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I

••

Ohio Lottery

Chicago falls
10-4 to L.A.
lnNL play

'

Pick 3:
2-9-0
. Pick 4:
2-7·1-3
Buckeyes:
6-11-14-27-30

Sparta on Page 4 ·

Cloudy tonlaht. lowe In
the 30s. Varl..ble cloudl·
ness Wednesday, chlnce .
ot sho- a. High ,...., es..

•

' Vol, 47, NO.4
1 Section, 1~

.
31A Gennett Co. I.... I prp u

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April 30, 1996

~Gas price QripeS enter political arena
I

By DAVE SI(IDP,.tORE
·Aatocllted Press Writer
WASHI_NGTON - Republicans are urging repeal of President Clinton's
1993 gasohne tax mcrease, while Clinton orders an investigation ofthe recent
price s~rg.e at the pump ~nd moves to sell some of the nation 's· petroleum
..stockpile m hopes of tammg prices. .
~u~enly, gasoline is a~ election-year issue.
If the ~mocrats want to do something to help tbe w~.rlcing middle-class
. people, th1s 1s a way we could do it. ·Give them some rehef on gasoline tax
: mereases," Senate MajoritY Whip Trent Lou, R-Miss., said Monday. ·
House Speaker ~ewt Gingrich, R-Ga., is promising a House vote on the
tax 1ssue by Memonal Day. And, thrown on the defensive, the White House
· says it's willing to discuss repeal, which GOP presidential challenger Sen.
. Bob Dole proposed Friday in a letter to Clinton.

Belly laugh commercials $t?em to. sel.l mor&amp;·cars
He used ~vety,thing from frogs
1
hippos.
10
. yYith a Southern ·twang and
rapid:fire speech, his ads went
like this:
"Howdy. I'm Cal Worthington
arid this is my dog Spot. 1 found .
I his fellow down at the pound,
and we ' re looking for a home for
·
·

him. He don't cat much. He chas-

line: "What's more, my dog can
.
Worthington flooded late-night
TV witti hi·s ads, and they were an
instafit success.
Johnny Carson did a routine
imitating Wotthil!llton's schtick
on the "Tmiight Show,".
When actor Ted Danson
starred ·with Whoopi Goldberg in
the movie "Made in Ametica,"
Danson played a car dealer whose.
advertising copied Worthington's.
"My purpose was not to
beco,me a celebrity," Worthington

es .cats and cars, but he can be whip his dog."
broken of that. S~ why don 't y~u
call me lip, and I II g1ve you this
guy."
Worthington would banter
with the animal for a while, asking it to speak.
And he usually ended with the

•g h-t e.c h .f eat. u.res.
·
I
H

(Continued from Page 5)
more liberal, more bold."
Vice President:~! Gore has rec-.
. tailored to the. b~yer," say Honda
design manager Dave Marek.
ommended that mternal-combu~· .
Marek says he_s xpects car buy- tion engines be ehmmated w1thm .
~ crs oflhe future will be ab le to go 25 years. But Chrysler engineer,
inln "'photolilcs" on their com- ing chief Francois Castaing says
pulers to pick unique fabric pat- · improved gas-powered engines
terns; colors and other specialized will be with us for most of the
.nptions for their cars. Honda • next century.
·
designers also predict that win"They're just so well-adapted
dows will match the color of car 10 what a car is supposed to do." .
bodies to give people the feeling Castaing says. "We're going to ·
ol sccunty. .
,
;;ec some mi~. of old engine t~ch- .
"Up until the 70s, cars had nology. that has been reliJ1ed over .
lots of char;iclcr," Marek says. one century and new alternative
"Car designers today need to get technologies."

Popular ·c olors·
can be cyclical

says. "I was selling cars."
Buying ·TV time was . a lot
chea~r in the '7Q's, Worthmgton
says. Worthington, 75, owns a
production stud1o and st1ll finds .
time to make 35 to 40 c.om~er·
cials every week for h1s e1ght
dealerships.
·
Ads that make you laugh score
big with consumers. What's more
they send . people into your store
to buy cars, Worthington &gt;;ays.
USA TODAY's Ad Meter,
which measured ·the success -or
commercials during Super Bowl

Nnw. rich blue-greens -

.

r

With OUI'IOW auto loa ra&amp;ee, JOU
eu updMe :yeu e•red mode ol

. ·

..,..,.pertaOoll AND ..,a a pea&amp;
deal ou ftllaiielal· Oar
auto .... rate~~ are &amp;be
liJw.t we've oUered Ia
:yeam. •• aad the:y'U appl:y

.nlllllll(ltivc rage .

Green's "time is ri.ght," says Daily.
Cars are the last consumer goods to ride a partic~lar color wave.
Automativc colors "arc not trend-setters," Daily says. "They are
lllllrC evolutionary than revolutionary. And th~y·re longer-lasting
1 'even to nine years). If (a color) dies in sportswear, they can just dye
11 all black an~ sell it the next season. We can't dye em'S black."
While is One of the most popular colors for cars because it's brl'ght
and dcan-luuking,. Daily says. It also stands out ip a parking lot at
White "exudes confidence and security," tic says.
Red - the first color to disappear from view when the sun st~rts to
. ,ct - is a crowd pleaser. Electric red appeals to luxury car ownors; hot .
..- red is for buyer~ of sportier model!!- and baby boomers, Daily spys.
1
......__, Red says "excitement," Daily says. "Look at me."
Blue is "middle-of-the-road, Mr. Banker or Lawyer," Daily says. "I
Jnn't care to be 0cen, !just want to get from point A to pJ&gt;int B.'"
Black is considered mysterious and high tech, and it complements
· today,'s "ergonomic shapes," Daily says. '
1
s,\me colors that arc rarely - if ever- seen on today's models
include orange (cheap looking); pink (too nashy), bright yellow and
peach. .
·
,
Peach "doesn't look substantial," Daily says. "Most people don't
want a color on their car that looks fragile."

•

t '

. lo ANY aew ear you'd

~·

lhltlfl.

•

XXX, found •\hat..belly laughJ are ·.
the best way to get viewer allentim\.
'' · ·
But does it work for dealers?
Marketing firms say it works, .
although most dealers shoot short, •
inexpensive TV commercials
where they talk price, price, pticc.
Roy Lightner, a vice president
of Carden &amp;·Cherry, a Nashvillebased marketing firm, helped
ac!or Jim Varney, beuer known as
Ernest P. Worrell, and !)is "Know
what I. mean" line become
famous.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Federal
r~gulators have !)bjected to . a 'proposed state law that would allow
some protection to corporations with
environmental violations, The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer report~d
loday.
·
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sent a letter to the Ohio
. EPA: last week thr~atening to revoke
t!Je state's authority to enforce pans
.of the Clean Air Act if the proposed
bJll becomes law, The Plain Dealer
reported.

· . David U~!!E~r,;;~~e~i,~~:n'£1~~~'· admti\istrator
mental Protection Agency in Chicago, signed the letter on behalf of Val·
das v. Adamkus, the EPA Region 5
administrator, in response .to queslions from ihe Ohio Sierra Club.

A.

Ullrich warned that if the bill is
enacied into law it "would mean that
Ohio would no longer have adequate
authority to enforce" air pollution
regulations that P.Crmit the operations
for the state's largest industries.
But the. Ohio EPA said the letter
drew some incorrect· conclusions
'
about the bill.
"It's a letter we take seriously, but
this seems to stem from a misun'der..
standing or misreading of the bill,"
Judith L. French, chief legal counsel
for the Ohio EPA, told The ' Plain
Dealer. "He seems to suggest we
~ w.on 't have access to information, but
this bill doesn't change 'whai we cur:
'rently have access to."

hunter green, pol~ green - are all the

Car repair•. !Contlnued trOm Page 6)

•

like to bQ•.J•t aliOp
anuad And •elect the
88W"C:ar JOU WRDt.

l

u

(forelp or dtt~~~es&amp;lc) aad • ·
. tben atop Ia ai\IW oa~
appUcaUoa. Ia m01t euu joa'U bave yot,tr
.

•

Ullwer • tile ume dQ-

•.
I

..

deliberate efforts to limit supply by the oil industry...
Sen. Phil Gramm, R·Texas, cited the depleted oil stockpiles from the
u.nusually c~ld winter and the new ~equirement in California for using emisSions-~ducmg reformulated gas?hne as reasons for the price increase. He
als6 sard the erroneous expectatton that Iraq soon would res11me exponing •
oil kept production dowm
·
But Markey said oil companies - whose profits have increased strong·
ly - "c~iously " have curtailed refining rather than increasing 'it after the
severe wanter.

,

Gasoline prices are al their highest level since the Persian Gulf.W~.
They 'vejumped 5 cents in the past. two weeks and 14 cents in the past year.
The average' price nationwide, including all grades and taxes, was 136.34
c.ents a gallon as of Friday, according to th~ Lundberg Survey of I 0,000 gaso!Jne stat10ns.
.
.
.

.

The EPA had several problems
with the proposed legislation that
would .allow a company to keep
secret any environmental violations it
finds in an audit, IJllrich said in the
'letter sent Friday. The bill also would
shield businesses from state sancti~ns
under certain conditions ..

B~ LISA FAYE KAPLAN ·
Gannett News Service
'
Car colors, like car stocks, are cyclical.
For years, blue was hot; now it's not; green was out, riow it's in. •
"Last time wc·saw green this strong was in the late .J 960s, when we
haJ all those gawd-awful avocado refrigerators and shag carpets," says
Rnbcrt S. Daily, color marketing manager for ·DuPont Automotive
hni,hcs. the Troy. Mich., operation that creates new colors for car

. .: t11npanics around the world.

(COntlnuedfromP•7)

on Monday authorized' the "orderly sales" of about
.12 IDlllion barrels of oil fi?m th~ nation· s strategic petroleum reserves, a move
that, by mereasmg supphes, m1ght drive down prices. He also asked Energy Secretary Hazel.O'Leary to repon within 45 days "about the factors that
led to the run-up in prices."
Democratic lawmakers, scrambling Monday 'o keep the campaign focus
on a m1mmum wag~ mcrease, suggested oil·company profiteering had more
to do w1th.motonsts pam at the pump than the 4.3-cent·per-gallon surcharge.
"Just befor~ the tourist season ·6egins , it's interesting that these prices
would go as h1gh as they are. I have a feeling it has a lot more to do with
profits than it does with taxes," said Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle,
D-S .D.
, Rep. Ed":ard Malkey, D-Mass., in a lett~r. called on O'Leary to investigate whether pnce mcreases were "the result of collusion, pric~· fixing or

Proposed r========:::::c:==~~~;;.::, Commissioners
..
law draws
·
.
•
will
tackle
health
.
warning
•
•
1~surance aga1n
from EPA
'

~ ~~~AG~E~EI~G~Hf.~·~C~AR~CA~R~E~E~D~mD~N~------------------~------------------------•·T__
H E_D_A~!LY__SE_Nn_
. _N_E_~~A-PR.-IL_a_,~1-~-·

Me~nwhile, Clint~n

, French said tiJe state will have
adequate a\!thority to enforce · air
pollution reg1,1lations even if the leg·
islatioh passes.

-1"

·
· ·NONE FOR UtiDER 21 .;..:. Alrparr
up to
·
. Meigs High School.
. ·prom, studltnts at the achool and others In the area are participating In the "None For Under
21" alcohol awareness campaign. The program reminds teenagers of the penalties and dan·
gers ass.o clated ll(lth und..-age drinking and Impaired driving. Pictured with a banner from the
campaign at Meigs. High School are, from left, students Stacey Price Beverly Stewart Taryn
· '
'
Doidge and Cynthia Sandy.

for under 21: program
promotes prom night safety
By TOM HUNTER
News ·Staff
With the season for hig!l sctlool
prmns and g~;aduations nearing. the
problems of underage drinking
and alcohol-related traffic acci·
dents are the focus of attention for
law enforcement officials, parents
and school administrators.
Hoping to prevent ·a tragedy
,from occurring, .local high schools
are reminding teenagers of the ·
penalties associated with drunk
driving, adults serving alcohol to
minors and the use of fakddentification cards, through the "None ·
for Under 21 ".campaign.
The campaign, developed by
ttOhio Depanment of . Public
Sa ty in 1994, addresses the prob1 m of underage drinking and
impaired driving, identified as the
•leading cause of fatal and non· fatal
crashes among teens nationwide .

Under the national umbrella of
"Campaign Safe and Sober," . the
''None for Under 21" campaign .
reminds teenagers that if they are
unqer 21 and drinking, they arc
breaking the law.
"We do have a very serious
proble~ with underage drinking.
and I think it must be dealt with
accordingly," Meigs Sheriff James
Soulsby said. "The liquor retailers
need to card all younger buyers
before selling beer or wine.
"Our department address this"
problem at all times, bu( enforcement is stepjJed up somewhat dur·
ing the prom and grad~ation season ," he added. · .·
A)' pan of the enforcemelll
coml&gt;onent of the campaign, the
"Cops· and Shops" program uses
undercover enforcement officers
who work with beer and wine
retailers to curb the
of

Long's brief appeals
for ~quitable funding
By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service
COLU BUS ~Area State Sen.
Jan M' ael LQng, D-Circleville, has
pe il a brief filed with the Ohio
preme Court supporting a lower
courts' decision thai Ohio's school
funding system was unconstitutional.
The brief will be filed today supporting th~ plaintiffs wanting a.mol'e
eq~1table sY,~m of school fundmll in
the DeRolph &gt;'s. ·State of Ohio case
pending . before the Ohio Supreme
Court:
·
"Substantial reforrn of school
funding in Ohio is urgently needed to
provide all · of Ohio's children adequate educational opportunities that
are req11ired by Ohio's constitution
anti that are so 'essential to the future
of our state," said the .brief, authored
by Long and Senate Minority Leader
Ben Espy, l:&gt;-Columb11s.
·
'The brief points out the $SO mil·
lion legislative. appropriation for
equity f11nds in 1992 was less than
one percent of the $5: I billion total
I'

L

Non~
S~mtlnel

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners are gearing up to take on
the healtt\ insurance issue - againfollowing Monday's regular com. mission meeting.
Commissioners will meet with
officeholders and department heads
Monday at 2:30p.m. in the commission office to discuss the need for
money in the health insurance reserve
fund.
"We've got a real prob.lem," said
! .:'~J,:e~·~~~o~. Presi&lt;!ont Fred Hoffneed -to put ~80,000 lo
$100,000 in the reserve fund."
Hoffman said the reserve fund,
from which claims are paid, contained about $28.000 as of last week.
Currently, participating county
employees are covered under the
county's self-inSurance program,
.which i&amp; administered by a third party, Medical Claims Service of
Columbus. ·
"We are feeling the need to get out
of (self insurance)," Commission
Vice President Janet Howard said
adding that the .board may have t;
pass along the increase to county ,
employees this time. .
Last summer commissioners had
discussed 'changing over to a managed-care type of health insurance,
but declined after office holders and
department heads said thev would be
willing to pay more to keep the current health plan.
Currently, monthly premiums for
courthouse employees covered under
the family plan total $200. Premiums
for si'ngles total $30.
.Last year, commissioners resisted
passing costs along to employees,
preferring to increase only the share
paid by county offices. However, at

alcohol by underage people. Eighteen sheriffs offices participated in
the pilot program statewide in
1995" with the program being
expanded to more counties this
year,
In 1995, 89 percent of Ohio's
public and non-public high schools
panicipated in the "None for Under
21" program. During the program's
first year, alcohol-related crashes
declined by 6 percent. While this
program may not have been the
main contributing factor to this
reduction in alcohol-related deaths,
it cenainly can take partial credit
for the detline.
'
"The program is helpful in
warning teenagers of the dangers
associated with·underage drinking,
but it is not the complete answer to
the problem. Enforcement is the
key in helping to keep 1hese teens
safe and sober," ·Soulsby said.

...

uation may change as medical costs
mcrease.
On Aug. 4, 1995, commissioners
enacted an I 8 percent increase in
departmental health insurance· "user
fees" to maintain the etisting health

msurance coverage.

In addition, co,mmissioners will
try to mee! ·with !!:hester Township
\tuStees and County Engineer Robert
Eason to discuss a problem with
Chester Township Road '156 (West
Shade).
Commissioners met with resident
Russell Spencer, who said floods on
West Shade Creek occasionally
strand 13 families who live there.
(Continued on Page 3)

HistoricaJ, ... _

unit fears·

battle site
imperiled
~ JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Meigs County settlement of
Portland is a small, largely agrarian
community along the Ohio River, but
almost I.B years ago, the quiet vii·
!age was rocked in the only Civil War
battle fought in Ohio.
In the Battle of Buffington Island
on July 19, I 863, a force of about
8,000 Union soldiers routed a smaller force of Con federate raiders commanded by Gen. John Hunt Morgan.
.The running battle through the Port-land area ended Morgan's foray
through Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio
and cut off tlis escape into western
Virginia (now West Virginia).
Now, history buffs are conceme&lt;l
that a propos~d gravel mining operation w1ll destroy a large portion of
the battlefield.
·
Margaret Parker, presideni of the
Meigs County Historical · Society,
told Meigs County Commissioners
Monday afternoon . of plans b)!'
Richards &amp; Sons Inc. to mine gravel
from a portion of the battlefield.
Commissioners approved a resolution
(Continued on Page 3)

VioJent storms rake western
Oh.i o; .t wo children left ·dead

state funds appropriaied for public
By The Associated Press
elementary and secondary education
At least two people died ih storms
that year.
that
banered western Ohio, tearing
''The sysiem of funding public .
roofs off houses. downing wires and
education in Ohio has resulted in the
sending rivers and cree~s over their ·
quality of educational opportunity for
banks.
Ohio's children being determined by
National Weather Service investithe location in the state where a child
gators will head to Jefferson Townresides.," the brief said, · ·
ship,
southw,est of Dayton, today to
.
The brief descrities an Ohio pubdetermine
.whether a tornado was·
lic education system in a&lt; state of criSen Long
.·
responsible
for some of the damage
si.s,due to subs1andard building con- ·.
'
·
dmon&amp;. The brief notes, for example, , decision supporting the state's school caused by Monday night's storms.
Rain that continued to fall over
that it wjll be 277 years before the funding system. . ·
much
of the slate was expected · to ·
$I 0.2 billion in repairs to schools are
. The caS. staned In 1the Perry
taper
off
durin~ the day.'
' · ·
fimshed at the current school build- County Coun · of Common Pleas
The storm left two children dead,
ing assistance appropriations rate.
which ruled that Ohio's system of
authorities
said.
The brief, sitl!ned bv 25 members schOol 'funding was unconstitutional
Christopher
Frowein, 6, of Dayof the Ohio House Qf Representatives · in July 1994. The Perry County
ton.
die4
after
he
grabbed a live elecand six members of the Ohio Senate, Court of Appeals overturned that rutis a Democratic respogse to a similar ing in Augustl995. That reversal was trical wire in his flooded back yard,
brief filed by Republican legislators. appealed to the Ohio Supreme Coun police said. He was pronounced dead
That brief lilep 011 behalf of House which accepted jurisdiction of this at· Miami Valley Hospital Monday
Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, R: case in January 1996. A decision by night.
In Butler CoJnty north'w9st of
Reynoldsburg, and ·Senate Speaker Ohio's highest court on Ohio's school
Stanler ,Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, urged , . funding system is expected -this Cincinnati, IS-month-old Jacob
Dueek~r died after he tumbled into a
the court to uphold an appe;lls court's summer.
'

that time commissioners said the sit-

.

••

,.

.

'

stream while playing outside his
home Monday. Sheriff's Lt. Anthony
Dwyer said the child wandered away
from the yard and was found the
creek about 40 minutes after he disappeared. He was pronounced dead at
.Mercy Hospital in Hamilton.
Winds of more than I 00 mph
snapped telephone poles at their
bases and ripped a roof off the Imperial Enterprises Inc: fireworks company in Jefferson Township Monday
afternoon.
No injuries were reponed .
"It may have been a weak toma(jo, but the damage is impressive,"
said Ken Haydu, the weather service's chief meteorologist in Wilmington.
The weather service planned to
examitte the scene today.
' Fireworks
employee
Kris
Laskowski said he turned off the
J?Ower and took refuge in one of the
bujldings.
"It just sounded like an explo-

sion ," said Laskowski, 24, of
Miamisburg. "The windows blew out .
and some of the ceiling tiles came
down on me. I just said, 'Please, God,
don' t have this building fall on me.' ·
It happened real quick, but it seemed
like it took forever to slow down."
. Winds in excess of 58 mph
snapped two of five cables that tied
· the showboat Majestic·to the dock on
: th~ Ohio River next to downtown
· C(ncinnati. The boat was not set
· adrift.
; In Dayton, the storms cut power lo
; about 25,000 Dayton Power &amp; Light
, Co. customers, mostly in the metro. politan Dayton area, utility
: spolc;esman Steve Bramlage.
· Power was restored to, all but
· 4,000 customers today, and .service
was expected later in the day.
The wind blew a large tree onto
the roof of an apartment buildina '
south of New Carlisle in cihltc Cpun- '
ty, said sheriff's Sgt. James Howell. ·.
No one was injured.

�•

_:CoiJJJnentary

(

•

hge'2

,/

TulllleJ, . . . . , .

UH/ 0 \'J c dlllel
Wed=ad1y, May 1

•

The Daily Sentinel
'E.rtllfJfisfld in 1.948

Affirmative action
WASHINGTON - Aff'UIIIIIive conb'OI

IICiion is to Bob Dole what WiDie
Horton was to Georp Bush. It iJ his

Dole's racial bogey man

or

Congress in
'1994 lias bK:tfirod on
them. While bolh Clinton and the Republiani
can claim a measure ' of
victory from the budget
deal that was struck last
week, tile GOP has taken
a public ~lations beating
• tor its meat-cleaver
approach to deficit
reducuon.
ReP!Jblii:ans haven't
fared much better with "the character issue " Voters· have shown little
interest 'in revisiting the questions
GOP actlvtsts raised about Clinton
four years ago witllout success.
So instead, the GOP returns to its
bad fonn. To do so successfully,
Republicans have to blur the lines
between affinnative action, which
many whites support, and quotas,
which most of them do not. That job
apparently has fallen to Hatch, who
recently has circulated two lengthy
w:ritten attacks on Chnton 's civil

rilhts policy.
The bottom line of
Hatch's qument is that
the president's "mend it,
don't end it" affirmative
action policy is a veiled
defense of racial quotas
and preferential programs.
This heavy hftmg falls to
htm because Dole, who
was a longtime supporter
of affirmative action before
entering tllis year's presi:
dential race, runs the risk of spotlighting his own character . flaw
when he now speaks out against it.
But tllis gambit won't work.
Dole will benefit little from tile
actions of his surrogates witllout
first publicly explaining why he
voted lime and agam in favor of the
kind of federal affirmative action
programs they now decry on his
behalf. And he'll have a tough time
convincing voters that he really dtslikes racial preferences if he can 't
explain why he once used such a

program to help land a fOI'IIlCl
employee a multimillion-dolllf fed·
era! contri!Ci.
Dole knows the real value of fed·
eral outreach programs to this
nation.
He unders~ands how t~ey were
used to help World War II "eterans
get a college education and buy
homes . •
He approves of tHem to aid unin- sured farmeril wllo lose their crops to
Hoods or drought. And he is unquestionmg of them when they are
employed to help American corporations gam a compeutive advantage
in foreign markets.
But now tllat he is in tile race for
the prestdency, Bob Dole hopes to
ovenake Bill Clinton's lead by carnpaigmng against affinnative action
of a different ,kind -that which
seel&lt;s to undo the effects 'o f past and
current practtces of racial discrimination.
It's a mistake he'll pay dearly for
on the ftrst Ttiesday in November.

racial bozey man. '
He wants to use it in lllUCh the
same way Bush used Horton, a black
convicted murderer who raped a
white woman after walking away
from a Massachusetts' prison furlough program while Michael
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Dukakis was governor of that state.
Horton became a symbol of the libROBERT L. WINGm
eral policies of Dukakis - Bush's
Publlaher
opponent in the 1988 presidential
election - and a manifestation of
MARGARET LEHEW
CH~LENE HOEFUCH
the worst fears of'manr white votGenel'lll Manlgef'
Controller
ers
On Tuesday, Dole surrogates
Nancy Kassebaum and Orrin Hatch
wtll try to tum affirmative action
into an equally effective weapon
against Bill Chnton.
Both Republican senalors are
scheduled to hold hearings on the
matter. Kassebaum's Labor and
Human Resources Committee will
hear testimony on ' the Dole-Canady
bill, a heretofore slow-moving piece
•
of legislation that - if - passed
will bring to a screeching halt all
federal affinnauve action programs.
And Hatch, who cha~rs the Judiciary
UNTIL
THESE
· Committee, will hear from supportBy PAUL SOUHRADA
IWA5
ers of the anti-affirmative action iniTo
I
AaiOCialed Prea• Writer
· COLUMBUS -Daniel Asbury might have been better off reaching for tiative tllat Californians will vote on
in November.
Jhe hard stuff in hts battle agamst chronic pain.
The two hearings couldn't come
, · Asbury, a Toledo area man paralyzed from the chest down in a 1980 accident, faces pnson tf he does not gtve up smoking marijuana - whtch he at a better time for Dole.
The Senate majority leader's
began usmg when prescriptton drugs failed to ease hts suffenng.
, AJudge this month suspended the maximum two-year prison sentence for presidential 'campaign ts tn serious
f.sbury, who was convicted tn March of trafficking in marijuana. Police act- trouble. Most polls show him trailing l)n a tip found 12 plants g(owing in his back yard, wh1ch Lucas County ing far behmd Clinton in the race for
Common Pleas Judge Rutll Ann Franks conceded he was using for medici- the White House: And the issues
Republicans thought would combine
.rlal purposes.
·
' Still, she ordered htm to undergo random drug tests dunng his two-year to deny Clinton a second tenn in
office - Whitewater, the federal
probation and promised a trip to prison if he fails.
. Lawmakers, meanwhtle, are close to a vote on a bill that would penni! budget and questions about the presd~tors to prescnbe morphme and other painkilling drugs in amounts that ident's character- have all fizzled
out
m1ght now raise eyebrows and could result in discipline.
Whtlewater it turns out is no
The sponsor. Rep. E.J. Thomas. R-Columbus, said the btl! is necessary to
protect doctors from unwarranted scrutiny from the Drug Enforcement Watergate. After months of Senate
Administration, which keeps tabs on who prescribes narcotics and how heanngs on the failed Arkansas land
deal in which Clinton and his wife
piuch.
,.
.. That fear could lead some doctors to shy away from prescnbmg heces- were junior panners. most Americans can't figure out what all the .
s~ry drugs , opting mstead for less controverstal -and less effective- subfuss
is about.
stitutes, Thomas satd.
The
federal budget fight that
"Who loses out? The patients who can never quite get relief from the
Republicans sought smce winning
pain they are expenencing."
• , Thomas and other backers of the bill, though, are emphatic that the protection would not extend to marijuana.
, : "What we 're talking about is deahng wtlh known pam medicatiOns,"'
Thomas satd. "They're already on the books. They're already approved by
tiJe FDA."
We 're going to be mundated wiih trtvia about the alleged
·
ski's cabin -- a Gold Medal whol e-wheat flour sack with the
: Asbury, who said some of those approved medications left him suictdal, Unabomber well into the 21st Century. In response to questions
handwritten notation "Dump m Ltncoln" al the bottom.
a hard ume seeil\8 the distinctiOn.
nobody asked, we've already learned about his angutshed brothAccording to Newsweek, thts sack contamed s~tl, W()od, metal,
"That's crazy," he satd. "Where were these people when they were flush- er, liis pen pal, hts brief academic career and even briefer lo~e
screws and bolts -- all secured with a rubber,band. Hu11. '· '
ing thts stuff through my system?"
hfc. '
I have a cigar box full of seven guitar picks, nine dice, three
Ohto is not among the 36 states with laws allowmg medicinal use of mar"
Last week we learned that Ted Kaczynski got a hatrcut. Some
mmiature screwdrivers, a small padlock (no key) , a broken
ijuana, usually for very specific medical condiuons under a physictan's strict newspapers carried pictures of him witll his new do.
magnifymg glass, a deck of cards and a yellowed postcard of an
supervision. And federal law prohibits it; anyway
Tliis IS all fascinating stuff, and I'm sure these informauon
.outstzed Jacbabbit wtth antelope horns postmarked "Laramie,
· But at .least anecdotal evidence points to marijuana's effectiveness tn nuggets will go a long way toward preventing this son of thing
Wyoming." But if you thmk I'm gomg to hop a Greyhound to
dealing w1,th a number of ailments m additiOn to chrome pain. Among them. from happening agatn.
·
Laramie to dispose of these items. you 've got another thtnk
glaucoma, anhrtlls, multiple sclerosis, epilep&amp;y and nausea stemmmg from
Most intriguing to me, as a casual obJeCtive observer, has been
commg.
cancer treatments.
'
,
the media and law enforcement's obsession with the alleged
I wonder how Kaczynskt's belongings would do tf Sothcby·~
• Asbury said he ts trying to get in to see a doctor wh!l can prescribe Mari- Unabomber's shack.
got hold of them. The famous auctioneers have done pretty well
no!, a synthetic form of the active mgredient in mariJuana.
The feds spent days ponng over the IOx 12 box he called
by Jackie Onassis. As of Tuesday ntght, they ·d sold closCLo 4.5
· But unhke the mariJUana he grew for free m hts back yard, MarinoI would home The amount of matenal that came out of there was incredmtllion bucks wonh of her thmgs -- mcludmg peacock pa ttern
cost hundreds of dollars a month. Asbury's only insurance is Medtcare, tble, hke the thousand clowns spilling out of a tiny circus car.
de~sen plates, a grand ptano, plus President John Kennedy's nld
whtch does not cover prescription drugs.
There were three typewriters, bombs, their makmgs, chemtcals, guns, humtdor and rocker. It's qutte the rummage sale: Her stuff is JUmpmg off the
"The drug compantes are laughing all tile way to the bank," he said.
mantfestoes. index cards, books, maps of San Franc1sco, lists of potenttal shelves.
.
'
targets,
tools,
anti-depressant
medicine
..
there's
a
34-page
list
with
700
I.
don't
know
what
the
hm
p&lt;lllot
would
pay
for
Kaczynski's
Sa"lsonit~
'
items on it.
briefcase containing degrees from the Umverstty of Washmgtpn, 011 why,Jii:
But where did he put tt? My apanment is three times as big as his shack, kept these· things. Would his blue-ztppcred swcatshtn and plastic glasses
and I never have enough room.
,
(perhaps the very outfit that inspired the origtnal pohce sketches!) start a
· Today ts Tuesday, Apnl 30, the 121 st day of 1996. There are 245 days left
What tf authonties exammed my heaps of junk? The table piled high wtth Qtdding war?
tri lhe year.
business cards, for example: There might be something sinister in that. AITI
Just last week, a video crew came to my house to tall\! some of my .com;
Today's Highlight in Htstory:
.
I looking for employment from them, or hatching revenge plots? There's the mentaries.
1
On Apnl 30, 1945, as Russian troops approached his Berlin bunker, A~olf broken fax machme I keep under my bed, tile major stack of back issues of
They'd lately come from taping Jessica Dubroff's takeoff, and had
t~itler committed smcide along with his wife of one day, Eva Braun One
Wired magazme (why?), and-- most alanningly .. the dozen or so jars.of brought me a souvenir baseball cap. It reads "je~ica Whitney Dubroff, Sea
'li(eek la\er, Germany surrendered unconditionally, endmg Hitler's Thtrd mustard I have m my ll'frigetator
.
to Shining-Sea, April 1996." By the ttme the crew left my house, Jessica
,. :~ICh .
1 have honey mustard, yellow mustard, wine mustard, hot mustard, gray Dubroff was gone.
. 1
••• •• On thts date.
mustard -- where dtd .they ,;;ome from? Did I buy .them? Why would I?
•Well, there 's afi~her item for my pile: Where do I put 11 all? What does
::: In 1789, George Washington took office m New York as the first presiI have nothmg agamst mustard, but how many Jars do you need when you 11 all ll)ean? The thtngs of a bomber, a nch woman, a dead gtrl, a cynic: .J
:~tnt of the United States.
..
.
only put mustard on ham sandwiches and you only make a. ham sandwtch guess everything is of value to somebody. Everybody"wants a ptece of somel
•! • In 1803, the United States purchased the LouiSiana Temtory from France. once or twice a )'ear?
,
thing.
. ,
!•: In 18 '2.. Louisiana became the 18th state of the Union.
Maybe whenever I lose a sock at the laundromat (or wherever they van(To receive • complimentary lan Shoal•• newal-r, call1-8fi0.989-DUCK or
ish from), a jar of mustard appears.
write Duck'• Breath, 408 Broad St, Nevada Clly, CA 95959.) '!'" Shoalea Ia a ayn,
;:: In J900( Hawaii was orgamzed as a U.S. territory.
This mustard business is at least as mystertous as this, found in Kaczyn- dlcated writer for Newapaper Enterprlaa Aaeoclatlon.
,
::: In 1900~-engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones of the Illinois Central Ratl·~d was killed in a wreck near Vaughan, Miss., after staying at the controls
:01- an effort to save th'e passengers.
:•: In 1939, the New York· World's Fair, billed as a look at "t""" world of
:~orrow," officially opened
.
.
·:·In 1945, "Anhvr Godfrey Time" made its debut on the CBS radto netWhen Fauziya Kasinga first arrived in the
Kasinga
escaped,
tion Servtce issued guidelines that fonnally rec:~rk.
'
United States, she thought her fight witll oppres- ' finallY arriving in the
ogntze gender-related crimes. -- such as rape;
: •: In 1947, President Truman stgned a measure officially changing the name sion was over.
land of the free and the
domestic violence and genital mutilatiOn -- as
:e(BoulderDam to Hoover Darn.
•
The young woman from Togo. then 17. asked home of the brave. But
grounds for political asylum. A victory for Kasfnl
ga could make this binding.
·
~
•: • In 1948, the Organization of American States held Its first meeting, in for political asylum when she arrived at Newark instead of finding 'freeB~gota, Colombia.
.
.
.
International Airpon in 1994. Kasinga Hed her dom, she was sent to a
As well it should. The issue of whether th~
In 1970, President Nixon announced the United States was sending native country to avoid a ritual practice called ' maximum-security
United States can condemn other cultures fof
feJflale genital muttlation,. Though it is often prison. In the following
tlleir tribal •practices is admittedly a difficult one.l
troops mto Cambodia, an action that sparked widt:Sp~ protest.
In 1973, President Nixon announced the resignations of his aides H.R. called female circumcision, FOM has more in months she was, at variBut it IS not cultural imperialism to offer shelter td
ijaldeman and John Ehrlichman, along with Attorney General Richard G. common with castration than the removal of a ous
times,
stripa woman who opposes these practices herself}
Kleindienst and White foreskin. li is perfonned so that women will not searched, shackled, tear·
By Sara Eckel who wants only to protect her freedom and he~
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , House counsel John Dean.
feel sexual pleasure, and will thus not be tempted gassed and beaten. In
body.
.
August of 1995, she W3li denied asylum by PennUnfortunately, even tf Kasinga wins her case~
In 1975, the Soutll Viet- to leave their husbands.
•
namese capital of Saigon
The World Health Orgamzation estimates that sylvfllia Judge Donald V. Ferlise.
the e.ffectiveness of this .preced~rtt will be virtual-l
fell to Communist forces as I 00 million women and girls have undergone
"1 don't tnow what I did to deserve this," a ly wtped out by the antt-terronsm btll that Presi-'
President Duong Van Minh female genital ' mutilation. Wttllout anestllesia, a despairing Kasinga told Santa Sandosham ,of dent Clinton stgned recently.
~
announced an uncondition- young woman's clit9ris is removed with a sharp Equality Now, a New York-based human rights
Unless thts law is repealed, asylum seekers!'
al surrender.
instrument, such as a piece of broken glass or an group.
'
will no longer have the right to an appeal if their
1 12-l~\!.~
Ten years ago: The Soviet old razor. Sometimes all of her external genitals
"It was really hard to g~t her out of that state initial plea is denied-- a plea that could begin arid:
'· WI\~N I'! WA'S
Union released a photo- are removed and, to ensure that she remains of depression, to remmd her of what a commend- end in an atrport immigration office. In other~
~ ~'( &amp;t~l-.
graph of tile damaged Cher- chaste until marriage, the young woman's vulv~ is able thing she has done," says Sandosham.
• words, if this law had been, in effect wiJen Kasin-~
nobyl
nuclear
plant,
and
sewn
up,
with
a
small
hole
left
for
urlnatio~
and
Now,
after
more
than
,
a
year
behind
bars;
ga originally pleaded for asylum, slie would hlive:
\.11&lt;£ ~accused Westetn news menstruation. .
,
KaS1nga has Jleen released on bond. But h'er strug- been;depOI'Ied long ago.
•
organizations
of
spreading
The
practice,
widely
performed
in
many
gle i~ not over.
·
F~uziya Kasinga is not the first woman to seek~
ME·.
false rumors of tllousands African' nations, frequently leads to serious infecHer asylum case i~ scheduled to go before the refuge from genital mutilation, nor will she be the•:
'foor
of deaths, saying only two lions, painful sex and labor, infertility and even Boaid of Immigration Appeals on May 2. Her last. If the United States is truly dedicated 10 lib-t
I
death.
people had died.
la:-vYer, ~~n ~usalo 'of the International. Human erty and j~tic:e for all, it will grant Kasinga asy·~
Five years l!go: An esti- • Fauziya Kasinga was spared from tllis proce- Rights Chruc, wJil have to prove that Kasinga has l~m. and 11 wtll ensure that women in similar sit'~
mated 125,000 peqple died dure because het father, a,powerful businessman, been persecuted because she is a ~embet of a par-.. u!llions are given the chance to eseape such per-~
as a cyclone struck the disapproved of it. tlut when he died in 1993, ticular social g~p .. ~omen .m .the Tcharnb8 sec ution.
·
=
South Asian counll')' of , Kasinga's mother was banished from their tribe, Kunsuntu who restst genttal muulauon •• and that
Readers who are interested in joining the cam-''
Bangladesh. Former Mass- the Tchamba Kunsuntu, and tile teen-ager was put the Togolese government has been unwilling or paip for Fauziya Kasinga can call &amp;j'uality Now:
...,. ' at (800) 253-9539.
··
·
~
achusetiS Sen. Paul Tsongas in tile care of her father's sister. The aunt prompt- unable to help her.
.
wins,
it
could
set
a
historic
,_,..._
...
lcblla
•
"''
a
r
c
now
11
t
-;•
announced his bid for the ly arranged for Ka5inga's circumcision,' as well as · If Kast·,.a
1
··e
r--- priM .._,,_. n lend
•
..
•
•
Democratic presidential for her marriage to a 45-year-old man who had dent for women seeking ~ylum in the United w.ne~ap:.:.::!:.-=z.-.....=~;-or:,
Staies. LaSt year, ~ Immigt'lltion and Naturalize·
"
~.
nomination.
three other wives.
'·
I
•
'

111 Court St., Pomet oy, Ohio
614-912·2156 • Fax: 912-2157

.2,

~ legis-lature: Morphine
~ror pain? Maybe.

-Marijuana? Forget it

PEOPLE
USED
IRRITATE. ME ...

LAID OFF

·obs.e ssion with alleged Unabomber's shack.

has

Today in history

Kasinga case could set hi.s toric precedent

Berry's World

I

""*'lor

..

•

A4(;uWeor.~ forecasc

Rampage suspect is .charged with murder .
By GEOFF IPENCEA

would draw his auentiQII and he •d
shoot," Ol$011 told The Anocieted
Press today.
"There were no heroes in there.
There were people cowerina, hopina
they wouldn't be his next taraet."
The couple hid behind a small blf.
rier. At one point, Olson peered over
the top and was hit by small pieces
of shrapnel. He managed to escape
out a backdoor. Mrs. Olson, 49, was
not injured.
"I looked inside the restaurant and
saw bodies lying all over. My wife
saw much more. She doesn't want to
talk about."
Hospital officials said they have
received death threats from people
upset that Bryant is being eared for.
Some have demanded that doctors
and nurses stop treatment.
Overnight someone · painted " an
eye for an eye" on a hospital wall.
"There is a lor of anger against
what has haptiened," said Lindsay
Pyne, the hospilal's chief executive
officer "It is quite ~isturbing for
staff" who have been looking after
Bryant, he satd.
Australia has declared a national
day of mourning on WednesCiay;
Tasmania has asked the rest of tile
country to observe a minute of
silence tn tribute to those slain.
Acquatntances have described
Bryant as a strange man given to
mood swings and vtolent behavior.
"You could write a book about tile
fellow. He had three or four different
personalities," said Barry Featherstone .. a former neighbor. "He went
from a normal person to a kid and
obviously now he's a Rambo."
Other members of the Featherstone family said he would change
from JOVial to angry within seconds
for no apparent reason : once inviting
them over for a fnendly cup of tea
and then threatentng to shoot them.
Police said Bryant has no crimtnal
record, but had a history of psychological problems.
The loner with long blond hair,
bright blue eyes and flush red cheeks
had few fnends and was dogged by
tragedy.
A woman in her 50s, Helen Harvey, became his constant but domineenng compamon tn the late 1980s.
She employed htm as a gardener but

AIIOClalld ........ Wlllwr
HOBART, Australia - Burned
from a fire he act and too weak to
attend court, the man IC(;Used of
killing 35 people at a Tasmanian
tourist site Jay in liis hospital bed
today while he was fonnally charged
with murder.
Martin Bryant, 28, was charged
, IND.
witll one counl of murder. Police said
additional chqes would follow.
.. .
During a brief hearing closed to
reporters,
Judge Peter Dixon asked
...
~ Bryant whether he was guilty or inno. cent, police said. Bryant dtd not enter
a plea.
Dixon ordered tile Hoban man to
be held in custody and to appear in
coun on May 22. If. convicted, he
could face life in prison. Australta
'·
does not have a dealh penalty.
W.Vk
Bryaot has been under heavy
police guard in Royal Hobart Hospital smce he was captured on Monday
following a shooting rampage at Port
Anhur, a colonial prison site 30
miles south of Hoban.
Police accuse Bryant of gunning
•••
down tourists ranging in age from 3
to 72 on Sunday, then setttng fire to
an inn at the end of an all-night
standoff with hundreds of officers on
Monday.
Three hostages had been inside the
bed and breakfast. Police today found
By The A11oclated Pren
·Tonight...Mostly cloudy nonheast the last of their bodies in the charred
Drier air was moving into Ohio with a few spnnkles early. Panly rubble, rai&amp;ing the death toll to 35.
Bryant surrendered and drop(!ed
behind a cold front today. Forecast- cloudy elsewhere early but then
hts
high-powered weapons only after
ers sai~ Hooiling caused by heavy becoming mostly cloudy. A chance of
h1s
clothes caught fire. He was hosrains ori~onday should substde.
showers west after midnight. Lows
pitahze&lt;\
with burns to his back and
But an approaching .low pressure 35tn 45.
1
system could produce more ram 9n
Wednesday ... Variable cloudmess buttocks.
The doctors said Bryant, who had
Wt;dnesday, the National Weather with a chance of showers. Highs 55
been
under sedation followmg his f
Service sa~d, ·
to 65.
arrest,
is in satisfactory condition.
Tempetatures will remain cool
Extended forecast:
with lows tonight 35-45 and'highs on
Thursday...A chance of showers. They judged him too weak to attend
Wednesday nlostly in the 50s.
LOws from the m1d 30s to around 40. a regular coun hearing.
Thtrteen people wounded in the
The record-high temperature .for fflghs m the 50s to aroul)d 60 south.
thts date at tile Columbus weather ...Fri.day ... A chance of showers. attack were bemg treated at the same
station was 89 degrees in 1942 while , Lows in the upper 30s and lower 40s. hospital; five of them were in serious
condition. Five others, tncluding
· the record low was 30m 1971 . :5un- • Highs 55 to 65.
set tonight will be at 8:25 p.m. and
·Saturday... Achanc~: of rain. Low\, Dennis Olson, 54, of Vancouver,
sunrise Wednesday at 6:31 a.m.
m' the upper'30s and ln.wer 40s. Highs Wash., were discharged from tile hos. pita! with minor mjuries.
Weather forecast:
m the 60s.
Olson and his wtfe, Mary were in
hne at a_cafe when shots rang out.
"Evetybody hifthe ground. It was
really
q(\iet because people had tile
COLUMBUS (AP)- Indiana-Ohio direct hog prices at selected bU)'tng
'
f
eehng
that if you say anything you
' points Tuesday by tile U.S. Depanment of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents to 1.00 higher; demand moderate on
a moderate run.
,
,
U.S. 1-2, 22().260 lbs. 48.00-50.50, few 47.50 and 50.75-51.00; plants
50.01).51.50, few 52.00.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- State police are investigating the death
U.S, 2-3, 23().260 lbs. 41.5().47.50.
of
a
worker at the Inco Alloys International plant.·
Sows: steady
Carl
E. Watson, 53, of Willow Wood, Ohto, was killed Monday in the serU.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 31 00·35.00; 500-650 lbs. 35.00-38.00, few 39.00.
vice center deparunent.of the plant. .
,1
,
,,
Boars: 28.00-30.00. '
'~tS9n
was
loading,
a
coil
of
wire
onto
a
flatbed
trailtr,•when
the wheels
Estimaled receipts: .39,000. ·
slipped
off
as
he
attempted
to
back
up,
satd
!nco
spokeswoman
Jean
Neal
Prices from Tbe Producers Livestock Assodalion:
The
fork
truck
toppled
off
the
trailer
onto
a
concrete
floor,
she
said,
pin, , Cattle: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00 htgher.
ntng Watson beneath the fork.truck.
Slaughter steers: choice 50.00-57.45; select 32.5().52.00.
Depanment employees and the company emergency response team
Slaughtel heifers: cho1ce 46.75-54.35: select 39.00-51.00.
.
respo~ded
immediately, Neal said . The paramedic on duty at tile plant tried
Cows: steady to 2.00 higher; all cows 39.75 and down .
to
revive
Watson
but was unsuccessful.
Bulls: steady to 2.00 htgher, all bulls 41.00 and down.
Watson,
a
26-year
employee, was the first worker fatality in more tllan
Veal calves: steady; choice 120.00 and down.
~
17 years, Neal said
Sheep and lambs: N/A; choice wools 85.00 and down; cho1ce chps 89.00104.00; aged sheep 39.00 and down.
MICH.

..

. 1~:§:]59· .
·t·l'-=

:Rain remains in picture
fo·r area .on Wednesday

,Today's . livest~ck report

Worker's death probed

·Prosecutor eyes report
Sheppard killing suspect
.made Con,fesS"IOn "In ,83
. CLEVELAND (AP) _A prosecutor looking into the renewed mvesligation of the Marilyn Sheppard
murder in 1954 says he will review
k statement by a nurse that a man
confessed ~o the crime in 1983.
• "We have to go over the finer
potnts and find out the basis of her
recoUectwn of the incident and find
out why she carne forward," Carmen
Marino, Cuyahoga County's , first
assistant prosecutor, said Monday.
·· He was not present when Kathte
Collins, 3'1, dfFionda, met last week
wtth an attorney and an investigator
from the prosecutor's office to tell
them about a conversauon she had
with Richard Eberling about Dr. Sam
Sheppard and the killing .
Marino Said there is not enough
~vidence t.; support charging anyone

" _____;;..___.;;...;
· -;;;...;,·.,;·"i·
•

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS %13-!160)

Several personnel contracts have
been .renewed by the Meigs county
Educational Servtce Center.
·
·
~
At a recent meeting the board rewtth the murder.
employed the following personnel to
But as pan of Sheppard case, a two year contracts: Lynley Carey,
DNA expert will compare the com- , mulu-handicapged teacher, Donna
position of blood samples collected Grueser, office assistant; Joseph
from the murder scene to blood tak- Mayhew, school psychologist; and
en from Eberling recently.
lena Tenoglia, speech/language
Eberling said in a coun filing that patllologist
he was made to give a blood sample
The followmg personnel were
against h1s wtll for the mvestigation. also rehired by the board· Sheila
He has demed killed Marilyn Shep- Hashman, three-year contract, early
pard
childhood handicapped teacher; ManEberling's attorney, David ning Kl6es, contmuing contract,
Doughten, d1d not return phone calls attendance officer.
placed to his office seektng his comCounty " Superintendent John
lllent Monday.
Rtehel Sr. reported that the county
Co111ns said she recalls speaking academic excellence banquet will be
to Eberhng at the home of Ethel May held Tues.day, May 7 at 7 p.m. at
Durkin tile Lakewood woman whom · Meigs Htgh School. Rtebel also
Co lim; cared for and later was con- announced Allison Gerlach of Meigs
victed of ktlhng.
Eberhng was broughr to Cleveland from Onent Correctional lnsti- Dance announced
A square dance will beheld at the
tution in Pickaway County where he
Tuppers Platns VFW Saturday, 8 to
is serving a life seriteiice
II p.m , Smoky Mountain Dnfters to
play, J.B. Wilson caller wtth other
guest callers. Refreshments and door
prizes.
Am.Eie Power .......................40'6

Announcements

Stocks

Published every afternoon, Monda~ throup
Fnday, Ill Coun St , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Oino Valley Publi1hing CompanyiOnnneH Co ,

Akzo ........................................58

O~lo 4l769, Ph. m-21$6. Secoad
clas~ po1taJt l)l:ld al Pomeroy, Otl~

, Pomoroy.

Alhlend 011 ...........................41'!.
ATI:T .......................................&amp;1
Bank One .............................34\
Bob Evens ............................15'!.

Mtlltba': The AUOCiared PreU. anJ the Ohio

, Newspaper Auociaaion.

Send-.•

Borg-Warner .........................311'1.

fosTM.u'niR:
c:otree!lana to
The Daily Sendnel. Ill Court St., Pomeroy,

Chllmplcin Ind .................. ,......18

Charming Shop ......................&amp;'&amp;

Ollio4Sl69

City Holding ...... _., ................25~

SUIISCIIIPTION RATIIS

o.e-.IIJConltr•-.. ....................... ................. .$2.00
' ·o.e v.. ,.. ......:............................... $104.00

Federll Mogui ..............;..........1SI

O.nnetl .................................68~

'ane Maatbc.................................... .. .s8.7o

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Goodyellr T6R ......................51'!.
K-mart ...................................1o\
Lal'ldl Ehd .............................18\

SINGLB COPY PBICI

Umltttd lhc.. ...........................2~
Peopl• B•ncorp...................23

'Dol"'
.................. ..... :.......,..r ..;...::... 3!~ Conti
•7

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. _ . , . no~'dellrinato t&gt;OY lite corrier titay
Ohio Valley Benk ....................40
- • In .........,... Ut The lloi\Y Sentinel ~.. Oa Velley .......................... ,•.. ~31' ,
a-a three. six or 12 rnoedl bull~~ wiD be
1

Educational Service Center
acts on personnel matters

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Htgh School was the recipient of the
Franklin B. Walter Award .
In otller action, the county service
center:
• approved the followmg phystctans to give school bus drive[ exammattons for the 1996-97 school year:
Douglas Hunter, Wilma A. Mansfield, Thomas R. Spencer, James E.
Wttherell.
• approved texthook adopt1on for
Eanh Sctence at Meigs Local and
Bwlogy II·at Southern Local.
• accepted the resignallon of Keith Eubanks as Htgh School ·Severe
Behavior Handicapped Teacher,
effecttve July 31 , 1996
• approved Primerica Financial
Services to offer 403(b) plans to
employees.
The county educatiOnal service
center wtll hold their next meeting
Thursday, May 9, at 7 p.m.

Meigs EMS runs
Umts of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded etght
calls for assistance Monday, includ·
mg five transf~r calls. Units respondmg inclu_ded:

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(Continued from Page 11
"We h ve m an area where we are
cut off above and below by West
Shade Creek," sa1d Spencer. An area
of fill about four-foot deep would
resolve the pro~lem, he addea.
"It comes up fast and goes down
slow," he explamed.
"Put yourself in our situation . 1f
you got an ell)ergency or a fire, you're
a burnout."
Commissioners also met with
Letart Falls landowner Roben Montgomery about the proposed clostng of
an alley in Letan F~lls
Montgomery complamed about
tile slow speed wtth which county
offictals have responded to his
request. He also cnttc1zed the health
department for failing to take actiOn
against a neighboring propeny owner.
Commissioners said they would
get an opinion Monday from Eason
on the closmg and then hold a pubhe hearing 10 days later.
•
In other busmess, commissiOners:
• Met with Greg Sears, pastor of
the Rutland Church of God, who
thanked tile board for taking a person
into the county home recently.
Howard said she appreciat!!S the
work the churches do m the county,
but satd the county can not contmue
to admit people into the home due to
family disputes.
• Approved Peoples Bank: Farm-

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ABG PliOII

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ers Bank and Home Nattonalliank a's
depositones for county funds.
,
• Accepted the sole b1d submmep:
by Asphalt Materials Inc. of Martel: ,
ta for bitummous paving material for
the May.
,
• Approved contracting with Lynn
M. Smith, R.N., for $30Q to provide
'training for Meigs County day-care
providers.
• Paid weekly bills of $78,129.89,
cortststing of 136 entnes.
•,
Present were Hoffman, Howard,
Commissioner Roben Hanenbach,
Clerk Gloria Kloes and County Economic Development Director Julia
Houdashelt.
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IN THE UNITED STATES DI~TRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF Pt:NNSYLVANIA
LAZV Oil. CO., JOHN B. ANDREASSI, THOMAS A. MILLER
OIL CO, ... WYNNEWOOD DRILLING ASSOCIATES, on
beboJC ol-a&lt;Jv., .,. 1111 ...... •bnllutr sltllll&lt;d,
Pblrtllll's,

~.

WITCO CORPOIIATION, QUAKER STATE CORPOJIATION,
QUAKER STATE OIL REflNING CORP, PENNZOIL
COMPANY, ... PENNZOIL PRODUCTS COMPANY,

Del........

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Chll Adlon
!14·110 Erie

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SUMMARY NOTICE OF PARTIAL Sm'LEMENT OF
CLASS ACTION AND SETILEMENT REARING
p!XjAIDJNG Pf.NN GIAQE AND AfPAI.ACHIAN CJIIDE 011.

TOt ALL PERSONS WHO SOLD PENN GRADE CRUDE DIRECTLY TO ONE
OR MORE OF THE DEFENDANTS DURING THE PERIOD JANUARY 1, .
1911 TO JUNE 30, 1995 (EXCLUDING THE DEFENDANTS, THEIR ·
PARENTS, SUBSIDIARIES AND AmLIATES).
.

Vetel'lliiS

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Commissioners will tackle ...

Hospital·news ·

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SMALL .
WANT ADS

(Continued from Page 1)
In a letter to the commtssionefs.
to support preservation ol the htstonc Parker said "the Ohto Htstonc Presersite
vauon Office is ready to do eve~Nearby land owners have received thing they can to help p,reserve thts
letters from the company informing battlefield and develop it. They ha~e
them of their intent 10 begin mining asked me to gather support from the
operations, Parker said The proper- residents of Meigs County, the Pori~
ty owned by the company is mostly land community, orgamzattons and.
encompassed by State Route 124, tile our elected officials... resolutiohs
battlefield monument and Bald and letters of support are to be direc,t~
Knob-Stiversville Road. Some of the ed to Amos J. Loveday, Ohio Histori~
property is located between 124 and Preservation Office, 567 E. Hudson
the Ohto R,iver.
St., Columbus Ohio 43211."
"Right off, 1 want to emphastze
Parker said future presidentl
that we are not opposed 10 the grav- Rutherford Hayes and William
el companies mining gravel, we are McKinley were panicipants in tile
only voicing opposition to it being, battle.
•
mined on the Buffington Island bat"We want the public's suppon,"
tlefield site," Parker said.
Parker said
•
"It would destroy somethmg that
She wrote· "If we lose this are~\
would be there for eterntty," she we have lost an indelible pan of our
added.
hentage: Morgan's Ratd and the BatThe historical society attempted to tie of Buffington Island touched tlie
secure a grant to conduct an archae- lives of almost every Meigs Counlological survey of the battlefield, but ian living at that time.
was demed.
"We owe preservation of this haH
Meanwhile, the historical soctety lowed ground to those men who
is encouragmg Portland area rest- fought and dted in the name of fre~·
dents and others to write letters in . dom, not only during the Battle &lt;;&gt;f
support of the battlefield.
Buffin~ton Island, but in the thou~
"We can't do it ourselves any- . sands of other battles fought dunng
more" Parker satd "We don't have the CIVIl War and all the other war§
~ tiln!' to ~.9ntjn.ue ,what Vf~:re .. 1 ,~_e~~a,ns h~ve fought and di\:11 jn:•
doing"

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A hesniJ 1111 be&lt;DICMduled lot JuDO 13. 1996, M9:~ a.m. ill COU!1room A Mlho United SIMa
CourthouH, 611 Stile Streel, Erie. Peonsyl•llla 16501 to couidw appro"llll of a Clau Actioa
S - t ta llle 111DJ11111 of $4,400.000.00 with dolotttllllll Qulbr SUie Colpont;Qtt ud Qull:a SIMa
OlltWlttid Corp. &lt;\1 the s-iaa. the Coli'! will dotemiae wltdher Ut """"''" the Seal....,. "' flir,
....IIIII to illd " " - ' If tho ScaieiiiOII ~ ttpprv•ed. tho ctma A&lt;:tioD- lpla&amp;tlhe QuoU.defeadlotJ will be dismisled wllh prejudice. The Coutt wRI alao COIIidet Plliatitrt' Coutael'l
IJIPII- for ultttorim ....n ol .. llia~trMhe ud lltlpllott ..... _ . 'lbil Notice il ODIJ • lllrmJII')'. If JOU . . . rnenmer or the 0.. IDd did DOt rtelive u. delailecl
Notice of Partial Seulemeal or Cl• Aelio1 ud Setalement HNri11 Rtprdlaa Pean Grade ud

,AJIPihd'iln CrudeOI.I, you llll)'ftl9*lOMbywridlllO!

Io ro Peoo Grode o..te Oil LiliiMit&gt;•

BlnLIR, UDmCBA s.utTA, LLP.
P. 0. lo•t470
.
\ Phll.ldelpltla."" l9105-tc70
PU!ASI!DO Nllf CXlNI'ACI'ntl! coutn' OR niB aJ!IIIt'S OFRC&amp; •
Doud: Apri130,1996
~- A.lln&lt;b, Clerk

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Histor.ical society fears

. II :33 a.m., South Founh Avenue,
Emory Gordan, Vete1ans Memorial
Special meeting set
Hospital;
Lebanon Township Trustees w1ll
6:39 p.m., Nonh Second Avenue,
'meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in special Rose Barnhouse, VMH.
sesston at the townshtp building.
POME~OY
'
6:05 p.m., Page Street, Chester
SHS Class or 1986
Hutton, VMH.
· The Southern High School Class
RUTLAND
of 1986 will meet ThurSday, 7 p.m.
II :03 a.m., Whites Hill Road,
at the home of Dixie Wolfe, Racine, Walter Haggy, Pleasant Valley Hosto discuss its upcoming 'dass n:union. pital.
For more infonnation, call949;2176.

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said.
Some described Bryant as a pleasant but strange person, others said
they found him frightening.
One man in his class at school in
the 1980s said Bryant did not "interact well with people" .and rarely displayed his emotions.
"He was very much a loner. He
was always very neutral in expression," The Australian newspaper
quoted the classmate as saying.
Others said he had a strange love
of animals.
He and Miss Harvey had a

MIDDLEPORT

Memorial
Monday
·
admissions
- Cora ,F.
Rockwell ................................58
.
Robtalna a Myert .................t ..3p. Jewell, Pomeroy:
No •lttcrlpdoa by 111111
Ia ....,
Royll Duteh/Shell .............. 1.42~
Monilay discharges - none.
...,l!afteCII'rier~ l,mi~
Shoney'&amp;lnC,ooooooouoooo••oooooo•:o11~
Holzer Medical Ceoter
MAJLSUIICIUP'J'I()fe
i f StarI Bank ...............................&amp;~\
Disc:bal'les
AprU Z!l - Keith
.
Werldv lr1t'l..............................18
1...,.,...... c...,
Harper,
Danile
Day, Sandra Saun.............,.................................$27.!0
Worthington Ind................... 20'1.
13 ders, Frances Majors, Douglas Blair,
'26 v.w.........."........................... ...,. .. $51.12: '
-·-·, - ..............................................Sttl!.56 , ·
Sloc:k ,.Porte an the 10:30 Della Tribble, ·
Jlirtb- Mr. and Mrs. Billie Hol$29.25
by Adveet
',zt ......................... ...................$!6.61
ley, daughter, Bidwell. • · 1
n -...............................................StO!I.n j 1111........ ................11111,..8. 11111
{Publlllbecl'witlt (lel'llliltl!on)

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soon asked him to live with her Qll 1me~erie of c.w, dol•. bitdt and
her farm in Coppins. 2.5 miles north ' pip, and many of them lived in the
of Port Arthur.
cluttered, antiques-filled rannhouie.
In 1992, she died in a car crash A trained pig used to sleep on his beG.
that left Bryant with head injuries. He Two miniature ponies regularly Ill in
tnherited her money and several the back seat of Miss Harvey's car.
homes she owned.
Copping residents said Bryut
A year later his father committed and Miss Huvey were i~
suicide at the farm. Neighbors said and that she frequently lavished gtfts
they .were alarmed to see Bryant non- on him.
. '•
chalantly cutting the grass minutes
" She told us she had looked aCtfr
after being told his father had him for years, that she was like :a
drowned.
mother to him and that his parents,
• Bryant later moved off the fann, couldn't handle him," Veina Featl)began collecting firearms and was erstone said. "She used to calm hi !II
never the same again, acquaintances down."
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·sports

Th~

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Daily Sentin.,!}
Tuesday,

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• . AVOIDS TAG • Chicago's Mark Grace evades the tsg by los
: : Angeles' Chad Fonville during flr81 inning action at Dodger Sta: · dium in LA t,llonday night. Grace hit a single to left field and
·; advanced-to second on an error by third baseman Mike blowers.
:; The Dodgers won, 10-4. (AP)
•

he continues to battle back from an a singl~ .
Roby was the staner and loser for
arm injury went the .first six and a
third innings, George finished up to Nelsonville with help from Schultz
'
pick up the save. 1be two combined and Caner. The three combined
to
to scatter six hits, strikeout eight and give up nine hits, walk two and the
walk six.
.three failed to strike out a batter.
Hoover led Meigs at the plate with Wickham had a double and a single
two singles and a double, Stanley to lead the Buckeyes. Roby, Smath·
added a single and a doubl~. Cleland. ers and Sullivan added singles.
two singles, Burton a double and Ault
Meigs will host Ravenswood on
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·The Run for
the Roses

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; Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda said he considered giving Mondesi
6 game off, but decided against it.
: " It's like a snowball going down!1ill." Lasorda said. "The funher
dow n the hi II it gets. the bigger it
£cts. You try to derail it: t~erc are all.
aiffcrent ways. We tho!'ght the best
thing was for him to play thmugh it."
Jsmael Valdes (2- I) allowed four
run s and six hit s in seven -plus
innin gs. His ERA jumped from a
league -lead1ng 2. I2 to 2.4 I.
Fosler gave up six runs.and seve n
hits in fi ve in nings. One run was
unearned .

Mets 3, Expos 2
John Franco became the first lefthander with 300 saves, and Pete Harnisch f2, I) held baseball's top-hitting
team to three hits and an unearned
run in seven innings.
Franco got his fifth save of the
season and his third in three games.
It.came exactly 12 years after his first
save, with Cincinnati on April 29.
1984.
Lance Johnson drove in two runs
and Rey Ordonez went 2-for-3 to
extend his hitting streak to 14 games.
Jeff Fassero (1-3) gave up three
runs and seven hits in six innings for
visiting Montreal,
Padres 2, Astros 0
Joey Hamilton (5-I) pitched a
four-hitter to become the first fivegame winner in the major leagues,
and Luis LopeJ hit his first home run
since July 5, 1994 . .
San Diego. off to its best start ever
at 17-9, won for the seventh time in
nine games .
Fonner Padre Doug Brocail (1-2)
allowed two runs and five hits in seven innings at Jack Murphy Stadium.
1Braves 4, Cardinals 1
Tom Glavine (2-3) won for the
first time in five starts and Fred
McGriff had two RBis as Atlanta
compl~ted a three-game sweep at St.
louis.
. The Cardinals lost their founh
straight. and for the seventh time in
eight games.
Glavine allowed one run and seven hits in 7 2-3 innings. and Mark
Wohlers finished with hitless relief
for his sixth save in six chances.
Todd Stottlemyre (1-2) allowed
four runs and five hits in seven
innings.

Scoreboard
New York
Toronlo

Detroi1 •
BOSIC~Il

/Ill Timts EDT

Cle\·c;Jand
Ch icago

EaSI Di..-i!iton

W

L Pet. GB

M o n~nl

17

9 .654

--

~tlanl.a

15
13

II .577

2

A orKI:l
'Ctntral Divtsion

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II
10

10 .565 2 tn
tl .458 5
16 .385
7

W

L Pd. GB

tJ
14
12
14
" . 14
9
IS
13
12

€ h1cago
' St. Loui s
11tttsburt;h
¢ inc1nnati
INnl Division

San

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I

.462
I
.440 1
.375
3

m

GB
12 .520 J In

!7'
13

rrom ci~co

.500

L Pet.
9 .654

"'

San D1cgo
L;o~ An~elc~

14 .481 41/2
13
• I I · 13 .458
5
Colorado
Sunday's Gamrs
New York 7. Pittsburgh 5
Phil!ldclphia nl Cincin n ~ti . ppd., ruin
. Mootreal 21. Co lorado 9
' Chicago). Lo~ Angela 0
Hou ~ l on 3. S3n Diego 2
Scm Fronc1!iCO 10. Florida 4
tctlanla al Sl. Loui.t, ppd.• r:lln
!Yionday'5 Gamrt:
. ~n Diego 2. Houston 0
,\l bnla .a. 51. Loo i ~ I
Nc ~~o· York J. Momreal 2
Los An gt!lc~ 10. Chicago 4
Thtsd11y '5 Gomts
.
l't11 ladelphm ( Wi lliam~ 1). I ) a1 Aorida (Rnpp 0-3), 7:05
Pjlt
PJII ~butgh (Neagle 2- 1) a1 Cinc innati (Smiley 1-2),
7oJS p.m
Mom real (P.M;artinez
at New York (Clark 1·2).

..

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2tt)

A\lama ISmohz 4-1) 01 H ou~ton (Drabek 0-2), 8:05
p.pl.
SL. Looi~ IAI.Ilcnes J. J) at Chi cago (Bullinger 1-2 ).
81i&gt;5p.m
Ctllor.ldo (R111 2-2131 Los Angele~ {Nomo 3-2). IO:OS

p.m.

10
14
17
19

.S45 1n
.417 3 lfl
_w; s 1n
.240
8

W
15
15
12
12
9

L Pet.
8 .652

Cenfral DiviDon

"ATIONAL LEAGUE

Phil:ldclphia
New York

12
10
9
6

.

S4n Francisco (W:u~on 1-J) :u.San Diego (Tewksbury
J,P). 10:05 p.m.
•

~rdn«day's Gamrs
•
St. Louis (A ndy Benes 1-3) at OUcago (fradlStl 1-

2). 2:20p.m.
Pftilndl:lphia (Hunter 1· 1) nt Aorida (l...ci1CJ'4-I). 7:05

Milwnuktt

Minntsola
K ~m~s City
WtS1 Diwlsion

GB
9 .6ll 1n
11 . ~22
]
12 .500 J 1n
17 J46 1 1n

K3nsas City (Belcher 2-1) at Minnesota (ROdke 3.1). 8:05p.m.
Senule (R.Johnson 4-0) a1 TeW (Oii~er 1.0). 8 : 3~
p.m.
Catiromia (Sandman 0-1) at Oakland (Van Peppel
0-2). 10:35 p.m.

~i~~burgh (Hope 0. I) a1 Cinc innmi (Burba 3· 1), 7:35

p.m.
Momreal (A I ~arez 1-0) ac New York (bri nghooscn

Monday's Sports Traosactloas

1:2). 7:40p.m.
·
A\lnnta {Avery 2- 1) 01Hous1on (Htvnpton 2·2), 8:05

By The Associated Press

p,{ft .

Colorodo (Thompson 1-1) at Los Angt:lel (Astacio
2-2). 10·35 p.m.
Sioi Francis«&gt; (G""""' 2-0)al San Dicg&lt;t(Valenzuel:i
0-1). !0:35 p.m.

American League
A! A Glance
By The Associated Press
All 11m.. EDT
Eli• pt,-islon

Balllmor&lt;

BASE&amp;f.U
Amtriwl Lt1ou&lt;
MINNESOTA fWINs-se.t OF Mitt Lawfbn to Sa

Laic Cily of !he Pacific C0111 Leapc. Recalled SS
Denny Hockina from Sah lake Ciry.
Notlonol Lcope
.
COLOR.u&gt;o ROCKJES-.a.c:atled U1P Mike
fiiiJIICt from Colondo Sprinp of lilt PCL.
ST. LOUIS CARDtNAI.S-Piaoed JB 0,.... Ooetti
on lilt I5-day lioablcd 1isl A&lt;livllled SS oUl. Smilh
from lilt 1~-&lt;loy disabled Ust
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Javier from lhe 15-day disabled liM. ()plioned RHP
Steven Bouratotsto Phoeni11 or the PCL.

Ohio may set another turkey hlirvMt mark
COLUMBUS,(AP) -'I'M Ohio
."ThiS truly was 111 ucepliOIIal
Division of Wildlife said hunters bar- opening week for turkey hunting in
vested a record 7 ,'030 wild"turlteys Ohio," Division Chid Michael
during the ftrst week of this year's Bodzik said.
spring huntini seaSon.
Counties where the most turkeys
The total represented an 18 per· were taken included Jac:kson (328),
cent increase from a year ago, when Gall(a (323), Meigs (308), Vinton
5,962 birds were taken, the agency (279) and Muskingum (276).
said in a news release Mondav.

• POMEROY LODGE N011CE
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM , will hold its regular stated
meeting Wednesday, May 1, 1996, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple. At that time all members present
will be asked to vote o~e request by Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, to merge with Pomeroy.
.
All Pomeroy members are requested to attend and cast their
votes on the proposed merger along with an amendment to the
by-Jaws for a cha,nge of meeting place.
·
Larry Lavender
Trustee/Past Master

and

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Facta and figures
Main track:
One mile oval; 1-mUe chUte
Soli: Sandy loam
Width: At Derby start, 120 feet
Backstretch, 79 feet - •
Stretch, 80 feet
Seeling capacity: 48,500
Stables: 1,404 stalls

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Our All Ready
Reduced

Middlepor
:Department ·
Store

•

Year ffflrse

Undefeated modem era Kentucky
Derby starters:
Pre-Derby Derby
Year Horse

wins

·finish

j'X

1,91 . 88Jr,l .......
3.;_ . tat .
1916 Thunderer
3
5th
1~ · l4.11rvlch
11
'1st
1!)40 Blmelech
8
2nd
i 948 COiitOwn
4 "L 2nd
1953 Native Dancer
11
2nd
1963 Candy Spot.
, 3rd
1963 No Robbery •
5th
1969 llaJelllc 'Prlnee
7
1st
1977 Seattle Slew
6
t st
I .
.
6th
1978 · Sensitive Prince 8
1982 Air Forbes Won
4
7th
1988 Prlvsts Term'!
7
9th
1990 Mister Frisky
16
8th

113 ENlT COURT OTREET
IN HI910RtC DOWNTOWN POMEROY

1995 Thunder_~.C.!! :.,;~ Stsvet11
1994 Go for Gin
McCanon
·Y~r··
· ··"f ..
1QP3 Sea Hero ' , &lt;, ~-.·h~-.;,
1992 Lll E. Tee·
Day
.,1001 Strike the Gold );; ~!Y~'.-;;
1990 Unbridled
Perret
- 9S9 Sl!ndly Sl~ '" V~ ·
1988 Winning Colors (f) Stevens

I

r----------~---~~

Most appearances:

Buchanan (1884), Sir Barton (1919),
Brokers Tip (1933)

Sill Shoemaker (26)
l;ddle Arcaro (21)

COUPON

Pulsar Watches

MoSt wins, tlainer:
Sen A. JOnes (6)

Maiden winners:

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Unbridled's Song suffers foot injury

Grooming &amp; Bath
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By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Home: where we're treated the
best and grumble the most.

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always gel away.

••••
Hard rock: a fate worse than

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CLIP &amp; SAVE

Heard 'about the belligerent : •
stockbroker? He carries a blue ••
chip on his shoulder.

Then, Unbridled's Song was put in
a bar shoe, which has a metal bar
across the open end to keep the foot
from making contact with the ground.
Ryerson sai,d he' expected Unbridled 's Song to run with norinal shoes
in the Derby on Saturday.
"We noticed heat in the left front
after the Wood," Ryerson said. "It's
one of those things that happens. It's
just that the timing was bad. You
don 't want this to happen now, but it
could have been wor.;e. lt1could have
happened right on top of us."

MEIGS CARPET &amp;DECORATING·CENTER

9t.cquisitions
!fineJewe{ry

Early derby favorite

1t, but after a series of stressful
races; this put no stress on him.
"The Aorida Derby was fast, and
that affects a horse. So I'd rather he
ran a slow race and be unspectacular
in the Wood, and then he can run here
like he did in the Florida Derby. "
Ryerson said Unbridled's Song
will have his final workout for the
Derby on Wednesday, and it's bound
to be a very closely observed training session.
Unbridled's Song is one of only
live of an a~ticipated field of20 coming into the Kentucky Derby off a
victory. The others are S~ip Away
(Blue Grass), Cavonnier (Santa Anita Derby), nub's Magic (Arkansas
Derby), and City by. Ni_ght (lexing. ton), each of whom beat at least one
D. Wayne lukas-traintd hor.;e. Lukas
will have a record five horse in the
Derby.

..

Shoemaker ;

Oldest winning owner.

Oldest winning jockey:

off

with coupon

Colint Fleet (1943); Citation (1!148)- $2.80 Frsncea Genter (92)
Donersll (1913)- $184.90
Unbridled, 1990
Youngest.winning jockeys:
Winningest jockeys:
Alonzo Clayton (15)- Azra, t892
Eddie Arcaro (5)
James (Soup) Perkins (15)- Halma, 1895 SUI Hartsck (5)

Bill Shoemaker (54)- Ferdinand, 1986

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t
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70o/o

Derby records
Shortest and longest-priced winners:

.

ALL KIRSH BLINDS

.
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•1~~~r!I!P
. .,.... _... ·.- 'MCCarron
,
.
1986 Ferdinand

.

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COUPON

Jockey

Derby -

ning the Breeders' Cup Juvenile last"
Oct. 28 at Belmont Park. Then , however, he was second in his' first two
stans of his 3-ycar-old seaso~ .
He came back with a 5 3/4-Jength
victory in the Grade I Florida Derb;l
over Editor's Note and Skip Away.
both of whom will stan in the Derby, then held on by I I/2 lengths in
the Wood over In Contention, another Derby. probable.
While
re-establishing
hi s
favorite 's role, the Wood also raised
questions about Unbridled's Song,
woo loped to victory in a relatively
slow I :49 3-5 for I I/4 miles and
allowed In Contention to hang close
to the end.
"You can look at that two ways, "
Ryerson said. "We didn't get the frac tions we expected, and lwas just happy he relaxed alongside that other
hork That let the other horse get into '

ORBAT GIFT FOR· MOM OR THAT SPJ!lClAL GRADUATE.

(f)-filly

( 1995-1986)

Undefeated Derby
starters

GUARDIAN ANGEL C!HARl.V.I
SPECIAL $ 2 5 . 0 0

In·The Sale
Room

ntucky Derby
winners
The largest field to start in
the Derby was 23 in 1974;
the smallest fields were in
1892 and ) 905, whic.h had
three starters
each.

Jtore

••••~• \.&lt;uauuiSe

Stanley showed nashes of old as

LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP)- Kentucky Derby contenders were hoping
w L Pet. GB to find a crack in the armor of UnbriTel;U
8 . .667
- .
16
dled 's Song-. Instead, they found one
Staule
ll
10 .600 I 1n
OaklarwJ
I3 II .S42
l
in hi s foot.
Californ ia
12
II .522 3 In
" This should not compromise
Sunday's Gamn
Kan'O;Is City 9, Boston 7
him at all ." trainer Jim Ryerson said.
Cleveland 17. Toronto 3
"He's worked on it, and he's comOakland 6. Detroit J
New York 6, Minnewro 3
fonable ...
Tt:lns 5. Baltimore 4: 10 inning~
Since he won the Wood MemoriChicago 10, California I
Milw:mkee 16..Seattle 9
al on April I 3 and established himMonda)''s Games
self
as the early Derby favorite,
Scaule al Milwtlllkee:. ppd .. rain
Chicoti!O 4. Califomiot 3Unbridled's Song has worked in a
Baltimore 8, Texa~ 7
protective bar shoe. At first , Ryerson
Minnt:rol.ll II . Knnsa.~ City 6
called the injury a· little cut. Then it
Tuttday's Gamn
Chica11o (Tapani 2-0) at Clevcl;md (Martinez J-2),
was a bruise, then a gouge.
7:('5 p.m.
On Monday. Ryerson admitted it
Detroit fl.Jm:a 0-0) at Bml:on ( Wakef~tld 1-3 ). 7:05
p.m.
. was a "quaner crack or heel crack".
Milwaukee (McDonald J..l) at Toronto (Hcntgen 3as well as an injury to the soft tissue
21.7:35 p.m.
New York (Pettiue 3- 1) m BnltirTIOI"r: (Rhodes 3-0).
in the heel of Unbridled Song's left
7:35 p.m.
front foot.
.
Kan5a.'r City (Vnlern 0-1 ) at Minne5oto £Hawkim f.
0). 8:05 p.m.
And if that's not a crack in UnbriScaule (Bosio 2· 1) at Te"as {Gross 3-2). 8:35p.m.
Cal irornia U..ongston I- ll at Oakl:lnd (Prielo 1· 1). dled 's Song's armor, it might at least
10:05 p.m.
affect the odds on him as the race
Wtdntsday's G•ma
Chicugo (McCa~k.ill 0-1) at Cleveland (McDowell 2· appt'oaj:hes.
I). 7:05 p.m.
Ryerson said blacksmith Bruce
Detroit (Aldred 0-2) at Boston (Clemens 0-4). 7 : 0~
Scott
cut away pan of the hoof before
p.m.
Milwaukee !Kar12-l)·al Toronw~Hanson ~-~H. ?:)~
Unbridled 's Song arrived at -Churchill
p.m.
•
New York(Rogm l.O)at Bnltirn:~«(Wells 2-2), 7:35 Downs last week from New York to
p.m.
·alleviat~ pressure. and the hoof was

The o.tly S1nUnet • Ptlgl 5 •

"'The guys are putting up runs for the tying run on third , and Randy
me, .but 1 just haven't been able to Myers got three outs for his sixth
hold on to a lead," Pavlik said. " I save.
don 't know why."
" We didn 't want to lose a seventh
Neither does Texas manager JCJ!ln- to them," Orosco said. " That would
ny Oates.
have given them momentum for the
" If I had the answer, I'd sit down next time we play them."
for the nut half·hour and explain it,"
Baltimore began its comeback by
Oates said.
scoring three in the third. Texas
Baltimore chipped away at the made it. 7-3 in the fifth when Greer
Tens lead
finally wed't ahead in tripled in a run and scored on a sacthe seventh. Alomar doubled off rifice ny by Mark·Mclemore.
Baltimore closed to 7-6 in the botRick Helling (0-1), stole third and
,tom
of the inning when Devereaux
scoted the t}ling run on Rafael
· Palmeiro's sacrifice fly. Two batters led (lff with a solo bomer aod Surhoff
later, Surhoffhomered over the right· hit a two-run , (wo-out double.
. Gonzalez o~ed the scoring with
field scoreboard .
Jimmy Haynes (1-3) pitched 5 J. his fifth homer, a\ wo-run drive in the
3 innings of three-hit relief, Orosco first off Kent Men;ker. That gave him
retired Rusty Greer in the eighth with 25 RBis, a Rangers record for April.

ilavey Johnson said.
In the only other AL game' Monday, Minnesota beat Kansas City II·
6 and Chicago defeated California 43. The Seattle-Milwaukee game was
postponed by rain.
Surhoff, playing third base this
season for the first time in two years.
made a critical error in the third
inning that helped the Rangers score
three unearned runs . He made
· amends, however, with his sixth
homer of the season and a two-run
double.
Juan Gonzalez homered for the
Rangers, but staner Roger Pavlik
couldn't maintain the 5-0 lead Texas
gave him in the third inning. Pavlik's
ERA swelled to 7.fli after he allowed
six runs in 4 1-3 innings.

.

uisville, Kentucky
rday, May 4, 1996

run.

National League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Orioles
end Rangers J1ex with.8-7 victory
,

;.

hurehill Downs

P,odgers rout Cubs;
!VIets stop Expos 3-2 :Sy The Associated Press
: : II was only a malle~ of time
:before Raul Mondesj started hitting.
: " We hoped wed get out of town
obefore he got hot: · Cubs manager
~ im Riggleman said after Mondesi hit
;,. three -run homer a nd drove in five
tuns Monday ni gh!. lead1ng the Los
:Angel" Dodgers over Ch1cago 10-4.
: Mondesi. in an 0-for-24 sl ump.
;, inglcd in the second off Kevin Fosler and scored the Dodgers first run.
ihcn gave Los Angeles a 5. I lead in
ihe third with his founh homer this
~ca..~o n . Mondc si added a two-run sin);IC off Terry Adams to cap a threerun eight h.
; " Nothing like 1his ever happened
to me " Mondc.i 'a1d. "I was think;ng w~ much. That ne ver happened
io me before, going a whole week
;without a hit."
• Mike Pia;.za added a solo homer
for 1he Dodgers. leo Gomez h1t a
lwo-run homer for visiting Chicago.
: In other NL games, New York beat
Montreal 3-2. San Diego beat Housion 2-0 and At lanta heat St. Louis 4-

' Ulldty,4pril30,1996

BALTIMORE (AP) - The BilltiniOfC Orioles lOOk a risky approach
to finally pin a loss on the Texas
•. Rangers.
•
"Seems like the only way to beat
'·them is to get a lead and blow them
out, or come back to win, " Baltimore 's BJ. Surhoff said .
• Baltimore took the latter method
Monday night. The Orioles rallied
· from a five-run deficit for an 8-7 victory, their first against the Rangers in
,rseven games this season.
'
Surhoff hit the go-ahead homer in
~ the se.venth inning, ruining Texas ' bid
' for .its first four-game sweep in Baltimore since 1972.
"We couldn't let them get out of
town without letting them taste defeat
at least once," Baltimore manager

Wednesday and then will travel to
Gallipolis for 1 double heltder on
Thursday. ·
NHS 011 000 4· 6 6 2
MHS 110 JOI I· 7 9 2
Gary Stanley (WP), Stolt George
(6} and Cass Cleland.
Roby (LP), Sch11ltz (4). Caner (7)
and Cater, Stalder (7}.
·
SAVE-George.
,

.

•

.

Cleland's 7th inning single gives Meigs 7-6 win
By DAVE I'IARRIS,
Sentinel CorriiPOildiM
ROCK SPRINGS - Cass Cleland
singled off the left-centerfteld fence
with nobody out in the bonom of the
seventh inning to give the Meigs
Marauders a 7-6 victory over Nelsonville in Tri· Valley Conference
baseball action Monday evening at
Meigs High School .
Meigs had carried a 6-2 lead into
the top of the sevcl'th inning. but the
Buckeyes battled' back and tied the
score four unearned runs.
Meigs is now 10-5 overall and 74 in the TVC. The victory over the
Buckeyes allowed the Marauders to
avenge · an earlier 5-3 Joss at Nelsonville. Meigs held a 3-1 lead heading into the sixth inning of that contest only to have to/elsonville score
four runs· to post the come-frombehind victory.
•
Meigs took a I -0 lead in the bot·
tom of the first inning when Gary
Stanley and Rick Hoover hit back-toback doubles. But the Buckeyes tied
the game in the second on singles by ·
Ben Roby and Smathers and a fielders choice.
Meigs came back in the bottom of
the second on a walk to Chris Roush
a sacrifice by Brad Whitlatch and a
single by Matt Ault. Once again the
Buckeyes tied the score in the top of
the third. Collins walke&lt;l. Wickham
singled, after an intentional walk to
load the bases Reeves grounded out
to tie the game at 2-2.
Meigs took a 5-2 lead in the founh
inning. Whitlatch and Brett Hanson
singled to lead off the inning. One out
later Scott George hit a short sacrifice
ny to left and Whitlatch scored the go
ahead run. Hanson with some alen
base running carne aroumyo score
when the ball rolled a shon distance
away froin the catcher on the attempt
to retire Whitlatch at the plate. Burton then doubled in the gap and later scored on a single by Gary Stanley.
Meigs made it a 6-2 contest in the
sixth inning when Ault reached on a
Buckeye error, he later scored on a
ground out.
The Buckeyes battled back to tie
the score in the top of the seventh.
Collins walked to lead off the inning
and Wickham singled. Stalder then
walked to load the bases with nobody
out. Collins scored the Buckeyes first
run on a wild pitch. Roby then hit a
grounder to and the throw to first was
wild scoring two more runs and
moving Roby to second.
Roby advanced to third on a
ground out and pinch hitter Watki"ns
walked with two outs. Watkins tried
·to steal second and got caught in a
run down, allowing Roby to score
and tie the game at six.
Hoover led off the bottom of the
second for Meigs. by hitting a sharp
single to center. Rick went on to second when the centerfielder bobbled
the ball just beating the throw to second. Cleland then hit the third pitch
to him to deep left-center field that
s.hon hopped the fence to allow
Hoover to jog . in with the winning

• I

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7 SIIOWIOOMS
DERBY HOPEFUL· Kentuc:ky
jockey Shane Sellars h\ the saddle,
workbut Mondlly In Louisville. Skip
0:48. The annual evant Is scheduled

Unbridled's Song, son of 1990
Derby winner Unbridled, set himself
up as the early Derby favorite by win·

••

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In

tor a
a half mile In
It Churchill Downs.

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'

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�r·
·Parents 'caught in the act' Should try lqcking their do~rs
Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I try to be discreet when we are
· having sex. but this morning, our 6year-old son walked into our bed. room and saw us both naked in a
compromising position. He didn' t
say anything, but we could tell he
was flustered. ·
This isn't the first time one of our

•
.

-

Pomeroy • Mlddtepcr., Ohio

Ponwoy. Middleport, Ohio

Pllge 8 • The 0.11y Sanllnel

.childre!J has causht us m the act. We
bave . told them IQ knock before
en&amp;enng our bedroom, but some,
tm~s they forget. We are reluctant to
lock the dOO.. in case lhere is an
emergency.
So far, t~is hasn 't seemed t~
upset the children, but I suspect 11
, will become a problem soon. Should
we say antthing, or is it best not to
make .an tssue of ~t? We would
apprectate some advtce o.n ho~ to
deal wtth thts embarrassmg snuauon . For obvious reasons, we can't
ask anyone else_. -- Red-Faced in
Berkeley, Calif.
Dear Berkeley: You say this isn't
the ~rst time one of yo~. children
has caught you 111 the act 7 Appar-

ently, you and your husband are
slow. learners.
•
Sux:e no quesnons were asked, I
see no reason to offer any explana·
lions. And now, may I ask what it is
going to take for you to lock your
bedroom door when you desire~vacy? In case of an emergency, 11
takes only a second for you to
unlock it.
·
Dell!' Ann Landers: I am a young
male, smgle and happy. but don' t tell
that to my famtly or my friends.
They would not believe it.
It seems that if you are not married' by the lime you are 30, people
think there is something wrong with
you. I am co~stantly told, "You
should get mamed -- you wtll be so

·"-RHS reunion
. . planned

much happier." Even more annoyins are the quellions, "When are
you going to aet nwried? What.arc
you waitina for?"
· Ann, I AM happy. 1 refuse to set·
tie down just to please my family
and friends. I date regularly and
have several attractive female
acquaintances. I'm in my early 30s
arid college-educated, own my own
home, . drive a nice car, and travel
extenstvely. I have ·no trouble finding young ladies to !late, bfl I'm
selective and I don't sleep around. 1
do want to marry someday, but I will
wait until I meet the woman I think
is right for me.
~e f~t is, people are not gettinz
marned rtght out of high school the

Charter
draped for
Bissell

The Rutland High School Alum·
- -ni Association will hold its 67th
... :annual reunion on Saturday, May 25,
· at the Rutland Civic Center, former·
· ~y the Rutland High School Gymnasium.
.
The dinner will be served at 6:30
.. p.m., followed by a brief business
meeting and fellowship with former
'classmates. Alumni and friends are
· invited to assist with prevarations on
·: ,the eve of the event. Classes planning .
special reunions may call Marie Lit"
• (le Birchfield, secretary, at742-2178
· for further information.
·
Cost $10 a person with the reser. vation deadline to be May 18. Reser·
. vations may be. mailed to Rutland
· · High School Alumni Associaiion;
· ·: p.o. Box 125, Rutland, Ohio 45775.
· _Reservations may also be paid at the
_Rutland Department Store or Joe·
. - Miller's Country Market in Rutland.
· ·Those unable to attend are asked to
TO OBSERVE 30TH ANNIVERSARY· Elwood and Shirley {Har- .
·: send $2 dues. Notices are not mailed
mon) Wilson, Rutland, will celebrate their 30th wedding annlver·
to residents of Meigs County.
sary on"Saturday, May 4. They wera united In marriage by Rev.
. • Officers are Thomas Hysell, '65,
Arden Smith In Buffalo, W. Va., on May 4, 1966. They are the par· · president: Beverly Forbes Rupe, '66.
ents of two daughters. Mrs. Robert D. Gordon {Sharry) of GaJ..
~: vice-president ; Marie Little Birch.Ilpolls and Mrs. David Harvey {Sabrina) of Columbus, and the
field, '51, secretary; and Suzy Park·
grandparents of Nathaniel and Christopher Gordon. Mr. Wilson'
: ~r Carpenter, '65, treasurer. Alumni
Ia employed by the Southern Ohio Coal Company as a general
. scholarships will be awarded to chi!plant foreman anc:l Mrs. Wilson Is a bus driver for Meigs Local
•dren or grandchildren of RHS gradSchool District. In honor of the occasion, the family has planned
· a aurprlaa weekend retreat for the couple at a Walt VIrginia
. uates, chosen from among those who
resort.
: applied by the May I deadline.

The chaner was draped for Ada
Bissell when Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, met re~ently
at the hall.
Several members of Mrs. Bissell's
family were present for the memorial service.

Send queiti0111 to Ana Lllllden,
Crealon Syndicate, !777 W. Century Blvd:, Suite 700, to. Anaeles,

Calif. 9004!

Public Notice

.,

PUBUC NOTICE .
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
- The Vlllege of Middleport
will accept propooato at
!&gt;flddltport VIllage Hell, 237
Rtct Street, Middleport,
Ohio 45760 until May ~3.
1896 until 4:00 p.m. end
·then at 7:30 p.m. at otld
j)!flce opened end reed
eloud lor the following
project:

Wednesday. 7:30 p.m .• Middleport
Masonic Temple. Members to vote
on the request of Racine Lodge 461
to merge with Pomeroy and amend·
ment to by-laws on proposed meeting place ,change.

CHESTER -- Chester and Shade
Valley Garden Clubs, to tour Bob's
Greenhouse, Mason, Wednesday.
Meet at market at 6:30p.m for tpur,
return to home of Jean Frederick for
meeting.

POMEROY -· Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Middleport Masonic Temple. Members to vote on merger with Racine
and amendments to by-laws.

THURSDAY
RACINE-- Southern LoCal Building Committee meeting Thursday,
7:30p.m. in the high school cafeteria. All district residents welcome. ·

Public Notice
mtrktd 11 Bid for
Middleport ODNR Flottlng
Courttty/Ltunch ·Rtmp
ProJect end ·melted or
delivered to: VIllage of
Mlcfdltporl, 237 Rtce Street,
Middleport, Ohio 457110. •
Attention ol blddert Ia
called' to ell requirement•
contalntcl In lht bid ptcktl,
perttcultrly the Stalt
Prevelllng Wage provlotone,
vtrlauo
lneurtnct
rtqulrtmtntt, and vtrtouo
Equtl
Opportunity
· provlelono.
No bidder mey withdrew
hie bid within thirty f30I
dtyl tlttr lht te1utl dtlt of
the opening thtrtof. The
·VIlttgt ol · Middleport
rtltrvtl tht right to welve
eny lnlormtlllleo or to reject
eny end/or ell bldt.
Vllltge ol Mldd!tporl
Meyor Dewey M. Horton
14) HI, 24, 30; 3TC
.

Vllltge a! Middleport
ODNR DIVISION of
\Vtlercrelt
Flaotlilg
Courteoy/Lounch rtmp
. dock tytttm Purchtlt end
lnotalltllon
·
• · Tho pr.o poeed cot!
·jnopotol will Include. the
'Iotti coet Involved to
lurnleh end lnottll 1
Caurt..y/L:eunch Rtmp
Dock Syetem, 11 the
dtolgntlld Location an tht
Ohio Rtvtr In the trtt ol the
Middleport Batt Ltunch
liiiiiiP on Front Strttt. .
Sptc:lflcotlone, locttlan
Public Notice
drewlnge, end bid forme for
'the projtcl may bt obtained
NOTIC-E TO
11 the Ofllce ol the lleyor,
CONTRACTORS
vtlltg• Hell, 237 Rece : · Stllld propoule lor the
Street, Middleport, Ohio. paving, end perking .
lf'hone 614-lt:l-41424)
pelnttng ·al the Middleport
Thl bid mutt bt Botltr Perking Project will ·
iceomptnlld by tlthtr 1 bid be reotllttd by the Melgt
bond In en ernount ol 1110% County Commlellonero 11
of thl bid emount with 1 their office ·•I the Mtlgo
eurtty totltlectory to thl Cau11ty Courthouu,
tfor .. eld Vllltgt ol Pomeroy, Ohio 41711 until
•lddleporl or by 1 Ctrttfltcl 10:00 t.m., May I, 1tN, end
ollec:k,· or leHtr ol credit then et 1:00 p.m. 11 I tid
Qpon • eqlvenl benlc In tht office opened end reed
emounl ol not 1111 then. tloud.
1M\ of tht bid emount In · Plene, Spectflctllone, and
fevor of the efortttld bid lorrna mey bt etcurtd ·
Vllllll' of Mldcllepor;t. Bid tl the olllce of the Melge
bondt
ahell
bt County Commlttlontf'l.
tcicom,c;nled by Proof of NOTE: Project conelet. of
AuthO
ol the olllotal or onl)' Prlmt, Tee~. Pavt, and
.agent elgnlng the bond.
painting atrtplng. Each bid
licit thiH bt ..illld tnd mutt bt tccomptnltd by

,;.,

Public Notice
either e bid bond In en
;.ma~nl ol ·100% al tht bid
emounl with t eurety
telltltclory to lht tlor..ald
Melga
County
Commlttlantrt or by t
certified check, or Itntr al
crtdi,'Qpon a tolvent benk
In the~..,ount a! not !ttl
then tO% ol the bid emounl
In favor o,l the tfortttld
Melgt
County
Commlulanere. Bid banda
ahall bt accomptnltd by
Proof of Authority of ll!f
otllqlal or agent olgnlng tht
bond.
Bldt tllall bt ottltd end
marked 11 Bid lor
Middleport Ptr~lng Ptvlng
end mailed or cltllvertd to:
Mt I g 1

C o u n I Y·

•••1111• out of.
,........ .... Ul ... It

by Bob Hoeflich

1'1111•

Y"'· .

Wantel! to iemind you thlll Meigs
County's observance of the Natio.nal
Day of Prayer win · he held this
Thursday froin 11 :30 a.m. to 12 : ~0
p.m., in front of the courthouse in
Pomeroy.
There will be musical selections
and Rep. John Carey is expected to
be on hand. Members of Drew Webster Post 39, Ameri~an Legion, will
pres~nt the flags.
There have been several activities
leading up to Thursday's observance.
You are invited to attend for just a
few fuinutes or for the entire hour-whatever you prefer and can work
into your schedule. Immediately following the prayer hour there will be
a balloon launch at the Pomeroy lev--·
ee.'
·
·

Goldie Frederick, councilor,
presided at the meeting which opened
in ritualistic form.
Practice was 1\eld for the rally.
Reported ill was Goldie Krackunburger. Macy ·Bamnger read a letter
from Helen Taylor, state secretary.
There was balloting on a new mem·
ber. Eima Cleland reported on the ral·
ly at Springfield.
Allending were Laura Nice, Eva
Robson, !;lob Ritchie, Marcia Keller,
Jean Welsh, Betty Denny, I,.illian
Demosky, Kathryn Baum. Everett
Leiters to Middleport High School
Grant, Joann Baum, Belly Young,
Alumni
Association members are
Esther Smith, Mary Barringer, Erma
'Being
returned
which is an indication ·
Cleland, Charlotte Gnint, Dolores
Wolf, Opal Hollon, Velma White, that some bf them have moved since
Mary Holter, Ethel Orr, Doris last year's mailing.
Grueser, Lora Damewood, Opal . If you know of any addr~ss
Eichinger. Mae McPeek, R&lt;;iberta changes by members please nottfy
Maidens. Elizabeth Hayes Goldie one of the four people heading this
year's reunion so tharletters can be
Frederick.
sent to the correct address. If you
know of a change please get in touch
with Marilyn Swan Anderson, Char·
.lene Davis Batey, Marilyn Stumbo
caster of the National Institute of Meier or Diane VanC&lt;?Opey Lynch.
Environmental Health Sciences: The four are also asking that local
"Our results leave us with two obvi- alumni report to the Meigs Junior
ous conclusions. First, there were far High School in Middleport at 7 p.m.,
more BRCA2 ··mutations t.han we on Friday. May 24, to help decorate
·were able to identify, but we feel that for this year's get-together.
May 19 is the deadline for reser·
is unlikely. Second, there is another
gene .or multiple genes· that are vations for the 1996 reunion and are
to be sent to the association at Box
re~ponsible for familial breast can109, Middleport, 45760.' Cost for one
cer.''
alumni,
including dinner, dtlnce and
The study, reported in Tuesday's
NaJure Genetics. involved large dues is $13.50 and guests are $Hi
teams of Canadian scientists from each. You might want to include your
Montreal. British Columbia, Toronto, year of graduation with your payment.
and Hamilton, Ontario,

There were some out-of-town
friends of the Curtis Jenkinson family here to attend funeral services for
Dortha Jenkinson held last week at
the Fisher Funeral Home in Middle·
port.
The group included Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Goldsberry, Athens; Buster and
Lee Bretz, Guysville; Jacl;; Welsh,
former Middleport resident now living in Westerville; John McCutcheon,
Athens; Robbie Shields, The Plains;
Mike Canipbell and Bill . Degnan,
Nitro, W.Va., and Dorothy Weaver of
Belpre.
A River Bend Community Theater
group iS' getting underway .and membership Includes Mason County as
well as Meigs County.
The group will be offered classes
on acting, directing and basic introduction to everything that composes
theater prOduction and these are to be
cond~cted by three highly qualified
and experienced professionals. It has
tentatively been decided that some
classes will be available during the
last two weekends in July. •
If you're interested the Rev.
Roland Wildman of Pomeroy is the
liaison person, can undoubtedly can
point you in the· right direction for
participation.
·
Did you get any of the Jackie Q.
items at last week's auction? In real·
ity, is a piece of "Camelot" really
worth that much money? Do keep
smiling..

Sentinel
Classified&amp;
992-2156

,.

Bring guests.

•

.'

I

1

•

•

985-4473

'

7122&lt;'14

.,. .__ _ _ _...;413~1~mo:;;;;,:
. pc1;:;·..1
•

..
i

'

ONE • ON • ONE!

CALLNOWI
'
1-900-446-1414
EXT.3694 '

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
•Room Additions
•Ntw Gel'llgts
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
9!12-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
1/2/lfn
.
.. .

lARRY'S

·- •of ~fc:::rory
1

William Randolph
·· "~lckey"
.
who lett ua on ·
April .30, 1988.
I ' think of you
~;~ow and
.I miss you
most when I think of
when, all the smiles
' and laughter we
shared; I hope you
kno\Y •. h.o w rn:uch I

• Top • Trim • Removal
. • Stump Grinding
15 Yrs, Exp. Llc. • Ins. Owner: Rict&lt; Johnson
.Free

$3.99 per min . .
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·l.J (619) 645-8434

lele HOLLON

• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential
and commercial)
• Shrubbery
. '
Ml!intenance
• Odd ii:lbs per request

l'lltdottiiHlQtl\

Limestone • Gravel
Djrt • Sand
Chaster, Ohio

CHAT LINE
Live 24 Hrs

aday

Talk ,t~f:fsautiful ·

care&lt;l.

1-900·446-1414
. It's been a while
since l'v.fil s~en your
E~t. 6445
faCE!, because God
$3.99 per min.
too~ you to his
Must be 18 yrs old.
special ' place, I
Service U
knbw
you've
(619) 654-8434
bec;:ame an angel
above·, for we can
feel your radiate.
love.
·
To me you were a
Talk line to our gifted
one pf a kind, taken
psychiC's on questions ol
to e .arly, before y()ur
love, success, care, soul
l:tin•"' .1still miss and
mates, seR-help and
·you ·so, I will
more.
lllnA•IIAr ·'1et your
1·900-255-0500
me,n\ol'll go.
Ext. 3505
$3.99 per min.
mind •:u-~
Must. be 18 yrs.
"'"V-ll (619) 645-8434
YOU Will~~~----~----~
and forever
in my heart and
Howard L.Wrltasel
memory.:
·
· · r Written by
ROOFING
,.
· Celani Baker
NEW-REPAIR
;J, Cummins
.
.
Gutters
Still loved and ·
miSsed by
Downspouts
Mom, Dad, D.J .,
Gutter Cleaning
Grandma's
· Painting
and all his f'ilmily
FREE ESTIMATES
and fr' ~nds
949-2168

,......

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6, 1x8, 2x4, 2x6

312111 mo.

Chat-Line
.Hey Guys!!! Your
special girl is waiting
to hear from you!! .
24 Hour's A Day!! ·
Call now

•

,,,

All Yard Satea Mull Be Pa id In
Advance . Oe;.dline : t :Ooprfi the
day before the ad is to run, Sundaw editio.n- 1:OOpm FrldaK., Monday edition.IO:OOa.m. Saturdly.

$3:99 Per Min.
.Musl be 18 yrs
'Serv-U (6191645-8434 '

.

PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1·900-nB-2525 EXT..
5961
· $2.99 per min
Must be 18 yra.
Sa~U (619) 854-8434

.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Fill Dirt

614-992-3470 .

Date-Line

949-2512

Trucking '·
J,Jmestone
B!!.!k!.ozing
and
j
.
•
Backhoe
Sel'\llces
House Sites and
Utilities

-

No arguments!
NoNaqgingl
Just the mate of
your choice.

1·900·988-6988
Ext. 1449
$2.,99 per min .
Must be 18 yrs. ,
SeJV·U (619) 645-8434

All Kinds of Eorth Work
992-3838

-

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REPAIR
992-4507

' Phone

614-992-5048
Free Estimates

,.DATE
LINE
Your Sweetheart as
close as your phone

1·900·988-8988
• ·Ext. 6733
$2.99. per minute
"'UBI be 18 yra ofd
Sarvlca .U
(619) 645-8434

Yard sale· May 2-3, ·Robel! Hrll
&amp; Elm, RaCine, Ohio. Log
chams, cham binder, lawn mowers. lois ol tools, clothes. drshes.
misc. Rain or Shine. 9am -6pm. .
Mulli fam il y, Fr•day &amp; -Saturday,
May 3 - 4, 9am- 5pm , Ebli n rf!. srdence. ~lk! Pen, Pomeroy.

•

Ma~ t -3, Rt. 124, Syrac~se . next
to river Des•de new Naza r&amp;ne
Chutch, calt 6t4·992-3860.

Fitlh

Wednesday &amp; Thutsdav• •9am 4pm. End ot Bar 30 Ad .. 1ra11er on ·
right , girts SIZes inlant thru 4T.
Yard S11e - 250 Mulberry A~e.
0811110 Pomeroy ·Etem.,

3.

.

Mav. 1·2·
.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

24x2"4 G~rage and _41amily yard
sale. an11ques, lurn1ture, dishes,
tools, lawn mowers, paris, 0--.1
Manin QUilar, computers , lndi.an
art1lacts, and more. 4574 AShiOI'I •
Upland rd. 1mt oft Rt. 2 May lSI·
7th. Follow ~ns. 3:14 -576-2265. •

446·9&lt;42.
60 Lost and Found

80

lost: Black lab puppy, 5mos old,
name is Cod~. Co. Rd . 12,TNT

Rick Pearson Auction Company
lu!l ~ime auctioneer, compl~te

Lost: Blue Sleeping Bag &amp; Stuff
Sack Late Wednesda.y N1ght, Re-

61-.379·0'974
70
Yard Sale
wa&lt;C 1

. Ga lllpolls
&amp; VIcinity
1939 Chatham Street, Sl1, 512. 5I
3. Furniture, What -Nots, Dishes.
Cass~llte Tapes, Cassette Play ·
ers. Microwave.

5 Miles Sout/"1 Rt. 218 From At. 7
' 511, 512, 513. 9-5, 4 family, EvAnl-

thing l

FIND TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
Through a Live
Personal Psychic!

1·900-255-0500

Ext. 4009

· $3.99 per min.

Public Sale
and Auction
ser~ice .

auct1on

· licensed

•6S,Ohio &amp; West Virgin1a, 304·
:n:::3:-'·5:.;.78':5:-;0..:.;.;;;30:..;4~
· 7:..:13:,.:
·54:;:4:;7.;,__

90 Wantectto Buy •
;C~Ie7an~L~.~,.~M~o-.d~ei-;C~a.~s~6,
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer
Smith Buic:k Pon,lac, 1900 Eajt~
ern Awmue, Gallipolis.
.

•. ,

511196, 8-75.20 Jackson Pike, En·
ter t&amp;mmenl Center, Dryer. Prom

Dresses. Misc . Pop-Up Camper
6 FOO)IIy: 511, 512, 513, 9-5. Rod·
ney V1llagv II, Merilorial Flowers,
Home Int. Too Much To Mentlonl
All Yard S,a res Must Be Paid In

Advante. DEADliNE : 2:00p.m.

the day before the ad is to run.
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition - 1D:OO a.m. Sat-

J &amp; o·s AU\,0 Pans . Buying sBIvage vehicles . Selling parts. 304~

773·5033.

Non- Working Washers . Dryers
Ranges. Refrigerators. Freezer'$'
A1r Conditioners, Color
VCR's, Also Junk Cars, 614 -256-

T.v.-,:

1238.

,

T~p Pric:es Paid: Old U$ Coins,
Silver, Gold", Diamonds. All Old
Collec:tibles, Papen,.,e1ghts, Et~.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Secorid
Avenue, Gal!polis, 614-446-2842. ~

U_sed furniture · anti ques. one
P•ece or complete estates, also
do appraisals, Osby Martin, 614992-7441 .
•
Used Mens levis, lee &amp; Wran.
gler Jeans &amp; Denim JackalS, Nike

urday.

Shoe' 61 ....6·2468.

HUGE Yard Sale At Gu1d1ng

Wanted To Buy Used Mobifp
Homes. Cal: 61•-~•6 · 0 1 75

4th. Clothing $1 .00 or Less. Lots
of Every Thing. Great Buys! 1111
ra1ns will be .nsicle follow signs. All
Proteedl go to Help Children at

Wanted To Buy : Auto's &amp; True ...
Any Condition , !)14-388·9062, Or
61 4- +'6-~RT.

Hands Sl:hool. 10-lo-4 Sao. May

Guiding Hams Sdloo!.

- ~--

.

•

oll"ull.

Giveaway

area. Calll&lt;eYin-at 304-675-1773

Howard Excavatin

Serving all Your
ELECfRICAL
needs
\

Petmll Needed AS Of 1996.

TFN

SPARKlES
·ELECTRIC

Limestone,

May 1· 2. turn a t Fi ve Point Expreu, put Royal Oak retort, ti•st
!Dad tD rjght ,\14 m\le, tef\ on ~inegar St. Rd .. gray house on left top

614-742-2193.

"

WICKS
HAULING

Please Beware: Do To The In·
crease In Crimp We Olter The
Very s..t 'an Urllque - P4tP9&amp;rSpray Items As Welt .As Many
Other Sa let~ Produc;ts . ·Do Not
Gamble With Your Safety Or The
Ones You Love. Call Now For
Free Delivery To Your DOor! 1·
800-830-2599 , 213-654 · 7320. No

1 Year Old Mate Hrmalayan Cal.
Very Good With Children, Neu t~ed. Oeclawed, 614-367-7561
112 Span1el &amp; tl2 Beag le 5
Months Old, 614 -446-9442.

1

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
D~nny &amp; Peggy Brickles

"

(lime Stone- .
Low Rites)

May 1-2, 456 Beoch . Middlepprt,
some g1r!'s clothing , many other
th•ngs.
·.

Male Hunt•ng Dog Beagle, 614-

Bamlsaw Mill

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
REAION~U .RA2'&amp;S

Leg1on Pos1 602 will have a · spe-_
c•al meeting for elecuon of olllcers
a1 7'30pm, 01nner at 6:30pm. All
members urgOO to anend.

sand boJ:es. Call Andy Stgter .
304 -9..17 -20t8.

H&amp;H .
SAWMILL
Portable

,n.

Uay 2. 1996 Racine American

large ltactor tlfes tor flower or

992-2825

For Free estimate call

H~ge garage sale, May 2·3, Rain·
er resi~ence , Tackerv ille Rd .,

available for all types or
2 Krtlens, litter Tra.ned, To Good
New Homes, Garages,
Homes. 614-446-0819.
. Additions, Baths,
5 -Mixed Breeds,. Loveable &amp;
Adorable Puppies, Will Be Med.
Kitchens, Decks, Siding,
Sized, 614·446·9442.
,-"-.:..c.,_;_:.:..:..=-_:___ I
Roofs etc.
Beagle Pup, Approk . 7 -8 Weeks
NO toll to 111111 or to large. ' Old,
To Good Home, 614·37&amp;Contact Rodney Howery
9112, II No Answe• leave Mes·
sage.
594-3780 days, 698-7231
House &amp; Building Free, Vou rear
evenings or
Down. 614 _367_ 7341 _
.
t-800-264-6390

Z'1 Z11211rn

P.O. Box 587

1·900-988·6003
Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
SeJV·U (614) 645·8434

a"m-

30 Announcements

years experience now

J.D. Drilling Company

CALL NOW

house hom ballrield. Clothes lnl~rowave - and can, furniture,
lng, msc. 9am-5pm.

Huge yard sale-Friday, Ma, 3rd &amp;
Sa!urday May 41h, 9am 10 5prn, at
485 '5 . Tl'nrd Middleport, across
I rom Tr i- County Ford , lois&gt; of
11ems, boys clolhes &amp; lays , size
newborn lo 5.

40

1131,.,

New24 hr.
Datallne ·
Meal the Man or Woman
· of your Dreams Never
be lonely again.

Garage sale- May 1·2, Arbaugh
AdditJOn, Tuppers Plains. Secend

ANNOUNCEMENTS

4111111(1 mo.

Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

949·2430.

Rac.ne, qll SR. 124, tools,
tiques, furniture, misc.

$2.99 par min.
Must be 18 yis.
Sarv·U (619) 645-11434

lladle lbaeli Dealer ·

·'·

Garage sa le , 512 -513, 9im ,
features large · women &amp; kid' s
c:lo thes. 2 miles past Forel!t Run
Church, s1gns at dn veway, 5'14 -

Ext. 2261

New At Ingles lleetronies

For Free Eollmatet

Garage Sale, 5 family sale, lot~ of
nice items, Maw 3, May 4, hQurs
9· 5. Addren: 1381 Ouskey Ally, .
Sy _
r acuse. neea d~tections ta.tl
614 -992-7769
.

Bitm-6 pm

Contractor with over 30

(No ·sunday Calls)

992-4405

Fuday, May 3, 9-6, 2285 •7th
Street, Srout residence.

614-992-4025

1·900·990·3737

614-992-7643

·Houee Repair &amp;
. Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Atldltlono
Siding, Roofing, Pallo•
Rteoonable
lnourere • Experl•ncod
Cell Woyne Ntff

Friday May 3, 9-7, Elladene War - ·
son's Mmersv111e. some small fur niture.

Pick-up discarded
batterleli, appliances &amp;
many metals.

FREE ESTIMATES

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

Apr11 1st-~lh. 9am-5pm, Sycamore
St. , MiddlePort , large yard sale.
)Ots of msc. from old 10 new.

FREE

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
C.OMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Ext.1,477

'

•••'

AnUCTIVE
&amp; WILLING
TO TALK!!!

.;.9416

t

810 South Stcond, Middleport,
May 1 through 7, workbench &amp;
wefghtl. bGddiAQ, apreac:ts, linens,
dr1pea, clothes, dial'lea, pots,
pans, a~all appliances, · j&amp;w&amp;lty,
fumtture, lets misc.

1

BISSELL
BUILDERS; INC.
.

1·900-44~·1414

~

Ff\MILY YARD SALE
.. 913 BROADWAY
Si.
.
M.IDDLEPOAT, Ol:i . ·

I

Tuppara Plaint, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or614-667-6484
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36''
4" S&amp;D - perf. ·- solid pipe
..1
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" tht'u 4'.' Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll's)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe t" thru 2''- Fittings - Regulators· Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full Jine'Of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water. s.torage tanks ..

,\lao avallebie
4x4's- 4x6's
614-985-4107
614-742·3337

SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT

.'.

chatr. watcheS, aors of misc.

. 992·3954 or 985-3418 ,, _

St. Rt. 7

a

312111-DI

l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiilii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~

4 lam1ly, Thurlda-;1 Frklay, behind
Mason i~ lodge in Ratine, Hill'a.
.res1dence . cloth1ng , I'IOIJS&amp;hOid
11ems , exercrse machine, couc:h,

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

G &amp; W PUSDCS AIID SUPPLY

8'-10' 30¢ a ft.
14'-16' 35¢ ft.

1-900-446-1414
'Ext. 43JI9
$3.811 per min.
Mu1t be 18 yra.
Satv·U {6111) 645 8434

The II a ek""' lias.:

011&gt;0.

Llmeatona, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

with the p811a &amp; service to bitclr It up
Serylng S.E. Ohio &amp; Wast VIrginia

To I Free 1-800-872·5967

MEN
BEAUTIFUL WOMEN
· aRE WAITING TO
HEARFIQM
YOU NOW!!!

1 -2nd, 9 a.m.-?

3 family yard sale, 2nd &amp; 3rd ol
May, 29; Wright Stre.~ , Pomeroy,

Wt OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

PGDLD'I'BD

•

'

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Comm,rclal or Residential
Saptlc Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollets·Renled.
Daily, weeilly &amp; monthly rental rates.

BENNETTS

985-4422

Mite.

Poineroy,

MODERI SUiti,IOI

Air Condltlonera,.Heat Pufl'lps,
Fumeces. All equipment in stock
· lor lmrnedlatelnatslletlon. ·
Free Estimates ·
IW\'010212

SERVICE

Plan Ahead, Call Today!
742·1!803

4~

16141 tt2·a364

Mobile and Manufactured Housing

DUMP TRUCK

No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small

. Whole .
Boneless Ham ·
&amp; Water ProdUct

.

Some Aduila,

35 Years Experience

-

TRUCKING

LA~£ARE

per lb.

.

May is~ 2nd; 3rd, 7:30 A.M. ·3::JO
P.M. Tous Rood, Kida Clomlng,.

,
Residential ~ Commercial
Roofing ~ Rubber ~ Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathroom• ~ Kitchens - Siding

(61 4) 441 -11 9 1
1-8 00 -508-8887

..

We welcome c:.111 or fOOd etltmpe only.

Se~ 12-7, loll Ot Goad Clolfwl J.
O.lllol. loll Of M - 1

..

5/1&amp;94 TFN

,

·Set

lns1de At flm.ty Cabin, 16Qe McCormiC- Road. Wad, Thun, Fn,

IIIIOOftiiMd
COISftUCflll

LIVE! .

•New Homes
•
•
'• •Garages
•Complete,
.Remodeling
.
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES '

.

' .

"Skyhawk"
1
Donald E.
Russell

.........._ _family
_,;,] , I

•. fpr
VIIY IEISOIULI
HAVE IIFEIEIICES.
61C.taS•CIIO

•

lOBEII BISSEll
CONSIRUCTIOII

Psychic-Line

•

01

•

. FREE ESTIMATES

In Loving Memory of:

Commlttlontrt,
Cciurthoutt, Pomeroy, Ohio
4576t.
Attention ol blddtrt It
called to ell ol the
requirement• canltlntd In
~
.
thlt bid pecktl, ptrttculerty yet.
to the Ftdertl Ltbor
God
gave
us
Standtrdo Pravltlont end
Davia Bacon · Wtgtt, strength to face it,
courage to bear the
vtrlout · llnourtnce
requlrtmtnta, vtrlout equtl blow,
opportunity provltlont, tnct
But wl;lat 1t meant to
the requirement lor t
lose
him, No one will
peyment bond · . 'and
performance bond lor 1110% ever know.
ol the contract prtCt.
Sa(lly missed by:
No bidder may wlthdrParents:
hlo bid within thirty 130)
Bob &amp;.Alice Russell
dtyt tlttr thtiCIUII datt,of
tht opening thereof. lltlll
·Eirother:
County Commlttlontrt
, Ronnie Russell &amp;
reetrvee the right to wetve
·. family
eny lnlornutlltlee or to·Nitct
eny o• ell bide.
SisteiS:
Fred Hollman, Pnlldtnt · Carolyn Summerfield
. . . County
. &amp; faf'!lily
Cornmletlonert
(41 111, 24, 30; STC
Brenda Kil-Haggy

'1614 1192·275

P.M .-

We will work within your budget
. Ph. 773-11173
FAX 773-5861
Mason, WV
108 Pome Straet

94~13Phonl

949-2018 FAX

Anlf

Many Mite . ltema, 10 A.M . · 5

"No·Job Too l.:.'llfl or Too Small"

RICine,'Ohiol45771

367.0286-1-800-960-3359
· L ...._!!.!!~!!!!:!!!!!!..._____!_J:IL...!~

To 7. Fur Coal , Sui II, Sttoll.,-,

Crib, Playpen, Furnllult

Authorized AQA Distributor
• Welcing Supplies • lndustrlef Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AIUJ'Tllnum/Slainless • Tool 01'88Sing • Omamentar
Sleps·Sbiira, RaHings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter hangers1 TreJtlses &amp; 191S of other sluff! I

21583~NRD.

•

Owner: Ronnie Jones

IIIIIIIOI•IDEIIOI

In Memory

Born: Aug. 30, 1950
Died: April30, 1995
He is gone but not
forgotten, never will
his memory fade.
Loving thoughts will
ever linger, to the·
spot where he is laid.
They say time heals
all sorrow, and helps
us to forget,
But lime has only
proved so far, how .
much we · mjss him I

20 Yean Experience • lruured

(614)9!12·5~

Hugo 3 Fomly: 1 - -Route
1· Put
Tho 711ile
·
Ctiknnt
ClolhH,
Ita ......,_,,

14..21112

UCINE HYDUUliC RIPAII
&amp; lUCHlNI SHOP, INC.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

., •NewHomH
•Addition•
·~Gor.O.e

;Remodltlln(l
·Siding
•Rooting
•PI!Intlng
~REE ESTIMATES

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

JONES' TREE SERVI(E

CuiiiJm lluMig lllem a••una

' iLINDA'S
PAINTING

-----'Community calendar----The Community Calendar is
publish~ as a free service lo non·
profit groups wishing.to announce
meeting and special events- ·rhe
, calendar is not designed to promote
··sales or fund raisen of any type.
ltems are printed·as ·space permits
· and cannot be guaranteed to ruq a
s.pecific number of days.
WEDNFjSDAY
. POMEROY -- Pomeroy Lodge
164, F&amp;AM, regular meeting

-SMRH'S
COIISIIUCIIOH

..

Beat of the Bend ...

::Breast cancer setback: Second gene plays limited role
BRCA2. identified in December Futreal of Duke University Medical
; By TIM FRIEND
1995, suggested it would play a role Center, Durham, N.C.
'
USA TODAY
That means genetic testing can
· The second gene discovered for in ab0ut45 percent of inherited cas·
accurately identify known mutations.
. breast cancer, BRCA2, may not cause es.
hav~
meant
tests
That
would
' as many inherited cases of the disease
B11t.,' greater possibility than expect·
· as first predicted, suggesting a third developed to identify cancer-causing ed exists lhat women from high-risk
or more significant genes are yet to mutations in both genes could iden- families who test negative may still
·. be found, shows research out Tues- tify most of the inherited cases, mak- carry cancer-causing genes.
ing screening for high-risk families
The 49 families studied were cond3y.
'
relatively
reliable
.
.
sidered ar high risk for BRCA2 '
· : The first breast cancer gene,
, BRCAI , found in 1994, is known to · '. But an examination of 49 Cana- because they did not have BRCA I
· cause about half of. familial breast dian families. strongly suspected of and met other criieria associated
·;:ancers. which account for 5 percent having the BRCA2 gene found it was with BRCA~.
to 10 percent ofth~ 189,000cases in responsible for breast cancer in only
Said collaborator Johnathan Lan·
· the United States. Initial studies of eight of the families, said Andrew

tered that so many people are tlllel'·
esiCCI in your welfiii'C.
,
Dear Ann Landers: Here • my
favorite Burma Shave sip . .. T.B.,
Bark River, Mich.
Ben met Anna.
Made a hit.
Ben wouldn' t shave.
Ben-Anna split.
Gem of the Day: Too many .peapie are eager to volunteer to c.arry
the piano stool when tt's the ptano
that needs to be moved.

way many of our parents did. Today,
!l'e go to college and sla11 our
careers first. We may, be a bit wifCr
than our parents were at our age. and
we are more likely to take our time
before making • lifelong commit·
me,nt.
If you print my letter, maybe my
. family and friends will ge~ point.
.. Happy and Single on the WeSJ
Coast
Dear Single and Happy: Here's
your letter, but don 't expect the
questions1o stop. They won't. Every
community has matchmakers who
make it· so111ething of p hobby, and
let's face it, some folks do need a lit·
. tie help.
Instead of being offended, he flat-

Ap11l 291h, Thru May 31d, 1.2
Miles Out Route 218.
..
.. Dolls, .Doll Furniture, Bedspreads,
oCurtams, Small Appliances, 828
Secor&lt;~ Avel'lJo, Gallipolis, 511, 5I

Wlnled. To Buy : Junk Autos With
~r Withaur Uotors. Call Lar,.,.

•
Wan!od To Buy: llnla Tikes Toyo
614·245-5887
,.
Uvely, 61~ ·~9303.

2. 513, 1 HIP.M.

G~rage Sale : Thull &amp; FJi, 112
Mile On 2~8; Pots/Pans, Dishes

Nidi !lacks, GoOd Clean Clothing'
lllaz•s. E11:.
· 110

EMP LOYMENT
SERV.CES
Help want~

Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) .

64S-8434
..
~.-----~

- -- - -- -,--T-..l..._

__c_

_

- - --·

�•

•

.
-.
••

-

'

Pom.oy. Middleport, Ohio

•

•

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
:::
----~--------------------------------------------~~~=·
..• ..

PHII~I ;:p

1

ALDER
510
$1 ,000 Wtekl~ Proceuing W1 11
Free tnfo. Send Selt-Addrtlatd
Stamped" Envelope · Express
Dept. 13'1, 100 E111 Whitestone
Blvd., Suitt 1 48-345, CedAr Park
TX 78613.

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears. Xl.. -675-- t•29.
Able

Avon

Representative~

needed. Earri money for Chfllt·
mas bills at home/at work 1·800·
992-6358 or 304-882·2645, lnd

Rep.

.

AREA SUPI'RIIISOR
Chmtmas Around The World 1
House 0 1 Lloyd -Now Hmng Su·
parvisofS In Area . Free Sample
• K1t, Free Tratnu"\Q. No Investment,
No Collecting, No Delivering. For
Oeta•ls, Call Collect, 814-654 ·
6875.
AVON S8 ·S15 /Hr. No Mintmum

Order. No Door To Door, No Inventory, 1·800 · 736· 0 168 lnd/slsl
rep

Bossard Library Is Accepttng
Applications For The Posttton Of
BOOKMOBILE Clerk • Dnver.
Pa11 limo (22 112 Hrs Per Wook).
Requuements : Onver's license
And ACIIV8, Clean Driving
Record, H.S Diploma Or Eq\Jival·
en~: Good Otal And Wrinen Commumca11on Sk ills, Flex•ble Scheel·
ule; Ab ility To Wor~ Alone And
Follo,. wnnen And Oral D~rec ·
uons: Two Years Library Ot Com·
parable Clerical Expenence. Job
Enta•ls L•lting, Cllmb1n~. Driving.
Typ1ng And Work.ng With People
01 AI! Ages. Includes Evening
And Weekend Hours. Preter(ed
Applicant Will Be An Avid Reader
And Be EnthUSiastic · About
Learning Salary te 6&lt;4 fHr , Appli·
cat1ons Ava1lable At Bossard L• ·
brary, 7 SpruCe Srreer, Gall•pot1s.
OhiO.

Conservation Jobs : Wildlife posi ·
11ons S16,000·S35,000Jyr. Clencal.
Secunty. Game Warden, etc. No
eJCpenenc:e. For mfo call 21Q-7618301 ut WWV 548, 9am-9,pm
Sun-Fri.
Cruise shtp positions. TraveiiQ
exoTic places $200·$900 weektt
Call 7 days, -107·875-2022 en
0598C16.

Onvers needed, utUrees wei·
come DMV repon , class D license. 304-675-5113.

,_llilin.aTrooSe&lt;vico, SII~
Rtmoval, ffee EtUmataal In·
a•~--• , Ohio• 114·311· 117a Biron 14JC7'0 With 7xt4 Ex·
aurance, DfiiWWn
· 814-317-7010.
pondo 3 lllldroomo, 1 IIIIth, To101
.,-_:__ _;__ _:______ ! Electr1c
Wilh Backup Gat Heal,
Sun Valley Nurtery SchooL AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acra
Chikkaira M-F e-m-5:30pm Ages Wooded lot Close To Galhpohs
2· K, Young School Age Durlng (Will Sell Seperate) 114-448 SurnmBf'. 3 Da~t per WHk .. inl· is-3.
~"":-m~S1:-4_4_441_·_38..;5..;7·______ 11112 mobile homo,
window
We WHI Haul Saw Du11 . S1one air, 10JC12 deck. 304-57&amp;-2•11.
For Onveway&amp; &amp; Sand, 111··379·
2n1 .
ti90 Breezewood by Radman,
3bedroam, 1b1th, garden tub.
. Will babysn your c1'11ld, county cen1ra1 air/heal, covered lront
certUil&lt;l or pnva1a pay, have ref- parch &amp; llYn porch, Iota ol exras.
erenc:e1,
reaaon1ble
rate. Good cond 30•·87S.5.C28 aher
ChH1af, t 885 3408. Sande.
8prn

•••112.

1

:;.:.;.:._________ J

Home Typ.als, PC usets needed.
$45,000 1ncome potential. Call 1·
800·513-4:}43 Ext B-9388.
Needed· someone to care for Ql.
derly 1n prtvate c:are home, days
&amp; mghts, 614-992-3324 or work

614-992·5023,
No Expenence Necessary! $500

To $900 Weekly /Potential Processing Mortgage Refunds, Own
Hours, Call {909) 715·2300, EJCt
13'51, !24 Hours)

On Duly Modoeal
Is Actively Seeking To Recruh
CNAs Who Are lookmg To Work
Lo.rrg Term Home Care Case•
Where You llve·ln And Stay
O'o!ern•ght In Either 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shtftl It Pays
16 Hours A Da~. Bul An Overnight Stay Is Requ~red. H Jnleresl·
eel Please CaU Usa Kmson At
1-1100-0N-DUTY-2.
Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs S21 /Hr +
BenefitS, No Exp. Wtll Tratn, For
Appl And lnlo 1-800-536~.
Screen Prinrer, Expenel')ee Nec&amp;!nary, Serious lnqu•riea Only,
814-448·2388, Ask For Ctwis.
Soc1al Workers. Now Hlnng $23 I
Hr • Benefits, On The Job Train·
mg To Apply In Your Area, 1·800·
339-6150
Super 8 Motel Will 8a Accepting
Applications For A Midnight
Front Desk Pos1tion On wednesda~ &amp; Thursday From 9 A.M. ·
7·30 PM . Computer Ela:penence
Helptul, No Phone Calls, Apply In
Person. Super 8 tAotel, 321 Upper R•ver Road, Gatllpons..
The Me1gs County Pubhc L1brary
LS accepTing applications for lhe
,part 11me poSitiOn of Ubtary Clerk
at lhe rate ol $4.50 per hour. The
hours will mclude some ewenings
and weelfends. Applications can
be picked up a1 the l.telgs Coun!y
Pubhc Library, 218 W. Main
Stree~ POmeroy, OH.

110 Miscellaneous
Item tor sale Cannon camera
oulfi&lt; 35rml-AE1 . 304-fl75-3423.

180 wanted To

Do

Dan's Lawn Care . Reasonable

Rates! Will Do Churches, &amp; Ce·
meranes. 614·379·2847.
Eileen's Personal Care. Speciahz·
ing '" Alzheimer's care giving .
Call us . We c:an help. 304·762·

2544.
General Uainlenanc,, Patnting,
Yard Work Wlndows Washed
Guners Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commeflcal, Resld8f'ltial, StBYe:
614-388-(14211.
Georges Porl8ble Sawmill, don'l
naul your logs to lh8
juat call
304-675-1857.

mi•

Give piano teiiOnt in "'I home,
to all age groupa, also teact,
chording &amp; von1poolng, If lnltres1ed. cal6t4-991!·5«l3.

1 Bedroom New Extra Nice!
Range, Rtfri gtrator· F~o~rniaMd ,
-~ $2M/Mo . Pluo Uiliiot.

a..

Dopooit~wod , a14-44&amp;-21167.

Washer Heavy Duty IP5 3 To

-oom
no"""

Choa10 F10m: Oryor G.E. Hlrvoll

2

Gol~ t95; Eltclric Range Ktn·

tplllmOnt In Perutroy,
814-982-5858..

mort Hor-..11 Gold 1150, G.E.
Retr1gerator Ukt New 1 Yur
Warranty, 1 Compceuor $350.
Refrtgerator Froat FrH Kehvinl·
lor Wl'lite S 1 SO; Skagg~&gt; ApP'ianeel. 78 Vine Street, Gallipo..

2 lllldfoom Aporttnenll, &amp;14-4441-

8221 .

1171 Cuda.. NMdt Warl, S25G
0110,81....a.211t.
. uud pool
fihtl, ,...
5pm

WOLFF TANNING 8EOS
TAN AT HOME
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl
Co..__ Home U-llom
1109.00.

Low monlhly paymonl~
FREE calor ca~

COil TOilo\Y 1-1100-842-1305.

Building
SUpplies

550

hi, 1· 800 · 499 -3.CI)I) , 6U -o4o48 ·

73118

uslness
r1 11y
Op
----...:.~po=..,u,.n_~---1

1882 Nonls 18•80 3 Bedroom. 2
Baths, Cont~al A,, LP Gas FurINOTICEI
nace And Stove, Underpinntng &amp;
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO M~ny E•tras l Very Spac•ous.
recommend&amp; that ~au do bull· . Pnced To Sell! Eas~ F1nanc1ng
neas w1th 1)80plv vou know, and Availab-le• 614-2H·2032 After 6
NOT to send money throuflh 11'\8 P.M Ot leave Uessage
m~ul until you have investigated 1995 Ctayron 14XJO 2 Bedrooms,
:lhB:::.::o~lfor;::::'"'i!:'c__ _ _ _ _~l 2 Ba1h1, Gordon Tub, 8•1 0 Buildlocal Vend•ng Roule. $2,500 A 1 Ing, Cat! Afler UlO 614·4&lt;41..0179
Wk. POtent1al . Must Sell. 1-800 840-3826

3 Bedr9om Mob1la Home, Must
Sell304- 736· 7295

198t Model Sot Up On Lol, Bal·
boullYlle, WV304-736-72115

All rooloslale adver11Ulg In
this newspaper Is sublect to
1he Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makoolllltegal
to adver11so "any pralerwnco.
llmllalion or dlscnmlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex famllal status or national
011gln, 01 any lnlontlon to
make any aucn 11ft!leronco, •
limltallon or dtsalmil)allon •

This newspaper wll not
lcnowllngly accept
advertisements for ""'leslato
which I&amp; In violation of the law.
Our readers ara hereby
. lntonnod that an dwellngo
advertised In lhls , . _ ,
are available on an equal
opportunlly balls.

REAL ESTATE

In Mason, 1972 mob1le home,
_14ll88. 3 bedroom. 1 belh, l.p ga'
new wat8f healel', ell, newly carpeted, mauve &amp; blue, has great
decOJating potennal, on rented lot,
call 304·773-S427. Arthur Roush,
P.O. Box 58&lt;4, Mason, WV. 25260

limited Oller! 1996 doublewicle,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2751
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Ont~ at Oakwood Homes, Nnro
304-755-5885

wv.

New Bank Ropos On~ 4 &lt;eh. Sbl&lt;
'"warranty. 304-155-7191
Prtee Buster 1996 3bedroom.
1825 down, S159/mo. Free dellv·
er~ &amp; setup Only at Oakwood
Hornet, foliUQ WV 304-755-5885
Save$1. 1998 double Wide repa.

3bedroom, 2bath W1ll deliver &amp;
serup on wour lot 3CM-75S..5566

Oak Wood Homes, 5875 David'
Creek Road, Barboursville, WV
25504, 304-738-3&lt;09

330 Fanns for Sale

2 Bedrooms /More 1 112 Baths,
EJCrra Lg L.R Eat· ln Kltctten, lo·
~ted . Gallia, Wrap Atound Dec«,

3.9 acre1 for sale within

~meroy

r;~}:;, Wlth+c Game Water, 114· 1

Mumc1pal 11m1ts, located in new
subdivtaton, read~ to build, beautiful ¥18W on hUI10p, $17,500, 111.111
. . . . ~- 814-i82~786t. 1

3 Bedrooms, 2 Balh Ranch, 2 Cor
Garage, Spr•ng Valley Area, Alter
600P.M 614·446·79~ .

4DX1.39 Lo1: Boalls Sub. Neal
A'ofe $3,500. Boat 18 Ft Ouachira
Ban Boat $850.00 614•441 ·
0325

78 acres nvl Wtrn ltlree bedroom;
IWO balh bridf. home, lhree ponds,
pate barn b\uld1ng, two car oa·
rage, 814-742-1902
Alf Condmoned 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, OR, large Lrv1ng Roo119,

Unanached Garage. Satellte
Syatem. Greeen Townsh1p, Ow·
rTW"dMustSell. 814-4.t1-1908

Houl8 + 29 Acres, 3 Bedrooms,
2 Balha, Ba""""'"~ 2 112 Car Garage, Pool, Lg. Deck, Plus E•tra
Space, 814-245-5376

HOUSE FOR SAlE
· BYOWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good
Condilion, folew Vinyl S1ding, Carporl Unanached 2 Car Garage
W1th New Aparii'T1enl Above. 81-C·
•46·1774 Home; 8U -o4o46-0374
Work Ask For Marl&lt; Palmer
Houae for sale •n Syracuse, two
bedroom. one bath. on rwo lots.
separate 24x30 one &amp; 1J2 s10ry
combination shop and garage
building, $22,500. CaH Bu!Ch, 614-

992-31194.
Leon Baden rd. I Mason Co 1 23
acres. Reduced. Call Somerville
Realty SO..f!75-3030 or S0.-875-

3431

Parcels available for new home
construction on Rayburn Road 5
parcels rilnging lrom 1.84ac to
5.32ac. Paved road, counry water,
reasonable restric:liona. Map and
1nfo available on reque'st No Single wide mqu ir~es please . 304675-5253.
Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
beauriful 2ac lots, public water,
Clyde ac-n Jr, 304-576-2336.

S•• 5 Acre Tracts lefl. Southern
Gallia Co. $6,500 10"4 Down $100
Per Month, One 32 Acre Trac1:
One 3• Acre Tract; E•ght 5 Acre
Tracts South Of Wilkesville On
160 County Water Will Lantl
C~;~ntract: Two 40 Acre Tracts
W11l Land Contract, 614 -669·
3462.

RENTALS

410 Houses lor Rent
2 Bedroom Home, located: 6693
Sr Rr 588, No Pets, 614-·t46-

2266.
2-3 bedroom house 1n Rutland,
depoSit &amp; references required, no
pets. call 81o4· 742-2661 .

LEON: V#Jry nu:e, well maintained

3 Bedroom Home In Cenlenary,

3 bedroom, 12112 s1orage barn,
3Jlhcre Cllll Vtrgtma Lee lew•s
304-586-1400. Old Colony Compeny

$450/Mo. Plus Security DepoaU,
61 ':.CAB-6566.

Ma•woll Avo.. 3bedroom, LR. DR,
large lam~tv room, double garage,
8yro old . $107,000 304 -675·

House for rent 30o4·675-672D.

4048
N1ce home 1n Racine, large buildmQ will house small butineas,
also a one car garage, fenced
yard, out of flt..od area, asking
$47,000 814-949·21104
Su1 room house and bath, ~o~ttllt)l
room, big red barn, 2 112 actes on
Now Lm&gt;a Rd .. Rudand, 614-7422757
Three bedroom home in country,
Wtlires H1n Ad , Rutta:nd, one bait\
m·ground pool, 8f4-992-50a7; '

320 Mobile Homes
ior Sale

House br rent 304-675-6720.

In Middleport, avatlable Ua~ 1st.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, basement. nver VIew, $400 per month plus ub1t·
"'~ 614·992-7136 aher 8prn
N1ce three bedroom hOme in Pt
Pleasant, no pets, 614-992-5858.
Twa bedroom' house, carpeted,
n1ce and clean, deposit requ~red,
no tnside pets : three bedroom
ftouse, deposll requtred, no tnside
pets; 61o4 ·992- ~

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

11171 ChOYy Pick-Up 4x•. Automarlc; 1H1 Dodge Dakota
Picti-Up, 40,000 .llllto; 1987 Plymouth Sundance, 2 Doors,

e1•·

2511-12152.
11180 Ptyrnoull, 1078
Buldl, &amp;14--75.

Buick. 11173

11185 Buoek. $1 ,800: 1881 Pontiac
Bomovillo. $3,000,814-1148-25211.
1985 Dodo• Ariol K, runl good,
1111fe ""'"'· 1..00.00. 304·
615-t575.
11l85 Lincoln Town Car. runs
good, •• condi- _ . , OVB!IId, driwr - · ~~~~ caH ei4IMI2·ZD4.

14x70 Schultz wlelpanda. 3nice
level 1011 wlgara~e. water and

sewer. $12,000.

'

14x70 mobie home Wladd1ti.n, '""
dudel kH. public utilities.
87acre, 3bedroom wladdilion, wa·
ter and sewer, priced upper

1988 MIII&lt;Uf\' Couger XL. loaded,
PS, PB, AC, PW, 302, new tim,
au1oma1ic, $3500. 814-148-2045

or 61..,949-2819.

1890 Grand Prix SE, Extra Clean,
68,000 Wtltl, loadedl Excellent
Condilion, 17,500, &amp;14 44S 8385.

Furmshed, 1 bedroom, all ulilili&amp;s
paid, $300 per month, 6t4·9•92526

1991 Oatl'\aiiU Charade. 4C~I
aUto, pb, am·lfJI caal. exc . cond.
$2,800. 304-f!75-1238

Apartment 29 Rear Neal

1991 Ford EscOrt LX, 2 dr., auto.
50K mde1, silver wlgray mtertor,
scratches dOwn passenger s1de,
$21195, 814-8411-2311 dayl, 614·

Grac10u1 11v1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VLIIage Manor and
Riverside Apartments in ' M•ddle·
pa&lt;l From $232-$355 . Call 814·
992-5064 Equal t-1ou11ng Oppor·

tun11iel.

9411-21144"""""01.

•

Modem 2 Bedroom Apartment,

61•·446.0390.

Brand New 5x10 U1tl1tr Tra1ler
Wuh Tilt Bed , 15 Inch Wheels.
$650, 614·448-7252, Call Aher 4
P.M.
.
Concrete &amp; Plai!IC Septtc Tinks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, Ot-1
1-800-537-9528

N1ce 1 Bedroom In Counrry Sel·
ling, Washer IDrver, Stove, Re·
tngeralor, No Pets, No Smokers,
Available 511/g6, 1300 Depoail,
Apphcauons At 1743
Road, Gallipolio, 814-

Black &amp; whtle Cocker Spantel
pups, 8wka old. SSOea 304 · 7735076.
8r111any Spamels 8 Weeks Old,

RegiStered, E•cellent Bloodline
Dew Clawt, Tails Cut, Wormed, 3
Females lett $1 SO, 814-2589340.
Month!~

ses: Gas Gr~N S3S:

flea program need help?
Ask "R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply, 6t4·
992-21S4 aboul !he HAPPY
JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR. Kills
male and temate adult fleas. For
clogs 1 catsl

01neue Set W11h 6 Cha1ri StOO,
Dryer $100: 1982 .Suzuki 125RM
Water Cooled 8 1ke, Completely
Gone Through, $850, OBO, 614·
44&amp;-8605, Aher 4 ~M.

Monlhly Flea Program Need
Help? Ask JD NORTH PRODUCE
614-446-1933 About Tl'\e HAPPY
JACK 3-X FLEA COLLAR K1lls
Male &amp; Female Adult Fleas for
Oog.s &amp; Cats •

Couch Cha~r , $100; Washer
S125. BoM Spnngs /Manress,
S35: Lov8seal
614-446-3224

N1ce 2 Bedroom Centenary Area,
4 112 Miles From Gallipolis, Refr!geralor, Stove, Water Fur·
mahod, No Pots, $250/Mo .. 8 14446-8038.

NICe 2 or 3 bedroom apatU'n8nt in
Scooters
And
Middleport, no pets, SU -992- Elec:lric:
5858.
Wheelcha•rs. New /Used, Van 1
Gar lifl Installed, Sta~rgliae's. L1h:
One bedroom apartment in Pt Oha•rs, Call For Brochure, 614·
Pleasant, no pel&gt;, 6t4-992-5858.
448-7283

Poodle puppies, IOVIteacups, also
m1n1ature Schnauzers, AKC,
champ•on bloodlme. shots &amp;•
wormed, 61-t-667· 340•

Tw1n R•vera TO'Nef, now accepling
applications lor 1br HUO aubskt·
ized apt for elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304-f!7!HI879.

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boord1ng,
Stud Serv1ce Pupp.es, Groomng,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Paymenll Welcome, 6U· 3BB·

f 1rewood, already cut, you haul,
per load, Laurel Cl1ll area.
6t4-949-2503
G&amp;W Plastics and Supplr, sR 7,
Tuppers Pla1ns. Oh10 &lt;45783·
Spectal April 29· Mar &lt;4 . 100' 4•
fleJC p1pe- S19 .00, 250 .. 4· Fie•
p1pe· $47 50, 614·985·3813 or
614-667-6484

Very clean one bedroom furnished apanment in Ulddlepon,
call 61o4-4o46-30D1 prvlerably betore 10:30am ot aflar 4:00pm.

Wanted · Someone To Share 2
Bedroom Apartment I Expenua G&amp;W Ptast1cs and Supply, SR 7,
$200/Mo. Your Pari, Cloae 'To Tuppers Pla1ns. Ohio 45783- Wa·
Gallipolis If Interested WriGht· rer p1pe 3f4• &amp; 1· 200 p s.1 !100'
R S. P.O. Bo• 558, Kerr. OH rolls thru t,OOO' rolls) all fittmgs,
45643
Sch 35 pope, gas pope (1" lhiU 2')·
Regulators. 614· 985-3813 or 614·
667-f!4S4.

450

Furnished
Rooms

G&amp; w Plo5IICS and Supply, SR 7,
-:;::::-;:-:::::-:::::;::7--:::-:-~~ Tuppe rs ..Pta •ns. Oh 10 4 57 s3.
Gall'lpoIII,
Plasllc Culverr s· tnru 36'
Circle UOIOI
""
,
44t-2501 or a14.3ft 7•0812. Efta· Graveless leach ptpe, S&amp;O p1pe,
ciency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone. Sch 40 P•Pe. 614 -985 3813 or
Micmwovo 1 fi&lt;t~ige&lt;aklr.
614-9667-f!4114

I

Rooms ktr rent. week or month. G.E Stde by stele relngator ,S75
.
$
ai9CIIIC stove, dau~e oven, S75
S1arung
01 120/mo. Gallia Hotel. fuel oil stove, 300gal1onk, 1175.
814·4411-9580.
G E. VCR have papero $100. hot
Sleeping rooms with cooking. water tank with papers 1100.
Also lraller space on river. All Gravely Walk Behind Mower.
hook-ups Call after 2:00 p.m ., 614-388-9237.
304-773-5851 . Mason WV
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Flepa~red. New &amp; Rebu fll In Stock
MERCHANDISE
Call Ron Evans. 1·800·537-9528

51 o

HousehOld
Goods

...,.,

Homestead Bend, Broker. ·ao.c 882·2405.
1818 Richardson mobile hom&amp;,

12xeo $3,500. price neg. 304·
45&amp;-154e.

200XR

'1,
•
f

0429.

'

Pure White German Shepherd
Pups, AKC , 61&lt;4·286,..8753, 614·

523-8965.
Sel Point Siamese ~~Gnens, father
Reg1stered. Wormed '1L1t1er
Tnuned, 614·367·7705

570

Musical
Instruments

Console Piano. Responsible party
wan1ed 10 make low monlhly poyments on plana. See loc:aUy. Call

1-ll00-268-f!2t8.

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LI VESTOCK

t991 Olds Culla11 Calata, AC ,
sun roof, rear defrost, runs &amp;
looks good . $4,000 . 304-875-

2949.
11itlit1 Cor11Ct Automatic. AC,
1988 Niuan Sentra Automatic ,
AC, ·61K financing Available,
Cook Mo- 814--446-(1103.

1092 Fatd fi&lt;tnger BXl COb, V.f!, 5
apd, sports 18811, pt, new tires.
$8,500. 304-f!75-2264. '
1992 L1ncoln Continental Lload·
od! $13.200. 814-441-(1136. •

_.,

'lloidll
tNT
2•

;,

:~

11i183·Ford Tampa. Sitver, Loaded
341,000 mi., $8,900, '814-245-5321
1894 Mercury Cougar XR7, V8,
32,000mi., loaded, exc. c:ond 304·
.805-3287.

1995 Ford Eacon LX Aulomatic,

AC, .c Door, 18,000 Miles, 1g92
Ford Ranger XLT 55,000 Miles, 5
Speed, Cassene. ltC. After 4 P.M
014·441..0179.
87 Ollis Cutlass Supreme
Brougham, 2 door, V-8. e'kc;ellent
concllion, 81•·9112-2358 anytime.

Auto Loans. Dealer w1ll arrange flnancmg even II you 1'\ave been

turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equipment Used Cars 304· &lt;458·
1069.
1995 Metallic Blue Pont1lc Sunlire, 5 Speed, 4 Cylinder, AC, A"·
bags , AMIFM Cassene. 614 ·

720 ltucks for Sale

V.G.C

1173 250 Ford 492 Engine, 4
Speed. New Wood Bed, Runs
Good, 58,000 Ac1ual Miles,

$1,250,814-446-11038.
1978 Chevy Pick-Up Runs Good,
Sell Alii. $650, 814-387-7034.
1D85 Ford F150 4WO, 300, 8 cyl,
S3SDO tum, call 6U -91it2-6273
....,..,..O&lt;-mouage.

610 Farm Equipment
For rent 30acres 'ground for f1eld
corn. 304-1182-2662.
Gehl Round Balers, Mower Can·

dilionera, Dtsc Mowera. Disc
Uower Condilionera, Forage
Equ1pmen1 Sates And Service.
Alt izer Farm Supplr. 11•·2455193.

J.D. 12 Ft DISc, J.D. B F1. Groin
Drill, Excellent Condition! er•256-001t.
John Deere 1280 8-row conven.
Iiana! corn planter, plate less.
$2.000. 304-f!75-1925.
Trac1or hydraulic ftuid SHS.QD/
Sgel. Sidof"o Equ.,__ 30•-8157421 "'1-800.217-31111.

1988 ChBYy 112 Ton V-8 Engine
PS, PB, Air, Auto Trans, $5,695:
814·4&lt;46·4225 C&amp;ll After 4 P.M.
1989 Dodge 0-250 P"k-Up, V-8,
Auto, High Mileage. Priced Ta

Selll814-4&lt;8-85811.
1992 Ford F-150 Undtlf 35 000
Miles, Bedllne, Step Bumper
300SX, 5 Speed, Duel Tanka,
Ca&amp;selle, PS, PB. like New. 614·
245-9179.
1982 lsuzu pickup, • cyl. 5
speed, n~ce, 70,000 miln, $5500,
may consider ppnial lrade tor a
4x4 or pon1oon boat &amp;U-892 ·
2584 •her 6prn.

• Qll;b:£Ct

7 lkllld
I lkltlly ciiRP.

... Explaalve

West

Pua
Pua

Nertli
2a
3NT

~-+--+-~--~

Eu&amp;

Pua
Allplll1

•

.

QUICK, MARCIE, I ~EED THE
ANSWERS TO F'IVE, SEVEN,
NINE. TEN AND "fWELVE.:

WI-I AT KIND OF A STUDENT
. ARE VOU, MARCIE?

DON'T HAVE
HU:'I: YET, SIR

'.

ldng. South played a low heart to dumm,y's
king and ran the dub 10 to Wes1'81ting. '

For Sale , 1968 ·1972 Nova Parts ~
Fiberglass t-looel. Tn.mk L•d~ And .,.
FrontFender&amp;,614-441-Q280
~"'

•
New gas lanks. one ton truck ~­
wheels, raciaiOrs, floQr mats. etc. l':
D &amp; A Aulo. Ripley, WV. 304-372- ~·
3933or 1·800-213-9329.

S
;

"ij

1971 Lark 17ft travellrailer sell ;:

-4 - 3c:&gt;
o ,.,., •••·'"' T.-ll!!!li! S'

•
;,

!••·

E-,..1: FandEBoOTC&gt;AOL.COM

.

198-4 N1ssan M~rage moror home,
4Cyl, Sspd, great gas m1leage
70,00mi, $4,200. 304-675-2949
' "

WUL,\o.JE.

,..--.~ ...

LDSrOO~
fi~T6N'-£.,
. 2-1, AAD~

DOII-\C:&gt; 1~1~ '"'"''-'"'-

:::E!CND (NI£.
3-2., MD CU.
NE.YJ (:}.J/-£, ~

"' '

199&lt;4 lnnsbrook, rutty loaded, lots

of e:~uras, 18ft Senous mquiries
only. 304-675-6903

'·'•

M1ndas Uotor Home 21 fl. Good
Condllton. Fully Equ•pped,.614 ·
245-1474.

,•

z-o ...

Worried that South stiD had the ace10 of spades, West returned biJ second
heart. But declarer won with dummy's
ace and drove ou1 the diamond ac,.
The defense had four t{icka &lt;two
hearts, one diamond &amp;Dd one club). but
South had lhe rest. If only West had
persisted with spades, the contract
would have gone down.
"I'm sorry it was -only the three, but
didn't you notice the two was missing?" asked East. ·
.
"Yea, strangely en-ough, ·I• did,"
replied West with a discernible sarcas·
lie tone to his voice. "However, ask
yourself thi~ question: What would I
have led from the four or five cards. to
the queen-jack withOut the nine?"
"Your fourth-highest, I suppose,"
replied East.
"Right. So when I lead lbe queen,
you know I've got the nine. You should
drop the 10, clarifying the position.•

DZC

J 0

HRBCW

..

ZCMWN

&lt;O©R(llA-J££trs· ::!:

TIIAT DAllY
PI IlLII

0 four
Rearrange leHen of
tcrombled words

lho
be-

..

lew ro form four words

l

B"TOE

13 IT

I

I

M ,:

.

'

yl

~L_O...,...W-rH--,E--II.

,-

.

..

- - - - " " - - 14hetl ~y CLAY I . POLlAN - - " - - - - - -

"'

I

I

I

17 , I 1Q

"He's a bnlltant conversaIlona list," the cut1e commented ·
about her new boyfriend , ' he
--"TE_Nr:-ETD--,Dr::--A-r---1 talks to me ----- - -'"

1 15
6

1

o:':''

vou

Complete !he chuCkle quoted
by l1l11Rg in the m1SS1ng words
develop from step No. J below

-

'

..

.

'

•

..

Home
Improvements

.

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

BASEMENT
· .Cf
WATERPROOFING
•'
Uncondiltonal lifetime guarantee. •.:
local relerences furnished . Call •. . . .
1614) 446-0870 Or (614) 237- :
0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Es- - '
tabhshtd 1975.
....,

The Treasure You

tht

Sovlnes You'll Find In lltt

Classified Stcllon.

Fusion - Cycle. Prove • Unjust - YOUR TOES
"You won't become well heeled," my rich friend lee·
lured me, "if you don't stay on YOUR TOES I"

_,
'

EI

Appliance Paris And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~;· ..,.:..
perlence All Work Guaranlted ' ;:;:'
French Ci1y May1ag , 814-.44&amp;: j '
7195 .
n

.

'

.

;'..,

C&amp;C General Home Ua1n· '•
tenence· Pa1n11ng, vinvl sidtng, " ::
carpantrr, doors, Windows, baths, ... ~
mobile home repair and mora For ~ ·
free estimate call Chel, Gu.gg2- ~ ! .
6323

DRYWALL

...
..
.
." .

.

.-

.."••.

.

,..

Hang, fintsh, repair.
Ceilings teJCtured, plaster repair

1

••
•·

CaH ~om 30&lt;4·675--4186. 20 yearS
expenence

1'

•·

.J:

Earl's Home Ma1nlenance, vinyl
siding. rOQfing, Ulterior ancllnteri· ~
or painling, power washing room · ~I
additions. Free Eslimates'0 814- ::::
•

,;,

~~~~~~§~~~~~;f~
~

f

·~I

'

Patio Decks, Carports Siding C.
Free Estimates, Call St8ve 814~ ...
245-9579.
'

Roollno 'gutto111 compleJo home.
remodeling decks &amp; aiding 35
wears 81perience, B 1 B Ro0fin
and ConotiU~~~ &amp;1• .g92-ZJJ
or 1-800-888

820

11251 .

•

2 Bedrooma, Kempaf Hollow
Road, $275/Mo. • Dopooit, 814·
4411-7321

840 Eltctrlclltncl
Refrigeration
RSES CERTFIEO DEALER
LAWRENC&amp;ENTEA'RtSES
Heal Pumpo, Air Condl~onlng. If ·~
\bu Don't Coli Uo Wo Bolh Lo..l .t--•·
Froe Etlima!M, 1'·800·29t·OODI ill ..
814 4481308, wv OD2D45.
• '

...

__ .,,.......... u: "'''

conto,d oloctrlclan. Ride-r
EIOCtriCol, WVD00308 30+e 7•

1118.

•

·""

,

you did.
to a birthday gift.' Send for your
applause.
ASTRO·GRAPH
Graph pre&lt;bOns for lhe year ahead by SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) This mommaiing $2 ~nd SASE to Astro-Graph, c/o lng, some of your Ideas might not repre:-------~..00.--- lhia newspaper, P.O. Box 17~, Murray • sent your usual crisp thinking·. In lhe
Hill StatiOn, NeW Yolk, NY 10156. Make . even1ng, your mind will work logically
.
sure 1o state your zodiac: sign.
again.
OEII.I
(Mity
21.JUM
20)
In
regard
to
a
SAGITTARiUS
(Nov. 23o0ec. 21) In your
BERNICE
contentious family matte• today, lei the financial affairs today, guard against the
BEDEOSOL majority rule. If everyone tries to haue lnC~natton to complicate a simple situsthings his way, that matter may beccme lion . Instead of building a maze, try a
complicated.
simple ji.oat. .
'
CANCER (JuM 21.July 22) If you do not CAPRICORN (Dac. 22,Jan. 18) You
rema1n altlrt today. you might slight an should not expect too much from a busi·
old trittild unlntantionaiiy by giving too ness contact .who has promised you
much atten~on and praise to someone soma g1118t deal~. This person will not
you met rac:entty.
make good on his promises.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 A great oppoOO- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fib. 111).Outside
nlty might develop unexpectedly today obatocles might disrupt your Intentions
Wadneldey, May 1. 1996
and It will require a quick response. Do today. Free yourself from t11ese en1811gteTllera are strong indications t~at more not make the ml8lalle Oflhklklng that you rnents as eoon as poslllle.
good thlnga ~ you axperiBnced In lhe have aonllllliin
'•lftediil
" Illume to act.
P~ES (Fib. 20-l\larch 20} Try not to
paat year may occur In lhe year ahead. VIRGO (Aug. aa 81pt. 22) Yow exlnlva- 1$81 or cat~riza a .person you meet lor
1'-';er, do not taka your new opportu- gant impuiMs and~ quafillea might the llrst lime today. When you gat to
be lltQI1II!IId In MliOUa C04'ftUil4daY. You . . know thi8 PeliOn betler, you will &lt;IIC:OYar
iliiiM tor~
•
•
tAURUS (Apr11,2CHIQI 20} Take ,Clll'8 JI'HI regret ·Kr.ter II your waaletuln6ti hi8 or her hiddan talanla. • .
- . . l'IC*IIIoul.
.
~RIEl (. .rch 21·Aprll 111) You can
not to.be l(lliuentlid by an Individual -ctmlaully judglnao~. II you wMtto UIRA (lept. 2:1-GaL-II) •Tqday, I wilt achieve a me81Mn0ful obiec1M1 todlty. but
be on the .... sidt. mllce all tile ded' not •'!flee ID try ID .... cnclllilr tom. perlllpe nOt aa ...; u ~ mlgltt think.
alaita by yoii~N!f. Taurut, .,... youfleJI ll*tg • - • •
_, d
maicfutrung ilcond Ilion.

.

Pl!l'lblng &amp;
Heating

•Rooidanllti or CO"'""ttCiil wlrli.g,

• j, •

,

'Ron's TV Setvice, spec1ahziryg in
Zen1th also S81¥icing moat Gll'\er
brands. House calla, 1·800-797- -..
0015, wv 304-576-23118.
•

Box,

'

"

EJOOJIIACW.
'.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If I'd known I was gonna pttch a no-hitter today I
' '
would have gotten a ha11cut. • - Bo Belinsky.

I ,_.J__.,L_-.1--..J.L......I..-.J

N1c;e Clean Old&amp;t' 2&lt;4 Ft Self·Con·
ta1nod «;.ampe1 $1,850, 814-245-

SERV ICES

.

'.
411 Judge
•
Lance47 DockS
49 Thin and
limp, like llalr :
50--llle
.
OUIId tlo4W ' '
52
the briny : ; :

.A W C K D

KHZWRLJOJKX .'

rI

•"

,.'

9448. ,

lzr+-+-t

., I

THE BORN LOSER
~ow·~ Y()IJR.Um£
l£N.:J:£ lUll\

I

40 . . . .

&amp;:

led the spade queen: four, three,

Oveftlual KIIS, 614-245-56.77

1973 Winnebago Like New :.
40,000 Miles, 6 New 8 Ply. Trres
New Brakes &amp; Wheels. Cyl1nder ,
Generalor, 2 Water Tanks, 2 ·
Holding Tanks. Alf , Fuity Equ•ppedl $6,700, 61o4-4o46-3o485.

.. -

54 Olympic .
'.
gyrnn. .t - , .

1-~::;~!c~t@ against three no-trump,

Budget Transmss1ons. Used IR&amp;- ('
built, All Types. Accessible To •·
Over 10.000 Transmis1ion, Also · ·

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

35Faolali
relaiM
31 Chemtc.l
aulll1l

.. , -

..

•.j;·

conta1n.ed, good cond. 304· 895·
3427.
.

~~

Kll4bul
' •
Are there laws against advertite· •
5li Phlloaapher . ·' '
ments making ridiculous claims? For !11~+--!-­
Immanuel- "
example, a supermarket chain near '.,r-4--+-l-"""
5li Cry af pain .• .
my home runs ads claiming prices •
56 Lawyer F. - • "
have been cut. Maybe one or two
Bailey
:...
Author
prices are lower, but far more have
Fleming
been raised. My favorite YDIUrl WJed
t.o be two for 99 cents, but a few
CIPHER
months ago went up to 69 cents each.
That's a 39.4 perceut Increase, with illby Luis Campos
pellbrlly C.., CC=M\S n createdlrom QUOWOOM by famous~. past and.prnenl
Dation nmning at about three pen:enl.
Each
In lhe ~standi lOt •nether. ToctltY. dult L equals D
Defenders adverti&amp;e their holdin&amp;a
with signals. The bani part is deciding 'HRBCW
HWCXKWJ~GO ."
J 0
whether the signal being contemplat-·
is canny or capricious. In toclay's ZCWRLRDGO.
~ast should have been more

PEANUTS

,.

Camping
Equipment

-

29Hotlafy

43 Anl'-lei

By Pbllllp Alder

1894 Mirada 18' Sk1 Boat, 3 .0 1 ;
Liter InbOard Eng1ne W1th Trailer · :.
$8-::·.:.500:::..
6~1~4-446-.:.::~11330=::·___;___~ J,
'.
Johnson Bass Hawk II wit 50 hp ·, '
Mercury motor. Black Ma. II ::
· __....;,_ _ ; "
:S5000;::::::;·c;:304::::·6:::7,::5-:,:1::;925:::;.

rl

lldlw•
21Wa-

--~~~~~31Mid
32 Shirt-front

Advertisements •
that mislead

::
;:

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

...... ,-.
21 Opp.afrnul . •
21 Conlelll -

21~

group ~

12' Sea Eagle mllatable motor ~
boat ESKA, 2 0 hp., gaSOline OUI· '
bOard motor, floor board pump I ~
oars, $500, 814-992-6035.
•'

'

388-Q886.

•.

ol1lld

I ·

'·

992....232. I

2 Bedroom Near N.G H. S Slave,
Reln~eralor, Water, Trash Paid,
S2SO!Mo , $250 Oepoail, 6H·

...n.·

'a.aan

10 1WiaoiiHI
11 . a -'tllllip
1711erbreWe
18 Playby23 Phonetic

~

1885 Ford ahorr p~c:lil - up bed
1D88 S-10 lhOn bed no rull 3D+
S75-8288.

367-7150.

2bod(OOm '" Middlepor~ DH Ref.
erenc:e1 &amp; deposit required. 304·

144
ll"gll handed
41Jump

•••••

1•

'

810

ronnonsa,.,..,

'I

t99o4 Honda XR 65Q, onloll rodd ~:.
b1ke 23QQmL $•.000 304 -675- l '
3100.
g•

4.11-1056.

-:::o. .

3S TMI..::J"•

11201~--

z

Opening lead: • Q

::OB0~-~6~14~-2~4=~=7~1=5·~--~-- ,,'

790

si

Dealer: South

19~3 Yamaha Wamor $2, 400 : :

780

DOWN
1 Futur. .ttp.'

21110111 .....
30 Chairs

Vulnerable: Both

~

,,

760

1

• J 84 3
·• A Q J 8

1991 Yamaha 850 Excellen1 Con· : :
dillOn, Law Hours. 12.200 Or Best • :
()tfei, 814·441·0138.
.. .

Avenue , Gallipolis, Furnitl'\ed

$275/Mo. U1ll1tin Paid, 814·4•83844, Ahor 7 PM.

• J'

I&lt;

11169 Camara RS, V-8 aulomatle,
naw draa, good condition, asking
S4000. 6t4-742-3t•2.

Furnished Elflciency 2 Rooms,
Share Balh, $195JUo. U111itie1
Pa1d, 607 Second Avenue, Golllpolla. 814-&lt;;&lt;8-4411 Aller 7 P.M.

aAK

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Handa

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' 34 HoiOfl- 2
1311 R814WERA
37M an
• In-- (bend)
141 FHahlkn bini.

1980 Yahama 1100 GS, GX,
11,800 080 or trade tlr car. 304- ' t
675-5113
,;

7753.

_

7 52

::

750 Boats &amp; Motors
'
lor Sale

12x6S W1th Expando 2 Bed ·
room1. 2 Baths, AC, EC. Private
Lovin Chosh1ro, 814-387-7871 .

2 Bodroom1, 8 Miles OUt SR 21S,
$210/Mo., Plus Deposu, Refer·
ences, tli1.C-448-8172, SU -258-

$4,000, 614-367-7534

.......

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1876 Hlrley Davidson Sport.ter ' '

$1 ,100, 61 .. ·2&lt;45-9055.

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2 Bedf'oam S3001Mo., + Utilities,
t4x70 Sc:hultz 2 bedroom 1 bath Oepotat, Add•son Pike Road, 614on approx 1 acre in Gallipolis
Ferry area. $17,500. 304 -8751617.

Motorcycles

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1981 Cavaher AS 4cyl.-auto, loll
ol """'' v&amp;ty good cond. $2,200.
304-675-2006.

1987 Pontiac Bonnovilt, $3,000
080. 304-675-f!ll88.

Furn1shed 3 Rooma &amp; Bath, Upstalrl, UtlliiJes Furn11hed, Clean,
No Peta. Referenc:e, Depoait Required, 814-.C48-1519.

Garag~

11r, u111 no otl, U2K miles, "
S3500090, 614-985-31it7i.
;:

1991

?'

12.4 A I Ul Glrr

1;

1980 Varnha Warri or Laoka
Runs Good, Needs Chams a r
Sprockels, $1,200, 614 -387-

11187 Ford Aorootar SOOO: 1885
Toyota Corala $300. e1•·378·
2650.

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apanmenr.
Acron From Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit, $350JMo ,
61•·446-8235. 814'446-(1517.

'87 S-1 0 4a4 ext. ceb, 2. 8L. 5 opel

1987 Suzulu 500 Quad A.Ker 4.
wheeler, rresh rebuilt, 11500;
, 985 Yamaha 2.00 Moto·o4 •.hatl
dnve 4-whee'er, brllnd new 1r11,
I1000; B14-fiii2·S551 al1er8prn.

loaded. $1,650.304-875-621111.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMEfoiTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drlvo
from $244 1o $315. walk to 111op
&amp; moviea. Calf 114· 448-2518.
Equal Houling Opporaml!y.

,.

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.
.
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12 . . . - . . . .,.Ill lailunlt
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11 DrMn'Cirl11 Extllldlnll
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11- ..... cllcw
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20 llo4nln 110
21 Aleo
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22Ua';;
lood

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111111 Ford Exp!Or• Spott ••• · 4.0 '
V-e. standard, loaded, sun roof,
-kepi.&lt;I14-D411-2411.
•

740

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11111 Ct'lftrall't Matk Ill c:onvtr·
lion ¥M, txC. COnd. inlide &amp; OUl.
tilt, cru1M. air, am-rm CJIHHe,
53,000tni, new 11rea. 304·175·
ecJ3 aflllt 5pn.

1985 Mazda 88LX 4&lt;fr. lUll)' looded, Sapd, looks &amp; runs good.
$900. 1981! Subaru •WD. 21ft, llt·
bo, 5apd, PW, lookl ' runo oood.
304-175-1575

1888 t.ton1e Carlo LX luaaury,

N 3rd Ave., Middleport 1bed·
room, furnished. DepotLI &amp; refer·
onces. 304-882-2568.

Kick Bad&lt; and Rtiu IAt Tho Do882-3267.
vison'l Mow Vou•r• Yatdl Call: 1873 Uberty 1 Bedroom, Good'
BeautiM Riwlr Viow, 2 BedruCH!ll
814-4411-7.13
Cond'lion, 814...
In Kanauga. No Pa" R-eo,
Lawn,;.w,;,gjabo.3o4-e7'5.4no. ·. ' tD74 12x10. 3 bedroom, noecl Oepoall. Foau~r·a Mobile Homes,
somo lloor, $1,000, 12•50 2 bed- 6t4-441 ·0181 .
Per10nal C.,. Ptovidet. Will ,.,., room lurniahed, ready to move.
lor your lOVed onololdortyl wtlilt 12,100, 814-D411-252e.
Tratler For Renl, &amp; Space For
Ren~ 614-446-12J11.
you
cloy ohllt; wl.! _,
town Poinl Pteaaant area and 1875 14X70 Festival. 3 bedroom,
clo,. ., Plft..nl Volley Holjliltl 2 fuN belho: tiiD2 Suzuki llllndit· Two and three bedroom mob1!e
aroo. Call anytlft10 304-875-..13. 400CC. can 8Yonino•- 304-875· nomoo, 11ar11no a&lt; $240-$300,
....,, Wllet and trash 1nduded,
~I.:..,.,;:::;!ra.:.u:::;n.:_Y'"';.:.:.'cai,;,;;,.lo.;_~:-:"-:::1 2312 a&lt; 304-675-211215.
814-IID2-2187.

..

092-2218.

-----------1
21 0
B

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In A 70 Bed SNF. SuperVISOry
Experience Preferred. Apply AI
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l1fegaurd IConcet110n Stand
Wo1kors. Apply City Parka &amp; Recreauon Oepl., 518 Second '-v•
rue, Ga.lipDMt..

VrRA FUANITURE
814-...·3158
Ouaaitr Hou....a Furril.trt Altd
~ &lt;hi1Dttil On
Clllh And Carryi'I'IENT-2~
' And LlviWIIY A* Au ' He.
"'"Dolt.otry w""" 25 Milol.

.

310 Homes for Sale

Ga lltpoll5 Ctty Pool Now Hiring

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'
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After 5P.M

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Fa1rway, Dept. 1351, Box 439Q,
West COVII''la, CA 91791

- - - - ' - - - - I 730 VIlli &amp; 4·W~

Hollllllold

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Pomeroy • Mlddltpport, ohio

Tuea~.

By 'K&amp;N 1111 I EA
Gllli..U....._Bervlce
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - "Ah, more gifts," a beaming Mark Lloyd said
.as he eyed a stack of boxes containing medical supplies.
"We survive on lhe generosity and wastefulness of human medicine "
~ veterinarian of the Roger Williams Park Zoo said on a Saturdar m~­
rng as he prepared for a day 's work of checking on his charges. '"Every. thing we have is donated."
· It used to be a lot easier to care for animals in the bad old days, when
·zoo keepers could remove an animal from its concrete cage and blast the
place with a fire hose and a splash of disinfectant.
Zoo and aquarium directors say the evolution from concrete and bars
toward more natural displays was driven in
II uNd to I» • lot part by a better understanding of what lho anito 'CIIre fot .,,. mals need. But the zoo-going public, after
nM/a In the bMI old watching wildlife documentaries on televidaya, when zoo sion, also wanted to see animals in more lifekeepers
could. like settings.
· rsmove an .n/ma/
It's a tricky transition, however,
from lr. concrete because natural exhibits often mean viewers
cage and blaat the are farther away lhan when separated oirly by
.place W(th 8 fire hOM steel bars.
a(ld a aplaah of dl1fn..
''I'm , the first to say ·that modem
fect.nt.
exhibits are 15etter than the old-sty!~ cages,"
said Lloyd, who inspects zoos for accredita·tion by the American Zoo and Aquarium Association and is president of
.the Association of Reptile and Amphibian Veterinarians.
... But from a medical standpoint, those old-style cages were wonderful," said Lloyd. "You could sterilize them every day." Small wonder
·orangutans are skeptical about changes in their cages.
Modern exhibits, with all their din, trees, logs, plants and mixed
species require much more vigilance against disease, he s~id .
NATURAL SETTING • Zoo and aquarium directors aay the
evolution from· concrete and para toward more natural displays
These new zoos also must be on the lookout for problems that arrive
was driven in part by a better under~tandlng of what the animals
wilh new Specimens. Every specimen coming in is quarantined and subneed. But tha zoo-going public, after watching wlldlHe docujected to multiple tests for several weeks before it's introduced to the other
,
mentarles
on television, also wanted to see animals in more life.
animals.
like
settings,
as this Cheetah is viewed.
Those tests continue through an animal's life in the zoo. At Roger
Williams. fecal tests are run twice a year on every ani·
mal. which means three tests are done in Lloyd's clinic every day of lhe year. The scrutiny lasts beyond an
-animal's life. "Everything that dies, we have· a
necropsy.'~ he said. "Yes, even Brazilian cockroaches.
· There are some things we can treat in invertebrates."
Sitting next to a donjlted, circa-1950 X-ray
machine, Lloyd said zoos spend much of their buo_gets on salary, animal food, operations and maintenance. Things like animal care take creativity.
·
"You've gotta be innovative," he said. The lights
.for the ' X-ray machine cost between $15,000 and
$20,000 new, but the zoo received them ¢rom the
· . Westerly Hospital in Connecticut. Lead-lined win. ·dows in the X-ray room would llave cost $4,000 new,
but the zoo got !hem for $800, rebuilt the wall to fit
lhem, and made it possible for students and others to
, observe procedures from outside.
, · A local ob-gyn assisted on an obstetrics problem
-with. an animal. A Brown University neurosurgeon
herped with an elephant. A dentist worked on a polar
bear's third root canal.
"They can do anything as long as they work under
my supervision.'' the animal doctor said of his
. human-doctor counterparts. "An\1 you'd be S~~rprised
how many are more than eager to help out."
SPACIOUS AQUARIUM - The zoo evolution has touched marine life as well' as land
For all his work treating lhe nearly I ,000 zoo crea- animals. Aquariuma are more spacious and allowing for a more natural life and view·
tures, from sea lions to wolves and beetles, Lloyd har- lng.
.
·
bors strong feelings about the need _to display captive
animals at all .
•
said they should be held accountable for how they treat their specimens.
"I don't think anything here belongs in cages, but it's a nece~sary evil
"I hate to sec zoos go under, but at the same time if a zoo. is just a
for now," he said. The time may never come whim zoos aren't needed to menagerie, then it probably needs to go under. Iflhey' re not changing their
rescue imperiled species, however. And as long as there are zoos, Lloyd mtsSion , then they should get out of the business."

••IM

Cleveland
rallies to
edgeChisox

"The t.anguage of Ufe, a Festi- believed !hat only an independent
val of Poe!$" by Bill Moyen was Jewish homeland qould conquer overt
reviewed by Betsy Parsons at a anti-Semitism. This was si~ty yean ,
recent mec:tin11 of~ Middleport Lit- ~fore modem Israel was founclcd:- ~
crary Club bQsted by Pauline Horton. Owen reported. Emma and her-"
In her review, Pinons emphasized friends, M;s. Owen said, joined in !
·the sliversit~ of the backgrounds of protests ov~ mistreatment and called ~
contsmporary poets making their upon fellow Jews to rise up as in bib-·,
works more representative of all lical times, tb recapture their past glo-.
American people. This was followed ry and to reclaim their homeland She
by a program of Irish music.
also reminded Christian readers of ,
At another meeting held at lhe. !heir recurring acts of 8J!ti-Semitism.-~
home of Ida Diehl, Sara Owen intro- Lazarus died in 1887 at the age of 3S: :
duccd the book, "Emma Lazarus. Her and unfortunately, her work did no(•
World, Life and Lettets" by Bene remain popular. W remember her~
Rolh Young, and Par Holter present- now mainly for her words -engraved"
ed "The Carousel" by Belva Plain. · within the Staiue of Liberty:
Owen noted that Young's work
. "Give me your tired, your poor,_,
started as a project in a Jewish His- ' Your huddled masses yetiJlling to.:
tory course Bl the UniveBity of breathe free The wretched refuse of:
Michigan. Following a trail ofprevi- your teeming shore Send these, .the •
OW.Iy..___uncollected letters, the aulhor homeless, tempest-tost to me. I lin_:
picced'together a life which dispelled my lamp besille \fie golden door!" --.
some of lhe myths which had gro\\ln
Holter introduced her review -,ith'.:
up around the poetess. Emma a musical selection played by a beauLazarus, the reviewer stated, was tiful silver filigree carousel. "The.~
born. in New York City on July 22. Carousel." ""absurd, extravagant toy ;
1849 to "one of !he best-known and , linked r
entous events of life-- 4
oldest Hebrew families" established love. grief, and murder.
:
there for four generatioi.s.
A "than~ou" note was read ;
Educated privately in music. Jan- from Emm K Clatworthy. treasur- ~
guages, literllure and art. she grew up er of Healh nited Me!hodist Churcll ~
in a cultured sociely without too acknowledg ng a gift made in rnein- ,
much in(luencc from Jewish religion. ory of Betty Fultz. A get-well card to •
Lazarus' never married but enjoyed Juanita Bachtel was signed by !hose -~
many friends in lhe literary world and present. An announcement was made J
by 1874 was herself recognized as an concerning the final outing of lhe ~
author of note who began the great year. The committee recommended a .•
contribution of Jewish literature to visit and luncheon at The Inn at ·:
American leuers. From her elite ~i- Cedar Falls near Logan.
·~
tron .she v1ewed the later Jewrsh . ' The next meeting of the Literary . :
1mmrgrants from the pogroms . of Club will take place at the home of •
Russra and eastern Europe as s_ome- Jeanette Thomas with a review of ;
what beheath her soctal group and Bernstein by Clarice Erwin.
·
!

·I

Vol. 47, NO. a
2 Secttona, 12 ~

will

Seventh birthday
celebrated
: Bfitnee Sauters celebrated her
s~venth birthday recently. with a
pllrty held at the home of her parents. Charles and Dianna Sauters.
P'pmeroy.
· Attending 1lre party were her
bi-othcr, Kelsey Mark; gr.mdparents,
L:eroy and Joyce Sauters; greatgtandmother, Manda Eastman;
'Fheresa and Tracy Shaffer. all of
11omeroy.
--'"~,
: Sending gifts and cards were her
pndparents, Delben and L11retha
Vandevander of Whitmer, W.Va.;
lhndy, Delores, Randy Jr. ,
Jl&gt;hnathan and Aaron Bradford Bender of Buckhannon, W.Va.; and
June, Jackie, Alison, and Ashley
Sears,Vandevander of Volga, W.Va.

~News

policy-

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and . home owners have
fewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge . you less lor your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even more
whh our special muhi-pollcy
diacounts. ·

.

A Meigs County man removed a

•

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enes
·I
r - - -- -

ARM 0001 fOI.W. omas IS (614)

446-0902

992-6661

Pomeroy · Rutland
992-2133 742-2888

ROGAN ~
RNER _:
•

;;

Bell's alleged embezzlemeirttook '
place as ~ assisted in the approval ·
, proces~ fo~ payment of items from
various vendors that were not used at .
!he Ohio Valley Electric Corp .. operated plant i:n Cheshire.
A pre-se11tence report was ordered
. by the court. The crime istmnishable
by a maxilljum 5-15 years prison and
a $7,500 fine.
, ·
Ajury trial date was set Friday for
Miller, whO operates a B'P bulk fuel
plant' on Pine Street in Gallipolis. .
Miller .,)Vas secretly indicted on
. Feb. 5 by the Gallia County grand
jury for his connection in the invoicingscheme.

1995.
'
"If
go out and confiscate Meigs' county Board of
Sentinel news staff
_Durham was charged wtth four someone s dogs, you have to have . ~ioners to support construction of an
HARRISONVILLE-- In the wake ammal cruelty-type charges, all of so.mewhere to take them," said her animal shelter.
of a raid on a purported puppy mill which were later dismissed in Meigs husband, Lee Murray. "You don't
"They thought this would get (a :;
last year, the Meigs Counly Humane County Court.
drop them off on someone and refuse shelter) fqr them, " she said. "They ;
Society has b~n named in a lawsuit
Last August. the M~HS was to pay for their support."
don't de~erve an animal shelter."
;:
filed in Vinton. County.
ordered to retu~ the ann~als, an
The Murrays c11ntend the MCHS
She estimated the dogs' value.at ·
The M&lt;?~S, former president order Durham ~ard has been tgnored. is responsible for the bill since it was around $24,000. The breeds inchjd- ;
Dorolhea Frsher and board member
After the rau!. 23 of the dogs were ordered to return the dogs to Durham ed Pekingese Yorkshire terrier Shi- •
. Rita .Lewis, along with Barbara · transported to Muf!ay's .kennel in ync~ the charges were dismissed.
htzu, Malle..;, boxer, bassett hound ;
Boolh of McArlhur, are named in the Malta for safekeepmg. Now Mrs.
"l want the taxpayers in Meigs and others.
· ,
.suit filed by' Lois Murray of Malta, · Murray clatms the MCHS owes her County to know how the Humane
Meanwhile, Durham, who is :
Murray is seeking money for about_ $19,000 for ke~p1ng the dogs. Society does business," he said. "I'm investigating filing suit over lhe mat- :
keeping dogs_seize? follo~ing a raid
"I JUSt want to get nd ofthese.~ogs ready to give the dogs back if I get ter, said her dogs received better car:&amp;':
on the Harnsonvtlle resrdence of and get my h!" back 10 order, she the money from the Humane Society before being grabbed by the Humane ,"
Sharon Durham on April9', 1995. In satd.
. ·
-- they have .to pay their ' financial Society.
that raid, 62 dogs, five cats and two
Her husband, ~e, accuses the obligations."
"Since the raid, a -lot of the a~i- ~
· chrckens were set~ from Durham's MCHS of bet~g _mcompetent and
Mr. Murray said he and his wife mals have ran away, been killed or ·
.Vance Road property on March 9, unprofessronal 10 115 conduct.
now have five of Durham's dogs, but been stolen" she said . "At least 1 ; _
·
did have about 20 following the raid. knew,wher; my animals were and 1 ; :
"We got~~~ sickest on_es," Mr. keptthemconfined."
Murray sard:, They were tn pretty
"Pet owners beware, you could be ;
rough shape.
lhe next victim," she warned.
"I've
taken
in a off.
lot but
of dogs
that
•
have
been
dropped
I'll never
Durham said she took good care ,;

Bry
' ·ant
sentence'd
.
.
•
•
•
.
rlce
rise
I
Gaso
.
. . lne
. . . PI
I .1 .
t 0 3 .y.ears
o·.n charges·
.
·
.
~'~er ,·n··
'
"eSt'
;g
· c;r
I~ t'iOn .
.
Ul
Un
1

.I f I

Gallipolis Middleport

.......

A Glnnett CO. Plsuc IP II* .,

Cl;trlsta Circle, ~ra King, JeaM Lillie and Kim
Sayre; third row, Jes1lca Sayre, Amber
Thomea, Mark Lewis, Biian Allen, -Greg McKlnntiY, Hillery Harrla,l!mlly Duhl, Amy'Riza;.end
T••"'u Juatla; fourth row, Jannlfer Lawrence,
Aa·van You.ng, C.J. Hlrrla, Jay f.4cKelVey, Jason
Ba1rnett. Rochelle Jenkins, Robin Gllllaple and

independent marketer ·or BP bulk

gurlty to charges of theft in the
amount of more than $100,000 in
connection wilh a phony invoicing
scheme Tuesday in the Galli a County Coml)lon Pleas Court.
Donald R. Bell, 62, Letart, was
indicted.by lhe Gallia County_Grand
Jury· in March, for his connection in
an alleged scheme_that defrauded the
· Kyger Creek Power Plant out ofniore
than $260,000 over a 1O-year period:
Bell, represe~ted by Cqlurnbus
. attorney Terry Sherman, is a former
stores.supervisor at Kyger Creek. and
allegedly wor)&lt;ed- in -collusion with
Larry E. Miller. ;of Gallipolis, . ·an
.

BRITNEE SAUTERS

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
892-6687

.,

pr~vious not guilty plea and pleaded . fuel.

-,

·
SyracuM
•·
Baddlng &amp;
Vegetable Planta ....... $6.50 flat ·

.••

"

..

: In an effon to provide our readersjrip with current news, lhe GallipoHanging B11keta $5.75-$10.85
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily SentitleI will not accept weddings after ' Col)lblnatlon Pots
Q) days froin lhe date of the event.
$3.50-$9.95
• All club meetings and other news
Geranium• .............. $1.00 &amp; up
anicles in the society section must
. _ .................. ~.76-$8.15
tic submitted within 30 days of •Rhododendrolll
............ $12.95
occurrence. All birthdays must be
Sllrubl &amp; Trell ... $2.95-$10.95 .
sJibmitted within 42 .days of lhe
.Open Dilly J11.m.-s p.m.
occurtence.
sundiy 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
: All material submitted for publilliiM176
cation is subject to editing.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 1, 1996

I '.

Hubbards Greenhouse

.....

r

Bell pleads.·g uiity to theft Meigs County Humane Society named in suit
charrres
at Kvner
Creelt ByJIMFREEMA~
Y?~
Co~mis~_ '
.::1
I ::1

..--

..

•

•

By JIM FREEMAN
piece of advice. He then asked the Cottrill, Jordon Lidel and Stacy Soy- :
Sentinel news staff
more-t~an- 330 Jieople present to sup- der; fourth grade, Bethany Amberg- -~
"Pathways to Success" was the · pan effofl!: to secure funding for a er, Codi Davis, Sarah Hawley and ;,:
theme for the ninth annual Southern new district-wide elementary~chool. Katie Sayre; fifth grade, Melinda ~
Local School District Academic
Ord worked as a coal miner for II
Excellence Banquet held in the high years before becoming a ieacher. He Chancey, Crystal Cottrill, Mariam.J::l· t
Dabaja and Jennifer Walker: sixth •
schooI.'s Charles Hayman gyl)lnasium taught for the Eastern Local School grade, Amber Duffy, Tyler Little and :
Tuesday night.
District from 1965 to 1972 before Rachel Marshall .
. ;
Retired
superintendent
Bobby
J.
transferring
to
Southern
.
He
became
J
1 h
uniorhigh --·eighth grade, Bran- ~
'd 'fi d
0 rd 1 entt re severa pat ways to superintendent in 1973, a post he held don WolFe, )amie Baker, Kyle NOr- !
success for the 70.student honorees. for 21-and-a-half years beFore retir- ris, Chris Randolph and Amber Mayc •,
od. work habits," Ord ing in Dec. 3 ~. 1994.
"Learn go"E
d'
1
nard; seventh grade, Macyn Etiin, ~
d
encourage . xtraor. mary peop e
Ord was a member of the steering· Shauna Manuel , Jonathan Evans and ''
are often ordinary people with extra- committee that helped form the first . Emil~ Stivers.
• '••
ordinary determi'lation."
academic banquet nine years ago.
H' h
Ord also urged students to develStudents recognized were, by
rg school .. twelth gracje, fen- ;
op a sense of responsibilily, be well-~ool:
.
nifer_Lawrence, Ray an .Young, &lt;::-J. :
Harns, Jay McKelvey, Jason Barnett •
organized and to enjoy "doing that
Letart Falls Elementary -- second Rochelle Jenkins, Paul Ihle. Robi~ .,:
which1s successful" . He cited inven- grade, Autumn McLaughlin, Erin Gillispie and John Card; eleve~th ~ :
tor Thomas- Ed1son and automotive Wise, Dustin Brinager and Shyla'Jar- grade, JesSJca
· Sayre. Amber Thomas, ~·
•
pioneer Henry Foro as famous exam- rell; third grade, Brooke Kiser and Mark Lewis. Brian Allen, Greg MeK- ~
pies.
Autumn Reed; fourth grade, Amy inney, Hillery Harris, Emily Duhl, •;
Wdrking well with others is anoth- Norman and Michael Roush.
Amy Rizer and ·Trudy Justis; tenlh :
Portland Elementary -- third grade, Cynthia Caldwell, Crystal ;;
er pathway to success, Ord explained,
adding that successful people are grade, Sara Cammarata and Ryan Coleman, Evan Struble and Nikki .,
·. ELEMENrARY SOHO~~- The following
Collrllt, Jordon Lldei 1nd Stacr Snyder; third
good scholars.
·
Smith; fourth grade, Stephanje Brad- Robinson ; ninth grade, Christa Cir- ·:
Solithem Local Sc~l
!riel elementaiy Stu·
row; Bethany Amber-, Cod Davie, Sarah
"If you do all of these, .. your ford and Andrea Tedford; fifth grade, cle, Kara King, Jesse Little and K.· ·
,__.
ell
h .... ·
..,_ le K
.,_.
chances for success are good, Ord Tara Prckens and Brandon Struth, S
.tm ·
denta were recogn,_., .
Y n 19 t ""' ace·
naW y, · atle Sayr,e, Melinda Chancey, Crylllil
said. "The only job security is to be sixth grade, Amanda Huddleston an"
ayre.
.
"
demlc achievement. Shown are; from left: first . Collrllt, Mariam EI·Dabaja, JennHer '· Walker,
·
"
' ·
· · "
,,. Rev~Brian Harkneu of.JIJ!; ~- ':
•.-ow; .~U!Uinrt .Mc!.pl.tllhjlrl, J!r!r:i''WISei"·DWIIJI1:"' ,. A11tbtr J.lU,ry,•;Jy"r ~:•t:!~~pbtl-r~"'l'..,-- more ~tented tom~rrow tha~ l?u are Lori Sayre.
Brjmr"f• Shyla J•rrelr, Bleoliil Kiser, Aufumn
f~!jlb row,_ Sara · Cal'i)m,fnilaL~yan..•Sjiiifu,
··tod;ly,!l.-,_,.-_...,
·~· "' ............ - ·~6u!e "BBerttenllry -- · sec011'11 ~elt'Metho.r.sr'Churcli delivere ••
Reed, Alny Norman and Michael Roush; sec- · Stephahie Bradforil, Andras ·Tedford, ' Tara
Stay away fro,m .drugs and be grade. John Bentz. Myca Michael, the invocation .,efore the meal preCHJd row,•ilohn· Bentz, Myoa Michael, Chel1ea
f!fekerta, -Brandon Smith; Amanda Huddleston
truthful to your God, was his final Chelsea Smitil and Jennifer Wolfe; p~ed by the Southern. Junior :High .
Smith, Jennifer WoHe, Ashton BrQWn, Rachel
ahd Lori Sayre.
·
third ·grade. Ashton Brown, Rachel School.
.
:;

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ACADEMIC HONoREES - Southam Junior
High 1nd Hlgli SChool itudenta reeognlzed
were, from left: front row, junior high atudenta
B111ndon Wolfe, Jamie Baker, Kyle Norrl1,
Ctrrls Randolph, Amber Maynard, Macyn ,Ervln,
Shauna Manuel, Jonathan Evans and .Emily
Stlvets; ~econd row,, Cynthia
Cryatal
Coleman,
Struble,

I

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Seventy students honored; Speaker Bob Ord
encourages honorees to learn good work habits

da and Brook Bolin, Suzie Will, Gerry Lightfoot. Cherie Williamson,
Becky, Ryan and Bethany Amberger,
Kathy Arnold, Carolyn Nicholson,
Sherry and Elizabeth Smith, Marlaline Painter, Janice Fetty, Kristen
Cooper, Paula Pickens and Nancy
Morris.

We
Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Ho••
Owners Special
Saving•· ·

CfOudv t = t o. . In
the 40a. "'ll
, cMnoe .
of lhowen~. High 7011.

•pathways to Success• .:
theme of Southern's 9,h ~.
academic awards even ::: ~-

Lydia Council plans mother~daughter banquet
Plans for the mother-dtUtghter with Amberger g1vmg devotions,
banquet to be held on May ·Jo were "Death Could Not Hold Him" using
made when Lydia Council of the scripture from Luke 24-6. Janice FetBradford Church of Christ met ty had a reading entitled "April" and
had a poem called "Open My Heart
recently at the church.
The banquet will be held at 6:30 That I May See."
Sunshine baskets for April were
p.m at the church with the theme to
·
taken
to Helen Kibble and Dwight
be "Down Memory Lane." A miniconcert will be presented by B. J. Hysell. Pack-the-pantry items for
Smith. Program booklets will be pre- May are canned meats. Communion
J!&amp;red by Becky Amberger and Paula for May will be handled by Madeline
Pickens, and handling special gifts Painter.
Hostesses for the May 6 meeting
be Sherry Smith.
' A donation was made by Lydia will be Painter and Nancy Morris.
€ouncil and members to the ·Jacob
Fetty and Amberger served
Arthur Cancer Fund of Wellston.
refreshments.
.
: Pickens presided at the meeting
Attending were Diane Bing, Bren·

BuckeyeS:
·16·23-25-29-30

~

Foster H~mes ·are neec:r'ed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call992-2117 for information and
· to be part of ~he effort.

I

0205

t

PROTECT A CHILD
I

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· Jonathan Meritt New Haven :
W.Va., Bachelor or' Music degree: ~
Heather Davenport, j'omeroy, Bach- •
elor of Business Administration
degree; Susan Wolf, Pomeroy, Bach- •
elor of Music degree; Donette Dugan, ·
Reedsville, Bachelor of Science
degree in . Nursing'; Tracey Powell: -~
Smith, Shade, Bachelor of Arts
degree·, Lt'nda V:anrnwagen,
·
p.omeroy,
. 8 · h 1 0 fS ·
de
· N
. ac ~~r. S ctence gree In ursrng_; 1 1P. watzel, Po~eroy, BB;Ch·
elor_of Scrence degree 111 Elecmcal
Engrneenng.

.

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r,r--1-T-TA.;._,K_ES_A_C_OMM....;;._,U~NI-TY~T-0-.. ;
.

Pick 3:·

Sparta on Page 4

Area students earn degrees :.
The following area students were
among the 417 candidates fordegre,:s
at the e~d of_ wrnter quarter at t)le·
Ohro Unrverstty Athens campus:
Of lhese candrdates, 65 recerved
graduate degrees at_ the end of th_e
quarter .. Of the remrunrng 352 candtdat~s. 59 gradUBied wtth h1gh honors,
ha~rng earned an accumulatrve graife
porn! average of 3.5 or better
· hon
h a 4.0·
scale,and 158 graduated wtt onors,
having earned an accumulative g~;ad~
point average of between 3.0 aQd
·
_ _
3 499

-

Ohio Lottery

April30,·1

·Midd·leport Library_.
Club reviews poetry:.

Ancient equlpment, 'People docs'
·all part of tendi~g to zoo critters

·,

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Aulo-Owner. lnmrance
Ule Home Car Business

n.

'""~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Co~- son task (orce oflawyers and ~conogressionalleaders p. 1mised a vote by mists to conduct the ~nvestigation of
Memorial Day to roll back gasoline price increases.
~
.
taxes as t.he Justice Department
.She acted at .the request of Assoo~ned ao investigation 1\iesday into ·ciate'Auof!ley General John Schmidt
the ca ses of the ·recent surge in, and in reSJIOnse to inquiries-by three
prices 11at lhe pump.
.members of . Congress, department
"We believe witlr tiJe skyrocketing sJ'&gt;okcsman·Carl Stem said.
prices of gasoline, jet fuel and other
TWo Senale Democrats from Confuels that the most certain way to give necticut, Christopher Dodd and
consumers retief is to repeal the gas Joseph Lieberman, and Rep. Charles
taX ... and do it as quickly-as we can · Schun:rer, D-N.Y., wrote Attom.ey
before the. summer df}ving season General Janet Reno requesting an
starts in earnest," said Senate Major- investigation.
ity Leader Bob Dole, President ClinThe task force whose member
ton's GOP challenger in lhe fafl were not identified, ·.•wilt _first study
election.
whclhermarket forces account for the
In a contest to win votes by low- increase in prices," Stern said. "If
ering prices, Republicans have call~ not,lhen they will determine whelher
for a ,repeal of the 4.3'-cent-a-gallon , . there is ~}Vidence of collusion, whiclt .
gasoline· tax increase th~t Clint9n is illegal under antitrust laws."•
won in 1993 as part of a deficit•
reduction package. Dole and House
Reno-told repotters Tuesday afterSpeaker Newt Gingrich said Con- noon !hat she was not aware of any·
gress would vote quickly for a repeal one in lhe Justice Department distJtroiWh lhe end of lhis year. And lhey cussing !he probe wilh lhe White
said a l?'irmanent repeal would be Ho.use before !he Tuesday morning
inCluded fl' !heir fiscal 1997 budget decision to open !he investigation. As
package.
inquiriesJrom Capitol'HIIl mounted,
The Clinton administration has .Reno said, "We asked Anne (Bingasaid it is willing-to discuss repeal. At miln) to look into it to see if there's
· tbe same time, it'has moved to drive, any new information."
prices down by increasing supplies.
.
And or. Tuesday, Assjsllnt AnorD11ring g"oline shortages jn past
nby Genetal Anne K. Bingaman, · ,years, !he antitruSt division has found- .
head of the Justice Department's no basis for taking' action against oil
,anti~st division, natited a five-per- companies.

'

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1

I

I!IY JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel news staff
A 48-year-old West Virginia man
was sentenced to three years Tuesday
morning for burglarizing two
Pomeroy-moa businesses. However,
a proposed plea agreement for lhree
other crimes fell tltr'ough.
James Edward Bryant oF West Virginia, currenily residing in the Pickaway County Jail, was sentenced i'n
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Co\lit of Judge Fred W. Crow III in
the burglaries of S&amp;W Guns and the
"' · H 1
..atenng o e.
.
.
However, after pleadmg gmlty to
the crimes, he was· released to West
Y.rgi~ia au~ori~es allegedly to assist
m-an rnvesugation !here. He was not
jailed by W:est Vi~ginia authorities
and apparently fruled tp. return to
Mergs County for sentencrng.
. ~· was sentenced by Crow to lhe
mutmurn senten~ of 18 months on
e_ach count, to be seryed conseculively. .
However••an agreement for ~~ant
to pl~ad gu1l~y t~ three additto~al
felomes fell through after his attOrney, Ke11 Murray of Columbus,
~came ~n_ct:m.ed c;&gt;ver ~e possibil.,
tty of addrtioital prr~on ttme for his
client. , .. . :
. Bryant _walved his rights to have
hts case lieard by a grand jury and
-..:as to _plead ~liy to a lhrec-count
btll 11f rnformatton. .
According to lhe failed agreement.
_Bryant was to l&gt;lel!d guilty to bur-

do anything for the Humane Society of the animals, keeping them in a -10- -: ;
glarizing Ridenour's 1V and J&gt;,pptr- again, ever." Mrs. Murray added.
by 36-foot concrete pen. The animals :~
ance in Chesler on Sept. 30, 1994,
Durham. said recently that the were fed and watered outside, slie : :~
and lhe Forest Run Block Company Humane Socie!Y never asked her to added.
: . : .;;
in Racine on Oct. I, 1994. The correct conditions at her home before
Jennifer Sheets, attorney rep~: i~
crimes were committed while he the raid.
·
senting. the MCHS, acknowledged · ·:,
. was being sought for failing to appear
"They came the first time with a the organization was named in a suit· ·'
for sentencing.
crew. If you had been driving past my filed by Mrs. Murray, but declined . :; .
For ll)ose two crimes he was to · house you would have thought there further comment.
:: · :;
·receive the maximum sentence' of 18 · -was a drug bust," she said.
Last monlh the group agreed to :~
·months each to be served consecuShe accuses the MCHS of seizing pay $3,000 to Boolh, who also .kept ;;
tively. ·
· the dogs in an effort to persuade the .. some of lhe dogs.
.z.
A third charge was a felony count
or----'""!"--'!'"".;...____ ' :~
for failing to appear for the burglary
::
senteqciog. Murray became con~•
·cerned after Crow indicated he could
·.;;
sentence'Bryant to up to five years on
the charge when lhe arrangement was
;-i
.•
i
' for Bryantto be sentenced to one year .
·'•
on that particular count.
.~
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
'Lentes wanted to dismiss tile failure
to appear_charge ll!ld charg~ with
•
•
Bryant wilh escape, which carries a
••
maximum 18 monlh sentence. Crow
denied lhe motion, allowing Bryant
;~
to wilhdraw from lhe plea agreement.
·~
' Crow said lhe court "will not have
•
its hands tied" in regards to sentenc·~
I
ing and instructed Lentes to meet
I
. wilh counselfor Bryantto resolve lhe
issue.
' ' Counting !he two crimes on which
·••
.. 'II
he was sentenced, Bryant could have
CONfERS WITH ATTORNEY
Bryant, C.ilw, wa1 ..,_ · ':
fac~ llp to 11 yean as oppilSed to lhe
tenced
tD
a
total
of
three
ywe111ln
the
Melp
Common Pleai Court . :seven called upon in !he plea agtUfor
his
role
In
two
Pomeroy-area
bu~ He le lhown-con- · ·• _
-mcnt.
ferrlr 1g with hie attorney, Ken Murray ofColuinbua, lllortly beloie • · .,.. .
Bryant was ~manded to lhe cusan
acldltlor)al plea agreement Mil through, while court ldn\lnll- : ;~
tody of lhe Meics County Sherift's ·
lrltor Paul Qerard lookl on.
·
:· ~
Department pending further action.

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