form a quivering ball several inches
across, not a puddle.
Understanding these other-worldly phenomena can be important to
making better medicines and materials on Earth and hfe better in space.
as well.
"We go into space for a couple of
reasons," said Bob Williams, a
NASA offic1al. "One, because it is
there."
And second, to study gravity and the absence of it.
Gravity studies are so imponant
to the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration that the most
recent space shuttle mission - cut
short by mechanical problems focused entnely on materials and
living things.
The new space station due to be
completed near the tum of the century will examine the phenomena
extensively.
,'
To study, gravity. for any period
longer than a few seconds. there ts
no substitute for going into space.
Williams' NASA · division, the
Reduced Gravity Office, offers the
next best thing - a plane that produces 30 seconds of weightlessness
at a time. In Houston, it is known as
the "Vomit Comet."
Astronauts use it for training.
Scientists. including teams of college students,, use it for experiments.
And even the crew of the movie
"Apollo 13" rented ot for filmmg
scenes of weoghtlessness.
The plane, which the military
·calls a KC-13S, flies a roller-coaster
pattern that can create weightlessness. By changing the shape of the
arc . it flies, it can also mimic the
reduced gravity of the moon or
Mars.

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"You can do really good sc1ence .
10 the KC- 135,'' saod astronaut Don
Pettit, who has a aoctorate 10 chemic~l e~gineerin~. He . was worked
wtth stmple ObJeCts hke soap bubbles, antacid tablets, yo-yos and
hard-boiled eggs to gain msight into
the radically different physocal rules
of reduced gravity.
In a set of experiments with balls
rolling down ramps, the 17th-century Italian researcher Galileo figured
out that E~rth's gravity actually is
acceleration, much like what you
feel in a car pulling away from a
light.
By creating their own acceleration, machines such as planes and
rocket ships can mimic the forces of
gravity.
What astronauts in orbit (eel
actually is two forces of acceleration
pulling in opposite directions and
canceling each other out. Gravity
pulls them toward 'he Earth while
the centrifugal force created by the
spacecraft zinging around in a circle
pulls them outward. The net sensation is weightlessness.
Astrona11ts traveling between
Earth and the moon, however, were
closer to being truly weightless,
because Earth's gravity fades quickly as they move away from the planet.
Passengers inside NASA's Vomit
Cornel briefly feel the absence of
gravity by being in free fall. But
even better than skydiving, there IS
no wind resistance, so the passenger
·contends only with the delightful
sensation of weightlessness.
Eliminating gravity as an experimental variable can allow scientists
to see in a whole new light. "All the
processes we see on Earth are m
some way adapted to a G. (gravity)
level," Williams said. That's true of
chemistry and phySics, and especial·
ly living things.
"We're talking about going to
Mars or in a space station where
you'll be in orbit for a long time,"

Williams said. "What happens to the such. a maneuv~r to keep blood from
body?" .
.
p~hng .10 the1r legs and starv10g
The btggest problem for people IS the1r bram. The pilots. also get help
that weightlessness floats the fluid from "0-suits" that automatically
10 the mtddle ear, throwtng off the 10flate wtth atr, squeezmg the legs
natural senses of up and down and and abdomen. These two measures
balance. Sudden head movements together allow a pilot to. g? 2Gs or
that slosh the httle flutd levels of the 3Gs beyond the normal hmns.
ear around only exacerbate the problem, 'often causing nausea and vomColher shows hos cla.ses a fnghtiting.
emng film of expenenced fighter
At greater extremes, sharp polots blackmg out 10 a spinning
changes in acceleration indeed can device called a centrifuge that probe dangerous. The powerful pull of duces up \O 9G. The grimacing,
exaggerated gravity in a sharply grunting p1lots have unclenched JUSt
turning fighter Jet can suck the blood a little, and wuh the1r eyes rolling
right out of a ptlot's brain. knocking back and cheeks sinking m from the
him out. ·
acceleration of the spinmng cen- ·
An F-16 in a tum can pull about tnfuge, they twitch, flop and lose
nine times normal gravity, called consciousness in just a few seconds.
9Gs, for 15 seconds But the normal
Space shuttle astronauts pull
human limit is about 50s or 6Gs, about 3Gs on takeoff, and after sevsaid Bud Colher, a former high-alti· era! days at microgravity in orbit;
tude paratrooper.
the landing feels like 3Gs or 4Gs to
He teaches astronauts to clench their bodies. Ai 4Gs, a 200-pound
all the muscles in their body during person feels like 800 ~ounds.
. - - -...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,

Great
.coverage.
Place your ads where more people can see them ... and act.
71o/o of U.S . adults read at· least one weekday edition of a
local or regional newspaper, while 57o/o read a daily
newspaper on a typical week&lt;tay. Readership grows to
64o/o on a typicai ·Sunday.

Newspaper readership•
P11t week

readership

71%

LISt Sundiy

readership

Rtarh mort adults, Jaster. in the ntwspqper.

The Dai)y Sentinel.

The Welcome Medium.

c) &amp;»NEEl
'Sour«: 1M J996 MN¥ EJI"IIfllnlnl SNrWJ by C..n~W~r Ranr.:h. lnrc=nvws by Schulm»n. Rork::a,
and ftt iC UYAiu. Inc

ASHLeGH DUFfY

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�The Dally Sentinel• , .....
all
&amp;VIm.,

Space·crews nearly finished moYing ·
equ.ipment between Atlantis,. and·Mir

•

SPACE C~R. Houston (AP)
-A couple of hundred items down.
A few dozen to go.
Tile crews of the space shuttle
Atlantis and Russia's Mir station
were almost finished hauling more
than 3 tons of supplies and equipment
between the docked spacecraft.
The seven-member shuttle crew
and three Mir men - two cosmonauts and an American - · must have
everything in place by Wednesday

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A Judge John Oossert Jr., who said the
retired baker who was a concentra- 78-year-old Philadelphia native torlion camp guard for the Nazis will be · mented prisoners at three concentradeported for taking Jews and others tion camps in Germany and Poland.
on a death march to Auschwitz dur"Schiffer personally testified to
ing World War II, government pros; his panicipation in a death march
ecutors announced.
from Hersbruck to Auschwitz on
The deportation order for Niko- which weakened prisoners were shot
laus Schiffer came from Immigration or left to die when they could not

Broken support rod
blamed for university
balcony collapse
The university closed the remaining balconies of faculty apartments
overlooking the historic central lawn
as it investigates the accident,
The wood and the iron rod were
part of the original building, completed in 1821. The rod, about an inch
in · diameter, penetrated a lateral
wooden support beam about 3 inches thick and 8 inches deep.
Matthias Kayhoc, a professor of
architecture who was involved in the
apartment building's restoration in
the 1980s, speculated that water may
have penetrated the wood and caused
the iron rod to corrode.
There was no indication of a
problem during the restoration or a
1994 inspection.

·

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A
cross-country custody dispute ended
when a man suspected of killing ~is
mother-in-.law and wo~nding his wife
killed himself after holding his 19month-old son hostage in a bank
parking lot.
Kevin Ronald Miller, 31, held a
pistoi' to the head or the .toddler for
nearly three hours Monday morning
before he turned·the gun on himself.

F~rm

agrees to pay $2 million
to·settle OSHA violations ·
farm in Turner. Then-Labor Secretary
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) DeCoster Egg Farms has agreed to Robert Reich likened conditions to
pay $2 million in.fines to sellle cita- those at big-city sweatshops.
Current Secretary Alexis Herman
tions brought last summer for health
agreed, citing such .violations as
and safety violations.
·
The Occupational Safety an~ unguarded machinery, electrical hazHealth Administration had proposed . ards, exposure to harmful bacteria
penalties totaling more than $3.8 mil- and other unsanitary conditions that
lion and officials said OeCoster will she characterized as "simply atrohave to pay the full amount if it fails cious."
Descriptions of squalid condito meet standards set out_in tbe agreetions
at the farm and at housing units
ment.
DeCoster also agreed to pay it provided fotilworkcrs triggered boy$21.000 to settle claims brought by colts of DeCoster eggs by several
the government for wage and hour large supermarket chains.
Austin J. DeCoster, owner of the
vi&lt;Jiations involving 105 of its workers, the U.S. Department of Labor farm that is a-big producer of brown
eggs, said most problems have been
announceQ Monday. ·
The settlement was announced corrected and some areas exceed
less than two months after the depart· OSHA standards.
If the compliance rate of Standards
mcnt's civil case was ·ahout to go to
trial before an administrative law set in tbe settlement falls ·below 90
judge. That proceeding was post-· percent, DeCoster .will have to pay
the remaining $1 .8 million .in penalpc oed as the two sides negotiated.
The department issued the cita- ties. An independe'nt consultant will
timis last summer after a six-month make an unanno11nced inspection at
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OSHA investigation into DeCoster's the farm within a year.

Hediedlateratahospital.

t

S«\tlnel newa ataff
Approximately 400 Boy Scouts
and their leaders invaded Forked Run
State Pari&lt; near Reedsville this week-.
end as par;t 9f a Heritage Camporee
Event.
.
Scouts 1110k part in about 16 different events ranging from crosscut
sawing, to chainsaw carving demonstrations, knot tying and water bucket brigades.
C11mporec Chairman Mike SydenStricker of Belpre said approximate·
ly 24 Boy Scout troops and 14 Cub
Scout packs were represented at.the
event which took place from Friday
evening to Sunday morning.
The boys, ranging from II to _18
years of age, come from Boy Scout
troops ·and Cub Scout packs from
Parkersburg,
Ripley
and
Ravenswood, W.Va., and !'rom the
Belpre, Athens and Nelsonville areas
in Ohio.
Sydenstricker said this weekenc:t
I
f

The following land trafiSfers were Michelle L. Hutton, Rutland parcels:
~corded recently in the office of
. Deed, Dixie I. and Jack R. StanMeigs County Recorder Emmogene Icy to David L. and Sara M. Ends.
Hamilton :
Rutland . .83 acres;
Deed, Ross Jr.' and Gertrude M.
Deed. Samu~l H. and Mary V.
Stewart to N&lt;~.than and Carolyn S. Simonds to Frederick L. Burney II,
Roush, Sutton, 1.100 aeres; ·
Salisbury;
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Right of-way, Phyllis Crandall to
Deed. Leona V. Cleland to Martin
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Edward Day, Salisbury;
·
Rutland, 3.43 acres;
Deed, Edwa&lt;d Lee McComas to
Easement, James H. Morton Jr. to Robert and Joann Robinson, MidOhio Power Company, Salisbury;
dleport;
Easement, Brenda K. Darst io .
Deed, Raben and Joann Robinson
OPC. SyracuSe;
to Robert and Joann Robinson, MidEasement. Judith A. and John T. dleport, .1403 acre ;
.Williams; Anne M. and Paul L.
Deed, JoAnn Ward to Jackie L.
·. Chapman to OPC. Syracuse;
and Thelma D. Ward, Salisbury;
Easement , Donna D. Haning to
Deed, Oshel D. and Bette A.
OPC, Pomeroy ;
.Edwards to.William Morris, Rutland.
Deed, Daniel C. and Gloria Jean 2.65 acres;
Gillenwater. Patricia Ann and Roy T:
Deed, . David Allen and Audrey
Gillespie to Christine Tackett, Rut- Louise Slater to Lynn Peoples, Salland, one acre;
ishury parcel;
Deed, Ray R. and Patty Ann PickDeed. Scou A. Bcarhs to Timothy
ens .to Patricia Anne · Weaver and J. and Elizabeth Bearhs, Chester parMatthew James Lyons. Chester, · cel, 1.75 acres;
4.5009 acres :
Deed, Therill Sr. and Wanda RanDeed, Julia K. Mitchell to Julia K. dolph to Martha Reed and Marvin
Mitchell Rev.. Rutland parcels;
Edwards, Olive, 160 acre lot:
Deed. Bruner Land Company Inc.
Deed, Opal M. Basim to George
to Delbert · H. and Marguerite f'. arid Tommy Lee Basim. Olive:
Stearns. Orange. 12.788 acres;
Deed, James w: and Karen Gihhs
Deed: Bruner Land Company Inc. · to Orland J. Laudermih. Rutlimd
to Dclhert H. and Marguerite F. parcel; . .
~learns. Orange. 5.412 acres:
Deed, Carolyn and Jack'J. Pcn;y to
Deed , Earl Donald Young to Larry Brickles, Scipio, 3.464K ai:res:
Audrey Young, Pomeroy;
Deed, Rehecca S. and James R.
Deed. Mickey R. and Rachel K. . Baker, Charles E. II. Sandy, Angela ·
Huuon . to Christopher M.. and

marks the first time ·a Boy Scout
event of this sil.Chas been held at the
state park. Earlier, smaller camping
trips to the park resulted in this weekend's heritage camporee, he added.
Friday evening, .park manager
Randy Wachter stayed over to watch
as the lowcrportionoflhc park filled
up with scouts. Although ·weekends .at .
the park can be busy this time of year,
he said the camporee marks the
largest single camping event at t]Je
park.
Most of the scouts were newcomers to the park.
. Scouts Ben Harnish, J .J. Jenl\inson and Bailey Miles of Athens
Troop 71, and Dante Carter, Justin
Hook; Justin Drescher and Dwayne
Caner of Troop 303, Nelsonville, all
not'ed this was their first time staying
·at Forked Run.
Sydenstricker said the park may
be the site of even larger camporee
events in the future.
·
\

Painting
FREE ESTIIAT!S

.949-2188 ..

Alison Kennedy, was hiding la.&lt;l
Thursday.
The wife survived a shot in the
head and thigh and Miller ffi;d with
Dylan. Texas authorities said there
was no apparent reason fot) he tat·
toocd, muscular knife collect'or to he
in-Spokane.
,
· Michael Kennedy. said his son-inlaw did society a favor byf'.killing ·
himself.
·
"Kevin Miller did make ~ contri-

.......,........ ........

Minute
Maid recalls
tainted juice
HOUSTON (AP)- Minute Maid
punch is bC·ing recalled ·in seven
southeastern· states because it might
contain cleaning ~elution .
.The Minute Maid Co. said Mon'
day it was recalling 64-ouncc. containe.rs of Berry Punch after lwo people have been reported ill.
The company believes a cleaning
fluid used on processing lines got into
a tank where the punch was mixed,
spokesman Dan Schafer said.
· ·some people had upset stomachs
and vomiting," Schafer said.
The company said affected cartons
of the punch were shipped to retailers in North Carolina, South Caroli.na, Virginia, Tennessee, Georgia,
Florida and Alabama,
The affected 64-ounce containers
contain the code JUN 18 LEY along
with ·four numbers that represent ·a
time.

--

.

'

C8rd

814-742-3090
814;742-3324
814-742~3078

·33 .AUTO CUNIC &amp;

Croallt.. ~lae.O
I.D. c.u.r~·
Contaoto lion .......

SR 33 Pomaroy, Oh.

r-----~-~.,

&lt;~::.:-

WICKS

we

Colu...,.,

Ohio
A111n11on:

.
The company said customers who ptlriOI.
"
"
.
.
.
bouaht the affected canons should viol 1M dlyl . . . . . . . '
PubllcNotloe
. . . • , . . for ¥111q•
thrpw them away. Product replace- .ealldln,
~ 1 ling ...,...
ments can be obtained by callins ........... to 1M ....,.
PU8UC NOTICI
(800) 888-6488 between 9 a.m. and nutrltltln .... Ill PI I ....
Ull lol CGal Co., 1nL
...,.....nu 1 , ••lllnl Of RO• . _ ... I II It
S p.m. EDT.
appolnllunts IIINI 100111 ' OH41140PHI1......nt7
l.....rcJnll awn~~ · ln .... II b 111•1 d I IWIII~III

otn•lor a EX1IIrlor

"'~:V~~;:;~~;~1'24~~.m.

.Bl6'1end Fabrication,.
I"
~ MConacdorhJnt_! &amp; WeiPodmeroingy.,SOhhJoOt89 .

(614) 367-0266
1·800-950-3359
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20Yra.

~IDDLI!P.OII'i'

-:=·ww.w. .
a:QI! !1,1!1,-~::,11 p.m.

:. o..

•St.,.Dows&amp;

-

..... AMtlolls

.ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUCTIOII
•NawHo~ea

•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
· FR.E E .

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Sun11t He11e
Cenllr•etlen

•
I

"

1/1,.,.

Charles Dill

1918-1993
of my hu.band ·
)
The treasures you left us
. BiU Pettit iJn this
are not of gold; '
his 57th birthday.
They're made of,
I cannot send a
memories that never grow
old.
. · birthday card
They're the sori~ and
, Your hands I
1$1Qrles we can sijare; With
: cannoOouch
loved ones and ,(rjends for
·· But God wiU aend
whom we care:·· &lt;''
my
~~ to the. Your love and t;ifing
meant so much;
one I loved so
And for each of Irs, our
much.
· lives you touched.
' ,Sadly mu•ed by ' The best of all memories
. WifeNancy · was the day you'Were
saved; .
J
And now you're with t
God1 where with gold,
l!reetS are pave~.
We love and; miSS you.
'

n.e..

j

r

'

,,•

-

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!
For.,. Uttle,.
. $7.00 Per lnotl Pet bay

.

.

-

'

992·7074

In MemOry

POMEROY, OHIO

614·992•711.9

Jeremy Lee Atkins
passed away
May20,1996
We little knew that
morning that God
w.as going to call
your name.
In life we love&lt;!
you dearly in death
we do the same. It
rbirok;e our hearts to
lose you, you did not
go alone: for part
us went with you the
day God called you
home. You left us
peaceful memories,
your love js still our
guide; and t!)o~g~
we cannot see you,
you're always at our
side: · ,
Our family chain
broken, and nothing
seems the same;
as God calls us
by one the chain
link again.
Sadly missed Mon1,1
Val, Misty, ~till, I
Billy, Nannie, ru•a.•
Papa, A11nt Sherry &amp;:
fllili!y, Aunt Shallila
A: flmily A: many
'
.
maay friends.

Do's
QUALm

Roon•a ·

UIJLDII.
IXCIIIft.
Llmeatone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syatenie
Trailer &amp;

Free Estlmatea

ttoureSitn
Reaeonable RaiN

614/992-7274
Roofing- GuttersSiding

JoaN. Sayra

Sayre Trucking Co.

_..,

814-742-2138

Sat., June 7, 1997
8 P:M.
Melga c~. ·
Fairgrounds ·
Sponeored by
Melga Co. 4-H Horae
Commlttae
Far more lnlo call P1m
us un or Uu 141-2052
Auctlon1tr: ·

.SEI~CES
Foundatlona,
Drlvawaye,
Slclewalka, Patloa,
Garage and
BaHmant Floora.
Free Eltlrnatea.
··lnruract
SAYRE CONCRETE

FREE ESmfATES

D. O.a17's
BN»SJaop
Quality Work at·
a Fair Prlcal
550 Patie St.
Middleport, Oh. 457110
. HomaPh.

·. -

614-992-3120

Don Geary, Owner

..................
••••Ill c-dMtner

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

A N NO UNCE t,1EN T S

005

{PaJhllflll liMed on fiPI)IOWid cncll)

"'

LINDA'S
PAINTING

MOBILE HOME
HEATING 1: ~OOLING

SIMttg~OH&amp;WV
.14 t4U418
1.-..1111111381 ~ 8chool Ad., Qllllpolll, OH

0

•

DATES NOWIII

Serv-U-810.645-8434

Cosmetologists Needed Full And
Pari-Time Guaranteed

W•a••

Paid Vacalior., 814-446-7287.

Glvaaway

2 Kitten• To Good Homes, 614·

448-7730. ',

A #fOOd paint job 011
~tny cloudy rl.oy,
mnlrea it teem

2 Whlta Klnene To Good Home,

814-141-0407.

39"26 Houae NNdl To Be Torn

bri«/tter.

Interior
Bffora 6 p.m.
Jaava maaaaga.
Arter 6 p.m. .
1114-9811-41 so

AVON S8 ·$18 /Hr. No ·Door .To

-Door,· Quick Cashl •BonuMt• 1·
800-827·4640 lnd/SIIIIflep,

Computer Uae11 Needed. Work
own hours. S20k to 150klyr 1·'
800-348-718811508.

· 40

Dell worker/cashier f'IHded. Mutt
bo 18yrs. old. .t.pply al Crawford"•
in Henderson, WV.

Digital· Enteflainmet ord8f Taker~
Noedecf$15.00 Pot Hour. Unllml·
eq Earni~g Polenti_al. Fl,llble

DOWn, 614-446-70211.

Hours. Phone Caney 1·(1!811)-7722455
.

5 kllle.na, end malher cal, real

Drivers ·Flatbed

naon·9pm.

6636 , Owner .Oparetora Alsp

, :,.

culuncl cuddly. 304-117S-4000. ,
lEW Pay J&gt;oeUtat ·. ..
3 Black mosll• Chow puppies, $1,000 Sign-On Bonuolllonlhljo
'
Bonus Program I Need·CDL·A .&amp;·e
&amp;wkoold. 304-875-7890 be!Ween Mos. OTR ECKMIIIor (800)·811 : .

1/11(1 W'IC).

Ctllckena lhallaya Brown Eggs. Wek:ome.
Cd:(814)-2!ie-t70tl
.
Earn St,OOO Weekly SIUftlng En··
Grev &amp; Orange Klnen Bob Tailed, veloP,ol AI Home. Starr Now. No
e14-440-3048.
·
Experience. Free Suppllta, Into.
No Obligation. Send LSASE To:
One largo Maple Tree Need To ACE. Dept: 1351, Box 5137, Dla·
So Removtd For Flto Wood. 614· monclllor,CA91711~.
245-11Clt13
EaSy Wark1 Excellent Payt AI·

RICK WILIER
PAIIIING

Auto, Tnlek, Rooldotnllal,
Commeral1l
Mltlchpoot, OH.
814-742-2707

School bUs ta give away tor junk.

semble Produc1s a1 Home. Cell

·Toll f•ae 1·800·467-5588 EXT.
::--:-:----:--:--:---:12170.
To good homo- female fawn cal- ..:....:.._,_
_ _ _ __
304-5711-40111.

.GOODNITE'S
QUALITY ROOFING

ored bouNyJ* dog, 8·7 months Experienced Roofers &amp; Carpent·

old, ptaylul and

~lendl1,

614·992·

011

3 Years Experience, lluol

Have Hand Tools &amp; Transport&amp;·
lion, Call Mike Marcum 614·245-

24l5.

. Washer. refrigerator and Amana 0437.
lreeltr to glveawat. may need
worked on, mua1 plc:k up, e14· Now Taking Applications At [)om.
D4244t.
Ina's Pizza In the Gallipalia and
60 Lost and Found
Pometov Areu only tor: llrivtra.

304 882-3541

...

·Free Estimates
...,

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!

Found: Black llog Largo Lob

Parr-Time Po lilian· Available Now.
Sewing Knowleclga

Required,

Ap-

Ttpt, Vtrtj Friendly, 61.&amp;-·U6· ply in Peraon At JoAnn Fabrlca

Seuatiolal Resuhs·

LIVE I!!
1·90G-1414)~ I020

889
, c.;,6.;,.------:-~I
Found: black, brown and white
Colllt·ty.pe j.up, six manthl, SR
124. Racine vicinity, 8U·949·
2U02.

and Crolla: Sliver Brl&lt;~a- Plaza,
GallipOlis.

Pleasant Valley Hospital 11 loOk· .
ing lor Part·time Pet Diem C.....
Respiratory Technician• : Muat
have Acule care and long 18f'm
FOUND: money dropped ar a yard care experience. Mutl have WV
tall in PI Pluunt dwlng March. license and able to work II!
Mall name, phone number &amp; de- &amp;hilts. Seod.rtaume to Sue Hu•

ocrlpllon of monoy

Ext. 1412

10

Box G-20, aell, 2520 Valley Dr.. Pt. Piau·
Moln an~ W/25550. M£0E.

'lloPt Ploaoanl Ro;loltr, 200
Sl, PI Ploalllll W/25550.

. SUI pef min.
Mullt 111111 .,a.

llloalng: Saint Bornird Since
May 1711\ May So In Clark Chopal h01d, VIcinity Or houre ieo
Ar.. R-rdl Pl1110 Call 814·
- - . Ot et..-11473.
70
Yard Sale

HARTWELL
HOUSE

•Free 5 Year Parts Wananty
•Free Digital Themloetal
B~NETT'S

P8nlonlls
1-IIQO.778~54&amp; Ul2878
S:Z.tltllrrin Ill+

Serv·U (8t t) 145 1434

EaSy"lank Financing
Air Calldlllalllil lniialed '28" a month
Heat Pumps htstaled 131' a IIIOIIIh

· &amp;92·6356,or 304·882-2845, Ind.

Rhett Milhoan

SERVICE

R.CI1111 OH 14-M

CONCIDE ·

Able Avon Repreientatlvet ,
needed. Earn money for Chrltt·
moia bitlo II ~omolal work, t-1101).

ANNUAL
TACI AUCTION

10125196111n

Aeration Motor oSelee 6. Repalra
Cleaning Septic Syateme
Port·A..John • Rantala • Serviced Weakty
No Extra Ct-rga for Everilngs or WHkanda
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Days A Waek

Antiques, to.P price. paid, RiVer·
lne Antiques, Pl)mero~. Ohio,
Russ Maare: owner, 8U · IiU~2·
25:111;
.

o

DUMP TRUCK

JACK'S SIPftC ·I
POR,..A•JDBI IIRVICI

Martin, 614~2- 7441 .

I

Gravel, Umaatonr,
Topaoll, FIJI Dirt,
Sand. No Mlnlnum.

R,L. HOLlON
TRUCKING

-pd.

In J;.ovina ~etrt!lry of ,

WILLUIL··
JUftCILL.

"Wir,.wrJfnq"
.,.., .....

1111111 ...

In Memory

:

'•

.

. Fiw Ell/mar.•
'
614-742~11
'

In Loving Memory

' .''
• •u

•

New Conatr11ctlon &amp;
Remocleilng
Kitchen Cablnlte
VInyl Siding ·•Roofs
Dacka • Gli'ag11 .

7122/tfn

In Memory

.

Ar11iqUea, furniture, gla... china.
colns, toys, lamps. 9una. tools,
&amp;states; also appra11als, Otby

Clean La1o Model Cora Or
Trucko, 1&amp;&amp;0 Modela· Ot Nowtr,
Syracuse 992·5776 · Smi!h Buick Pon1lac, 11100 .EiaiNow Ope11 For Spring 1 "'! Avor&gt;Jt, Golllpolo.
Sea.•ora
J &amp; D'a Auto Pvllo, Buylllfl oat' Pansies $6_ 50 flat
vago vehicles. Selling porta. 304·
773-5003.
• All vegetable &amp; bedding
wan led to buy uood Mobile
plants $6,50 flal
Home, clll 814·446-0175 or 304- ·
• Blooming &amp; Foliage
875-5965
Baskets $5.75- $6.75
;W~a~n~lo~d
~To~B~u~y:~~;:!~~
o4 ln. Assort. Pots
Ot Vac1n1 Properly
614
e5e-S1.25 ··
~---;.;.;..~~-~-~~
wanted: Used Hardwood Flooring
I
h
nt
R
I
&amp;
bbe
• U
r rees e ep a
tn Good Condition, Call 814·245·
ears $5.50 •
5887.
·
oCannas $2.00 ea.
EM PLOYME:N I
•Shrubbery
SE RVICES
We honor Golden
Buckeye Cards ,
Open Dally 9·5 Sun 12-5
11
Help wanted
417 ...
AVON I All Areu I ShlriQ
Speora, 304-675-)4211. ·

' 992·2825

....."""'....

.

'

'

1

Hllbbtirds Greelthouse

742·2925

CEt.LULARONEe

'

WIIMiows

t66,0No &amp; Well VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 Ot 304-773-5«7.
90 wan.t ed to Buy
Absolute Top DoUor: All U.S. Sil·
ver And ·Gold Coins, Proolaets,
Dilmondt. Anllquo J-lry, Gold
Ringe. Pra·H•30 U.S. Currency,
Sltrling, El&lt;. Acqullillonl -~y
- II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Saconcl
Avenue, GaHipoio, 614-4-40-2142.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
. 992·5583

•Small Engines
•'-"wnMowera
·Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters · ·
2 mi. off At. 7
Laadlng Craek Rd.

·llatlle lllaeli Dealer .
Mlddleporf, OH

full tlmt aucllonHr, complete
auctiOn
service.
licoenl8d

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

JEFF WARNER INS~RANCE I liBELS
113 W; 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

INGEll·ELECTRONICS

537 BRYAN PLACI!
llllt-2772

3W Communications

61~992·5479

1. .

J&amp;L SIDING·&amp;
INSULATION

_.......,

•

(No Sunday Calls)

111...•----...;..--..:...-.:....-.;;.;:.;::.;;;~

CELLULAR PHONES

(FAEI! ESTIMATES)
Y.C; YOUNG IH
' 119U2111
Pomeroy, Ohio . ,

Publlc .Sale
and Auction

New Location: 2 mllrs off Rt. 7. on Rt. 1'2 4

614-992·7643

""'

-Painting
.
AIIO Conctalll Work

'

'"

r

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ·ESTIMATES .

Radiator Repair&amp; Replacement

.

I/'IHI'' . ..

cloflao. houllhold, Ole,

1.:.1
.........

Industrial • Automotive
New Ridlators • Re..Cores
A/C Condensers/Hose AssembUes

r---+--....--------.
.
.
.
..----------..
.
.
~~~!:,s::,~~..J!!::
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC·~

•·
•
.
·

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

.

oRootlng

Four family, Thurtday, May 22,
400 Rulland Stroll. Chlldron•a

Rick Pvaroon Auction Company,

JoaWllaon
. (814) 11112-4277

1HIS Martin Straat

'

oNewOaragee

·
;

"U!I
.
.......... 1~614·992·7022

• M·S

~ ......

1:00pm Friday.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

992·1330

'"
· ADlvlllon on Nichols Metal, ltfc.
.Phone: 614: 992·2408 ·
Fax: 304-n3·5881

.

ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
· Must meet HUD eligibility requirements. .
~For further details call today ~
~

e!lactrlcal • Pllllllblng

·
:

Remodeling

In Pomeroy, Ohio

·--7

I'OmlfOy,
MldcllrpOrt
&amp; VIcinity
All lOrd hiH lluat a. 1'114 Ill
Aolvanca. Daodllno: 1:OOpoa lila
dQ bator• the ad 11 t• ru•,
lundor • llondor .,111... ·

•

.«oo,n Addltlona

.

25210

Mil

Yoa'S
.(AIPENTER SERVICE .

:

•-.wv

Not welt Flnlnclll .

Eliot Drytr.

Rents ·are computed according to your
·· Income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.

24 HR~ TOWING ·

tt~-40~~ .'

~~

,· .

. colt lltbor rates?
HOok·up charg..?
.Wa'll mltCh 01' baat
any other
· compelltor'e price?

·

IS

a.af

Northup 2M 1W It IN loll 1&lt;111.-. All ...... 1;1811 - ·

THE MAPLES

AL 1, Box 41-C

t. ....,.., CDPJU

•

In 1M POOT Hou•?
Consider:

. FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822

Cuatom Homes

111'1d of pt~ylng high

l .... fenaa .8111e27

Of·IIIII nollol.
. '.
14121i (I) .. 11, 10; 4TC '

.
.
The f1mily of Marvin Glasgo_w1shes to express
our du~l gratilllde 10 our friends, f1mily and
neishblRs for their prayers, phone calls, cards,
floilven, food, and wmforllng w()nls expresSed to
us aftel die loas of our husband aud father.
~ld like to thank the nurses 1114 doctors In
the CJI!IIICIICY rom at O'Bie~ Hoepital.
n-*s, also the Moip County E.M.S.. We
WCIUid ,Uko 10 thank Athens American Legion fOr
dlei, mUiwy 111\lie. {'1. special ihanb t!l Fisher's
hllefll Home for dlelr devoted excellent 'care I'
Our llpiCIIII llllnb 10 Putor lbomu D.lfll!ovet
from tile Flnl Untied Melhodill Churdl, Albena,
Ohio. ;tiy Ocxl b1eu you IIIII .
.
'11M OIU,O FUIIily, Joyct~ Rildllo

==....
·c·""
...=,.,.............
... = ...

"'
Of--.
.
lng 1M clrMr.
i • 43218-08111;
Admlnl • I r.
It II =ICIId tllat 10 111 1a. ao; rrc

~

'

:::S:

ollelr

or Thenka

.. ........... a...,

Glragee,P~.
' Cllll iJo For A FrN ~

...

&amp;::!

'...!!r:l'lllorl

..........cr.atw...... .

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SoU, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Public Notice
at application wm illllow
eppllodan lor 0011 mine
Wallrloo
Coal Co., ·Inc. to
o.- to 1M Ohio cantlnile 1M
mining a,.,..
of ~11111181 A - - ·
IIane
0!1
0:0111
lor up t9
Olv.
al
11111111
&amp;
Reatematlan: The permit llw ~ra put 1M .......
,,.. II laai!H In lhlp tlan ·datj ol = t 24,
.. 1¥1
County, 8lll1bury· lWp,, · 1117. Thlllppl
nt• ... 111e 111111• . County
Lola . .; • - (T·1·
N; R·13-W), an 1M pruper. Recorc11r'1 OIIIOe, lletge
tiH al w.e.rlao Coli Co., Co. Coui'IMuM, ~.
Inc., CIMIIPMIII &amp; Ohio Ohio 417111ar pullllc view:
Alllwly. Co., lncl ,J,W. lnt· Wtlltwu oonw•a Cir
Cci119hlnallr. nil permit reqiiMII lor In lnloim11'
Wtlllh18 12.8 10fl8 111)11 1• ooeer.e .... mer be eent to
laolted an 1M Chlllllrs 7 the · Dlv. al MIMI &amp;
1855·
minute
UIGS ReoletUtlon,
1/2
CluldNngll map, 1pprox. Fountain llquere Court,
1.3 mllel Norlhlllal al :t.H-3,Coluntbiii,OH
.
within 1hllty dllyl al
Chlehlra,,OIIIa. Tile ' !ftt lilt elate Of publlalllon

PUBUC NOTICE
Th• annuli report Forni
9110 PF lor th• · Kibble
Foundation Bernard v.
Fultz, ·TrultH, II _IVIIIable
lor publle ln•p•cllan at
S.rllll'd V. Fultz Llw Ollie.,
1t1 1/2 W. s-nd Btr11t,.
PIHIMII'Oy, Ohio 45718, taxi ...... lion. lor till produring regul1r bullnlle vlllon al trlnlfOrtatlan
~ to 1M lldlrty and
hours lpr • period of 180 dlalllllcl
wllhln our IIMot
dlyl · 1Ub1equent to
publl-an of 11111 natloe.
. whO lfll-·
(5) 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, ~8, Ul,
In
on.tng
prcpOUtl
20, 21, 22, 23, 2512'to
Ia
"""'.
.., Me
ehauld
cant.ct
tlelh
A. S...,.r,
Pu~llc Notice
"--et. Dlrula r, 81 1M
Mllp ~ Counall on
.Arjlng, .IM., .o. lax 722,
PUtiUC NOTICE
Pomer"li. Ohio ·48m to
The · M~ County olltllln
cletalle Of till
c..-11 an lng, Inc., typt
ol
lriiiiPWIIIIun
whlahlleprlwlle,-lfii'Of- viOl th8l 11 nn d1 d prtor_.
to
It _,ar811cm, lnl8nde to
preparing
a
propa111.
tlllbmlt an epplntlon lor a
wrm.n comment• or
Olptlll gNnt under 1M JM'O'
villein al • usc SIOtlon prop a1111 IIIUit Ill 11 a til
5310 ol 1M ,...,.. Trllnllt 1111 within • dlyl Ia ""
Act. to ptavldl lrlni!IDIII- lllllp Counly Counolt ·on
tlon Ill wtot for 1M lldllly
lnei.
will\..
I .1M
.,to 1111
n dlllhlld' wllliln
Ollla .
al
Tnn1po
, Olllae .,
County.
Tilt
~~~~~~ •
Wille!
Mila 'mill~ 21
'Iauth , . .
lloalll

.oonvlctlon of

HAUL.lNG

Public Notice · ·

MtiQI end •Ill•-" oounIll..
The llelgl County
Council on Aging, Inc.
IIWIIM and JM'O'
,....
11om a1 tmr•ll•d
publle, private and peralrllntlt ...... - . lnollllllng

la•&amp;ll•-.tothe

'

K. and Jon M. Grucser to Linda K. , to Evelyn C. Tcphabock, Olive lot:
Kcan, Sulton parcels;
·
Deed. Wanda Joan Look, Wanda
Deed, Gary and Donna Norris, C. Joan Woollard, Carl Look to Martin
Roger and Nancy Hubhard to John J. IV and Tammy Woodard, Rutland
and Juanita M: Ginther, Sutton. parcel;
·
5·.0202 acrcSl
Deed, Larry K. and Connie K. Hill
Deed, Earl and Doris Adams to · to Michele C. and Gregory ·p_ GarTodd Adams, Letart pareel ;
• 'icison, Letart:
·
:
Deed, Michael Shay and Deborah
Deed, Lili B. Sullivan to Sophia
L. Faw to Stanley D. and Yvonne D. . B. Stephenson, Meigs tracts;
·
Gibhs, Rutland. 15 acres and 106
Deed. Russell E. and Rchecca L.
rods;
Wooten to Anthony Lan&lt;.l.Compan_y
Deed, Paul E. and Carol J. King to , Lt., Salem parcels;
. •
Paul E. and Carol J. King, Ch~stcr . . Deed, Russell E. and Rehecca L.
parcels;
• W1Kllcn to Russell E. and Rchccca (-.
Deed, James W. and Judy L. Mar- Wnoteri, Salem, 4.663 acres;
.
ris to Charles R. and Linda L. Riggs,
· Deed, William T. Shelton 10
Olive;
·
•
William J. Bia.,, Letart:
.
Deed, Edward D. .And~rson to
Dce&lt;,l, V. Terry and Betty S. Hupp
John Edgar and Doris Yvori~e J~ks, to V. Terry and Betty S. Hupp, SutSalcm;
ton. 3.5636 acres:
Easement, James C. Birchfield,
Deed, V. Terry and Belly S. Hupp
Harold and June Dewhurst, Andrea to Timmy J. and Tammy S. Smith,
and Rodney Wright to !'llnny B. Sutton, I. 994 acres;
·
Dewhurst, Rutland village; .
Deed, James E. and Linda Keesee
Deed, Robert M. and Cathy S. to James B. Kee~ee II; Rulland, corScarbcrry to Gina Rcnac Weaver, Sal- rective deed;
isbu,Y tracts:
'
Deed, Donald A, . and Betty J.
Deed, Harry Garnes to Vivian Maurer to Edward L. and Victoria K.
Garnes, Pomeroy:
. ··'
.
Nottingham, S~tton parcels;
. Dccd.M1lo·B. Hutch1so~, to Juha
Right of way, Edward L. and VicVaughan, Jane Humphnes a~d Joyce Ioria K. Nottingham to Df&gt;naid A. and
Seeley'. Rutland tracts;
' . .
Betty J. ,Maurer;
·
Deed, Helen F. Hart, Patnc1a E.
Deed, Carrie Roush to Karon S.
an~ Thomas F. Hamilton t&lt;~ ,Charles . Connolly, 'oycc K. Smith, Edith B.
011s Jr. and L1sa K. Noland, Bedford, · Manu~l. Jo Ann Smith, Gary L.
5:348 acres:
,
.Roush, Vickie Cundiff, Michael ~ .Deed, Jack L. and Jean M:'Masun Roush and John D. Roush, Letart. ·

Public Notlct

Public Notlca

,.,,..............

.1,000 . . . . ..

3351 HIPPY Hollow R01C1
Middleport, Ohio 45780
New ...,., Addlllont,
Roollng, Siding, Pola
. Barna, Dedcl, Painting,

bution to soc:iety. finally, for the first
time in his life.~ · he said. "And that's
the unly 'contrihution that I'm aware
of that he's ever made in his life."
Ms. K~nnedy's family had been in
hiding since March, when Miller took
the boy and ned to St. Louis, Mo .. Lt.
Bud Baker said frqm Texas.
·:
·After a Texas coun granted Ms.
Kennedy temporary . custody, s~e
went to Missouri

·u.•·

110 Court~8t.;;:__!wv!!!~!!.,._l,;

liNGS'

Meigs County property·:transfers

Scouts overrun Forked ·Run
for weekend camporee
By JIM FREEMAN ' ·

Guu.r Clunlng

,~...._

Will Your Utllm. Put You

. . , B. • ......, D.D.S.

"FACI'ORY
·oiRECI'
.. PRICES"
QuaJ:!~y Window Systems

Ounars
Downapouts

..

His son, Dylan, was unharmed.
The shooting ended what police
·called·a lwo-week campaign &lt;Jf vi9lence carried out by Miller against his ·
estranged wife's family in a custody.
bailie over the boy. •
He was suspected of abducting
and killing his mother-in-law, Karen
Kennedy: 49, in San Antonio, Texas,
on May 2. Authorities said he then
sneaked into an Austin, 1cxas, apanment where his common-law wife.

: . al'I!'AAB"'.,.,...

NEW-REPAIR

Schiffer becomes the latest in :a
series o( former Nazi camp "guards 10
be ordered out of the country,
•
Ferdinand-Hammer, a 75-year-old
retired foundry worker, was ordered
in April to be deported to Croatia f9r
covering up his past as a guard at five
concentration camps. He had lived in
the United States since 1955.

.

charged
with killing grandmother

\

continue," Gassert said Motufay.
Schiffer, who admitted to being a
guard but denied knowing of the
atrocities within the camps, will be
deported to Romania. The ·telephonc
number at his home in New Ringgold, 60 miles northwestof Philadelphia, was unlisted and he C!'uld not
be reached for comment. ,, ..

~ -~ DEIITiL CIIE

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

ROCR4G

fumes, brokcm oxysen general~
. and a carbon-dioxide removal syste!"
lhel overheated.
.
He said besides helping Foale se)tie in, he's given him ·"little pointers
thai! think a month·from now, he'll
say 'Oh, .yeah, 1 remember Jeriy
telling me s!lmethins about that,"' he
said.
·
Foale sai~ he's "pleasantly surprised" by the conditions !If the stalion and the lifestyle there. ·

Texas fugitive -dies after $hooting
himself during ·standoff "!ith police

15~year•old gi~l

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - It that Pona was being freed and the
wasn't long after a 15-year-old girl granddaughter arrested on a charge of
tearfully described how she cowered murder. She . may also be charged
on a stairway while two men beat her with perjury.
Investigators have not provided a
·grandmother with a frying pan that
motive for the killing, and a newspapoli¢e had their man. ·
.
The girl's ex-boyfriend was Rer reported the giri slashed her
charged with murder, but now police wrists after learning she would be
say the granddaughter not only wit- charged.
At the time of the March 1996
nessed the allack- she did it.
Mildred Washington, 75, died attack, Washington's granddaughter
from the beating and, based on statc- told police two men entered through
illents given by her granddaughter, - the back door of the :apartment. She
19-year-old Darrell Pona of Provi- said she hid atop a stairway and
dence was charged with her murder. watched as the men beat licr grandOn .Monday police announced mother.

morning, when the bat~hes between hours ofAtlantis' arrival Friday night,
the two spacecraft are to be closed. trading NASA astronaut Michael,
Atlantis is to undoc:k that night and Foale ·for Jerry Linenaer, who ·had
return to Earth on Saturday after nine lived on ihe station since January.
days aloft.
Foale began a 4 1/2-month stlly.
Early today, the astronauts and
" Mike is going to have &amp;_chalcosmonauts had completed m!lre lenge ahead of him," Linenger said
than three-founhs of the transfers . .. on a CNN interview this morning,
The eight men and two women were referring to potential problems:pn the
almost done moving 10 100-pound aging station.
•'
bags of water into Mir.
During his stint, Linenger had to
They made a key swap within · COf\tend with a fire, leaking antifreeze

SOUDVINYL

Hoaa:d L Will nl

Deportation ordered for.~_former
Nazi concentration camp 'guard

A FINAL ADJUSTMENT • Michelle Mliler Want8d her hllr to look
just right for graduation and here her mother, Shirley, makal a
final adjustment beneath her cap. Mlchalle who llv• at Rutland
was one ol155 s~dents graduating from Meigs High School SUnday.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP)
~ When a University of Virginia
veranda was checked three years ago,
inspectors apparently missed the
rusty original iron support rod hidden
within the structure's sturdy wooden
frame.
The 176-year-old balcony ha!lging
outside a faculty house collapsed
Sunday during graduation ceremonies, killing a commencement
spectator and injuring 18 others.
"Our sense .is that tbe concealed
portion Qf.the rod deteriorated and
simply broke, " James Murray
Howard, an architect who worked at
the campus designed by Thomas Jef·
ferson, said Monday.

a..,
~"--Hr'='..O::
"..........
-.-.........

Pomeroy • Mlcklaport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

...

~
10111. Mliln. Pomlro)' .
111-7-

'·

RECEPnONIST.QFFlCE

ASSISTANT

Eslablioho&lt;l Meigs coun1y I!Hitll
cart practice ntkl 1 fMIFI·Ihne
rtc:eptlonlsV .o llice lllilllnt.
Wotk Tuoidayo and Frltlap plut

occasional vecllion fill·ln dar•·
Mull hava plouanr ••ltphont
monnar, oxporlara wltlt ~·
Gllllpolllt
Ill Ond hoVII ICCUrllt iloyboanJ-.
&amp; VIcinity
lllfl oldlla. Ananllon ID dollll IIICI
dapondabiHty
aro -lrtd. W...
2111. 22nc1. 1:00 Flrllllouaa Soblloocl on~ IIIII ..,.
lora Roblo'a Au\0 Saln, Routt eo
teO. 125·Palr Uood Top Brand cajon.
Shr,.a, orna; Tooto, Knlv11, Send P"roanrrUr """ tMU~EQI 1
ularr -~- 11r 111f
11121, 11122, 421 MiiNit RQa\1. 11-2, 27 CIO:
IMf Ctotlwl. Furnjllro, u_,o.
·

••t

·

tv CloiiiM Man, Wo_. Clolll•

IIIIC.IItlllt.

.

Tho Daly INinlinll. P.O. llaal'II42, ~a.-

"

I

�hge 10 • The Deily 8antlnel
1817

••IIMII'

NEA CrOIIWOrd Pui•le

PHJI.IJP

ALDER

Ill

1 Mlitlr Ol 111r

-~-?'~.Kilo-w--

11 .........

411Cnc* In ......

14 Cruel

,.,..._

41 PN I

11

~ Ci.\1- ...

1

N-18117 14 Wldo-1 bath; teKo'
down, l13g/mo, with approved

AI noal-t• odve!Uslng In
II*
rapeitsuJoctto
the Fodarot Fo~ -sing Act

now

ol19e8- mokao H!logo!
to ldve~tse •any pte!...,...,
-lion or..........,.tion
color, rollglon,

-on
""*·
••-••tuo

or nollonll

origin, or any ~HI IIIDI• 10
moke any such pnlo,.,.,.,
llmltdon or clscr1nW"'atiM.•

posillono
,_ M''PHe,IIUdentl and MOiot' C::lt·

lzono opplcatu welcarno.
••• Aolumn!Appilcaliono Available.
:-&gt;• II Eulmln'a Foodland Super·
rrwlwll. 1111 Equal Opporlllnity
E~.

HOME TYPISTS,
PC uoora ntedtd. $45,000 In·
, . ~me potential. Call 1-800-513.013Ext8-0388. ·
MEO.IDENTAL SALES
$500 -$2,000 /Month
Preflt Frcim lntrot To Provlden
'lbu No Rilk No Cost Save
Your Provider Contact Big St.
"Medical Soloo Exp. Roq, 800·287·
'IJJ77.
Modica! Billing Clerk/Offlco Ao·
liltant-full-time. benefits. Send
re1ume to:
Box G·15
Point
Pleasant
Regitter
200 cto
Main
St.
Pt Pltuant. wv 25550.
.

-!col Bl~pocll!lsi/Aalol!iltl
lla/tagor
A growing modical ollie&amp; In Point
Pleasanl, WV Is seeking candidattt for the position· of Billing
Clerk/Asalstent Qttice Manager.
We are lteking a deta[l oriented
person with excellent cammunl·
cation 1kifls. This position re ~
quires a-commanding knowledge
of CPT-4 and ICD-9 coding and
medical office procedures. To be
conaldertd you mu11 have 1
minimum of 2 w••r• full-time
medical billing experience. Ex~
parlance with EIKtronh; Medical
Billing tEMC) and tho Modlcol
Manager 1oftwara a pius. Salary
commensurate with experience.
Co~plete benefit plan. Send
cover letter. resume and salary
requiremenls lo: Box CW-15 cto
Point Ple"aant Register 200

·
Thlanewspaporwllnol

tcnowlli1JIIYICCipl

-lion

- - ""rMIOSIIII
wntcn
In
oltne law.
OurIafOlders
oro hereby
lnlormed lllllal-ingl
-laod In t h i s - -

310 Homes for Sale

I 112 Story Homo wllh Throo llodroomo, lWo Bamo. Baoernon~ 55
Acres with Barna and Fencl.
FrM Goa. CalL (014) 3117-7784
1192 modular home on permalot
SbrIn
~;I~J~}:~d~:r~ onHaat112acre
pump,
•

~~~~;;;~lr~o~n:l
~~~b~o~ck
building.
3041111 Modular homa In Rolling
Acroo oub divlaion, priced to
ooll. Call Watson Raau,. 304·
875-3433·
2 Bedrooms: 2 Bath. Houle, On
18 Acret Locatecl At Sowards
Ridge Rood. Crown City, Awllablo
To lluy June 1at, lnqulrlel Call
U4-2S8-1559.

3 e.droom house In New Haven,

central alt, ~;~k basement.
Prlcad to s.tll
-3m.
3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home
With Garage &amp; Barn, Main·
tenanca Free, located: Addison
T-*llp, 81,..._N2.
3Br, 2balh, LR, DR, klichen. tear
garage, lanced in back yard.
Priced on ln1P"ec1ion. 304-8754428 days or 30"'875-7788 from
7-9pm.

lrict has the following coaching
potilionl awailabla for lha 1997. 98 school year: aaslatant high
Beautiful three bedroom, 2 112

Ruger GPIOO .3&amp;8 !IIOgiQit wilt
Slltt!Nint 4132 ocopo and lido
!dell ohoulder hoioter 1100. 304882-3501 .

530

"'"""Aroa,

Bonk Ropo'a
&amp; Sin""" • ·
o el1very
·
glewlde't
FreeDc&gt;ublewldl'a
a sat· u p,
~-:-::-:-~~~~~~~-_)I
Call Tho Flnanoo line, 1·800-

The Soumern local School Dlo·

. appllc~11

·• . . _ ••
ao&lt;IL Coi -HI00-691~m.
14170 "!We Bedroom, Two Bath
Troller. Two Acroo St7,800, to
Now-18117 14 Wido-1 balh, fi!Q8/ Acroo f20,000, 3 Acrt LOll
down, $138/mo, with approved $7,000 Each 114· 3117· 7555
c:roclt Col I -BOII-691-&amp;7n.
tV87 Ux70 2 or il Bedroom, "'-::-"-:~----:--:--:---:-1filgs down, $18!5/mo. Only ot 2 Bedroom, torololoculc, reor·
OekwOod Homn. Nilro, WV. 304- =~Ired, S..ndh!U Rd. 304755-5885.
-.
3 llodrooml, 2 FuN Balhl, 18g'7 14X80 · 3 or 4 aodroom.
11 Fumllhod. Now 1'1!rnlll!ro,lol
tt,358 down; $22Uimo. Fnao olr, "Provided, $300/Mo., 814·245·
ulrong, &amp; doll\lor~. Only at Olll·
wood Home• Nitro,wv. 304·755· 8388.
5885.
lWo Bedroom Trollor In Clloltiro
•
d
·
8t4-3117-7seo
1887 doublewldo .1445 own,
t228/mo. Free dollvor1 &amp; aotup. 440
.....-..1111
1-1100-691·6777.
....... ......
•
for Rent
111
Tlma
Burera
Eaoy
Financing
~~~~~~~~~~~
2 1 3 Bedrooms Around $2001
Mo., Froo DoUvery &amp; S.t·Up, Call
1-1100·251·5070.
, no poll,

are available on an equal

Main St. Pt. Pieuant, WV
25550."

achoolloolball; junior high loot.
ball; asslatanl high achool volley·
ball: junior high volleyball; junior
high. boyo baakatball; junior high
girl• balkotball: varolty cheer·
loading_advloor; ond junior high
achaol. d:lnr•adlng advi•r. All

14 7
BR.
X 2~)!,:,·~ ~.:'""'· 2

251 •5070 .

·

Buy in May! No paymenll till Au·
Dr
&amp; s
gu11 ·oI 97. Froe OIVOry
ot·
up. Woatwood Homeo t-800·2~1·
5070.
Dloootor Rollo! Ploarant ·
We have StOOO to S2ooo por
homo in diaooter r&lt;illot . tun do
avallablo 10 help 1au pur¢aso 1
replacement home. Call 1·80D486·7671 to ao&lt; appointment tor
dotalli.
FACTORYDflECT.
No MIDDLE MAN
-$S. .
SAVE ..
Oakwood Homo~ is tho only
dealer In the lri·otato aroo that
build&amp; and aollo lhelr own
homol. For factory direct prlcao,
ihop OAKWOOO HOMES, Nl·
TRO, WV. 304·755-5885.
First Time Buyera·EIIy Finane·
lngl 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom around 1200
per monlh. FrH delivery &amp; Bot·
up. Westwood Homeo""l -800-251·
5070·
IrS BIG. 1997 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE . $1,G49 DOWN,
$31gtMO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP. ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755·
5885. Umlted.otlor.
largo &amp;election ol uood homo. 2
or 3 bedroom&amp;. SBrdng at $3-195.
0uick delivery. Call 1·800·837·
32Sfl.
·
Limited Ollorl 1987 doublowlde,
3br, 2bath, $1798 down, $279/
month. Free delivery &amp; selup·.
Only at Oakwood Homos, Nitro
WV. 304-755-5885.
·

bath log homo tor oale, largo II•· Muot Sell: 1973 Mark line Mobile
ing room, cuer. kitchen, full fin. Homo Two "Bodrooma, Good
llhed banment. exquialle wood- Shapa, Extra 12 112 By 16Ft Add
)10011&lt;, 1011, lofiiO whlripool IUb, lkr· . On. $2.300, Cai614-448-Q458.

mull po11e11 or ac- light. haat pump, CA, satellite,

1 BR .....,...
•M """
~-.. ., -........ Na .-~1
(814) "*2072
2 Badroom Aportmon~ Adjacent
To Unlvorolty 01 Rio Grand.o
Compuo, Available 8/1187. 814·
245 5858
2 8odroom Apartmon~ •311~.
$100 Dapoli\ All Ulilltioa Paid, Na
Pall, 814 U8 3437.
2bdrm. apll., total oloctrlc, ap.
pliance1 .. rnllhed. laundry room
laclllti.., doH to IChool In town.

~~a:~• ::l~b:n•~;~~~r
3711.EOH.

.....,==~-.,:::=~~=~

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wottwood Drive
!rom $280 to $334. W.lk to lhop
&amp; movloo. Call 114' 441·2568,
Equal Hauling Oppor\lnlty. ·
Country Slit Apt largo 2 BOd·
roam , 2 Larg 0 Ba lh I, WIIh•r
Qryer Hook·up, Conti&amp;! Air $450
Month
Dopooll
Roqulrod

~(5_1 ~3)'-57_4-_25311-:
· ~-,..-,.,.-.,--

=
Downtown Galllpollo: Modern 1
Bedroom, All Electric, Carpoted,
Completa.KIII:hen, Electric HHI/
. A~Condltlorilng, 814 U6 4383
Fumlohed 1 bedroom upper llvit.
Utllodoa ""'d. ldlol tot 10 r 2 _
pro. sz5'5.mo. t100 dopo·iii.
!tf3:oncito Required. (814)·
Furnlohod 1 Badroom •-·tmont
..,....
Upotalro, All Ulilltlea Paid, 854
Socond Avenue, Galllpolil, No
Poll. 81 4-UII-9523.
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Barh, No
Poll, Roloranca And Deposit R•
qulrocl, 614-4411· t519.
Furnilhed Al&gt;ortmonlt Bedroom.
939 Second Avonue, Gallipolis,
$285/Mo., Utlitloo Paid, 814·U83844, Al1or 7 P.M.
.:..:..;__.....,,.....--..,....,..,...,-Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmerua at VIllage Monor and
Rivaraida Apanmenta in MlddleFrom $238·$304 . Coli 814·
I !!~i:~· Equol Hauling Oppor·

"!'W"'

tor good map,

Professional Tree Service, SlUmp

Removal.

j

320 · "'oblle Homes
for 5ale

wm t.i!ljunk
or lralh - · S351
PickuP
laid. 304-875-5035..

1881 GMC luburbl!i SLE, 314
ton, !Oided, • 7, 500, OICOIIOnt
_...,........111.

--

CMvy V.n, 310, Y·l. Tiara
ig87 Ford Ttmpo Ol, IIPied, 18t2
convarslo·n, low miles, -tKtrl
olr, now tlr•, lharP. ~ mhH, ciHn,
coli Tom Anclonon, 114·
but runs groa~ tt"t50, a1+fiH.

--·

o13111. ·

AKC GOlden flol~overo Pupf)Oeo
-~~~------·1
UOO ..,:11, Vol Chocflod. Shoto.
540 ••
~
. .. ISCellaneous ·
- ..- 8 t ..3Jt...,t
·•
Mfi'Ch&amp;ndiU .
AKC reololorod Botton "Torr lor
~=======;;-;I
Bulldoa pupp~oo,
t IINnolooholll
$250, t
1 Yut Old Whil1pool18,000 BTU malol200,
IO wooko.
AC, 1300, 814·4411-&lt;12•5, Afltr 7 ....._._ 81 ,~.P.M.
.
-...... ~ ~

K 9 8 7
10 8 8

•

•x:••••
111 ol droo and - · · 114-

tr1
012-8548..
. •~

18U Dodao Ram 1500 414 SLT
laro!niO, !ilow Rimo onrt 33Tireo,
1aGo Grond Am fotrf Do~r. Alr, loaded! 58,000K ft7;000, 814·
Auto, AM· FM 111,000, •uoo. 379-2614.
614-24~ Aillf 7 Pll
-==---:.,...--:--:-:-·1
414 1817 Suzuki S.mu~al Sport
1/4 CT Diii!IOnd M•mulo
Rtglotored
Cocker
Spenli!l.
-, IOIIBIN AKC
pupploo,
black, both
porontt
on 1&amp;110 Mliiubl ..l i&gt;redo I op., !lie, Udtlty 414; AC, 81,000 Mlleo, Ex·
81
~r.'1'\oltd Ring. $27S Arm .. premloeo, born 3120187, ' I~Otl runo vt'ry good, 30 MPG, n.W ci!l\fnl Condii!On: 11112 Ko.lakl
-:--,.--:---,,-::--:-::--I end W.rmod, $200. coli ovtnlngo llr-. 87K, .187!, 814-885 - ·
550 LTD, Now Tirol, Excellent
American Saddle Breed Horte ~ a•saksnda, 814-ID2-3D31.
,ggo Pl1moth Sundonco, Two C-lion 10,8DD MIIIL 814·2511·
1&amp;24
$1 •ooo,· ••1•~
-7Mt•
- ~
AI&lt;C R-lttorod
MOJo Chlhuohua Door, III,OQO, Mllea, Til~ Cruloo,
...
AC,
Auto,
$2;500
Exctjlonl
Con2 loto In Ohio Valier Momor~ Throo Montho, Sholl and
740 MotOICycles
614-4411-&amp;552
Gordono;,4as.oo New otalnlou Wormed . Pho~o 814·441·8818 dillon.
'
'
Bumper t125. uno End Toblll; -'-1300:-:.:-::::::-::-:-"::':-:::::;::~;:;::: 1981 Dodg' Dynuty 82,000 11114 Hondo CRBO Good COndl•- '*14L""-2S1"
:.
lon, $500. 81..3117..01811.
- · •• ,._.. •
tOgo! tank 111 up opoclolo. Fllh Mlloo. Nr Corldltlonlnti. ts.ooo Or
::-:::::--::-:"""::,_"":"~:::':'-:"I Tonk
&amp; Pot Shop, 2413 Jacklon BoaiOIIor, 114-2&amp;8-1f33.
18&amp;1 Harley "Davldoon Sottoll.
2·121n. Jl·Audlo oub wollorl, Avo. Point Ploaunt, 304 •87 5.
then 7000 IOiuai miltl,
~;\~ - r ompllllor. 304· 2063.
1882 Chevy Boroita 3.1 \(·•· )Ill
$14,000, 614-742·1803.
- ·ss.ooo. 304-882-2328.
3 lip. go kin. f250; -topt&gt;orl,
CR 125 Honda, Good Con18112 Pontioc Flroblrd, IUIO, V-41, '1888
araeo wide, USO I $t 2&amp;; 81 4- Border Colllo Pupo Sconloh T·topl,
dition .1.100 81 ..258-17311
taal
color,
Ill
power.
gray
IM3-D2.
Bloodline, Vory Nlot &amp; Obedient
•75: AIIO, French Ulni-Lop Rab- lntertor, excellent condition, rHr
delog, 12.000 ·mil eo, 114·247·
4" huvy corrupted pipe, 10011. lito. 114-+18-412110.
ron. f2U8. ""\NT PLUS HARD- HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE: 31101 illor511!l'. ·
WARE.~~recognized oilo &amp; otroctlvo ·
11g1 Honda 300 4x4, t2,500
(814)440 "6158
.
5 4-li0be
B
Will 10 0 aptnot hook, 'round &amp; tjqiOWorrilo
•cca aao.
ao in dogo &amp; coli.SU
Available OTC ·at
Aloti'Wt(Bt•)·25BU88
YlhoN Bitt Boor"414 nry
ReG FEEO &amp; PPLY, 814·982·
good ohopo, low book t3,425
Big acroon TV lor oalo: Roopon- 2184.
aoklng 13,250 OBO. 304·875·
olblo porty 10 like on omall .;;:-:::-;:=-;;;:::::-;;::;:;::=-:;;::::::1585 oher 5pm or leave moo·
n~~nlhly PIY"*'II. Good credit a Polo Pluo, Sliver Bri4go Plaza .
011111. Col J-8Q0.71B-1857.
:&amp;~14;_4_4_1.0.:.770:--:-:.~;--;::--;--:;::­
1 8114,- 11!*1- 4,700 Millo
Boolo ~ Rldwlng, Chlppowo, Pomtronlan For Stu do, Vor,
_... Small Proven For Information,
E•collont Condition, loto Of Ea· .
Rack'f, any l ama. Guarantewu
- $7,SOQ Aim. 614-378-2908
~ PrlcH AI Shoe Colo. Gal- ~8~14_4":"4.;.8~304;.::8':-:~'7:"'~""':':'-:lpoi!L
Purebred Slborlan Huoky pup·
18G5 Honda 300 EX tourtru.
-••· ""'Ito,
gra•• &amp;
.... Cond., $2,800 tlrrtt. 304-875BOTTLED WILL POWER! LOSE plot,, bluo .,
~•·
1445 leaft meaa.ge.
up ID 30 poundo, 30 DAY MON· whiB, preny muko, 1 malo, 2 fe.
EY BACK GUARANTEE! Nalural, rnolol, ....ry now. $130 ooc:h, call
1885 KoW.aokl 800 Vulcan,
Doc10r Recom!IIOII!Iod, 114·U1· ·~8:-14;_119:.;.:.2-.:.51":"44~.::--:-":7.::--:--;-:
MOCO. 814-1192-nBt.
1982, frMownplel. .
AeaiiiOrad Hlmolayln bluo point
1G88 Polorlo Exprooo 300, oxc.
~T-Ier a FUa Slza Pic!&lt;· malo killen; aloe 11Ull oervlca::·
Up, 8 ft long . Good Condition. · Shalllo, Himalayan, Sl&gt;ii·Zu: 014· 1-~.,--::--~_.-=--- COI'id., 13,200. 304-4175-11122.
1192-2807. ' · ·
750 Boats &amp; Motors
(814~1012
-;:--::;:::-:-:-::-::::::-:::::::::--:::::
Sll miniature Colllo pupo, lull
forSale
.
Cemetery loti, Gronlle Bronze blooded, $.125 each, 814·7•2·
Memor!IIL Apple Grove llomori, 2050 ,
·
151! Alu.,num Boat 16 HP EvenII Gordono. 304·~2778.
rude ,_.a tor and Trailer. Electric
Top ol rho Hill Dog Grooming.
llarl.700 6.1..25f!.843.4
Cheryl Rilo,, 131 · Howard S1.
wv. S0..-8112-3214. ·•
1111. Opan bow Mark llol!ln, 85hp
ceramic kiln with stveral molds
motlr. 304-875-2793.
•
$250. 3()4.812·21119.
Musical
570
1.,...,......,..,-.,-,--~-:-Instruments
Colloctlble dollo • Ellanbll,
Hoiaman, Vogue, idHI, E1(:, 304· Sllr Guitar, Chnhlre, Ohlo- ·losa·
875-5811 Mrj.Auotln.
ona and instrumen11- piano, gul ~
l cc:--,.~-,~--:-:-Pta:. -:-1-:lic:-:
_So-p-:lic:-:To:-n-;-k-o, ar end drumo, 814-31SHI302.
0 0 10 1
R
300 Thru 2,000 Goll~n• on 580
Fruits &amp; ··
. Ev~na Enterprloot, Jacklon: OH
1-801!-537·0528. ·
Vegetables

I~~~~~~~~~

1----------·1 - -·

Electric Scoollf and ·wheel·
chairs, Now/ U11d, Scooter Uftl,
Portable Rompo, Stairway Elova·
tors, Bawmari'l Homeeare 61•·
448-7283

::-:-:--":7-::--:".:-::::-::--::-::Glrlo tCJ.Sp. Bike $50.00. Studio
Couch and Choir $30.00 (614)·
448 G4•

SWeat potaiD planta lor sale, caB

11 ..742-2m or 814-742·2220.

Vulnerable: Neither

RENTALS

Pass
Pass
Pass

'
I. DON'T 4AM8LI
WHEN. I'M WEARIN'
THIS IA04111

KING II

..

,THE BORN ~OSE...-R,;-__,;;

-. "r.ti\.A-J I~. Tl\1~ '(00~ .
W..Ta\INC.?.~
THI~~ OFf I

r

{'JJi, ~, IT'5

- ~~~--,

01'.''( ~ ft'C TO
WP-.TCJ\, IT~ ~T
~TED"TV·I·'(!

~T~ i::P-.1€D

·M·~- f•!"N&gt;ID
Tl.lf. (K.'I'

~ n\P-.T~

I ~~~~ TII"-T

J~~D

i
li

Tf\1~ I'DlU !

... '
•

•v

BIG N4TF.

Grubb'a Piano~ tuning &amp; repair•.
Problema? Nood Tuned? CaiHht
plano Dr. 814-4411-4525
I 1tav1 alofiiO Nllction of ~rninit
card•. •Magic• the Galhenng ineluded. thousand• of comic
books and a huge collection of
oporlo cardo. Old and new ,SIIrt
Waro 1oyo ajoo lncludod. Loro
dHII Na roooonablo ollor roluoed.

1-!ERE'S TI-lE WORLD FAMOUS
PATRIOT SOLDIER ST~NDIN6
611ARD AT VALLE't' FOR6E ..

SERV ICES

''THESE ARE THE TIMES
THAT TR't' MEN'S SOULS ''

UIOd Furniture: lila lulallllle

Nglo- lllado Anguo Buill For
- . 811418 Uzt Afllr Six.

lfiAI JSI'O RTfl110tJ

710

••oo.

Wuri!Uor Plario
Nor41c
Trock'l Back &amp; Stomoch M•·
chino Uke New. L - MMoogo.
(114~3lt-2832

5110

ctnn1 alr,lorgo .yard. goodcoo !d111or, no ptt1, t230 por
rnon1h, _.....,. 304.-2·2 •
.,..,.., ,

'•'

AUtoe lor Sell

'1111 ·Z24: '12 Toyota Coiolla: '81
S1•: 814-742-3513. ·

1877 Ponlloc Gl8n!l Prix. IO,soci
Mloo,81U480214 .
1882

Pork-· Oo04I.....,

I Trono, H u - Pro-.
A-~ed uaod 11" I beeml. cal MJko Goo4 o.mo Car ·•4DO;
lloHII-1.
· !881 0141' Cudaoo v... Ao!to,
Runo Folr, UIO; .Call 11~·441Block, brick, - r plpoo, wind- 8113.
ln1M. ole, Cloudo Wlntoro.
Rio Qrando, DH Call 814·245· 11113 Bulcll Aoeal. 87,100 mllol.
1121.
ttii!O. 1 1 . . . . .
'

;;;;;;;ri;i;i;;;;;r I PCI!o• ...., bod, ,., ,... .......
,._ •• • - ......., "milhod. onCI llllleo. night allndl, dnb,

_30110;;;
.

110
11U foNT-. Rune CIH!I,
-:-::~::-:::::-"'l:::"ll:=:::::~ I IIIMir Gaod Con!Uin. ID oao.
•1
. _ , . . . "cou-. chalro. rock· A Groan\ Shop.,., Grooming. Alllr8:10PMI14
'Featuring Hr*• ·Iaiit. · Don
ero, bu~k bod oot, much mor..
11~712 HRS 10. 4. W. i1!1r

UIOd ...,_

On

Pass

Paaa

Eut
. t9

2 .•

29
Pus

--

lead: . 6

32W_.!\il
clathlia

The youngest
in 18 years

31 TV ltor1e
. (2 well.)

Thesday, May :10, i991

45&amp;::,
47 Pllenlllc

r •

31~1

.tO'P.oovw!ls

43--lna

"452=~
1=

By Phillip Alder .
The winners of lfte·Open Pairs I
nationaltitlc,at lhe Spring Nationals
in Dallas were Geoff Hampson and
Eric Greco. Aged 28 and ~I , respcc·
lively, .they are the youngest winners
of a national tille since Jeff Meek·
stroth (then 23) and Eric Rodwell
(then 22) won lhe Open Pairs tille in
March 1979.
Hampson, whQ won a silver medal
on the Canadian team at the World
.Junior Championship in 1991, was
gaining his third North American
title. He is a !lridge professional who
lives in Fenton, Mich.
Greco is a senior at the University of Virginia. He won the Youth
Player of the Year title (for age 19 and
under) five years. in a row. ·
Greco used the auction to guide
.his pl~y on this deal from the final
session. The bidding is typ'ical of. •
pairs event, with no one willing to
pass when he might bid.
Against two mHrump, West led
the heart .six. East won with the w;e
and returned a low heart in the hope
that the positions of the heart 10 and.
jack were reversed. After winning
with the heart queen. Greco cashed
his five diamond lricks.• throwi~g a
spade from the dummy; Eas! had lo
make four discards. He selected the
spade two, club seven and two hearts.
Declarer cashed the club ace
· before exiting with the heart jack.
East could take two heart tricks and
the spade ace, bu1 then he had 10 lead
away from the club queen into dum· ·
my's king-jack tenace. \Yinning the
overtrick, which is so vital in a pairs'
event.. gave Hampson lind Greco 62
ou1 of 77 matchpoints ..

50FIHIIW.....

riYitl
140..
55· They get tM ·
. yokel -

liiSchool5I Thill thlng'a
5I Noun aulflx

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos .

.,_lionl

Celebrity~ ~·•• . . crewel from
ttv lamouii»&gt;J))e. pall and present
Eleh
in lhl cipher standi for anothef. TcW,r·• '*'-:N equ,t/s U

ZKNYEII

'AKIIP

GFH

W K F ·, P U

DB

aL

I I R i l . " - GIIFC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "This guy is
loo1, he used Absomine Sr."- (Spo

FPG

K W .I( II C ,

P II A

H.

MRMCH

F P. G

D R 0 P L

Da ·

PDLKW

IIRIICH

EKRIIa

IIFZK

ZKIICOaKIIB

HIIFC ' B

.

.

.

old that the lirst time he had alhlete's
aster) Roger Craig .

WQID
G&amp;MI

O Rearrange

_,ters

of

the

. four scrombli$d. wOrd~ be·

low tO form four simple words

I

ARFEGO .

I

,... .,

_rN_Ir..;;l,r.F:-;Trll

r. I I ·1 I

TO POT IT ANOTHER WA'&lt;.
'' l ll.OPE I MAKET~ CUT''

~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~8

'

r;.

rotoroncoo roqulred, 814·ee2·

e
Paaa

! . One long time dieter to an·
~

t•

8ltoi!ll. 173 ClaOftH Crtek Rd. ·
811 •• 02SI.

•

other. "I can .resist temptation, .

s0

D

I

A PRINT NUMBERED· LETTERS
'VI IN THESE SQUARES

•I

6 GET
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO I
ANSWER

ITUESDAY

ABTRO-ORAPB
. . .

uaoo. Ill •11100, ..,......,,

Noith

..

Ono bedroom houH In Pomeroy, Full. Size Mallrooa end Spring
nico and cloan, dopool~ 304-m · Sat Vory ClaM Condition. (114)·
5707 afltr 5pm ~14·8112-20011.
-7
.

dlpolit w

7~th)

1 ~ot"'
2P
bOard

aaiDnglng

SCRAM;urs ANSWERS ·

pooit

no lnlldo ptt1,

DQWN

you dev-elop from steo No. 3 below.

-4 Beclroom hou&amp;e on Nor&amp;h Main
St. Pt. Plea11n1. $300/mo. • de-

daon,

.

3 , _ poiMn
4 \liledlclne ·
-lnar
5 How . . -?
8 Sm8ll piece

~--,.1 &amp;__,1r-=:,lr-,.1..:;.·,.1'7 -t o ~~~~:~~ i~h~h:h~~~~.~g q~~:~~ .

Houaehokl .

-·Old.•

~=..:c nl
39
to

.,: . 7A R l

JET
'.....__
AERIJION MUIUM:&gt;
Repa•od. New &amp; Robuik In Stock.
Colt Ri&gt;n Evano, t-81'lo·537·g528.

2 Bodroomi. 2 Balh House, On
Goods
· Hll Acral located At Sowardl
Reconditioned
Ridgo Road, Crown City. Availoblo App1:1ncea:
To Buy Jun1 Ut, lnquirlel Call W.lhera, Dryoro, Ranges, Rolrl·
gtatort. DO .Oa~ Guarenteel
614-2!58-tSSO. ·
.
French !:lty Ma,"-g, 114·448· ,
3 Bedroom hOU!I8 In Pt. Pillllnt 7785.
t3501mo. • deppai~ no. poll, roiO&lt;encat required. 304-875-27411.

Pomoroy Ohio Will8li Stroot 3 GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Bedrooms, t3SO Month Depoalt· Wathert, dryera. refrJoeratora,
(513)574-25311
rangoo. Skaggo Appllancoo, 78
Smol 2 Badroom HouH Norm ol
s,::;~eion lt4-4~8-73ll,
Addison 1200 Month, Pluo Dt·
poolt, Utilitill, Rotoroncoo Ro- Hoavy Duty Woi!hor maclo By
quirad814-317.()15e
Mal~.t ThrH
125.
.81
71 • .
Smell houu in Clifton, claon,
qulot, no poto, 127!5/mo. 1200 Hutc~ WIMali:hlng Tablo &amp;8
dopolit. 304-773-8182. .
Ohalro. Cedar Blanked Chotl.
Wall Minor, Dook. Oak l!ibr Bod.
Two Bodroom HouM Rolrlgoritot, (814)-379-ZIIII
,
Stovo, Furnilhod, Walltor, DrY.,
Hook-Up 733 Third Avo. 1275. Hlce Bola &amp; Malding LrM! Soo~
month •150. Dopotll. 114·448· 81oi-3IIB-It....
·
3870
'
.
Throo piOco L.R. oulta with I ,.
Two bedroom houoe, nice and cllnoro, olx monlht old, coot

~~ANd

14 . . . _
. govwmMIII ,15 Nellie m-a
• l'tagranl " - 15 , ,.• • ,...
33 FHblrt or
••F'rtiW
C. .Mw
(llllllr.)
34 ENu'a counlry

~~;::;::~=;::~::..,as long as someone is -, • • • · ·,

MERCHANDISE

510,

2tllluUiln

12 ,* I u Ann. ,

5

2 Bedroom house In Hartford,

pluo utilltilo. 304-882·3888.

.

Wladar...,....

Call .&amp;1•·9•~aflertt30pm.

dopolit·S350tmo.~l'S-1~ - .

l

CROWN THAT
THAll

0own111Wn ·ftrotlloor olflco tip!ICI.
air conditioned. Now carpet. Call
(814) 446 4383 8 a.m.-5p.m. moll'
day lhur tridoy.

410 Houses for Rent

Weal

I

18 Ft Creollinor Cutty Cobin, 4

38&amp;-t685.

.

eo ~.o~~~r·• too~
,,...,.., lOIII

Dealer: North

suUib

Far Rent or Sale- 3 Bedroom, 2
bllho, control air, no lnlido polo·

FINANCIAl

tQJI087
A 9

num, Lois Of Accesaoriea, Good

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

24&amp;:;::-

•

Cylinder Marcary Cruiui, Alumi--

Lokt Erie Boo~ S3,000 Firm, 814-

•A2

• QJ 9

-

1--'---------

22 -

' . • 10. 5

·' .1!

113 . _
UM-17 ln8lftlal

20 SclloOI grp.
21 011- will

8ea&amp;lt

.

=tglh

Eat

I

~

lhlnv-

• 8.
• . Q 10 8 7

852

11183 Chevy lliiYolodo 414 - ·
1880 Chevy S-10 llu•, air .0.,. Til~
Air, Cruloo, Bad llnor. Tondilloner, nowty Nbullt onglno and ftOOIII,MUII
Soli. 113.000.
.... Plf1l.
CIDnf;lllion. ... (814)4.48-Ui7 .

-

11 llallienoiM

•AK75f

• 4 3 2

1·61-t - 593~

Free Estlmata,.l In-

surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 8.14·388·
8&amp;48. 814·387·7010.
Three bedroom ranch in Meigs
Counry,
ana and 112 baths, cenRo~n·o Homo Cleaning: Weekly,
tral air, lar~e garage, beautiful
81-w.ekty. Excellent References! country
san1ng on one acre, Red
Coli Anvdmo, 814·44Bc2315 II No Hill Road,
Danville. Shown by apAn-l-Mo11age.
polrwment only, 614-742·2337.

1887 Chevy Cowall., Wllh Alr,
Allto. ~...7181..~ts-1SOD.

Buy or 11111. Riverine Anllquoa,
11lM ·E. Main - . a n Rl. 124,
Po-oY· Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
._m. .. 8:00 p.m., SundiW I :00 II
8:00 p.m. 814·N2·2528, Ruoo

quire a oporta modlclno certiflcata 2252 ll&lt;fUare teet, $77,000 OBO. New 1987 14170 lhreo bedroom,
ond a CPR cord. PIHao Hnd ln- 814-742·2581.
include• o monlha FREE lol •ont
qulriel ro Mr. Jame1 Lawrence,
Only $181 .66 par month wtth
Superintendant. Southern Local Brit:k 311 wilh Dai8Checj Brick G• $1050 down. Call 1·600·837·
Schoolo, Box 178, Raclno, Ohio ra8•· Second lot For Trailer or 3238.
45771 . SlSO Ia an Equal 0 - · La!Jie. Garden, tHof89 $49,900,
O
I·
In Radi"Mty ~014)_ 245-S480
New Bank Repo•at n1y 3 1eft,
IUrity Eonployai.
owner financing available. 304- In Polnl Plaaaanl: Unturnlahecl,
Wanlod: 38 Pooplo LOIO 18 ·25 Cheshire, Th~d Street, Facing 755-71g1 .
s lo 1 8 PI 1 Roo a Reier
Pounds In The Next 30 Day1. Park, Five Rooms. Bath, Baoo·
.~: ,uDepoart. 814-~4S-0041:
·
Natural. Guarantoodl 1·800-690· mant and Garage. Recent! I Ro- Taking Bids Unlit May 30111. On 3 An• 8P.M.
2315.
.
modeled. Call Today 814·367· Badroom, 1977 14170 Schunz
7114
Gas Heat, Needs Work. After one bedroom aparlmeni In Mld5:30 Ca11814-245-i572.
dleport, aN utilitiet paid, $270 mo.,
180 wanted To
CONVENIENCE IS THE KEY
.
$tOO depoolt, 814-892· 7806,
Wool Rlploy H-la • · 8am·Spm
.
ANY ODD JOBS: E"erior paint· By owner: Mount Vernon Avenue,
lng, ahrubi &amp; weeds trimmed, Pojnt Pleasant. 8 roams, 2 or 3 atockldl Huge Mlectlon or 1W7
modola ready 10 dotlvor. SAVEl
Smalllurnlohed apartment, tbr,
landscapinQ, sidewalks edged, bodrpomo, 1 bam, largo ki!Chon
304-372-3400.
ldeaf .for 1 peraon. no pets, no .
lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304·175- with laundry hook-up, all on ana
7112.
•
lloor Ba .. m.nt Vl·nyl aiding
·
amokera, relarenceo &amp; deposit.
· fenced back
· yard. Per·· 340 Business and
carport,
304-87~265~.
Child c:ari in my home, releranc- tectsBrter home or lor older indi·
BuildingS
HtMiiiable, 814-992-6642:
vidual (a). $73,000. "CALL Nowr · -;:::;-:::;-;;::ii:;.::~::;:::;;;:;:: Twin Rivers TOW&lt;!!', now accepting
3GU75-631C.
Land and Building. Crawloid'a appllcatlono tor tbr. HUO oubold·
Experienced carpentry, and remoGrocery, Handeraon WV. Priced ized apt far elderly aqd handi·
deling. Inside and outside, For sale, 1 bedi'tlom home in PoL on inspocUon. Call 304-675,5404 copped. EOII304-4175-e879.
decks. vinyl aiding, add-on adc:U· maroy, will· sell on land contract, or 004-875-1408.
tions, cabinet retacing or newly 814·D92·5858.
Two badroom apartment In Mid·
rebUilt ·References-Free ·Esll·
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
dlopor~ we pay watar,
and
In Harrl•onvUI• home and two
ma111. Jim Shull 304-675-1272.
·
trash, you· pay o•• ond electric,
lots, ideal for young or retired 1 A&lt;; &amp; 2 .AC lots tor aalo In $200 mo. pluo $tOO dlpoli~ 614Georges P(trtable SaWmill, don'l couple, call614·742·3128.
Sconic Valley Subdivlolon. 8112·7808, flam.Spm.
haul your lags ta lhe mill just call
Wedge Really, Broker 304·675·
304-875-1957_.
Newll romodolod lhreo bedroom, 2722.
Two bedroom apa(tment in Uidone ond 112 balh home In Midct..
clltpor1,
no Plll.ll4-1192·5858.
HIIIIDp'Lawn Mowing . 304-675- par~ 814-992·3485 alter Spm.
Prime Acreage 3-1 acre parcials,
27113.
excellen! building oltos In Ma · 450
Furnished
0.. Mile From City Umit Of Galli·
Rooms
Hause Clearing, Reasonable poll~; All New Kilchen, Window &amp; son. Serious lnqulret only. 304·
882-3772.
· Rates. Work Guarantee. (614)· Siding, $35,000, 614-387.0403.
Sleeping roomt with cooking .
258·1233
Several S.acrt parcell
Also trailer space on river. All
$7,500each
Lawn Mowing Services Commerhook·upo. Cali ahor 2:00 p.m..
remote, beautilul lalld; Meigs 304· 773-5851, Mason WV.
cial &amp; Roaldential, 814-448-4885,
County, Seiple Township. SR 692
814·379-2135.
· oW SR 143). Owner lnancing. 460 Space tor Rent

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Wednesday, May 21, 1997
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
· Strong self-motivation is required
tOday if you hope 10 be successful.
'
Lady Luck mipt 1101 play 1 leading"
role !II this point in time, so fend for
, ·yourself, Gemini, treal ynutscl( to a
birthday gift. Send for your AsiJ'o:e
Graph predictions for the YW' ahead
by mailing S2 and SASB to AstroGraph c/o this ~lplflef, P.O. Box
17,11, 'Mumy Hill S1ation, New
York, NY IOI.S6. Be su.e to lllale
your zodiac Jign.
•I

. CANCER (June . 21-July 221. • They1 won't put themselves out,
Today, if you feel comJ)elled to take' · though, if you're the only one who
a chance, gamble on yout own abil· . ·benefits.
ities and nol on another's. Betting
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)'
blintl could Ge disappoinling.
Before making any large purchases
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) lf.you're today, give the maner much thought.
anxious to keep your household.bUd· Take care thai your Other expend I·
get in line today, maintain control tures don'lget you in over your head.
over your credit cards and ask 'your
AQUARIUS (lan. 20..Feb. 19)
mate to reduce chqing as well.
You will have to exert a bit more conVIRGO (Aug. · 23-Sept. · 22) sc:ientious effort than usual today if .
Results could be sratifying tOday, you hope 10 make the most of your
' provided thlla·swrogate c-:ries. oul areas of immediate advantage.
your ideas. You rna)' not be mchqed
PISCES (Feb. 20..March 201 A i
to do much about them yourself. . care(ully tllought·QUt decision might'
LIBRA (Sept 23-0c:t. 23) Little not .ao as anlicipaled today if you
financial surpluses you've accumu· beain makina little las1 minute
lated i:oold go ool the window today · chanF5. Be .consistent.
if you go on a shopping spm:. Keep
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be
this in mind befon starting your trek. very selective in choosing your bull·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Usu· ness involvements at this lime. Do .
ally, yoo'Ri a pklricntod jJenon not plunge into dells bef~ invesli·
who is leiiiCioos in punuina yoor gating everythina thoroughly.
objectives.Thtlay, howevct, if thinss
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Do
don 'tao easy, you mlaht back off.
not expeettoo much today businetr .
SAOmAJUUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. wise from someone you know on a
21) Associllel will coopen!IC today pulely social basis. Try to keep your
if Cherc's somedlina in it for the~ two worlds divided.
)J
•

Foment - Ensue ~ Droll · Unfold • OFF the SOUND
Our minds are like a television set. I~ it goes blank,
it's smart to turn OFF the SOUND!

MAY 20 I

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