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                  <text>Plge D8. ~

l ....... ~ !bwJ

Ohio Lotte~y

• J

Pomeroy • Middleport • G8111palla, OH • Point Plnaent, WY·

Suncley, May 5,1-

Reds .hand
Giants loss
In NL play

Super Lotto:

M-22·28-36-43
Klc:ker:
7 4 8 4 7-4
Plck3:
0-6-3
Plck4:
7-5-5-2

Sports on Page 4
•
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BENEFIT CONTEST- A plg-klaaing contest waa held recant•
ly It Oultllty Fann &amp; Fleet, Gallipolis, on behalf of the March of
Dlmet. The event ralaad more than $210 for the organization and
the
eventl!ally won by B.J.'s Rabbit Ranch, Ashton, W.VL
From left are Betty Robertson and Ronnie Robertson, both of
B.J.'a Rabbit Ranch, Zachary Jagello, Quality Farm &amp; Filii man·
agar Mark Zagello, and Dianna Eada, tha Gallia County Goodwill
Ambaaaaclor for the March of Dimes. She is the daughter of Brian and Sandy Blakq of Bidwell.
.

pig-·

GALLIPOLIS · The occurrence of
melanoma (skin cancer) is increasing
at a higher rate than any other cancer
today. Skin cancer is now the eighth
leading cause of caqcer deaths in the
United States.
The principal cause of skin cancer
is almost universally accepted by
medical experts to be overexposure to
sunlight, especially when it results in
sunburn and blistering. Early detec·
. lion is the surest way to a cure.
On Saturday, May II , from 9 a.m.
until noon, Holzer Clinic will spon·
sora free skin cancer screening clinic. Dr. James Young, Holzer Clinic
Dennatologist, is spearheading the
annual screening clinic.
"The American Academy of Dermatology has been promoting screening clinics Jince 1985 be. Sin~e that

time, over one million skin cancer
cases have been detected." stated Dr.
Young.
"I'm thankful that Holzer Clinic is
helping to offer this very important
preventative screening." Dr. Young
s·aid.
Dr. Young, Holzer Clinic employ·
ees and other clinic physicians will
panicipate in this year's screening:
Anyone with a history of skjn cancer,
spotty discoloration of the skin or
known overexposure to the sun is a
good screening candidate .
Those interested in the free
screening should register at the Holzer Clinic's Urgent Care Center the .
day of the screening.
For more iftfonnation, contact the
Holzer Clinic's Dennatology Depanment at446-5513.

Houdashel·t honored
GALLIPOLIS
Randy · E. Print Competition in Columbus.
Houdashelt, owner of "the Image
Besides receiving the Top Ten
portrait ~tudio in.Gallipolis;
was
re.;enlly Award, Houdasheit was awarded
ranked
sixth three blue ribbons and was tbi: winamong Ohio's ner of a coveted PPO "Coun of
Top Ten Photog- Ho!lor" trophy.
raphers for 1996
Earlier this year al the Profesduring the Prosional
Photographers of West Vir~
fessional Pbotog·-glnia
convention
in Par.kersburg,
raphers of Ohio
Mid-East Stales Houdashell received two blue ribHoudeshell Convention and bons and 'ranked fifth among professional photographers in the state.

-Busin.e ss briefsWASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate dipped to
a 14-month low of 5.4 percent last
month, giving President Clinton fresh
election-year evidence of an improving economy. Republicans focused
on big jobs losses in construction and
manufacturing.
·
Friday's news at frrstlifled spirits
on Wail Street, but stocks closed
down for the day, reflecting continued weakness in the bond market.
The Dow Jones industrial average
lost20.24 points to finish at 5.478.03.
NEW YORK (APJ:_ A~ericans
overwhelmingly favor an increase in
the minimum wage, even though
many also believe it could backfire
on unskilled workers by eliminating
jobs, an Associated Press poll found.
By 78 percent to 17 percent,
respondents favor the plan by Presi·
dent Clinton and congressional
Democrats to raise the minimum
;.age by 90 cents over two years .to
$5.15 an hour. ,
The Republicans who control
Congress have refused to bring the
issue to a vote. They argue that an
increase would harm businesses and
force them to cut entry-level jobs or
raise prices.
CHICAGO (AP) - Pharmacists
who claimed dru~ makers were iile·
gaily denying ibem discounts 9&gt;joyed
by HMOs are near a deal tljaf answers
their major complaints.
Lawyers for the 40,000 druggists
have reached a revised seuiement of
their class-acti.on lawsuit against
major pharmaceutical manufacturers,
people chis~ to the case said Friday.
Unlili:e an agreement that was
rejected by a judge last month, the
revised deal would address future
pricing practices. But like the earlier
deal the drug companies would pay
the pharmacies $408.9 million.
In coun papers filed Friday week,
Michael Freed, lead attorne~ for the
phannacies, said the two s1des are
"completing a written agreement to
.reflect their understanding and ..
intend to resubmit the ,settlement for
approval."
LONDON (AP)- Britain's desperale effort to end the mad cow cri·
\.$is and ·restore confidence in British

.,

beef crept ahead at a glacial pace as
a Scottish slaughterhouse destroyed
I00 cattle.
It was a small, muddled stan Fri·
day to a program that has been a pUblic relations disaster for Prime Min·.
ister John Major's Conservative government.
"We just went on and did it," said
'John Kelly, proprietor of the J. Kelly and Sons .slaughterhouse in
Larkhaii, just outsi~e Glasgow.

blossomed into a greenhouse that
uses waste heat from ·electric power
plants to produce 250 tons of perfecliy ripe. unblemished tomatoes
·
every week.
"Consumers for years have com- ·
plained that (winter) tomatoes taste
like the box they come in and that
they are as hard as billiat4 balls,"
said Bud Bridgwater, .marketing
director for Colorado Greenhouse
LLC in Fon Lupton. "We've put an
end to that."
"It's a better-lasting and -.
smelling tomato," said Kent Beesley,
a produce buyer for City Market grocery stores in Grand Junction. "Once
you get them home, you can leave
them on your counter and they will
hold up for one to two weeks."
On the plains 30 miles northeast
of Denver, a 272-megawatt, natural
gas-fired power plant provides electricity to neighboring communities.
The heat generated by its turbines is
pumped next door into a vast configuration of galvanized steel and .
white, tempered glass.
This 20-acre building is pan of
what is fast becoming known as the
largest hydroponic tomato producer
in Nonh America. '
Inside, rows of tomato vines
grow up to 30 feet long. Their roots
are anchored in special rocks, fed by
tiny irrigation tubes. Few pesticides
are used.
Bumblebees buzzing about the
operation PQilinate blossoms naturally. Tiny wasps and other insects
stand guard against tomato pests.
: Because greenhouse tomatoes
aren't stockpiled, they can be bred
with extra-thin skins and meatier .
insides. They are brought to market
within three to 'five .days of harvest.
The owners. in the I 980s, wen:
more interested in generating electricity than growing tomatoes. Boulder- based Colorado Venture Management Inc., one of the primlll)'
investor's, organized investor groups
to build private power plants that
would sell powe~ to Public Service
Co. of Colorado.

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COMPLETE INTEF,INSHIPS - Tllrw realdanta ,_ay
complelecllntemlhlpa In placementaat the Melgl County Boarcl;,
of MRIDD'a C1r1aton Schoolllotelga lndultriH flcllltiH. Sian Rlf- :
· fie, a aenlor at Ohio Unlveralty, and Thareu Lllv.ndar, a MRior:;
It the Un,_.ltY of Rio GFMCII, hive completed tMir lour 4410-::
hour ln1emahlpa In the.._. County Elt1y lntllveullon PtogtWii01
. under the aupervlalon of RTtl Fllldl, llclhlld eoc•l worker. Rlf-:~
fll will obblln hla Bachelor of Sj:llncl dlarel In community.:
hllllth aervlcll In June, while Lllvll1dlr wllf obtain her Bact.·'
Iori degree In eoc•l work In .Sep.ta111ber. Branda Curfman, a:'
aenlor at URG, hla complltld her four 400- hour l_,.lhlp wltti:•
the Mllga County Board of MRIDD under the aupervlalon of JO)' ·~·
Stewart, CMI manager; She will Obtain her BIChelora degree In:·
eoc.. l work In September. Left to right are Curfman, Riffle, and.:
Lev-....-.
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HONORED FOR SERVICE- Outgoing Malga lndultriH Board
of Truatau preakllnt ~ "Mick" Howall (left) Ia honored by
Incoming board prealditnt Aleve ·Dunlll for hla work with the
boltd; HoMllllrVICI u a truiiM on the boltd from Januery 1013
until December. 11185, and held the office of Prealdent for two
yllre.

Waste heat
lflowe·rs g··ant
tomato
F~e~ skin cancer screening · greenhouse
cliniC scheduled on May 11 An~?:~~!!'e~~~~~~:has

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flooding in its wake
.

.

• By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
. and JIM FREEMAN
· Sentinel News Staff
' Thunderstorms siruck Meigs
. County with a vengeance Saturday
evening, resulting in extensive flooding and damage around the county.
More than 3 inches of rain fell
. between 6 and 7:30 p.m., according
lo Bob Dyer, director of the Meigs

Sink into the comfort of this
stwdy glider. Available in oak,
maple, or cherry. Quality at
affordable prices for years of
enjoyment.

Prices Starting-At .

County Emergency. Management
,
Services.
.Culvens were W~~Shed out; roads
were closed for hours by the high
water and the debris it moved in, and
several homes were flooded by the
downPQur.
.
Salfsbury, Rutland and Chester
·townships were hammered by the
onslaught, with to_wnship trustees

$18995

THE C~mpany, Inc.
'

&amp;eclaring emergenc1es there.
Among the hardest hit in Pomeroy
wen: four units in the Village Green
Apartments on MulbefT)I Avenue,
Pomeroy. Water surged off the hin·
side behind the building aitd into the
four downstairs apartments before the
residents could vacate. ·
"It was like a waterfall," said
Cindy Faulk, one of the residents.
The pressure of the water in the
hallway leading to the apanments
was so strong that two R;sidents were
unable to get their door open, accord·
ing to Faulk.
She said someone $~Dashed out a
MOVING
-leonard
laft, a reeident
·Furniture as stacked high on the sidewalk aa
window and several others helped
resldenta movael out thelr belongings. Water
of one of the Village Green Apartnienta,
pull the two out through it.
waa
thre~~ feet high In the four apartmenta.
Pomeroy, which waa flooded. In Saturday
(Santinal
photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
"We really ·pulled together to get
nlght'a downpour, carries out some clothes.
everyone out, • commented Faulk ..
There was about3 feel of water in carry off the water, .it courses around ed to Southern Local High School. . .
Township Trusle~ Gary Dill said
In Middleport. water flowed in the the volunteers did an outstanding job
the apartments. The'residents worked the structure into the apartments
to salvage furniture itnd. personal which are partially below ground lev- Middleport Fire Depanment, swamp· opening the road to traffic.
ing rooms there, Byer said.
"One woman called us 'Angels of
el.
. belongings well into tbe night.
Traffic on State Route 7 is limit- Mercy'," Mrs. Holsinger said, adding
The 'four apartments. are the same
Pomeroy firemen were al the
ones whic~ were flooded in the scene for a shon time, but residents . ed to one lane traffic after flood water that nobody else offered to help.
Other ·roads damaged included
Mother's Da~ 1995 flood. The resi- said they left soon after shutting off washed out a porti\ln of the ·road
between
Pomeroy
and
Five
Points.
Laurel Cliff Road, Willow Creek,
dents were quick to point out that the the electricity.
h
Water covered Mulberry Avenue Motorists using the road during the Leading Creek, Noble ·summit and
1
problem is one of ·not on Y cavy near the intersection of Union stonn were forced to ford a swift
Pomeroy Pike, Byer said.
rains, but inadequale drainage.
.
Avenue,
and
many
residents
report·
stream
of
muddy
water
flowing
from
Scattered power outages were also
Dyer said the Re d Cross came '" ed several feet of water in their base- the U.S. 33/1-77 Connector Project. reported caused by high winds and
Sunday night to offer assistance 10 the ments. Traffic was divened for nearIn Chester, the flood left large fallen trees.
displaced residents.
"The drain just isn't able 10 handle ly two hours to allow time for the rocks and mud on SR 248 in the midByer said that the three inches
· the water," said Faulk, who also water to recede and village employ- die of town.
which fell Saturday evening brought
Good Samaritans John and April the total rainfall since May I to 6.4
pointed out·that the water coming off ees 10 begin cleanup.
Holsinger,
Roliert and Gwynn Tag- inches .. Gusts up lo 39 mph cWerethe hillside brought with it din and
A bolt oflightning hit the chimney
gan
and
Joann
Freeman removed the reported in Pomeroy, he added.
·· acl!ris and that helped clog things up ·of Portland Elementary School, erearound the drain.
ating in a large hole in !he roof of the majority of rocks using hand tools
"It was not quite 'IS bad as the
The drain is located near the rear building. The school was closed and a pickup truck, placing the stones Mother's Day Flood (1995)," he
.of the building and when it cannot today with students be~ng transport- into a washed out creek .
added.
w.

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Decline ·in violent crime creates .little cheer
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By MICHAEL J SNIFFEN
Aaaoclltld Prell Writer
WASHINGTON
S'erious
crimes reponed to police fell for the
founh straigot year in 1995, but
authorities fear that rising teen-age
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.- detennirie the chiid's,position In the
violence m!IY soon make these seem
A 3-year-old Point Pleasant boy line. He was found,11pproximately
like "the good old days," as one put
died after he was swept into a eight foot into the line, Blake said.
·
, drainage ditch by high water.Sun- To reach the child, a six-inch con·
II. The FBI released preliminary fig·
day evening, according to Mason crete walk had to be 1emoved·.
un:s Sunday showing that n:pcined
County Sheriff Ernie Watterslln.
At 8:07 p.m., Akers was
crime overall fe112 percent last year
Raymond Akers. 3, of Bethel removed from the pi~ and hans· -1--"'
f m 1994, led by a 4 percent drop in
Road, .Point Pleasant, was playing poned to Pleasant Valley Hospi~al
violent crime.
.
in a ditch area beside his home by Point Pleasant EMS, where he
Law enforcement officials. legis-.
when he was swept into a 100-foot was .pronounced dead after hospllators and scholars applauded the ·fig~
drainage line, which measured six tal workers did ail they could to
ures but warned that large national
to eight inches in diameter.
revive him, Blake said.
trends are masking an alanning rise
.:
Mason County Emergency Ser- ·
Akers was the son of Mr. ahd
in violence·by teen-agers .
• vices Director Chuck Blake said Mrs. Troy Akers and !he grandson
"We
facing a bloodbath of
91 I received the call at 7:09p.m.
of Mason County Sheriffs Depanteen violence in the years ahead that
Members of the Point Pleasant ment Jail Administrator Lloyd
will make 1995 look like the good old
Volunteer Fire Depanmenl, Office Akers.
days," said James Alan Fox, dean of
of Emergency Services, Fiatrock
Bi~ke said the rescue was a
criminal justice at Northeastern UniVolunteer Fire Department, Mason highly emotional and stressful
versity in Boston..
. Volunteer Fire Department, and the operation. Stress bnefmg and
"We shouldn't be lulled into a
'sherilf.s depanment responded to counseling is being offered to voi·
false sense of security," said Rep. Bill
the call.
~·
,
· unteers who assisted at the scene. · McCollum, R-Fia., chainnan of the
Approximately 75 volunteers,
Arrangements are, under the
House crime subcommit.tee.
:including emergency personnel direction of Wilcoxen Funera.l
Attorney General Janet Reno
·and neighbors, dug test holes to Home, Point Pleasant.
pledged to "continue to put more

.. '

·1')-~"..K'r"''"'
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- Pomeroy's Village Grwn rHident CindY Faulk
atands In the water in the hallway leading to the apartmenta which
were flooded during Saturday nlg_ht:s downpour.

Mason .County yo~th.
· a-"er
bel•ng $1AI~e~nt
dl•es
Ill
•IJ' I '
. t 0 .d rain
. age.. dl•t.,.h
In
" ,).

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cops on the beat, get guns off the
street and put violent criminals
behind bars."
the only crime to rise -larceny,
by I percent _. fores"adows the
anticipated surge in youth &lt;;rime, said
Professor Alfred Blumstein of
Carnegie-Mellon University.
Overall crime down
Overall reponed crime was down
in. every region, led by a 4 percent
decline in the Northeast, according to
the FBI compilation of local police
figure~.
In cities of more than ·I million
· residents, overall reported crime fell
by 6 percent. Suburban counties and
most mid-sized cities also reported
declines, but rural counties showed a
3 percent inerease.
Among violent crimes, murder
dropped the most - 8 percent. Robbery was down 7 percent; rape, 6 percent and aggravated assault, 3 per·
cent.
. Total propeny crimes dropped I
percent. with auto theft down by 6
percent and burglary, 5 percent.
But the increase in lareeny '' is the
first glimmer of the impact of the
next generation," Blumstein said,

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. WASHINGTON (AP) - Republ.ii:an leaders say the:( pian to demon,
slratc Congress' tax-cutting creden. tials this week by taking up a measure
' 1o repeal 'a 1993 increase in the fed~ ~ral gasoline levy. But Clinton
·· administration officials are skeptical.
. House Speaker Newt Gingrich
, ~8id Sunday that Congress will have
, die llili repealing the 4.3-cent-per-gallan increase, which was enacted
.' sDieJy. wiih Dtimocratic votes. ready
fcir President Clipton 's signature by
. Memorial Day. That would give
motorists a price break (or holiday
. atid vacation travel.
. • Gingrich, speaking on CBS'
"Face the Nation," said the drive to
back the gas tax was "pretty popular" and "I think it will pass'by a big
'
,. '
rnargm.
· · He said the House Ways and
Means Committee will meet Thesday
to:considcr how to make up for lost
tq revenue, estiniated by the admin·
isiration at $30 billion to $3S l!illion
oY.et seven years. Se~te ~ajority

roll

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Leader Bob Dole said earltcr h1s
chamber will. take up the legislation
the same day.
Administration officials appearing
n the Sunday teie.vision interview
hows would not say whelher Presient Clinton would approve the
repeal. But they made clear they
thought it w.as probably unnecessary
and should be'considered only as pan
of a larger balanced budget deal.
The tax was imposed as pan of
Clinton's 1993 deficit-reduction
f .
package.
.
"Republicans sho~ld co.p1e ~o ihe
budget table to negobate a l&gt;aJanced
budget and say exactly how they
would pay for that gas tax cut,"
White House economic adviser Laura D'Andrea 1'yson said on NBC's
"Meet the Press."
Gingrich said offsets for the tax
repeal would be found "within the
framework of a balanced budget" and
that the money wu then: if ~ welfare system wu overhauled and the
size of government reduced.

"because larceny - such as bicycle guns, declining unemployment and
theft, stealing auto pans and shopiiti- ril;ing public intolerance for crime.
ing- is. the crime with the youngest
Political leaders also ·s®ght to
criminals. The peak age for larcenists share in the credit.
is 15 or 16." Most burglars and rob"For live straight years before I
be.rs are older.
•
took office, violent crime increased in
"In the other crimes, what's going America," President Clinton said in
on am·ong teen-agers is being a statement. " Our tough and sman
swamped by much larger numbers of decisions to put more cops oli the
older folks who are growi.ng out of streel&amp;nd get kids. guns and drugs off
the high crime ages and giving up the s.treel ... are now beginning to
crime," Blumstein added.
reverse the trend."
Fox predicted thai "this calm
McCollum of the House crime
before the · crime storm won 'I last subcommittee said a major reason is
much longer."
.
"because we've put deterrence back
Teen murder rate up
into criminal justice again." And he
The murder rate for teen-agers said Republicans in Congress just
grew by 22 percent between I990 won increased federal ·prison-build·
and I 994. Fox .said. "Over the ne~t ing aid for states that require or move
I0 years, the teen population will toward requiring violent felons to
e.xpand by 17 percent, because there serve 85 percent of their sentences.
are now 39 million children under
But Rep. Charles Schumer of
age I 0, more than we've had si nee New York, ranking Democrat on tbe
the 1950s when the baby boomers panel, said "you have lo have both
were in grade school," he added.
deterrence and prevention. We've got
In addition 10 the aging of baby to get guns out of the hands ·of kids
. boomers, analysts and officials attrib- and give them constructive places to
uted the fo4r-ycar crime decline to . go."
closer police work with citizens,
The complete preliminary qime
longer prison sentences for violent report is available on the FBI's World
criminals, crackdowns on illegal Wide Web site at http://www.tbi.gov.

Report cites safety code
violations in older prisons ·

.Congress will consider ·
gas tax repeal this week
• Andenen 1Ut Windows
• Stanley Doors

A O.nnetl Co. NeWIPI' If

\V iolent· storm leaves

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.A Few Of Our Home Standard Fetttures

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Mon. • Thura. II to 5; Fri. II to 8; Sat. 9 to 4
St. Rt. 7 In Tupper.. Pialna ac1011 atree1 from Farmers Bank

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Tuaadey, chance of rain.
Hight In the 701 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Nlay 6&gt; 1996

;1 Section. 10 Page.

PLUS

LAID BACK

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;Vot. 47, NO. 8

chance of

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ftiJALI'JY

-a

Tonight,

"'-a. Lowa In the 501.

1

MEIGS ROYALTY - Amber Bennatt and Monty Hu~er ware
crowned 111116 Malga Hllih Schooi·Junlor-aenlor prom qu11n and
Icing In cftntonlla SatUrday nipt. Beil~ Ia thf1tdaughter of
Bonnie Bennett of Albany end S.m Bennett of Maaon, W.Va •., and
Hunter Is the aon of Judith Hunter, ,Rutland, and Roger Huntar of
· Chllhire. Sennett waa crownacl by Dannls ~lchlngar, laalstant
principal. The candidates for queen war. Bennett, Suzan11!11 Hen·
cleraon, LOri Rusaall, Cindy Stewart, a~ Clnd~ Wallcer, and.
king Trtlvle Abbott. CUI C~d, MlchHI Franckowiak, Hunllr
and
WUIIIma, Tha prom theme waa •forever In Parla.• (Sen·
tlnal photo by Char""' Hoeflich)
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CLEVELAN.j (AP) - Safety
Inmates have keys to their cells to
systems standard in newer state pris- be used if a fire breaks out, the news·
ons are absent in II older prisons that paper said. The prisoners still would
fail to meet fire codes, The Plain ·be locked up in a cellblock.
Dealer reported.
The state faces class action lawThe Ohio Department of Rchabii· suits by inmates at the London,
itation and Correction has been aware .Chillicothe and Lima prisons.
of the lire safety problems since the
"The places that got sued were the .
late 1980s, follow ing lawsuits and places that needed the attention, and
inspections. The buildings 'met fire this is why we haven 't gone out of
codes when they were oui[t, but the our way. to fight the lawsuits," said
· state is not required to upgrade them, Reginald Wilkinson, director of the
the newspaper reponed Sunday. ·
stale prison system.
The state has begun a $7.6 million
"The most serious problems are at
· program to reduce such hazards.
Chillicothe," said David L. Blodgett,
The last fire death in an Ohio head of maintenance and construction
.
prison was in 1930, when a lire at the for the prison system.
1
old Ohio Penitentiary killed 322.
Scventee.n of tbe state'$ 28 prisons
TheGovemor'sSeieciComrnittee have been constructed since 1985.
on Corrections found in 1.994 that the The newer prisons meet current lire
need for maintenance and renovation· codes.
·
at prisons built befor:e 1975 was
"The .biggest problem you. have
&gt;hronic and PQsed "serious fire and with a prison is the occupants are
life-threatening safety hazards."
incapable of self·presc'rvatiort. They
. The problem is highlighted by the can 'I get out without the assistance qf
lack of a centrally coiltrolled cell d&lt;ior a correctional officer." said! Thomas •
system that would let inmates flee_a · w.Jaeger, of Cage- Babcock &amp; AsiD.
·burning cellblock at London Correc- ciates, a Fairfax, Va., fin: protection
tionai Institution.
engineering and consulting fmn.

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Commentary

,

MIMdly, ...,.,, 1 -

•
•

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P112
MoMS•r. Mer •· 1111

,

Teen
drug
••se
is
up
during_
Clinton·
·years
The Daily Sentinel
WASHINGTON - Ill the week IbM President CliDion ooce
again tried to highlight bis commitment to fighting drugs, Rep. Jobn
Mica, R-Aa., sbowed us another
side of lhC drug war.
Ill Mica's otr~ee is a picture of two
bales Qf marijuana seized by authorities in Vol usia County, Fla. The biles
represent only afraction of lbe drugs
thai flow t!lrough this eastern Aorida county eao:h year. But it's nottbe
quantity that interests Mica, it's the
inscription on the bales: "C.O.D.
Clinton."
Mica believes drug dealers have •
good reason to be high on lbe prcsi-·
dent ·this election year. "1bis is an
example of bow even lbe narcotraf.
fickers think the Ointon drug policy
is a farce by mocking bim," be told
our associate Jan Moller.
~ picture also highlights lbe
RepublicaJis' commitment to using
the drug issue against 0 intqn in tbe
fall elections. After years of decline,
the rate of drug use among teen-agers
is once again rising quickly in every

'LstUfilfld in 1!J48
111 Court St., POIMioy; Ohlo

614 112-21111• Fax: 112-2157

~·
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gentrlll M-ow

MARGARET LEHEW
'Conlrollet'

.... __

.,.., __ .... ____A/1_

_.. .,. ==--.....,-----·
Utllfw,.., . . . ,. ,.

~

-r; '*:·::4: ,.,,..:):"'*'fiNd.
'

be ln . fOOd,.....

'

'Riverfront West'
By TERRY KINNEY
·Aa.aclsled PrMs Writer
CINCINNATI (AJ') -There's a gleaming high-rise office rower in the
middle of downtown, and two 'llite-of-lhe art sports stadiums on the river
front. The renaissance includes hotels, restaurant$, col)dos, shops and a marina.
Trouble is, it's all on paper- concepiS, artists' drawings.
,
City officials bope to translate those dreams into reality. ~
· "Cincinriati has .a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to design
develop
·the front door to the region- Riverfront West," said Mayor Roxanne . ualls.
:".It is very important that !be riverfront 's full potential be realiud."
: · Qualls is trying to sell development to anybody wbo will listen.
. Last week, sbe went to Washington to talk 10 a House commillee about
·a light rail proposal to run through Cincinnati, linking Kings Island 'with the
· :cincinnati/Northern ~entucky International Airpon.
. ; lben she went to Boston to talk to architects and city planners at a Har-vard symposium on urban development.
.
: Now that voters have approved a one-half cent increase in the Hamilton
:COUnty sales tax to build two new stadiums, and w&lt;irlt has begun Qn the mid'own Fountain Square West project, developers seem on the verge of tumtng cboice, idle locations into revenue producers.
: Indeed, Qualls called the Fountain Square West site "the world's most
):xpensive parking lot" at ground breaking ceremonies last month. And the
)lite for stadium development also is used for parking cars.
• For years, city officials and real estate appraisers have said the vacant
llowntown and·river front locations are among lbe most desirable undeveiJ&gt;ped sites in the Midwest. But no one made a move to build.
: Now, several pr()jects could be coming together simultaneously, dramatically changing Cincinnati's look. · .
: Michae.I Schuster, wh~archirecrural firm bas done design .work in conflection with the A,ronoff enter, a·performing arts theater downtown, told
'lbe Cincinnati Enquirer I
the stadiums will spur other projects.
: "Once ground is broken for real arid people see some structural steel going
up. development will happen as a natural progression," he said.
•
: Some proposals over the years have been large on wishful thinking. One
· ~usinessman seriously discussed the idea of turning some city streets into
.eanals. .
.
: Other ideas considered doable, such as an aquarium and an IMAX the4ter complex, have not found funding.
• Proposals include a Children's Museum/Science &amp; Technology Center,
iimilar to Columbus' Center of Science and Industry, and a National Underjround Railroad Freedom Center. ·: "All of tbese projects are exciting, but as a community, we must figure
'1'11 which of them will give us the most mileage and draw the biggest crowds
and do the most for our downtown,'·' said Rick Greiwe, who heads DowntOwn Cincinnati Inc ., lbe nonprofit group overseeing downtown 's revitalii:ation.
·

. . .jstjcaJ

&lt;=*gory.

~larcd

still thriving despite yem of efforts
to root it out by local and u.s. aaAbor-

incidents n • aa al.l-time biJb. IDd
hip scbool swdents are oace again
seeinJ linle harm from recrealionai

White House sutr m. Oilltoll bid

promised durins bial992 camplip,

'"'''
• IColumbus!egoI

''''"'

Pt.

Is it ever going away?

.-

time, and want to know where exacl- "

•

.

Tearing up 'The Great Writ of _Liberty'

Two days after Congress passed
the much heralded Anti-Terrorism
Bill, I was speaking at a benefit for a
public library in Charleston, W.Va.
The audience was composed of
lawyers, doctors, librarians and jotirnalists. lbey were well infonned
about local and national politics and
health-care issues, but most were sur·
prised to be told that the Constitution
had just been largely gutted of what
Thomas Jefferson called the most
fundamental right of all-- habeas corpus.
By The Associated Preas
·
. ·
Jefferson had urged James MadiToday is Monday, May 6, the I 27th day of 1996. There are 239 days left son, as the Constitution was being
wrillen, to ensure "the eternal and
in the year.
unremitting force of the habeaS corToday's Highlightin ijistory:
pus laws:'
On May 6; I'll?, the hydrogen-filled German dirigible Hindenburg burned
But with the approval of the presand crashed in Lakehurst, N.J., killing 36 of the 97 people on board.
ident and Bob Dole, the House and
On this date:
Senate have now set such draconian
In 1861, Arkansas sec~ from the Union.
In 1882, CQngress 'passed, over President Arthur's veto, the Chinese . time limits for federal couns' review
Exclusion Act, whicb barred Chinese immigrants from the United States for of stare .c,onvicrions that -- as Rep.
Patrick KennedY,, 0-R.I., said on the
10 years.
In 1889, rbe Paris Exposition formally opened, featuring the just-com- House floor -- "This bill increases the
risk that innocent persons will be held
pleted Eiffel Tower.
..
·
In 1895, legendary silent-screen star Rudolph Valentino was born in in prison in violation of the Constitution -- and possibly even executCastellaneta, Italy.
ed."
'
In 1910, Britain's King Edward VII died.
Unquestionably, some innocent
In 1935, the Works Progress Ad!Dinistration began operating. ·
In 1941, dictator Josef Stalin assumed the Soviet premiership, replacing people will indeed be executed
because there is undeniable docuVyacheslav M. Molotov.
In 1942, during World War II, some 15,000 Americans and Filipinos on mentation that e~entual habeas
reviews have enabled a considerable
Coi'regidor surrendered to the Japanese.
In 1954, medical student Roger Bannister broke the four-minute mile dur- number of dearh -~ow .prisoners to
. ing a track meet al Oxford, England, in 3:59.4.
In 1960, Britain's Princess Margaret married Anthony Armstrong-Jones,
a commoner, at Westminster. Abbey.
. . . . (They
..
.divorced. in 1978.)

today in history

establish rbeir innocence after much
m'ore time than this new law would
have allowed them. Some have waited as long·as 10 and 12 years.

•

NatHentoff
The West Virginians that night,
even the lawyers, had not paid much
attention to the habeas part of the
anti-terrorism debate in Washington.
Commercial network news operations and "serious" television discussion shows had, for the most part,
been otherwise occupied -- and so
-were NaJional Public Radio and the
Public Broadcasting Service. Thomas
Jefferson had also said that the only
way constitutional democracy would
be preserved would be if the citizenry were sufficiently well informed to
know what was being done -in tbeir
name.
Only eight senators voted to preserve what for centuries had been
called "The Grear Writ of Libeny·."
(Warren Rudman tells me that if he
were still in the Senate, there would
have been nine.)
'Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.:
-- astonished at the wreckage of the
·cornerstone of our liberties·-- told his
· colleagues : " If I had to choose
between living in a &lt;;,ountry with
habeas corpus' but witbout free elections or a country with free elections

but without habeas corpus, I· would
choose habeas corpus every rime. ,
"This is one of the fundamental
civillibenies on which every democratic society of the world has built
political libenies that have come
subsequently."
As Moynihan also pointed out,
this shameless allempl to capitalize
on the Oklahoma City bombing goes
beyond drastically cutting down on
the lime Jor habeas petitions and on
.the rime for federal couns to decide
I on ·tbem.
·
In addition, ·this 'contempt Qf the
Constitution requires a federal coun,
in habeas maners,ro defer to the decisions of stale jll(!ges on constitutional and other issues -- unless the state
coun 'rulings are "unreasonable"
applications of the facts or federal
Jaws.
That leaves the once-independent
federal judiciary very lillie to review
if a state coun's being just wrong, but
reasonable, on a constitutional issue
is of no concern. And just what does
''uml~asonable : ' mean?

The history of habeas corpus,
after all, reveals the often stunning
incompetence of many elected state
judges when it comes to deciding
constitutional issues. Other state
jurists -- in unpopular cases -- make
their own re-election a priority over
due process.
Funhermore, as Supreme Coun

ttow '!

S'ffA\&lt;. '·

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r-to~

RAtz.E. ~

.I

W~L.L. l)~E

I
ME171llN\?

Every once in a while, I have this
nightmare in which I am locked in a
room with a giant pie chart that
shows how Joe's hide is being sliced
up by various components of the
economy.
There's a buge slice labeled "oil
companies." Another is designated
"banks ." Another is earmarked
"cable TV." There's an "insurance
industry" slice, and a "long-distance
carriers" slice and a "cereal compani.e s" slice. Only one little chunk of
the pie chan is devoted to "other,"
• which includes ihelter, clothing,
reading material and an occasional
round of golf.
·
.I think this means I have a dee~­
seated fear that .I am being devoured
by Greedy Creeps, and I instructe4
the Spear Foundation investigate
whether there is I! basis in f~t fQIIlhis
anxiety. Sure enough, the 'findings
. indicate lhattbese six segments of the
modem economy are threatening to
eat us alive.
I suspect Big Oil is the worst,
what with their jleriodic effons to
push gasoline prices into the straiosphere. They are cenainly the most
deceptive, because of tbeir talent for
conjuring up ,creative e~tcuses
couched in credible-sounding, eco-·

I

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1'10 1•
I
OK:'•
I

to

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nbmic gibberish and oiltalk. "Ajump
in the price of West Te~tas Intennedl8te Spot Market Crude spurred
another spikei'n pump prices 10&lt;\.Y. '"

'

·Today's livestock report

Ex-CIA director's body
recovered ·by authorit.ies

--.;,..Hospital
news-.

Stocks

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Racine Village Cound
Meigs Ba11d BoOsters
Meigs High Band Boosters will
The Racine village council will
A Westerville man ·was in fair condition today in the trauma unit at
hold their regular meeting this. meet tonight at 7 in .the band room.
Grant Medical Center, Columbus, following treatment of injuries suf·evening, 7 p.m., at Star Mill Park.
fered in a motorcycle accident Saturday in Meigs County.
Potluck
planned
.
,;.
Toby A. Hysell, 25, was initially taken lo Veterans MemoriaiHos- · ·,
~
' .. :
;J ~.f8.111:!er, Skj~ner qfMiddleport died Sunday, May 5, 1996 at HolzBurlingham
-Modem
Woodmen
Reservations due
pital by the Meigs EMS, bur was transferred to Holzer Medical Cener Medtcal Center in Gallipolis. • ·
·
will
have
a
potluck
dinner
ar6:30
p.m
for
the
annual
Reservations
ter. An HMC spokesperson said Hysell was trealed for a fractured col,
· She leaves her husband, Arthur; a son and daughter-in-law, Thomas and
Saturday.
Meal,
rolls
and
beverages
Racine
United
Methodist
Women's
larbone
and multiple injuries, and was transponed to Grant.
Glenda Skinner; and tbree .grandchildren, Ca~olyn , Bethany and Allen, all
will
be
provided.
Mothers
will
be
recmother-daughter
banquet
to
be
held
.The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway said H'sell was eastof Gallipolis. Sbe .also has a sister-in-law, Mary Farmer Ruby of Dayton; a
ogniud
with
flowers.
Guests
are
\VelSaturday
at
5:30p.m.
at
the
church
bound
on Rutland Township Road. 41 (Parkinson), 70 feet' north of
niece, Lynn, and her husband, Kevin Brandenburg; two grandnephews, Man
come.
are
to
be
made
with
Opal
Diddle,
Township
Road 342 (Swick) at3: 15 p.m. when he lost control of his
and Scott; a niece, Lucinda, and her husband, Phillip DeVeny. and two grand- ·
949-2051
or
Lee
Lee,
949-2454.
motorcycle
and overturned on the roadway.
·
nieces, Amy and Molly; and a brother-in' law and sister-in-law, George and
Auction
planned
.
.
The
motorcycle
was
slightly
dam~ged
,
the
patrol
said.
Phillis Skinner of Pomeroy.
·
'
Tack auction will be sponsored by
Chicken barbecue
~ She was preceded ~ft' death by her parents, Dave and Genevieve Russell
the
Meigs 4-H horse committee and ~----------~----------~.
The Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire
Farmer; her brother, Daniel Farmer; and two sisters-in-law, Marie Fosler and
Depanmenr will hold a chicken bar- Hendersons Tack , Shop, Saturday,
Helen Brunner.
.
.
' Mary was a teacher in Meigs County schools for over 15 years, a mem- becue Sunday at the Tuppers Plains ' 6:30p.m. at the Meigs County FairCOLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaEstimated receipts: 39,000..
grounds. Additional information may
bc;r of the Trinity Chun:h and choir, the Middlepon Garden Club, the Rerum Fire House beginning at II a.m.
Ohio
direct
hog
prices
at
selected
Prices rrom Tbe Producers .
be obtained by calling 985-4489.
Jopathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution and
buying poilus Monday by the. U.S. LivestO&lt;!k Association:
the Bells and Beaus Square Dance Club.
Depanment of Agriculture Market
Canle: uneven, 2.00 lower to 2.00 ·
~ Graveside rites will be 2:30p.m. Thursday, May 9, 1996 in the MiddleNews:
higher.
pqfl Hill Cemetery, with the Rev. R~and Wildman officiating. There will
, Barrows and gilts: 50 to mostly
Slaughter steers: choice 49.00- ,
be no calling hours. In lieu of flowers, donations can lie made the organ and
1.00 higher; demand moderate ro 57.50; select 32.50-52.00. .
. clioir fund at Trinity Church, P.O. Box 429, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.
good on a moderate run.
Slaughlcr heifers: choice 46.75-.
, The Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon, is in charge of arrangements.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 50.50- 58 .00; select 39 00-S 1.00.
·
ROCK POINT, Md. (AP) al resources police. Ruling out foul
Cows: uneven, 1.50 lower to 2.00 .
Police today found the body of play, he said: "There is nothing 53.00, few 50.00, 53.25-53.50; plants
52.50-54,00, few at 54.25.
higher; all cows 40.00 and down.
William E. Colby on riverbank, more unusual _aboutthis case at all.''
..
U.S.
2-3,
230-260
lbs.
44.00Bulls: steady to 2.00 higher; 56.00 '
than a week after the. 76-year-old
Colby's wife identified the body,
50.00.
and
down.
retired spymaster dis~ppeared on a which was ~ssed in khaki pants ~ a
Veterans Memorial
' Sows: I .00 to I .50 high«. ,
Veal calves: steady 10 higher;
Oliver,
canoellig expedition.
.
red windbreak!~':- a blue and wh1te
Saturday admissions - none. ·
300-500
..
lbs.
32.00140.00
and down.
U.S.
1-3,
(Published
with
permission)
SaturdaJtdischarges- none.
Colby, who supervised the CIA's shirt and no shoes. Last week, she
36.50;
500-650
lbs.
36.50-39.00,
few
.
Sheep
and lambs: steady to 3.00 ·
· Sunday admissions - none.
coven warfare campaign in Vietnam had expressed the hope that Co!by
40.00.
lower;
choice
wools 80.00-94.25;
. Sunday discharges - none.
and then as -director from 1973-76 would turn up, mJured and awaiting
Holzer Medical Center
Boars: 30.00-32.00.
choice clips 85 .00-104.00; feeder
tried to clean up the agency during its rescue.
·
: ~barges May J- Crisry Spencer,
lambs 98.00 and down; aged sheep .
Am ·EJe Power .......................3~
darkest hours, apparently drowned
Experts had said that natural
Mary Biown, Kimberly Cade; Mora
40.00
and down.
·
AkZo ;; •••••••••.....••.•.••..••••.••••••••58'..and foul play was not suspected, offi· processes, including changes in water .
Rice, Kenneth Sciles, Megan McCoy.
Ashland 011 ...........................41),
cials said.
temperature, often bring a body to the .
"DUcluJrges May 4 - Harry HenAT6T .....................................59t;.
Colby
had
been
missing
since
he
surface after a few days.
dricks, Herschel Gilkey, Ray Hoffner.
Bank One ........:.....................33\
The following actions to end martold
his
wife,
Sally
Shelton-Colby,
The search, which at one time
:Birth - Mr. and Mrs. James Burris,
Bob Evan• ............................16),
riage
were filed recently in the off1ce
April27 by phone that he was going i~cluded dogs, divers sonar equipson, Vinton.
Borg-Warner .........................3117'
l)ischarges May ! - tJirs. J_ames
canoeing. She was visiting her moth- ment and dragging lines, had been of Meigs County Clerk of Couns LarChampion Ind.... :..................18o
ry Spencer:.
Qunis and son, Drew Cannon, Mabel
Charming Shop ...................... &amp;~
er in Houston at the rime. .
scal~d back in recent days.
City Holdlng ..........................24),
Dissolutions asked - Angela A. ·
The caaoe was found April 28
Federal Mogul-.. ...................18;&lt;
Duckwonh
and Roben W. Duckon a Wicomico River
The current CIA director, John
Qanneu .................................68:J.t ovetturned
~dbar a quaner mile from his vaca- Deutch, said today that his predeces- worth, both of Middleport, April29;
TAR ......................52\
The Daily Sentinel Goodyear
tion
home in tl]is.southern Maryland sor used "great courage, determina- Stacy L Tripp and Rodney A. Tripp,
K-mart' ...................................10'.4
town:
The area is near where the lion and devotion 10 his country ... to · both of Pomeroy, April 29.,
(USI'S21~)
Lends End......................., .....19~
' '
Divorces asked - l'rnest M.
Limited Inc ............................ 201.
Wicomico empties into the Potomac guide the agency through a difficult
Published evtl'y llflernoon, Monda)' throuah
Peoples
Bencorp
...................
23
River.
time. He faced up IO severe c(Jai- Mitchell Jr. from Bcnha F. Mitchell,
fliday, Ill ~o.~rt St. Pomeroy, Ohio, b) the
Ohio Valley Benk.................... 40
Clhio "'!tley Publiahins (4mpony/Gannen Co., ,
Cpl.
Leonard
Sciuk~s. a police ,.Jenges with openness and inte~rity. both of Pomeroy, May I; Kay HemOne Valley.............................31'1o
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9. Ph. 992-2156. Second
officer with the state Depan~ent of The people of th~ CIA and the I~ tel- sley from Rollie Hemsley, both of
clus postaae paid ttl Pomeroy, Ohio.
RockMII •. ,........................... 57~
'
Natural Resources, found the body ligence commumty have lost an trre- Racine, April 26.
Robbin• A Myera....................38
Member: 1bc Anociaaed Press, and the Ohio
Divorce
granted
Mary
around 8 a.m. today while out seatch- · placeable source of wisdoll)." ·
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............140'4
Newspaper As~iadon.
Caruthers from Richard Caruthers Jr.,
Shoney'alnc.............,........... 11/o
ing in a boat. It was partly in the
Star Bank ..............................66:4
f'OSTMASTIR : Send address corrections to
26.
water and partly on the bank. The site
1be Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun Sr.. Pomeroy,.
Wendy lni'1............................ 19~. ·· is a few hundred ylirds south of where
Ohio 45?69.
·
Worthlngtonlnd................... 20'1.
.the canoe wa~ found.'
.
.
iiVISCRJniON RATES
Colby
was
likely
alive
when
he
Stock reports are the 10:30
,,. , ll)'CtlnWrO&lt;Molor-•
fell
into
the
water
and
got
~yopther­
a.m. quotes provided by Adveit
Oae w..t................................................. S2.CIO
Oae Month.........................,...................... $8.70
of Gallipolis.
'
mia and drowned, said Lt. Mark
aile v................:................................ $104.00
Sanders, a spokesman .for the natur-

Mary Frances Skinner

•
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor hi!S
emphasized, '.'a state cout!'s incom;ct_
legal determination has never been
allowed to stand because it was rea-.
sonable."
'
The Congress of the United States"
is pursuing terrorists by disarming~'
. Constitution. As four former allor-'
neys general. -- .Benjamin Civileni:•:r
Edward Levt , Ntcholas Kat""'nbach ·
and Elliot Richardson -- wrote in vain
10 tl]e president
:'
"By stripping federal couns oT:
authoriiy to exercise independent
judgment and forcing them to defer ''
to previous judgments made by state''
couns, this provision runs afoul of the i,
oldest constitutional mission of the
federal c0uns: 'lbe duty to say whai !,
the ~w is.' (Marbury v. Madison;'~
1803)."
.•.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, one of
the key architects of this "anti-terrorism" law, says he wants it to be a •
"lasting IJ!Onument to .the bombing
victims." Instead, he has dishonored
them by using their tragedy to weaken the liberty of the living.
And habeas corpus is not limited
to death row. The writ has released
' many others who were unjustly
imprisoned. But they also don't count
in an election year.
·
· -~:
Nat Benioff Is a natiDI!,~I~ •'
renowned authority on tbe ·~
Amendmeni.J!nd the rest of tbe Bill '
of Rigbls.
.
· ,,

tellers and fees for using their stupid them. I recently got smacked with a :
ATM machines, which were invent- $9 charge to a wrong number. ;
. ed to obviate the need for cQstly AT&amp;T's fee for the sa111e call would
human contact but are now being have been $2.65. Long-distance is a •
exploited for huge profits. According $70 billion business, so we're not ~
to the Center for the Study of talking' small change !Jere.
Joseph Spear
, :
Responsive Law, banks nelled $2.2
.
·.. What can you say about insuri •·I
Wbo among us can challenge that billion in ATM transactions in 1995. · ance that hasn 't been said? lt's , $2.~ ~
logic?
·
Recently, the ind\jstry adopted a rule · trillion industry that ;;creams poor- : ·
Here are some p( the _highlights that allows banks on both ends of a mouth as it squats on cash reserves ot .:
from the SF repon: · ,
.
nonc!lstom~r ATM exchange to col$160 billion and rakes i~ the dough •
-- lbere are SI!Ch things as legal lect a fee.
writing policies and ileny~ng ·benefits: ' :
thieves, and they dress in banker's
It's a shameless business.·
;
blue. The cost of mouey 'is at a his--Anybody who thinks the cable-- You haven't heard much about
toric low, yet bank profits are at a his- television industry ,.learned a lesson the .cereal ma~ers lately, but ~lly :; ~
1
toric high -- $48.8 billion last year.
wben Congress re-regulated them had what can be satd after they've puslle&lt;l• l
Bllilks are reaping obscene Torbest think again. According to the the price of flakes and ,crispies and j
tunes from personal loans, for which Consumer Federation of America puffs and brans to five bucks a box 'I , ~
'
they cllarge an ave(age Qf IS pertetil these GreCdy Creeps zapped us for $6
Joe will gel the Greedy Creeps. •
interest. We used to refer to sucli
billion a year in oven:harges from Joe will walk, use money orders, read i~
.practice~ 8$ loan-sharting. We used
I 986 to 1~2. wben they were unreg- boOks, write letters, buy term arid cal :
to refer to sucb inteiiCst
as vigulated. They are now free of the gov: yogun.
' •·
orish.
1
'
emment yoke agairi'; and already , That will put a dent in their prof~ l
So far, as best as anyone' ·can Tele-Communications Inc. and Time liS.
•1
count. banks have invented a1 least Warner have jacked up rates as much ' · In my dreams.
:
225. different kinds of fees for han- as I0 percent.
· Joseph Spear is a syndicated •
dling your mo~y. There are deposit
writer for Newspaper Enterprlle' ' ;
fees and withdrawal fees and fees for
. Service Association.
.• :
-- Ever heard of Operator
bouncing checks and a "deposit-item .
return fee" for depositing bad checks Providers? They are the small long- ·• . The first national television ~an ~ '
.. even if customers are not aware· distance carriers wbo contract to NCAA ~asketballtitle same wu in ·:; :
handle calls in public,: phone booths 1954 when La Salle beat Bt'ililley, • ·•.
they are depositing rubber. .
.
and
then charge oulnlaeous sums for 94-76. ·
lbere are fees for speaking with

•

Driver escapes injury in car-deer cl'ash

Motorcyclist 'fair' follQwing accident

The thieves.wore pinstripes ______~·;

Berry's World

Fire damages Pomeroy structure

Meigs an~ouncements

:1

.

Power outage affects 400 customers

By The Alaoclated Pres•
this dale at the_Columbus weather
• High pressure will allow drier air station was 91 m 1959. The record
to work in as it builds into the Ohio low was 29 in 1968. ·
Valley today,
.
Sunset tnday will "': at(\:31 p.m.
Some sunshine will return and no Sunrise on Tuesday will be at 6:24
rain is expected which will diminish a.m.
Weather forecast:
I~ flood threat across the south.
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy. A chance
Higli today will be mainly in the 60s
of showers and rhunderstorins southaqro the state. ·
isture wiD stan to return from west with a c()ance ofSbowers nonh1
uth by tonight and Tuesday. A west. Lows from around 40 nQnl\east
,w ~bowers or thuqderstorms may ' to the lower sos:south.
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy with
push back into the south and west
scattered
showers. i'hunderstorms
p~s. ofthe state tonight with lows in
lhe.40s in the north and 50s across the possible- central and south. Highs
from the lower 60s nonheastto near
south.
Scanered showers and thunder- 75 extreme south. ·
Extended forecast:
storms will be in the pict~ on TuesWednesday...A .cha,nce of thunday with higbs reaching the 60s in the
north with some lower 70s .Cross the derstorms. Lows in the upper 40s to
lower 50s. Highs from the upper 60s
south.
, .The record high temperature for north 10 the middle 70s south.

ly (she) stands on some things," confirmed one EPA official. "If tbe peO"i
pie believe the Congress is not doint·'
this tbey will.go 10 their state legis: •
' latures and say 'you do it. ' The last ·
thing the business community needs
is 50 different slate (environmental)·~
standards. They can 'I sllind it. lbey
would take us any day ofthe·week.'' .:
Jack Anderson and 'Michael l
Blnstein are :writers for Unit~ ;
Feature Svndrcate. Inc,
· ,

••

Local· News in Brief:

~ore rain set for tonight

Many of these corporate group$ ;
were among the biggest bankrolle~ .
of the Republican revolution, boping:
the GOP maj ority would rQII back the·
regulatory burden. But like House
Speaker Newt Gingric)l, many or :
these ex~curives are surprised by the 1
public backlash.
"People who didn 't really have,
time for her before now have lots Of :

as •

EMS units answer 25 calls

W.VA.

ronmental enforcement. .

saturday'•stormsc·~damaci

...,,..,,.. ..... - .
rosedimenlconlrolt-lllda'Oiioa
Mary Lenore Bailey, 86, Middlepor1, died SMunlay May 4, 1996 at the
A ~OIId slip hu limilld lnlff'IC to control devices on !be Five Poiati
Overbrook center, Middlepol1.
one lane on a section of $t.Je Route end of the 2.2S-mile conqector pro!
Born March IS, 1910 in Rudand Township, ~he was the daughter of the 7 near the U.S. 3311-77 Connector jeer, funberdelaying worlc from~
late Anson
and ~I Grapes Bailey. Sbe worlced
cle'!' for the fo~- Project until two lanes of lbe new pessin&amp; on the new four· lane hig~
mer Ewtng s Grocery tn PQrneroy and tJI:e former Tuckerman s Grocery '" highway lite completed, state high- way. Recently completed main sub;
Middleport. She was a mCI!'ber of the Mtddl~port C~rch of Christ. .
. • way officials announced this morn- grade stone work also received mlllf
Sbe is survived by two sons and ~gbters. rn law, Richard IDd ~s Bat- ing.
damase from runoff during 11M
le~ of Middleport, and Stephe~ IDd D1an Batley of Belpre; and ntne grandThe section of collapsed roadway storms, Tillis added.
:
cbtldren and 12 great-grand~hildren .
three miles north of Pomeroy, lcnown
"We are at least four weeks awq
Sbe wu aslso preceded m death by her husband Qf 64 years, J-ester B. as the "Goeglein slip," sank epprox- from having two lanes oftbe projec!
Bailey.
.
.
.
·.
imately eight incbes after Saturday's open for traffic. We lost all of Jut
Services will be II a.m. Tuesd~Y. m the ~tsber Funeral _Home, _Mid~le- heavy rains saturated the area, week because of the weather, and~
port, with the Rev. AI H~ officumng. Bunal w1ll follow tn the Rivemew accordihg to Don.Tillis, Ohio Depart- will likely lose all of this week's worll
Cemetery, Middlepon. Fnends may call at the funeral borne from 7-9.tomght. ~ent ofTransponation project super- ro the weather. We aren't dQing aD)!'
v1sor on the connector project.
roadwork, but we are currently work•
Traffic was reduced ·to one lane ing to correct a lot of wasl)es and em.:
late Saturday evening, with ponable sion problems which were caused bf.
traffic signals maintaining traffic. the rain ," said Tillis.
· •
Units of the Meigs County Emer- assisted;
Barring any further movementatrbe
Yoacham stared that ODOTcrew;
6:41 p.m. Sunday, Mechanics slip area, one lane traffic will be will be called in if the slip begins tO:
gency Medical Service recorded 2S
calls for assistance Saturday and Road, Carey Loot, VMH.
maintained until traffic can be direct- move again. "We will get in and do:
RACINE
Sunday, including three transfer calls.
ed onto two lanes of the connector, work to sure up the slip if that hap-'
12:37 p.m. Saturday, Broadway said Nancy Yoacham, public infor- pens, but we are ho ing to' stay witt.:
Units responding included:
11
Street,
Daisy Sayre, Holzer Medical marion officer for Ohio Department one lane traffic until
CHESTERVFD
the two-lane
8:38 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire Center;
of Transportation DistrictiO in Mari- connector completion."
6:59p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire ella.
depanment and squad lo Scout Camp
Road, tree fire a1 Bob Bailey resi- departmel)l and squad to Old Ponland
dence, Pomeroy squad assisted.
Road, structure fire on Ronald Keys
MIDDLEPORT
property.
9:23 a.m. Saturday; Stonewood
RUTLAND
Apartments, Darra Yabya, Veterans
7:03a.m. Saturday, Felden Road,
Memorial Hospital;
Robin Rowley, dead upon arrival;
Approximately 400 Ohio/Columbus Southern Power customers in
6:53e.m. Saturday, volunteer.fire
7:15 a.m. Saturday, Oyes,ville
department to U.S. 33, water rescue;, Rood, Nancy Davis, treated at the · · the area between Harrisonville and State Route 7 were left without electricity overnight Saturday in the wake of a thunderstorm, according to
9:32p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire. scene;
Gallipolis
area manager Ronald McDade.
.
,
department and squad to Stale Rout~
3:16p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
Downed
l~ees
and
high
winds
caused
the
outages:
McDade said.
554 in Gallia County, water rescue; department and .squad to Parkinson
Repair
was
hampered
by
high
water
in
the
area,
he
added
..
Herchel Hatfield, not treated.
Road, motor vehicle accident, Toby
· P~er was restored Sunday afternoon, he said.
POMEROY
Hysell, VMH;
I :32 a.m. Saturday, SR 7, Chuck
·4:04p.m. Saturday, Laurel Street,
Smith, VMH;
Richard Ward Sr., VMH;
No injuries were·reported following a house fire in Pomeroy Sun6:13p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
6:22p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
~ay morning.
.
·
department and squad, water rescue department to Main Street, water resPomeroy
flrelighters
were
summoned
to
the
108
Buttef,AuiAvc.
reson,Grueser Hollow Road, Middleport ·Cue; .
'
idence at 9:25 a.m.
'
assisted;
•''\
6:36 p.m. Saturday, Strongs Run
Ac~ording to Fire Chief Danny Zir.kle, an elec!rical fire in a first·
6:45p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire Road, Beatrice Rhinehart, VMH;
floor wall went up onto the second floor and into the attic of the twodepartment and squad to Village
4:09 p.m. Sunday, · Eagle Ridge
story frame house, causing moderate damage.
Green Apartments, water rescue;
Road, Elva Hudson, HMC.
Thineen Pomeroy firefighters,. two trucks and the Poineroy squad
9:38p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
SYRACUSE
of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service were on the scene
department and squad to Laurel Cliff
II :30 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
along with four Middleport firelighters.
Road, water rescue;
department and squad, motor vehicle
· A repo·n on the fire w.as not available al presstime.
3:10a.m. Su'nday, Fisher Street, accident on Snowball Hill Road,
William Stivers, O'Bienjlss Memori- James Barton, VMH.
al Hospital;
TUPPERS PLAINS
9:25 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
A Point Pleasant, W.Va., man escaped injury when his car struck a
2:01 p.m. Sunday, Main Street,
depanment to Butternut Avenue, Louise Staats, VMH.
deer on SR 7 in Sailsbury Township early this morning, causing heavy
structure fire, no injuries, Middlepon
damage to the vehicle, according .to Meigs County Sheriff James Souls- ·
by.
.
Ronnie G. Bass, 44, was southbound when a deer ran into the path
of his 1985 Chevy Cavalier, causing Bass to strike and kill the deer.

'!'·

By

••

!!..~~

Mary .Lenore Bailey

ities.
·
The White House lppii'CIItly
In South America, where most of understands CliniOII'• expotUR on
the WJ~rid's cocaine is produced. offi- the drug issue. The I996 budJet
found !hal drug kingpins are not includes a partial resronlion of funds
Jack Anderson cials
only holding their own- they 're also for drug interdiction abroad-- a JlfOc
expanding, into heroin P,roduction. In gram that's languished in the past few
and
Pcn:r, where most of the world 's coca years. He also has tried io revive the
Michael Blnsteln is grown, some farmers have drug czar post by appointing a tiew
switched ro planting poppy - which director . and pushing for hiaher
drug use. A 199S survey sbowed · is later synthesized irito herojn.
staffing levels.
overall drug use is up SO pen:ent from
Since taking office, Clinton has
Even the president's opponeniS
the year before among kids aced 12 taken only a peripheral interest iJI agree that retired Gen. Barry McCaf..
to 17.
fighting drug. According to a recent . frey is the right man io revive thedorWbile drug use has risen, federal report br the House Committee on . mant drug war. But unless Clinton is
support for the anti-drug effort has Govemnient Reform an~ Oversight, willing to use the presidential bully
fallen from its peak levels during the Ointon mentioned illegal drugs only ·pulpit more effectively, tbe gains of
Bush administration. Overall funding II limes in 1.724 presidential stale- ·· the late 1980s will continue to erode.
for ·drug interdiction has fallen by ments and ullerances in I 994. His
·MAKING FRIENDS -- Enl(ironmore than $200 million since fiscal record was only slightly beller the mental PrQiection Agency Adminisyear 1993.
year before, wben drugs received 13 trator Carol Browner has been receiv. Mica spent _the spring c?"gres" meinions in I .628 statements.
· ing some strange phone. calls this
stonal recess .w.tth three of bis ~p
Clint~n also invited •criticism year.
.
Her erstwhile enemies in corpocolleagues on a fact-findmg lnp. ...when he.tmposed an 80 percent staff
through Mextco and Sooth A!Jienca. cut ?.n the office of former "drug rate America now want to, politicaiJudgmg from a report of the mp, Ia":- czar Let Brown. Tho": cuts made Jy speaking, kiss and make up.;
makers found a drug culture that s up lbe.bulk of the 2S percent cur m Browner has regaled admin\stration'
colleagues with tales of bow hu
office phone has been ringing Qff th1:'!
h()Ok with corporate chieftains and'
trade group heads who had previ~ '
ously shunned her, before public
opinion turned sharply . agaiifs'l :
Republican efforts to dismantle envr. •·
•

Slip closes connector ·
traffic to single lane .

OHIO '.'Jpathe r

Actions to end
marriages filed

.:--·-·-

· SINGLE COPY PRICE

Dilly ....:.......................... .'.................... )5 C....
Sublc:rtben,not deaJrina m pay lho ~may
retnlt '• advance direct to The Dally Seod~~el
on 1 line, lit or 12 mDMh bail. Credit wiH be
PVIII Olllicreooh _ ...
N6

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Of GAWI'OUS, OIL ,

by mall pennluecl in lftll .

....... ho!ireoorricr-ltavolloblt.
MAILitJISCitiPI'IONS
·-Melpc-d)r

.

195 Upper
River Rd.

'

11 w~........;............:..... :......-...........$21.30
l6Weeb........,.,_,.,., ..............................S53.82
52Weeb.............................. ,................ SIO!J.56

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13 ~"""""'"""'"'"'"'""'""'"' ..... ,$1?.:15
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....:...................,......... ,............ 1109.72

52 '•

.

'

...'

·,

•

..

'

�•

•

Sports

•

The Daily Sentin~J
Monday, May ••

••

In NL action,

lllonday, May •• 1811

1-

In the NBA playa,.,

LOSING THEIR VIEW Ia all Cincinnati . .cond baaeman Bret Boone
and San Francisco'• Stan Javier hava In common, •• Javier elides
Into . . COIJd baM with hie helmet oyer hie e,.. while Boone lottie ballball et hie elbow In the flret Inning of SUnday'• Netlonlll
Leasr..~e g~~me In S.n F1'1111cleco, wheni the Rede won 12-6. (AP)

In AL action,

wu important fm: 11110 come in here
and win lhe series. We were lble to
SCOI"B some 111111."
At Sao FranciJco, Davis became
lhe fant to bits slams on comecutive
days since Detroit's Dan Gladden in
1993.
BaQ;)' Larkin and Thomas Howard
hit two-run homers and John Smiley
(2-3) allowed lhree runs and sill hits
in seven innings.
William VanLandingham (1-S)
gave up seven runs and si~ hits in 6
113 innings.
In olher games, Montreal beat
Houston .S.O, Atlanta beat Philadelphia 11·8, Chicago beat New YorkS4, Pittsburgh beat Los Angeles 4-2,
Colorado beat Aorida S-4, and San
Diego beat St. Louis 1~.
EliJIQI 5,.Astroe 0
Henry Rodriguez homered for lhe
second straighi day, raising his total
to 12. He drove in anolher run wilh
a double as visiting Montreal took
advantage.of lhree errors to take a 40 lead after four innings.

Shonstop Orlaado Miller made
lhrowia&amp; and fielding errors, and
catcher !tick . n s made a throw·
1ng error.
Jeff Fusero (2·3)" got his fmt
decision since April 7. allowing seven hits in seven innings with nine
strikeouts and one walk.
Doug Brocail (1· 3) lost his third
straight decision, allowing five runs
- two earned- and fi~ hits in five
innings.
.
BnftS 11, l'billia 8
Dav.id Justice homered twice and
drove in four runs, and John Smohz
(6-1) wop his silllh straight decision
as Atlanta backed hi!n with 18 hits.
Smaltz allowed seven runs -just
one earned - and six hilS in 6 213
innings and struck out nine.
Mike Williams .({}.3) surrendered
six runs and nine hits in four innings.
Benito Santiqo hit a three-run homer
for lhe visiting Padres.
Cnlls$,Me&amp;s4
For lhe second time in three days,
Sammy Sosa hit a game.-winning

11Y CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP B•Ubllll WI liM

· MAKING HIS MOVE- Chicago guard Michie! Jordan (left) mtlkee
his !1I0ft Mll.lnd the NMv York Knlckll' Derft llerpar In the third quartir ol Sunday's NBA EaStern Conference lllnlflnai-IH opener In
Chicago, wheN the Buill won 91-84. (AP)
·

" We gave up 14 runs to these
ChrisHaneywonforlhefmtti~;~~e
pregame wannups, pitched California
guys, but they beat us lhree out of in nearly a year, pitching a three-hit·. to its sixth straight win. The ~gels
: ~ For at least one day, pitchers four,"losing pitcherCiuis Bosio said. ter that led Kansas City.over visiting won !heir I Oth in a row a1 home, !heir
:.Uled for lhe most pan in the Ameri·
Griffey robbed Alben Belle of a Oakland.
pickoffs last year, trapped two White
;.ian League.
•
two-run homer in the first inning,
Aajels S, Twbu 1
Sox
runners. The left-hander has
•: Dennis Martinez and lhe Cleve· reaching over the 8 112-foot fence in · §bawn Boskie, forced to stan
· ~ Indians shut out Ken Griffey Jr. center field at lhe Kingdome to make when Mark Langston hurt his knee in . five piclcoffs in seven starts this sea·
son.
:.00 lhe Seattle Mariners 2-0. Kevin the catch.
:¢ross and lhe Texas Rangers comThe game was scoreles~ into lhe
eted a lhree--day span in' which lhey sevenlh inning, when Tony Pena hit
ld Cecil Fielder and the Detroit an RBI single.
All Meigs County youlh soccer want to give lhem an opportunity to
· , gers to a total of seyen hits .
Eddie Murray hit his first home
players
are invited to lhe University improve lheir skills."
·
:: Chris Haney pitched a shutout for run of lhe season, and lhe 480th of his
of Rio Grande Soccer C. ~ · orga·
Morrissey
has
been
lhe
Red·
~sas City, Ben McDonald of Mil·
career, in the eighth off reliever
nized
by
Rio
Grande
ht
"
coach
men's head coach since 1989. He has
iiJaukee and Andy Pettitte of New Mike Jackson. Murray moved ahead
;Vortc'were in control Sunday.
· of former teammate Dave Winfield Scott Morrissey, who in 1995 was led lhe team to four post-season
•: Quite a contrast from earlier Ibis for II th place on the career RBls list lhe guest speaker a1 the Meigs Youth appearances and is certified by the
Soccer banquet.
4ason when runs seemed to reign National Soccer Co~~~:hes Associa·
with 1,834.
The
camp
will
be
held
from
June
tion
·of America. He s also an expe·
·:ilnd rain - at every ballpark, a time
Rangers 3, Tigers l
17
10
June
21
at
the
University
of
:when batters were far ahead of the
Kevin Gross and two Texas reliev· Rio Grande soccer complex from 9 ri~nced cl.inician.
For more information about Rio
.Pitchers.
.
ers combined on a five-hitter, team·
1
• • "You think of Cleveland and you ing to retire lhe last 16 batters at Tiger a.m. until noon each day. The cost is . Grande soccer camps, please contact
$60.00 per camper wilh each partie· Morrissey at the University of Rio
lhink of lheir offense. but basieBll y Stadium.
)¥hat wins for lhem day in and day
Gross·(4-3) followed consecutive ipanl req,iving a camp T·Shirt. Chil· Grande. The number is 1-80{}.282·
q., is their pitching," Mariners man· one~hitters by Ken Hill and Roger · dren ages 4·13 are 'invited.
7201, extension 7126 or7293.
New to the Rio Grande camp Ibis
MHS'Band golf
4er Lou Piniella said. . .
Pavlik of the Rangers. Jeff Russell
: • In other games, Kansas City beat pitched the eighth and Mike Henne· year is a mini-camp for kids ages
louruament slated
The. MCip Band Boosters will
dakland 2·0, Texas defeated Detroit man, hack in Detroit for the first time four to five years old. The cost for
the
mini
camp
is
$50.00.
Mini·
i;2, California clowned Minnesota 5- since being traded late last season,
hold its annual Memorial Day week·
camp participants also receive a T· end golf tournament on Salurday,
~i..New York defeated Chicago 7· 1, was booed while getting the ·save.
shirt.
~!waukee beat Baltimore 13·1 and
May 2S at" Meigs County Golf
Texas pitchers went the final 29
According
to
Morrissey,
families
rill'ooto lopped Boston I I -4.
Course.
The event is a scramble for1/3 innings of lhe four-game series
•: Martinez (5·2) matched Whitey without giving up a walk. Kevin with two or more camP!'rs registered mat with each team having a 4a.plus
l'ord for 50th place on the career vic- - Elster bomered for lhe Rangers and ·will receive a $S discount. CamperS' handicap. One player•per team can
tory list wilh No. 236. In 6 2/3 Eddie Williams homered for Detroit, are also requested to bring !heir own be a 10 or under hlindicap. To enter
innings, Martinez allowed only lhree which has lost ~ in a row and IS balls.
a team, call John Krawsczyn at992- .
Morrissey said of the camp's pur- 21 S8 (Meigs High School) or 992·
singles as the Indians won for the of 17.
pose, "More and more kids in our 6394.
18th tim" in 22 games.
Royals Z, Athletks 0
area are playing lhe game and we

.

Goodrich .and ·G er-v in
among new inductees
into basketball HOF

Meigs County spof1s in brief

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) ~ er wilh 2,001 points in 1957-58;
Pail GOodrich will be officially
-Nancy Licberman..Ciine, who
inducted into the Basketball Hall of helped Old Dominion win two
Fame tonight on his own consider·
national college championships and
able merits. He did have more than . became the first woman to play for
a little help from his friends on the a men 's professional team : the
Los Angeles Lakers.
Springfield Fame of lhe U.S. Bas·
Maybe lhe names are familiar: ketball League in 1986.
)Yilt Chamberlain and Jerry West.
- Kresimir Cosic; lhe Yugoslav
"We had two players who ·could Olympic champion who also starred
take lhe game to anolher level when for Brigham Young and died a year
.we needed to," Goo4rich said. He ago of cancer at-age 46.
didn't include himself, though many
Goodrich played for the · NBA
would argue lhe textbook shooter champion Lalcers or 1971-72, who,
should have.
are viewed by some as the greatest
Goodrich joins five other players team of all time. Their 69-13 reconl
;,. the newest members of lhe Hall of stood untillhis seaSon, when Chica·
'Fame:
go -. with the equally amazing tri·
- George' "Iceman" Gervin, umvirale of Michael Jordan, Scottie
four-time NBA shOI)ting titlist;
Pippen and DCnnis Rodman- wenl
- David Thompson, who led 72-10.
North Carolina State ·to an NCAA '' ' Did Goodrich feel a pang of
championship and once scored 73 regret?
p&lt;&gt;ints in an NBA game, only to see ~ "The record of 69 games dido 't
the season 5coring.tille captured by mean anything to me. Don't get me
Gervin wilh a 63-point game;
wrong, !hat was a gi"eatteam. But'the
- George "Bird" Yardley, who 69 wins just happened," he said.
broke the NBA's 2,()()().point barri·

NHL

In the NHL playoffs,

Red
Wings and. Rangers. notch wins
.

By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT (AP) - Wilh all the
talent around him, Steve Yzerman no
longer feels pressed to bring the
Stanley Cup to Detroit all by himself.
Maybe that's why he 's playing the
best hockey of his career and the Red
Wings are holding a 2..0 lead in their
playoff series with St. Louis.
Sunday, Yzerman set a club
record with five points as the Red
Wings beatlhe Blues 8-3 in a game
lhey dominated from stan to finish. ·
• "Wearing lhe 'C' is 9verrated,"
the Red Wings' captain said. "You
den't really have to have a letter on
ydur jersey to be a leader on a team."
: Yzerman 's effort - two goals
and lhree assists - was magnified
· b~ lhe factlhe Red Wings.didn't feel
: thCy played well in Game I, escap·
. ing with a 3-2 victory.
, Yzerman wanted to make some·
thing happen Sunday. ~nd he didn't
waste any time. Yzerman had a goal

Baseball

AL standings
Ium

.
and two assists in less than 12 min· round against Toronto. But he was
utes as lhe Red Wings scored five simply overmatched by Detroit in
goals in lhe first period.
Game 2 of this series.
"You can forget about the score
Casey, forced inlo action for lhe.
of this game," said Yzerman, who postseason because of Fuhr's reconwasn't always surrounded by so structive knee sur_gery, spenl most of
much talent. "It's irrelevant. Now we . lhe season at Peoria of the Internahave to play Game 3, anp that tional Hockey ' League. He was
becomes lhe most important."
pulled for backup Bruce Racine
The Red Wings won the season after Darren McCarty's goal made it
series from the Blues 3·1·1. The 4-0 at II :41 of the first.
· Blues' victory came in St. Louis.
"Jon was awful," Blues coach
The Red Wings are on a mission Mike Keenan said. "He didn't give
this season. Their 41-year drought us much of a charice. Butlhe rest of
wilhout the Cup is the longest active lhe team wasn 't very good, eilher. I
streak in the ~HL. Last season, pulled him becauSe it looked like lhe
Detroit was swept in·the finals by lhe rink was tilted a~t 4S degrees,
New Jersey Devils.
!here, and I wanted to stall and give
They won a league-record 62 him a chance to regroup.'1
games Ibis season with arguably tlie
But it was only temporary. Coach
deepest team in the NHL.
Mike Keenan sent Casey back out 33
Deplh could soon become a prob- seconds later. ·
lem for the Blues. Goaltender Jon
"He told me logo in, and then he
Casey gave St. Louis a heroic effort, told me to come back out," Racine
said. "That was about it. We know
Grant Fuhr in lhe first
.

'

•

luccmDM-'•

New York 7. Cbica'o I
Milwaukee 13, Baltimore I
KJwu CJtr 2. Oakland o

Florida .. .......... .. ..... 11

California'· Miancwta I
CLEVEt.~D 2. $eallle Q

Chlcago.......... ....... .l6 15

lill

Decroh (Aldred o. J) Ul New York

811kimore .............. .l6 14 .!i33

2

Toronto .................. ,.

.467

4

Bolton..................... l 0 20 JJJ
Decroii... ................. IO 22 JIJ

8

!llogenl-0), 7:l5 p.m.
Minnesota (Radke ~- l) ar Seaute lHurlado I ·3}. IO:OS p.m.

9

Central Dl•blon

CLEVELAND .......20 . • .600
Chlcqp ............... ... J6 14 .m
Minnaota .............. l4 U

4&gt;.

.483

6

·Milwaukee ............. u 16 .4411
KaNMCil)' ........... II 20 .3!i!5

10

.
Wettem Df•Won
Tew .....................20 II .645
Callfomia .... ........... l8 12 .1100
Seanlcl ..... ............... l1 14 - ~

Ookland ...... , ....... .14 16

.~7

1

5\

Satunby'ssco"s
Boaioa 8, Toroftto 1. eo·mp. of •u•p.
• - ........, TCJI'IIIM04
Teut .1, Deaoill
Bakimore 10, Milwautce 5
Chk:fwo II. New YorU
Oolllaod J. Ka.aoCil)' 2
• California S, M i - 2
• SealtleJ.CLEVEt.AND I

Suaday'•1

TOANM9 II, Bolton. '

r- !, Dolrolt 2

CLEVELAND (McDowell 3· 1) ac
Oolland (W.,..... J).J ), W,05 p.m
KIIIIIU Ory (Belcller 2·1) 01 California
(Leftwich 0.0), 10:05 p.m.

Tueaday's pmes
CLEVELAND (Hcnhila 3-Z) ar Oak·
land (lolloo2·l~ l:IS p.m.
Deuoil (U10 2·Z) 01 NeW Yodt (Cone
4-l), 7:35p.m.
·
(Ml,..... J. l). B:O:l p.m.

Blhimono (Wol~ 2-2) 11 O!Jcoao (Fer·
lllllllb4-2), 8:05p.m.
TO&lt;OOIO (GIIZIII&amp;II 4-1) 01 TClW (OJiy.

er 1.0), 8:35 r,.m.

Kanw C 1y (Umoo 0.0) 01 Callfomlo
(Abbolrl-4), 10:05 p.m. .
Mi._a (Pam 0.0) 11 S&lt;lltlc (Wo~
COIII-4), JO:OSp.m.

NL standings
Arlallla ...................ta
PhUodelphlo ........... t6
Now Yoot ............. ll

Iii

ll .551

, l

!6

.+II

Hoaooa ...... .......... .15 16 .414
Sr.Louio ................ J4 17 .452
' CINCJNNATL.... .t2 17 .414

I
2

l

16

.l

4~
4~

.467

New Yoot 7, llll~o l

Colorado 17, florida 5
CJNCINNA'n 9, San Fruoioco 7
7, Loo ~lea 2
All,... 6, Philadelphia]

p;.,.....,

Moo_2._1

SJ.l.Guio 4, Son Diqo 3

2

6'

MonoaJs.-o

-lCD

6

M-

Ntw \'ort (Ciut 1·3) at Florida

Cbioqo (B~lllopr 1· 2) 11
7.Up.m.

Schott praises Hitler's early
years as Germany's dictator
BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) -Three
years after she was suspended for
racial and elhnic slurs, Marge Schott
once again is praising lhe stan of
Adolf Hitler's term as German chan·
cellor.
"Everylhing you read. when he
came in 1¥: was good," lhe Cincin·
nati Reds owner said in an interview
aired by ESPN Sunday night. "They
buili tremendous highways and got
all the.factories going. He went nuts,
he went berserk. I lhink his own generals tried to kill him, didn't lhey?
"Everybody knows he was good

los A~J•ICs (Anacio 2-3) II
CINCINNI\11 (-J).J~ 7:l5 P·'"·
Colorado (Farmer 0-0) at Allanla
(Middul '-2J, 7:.0 p.na.
·
San Francisw (Wa11oa l·l) 11 Sr.
Loui•l"'kcwodt 1-0~ B:OS p.m.

.

, _, Seallle lOll, 75: Seallle- oaies 1-0

· Tuesday's pmes
A•-Loope
CALIFORNIA ANOBLS: S.nr OF
Phillip Dauphin 10 Lake FJ1iaore of 1he
Califami.a Lequc. Reassianed RHP fer.
nalldo DeLaCruz from Late Elsinore to
Cedar RlpidJ of I he Midwea. l.eiJMC.
'
NEVI YORK Y1\NKEES: PI- INF

Wedllesday's pmes

Albala at Odando, 8 p.m. {1loiT)

Hockey

Mariaoo Duacan ott the 15.day disabled
tio. Recalled INF Robm - - . , from
Columbus of the lntema~ro..J Letave.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Recalled
RHP Many Janzen from Syncuae of tbe
t.rernorionaJ t.eaaue. Oplioned 2s n~oon

NHL playoffs

BritoroS~.

Satul'day'sliCOrel
. J. J

Philadtlpbia 3, Florida 2; teries tied

,Colorado 5, Cbicap&gt; 1: oerieoded 1-1

.SIJI!dllj's Kore.

N.Y. Ranaen 6. 'Piusbqf'lh :\; series
liedl· l .

Detroit 1', St. Louis ) ; Detroil leldl:

-1-0

Tonllbt's paoe

Colorado .. Ooeaao. s,30 p.m.

l'ueldly'• . . -

Pilfllllqllll N.Y, . _ 7:30p.m.
Philadei!Jhilll Floriclo, 7:l0p.m.

w........,......

sr-

- l i S t Looio.
Colorado II ChJeaio, :30 p.01.

..
•

lluebaU

Utah M SAl An40nio, 7 p.m. (TNT)
New York at Cbinao. 9:30p.m.
(TNT)

Suaday'IICOI'es
ft ...-...,.., Allaala 89, lodi·
ana IJ7 (Atlanta •inl series 3· 2); U1ab
102. Podlaod 64 (lltoh- ..... J.l)
IeetH rHIMI: Cbicaao 91 , New
Yoot1ol:&lt;lll_leado_J-0

at the beginning. but he jusl went too ·
far."
The 45-minute interview by Sal .
Paolantonio was taped in !:choU's:
office in Cincinnati on Friday.
.
" He ~~Sked 'me some questions '
during the interview lhat I really did· .
n't care for," Schott said when · ·
re~~~:hed at her home_Sunday night by
The Associated Press.
Schon said 11he subject of Hitler
came up because "he asked about
the swastika in the house." In · ·
November 1992, Schott admitted
keeping a swastika armband at

Transactions

Chicaao (Tnc:b.el l-2) 11 Monrrell
(AI ..ral ·l), ?: ~S p.m.
. Hou11on (Hamproo J-2J 11 PhiiQJ.
plliaiGrace 5-0). 7:35 p.m.

SaturdaJ'IICOI'e

Colonodo , Florida 4
Son Dioto IO.SI. l.Guio4
CINCIJoiNA1112, Son

(MIIIlnaJ.t~

n.e.tay'sc-a
New Yoi'lt (Clark 1-3) 11 Florida
(Lei!....2), 7:05p.m.
.

Not quite. Seattle cetcher Dtin Wlllotl ·

momentarily_embrlc:t11 Clevelend's Julio · Fri!ICO blfore Wlleon ·
mt1kee hie way to the mound for 1 flrat..Jnnlng conference with phch-. .
ar Chrll 801)0 during Sunday'• Anlerlcln League contest under the
Klngdoma In Saatlla, when the lndlane - n 2-o. (AP) .
.
.
.

Houuoo (llnbek 0.2) "'·Philadelphia
(Hunler 1-1), 7:35p.m. _
Colorado O'hoqnon 2-2) at Atlanta
(Aveoy-2-2). 7:40p.m.

NBA playoffs

~-=.~y~2

?:OS p.or.

NliL oo Paae S)

.

su••r'• "'"'"'

(l.eilfr 4-2).

(See

Basketball

'

All- II, Pbiladelt&gt;Jiia 8

...... (llooo 1-1~ 3:0:lp.m.

"They had to do what lhey felt
tiley had to do." Detroit coach Scot·
ty Bowman said. "Most of our guys
play lhrough that stuff:"
Keenan, a master ofmind games,
had complained about every .ng
from lhe length oflhe visitor's
·h
at Joe Louis Arena to ergei
Fedorov's alleged flop$. ' a:enan
gave· lhe impression lhe Blues felt

BROTHERLY LOVE? -

Saa Oieao (fewUbury J.. l) at Pin•-

Col01111o ................ l5 14 .517
Loo Aop .......... 15 11 .-169

Snn Frafteiaco ........ 14

Mike likes to do things like lhat, and
we don't need to know wby."
Nicklas Lidstrom had two goals
for the Red Wings, seeking !heir first
Stanley Cup title since 1955.
\lladimir Konstantinov, Martin
Lapointe and Marc Bergevin lilso
scored for Detroit.
Shayne Corsori, Peter Zezel and
Adam Creighton scored for the
Blues, who saw the constant com·
plaining of Keenan come back to
haunt !hem.

bvflh (Ericb 0.3), 7:05p.m.

Watem Dh·lllon
SMOiqo .... ..........l9 12 .613

Lo1 AD&amp;eles (No111o 4-2) at Pins·

..
.511

ll

•

Todlr'•,.ma ..

.....not.W..

=.aL.. . . . ...~ I~ ~

"T

SallordiY'IICOI'el

8o11on (Clemens 1-4)' u Mllwa•kee

1I
l

516

15 .500

t;.,....., .............. 15 '

ToDipt's pmes .

9~

.:144

Cenlrallli•-

:11: L f&lt;L
New Vork .... .......... l7 II .'WJ·
16

21

•

,

A'tl.A~~Acli..rodSS
left Bllllller f..., rho 15-day dioabled liu.
A.ORJDA MARLINS: Recllteci P
.Kurt Miller from Owlone of the lnlemtlionall..oa&amp;ue. Opriooed P Joel Adomoo•
1oOwlol1e.
.
SAN DIEOO-PADRES: S.nr OF.c
Joh• Ma·••are11i from Mcmphb of the
Sourhem ~lie to RaiM::ha Cucamonaa
ollhe Califonua Laaue.
SAN FRANCJ!CO GIANTS: l'llr·
cbued the Q)Qh'W;t of RHP Jote B.ullsra.
~ Phoeni.lr. of 1M Pacific CoutJ.aaue•.
Oprio!"'' LHP Shawo a.rooro l'lloalix.

Football ·
_,_Leapo
BUFFALO BILLS: Aon.. nud !he ·
••rl..._ofCAdomU-.

much time to aavor their do-or...tie
viaories. Utah starts its next series
agiiast S.an Antonio &lt;1" ~)'
night and Atlanta begins its beit.-of.
seven series at Orlando on Wedntsday.
11le Seattle Sul"!fSonics, who
took a 1..0 lead over Houston on Sat·
urday, resume !heir series wilh lhe
Rockers tonight.
The Bulls and Knicks play acain
Tuesday.
Hawks 89, Pacen 17
Miller wasn't supposed to play in
lhe opening round. but be decided
Sunday morning to tty for more of
his playoff magic.
He scored 16 of his 29 points in
lhe final period, including Indiana's
final eight. And after Mookie Blaylock threw a pass away with 11.3
seconds left. Miller gotlhe final shol
of lhe game. He was double-teamed
by Blaylock and Matt Bullard a1 the
lhree-poi"t line and had to force up
an off-balance shot lhat glanced off
the side of the rim as time expired.
''I'm no Superman, even though
people perceive me to be that way,"
Miller said. "It wasn't guaranteed

just becBIIIC I wu in a uniform that
we were aoin1 to win this pme. In
trulh, it probably was a lot harder.''
Blaylock scored 23 points, Steve
Smilh had 17 and Christian Laettner
added IS points and II rebounds
despite being in foul trouble for
much of lhe game.
Jazz 102, Trail Blazen 64
Karl Malone had 25 points and 10
rebounds and John Stockton added
21 points and II assists for Utah,
which led by as many as 40 points
in the final quarter.
Portland scored just 12 points in
lhe first quarter, I 2 in lhe second and
14 in the third.
The Blazers' 64 points broke the
playoff record-low of 68 set by_the
New York Knicks on May IS, 1994,
at Indiana. Portland also supplanted
lhe Los Angeles Lalcers' record 28·
point first half on April 7, 1974, at
Milwaukee.
.
"The Jazz were that good and we
were lhat bad," Portland coach P.J.
Carlesimo said. "They ran out on us
and controlled the game, ..., They
jumped on .us and didn't let us get
back in the game."

Ponland, which made lhe poll·
"'"ou for lhe 14111 llraight ~. wu
eliminated in lhe firsl round for lhe
fourth strai&amp;flt seA$011.
Balls 91, Klllcb 114
Iordan scored 44 poinls dcipite
playing wilh hack spasms lnd lhe
Bull• held New York without• field
goal in the final S: 15.
Scottie Pippen, with II pointa on
4-for-15 shooting, was the only other Chicago player to score in double
figures.
"When you look atlhe stat sheet
and see the way I shot and Toni
(Kukoc) shot, it's good to have
Michael on the court." Pippen said.
" We kind of rode his hack."
The Bulls missed eight strai,ht
shots, allowing lhe Knicks·to pull to
83-82 with four minutes left before
Jordan made a IS-foot jumper, an
end-to--end drive over Patrick Ewing
and a fade-away from lhe Jane as lhe
Bulls finished lhe game with an 8·2
run.
New York had two of its 17
turnovers in the _final minute of lhe
game.

.

Wallace passes Gordon to Win Save Mart 300 •

')

.By BEN WALKER

~

by Michael Jordan,
Sunday in lhe NBA.
But because of it, lhe Atlanta
Hawks and Utah Jazz are going to
lhe second round, while lhe Chicago Bulls have a I ..0 lead over New
York.
The Hawks escaped Indianapolis
wilh an 89-87 vi.ctory and a 3;2 win
in lhe first-round series when Miller,
making an unexpected comeback
from a fractured eye socket, missed
a jumper atlhe buzzer after scoring
16 points in lhe fourth quarter.
In lhe Jazz's case, lheir 3-2 series
victory over Portland came in a 10264 home vicJory in which the Trail
Blazers set an NBA record for fewest
points in a playoff game.
The Bulls survived a sub-par
effort by everyone but Jordan and
beatlhe Knicks 91-84 at Chicago as
New York went wilhout a field goal
in the finalS: IS.
•
The Jazz and Hawks won't have

. 011C1

(See NL oa Page 5)

·lP Baeblll Writer

'

A miuod shot by Regie Miller.
lots of missed shots by lhe Portland
Trail Blazers and plenty of made

home run in lhe bottom of lhe ninlh
I# Wrigley rJCW.
.
Sou broke a window in a buiW.
ins across Waveland Avenue, beyond
lhe left· field bleachers, with his
bonier off Jerry DiPoto (I.J ), Sosa's
second of lhe game.
Turtc Wendell (3..0) pitched two
innings of two-hit relic(.
Pirates 4, Dodaen l
Charlie Hayes made up for a tworun error by driving home lhe goahead run in lhe sevenlh at Three
Rivers Stadium as Pittsburgh won for
lhe fourth time in five games.
Shortstop Greg Gagne's throwing
error set up Hayes' key single as lhe
Dodgers dropped to S-12 on lhe road.
Denny Neagle (4-1) allowed t~
runs - bolh unearned - and ei501
hits in seven innings. Dan Plesac gOt
lhree outs for his second save.
Ismael Valdes (l-2) gave up tllree
runs and six hits in seven innings
with seven stri~ts and no walks.

:I ndians top Mariners 2-0; Brewers win

.

Hawks and Jazz advance; Bulls win

Reds·beat G~ants 12·6; Pirates also win
By The Mia C'l"fd , _ .
Eric Davis siii!!!!!C&gt;d s.n Francisco qain.
After hining a gruel slam in
Cincinnati's 9-7 viciOiy on SatUrday,
Davis did it qain Sunday night. He
beQme lhe 181h major leaguer to hit
slams in conS«Utive games, lhe fll'Sl
in lhree yean, in leading lhe Reds to
a 12-6 win over the Giants.
"When you come up wilh lhe
bases loaded, you have a tendency to
want to bitlhe hall too bard," Davis
said. "From lhe time I took batting
practice today, everybody was say·
ing, 'Don't hit another grand slam,
don't hit another .grand slam.'
"And lhen wben thai situalion was
!here, I was !l')'inJ to back it out of
.my mind lhat I hit one lhe day
before."
Davis • slam was lhe seventh of his
career and it gave lhe Reds a I(}. 3
lead. He also had an RBI double as
Cincinnati won its third straight.
"We haven 'I started to roll yet, but
this is a good start." Davis said. "It

The Deity Sentinel • Pege 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

action...

alongside him, and that was a key
By ANNE M. PETERSON
SONOMA, Calif. (AP) - For factor," Wallace said.
Gordon, the defending Winston
Rusty Wallace, lhe annual trip to
Norlhern California's wine country Cup champion, said the caution
for lhe Save Man Supennarkets 300 proved to be 'his undoing. ·
"There's going to be cautions,
is always like a working vacation.
and
if you 're going to win it, you
This 'year, lhe working pan paid
need to win ·it after a caution," Goroff.
"I've had a wonderful weekend. don said. "I didn 'l get it done. I blew
Even if I hadn't won, I l"'Ould have it. I spun lhe tires or didn •t get •em
still. been smiling, and, damn. we cleaned off good or whatever.'' .
It was the sixth road course vic·
topped it off with a win," Wallace
tory.ofWallace's
career, and his sec·
said Sunday after conquenng the
2.S2· mile road course at Sears Point ond at Sears Point. He won lhe race
in 1990 and took the pole the year
Raceway.
Wallace outraced Mark Martin by before.
But the victory was tainted when
about two car lenglhs at lhe finish for
NASCAS
officials found Wallace's
his second win this season. ·But the
,
Ford
Thunderbird
was too low after
critical point of the 74-lap race came
on lhe 69th lap when Wallace passed the race. The roof height, which must
leader Jeff Gordon com.i.ng off a cau· be 51 inches, fell less than one-quar·
ter of an inch short.
lion.
Wallace was not stripped of lhe ·
"I just got a jump on him. got

me

------~~~~~-

(Continued from Page 4t

-robbed after lhe loss in Game I.
"We didn't pay much attention to
what he said," Yzerman said. "It's
irrelevant to us."
·Keenan was .upset ·wilh his lop
·players. Captain Wayne Gretzlcy, for
olle, was on the ice for four of
Detroit's five first-period goals.
' "You have to expect y9ur best
players to carry your team, an4
that's not happening," Keenan said.
The Blues' frustration began to
show late in lhe game. St. Louis was
'called for II minor penalties in the
·third period, two of them against !he
goalie.
.
"It wasn't Jon who was shaky,"
Blues forward Glenn Anderson said.
"It was 20 guys who were shaky.
They were really flying, and built up
a ·ton of mo~ntum right at lhe start.
•We should have slowed lhe game
down .a lot, but we just stood lhere."
, Detroit outs hot St. L!Juis 31-21.
,. Elsewhere, the New York

Rangers beatlhe Pittsburp Penguins
6-3 Sunday to tie their Eastern Con·
ference series at ) . J. The playoffs
continue tonight with Colorado vis·
· iting Chicago in a Western.Confer·
ence series tied J.J.
Rangers 6, Penguins 3
In Pittsburgh, the Rangers con·
tained the Penguinf stars with
forechecking and came up with time·
ly goals.
.
· Luc Robitaille scored the first
goal and assisted on two olhers as
New York took over home-ice
advanlage in the series. Game 3 will
be Thesday in Madison Square Gar·
den, where lhe teJUns split lwo reg·
ular-season games.
Mark Messier, who stressed the
necessity of playing with a sense of
urgency, also had a goal and an assist
as New York swept away its sixth
consecutive Game.l playoff loss by .
shutting out Pinsbul]!;h on four first·
period power plays.
Even after the Rangers IOQk the
sellout crowd of 17,181 out of the
game by surging into leads of 3-0
(Continued from Page 4)
and 5-1. they relied on relentless .
Rockies 5, Marlins 4
checking to take away Pittsburgh's
. Dante Bichette singled home lhe end-to-end rushes arid the playmak·
winning run with one; out in lhe ninth ing of Jaromir Jagr and Mario
as Colorado won .its fourth straight. Lemieux.
Visiting Florida. which tied lhe
game at 4 on Jeff Conine's two-out,"
two-run homer in lhe top of the nmth,
lost its fifth straight. The Rockies
swept Florida for lhe second time
\BOt 11111sipce the two expansion teams
entered lhe league in 1993. .
·
BO\D \I \l{h.l T'.'
Kevin Ritz (3·3) pitched lhe Rook·
les' second complete game in two
Guaranteed Safety &amp;
seasons. allowing seven hits. Col·
High Interest Yields
~o·s only complete game last
year WJI!i by Bryan Rekar pn July 24.
. Available
Yorkis Pere;t ({}.I) was lhe loser.
• No Loads or Fees
. Padres 10, Cardinali 4
• Accumulale or Monthly
,Wally Joyner hit a hvo-run homer
Income .
lhat helped chase Alan Benes ~ter
•
Hip Safeiy!
two innings as San Diego avo1ded
•
\'{,ide
Choice of Annuities of
whal would have been its first three·
All
Kinds
gaine losing streak.this season. Jody
Can for lnformatiqn:
Reed had three of San Diego's IS
SCOTT INSURANCE
hits.
.
..
•Joey Hamilton (6-1) .won his third
,tl4-CWI....UU ("''llect)
straight sian. allowing four runs and
"t'U~!l Sw1rt Rd.
five hits in seven innings al Jack
Oblo45710
MurphY Stadium.
· Benes (3·2) allowed eight runs
issued
haveb)' lA1:=::~
and six hits wilh three walks and one
withdrawalS.
strikeol\t.

NLgames...

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Of 7o1 Miout. -

HYDRAVIVE,
COLORVIVE OR
FORTAVIVE
Sh1mpoo or Conditiontr11 oz. to 13.8 oz. or

~

3 Pac:k

Hvdravive D~ Hydtiting

Masque - 6. 5 oz.

NEH.V&lt;&gt;lJS

I

•
win or his Winston Cup points, but
Wally Dallenbach Jr. was third,
he was fined $25,000. NASCAR which also was his highest finish tJis
said
lowered height was not per· season. The lop three finishers Su··
formance enhancing or intentional day all drove Fords.
·
and could have been lhe result of
wear-alid·teai during lhe race.
"We know and lhey know we
didn't do anything to make the car go
faster with this. ... I was off the
course, bouncing off ~urbs and it
damaged lhe car. .bent lhe son of a
gun/' he said.
Wallace, who also won at Mar·
tinsville this yeal, beat Martin by
about .46 seconds. It was Martin's
best finish of lhe year.
"Rusty w;IS in the front and there
wasn't much time to do anything
with him." Martin said. "My car was .
faster than Rusty's, but he was in
front. It was going 10 be hard to get
around him in that short amount of

•

TYLENOL

•••

h1rl Str•ngth
C1ph!U. Gett•bl
Geklpl or

•
••

h1ended Relief

C•pteu - 100'1

I

CLAIROL
NICE 'NWY
HAIR COLOR
~•dSN,dfl

•

i•

.:

·•

Coke/Diet Coke' .
12 pk 12 QZ. cans

Tostltos from Frito·
9to 10oz.

$ .29

�•

•

By The Bend

The Daily SentfueJ
'-at~

I

~·

•

·100 year-old Meigs man
·sole survivor of World War I
Garner Griffin of AlRed, Meigs
County's last survi~ing World War I
~etcran, observed his l OOth binhday
on April 25.
· In observance of that occasion
several members of Drew Webster
Post 39. American Legion. joined
family and friends for a celebration
'Of the occasion. Griffin is a life mem·
bcr of the Pomeroy Post.
Highlights of the afternoon inchlded the ·presentation by Post Commander Fritz Goebel or a resolution
from Sen. Jan Michael Long and the
Ohio Senate to Griffin honoring him
for service to his country and his
community and recognizing his
iongevity.
Legionnaire Frank .Vaughan pre-

sented Griffin with a similar legislative commendation from the Ohio
House of Representatives signed by
Rep. John Carey.
A birthday cake inscribed "Best
Wishes, IOOth Birthday" and ice
cream were served by the family.
Friends and f8J9ily attending were
William Carr, Sherman Henderson,
Robena Henderson, lbelma Henderson, Pam Henderson, Larry Converse
and arandson, Kevin O'Brien. Representing Drew Webster Post were
Commander Goebel, Eight District
Second. VICe Comni1111der .Vaughan,
Mickey Williams, Lenny Jewell, Bob
Bunon, Wayne Milhoan, George
Harris, Ken Harris, Dick Fick, Ray·
mond Jewell and Joe Struble.

Monday, M8y 8, 18M

.

.

.

I

'Timepiece' ticks slowly through
a tale of passion and morality ,
By RUBY L. BAILEY
The DetroH NeWs

. .

CHATLNE
Uve 24 Hrs a dtry
Talk ,to Beautiful
Girls

'

in - is when Par!tin takes the rap for
Not that Mary Anne gets off totalhis black friend, LaWJence, who kills ly without a scarlet lener of~ own:
a white man in self-defense after
"The wom111 made no anempt to
inheritina the watch from the white conceal her horror. 'Oh,' she gasped,
man's aunt in her will.
'an office &amp;irl .'
Although he escapes jail, Parkin's
" She took a step back. 'lbere ate
house is firebombed and their daugh· such dreadful stories about the office.
. ter dies. 1be watch ends up placed at But I am sure the:~; do not apply tp
her grave by a cuilt·ridden accom- you,' she said, looking down •'
pUce.
MaryAnne's slightly protrudin
Evans also has wrjttetl an insight· stomach.
ful prologue for the book, discussing
"'Myself, I do not think it
man 's vain auempt to leave "our woman 's place, hut what do I kno
mark on the unset con&lt;:rete of time." of such things? I am too old-fas
If "Timepiece" has a problem, it ioned and probably too sen.sible ~
· is the now of the book; it moves like my own good,' she said, nol'rishin
a watch that runs just a few minutes a ~orpulent -hand in dramatic ge ·
slow, but slow nonetheless. Evans ture."
· i
takes readers on a long trip to get to
. "Timepiece" may not be (or tho
the relevance of the timepiece.
deuring a fast-paced read. 'But ~
The conversations in some pans those who don 't mind a thought~
lack depth and passion, making it and leisurely journey, it has much''·
hard at times for the characters to offer along the way.
·
•
come to life for the reader.
"Wee Willie" Keeler, fa.;,ous for
Parkin, for example, easily accepts
MaryAnne's pregnancy in an era "hitting them where they ain't:"
when such a thing was highlr scan- .ted .432 in 1897.
dalous. And when the pair does
From 1906 through 19 ·
speak about how her unwed pregnancy came about, it i~ almost with· cr "Three Fingers" Brown
games in six sC&lt;~Sons for the ·
· out emotion.
go Cubs.

Mankind has an obsession with
time·- a desire to control it. to stop
it or at least slow its progress.
And it is that inability to stop the
clock from ticking, or to b'avel back
CENTURY OLD - ~rner
and change what happened hours. or
Griffin who marked the centu·
minutes or just seconds ago, that
ry mark on April 25 was hon·
forms the basis of Richard Paul
ored with a party at his home.
Evans' new novel, "Timepiece."
A highlight was presentation
The book begins with a dying
of commendations from the
wish that a rose-gold wristwoman's
Ohio Legislature. Here Frank
watch be given her daughter on the
Vaughan of Drew Webster Post
eve
of her wedding.
39, American Legion, makes a '
Evans,
bes!-selling author of "The
presentation to Griffin.
'
Christmas Box," takes readers to the
1900s and the lives ·or David and
Mary Anne Parkin, to solve the mys·
tery of the meaning behind the watch.
· PHOENIX (AP) - Observation · Is just one plant in trouble, or do simIf not, wh at's adjacent to the
David Parkin is a ri~h man with a
is the key to success with whatever ilar. ones show the same symptoms? plant? An alley, swimming pool, dri· love for timepieces, and grandfather
~iant you contemplate growing. And Was it planted too deep or shallow?
veway, a patio, the neighbor's yard? clocks line the walls of his office and
the closer the observation, the better.
What's
happened recently? A patio his mansion.
Asking such questions usually
. • Often, just asking why you're con· pinpoints the trouble.
expansion that may have damaged
A love story unfolds when Parkin
cemed points to the solution since ail - • Start by making sure what con- roots or changed drainage? Swim· falls in love with his newly hired secing plants usually provide clues as to cerns you isn't normal for the time of ming pool overnowed? Lawn fertil · retary, Mary Anne Chandler. Despite
· what 's wrong. Sometimes a little luck . year. Leaf drop in the fall is expect· izcd with possible excess amounts? the fact . that she is · pregnant by
ed from deciduous plants . It can be Chemical spills?
11elps, too.
another man, they wed.
Are underground animals, such·as
• I wanted purple-flowering Texas wonisome from evergreens anytime.
The most interesting section of the
sage (Leucophyllum frutescens) for However, evergreens routinely gophers , a possibility? They can novel- and where the watch comes
iUl informal, 6-foot hedge to hide a replace some leaves, and many drop · damage succulent stems before their
eement-block wall. Six out of seven lots of them at certain seasons. If the tunnels are noticed.
••
A general yellowing of all leaves
took hold beautifully; even worse, the remaining leaves look all right, the
••
can be caused by lack of fenili i er,
iaggard was the middle. one.
plant probably is healthy.
•
• I checked drainage, watering and
If there is a persistent, premature extreme sunlight or high tempera· By Ed Peterson,
· on a Social Security record (which below), or
1
insects and eve~ considered genetic · leaf drop, check watering practices lures. If oQiy older leaves are affect· Social Security
amounts to 150-188 percent of the
%monthly benefits that can con ..
differences. lben our gray kitten was fir;t. A sprinkler system produces a ed, it could be lack of nitrogen or Manager, Athel)s
worker's benefit). Generally, no more· tinue into adulthood if he or she iS:
discovered roiling on it several times fine lawn but seldom supplies suffi. potassium , soil high in salts or poor
I ran into an old friend the other . than the established maximum can he disabled and the disability ,beginS:
s day. A chicken-wire enclosure cient moisture for trees and shrubs. soil aeration. Yellowing of youngest . day who, of course, had a Social paid to a family regardless of the before age 22.
, .• . ..
divened him and the plant filled in. An occasional deep watering leaves suggests lack of iron or chem- Security question for me. After talk· number of beneficiaries entitled on
I told Sharon that since 'she
· Fonunately. most .plant problems becomes important to avoid shallow ical damage. Marginal burning usu- ing with her, I .realized that her ques- that Security record. The average remarrying before the age of 60, het
f)lll into more routine channels. But roots and declining tree or shrub'vig· ally is traced to salinity.
tion may be of interest to other peo- total payment for a family consisting . own benefit as a widow would stop .I
Plants under stress seem to attract
it's still wise to never assume any- or.
of a widow(er) with four children is However, her four children's benefit!l,
·
I
pe.
insect
pests.
Honeydew
on
leaves
thing and to check everything. Keep
Remember e.xcess water can kill a
My friend Sharon, age 44, is a about SI ,350 per month.
would be re fitgured so th
, ~\ ther;
notes. Eliminate possible causes plant as easily as extreme dryness, indicates sucking insects. Large num- widow raising four young children,
ButbecalfseSharon'schildrenand would ' share the full family maxi-.
!llethodically.
all of whom receive Social Security her prospective husband's children .mum.
:
Wilting foliage can be an early symp· bers of ants may be another clue.
- Bark splitting? Leaves yellowing? tom of·either. Probe into a few inch·
Has a soil sterilant or vegetation- survivors benefits based on her late are receiving benefits , on . different
Sharon thought that all this sound-:
15 the entire plant affected or just one es of the soil with a trowel, a soil killing chemical been used under or husband's·work record. Beeause her worker's records, their benefits would ed complicated but I assured her
side? Was the decline sudden or over augur, or try inserting a long-blade around the plant within three or four children are under age 16, she also · not be affected. I explained to Sharon the Social Security office would hel
a periOd of time? How does adjacent screwdriver. This should supply the years? Some persist in the soil for receives benefits.
.
that the "family maximum rule" is her sort it all out. The impoflanf.poi
years but are not picked up by a plant
~~getation look? Are insects obvious? answer.
Sharon plans to marry a man. who applied to each benefit. record sepa· is that she now knows what•to expe
until its roots grow into the area.
recently retired. He has a 16 year-old rately, i.e., her late husband's and her from Social Sec~tjl. when she rem
How long have you had the plant? son from a prior marriage drawing a new spouse's. In fact, her children are ries. ·
' : lo!
Many can't be expected to survive benefit on his ~arnings record. She already receivi'!g the family maxiSharon and her family are amonr
more than a year or two.
asked if their marriage would reduce mum benefit based on her late hus- .the 7.4 million Americans, almost
If the plant dies, theroots and the the childre r's Social Security bene· band's work record. All of the chi!· two million of whom are cbildrerC,
· . The Community Calendar is
ROCK SPRfNGS -- Salisbury soil surrounding may tell why. A bad
being helped by Social Securjty sur-•
published as a free service to non· Township Trustees meeting Tuesday, odor often means the soil was kept fits. She _, d she had heard some- dren can count on Social Security for:
"family
maximu.
m
."
%
monthly
benefits
until
,they
vivor
benefits. For more information
thing
about
a
~rofit groups wishing to announce • 6 p,m. at the· township building at
too wet . Limited ro9t development
·hold
Sharon
thatthere
is
a
nionthreach
age
18
(or
until
age
19
if
they
call
1-8()(}.
772-1213, and ask for the
meeting and special events. The Rack Springs .
may indicate the same.
. . ly maximum family benefit payable are full-time stud,l:nts in grade 12·or '· ·booklet Survtvors. ·" ,
..• ~
I'
taleadar is not designed to promote
Water in the morning so fohage
S'ales or fund raisen of any ljpe.
POMEROY .. Eagles Auxiliary dries before dark; watering deeply
Items are printed as space permits ·-21 71 meeting Tuesday.. Potluck, 7 and infrequently normally is best.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notlcle
:
and canDot be guaranteed to ron a p.m. followed by meeung at 7:30
--~~~~.~~.---:
Rapraaantattvn from the
The L"adlng Creek Coneervancy DJilrlct ,
srecific number of days.
.p.m. . Bring contributions · for
PUBLIC NOnCE
Dlvlalon will also dlacuaa a Con .. rvancy Dlatrlct reHrve• the right to waive I
REQUEST FOR FEE
·
·Alzheimers kits.
number of abandoned mlne reae1'YH 11M rlght to reject any lnformalltt•• or 1
PROPOSALS
MONDAY
reclamation projacte any and all Bids or to lrregularltleo In the Bidding. ,
The Melga County tend
the dletrlct. lncrean or decraue or
propoaod
' CARPENTER -- Board of
MIDDLEPORT
Middiepon
The Succeaelul Blddara •
Commlaalonera ·wlll be Queotlono for
moy
be directed omit any llama or ·items shaH be required to comply :
frustees of Columbia Township, Masonic Lodge 363 meeting Tuesapplying lor CDBQ CHIP to Terry Van Olleren
of the and/or award to the lo-ot wlth all 1-• porllllnihg to •
Round t 8 funding and will Division of Mlnea
t¥fonday, 7:30p.m. at the fire station. day, 7:30p.m. with work in the Fel• and beet BIDDER. Each minimum wage and :
accept lee proposal• lor Reclamation at (614) 265~
lowcraft Degree ..
propoul muet contain the ljlocrlmlnatlon of peroo1111. •
REHABIUTAnON
SYRACUSE .. Sutton Township
lull na!M of avery pereon or
by: J. Fanton Taylor, :
CONSULTING SERVICES to 1094.
Trustees
meet Monday, 7:30p.m. SATURDAY
Implement the progrom, If (5) 6; lTC
company lntarntad In the
Praaklent
.same. Each Bld aliall be Leading C'l'ak Conservancy
funded, until May 20, 1996
RACINE -- Racine United
~1 the Synlcuse Municipal Building.
delivered In a oealed
District
Public Notice
at 10:00 A.M. Fee propoeals
Methodist Women mother-daughter
envelope
marked
"Bid
tor
(4)
22, 29, (5) 6, 3 tc
t
wilt
than
be
considered
at
LETART FALLS .. Letart Town· banquet, 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
I :00 P.M. during the regular
Leading Creek Connrvancy ---------~
ship Trustees will meet Monday, 7 church. Reservations to be made
BIDS
District Water Mal n
,
commissioner's -lng.
with Opal Diddle, 949-2051 or Lee
p,.m. atthe office building. .
Scope of services Leading Creek Conservancy Replocement along Red Hlll lle A CD01 Col And Ched O!JI tilt •
District
Rood." The Ludlng creek
~in tilt Gmified S«tion.
:
required
by · the
Lee, 949-2454.
344111
Corn
Hollow Road
rehabilitation
consultant
••
LETART FALLS-- Letan Falls
Rutland, OH 45n5
•l
wlll Include: Inspection of
Elementary PTO meeting Monday, 7
Separate sealed Blda will
20 housing single family
Real Estate Gener'il
p.m.
houalng unite and be received by Leading
preparation of rehobllttatlon Creek Conaervancy District
work apeclflcatlona and at the Dlatrlct office located
RACINE .. Special meeting
coet estimates of each unit. at 34481 Corn Hollow Road,
The Consultant will also Rutland, Ohio 45n5, · until
Racine Chapter 134 Order of the
In the contractor 12:00 p.m. (local time, May
aoalst
Eastern Star Monday, 7:30 p.m.
blddlng procaao and ravl- 7, 1996, and then at aald
Annual inspection. Refreshments.
ol such blda, pre· olfloa publicly opened and
con,tructlon meetlnge, read aloud. A prebld
Interim
construction conference will be held at
RACINE·-- Southern Local Board
lnapactlons,
averse~ 1:00 p.m. (local time) on
of Education special meeting Moncompliance whh Ruldontlal April 30, 1996 at the
day, 8 p.m. at the high school to hire
Rehabilitation Standards, Leading Creetc Conaervancy
a;football coach.
undenake final lnapecttona District olllca. .
The work covered by the
and approvals and provide
Contract Documenll
written
reporta
of
all
TUESDAY
Inc Iudal the following
Inspections to the county.
RUTLAND-- A free tuberculosis
approximate
quantltlea:
Fee propoaala ahould
skin testing clinic will be held Tues·:
alate . quallllcatlona, 2,200 lineal feet of 16·lnch
day, 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Rutland
previous uperlence ln polyethylene. pipe and
CDBQ
Houalng Programa, ductile lton flttlngo and
Fire Department by Connie
acope
of aervlcea to .be val""" at the tie-ln.
Karschnik RN. Meigs County tuber·
The work will be awarprovided, · and amount of
culosis nurse. All individuals who are
compensation requtrad lor baaed on the lowest and
beat Bide received. The
in food service are required to obtain
such aervlcea. ·
estimated
construction
Faa
Proposals
may
be
, yearly skin tests.
mailed or delivered to the costs as ol June.f, 1996 11
Metga
County $147,000.
PAGEVILLE -- Scipio Township
The Contract Documents
Commlaalonera,
supplementary
Courthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio and
Trustees will meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m.
materials
may be examined
45769. Quaatlona In regard
at Pageville.
·
to this requeat ' may be at:
addressed to Jun Truasell, Leading Cleek ConH1'VIII1CY
District
Grants Admlnlatrator, at
that fits your minivan.
3448t Corn Hollow Road
6t4-992-7908.
. Rutland, Oh 45775
Melga County
The Ohio Casualty Group of Insurance Companies, one of the top 50
eurge11
a Nlple, Limited
Commlaalonero
insurance groups in the United States, is working with us to offer
5085 Reed Road
Fred Hollman, Preoklent
(5) 6, 10, 13; 3TC
. Col'!mbu~, Oh 43220
minivan drivers 15% off their premium rate. Now, minivan drivers
.
Coplea
of the Contract
like you can get top-notch insurance co~erage at family car p.rices.
Documents may be
Public Notice
purchaaed at:
. Burgeaa a Nlple, Umlled
OHIO DEPARTMENT Of
To find out more about this money-sa~ing deal in minivan insurance,
5085 Reed Road
NATURAL RESOURCES
Columbus,
just call us today! We think you'll find our offer very fitting!
out of Pomeroy • I 1/2 Story hOme with 4 bedroorJ!i, 1
DIVISION OF MINES a . upon poymantOhof43220
$40.00,
, 11\llnjpoom wilh flrepiiK:e, ~. Home hal epprox.
RECLAMATION
NONE OF WHICH WILL. BE
•.lllc:e llig frOnt yard pertlllly fenced. f car,IJIIr&amp;gl.
The Ohlo Department of REFUNDED.
Your Independent Agents ·
I~~~~=
80I1'HI -'1· but has lola of potaRiial1dr only
Natural Reeources, Dlvlaton Prnpectlva BIDDERS, may
I:
MAKE OFFER II
\ .
of'Mlnn
•
Recllllnetlon,
will
.addraoa
lnqulrlaa
to:
Mr.
'·.
Serving Meigs County Since 1868
hold a public meeting at Terry Breckenridge,
ATTENTION HOllE OWNI!RI!Il WE NEED U81TN0811
'7:00 P.M. on May 9, 1!1911 at Burgeao a filple, Llmhacl,
WE HAVE BUYERS WAITINQ FOR THE "RIGHT
Musklngum Area Technical 5085 Reed&gt;Roed, Columb•,
PROPI!RTY"
SHOULD YOU NO't BE IJ8YED WITlt US?? .
College to diecuaa the ·oH 43.220. Telephone (61 4)
THE CLELAND CLAN WILL U8T YOUR PROPE!!T'f AND
problema related to mlnea 45&amp;-2050.
SELL IT FOR YOU WITHOtiT THE HA88eLl
. abandoned prlor to ten,
A
alta
vlaltatlon
ean
be
GIVE US ACALL lODAYt
located ln tha Jackaon ar111nged by contacting Mr.
mining
dlatrlct
which
Pomeroy
992-3381
Bonn. 34481 Corn
111 Second St.
HJ!NRY E. CLELAND
22S9
lnctudll the countlta of Brent
8HERRI L HART-...- ..............- ....·---.74J..a17
~ntine:
HoAow
Road,
Rutl8nd,
Ohio
At~en1; Oallla 1 Jaolta.on,
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND................- •••o••-.18a-818t
4&amp;77&amp;. Teiephotl* (814) 742Oroup ·.
Lawrence, Melge, Vinton, 2411.
.OFFJCE.......................- ••- ..-·..·-···..·-··-..-IIta nst
and
countlta.
. . Weahlngton
'
.
..

·Careful observation leads to gardening success

A question the 'Brady Bunch'

didn~t

cove

IA.WNC:~

1-9.00-446-1414
-Ext. 6445
$3.99 per min.
MU.t 118 18 Yll old.
~rvlc:e

1

TooSmal '
Plan Ahead, Call Today!
742-2803

u

. (619) 654-8434

~

l
i' •NewHomea
i

•Gar.-

:

,_
-

. 985-4473
-~

AnUCTIYE
&amp;WILLING
TO .TALKIII

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions"of
love, succasa, care, ~I
mat", saH·help and
more.
1·90()..255-0500
Ext. 3505
$3.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.

$2.111'per.mln.
IIIU8t be 11 yre.
Serv·U (111) 845 8434

Serv·U (619) 645·8434

'.

'

wtfh

SPARKlES
ELECTRIC
Serving..all Your :
ELECTRICAL
needs
·Phone

1-900,255-0500 .

~.4009

~ . permin .
Must be 18 yrs.

614-992-5048

Serv-U (611;1)
645·8434

Free Estimates

SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT
PICKS, SPREAD.S ;
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1·900-ne-2525 EXT.
• . 5961
$2.99 per min
Must be 18 yra.
Serv·U (619) 654-8434

Serving S.E. Ohio 6 Weet VIrginia
Toll Free 1-8011-872'-81187
441 gn8

LIVE/

•Naw'Garagel
•Electrical&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
PllnUng .
. Al10 Conc1111e Work
{FR!&lt;E ESTIMATI:S)
. V.C; YOUNG Ill ·
11112-6211! .
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

KiDOM 3 odcfllllo, 7wll old, -

&amp; whlto, ~motl,
ninod. 304-

tlt~r

•

to good homo. 304· 713·

(6 1,) ) ,, 11-119 1

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
• Masonery 773·5124
15 Yrs. Exp. Lie. ·Ins.
Owner: Rick Johnson

- - ~- -· - -•,. ,

Free Estilllllles

TRUCKING

•Room Addlllona

••

3~

R.L. HOLLON

YOUNG'S

moo. old. - . -moe~. e14·NS:

C311.

Kitton-to good ho,ft&gt;o. 304·05•

· $3.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

CARPENTER SERVICE

Co!tlo-Bugto mix pupa, 2 lit

ftM Puppin. .. 14-3. 8532

ONE -ON ·ONE!
CA1.:LNOWI
1·900-446-1414
· EXT. 3694

w

1~

Male car 1lld black, 1hqrt hal;, 1
neuttrt,.,
"101 old. Call · alt~
4pm. 304-&amp;i 3-2'M4.
:0
To Good Home: Mh:ed Ttrtitr
Seagto Pupa, 10
Ot~

~~~~: Call

'-Iter

.IV••·

4 P.M. et~.-

Two pot·bollitd pigi, 114·142·
1410.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

149-2512

:

60

Lost ·a nd Faund

-

Llmeatone • Gravel
Dlrt•Siind

9115-4422
Chaster, Ohio
28583 BASHAN RD.

IIIII
IEAUTIFUL WOMEN
. ARE WAIIIIII 10
·HEAR FROM .
YOU IIOWUI

Howard Excavotin
Trucking.
Umestone
' Bulldozing and
Backhoe
services
-t,
1, H~~ Sites and
Utilities ·

-

Contractor With overJO ·

1-800-448 1414
J:¥t4309
$3.1111 par min.
Mu~ be 18 yre.
Serv·U (818) 845 8434

All Kinds of Eorlh Work

992·3838

yean esperlen~:e now
&amp;Yallablt for alJiypel of

New Homes, ~ara1eo,
. AddiUons, Baths,
Kltdlt111, Decks, Sldl~,
Rool'o etc.

Ntjollte ............
Contact Rodney Howery,
594-3780 tiaYt. .698-7231

.

--

·Reel Estate General

· even~npor

All Ohio
,~' \
~

I :

f',!v ,\
.

j \!

;
!

J',,\

Your Sweetheart as
close as your phone

1. 1r 11

\I (

~I

&gt;. I), '
['lJI .\ :; 1; :•:•
/\i

r-)1, •1

VCR Sick?
Call Quick
COY'S VCR
REPAIR .

9924507 .

$2.99 par minute
Must be 18 yrs old
Service U
619 645-8434

·rr1y

LINDA'S
PAINTING

NEFF ltEMODELING

l

Houao RIINIIr•
. Remodeling
Khehon a Bath·
Rtmodettna
. Room Addhtona
Siding, Roofing, Patioa
Rooaonoblo
l1111urera • ExparfonCOid
Call Wayno NoH
11112-4405
For Free Eotlmatn

IIRRIOI•IIYIIIOR

".............

FREE ESTIMATES

palatl•l· Let •• do

.i

'

j•

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·H&amp;H

' OFFICE 992-2259
.

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;S"turday, May 11, 1996 ·
. Open House 11:00 t,o 3:00
,. 144 Hudson Street ·
Middleport, Ohio

Card of Thankl
' ., ...

BtmdsiiW'Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy BriGkles

Ho-rcl L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters·
Down1pout1
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

Olive Twp. F.ire Dept. &amp;
Mark Smith, lire chief
would like to thank Tye
Brinager, Produc~ &amp;
Greenhousas
in
Reedsville for the
generous donation to
the fire dept. Also for
the · two electric
roasters he bought lor
us. It was very much
appreciated.

.HELPII! We need a few i ~
· good people to assist
persons with MR/DD with·
dal.ly living ~kill~. Var.ious
positions available.
,Call1-soo-531-2302.

•

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I

POMEROY, OHIO

.

i
Trash Removal- Coirtmercial or Residential
!'
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rentad.
Dally, weeidy &amp; monthly rental ratta.

W~ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Just the mate of
ry~choice.

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992·3954 or 985·3418 "-: I
.s:J

.JONES' TREE·SERVICE
'

Top, Trim, Removal

Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

&amp; Stump Grinding

Pick-up discarded ·
battarles, appllaneaa a
many matalt.

614--992-4025
· Sam-&amp;

'

Owner: Ronnie Jones .
367-0266-1-800-950-3359
Free Estimates

..BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
~ew Homes

·i=

• Vlny! Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wlnd'"'s
Rooni Additions • Roofing

COMME;;~~~~~~::;~~ENTLAL
614-992-7643
Sunday Calls)

."

· Dateline
Meet !he Man or Woman
of your Dreai!IB Nailer
. be lonely again. ·

CALL NOW
1·900-988-6003

. Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Milat b!t 18 yrs.
Serv·U (814) 645-8434

.'

PomerOy,
MkldlepOn

•
•'

&amp; VIcinity.
All Yard So111 ·uuot Bo Poid tn
Advop.P•· Doodtfno: 1:OOpm tl"!
day tioll!ro tho od Ia to run, Sun·
day edition- 1:OOjxn Friday, Mon·

dol editlon10:000.m.~rlfor. ' .
Boso re1idence· SR 338 , Greit
Bend, Solurday; Moy 4 thru Tu..:
doy, May 7.
Friday, Sunday; Mond.ay- Bani ·
5pn, Burdetta RdJ !.au,. Cliff, ftrat
haute behind Llurel Clifrchurc:h.
Loti kido cto!IIH.

Public Slle
and Auction

Riclc Pearton Auction Company,
full time auctioneer. complete

aervice .

licensed

166,0hio &amp; We11 Virginia, 304 -

773-5785 Or :JJ4·773-5447.

90

Wanted)o Buy

73-81 Ctlovy tructc bod, BIL Fleet-'

oklo. 304-182-21110.

Clean lare Model ·Cars 01
t8110 Madoto Or Nowor,'

· Trucko,

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·,

ern,_...., Goltlpalo.

i o·o '-•to Porta. Burlno aat••oo YOhicloa. Soiling parro. 304-

J

773-5033.

.

Non-Working Washen, Dryers, :
Ranges. Aelrigeralors, Freezers,
Air Conditioners, Color T. V.'a,
VCR'S. Also Junk Cars, 61•-258-

Top Pricot Paid: Old U.S. Catna,
Silver, Gold, Diamond a, All Old ·
Cottoctibtoo, Paporweighta, Etc.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 15! Second ·
- · Gattipotia, 8t4-448-2842.
Used ·furniture- antiques, one
piece Or complete eatates, also
do appraisals, Osby Martin, 814,
Gll2-7441 .

Used Utns levis, lee &amp; Wran- ,
gler Jeans &amp; Denim Jackals, Nik•

Shoes, 814-4&lt;18·2468.

•

Wanled To Buy Used Mo~ile •
' .

Homes. call: 614-448-0175

To Buy: Auto'a &amp;'Trucka •
61~388-9082,

(Lime StonaLow Ratie)

New24 hr.

For Everybody!

1238.

-988-6988
Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.

614-992·3470

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MODERI SANrtltiON

I

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp;Water

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SOil, Fill Dirt

May 71h, 8th, 9th, 588 Johnaan

Road, 1 112 011 21 B, Something

992·2825

Date-Line

WICKS
HAULING

"""'~

80

.20 Years ·Experience • Insured
Card of Thanka

the day before the ad it to run.
Sundly edition- 2:00 p.ni. Friday:
Moriday editio" . 10:00 li.m. Sat;

auction

I

1·9

TFN

'-LL Yanl Sotoa Uuot Bo Paid Ill
Advonco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.

May 8· 7. firll JTIOI&gt;IIo 11ome bohind
Meigs fairgrounds. Kino size wa"" bed, nw11 othor illmo.
.

. 11111lfn

.........

1fN

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR ATOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Your favorite ·artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2ndAve., Middleport

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.
1x6,1xS,2x4,2x8
8'·10' 30¢ a ft.
14'·16' 35~ a ft.
Alao available·
4x4's- 4x&amp;'s
614-985-4107
814-742-3337

Portable

~1&amp;94

lladle lllaeli Dealer

FIR Mill

614-742-2193

Portland PTO would
to thank Chris
lfe,
Letart
ITt&gt;wr&gt; .. ~ ip Trustee
donating one of
is checks to the
chool.
Chris
nated
two
one to
and the other
Portland as a way
saying Thank
his voters.
checks were aiv,en 1
to the schools
because children
Letart
ship attend
both
schools.
Pictured are
PreSident
Bard
Lane and Wolfe.

"

POGLD!IIII

SAWMILL
.

New At Jnales .lt.etrontes ·

.,._

..

4131 mo.

,,

SERVIa .

'

.14-915•4119

i

Tuppara Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert· Dual wall and Regular 8" tbtU 36"
4" S&amp;D • perf. . soli_d pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
·, 1/2" &amp; 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe
I l/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1,000' roll's)
3/4" 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 line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.
St. Rt. 7

Ext. 6733

i 111 , •

for y01.
VERY IUSOIARI
IAit lifiUitCIS

:Free
Rafre~hnients

I &amp;W PWnCS AIID SUPPlY

1-900-988·8988

I

C:"t1;lll!· :&gt;.' t~,~~
(!) 1 ·11 :1·c .-lr-lo
I ''(W\1

Racine, Ohio 45771
94WD13 Phone
94f.2018FAX

DATE
LINE

l-800-l64-'390 anytime!

..

.

114 1112·2753

-

FINDTOTAL ·
SATfSFACTIONI
· Through a Uve
Pel'$onal Psychic!

liNN
Mobile Horne Heating &amp;Cooling
fiW,.,. a..,.. eo lllcfrlt up

FREE ESTIMATES
. (814) 192-6i35

Must be 18 Y!S
.
Serv·U (619)645-8434

We will wolf( within your budget .
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5111

,

.1"---···•··---·-

•Painting

"No Job Too Large or ToO Small"

r===::::::::::====r======-r======-r==;::::~:;·;::::::=1

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE

•Siding

•ROofing

. Authorized AGA Dislributor
• Welclng Supplies • Industrial Gatl88 • Machine Shop
Strvicae • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrk&lt;ation • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps -Stalll, RaHings, Patio .Fumhure, Areplace
hems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of oiher stuflll

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1·900-446-1414
Ext. 14n
$3.99 Per Min.

Psychic-line

1·900.990.3737
Ext. 2261 ...

Community calendar

wm

-

Remollellng
Stop &amp; Compare I'
FREE ESTIMATES I!

;

SMITII'S

Chat·Une
i
'
Hey Guyslll Your
!
COimUaiOI
special glr1is waiting
·, C... ..... IRooi aJ ••
to hear from you II
•New Home•
·•Additions
24 Hours A Dayll
i.
•New Gar~
Callf'!OW
'
•R81110CMII~

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IOIIIIIISSILL
COISTIICIIOII

''

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•TFM Ti.iwnlltg
• Mowing (R nilllntWI
and commerelaQ
• Shn.tbbary
Mainlenance
• Odd jobs par requeel
Nf? Lawn Too Ullge or

~·

I '

or.

Wanted To liuy: Junk kltoa With ~
Or Without Uoton. Call larry •
Llvoty. 6t~388«103.
.
Won1ed To Buy: Llntt nkot Toya; •

11~245-5887

-:

_____ __
EMf' L OYMENT

SERVICES

...,...

_'; ._

11 D

Help Wanted
$-WANTED·$

•

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•

.:•'·
••

::

�The o.lly S111lln1l• Pill I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NJ:A Cro••word Puzzle

•

PHILLIP

. :----j,;;.;.~.;-;;,,;.;.~---

RIIHI Wil Do Clwrclwa, &amp; C..
_.... ....m-»17.

•·!

•' lioc"nv Voioy co"'""'nity

: dentlll Center IHkl e.ec:utlve
, DlfeclOr. Reaponslbllitlel of totlll
. manaotm.nl and admlnlantktn
• a• a 22·bltd jwenlltl rehlbilltatlan
' A.cility far mates ad;udicated lor

;"felony o"'""'· Othtf duliH In·
· .,~:tude:

work with citizen adVIsory

· board and governing board: all
• aspeetl of !)Ianning, dellelcP'f* +1,
·: tmptementation at'ld monitoring;

•*ttie, e· z 81 t'*'\ d

hou•-.
S b U - 2 bah.
heat pump. IN'•ttu rt lfttttct

GOMfll Molntonanu, Painting,
Vlrd Work WlndoWI Woii1M
Gunara CINned Ugllt Haullno,

-

t14-311 CM211.

1111 t4x70 Patriot. 1hr•• bed""""' twO bolh. CIA. I'M&gt; porchol.

dryer,

eltcWIC. welhlt I

GOOD

oc, - · lr&gt;Waaon.

400 oq. 11. ciod1 1nc1uded,
c:a1 et.....a2:-5044,
.2bedf'aom it t ' I11

r

t. oH. Ref.

Soiata llr1lnd Elocbo:1ic T- Mil
Plid 1500 - . . 1300. 814-381-

1113 Met«.r,. Marquit station
....,.., runt good, rebuill nns.-

on: Burgundy,

mum

~~~!

8803.

SPRING SPECIAL: Central Air
Conditioner~ 2 Ton 11,185; 2 112
Ton S1.2g5; 3 Ton 11,315; 3 112
Ton t1,585; • ·Ton tU115: Ptlcol

Mlcrowav•. Color

e:cper~nc.

and train· ·

lng. Resume and lluee tenera ol
reference ""''' be lotMrded 10:
Interview Commitlee. Hocking
Valley Comm,unl1y Rttidtnlial

Cente&lt;, CIO Honorable Stapnen 0.
Jackson County Probate
&amp; Juvenile Court, Courthou se,
226 E. Main St, Jac:kaon, Oh.

Will

AppUcatjona must be receiVed by

May 20, 1.11911814:00 p.m.

ing, Reaaonabla

anced, ReJeren&lt;:eo, For
m-. 81 ..245-5755.

wv. 304-755-5885.

'

AVON I All Areaa I Shirley
Spears, 30:0.875-.. 29.

Rep
Experienced LPN Apply In Par-

san To The Medical Plaza 936
S1a1e Roule .180, W~ysOnly.
Full or part t1me posilion5 avail·
a~le . Pliny Truck Slop. 304 ~937 .
&gt;456., 304-937-2 750.

•
Hair dresser wanted. Full or

part

time with clien1ele 304.fl7!&gt;3040.

HELP Il l We Need A Few Good
MRIDD With Dally living Skitto.
Various Positions Available. Call
1-801).531 -2302.

Horne Typiala, PC users needed.
$45,000 Income potenlial. CaM 1-

1100·513-43:13 EICI. S.9368.
Honest dependable pert·time bartender, call 61• -992 -3679 between 8pm-10pm.

FINANCIAL

painted stttl sidet root, &amp; auttara, ttec11d price $6600, Preci ~

Business

530

•Lumber Price Up'r Steel Build·
lngs Dealer Prolito Are UPIII COil
As low Aa $3.00 Sq Foot.
tional Manufaclurer Awarding

1124 E. Main
bedroom on Broad Run rd.
refriQ. &amp; ttOYe. $295mo. Oepa&amp;lL
Water included .· 304-773-9171 .

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

local firm seeks Data Entry per·
son for 't~ un~s pa)'able ,!Hparl·
ment: Spettd &amp; accura·cy· lmportant. Send resume and salary requiremel'fll to PO. Box W-.t cto
Point Pleasant Reglstef 200 Main

St., Pt. Plea11nt WV 25551). EEOI
AA Emplover.
l,ocal Taxi Service looking For
Drivers Male Or female, 614-

«8-7088.

•.

On Out)' Medic81
Is Actively See)tlng To Recruit
CNAs Who Are Loa king To Work
long Term Home Care Cues
Where Vou live-In And Stay
Overnigh't In · Either 24 Hour, .. a
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shilts. II Pa~l
16 Hours A Day, But An Over night Stay Is Required. If ln!erested Ptease CaU USB Kerson At

1-80C).Qtl·OUTY-2.

NOT to send moner lhrough the

34 acr.., 2 bedroom mobile home
I 2 oulbuildinga, 61.t·ii2·2822.

Appl And Info 1·800·53!3-3040,
Social. Workers, Now Hiring $23 1
Hr • Benefits, On The Job TrainIng To Apply In Your Area, 1-800-

339.fl150.
Southeastern Ohio Community
Bank Seoking an Aggressive Rerail loan Officer. Must Have Mini·
mum Of Two Years Experience
With Good Organizational And ,
Communication Sk1lls. Resume
And Salary History To: ClA 385,
do Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45631. .

Staff development and infection
control nurse for 138-bed long
18fm care faciHI)'. Applicants must
passel&amp; Bachelors pegree or be
certified as gerontological nurae.
Please respond by St1 7198 10
Donna Northup, RN, DON, lakin

Hospltal.304·1l75-0860. EEOIAA

BRUNER LAND
814-775-8173

I movies. Call 61.t · .. •&amp; · 2568.

To.n Rheem Heat Pump, 1-800-

Equat Housing Opportunity.

287-8308, 114·448-8308, 1' 801).
291-IJ096.

11)11 n o - r will not

Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, Upstairs, Utilities Furnished, Clea·n,
No Pels. Reference, Deposit R•
CJ~ired, 814·446-1519.

s

$12,000.

kroWt\ngly accept

-r

adverttsemerns tor mal estate
which IS In vtotiiiOn ol the la'!f.
Our readers aro hereby
lnlormed thai all -lings
advertised In this
are available On an equal
oppor1unl1y basis.

Bedroom, z•x32 10x10 Shod,
20x22 Garage, Lax• Good All In
Grass, $38 ,500, 941 -543-1812,
814-388-9.t11 .
2 Bedrooms Jt.fore t 1/2 Baths,

El1111 Lg. l.R EOI-In Kitchen, f.o.
cated; Gillie, WtiP Alouild llocl&lt;,
Free Gao With Gallla Wa10r, 814·
367-7422.

3~2BathRanr:h,2Cor

Ganoge, Sprir18 Vllloy Area, Alter
8:00P.M. 01~·71140.

4 Bed ooma. 2·112 Bathl, Bric:k. 3
Milas From Gallipolis On 1•1. 10Ground Pool, 8.14·'146·0038, 614441 ·056&lt;1.

.

House + 2i Acres, 3 Bedrooms,
2 Balho, Ba-~ 2 112 Car Garage, Pool, lg. Deck, Plus Extra

Space, 61+24S.!i3711.

izer 1.t Band S25.00. Optimus 25
Wan Power Boolhtr 115.00. Call

HOUSE FOR SAL£
BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooms, Very Good

The Meigs Caun1y Council on
Agi~g. Inc. is aeeking an RN,
B!!chelor Degree pref.erred, for
1he position of Long Term Care
Ass ia tanl Coordinalor. Job re ·
spon$ibilities will include personnel superllision, client aasess ment and moniro~ng. 'health train·
in9 and api~ network reports. In·
terested 1nd1viduals should tub·
mit a resume with salary requ ir..
menta 10: C. Susan Oliver, Execu-

Wilh Now Apertmont - .. 014448-17,7• Hom.; 814-448-0374
Wo!1&lt; Ail&lt; For Mark Pllnwr.
House lor sale tn Syracuae, two
bedroom, one balh, on twa lots,
separate 24x30 Qne a
story

N 3rd Ave., Middleport. 1bed·
tOom, furnlahecl. Deposit &amp; refer-

Sc8nic Valley, . Apple Grove.
beauriful 2ac lois, public water,

eneea. 304-882·25815.

Ci)'de Bowen Jr., 304-576-2336.

Nice 1 Bedroom In Country Set·
tlng, Wuner /Dryer, Stove, Rt·
frigerator, No PJall, No Smokers,
Available 511180. 1300 Deposit.

Six 5 Acre 1racrs left, Southern

Co, $6,500 111'1&lt;: Down $100
One 32 Acre Ttac1 : S3501Mo .. ~ppllcationo At 1743
One 34 Acre Tract; Eight 5 Acre Centenary Road. Gallipolis, 81-4;
TraCt&amp; South 01 Wilkenille On ..e-2205.
1·60. County Waler WiU land
Nice 2 Bedroom Centan• ... Area,

··-z

Contract; Two .. 0 Acre Tracts
Will Land Contract, 61.t-88SI·

3462.

360

4 112 MIIOI from Gatllpolil, Ro-

.

higerator, Stave, Water Fur-

nlohed, No ·"-11. $2501Mo., ., ..
446 8038.

Real Estate

wanted

814-742-2182.

.

5858.

:1048.

Nloe homo In Raclno, largo build·
WANTED: COMMUNITY SEV· ing will houae amall butinesa,
ICE WORKER (full-Time) Potl· also a one car garage, fenced
tlon Avollablo A,. A Communi!)' yard, . out of flood area. asking
Group Home' For Pe'raona With $47,000 81:j.84fi-281M.
MRIDD In 81-1. Hours: 1:15 P:15 P.M., .Sun; 3:45 ·11:15 P.M., Three bedroom tiome in coun1ry.
Mon /Tuet /Wed IThurt; 2 ·Hour .Whilel Hift Rd., Ru11and, one both,
Weekly S1all MNtlng; Or AI ~nd pool, 61 ..1192-5067..
Olherwi.. Scheduled. High
School DttlrN, Vllld Orhror'l ll· :)20 Mobile Homes

Henry al1er

5:oo 304.fi7S.1433

30• riding mower, S300: .u mag
Desert Eagle pistol, ·S S, $1.t00;
Remington 1\00 lT, new, 1525,
814-992-115(
..x15ft Above

~-~~~riel.~~~~~~~=

l'faas!ol~

1 89 Camara drag car, 40&amp;f cu. in.,

hamt:'

111-t Niaun Uirage moll:w
..
5spd, great gas mileap1
lU,OOrni, $4,200. 304-875-2949. :·
1994 lnno.brr&gt;ok. M'"faadod.lot~•
.,
•
.of HlniS. 18ft. Striou1 inquiries' .
criy. ;104-e75-8!103.
.
·:

.

lor 1br. HUD subsidapt. lor elderly and handi-

I
capped. EOH 304-e75Ml9.

450

570

Musical

Instruments

Ga carl 3 .5 hp. 1077 . Apec~

720 1hJcks for sale

camper, goOd cond.

304-773-5851, Ma1011WV.

-·lOt·--

·--1.

FARr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

$11 ,900. 304-S'M-2383.

Largo niter 1o1 lor rorw In Pomeroy, caJI1:j.992-7853.

Nice three bedroom home In Pt.

MERCHANDISE:

no pe1&gt;. 81:j.992-51158.

510

Furnilure. Home InteriOr. dishes.

motal buildinv. GE ,...,.. &amp; flr:t·

er. 1ft5 Ford Escort, 2.00Dmi.,

$9,500. 304-67S.4023.
G.E. lido by lido ratrigator $75.
atectric ttovt, double oven, S75.
fuel OH 110VO. 300ga111nk. $1'75.
G.E. VCR have papero S100. hoi
W011f - with - · t100. 304875-4458.

742-2088.

810

Home

Mar•g -her I dryer, GE
. ,CIIfl&gt;r··304-87!i-77SI.
'

.-n-

r.;, Pigl For Silt: Bam

Early fe-

PAINT PLUS' 511 Buld.I UI St ..
Now through $11 Mor 11 Pin•
burgh Palnl Silo, Colllnt Point
19.99 Gat. t - Flat Will Point
SUV Got Latex Sealer far Dry·
wall $8.1111 Gal. Alu"*"'m Fl1arol·
ed Roof Cooling 5Gol 124.1111
Sprlni Flowor ·Bulb• 12.98 pi1g.
Bulk 5to4l &amp; -lng Plonll on
So it.

Countnr Fur~rure. ~~
Rt 2 N, 8mltea. 1'1 P,flaoan~
TUOI-Salll-e, Sun 11-5.

wv.

'

. . . .. .

.

:•

IIi

' RPIIUN

S N N .1.

P I Z II

DJII.L

RHD

IIJ

RPN

YNJXYANA

IVRPNJRXG

C I LA

HDUKW .•

H X 11.11. X .N

HXKII.XII

APPTIIAONIUII . '

RIKII.VII.I~

SIJTPNIW .

IJ W

\

•

,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Sbw1Q1, I as il ~ SO - I 11M -no~
than a·fllw ......._. -lr.llwig..., Boalltoven. on hie dN?Itbld.

....
ldl

I
I

REESA

I

·A college professor
was ai5~-,.C--,.0
I_ I'_-:-N"T""TI_ -"r-11
I_ : ', ment
encourage-.
He said that. "The only
ways giving me

...--r-.,..-,~-::-.,.----..lhing to do ~n al else fails is

5Gvl"'' YINI'II flttd In !Itt
. Clasllfled Sealott.

Appliance l'&lt;irJS And s.r.r;co: All'' '
Name llolndt Over 25 -.s Eli"
perience All Work Guaran~WC~.

I MONDAY

Fre~ch C ity. Uay11g, 814-USO.
7795.
~

-lre ~;"1',""!~"-~-;~
11Wp

No.

..

btlow.

Immune - Party - Joust - Polite: STATION

My old granny told me that lhe right train of lhought
can lead you to a better STATION in life.

MAY .61

•

C&amp;C General Home Main:: ·
lanence- P!int•ng. winyt •idin.; ..

.,.

-1

.t1.t Or pa,n taan boat, 814-092-

Patio Dech., Carports, Siding ,

2!illol-8pn.

frH E....,.ltl, Cafi. Sieoe, 614·

=:::--:~--=~=--:-l24s.115711.

:::-O:::::::Yani~~'-::·:4-~WDs=~~
:
I ~Ron~·s:irv~s.r;;.;loe;:,~"'~";,.~.li;z;;ti.ov.,;·

ae Clit¥r .full Slzt Mo;- 111: Z - 1110 -1111 _.other

c-olon van. 17,000 lllln. lnndl. - .. Cillo. 1-1110-7117~ Canrltlon, ., .. .._ 1 oo~·s.~WV~304-;;5;ll-;
, ~238&amp;;;;;';;;;;;
I Roofing

&amp;

ounn camp1a~ 11om1

1 • ford-•., Van ,1 ,200. romodatinvdocko I aidllltl, 35
Cati 304..75-2311 or 30..175- ,_,. ._.,..._ B I B Roofing
- ·
and Conl1tuctlon. 814 -1111:!-231•

~7:~~~~~~-----~·~1~100~!!!~~~1~--~----=
11181 Ford lari111XLT, F-250, .... B20
lliooal, ""-tic. Air, All E1lftlll
Plumbing &amp;

---':'!

_,_ •

••

two.- .

'

-

' '#' ...... -

.,

·,

BERNICE

BEDEOSOL

,._,.in

yotne~~- ,_ a1 rr ... gcMI!II !11Uelltll1a.

loS i1 ~ IIIiA _

CNICEIICJune 21..tulr :121?nvolloa•• ..
.... peclllle ._ _
.......
, _ allillly 10 ltrcceaf SOdey. It:: · - ·
JIIU . . OhOUid nal be
lll so
po u:t 1 flilndl.
•.
L£0 CJu?r ~AU£. 221 Vou mlghllle
• -...l?lld ...... fltwOIT- wil"""' you

w...,...
7

~

and yoU lnlgtit -

24-f?ov.

221

You

can

.......... agandtL
IIAGmARIUI (Nov. U.0.C 211 You
w i l - a..,..,.. ............. chance ol
augmensing waur fiilaJxes today. Vou
migll7- . . ~so gal110t11111hit1g
you'lie
Pang lima.
CAPRICORN (Dec. :12....... 111 Managing- . . . .
wil be
yaw b e l t - k*y. E_, I W0U ghre
lham tough - . . -• ...,. will no?

-lar.Ill_-...

.

jpU11!blecwJaeli--lillad.
j1QIJAMI8 (.r.n. 2fD.Feb. 111 Tenad?y
Wiiibltiid w11.t aptin•n,.. bla •illi'U
combinaPion tor wau loday. The viclotJ
JlllU ,... I 1 81 . . - ol . . h C8!l be

•

3

201 You can
._18JIIIdi1U.,
,....... _ , . , bec:cwtll

P7ICU ( - - 20 M ol1

good luck In - -

-·
..'

..,.., In ...,_loryou....,soue?y.
~ln&lt;IIWI&lt;IIOM•IIIIid . ....... IIIia . . . . _ yaur 1Dp
. .
LFRA ~ 21 OClC. Zll S4 [ 7II . . prlorl?y , . ,,
nalbe•- llgi1111Uiyaurlris-" llw1 .,.. f' clt21-Ajd 11J You - In a
flho1 •• . 111•..:111 . -; ... !W11Iin .....
lodaJ. You • be In a CJ'I»
~ rou more conrros O'itf impDrlllnP ,-.ssy a?8d lodaJ lor llflPOIIUII?8e l71it
• ' uaiL
ClJI!IId h:t
-

.....
' I

"'*" •

'

. . ." . .'. ,. .. ....
'

lOci.

derive a areal deal of plea1ure from
80Ciola....,.,arlo today. Good flllndl.
?J00r1 w-T r "' - aiUfll!IN ending

.........
..
-IN?dl.,.
jrected..,.- poops.--,...., ......-11111 _ . , ..

Gllililll
VIRGO (AU£. 21-s.pt. 221 YCHI NY

'

s.,.. Roper·-·

ASTR~,ORAPB

- r __.,., ....

1nd locks. •Great Car: $5200
neg .• 814-~2-7478 or 8t4·14tg.

211711.

•:

Maldlmakolr can help wau undefstanci
SO Ceo SO Pllllre a. I I s Dlelip -'&lt;Mil S2.751D M Ioiii I • cfo lttlt _ .
paper, P.O. Sox 1758, Murray Hill
1!1*wi.- Vorl&lt;. NY 10156. .
CCCI...-, 21~ :101 Some negaShe &lt;011Ciillol11 can be ,...,... today.

ID.do'YIIIUIIId&lt;loday. T - ..........

'811 ThundOrl&gt;lrd SC.
3.1
litre" 1/-il; alito morlol turtlo. PS,
PB. ~C. 5 si&gt;tod, po- Mill

111111 Nova SS 3111 • 375, Lon
Motor, &amp; Trant, 13,000, NHdt
l'lottortid: 1111111 Buick as a10, •
uiod 5 or 8 ~. FKIO&lt;J Air, Ari%aN1 Car
limll. 1150; Kenmono dryer, 150: 13.500. NHtlt Rli10rocl, 61•· 1981
V-1,
f14-8411-2001 .
882·7512.

.

- - ...... =

. ,\ .

uptt;.~ee,

300S~.

ic, left reer tail light Gamage,

Ulld 1 Souon. 114 141 1115.

'

44.

SCilW LETS ANSWEIS

Weedeater Gas 1S Inch Ito,

...

ft.:fiil. . . .

hT+--1-+--

:BIG NATE

Miles. a.dline, Step Bum"'

•,

.

:

,_L.,.t_M-ri-L1':1'1

carpentry,-.. wi-1. bathl.!
homa ftj1lir and """"· For 1.
1n1e u1ima1a caM Chef, 11 ..1183· •

'711 Mercury Caprice, S300 080,
614-992·3219.

..

'

...

I

431V-

,1-...,lr::-!....

1811 Ford Ranger Pic--Up, 4
Spolll, Becmnor. 10,000 MUo1.
S5,00011.._,lll58.

110 Autos for sa1e

JET

Appliances:
Racondilloned Oueen.Size Onl1optdlc Maltr8SI
W01her1, Dryers, Rangoo, Rolri- . Sa1 And Frame. N - Usad StiH
gralors, 10 Da1 Guaranlaal In· Plastic Coli $100. Sell t.2SO.
French City Martag, 814-441· I14-77S-2310.
17115.

.., 1\uo 111 dt

nr,

97,000 miles, S850. 61:j.849-2311
daYS or 1144411-211Jrt4 ••~uirga.

BTU On Upl t548. 114-3~.
AFTER 6 P.Y,

21=Fdl ,
31 ~~~· 1•......
•Ra , ..

5 SpHtl. Duel Tonka,
•
bruary And Early Mlli'ch 81:j.24S. CU...nt, PS. PB. uu rMw, IS1.t· ·e.a ~t·s , Ho~ Main1enance, winy~ .
5672 After -4:00 On 'h...l day&amp;.
24!&gt;81711.
Siding, rooling, e•ter:or and inf&amp;ri.:.
ar palnling, wallling, ...
l.tlrm Far 814-448-1941.
1882 1suzu pidtup, • cyt. 5 addilions. Free EttitNitea, 11-t~
........ 10,000 rriln, 15500, 992-4232. .
,..
f1WY contider partial trade tor a
TRANSPORTATION

1W Ford Tempo, .. door auiOmat·

New LennOX F 11rn1cts. 75.000

I

Local

Mulcher -Mo- 12. Hp 20• 105;

box aprlngo, t .225; couch $10;
Club chair ·makoa lingle bed",
150;11..1185 '586.

.

I

15,115, BID AUto Soteo, Hwy.
110 It ••• 4411 11815.

-4 piece twin bedroom aultt, in!
eludes Sealy dtlug mattrell &amp;

..-t-+---1

you drruelap

Box 604, Jackton, OH

170; M~llalleOUI

,__

Livestock

Goods

•se•o: ATTN : Cecilia. Daadllnt
For Appllcaruo: SliWa. ,Eq~al ep.
~ru~tyE~. ·
·

-+-+---1

111111 S-10 En Cob. Ault, Nt, ISO 13Z1.
~
A-1 Condi1ion, 17,400, 114-448DRI'WAU
i
2·yaar, .registered, quanar hofae 11157""" 5 P.M.
~ llnith. ropU.
i
lillr. S80o, su-742-2552 .,,.,
Ceiling~ textured, plaller repair. ~
111112 Ford F-150 llnrter 35,000 Coil Tom 30:0.875-4181. 20 ,_,. r
3pm.

630

Hot Point W.lller. Drrti. S - &amp;
Rllrigoralllr, AI 2 Years Otd, 3CU67S.78511.
AERATION MOTORS
Rclpeir~ NeW &amp; -.in In ~
ca11 Ran e ...... 1-IIJG.531-.

Household

Uodel 30Q ·twa -row Fotd planter
with additional bean and corn
ptalto; good condition, $650, 614-

a n ~·

actwire , ...

r.

30• - ea~-

SERVICES

13500 lirm,

Ford tractor. gu, •ooo~ txc.
1890 Ford F-250 ... 7.3 liter ell•
Drrar $100; 11182 suzuki 125RII· amd. S8,0Cilfirm 304-882-3213.
_. mGIDt. 304-eJS.SAQO.

Horse-. 814·'14$-4410.

460 Space for f'em

"'I

2283.

1985 Ford F150

Dinette Set With 8 Cha'Wt 1100;

448-7283.

Sleepini rooms with cooking.
Also trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call aller 2 :00 p.m.,

...
fJIV'uo.' mm.JS (i)lt) /I.(NlfC£~
'

when tbe queea won, Palleaiua
C811bed tbe elub aee and ruffed tbe
dub Dine in the dummy. !¥1!11 Uwagb
West bad tbe beut Ida&amp; deelarer'a
loeer ·c:ounS: wu dOWD to three: one
epllde, oae beart and cme diamood
Ahrllys keep lnldt ..,.,.... entries.

.!

108Q.

Chlory S l -. ll.&lt;1enlltd
cab, I' bed, 350 au1o, towing
P.ckage, tappet, 52,DQO'"l.,

Chairs, Call For Brochure, &amp;u -

Rooms for rent • wee!( or monlh.
Uaaon area, 3 ~m. large lot. Starting' at $1201m0. Glllia Hotel.
614·448·95110. .
304-e75- 1783. Cal Mnlngo.

BORN LOSE~

•,

Car lih Installed, Stairglideo, lih

Rooms

West's lliD&amp; Nlrnir1• planned 10 dummy's dub jed&lt; as the ea?ly 10 late
two heart fin·- ?bnJucb P.uL But

t

•

•
1,

Watir Cooled Bike, Completely
Gone ThroJQh, $850, 080, 614-

Furnished

f

.•

2318.

1117 DodQe ~m IIUCk. Goad
GDndi1ian. 304-574-2545. leave

seat30H7~4548.

•

I

Equipment Used C8r1. 304--451-

Baby bed, stroller. swing . car

814-24!HI405.

~

••

,,I.

r-m:r-mr-~ a

42,........ _

••fJ

150,

Works Good, looks Bad,

~.

......
==
·l'ellllr.......
··-==•a
odor
1tAirlii I rl
:12 New IJINI.)

.........

•17V'

power glide, brake, aleclronics. 1995 Outd1m11n ~ CaqNtt1
11HII24o107.
· Sloeps 8. •AC, 3 W.y ~0111r1
$4.300. 814-4-48-12114.
.'
~.. Loana. Dealer wil ilmlngO 1Pure White German Shepherd nancing
even if JOU have been 32' c_w:mpe:r with air,
good;
Pupa, AKC, 614·281-e753, 814- turned down eltewhere. Upton condeuon. 12800 080, e1,..041ot
52U965.

no pelS, 114-llll2.sa58.

009Q ;i1, 814·448-0231, 814·4:48- Circle Motel, Galllpolla, OH 814••2501 or 81-t-387-0812. Elflt.
0205.
ciency Rooms. cable, Air, Phone.
Home lor rani in Mideleport. 61.t- Micrvwavo &amp; ReMglraiOr.

Sm. house Beach nm area. Uuar
have references . Will require a

ca-.

COI)IOie Plano. Rnponlible pe;rl)' 1915 Ford short pick-up bed.
111nlad 10 11\lka low manliJr pay- 1986 S-10 _ , bed no rull 304't'l"11 on piono. Sse locally. Cal 6~.

Air Conditioner 12,500 BW

Elecrric
Scooters
And
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van f

Ploooan~

1095 Ford Eacort 1.1 AuiDmatic.,
AC. 4 Door, 18,000 MiiH·; 111112
Ford Ranger XlT 55,00Q Miloo. 5
N:;, Allor • P.M.

~:;~~~---..:_-

One bedroain apartment In Pl.

nash.~~~~;~~;~~:

menaoa.

.

6f:j.IM9-2780.

modeled, includes
stDYttwelcome.
&amp;
Construction
workers
304-77.U7a4. ·
.
.

Nk:a 2bedmom, 2brl., home: in Pt
Pleasant, furnished, arcept par10,.1 item.. If aald 120,000 cash
down lake over parmtnts; For
ren1 · $3~/mo. plus utilities. de·
potil &amp; references a must Now
accepting tPplicationa . Serioua
inquires on!~. 30.t-G75-4001 leave

......7-3404.

8,6 Gravely Rider, .1$ 112 hp. wilh
hydraulic ·lih, 50" rmwer and oneraw cultiwtor, tear Wheal brakes,

- 5. Al10r4 P.M .

deposit304.fi7S.1900.

Orivinv Record Required. Sslery:
S5:00 IHr, To Stott Sond Roaomo

1992 Toro• Colloe GT. 50,000mi.
~ap, sun tOol, ex. cond, asldng
$10.500. 31J4.812-3772
1984 Foiii Crown Y~a. load·
· ·ad( t:JUal air bagi. firH1 orNn.
like new, gonoge ktp~ 11._11115«18.

.

. ••.

f$YCff!A~Y .

10gal tank 111 up specials. Fish

u.alf •

~;:;.... :

come and an international all-1tar
field itr gueranleed. &lt;There itr 1l1lo a
PeiDl eooent beld OW!I' Mq I and PO at
the Ton ClubJ
Tbere itr an inlttuctlonal point Iii
tbitr deal Crom lut ,ear's - l HOWl'
wuuld ,.,.. plan lbe play iD four hearts
after West bu led a low clianwd!
1be dedarer- Bjorn Fallenlua, a
Swedish intemalional wbo II based
primarily iD New York City. He saw
tbe rill! of alataer In eadl euiL !¥1!11 if
Eut bad tbe dub ldng.lbere - etiD
a polentiallbird-round lo1er if be
CIOII!dn't rulf the .,... nine iD the dummy. So. not nnling East to,Otrildl to
a trump at trick two, dedarer called
for dummy'l diamond I&lt;!!- Tben be
earefuiiJ played a dub to bitr queen.
a •Niincthe jack wotb here, but not
if West bas tbe dub ldag and Eut
ldng·tbird ja bearts.l If tbR l011llo

11•-441-

.

992.fl939.

Maxwell Avo., 3bodooom, LR, OR,
Iorge lamily room, double garage,
Byro old, $107.000. 304-175-

1

2 Bedroom House, naw carpet, re-

4 Milas Froni Gallipolis, St. RL
141, 5 Rooms. Fro" t Pon;h, AC,
Handicap Acceuible, 1..00/Mo.

THEN A 't'OICE COMES TO ME
OUT OF THE OA~K TAAT
5/JNS,f TR.'( s.IUFFLEBOARO"

Middleparl, no peta, 814·002·

Twin Rivers Tower, now l!lc:capting

RENTALS

Accessortea

.J~~~

Poodle puppies. adull.toy, leaaiiO miniature Schnauzers,
, champion bloodline, ahala

51'56

.....

17•:::3!'

Neftl
PUll

pobe raise money for charity. Tbe
be.t IDIOWD is surely the Cavendillh
IDYilatioaal Pairl. Lu? year, •10;000
-'to lbe·Cbemollhenpy Ponnderion
'l'llil ,ear'l benelldary, Crom the - t
to be held on May 11 and 12 at tbe
Loen Hotel In New Yarlf City, wiD be
tbe Memorial Sloane-Kettering
Caneer Center. Spectaton an wel-

Auto Parts &amp;

AKC Registered Poodles, male

25. Magnavox Color CDnso'-tlV,

Nloe 2 or 3 -oom ..,.,.,....,, In

Disabled veteran urgently loc*tng
for 30-100 acrea. priYBte, with or
wlrhout build;nga, land contract,

760

......

11

.... ...

.....
·-

Several bridge nentl around tbe .

•

and-. 814-1182-71Jrt1 .

2 Cryp11 1n Ohla Vlllty MO""!rlat

At S2l51'l.lo., Low &amp; ._.oderate In-

e1 ..-44. 0300.

-.cl150.

line, Shots, Wormed, 8U ·898-

201J3. ~

:a:;zpt.. :~~.z.=r'
=·•••

By nmtp Alder

·:1128.

61

Gar.t,n1 For Sate Front Wall

Needs Work; S7S.OO. BSR Equal·

":":-::-':":"'---:-::::--cr-410 Houses for Rent

for sale

izmo 100,000+mi . 21r. old Gibson
gas stove, white &amp; black glass
fronl 304.a!S.3038.

Pike, 1 ·2 l3 Bedroom Ren1 Star1
•

"

0414.

1094 Mercury Cougar,!'![· VI,
32,000mi., - . ....
895-3287. .
.

Modern 2 Bedroom Apanmen1,

AccM1i!lf

AKC mini Pintcherl, !Wo j!!Biel,
two females, rudj June 15, ace•~~~~ deposita, S300 each •.

2482.

25· RCA .color console TV, dark
wood, works parlecr.:$.125, 61•·
!185-3505.

'

~itlon,13, 500,

Mini

Rudy 513198. $150 Each, Will
Hold- Depool~ 614-381-92&lt;3.

814-24S.5805.

i'Y:_!!,!!;!!!~I~Ho~u-si_ng_Op_po_rru_n-_.

Sun Deck, 4.3 Lhtr, V_JJ,

1Q90 Dodge Omnl, 4 ' Door, 5
Speed, 37,000 Miles, Tltn.

AKC Mala Goklan Retrievers

2822.

Call For Owner Financing Info •
Maps. 10."4 OFF Caah Purchas·
es. Above Examplea Based On Honeysuckle Hilla Apartment•
10 Year NolO With • Vear Balloon · LO&lt;ted Colonial Drive Behind NM
Payment
Highway Patrol Pall On Jackson

.

24 Fl Por:"""' Boat 50 HP Mo1JI&gt;
Ex::elltnl Condltlonl 15.500. 8fjl•

2 E) a ••

OpeDillg lead: • 5

304-6J5.4331).

1971 Ban 121165 nice condition, Ave. Poinr Pleasant. 304 ~875 ·
gas. $4,500 . 1988 Pl1mouth Tur· .

2526.

Plnet. 5 + Acres • $6,500, 12
Acres - $8,000, Lot Acraa Whh
Barn · $10,500. Near Albany.'

87S.5253.

11188 Plymoth HorUon. ..... t750.
304.fi1S.1t 711.

21 lioN lauau ~

_

The top
charity event

Tank &amp; l'&lt;it Sl1op. 2413 Jackson

t.leigs County : Firll t Call Ge1s Garage Apartment: 29 Rear Neal
This Farm House Fi•er • Upper Avenue, Gallipolis, Furnished
With .t 8drms. • 5 Acret •
Utilitiei Paid, 81"· 446$20.000. ' ~any Country lots
7P.M.
.
'
AYiilable With Fields, Struma &amp;

Parcels available for new home
construction on Rayburn Road. 5
parcels ranging from 1.84ae to
5.32ac. PaVed road, county walef',
reasonable reatrictiont. Map and
info available on request No aingle wide inquiriea ple81e. 30.t -

DOGU HE
MUST BE
AIUN' !I

hatch' back, w/aun tool, pt, pb,
auto, w/overdrive. anr-tm I:Aa·
sene, exe, cond. $3,200. 080.

reodr Mar 10, 1998 . 304-8953128.
"

'AKC Regl01oreti Black Labtod~r
ll&lt;lri"'"' Pupa, Champion Blood-

sso.

Furnished one bedroom aparl·
rn&amp;nr, $250 per month, 614-9 .. 9-

More Crulaw, Wllh Sid
riot.I1 ..25H110.

.......,

1 Weed ~MI

Dill . . ••

1888 Motallic blut MUI!I"'I LX

10' wire math tlttlllta dish, antenna poaitioning unit, receiver,
Video Cipher II, 1750, 1514·192·

13·Cu . Ft UP,ight Sears Deep
Freeze, $180; 52 Gallon Ehtctric:
Hoi Water Heater, 175; DP Ex ·
cortito Bike
61...._235a.

Share Bath, $19§!Mo, Urililies
Paid, 607 Second Avenue, Galli·
poijs, 614-446..,.416 After 7.P.M.

.......

BbOr

PS, PB, N;, PW, 3112. .rww tltH,
au10motic, S3500, 8 14-lloii-ZO.S
D&lt;81H48·2819.

..

DOWN

:1381plue21 llotng lnlo

Vul?lenble: North·Soutb
Dealer.Wat

810-742-2357.

r

Minutes To Afhl11o.

port Unattached 2 Car Garage

cense, Thr" Y•are Licensed
Driving Experience And Goad

Teens Run ... Chambers Ads. 11
Acre Building Sile . 11 ,900. 1o
Acres With Pond . 14,000. Vour
Horses Will love This 8 Acres
With S1ream · $11,900. 5 Acres •

s

Gondltlon, -Vinyl Sldlnv. Car-

• . tlve Dire&lt; tor, P.O. aox 722, Po·
meroy, OH 457eo by ·Mar 12.
1996. EOEiprovider of -Ices.

Near Parler, 814-3&amp;-1100.
·

S26,000. Go South Hallwar To I:---:-:---:::::-:---:-::--Hunrington . 3 Miles West On Furnished Elficiency 2 Rooms,

P"""""""'-

turing Hydro Balh. Julie Webb.

Call814-448-0231.

Yonoda 11 Ft Open

.._

21COIII .....

32
34

1988 Flrebird, V-8 IUiomltJC, I·
tQps, eiCetltnl condition, t:)SOO~

Groom Shop ·"-' Groomtnv. fMc

' lab pupa, black .&amp; brown,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKsON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
trom .$24410 $315. Walk to thop

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Neighborhood Rd. S~W~ral lah .
10 Acru • $12,000 - $1,900
Down.,. l133 ..t9 A Month. 9 Acret • $1.t,500 Or 22 Acres •

E~er

P.d.

Trash Paid, NO PETS, On

55~

-.,--,,..,.--..,...-.,--,UHd Colenwl Down Flow Gal
BTU"a, Compttte
Gao ·fur,.
ni\Ce, ' '
Upl1ow
12~ ; '3 Used EJ~~_1f.ilc
15KW, 20KW, 25KW, 1

Sell Chea~ 1·1100-ft20.8782.

2 Acres Off 160 AI Partar Nlce 1

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobl $21 /Hr +
Benef its, No Exp . Will Train, For

Pomeroy. Hours : M.T. W. 10:00
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 .,
e:OO p.m. OtC..902-2521.

540 Miscellaneous
1 a.droom 13 Room Apartment, .
Merchandise .·

330 Fanns for Sale

the Federal Fair Hou~niJ AC1
ol1968 which makes n Illegal
to ad-se •any
tlmllallon ·or dlocnmtnatlon,
based on race, color, religion,
sex flmllal status or nationBI
Oflliin, or any I~ ill
make any ouch p~;
l i - or dlaC1Imlnatfon.•

on Rl 124,

~.save rT1811111"·

recommends thai you do busi·
ness wirh people you know, and

All ""'leslate advertising In
this newspaper I&amp; subject to

s-~

Mttcutr Cougar Xl. - .

511.1

Ill

30Mills...,

18P2 15' Challahoor 1Nuo .....
with
""""'· loocltd, loll ot """""'
61..-12.
•,

$:0800; 81:j.84fl-2534 ahor 5j)J),

Pets for Sail!

560

Buy or sell, RiYirlnt Antiques,

cal DEALERSHIP. 303-750-3200

· LOCAL FACTORY
OUTLET

Antiques

11117 Pontiac Ba,_Hit, 13,00G

19811 Buick Raga1. autDnollic, PW,
8/c, ane owner, 15500; 1NI
llror1ca II, 5 opood, 4x4, II&lt;. PW,

lion Post Frame Bktts. Inc., 6; • ·
11112...16or 1-8CJ0.398.302&amp;.

I,......,.~~~~~~,.=

VENDING: LAZY PERSON'S
DREAM. FllW lioura + Big SS. Will

Bldra •:S00.352-1045.

·-......

• • •·s

i

750 Boatl &amp; Moeora ~
for Sale
t

12 II lldlloelir

..., -

Q II 6 5

•

$3400, 814-742·2018. },

-211K.

..'l1lwe--......

11 Ca lplll

:nd

,,,._....,

11100- RT, 110 r.., sDitt Bika Rabui1 Engm, Laal1.
- - · -·" 1"245-575&amp;1
11183- 1100 2WD, ucolltjot

tires &amp; whe..a.

new

t2,...Cinl . . . . . . . ......
41111du
.11 Cll
.... el ~
iltl 11
141-·
... u ...
11 CIIMIIil'i
10 Elfli I U I

........
tiiCioi'*'···
~~
,,,...._
_,,_

3171Q23.

condlk)l~o

...

7 ol-

41 Ani

-

.,. It 7

I

111118 CR250, $:0,&lt;ol'io
Or Taka Over Paymen11, 11f
387-1538.
•
•.

11188

Pole Buikting, 30x48.0 cailing, 1·

1------------------210

mail until you have lnvestigaled
the offering.

•

a,..

3114475-62111.
1W Ponaac Flreblrd. v... 11110.

CuMu $100. 3flri-Q$.15211.

~ir1t~RoSteot
Siding, Golvatumo
ol: S8.«4 Eroc1od: Iron

••,·. c·.cc

Carta LX lu1aury.

•an ilereua GT ·u :ooo. 111&amp;4

oor, 1 -3' Man Door,

·387~ 7113.

__ ..,.

.lllelll ....

tl R

Weal
• JtQtl

4 Wh-r Fr6nr &amp; Roj.r
st.h Dripon. 12, 100,

~ Oil Monte

080.304-ll~.

3' entry door, t-14:dlllidinv door.

Glllla County: Two Mllto Ou1 On

Oue To Expansion, Local Factory
Outlet Has 30 Positions Avail ·
able. Skilled Or Unskilled. Uust
Be · Neat In Appearance And
Willing To Start' Immediately.
Mamigement POallions To Thou
WhO Qualify. Starting Pay: S1,200
Mo . Per Written Agreement. lnrerviews Br Appointmer:u Only,
Call Monday And Tuesday Only
For ,Appoilmenl: 81'4..,.46-8795.

Pole ~Spl: 31l'x4S::9', 1 _, 5...,

Sponlng
Goods

Ext 2200.

People To Auitt Peraona With

tor hila 1150; Skaggs .AP·
pliancoo, 7e Vine SUHI, Galtif&gt;O'
lis, 1-800 -408-3481 , .,, . ..u6 -

..."·

111100, 81--IM• .,., 8pm. J

1QSI.

12,3110. 300

I

va:".l.200 ...... ftlt

111gs Honda XR100. 304 •015·

au.n root,

Block, btiek, sewer pipes, wind·
OWl, lintels, etc. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH,~ Call 8U· 2.. 5·
5121.
·

7,3;1 8; =.:,---------;520

Able Avon Rapresantalill&amp;ll
needed. Earn money lor Christ·
mas biNI at homelal work. 1-800.
~92· 6356 or 304-882·261115 , Ind.

Supplies

more Harveat Gold t 1 SO; G.E.
Ref.rigtrator ·Like NeW 1 Year
Warranty, 1 Compre·a •ar $350;
~etr~erator Frost Free Kelivina-

11115

992-5051 ohor 5Jm

-···eo.

BuDding

Cl1oo.. F:vm; DtyOt G-E. Harvell
Gold $115; Eloc1rlc Range Ken-

limited Offert 1098 da·ublewide,
3br, 2bath, 11788 down, $27SI
month. Fret delivery 4 IBtup.
Only at Oa~wood Homes. Nitro

I

1811 Chevent a~o~tomatic, new
......... ' battery. 1300. calll14-

""""'· prtlonlbly lind lifter, r..IOnlble, ....118[!.5053 aner !ipn.

J

L....:l:i&lt;L-"'---

11MICf Ka...- " NIIIja 250, I ~·-

•wo. » .....

Wanted to buy - oood, utad pool

550

· $400.00. 311..

11185 Mazda 12tLk .c4r. tully
looded, Sspd, • "'"" goed.
1900. 111118 ~
bo, Sspd, PW, loaks &amp; "'"" goad.
11,500. :!04-li7S.1575.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gal[on
Uprlgh1, Ron Evant EnM&lt;prltot,
-.Ohio, 1-IIJG.537.Q521l

.
W01hor H•••l Ou.IY .g5 3 To

M ~hael,

458:W .

·575.
Hot. 175-1

44883011.

VI'RA FURNITU'IE
11-.3151
Oulllty Hou- FwriiKo And
Apptiancft. Gtoal Dealt On
Calh And Conrl RENT-2.QWN
And.._ Alao hhllll.
Froo DoiNoty Within 25 Mial.

_.. ·--

) ~==-

II• • • •

wheeler, fresh ralluill, •1500;

11185 Oodgo Ariel II, runt gaact,

Above Include Normal lnslllil·
tlon. full 5 Ynr Wananty, Free
Eatirrw.t11, 1·100-201 -0001; 614-

.

suraw with

. milllon, OOQd tires, tgoo, 8 14·
1182-2122.

Oryor, S..V., VCR.,

check required. Satar)l commen·

To :

Navy Blue And

PICKENS FUAIITU'IE
Nowll*cl
304-ll'lfi1410

gree

live

•

Huntot Gr- Alkint: t500, 080
014-..a.8154.

3

I +V I Iil~;?]f~~~}.j~t~~~;~~.J ~§~~

Movlnll Mutt Stll: Sola And
lovollll Only 4 01d Cof.

. 71

' a,flf

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

. ....1Q.-.,

Sam SomervlHe"a Atmt carnouUago by Slndyvlllo Poll Office.
Fri·Sun, -Spin. tTur¥ey Ill·
... Apr 22). 304-2n!ea5.

uoo•:w1111.

wenctt &amp; deposil requ ired. 304882-3217.

... ....., .

..

21AIMIII

I .Sal-

, _ . . , """ MOll, rMI ....

GrHn toll, 1100. Ctllt._n
otec:~lc bod, ,..., uMd. 1700.
304-67S.11132.

rangoo. Skaa'Da Appll-

Vlna Slraet, l:'atlt1.f......_73M,

I

~·
., t •t'*'l

1117 RliiO luJUkl. WI" eMil

18711 C1trNro Z-21400 SB A~D. 1 - V. ...... 1100 GS, GX,
T· Topa, Now RI111J And Tlrn, •• . - 010 . . . . tor-· 304Vatf Sl\arp~ lOll Of New Parta, . 175-5113.
13,000 080, 514-- 1, 114, _ GPZ 560 Runa llood. 1?0W
311 '».
1110 Plymouth. 1171 Buick. 1P73 """' t800 Firm. 81+205 85115 •.
Buid&lt;.l1 ..25f.t075.
111111 Somrltl 500 Quad Roier ...

I.,-..;__,;.;__:...:;....:.,_ __

support ;

1178 CadiKoc 1400. 304·175·

APPliANCES

USED

Waatters, dryan, r•fr~raiOtt,

No ptt1. 004-713-5751 .

3 Btdrooma, 10~~:60 Fairland
O.Orgoo Pllrtablo Sswmll, don't· lft.l•bltnMCI.I14.ft2-1153.
School Oiotri&lt;t S27!VIIo. + Oarnhaul your logo to lhl mil jull cal
10112 Norrlt 11xt0 3 Btdi'OOITI, 2 101 Otpoeit, 81.._251-,1G.
~7S.1K1.
Balha, Cemrat Air, LP Gas Fur· ~s;.~~;;;y~:ti;;;.;;;;;
River Viow, 2 a.droomo
Child Care In My Home AI "'!CO And S10Vo, Underplnninv &amp;
, No Pita. RoltntneH.
I Hours, Ct.lhire Alta, 81•·387'· Monr E&gt;traol Vorr Spaclovt.
Prict4 To Sell! Eaay Financlog
Mobile Homes,
Avallablel 614-247-2032 Alter 6
P.M. Or~ IAoa-.

with laga.l nw.ndataa;
Interagency
•· assuring
program compllancel~~~~;

coorcUnation ; budget process and
fiscal managemenl: personnel IC·

1A1 fairmont. all

c-.--.-:

R411·

...

Goodl

Don•s lawn Catt. AMtonable

ALDER

II£
..

ACIUIII

'

'

~

...

..

ldlt.. .

,
l

'

'

',

�-

•

I

~y,May6,1898

...... 10 • The o.lly Sa •llntl

.

Don';t condemn system because of abusers

~

Beat of. the Bend ...

. A bright spot on Sunday was a
surprise binhday party for Dick
Vaughan of Middleport held at the
Senior Citiuns Center in Pomeroy.
Dick was taken· to the center
undeo' the pretense of a business
nlceting by Bernard Fultz. Dick's
daughter, Beth, and her. husl!and,
1ohn Schneider, Staged the party with
other members of the family on hand
for the celebration as well as other
relatives and friends. 1lte food was
delicious and some interestins activities conducted by a disc jockey made
it a really fun party. And besides the
party, Dick's family presented him
with a Rollei watch.

alllhe lhenpy lltd medication, I will
have to struule with my Cllllllional
fngility the res1 of my d.lys. I would
give anything to lead a normal life
again, but I know this isn ' I possible..
•,._ .... MIIIII
I am unable to fill out a form or
srand in line in a pharmacy or a~
without fearing that I will suddenly
Dear Ann Landers: I want to go to pieces. Yesterday, I had a cryrespond to "Roanoke." who said peo- ing spell in the supermarket because
ple on disability would rather sit back I couldn't find the bouillon cubes,
and suck up the taxpayers· money Any little fruslrllion can set me off.
than work. A few years ago. I was
There' are many honorable, hardsinging that same ignorant tune. I had working people who used to earn
worked han! since I was 14 years old their own way but can no longer do
and had no respect for anyone on so because they are now mentally ill.
welfare. I put myself through college Most of us manage to make it back
and graduate school and always had into the workphu;e, but many do not,
jobs that paid wellllhought, " If I and we must rely on the generosity of
can do it, why can't they?" ! remem- the American taxpayer. Please ask
ber usins such words as " lazy·· and your readers not to condemn the
"freeloaders."
entire system because ·of a few perI am now disabled lly what,they ceived abuses. We really do hate
used to call a "nervous breakdown ." · being dependenl. but we have no
'Those l)().hour· work weeks eventu- choice. - S.H.J., Oakland, Calif.
ally caught up with me. I have
Dear Oakland: I' m sure you have
learned, to my sorrow, that in spite of

Friends are planning. a card shower for Bill Young on his 85th birthday
which will be on May 16. Young is
formerly a resident of Gilkey Ridge
but is now living i!f Rutland. Cards
will reach him at P.O. Box 56, Rutland, 45775.

Meanwhile Ollt Rutland way, the
date (If June I has been set for the
annual community yard sale.
Residents are invited to dig ou.t
their good stuff and take part in the
day's activity. You might just look
upon the event as one stop shOpping
since there will probably be many,
many residents of Rutland taking part
on tbe designated day offering about
anything you might want and at yard
sale prices.
Now I know it's a long time until
The Rutland EMS will be serving
the Fourth of July and the wealher food throughouttbe day al'lhe Civic
has been anything but suggestive that Center and will, for those who would
indeed, it will be rolling in.
like, offer rental spaces for residents
However, up Racine way tile com- who want to take part in the sale but
miuee which plans the annual July would prefer offering their wares at
4th celebntion of the fire department tbe Civic.Center.
is meeting and looking ahead. Right
Any qucs1ions• Just call Mayor
now the committee is concent.rating Joan Eads at 742-3078 or MarCia
on the parade portion of the cclebra- Elliott at 742-2231. ,
tion.
..••.•••
The committee wants the parade
Now isn't . that interesting?
to be bigger and better than ever and Remember when some of us were
is offerins cash prizes to the top three complaining about the hi~h price we
winners in a number of categories were paying fot gasoline m compar·
which include religious Doats; non, ison to areas relatively close to u.'?. If
religious Doats; walking units: dogs: you'll recall no one paid much atten,patriotic entries; decorated bicycles lion of our complaints or made much 1
and equestrian entries.
movement to auemp110 do anything
The parade. will fonn at the high . aooutthem.
school at 9 a.m. on July 4th and will
Suddenly. since the cost of gasobe moving by 10 a.m. II will open lhc line has increased across Ohio and
day 's activities with lhe popular Star ihe nation it has.become a matter of
Mill Park to be the scene of a lot of major coO:Cem. All of a sudden the
ihe action.
politicians and other officials are very .
Marilyn Powell, an active member interested. They even think"they can
of. the committee. .reports that it do something about it. They seem·
appears there will be widespread pat- ingly couldn't do that when itwas just
ticipation in all aspects of the celc- us who were affected. Guess it
bration this year. If you have any depends on who's wearing the mo.:questions, jusi direct them to her at casin IJuh? Oh well. You keep smil-"
.
ing.'

_.,.

.....

a

...

,

says

.

By JIM FllEEMAN .

A Butternut Avenue residef\1 mtt
with councif about the alleged junk•' Po!!J~f)&gt;Y. \ljllage &lt;;ouncil posH Ya!d· saY:i~g !he P1'9bl,~m ~as ~en
po'iied_ tmpletllCII)Iiiti~o of· •tt ·ue.• - go!ng on smce 1989. wnh..no..acuon
downtown parking policy ai its reg- bemg taken by the vtllage.
ular Monday night meeting. . . · . Mayor Fra~k Vaugha~ advocated
The new parking policy was post· · •,nstru~tmg V•llage Soltcttor Chns
poned until July I dOl' to construction Tenogh~ to "''medy the p~oblem m
of a new walkway on the river side court :- a notiOn shared liy the SIX
of the parking lot.
co~~~tl members.
. ., . .
Council ·issued a reminder that
Its gel\lng to the pomt•l s nd•cu• parking on the business blocks will lous," s~id Pol~ce Chief Geral~
be limited to two hours for 10 cents Rought. We can I go m and clean t\
per hour. while parking on the busi- without a court order."
ness side of the parking lot will 25
"Let'! take 'em to court,"·Vaughcents for 2- 1/2 hours up to 10 hours. an said.
.
Parking on the promenade side will
In other .matters, Clerk Kathy
be by permit only.
Hysell reported the following April
Also, council voted to pursue balances: general, $118,898.88; safelesal action again a property owner ty, $3,817.64; street, $53.62; Slate
on Butternut Avenue over an alleged highway,
$13 ,386.47; , fire,
junk yard there.
$2.6,296.28; cemetery, $13,729.32;
~tiiMII Newt Staff

•

Voinovi~h

..•
•••
..

..••
.•••
•
..••
••
••
•

...•
.•
•.
•

•

•

.

·R

. ., Atheris
. New Lexington
119 N. Main St.
1100 E. State St.
342-9909
594-4800

E"

.
Pomeroy
204 W. Second St'. .
1992-7070

Athens
Fritz Electronics
592-2585

Logan
Middleport
Ingels Electronics · Seymour &amp; Assoc.
385,5954 . •
992-2825

Nelson.vtlle .
Blackburn Appliance
7,53-3525

.

'

•

NelsonvHie
Bob Davi~ ·
591 -0095

[Z]
Offer expires May Ihh, 1996

.

'

Authorized D!.'aler Locations

.

'

. .

•New activatiQtls, ltlQIIircs a •~ year """"ce "'l'•cment. t11hcr ~IOI)S and guidcH~ may be ~lied Please call andl!"))mc.

werepre...,-. •to the" eight Melge Junior High
School etudlnta In reeognltion of having
achieved all A'a during the yeer. Recognition
t~ plica It Monday rilaht'• e~lc bafl•
quet aponeorsd by the Mlddllport·Pomeroy

•·
•

erell, center, and Judy Jones
joined Rader as the cleanup
continued, at right.
A huge culvert on a roadway
just qff U.S. 33 near the Route
1 Intersection (top
washed out
the

rain, denying residents access
to their homes on the either
side. The culvert was replaced ·
after the 1995 Mother's Day
flood. (Sentinel photos by
Charlene Hoeflich)

, towns)Jips.
•
")he townships in the county are currently assessing the damage, and trying to see where they need help," said Robert Byer, director of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
"The Ohio Department ofTranspartation is trying to furnish some equipmen! for repairs in the townships and the entire county," he added. "Normally, a township has one grader and one backlioe, but with several road's
damaged they need help with additional equipment."
Much of the repair work on damaged county and township roads from
.
the January nood had not been completed due to bad weather, with road dam-

ages now compounded after this weekend's round of nooding, Byer said. ·
Officials with the Ohio Emergency Management Authority are eKpected
to arrive.in Pomeroy early this afternoon to assist with damage assessments,
Byer smd.
.
.
Officials with the American Red Cross were in the county Monday afternoon, assisting families affected by the flooding .
Meigs County is the only county currently under the governor's emergency
declaration . The Ohio State Highway Patrol is also assi&amp;ting in tbe response .
and recovery efforts, according to' Dale Shipley of the Ohio Emergency Management Agency.
·

'

•
• 1 month free long distance anywhere
•••
•
..••
in the U.S.
~·························:

CELLJ

Cleanup work Ia _progrell·
lng at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church, where Saturday's flllah flooding from the
creek behind brought eight
feet of water Into the basement
Sunday school rooms:
Damages were estimated at
more ftlan $5,000.
Pastor Keith. Rader uld It
waa the sec:Ond time In 8 hundred ydare that the church has
been flooded.
The first time was last year
water, $2,223:57; sewer. $42,126.56;
on
Mother's Day during a
guaranty meter, $19,138.81; utility,
atorm
which dumped five Inch$p,605.98; fite_,truck, nQ balance;
is
·
of
rain . ,In .less ,than two
- perpetual' care;-$'1;284.55; t:ernetery
hours. Saturday'a rain waa
endowment, $38,118.57; police pen· measured at three Inches on
sion, $2,672.50; building fund, ·
already . ,saturated ground.
$2,659.03; recreation, $5,287.89; perSince May 1, 6.4 Inches of rain
missive tax, $2,997.'~7; law enforcehave fallen.
ment, $3,397. 78; COPS FAST grant,
After last year's flood
$1,527.26; FEMA flood grant,
destroyed the plano used
$16,944; downtown revitalization,
downstairs, one was donated
$87,000; total, $425,146.74.
to the church. h wss ruined,
along with severe! pieces of
During open discussion, council
furniture and appliances lrt Sat·
members discussed Saturday's flo&lt;J!I- .
urday's flash flc;JOd.
ing on Mulberry and Union avenues,
Rader said men worked
noting that ·residents are aggravating
until 1 a.m. Sunday morning
the problem by throwing away limbs
pumping water from the baseand leaves thai clog storm ~rains and
ment.
Sunday services were
sewers.
'
canceled
so the cleanup work
In ot.her business, co~~cil:
.
could
begin.
•·Gave first reading on ordinances
. On Monday, Jeannie With·
(Continued on Pege 3)

Democrats concede GOP has
votes to repeal to gasoline tax

•

.

ees, and this practice be carried out
each year thereafter;
• Meetings with county employees
be held to compare benefits and
inform us of the extent our coverage
may be changed, and what limitations
we may exi*tience;
• That cdrrlmissioners make future
decisions on the insurance as though
they and their families depended on .
the coverage as do other county
employees.
"It's good insurance, really good
insuran~~·" Jenkins added.
The problem is not the insurance
fund, but rather in accountability,
Jenkins said.
"Find out who didn't pay," he said .
"There may be a lot of money hanging around out there ... maylie enough
so you don't have to raise the ·price."
Knight added that commissioners
did not answer a question about
$13,000 he claims is unaccounted for,
"They never really answered it,"
he said. "We are concerned about it."
Commission President Fred Hoff.
(Continued on Page 3)

declares Meigs in state of emergen~y ctue to flooding ·

· SentiMI Newa Staff
A state of emergency has been declared in Meigs County by Ohio Gov.
George Voinovich ~ue to heavy weekend nooding and storm damage in the
county.
·
The sovemor's emergency proclamation, issued late Monday, authorizes
state agencies to take whatever action necessary to assist local government
officials.
·
. .Flood damage was i.ndicated in several parts of Meigs County. including
the ·heavily hit areas of Salem, Salisbury, Rutland, Chester, Lebanon and Olive

••
••

••
••
••

J

By TOM HUNTER

•••

• free activation

existing health insunince.
"We're real pleased with the heal\h
insunnce and would like it to stay the
same. We feel our insurance plan is
real good," Jenkins said.
The employe,es made rive
requests:
• A thorough audit of the insurance
fund encompassio1g the past five
yellfS, verifying both receipts and disbursements to assure all employees'
premiums' obligations · to the fund
were met, and the results of the audit
be.made av~lable to employees upon
request;
• Establish an insurance advisory
board to be made up of employees
and department heads from each
department included in the group ·
coverage. This board would discuss,
review and agree upon any changes
to take place in the county's health
plan as well as review, at a minimum
bimonthly, the financial status of the
fund;
• Beginning with January 1995 an
annual financial statement be prepared for distribution to all employ-

·pomero.y Council postpones ·date.
·. ~n implementing parkit:Jg policy·

· for just

-ATTENTION-

The Meigs Co. Humane Society is under
new management. New president is
Sharon McLead. New officers and
Board members haye been appainted.
Animal concerns, questions or persons
interested in donations or membership
should contact Ms. McLead at ..9~
2216.

: By JIM FREEMAN
: Sentl1111l Newt Staff
.
: . Not eno~gh money- or just b•d·
· bookkeeping? ·
That was the question posed to
Meigs County Commissioners at
their re'lular Monday afternoon meeting concerning an apparent shortfall
in the county employees health insurance ·fund .
Las1 week, comm•sstoners
requested a meeting with elected
officeholders and department heads
to discuss the status of the health
insurance reserve fund, from which
claims are paid, saying the account is
in need of additional funding.
·Currently, participating county
employees are covered under the
·county's self-insurance program,
·which is administered by a third par·ly, Medical Claims Service of
·
.Columbus:
: • Dave Jenkins and Neal Knight of
ibe Meigs County Department of
~uman Services Monday presented a
Jetter signed by 52 QHS 'employees
~ing commissioners to keep the

Cellular-Service
? •

A Gannett Co. Newepaper

·_A ccountability urged ,.....-Flash flood remnant
~in insurance coverage

.Lucy and Andrew Pearson built
this town with their bare hands.
!heY marriell when Lucy was 18 and

I month

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, May 7, 1996

1 s.etlon, 10,...

· (Peanut Butter Snacks)
at
Rejoicing Life Christian Sch~l
Middleport
Come and see an alternative to
Public School.

•

•

VoL47, NO.I

p.m.

Also openings for grades 1-6

•

a1

•

·Peanut ·autter Brunch

stacking her trca.&lt;ures in neat rows

"Pamela had no fear, which was in a recent interview, retelling lhc stoYANK'ION. S.D. CAP) - Tom
Brokaw isn' t just a network news great because it allowed her io do ry of how the children's classic about
anchor to folks in Yankton. He IS the "many . of the stunts herself," Lock a naughty monkey came into being.
The seven·Curious George books
news in his home town and that said.
have sold 12.5 million copies. An
makes him a little uncomfortable.
TRlTilf OR CONSEQUENCES. anthology of the seven issued last
The city is considering a proposN.M.
(AP)- Ralph Edwards does- year, " Tile Complelc Adventures of
ar to rename Broadway Avenue to
let
anything stand .in the way of a Curious George." is in its second
n't
Tom Brokaw Boulevard.
printing.
· The "NBC Nightly News·· anchor good party .
Despite fragile health, the 82-yearAfter their marriage, she and her
he initially agreed to the idea but
. h4s been.surprised that the issue has old former host of the popular quiz . husband, Hans Augusto Rcy, settled
become a topic of debate around show "Truth or Consequences.. in Paris. where they collaborated on
returned for the city"s annual Fiesta the 1939 book "Rafi ct les Neuf
town.
: "It kind of puts everybody in an celebration. wh!ch he hasn "t missed Singes.' One of the "Nine Monkeys"
a\\'kward position," Brokaw said Ia." in 47.years.
of· the title was a prototype for
"If
I
wasn't
here,
rd
probably
be
George .
.
week in.a telephone interview.
· : "I'm very flattered. bul I don"t · falling dead somewhere." Edwards
They Oed France in 1940, just
. want this thing to be some kind or said Saturday.
ahead of Nazi forces, and moved to
embarrassment.! don 'l want anything
The celebration siarlcd after the United States.
to happen that will divide lhc Yank- Edward.•' quiz show issued a chal- · The Houghton Mifflin Co. bought .
ton community. Those arc still my lenge in 19SO for some town to "Curious George" during their first
rootS. It's still my hometown.··
~hange its name to Truth or Conse-. week in the United States. It was pubIf the street· renaming docsn"t quenccs.
lished in 1941 , and the Rcys wrote
work out. Brokaw joked. maybe
"In those days. nothing seemed seven Curious George books ovcrthe
something else could be·arranged:
imppssiblc.:· he said.
·next 25 years.
"They could name. the alley
Residents of what was then Hot
"He became very much a figure of
behind (a former pool hall) after me: Springs, N.M.. 140 miles south of his own. He knew what he could do
1 spent· mori: time there than any- Albuquerque. voted overwhelmingly and couldn't do. He became a perthing."
for the name change to puflhc town son, •· Margret Rey says.
·
on the map.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fran
There arc 13 incorporated towns .
Drescher: the stereotypical New and cities in the United States named
Yorker on "The Nanny:· will have to Hot Springs. but "there's only one
go back to the BigApplc to file a law- Truth. or Consequences.'' said resiSyracuse
dent Louise Walls.
suit against TV Guide.
Bedding&amp;
Edwards always brings someone
Drescher filed a negligence suit .
Plants..........$6.50 flat
along.
to share !he spotlight Back ill Vegetab(!l
against the magazine in Superior
10 in Hanging Baskets $5.75 &amp;
Court claiming she was burned by a the 1960s. ther!' wa.&lt; a 13-year-ok! $6.75
cup of coffee while posing for a TV Wayne Newton. and a younger 12 in Hanging Basket Fems
Kathie Lee Gifford. This year he. $10.95
Guide photo in New York.
brought
20-ycar-old Angela Watson Combination PoiS
Drescher is a California resident.
of
TV's
"Step
By Step...
................ r ............ $3.50-$9.95
her lawyer, Ralph Loeb, said in supGeraniums................ $1 .00 &amp; Up
port of the lawsuit.
•CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (AP) ~ ........................... 10 or more 85¢
That's nOI good enough. Superior
Before
Curious George. there Was Azaleas ................... $4.95-$8.95
Coun Judge U&gt;rcn Miller Jr. said FriZozo
1he
chimp. Or was it Coco? As Ahododendrons ............... $12.95
day. ruling the case should be filed in
&amp; Trees ..... $2.95-$10.95
she turns 90. Margrct Rcy can be Shrubs
New York City.
Open Dmly I e.m. - 5 p.m.
"Why should we try a case that excused for forgetting lhc.paniculars.
Sunday 12 Noon· 5 p.m.
992-577fi
happened in Central Park. Why · ··Jt was something very foolish.
shoukU·Ieam New York tort law?" One of those cutesy nameS.·' Rcy said
Miller said.
'•
TV Guide lawyer Mary Winh criticized the suit.
"She .had a cup of coffee in her
hand, she stood there and she spilled
it on herself.·· Wirth said. "Does TV
Guide have a duty ... to have one of
thiir own people dip !heir hand in the
coffee to make sure some sitcom
actress doesn't bum herself?"

May 7th 1

Tonight, showers •nd
storms likely. LoM In the
508. WedMsd•y. ahowers
•nd atorma likely. Hight
near 80.

6-8-1-8
Buckeye 5:
1-12-18-21-26

•

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 9004!!

p.m.

1-G-7
Plck4:

•

KINDERGARTEN
REGISTRATION
May 6th 7

Pick 3:

Sportt on Page 5

a new resident of Dayton, Ohio. She foot shack, lived without running
had crossed the .Ohio River two water and electricity for two years,
years before, Heeing the poverty of .scraping money together to buy more
her daddy's Kentucky farm and car- land.
They were going to build a steak
rying a twang that coats her voice
house. Since it was situated between
even today.
• The Pearsons and their two kids Lone Pine and Los. Angeles, just
drove west. Driving up 395 one about · the midpoint of nowhere,
bright day, they saw a sign and took stranded motorists kept coming for
help at all ho!Jrs of the day and night
it as such.
"Land for Sale," it read. They
Andrew, who was a mechanic,
bought 40 acres. Built a l:!cby-12- decided he might as ,tell go into bus1ne5s,as one.

Yan kton, S. .D. residents ·may· :::~~F~~h~~~~v~~:r~~~~~~z.
re. name stree't afte· r Bro·kaw ~~~~:!y~=~~~~ceiling.ofthe

LOS ANGELES (AP) - 1bat's
no stunt woman filling in for Pamela
Anderson Lee on a moton:ycle in
"Barb Wire."
\
"She iook to it like a duek to
water," Michael Lock. chiCf executive olfiCCF' of the Triumph motorcycle company, said Friday in dcscrib. ing the "Baywatch" star's skill on a
· 900 cc Triumph Thundetbird.

.

They call her the Hubcap Queen, but you .can call her Lucy
PEARSONVILLE, Calif. (AP)- block .wall fronting the highway.
When Lucy Pearson looks at hub.It even eamell her a spot iii the
caps, she sees be1uty. She doesn 't Smithsonian . Last year, Lucy's fine.
know why. They just speak to her.
weathered face was part of a Harvey
':They're just all so prelly," she Wang photography exhibit chronisays from behind the counter of cling elder Americans at work.
PearsonvilleAuto Pans in downtown
Magazines from all over send
Pearsonville.
writers here. She displays glossy pubThere is no traffic light here, no lications in French, Arabic and Gerschool, no supermarket and, as of two man. She can't read a word of any of
years ago, no post office. Heck, them, but that's her in the photos, ~o
there's barely a Pearsonville~ ..,....,,,..,bt about it, sporting her trademark
Surrounded by desert, riStrrg"'Up bOnnet and V-necked apron, smiling
from U.S. Hishway 395 about 100 sweetly surrounded by silver-colmiles nOrth of Los Angeles, is a parts ored discs.
store, a gas station, a Burger King and
Need a hubcap for a 1936 Dod,gc
about SO people, many of them Pear- · pickup? Lucy just found one for a
sons.
.
.
guy in Kansas. "It's not in the b.est
The govem"!ent closed the po_st shape." she said. "I like to send them
office a few years back. "They satd in good shape ...
we wasn't big enoush." sighs the 70How about a Rolls-Royce wheel
year-old great-grandmother. "When cover? Hard to come by and not
they took the post office, Rand cheap. She just sold a pair for $350
McNally took us off the map. " .,
·to a man in Aorida. "I'm going lo
That still rankles Lucy. She and specialize in those," she says.
her husband, Andrew, founded PearShe sells hubcaps for about what
sonvtlle 35 years ago.
.
they cost her.
·
Post office or no, people sttll flock
She likes helping people. She'll
here to see Lucy's hubcaps.
call all over God's green acre to find
She's got 140,000 ofthem;, "The a hubcap for a customer. Since she
Hub Cap Capttal of lhe World, reads started c~ecting 20 years ago, she
careful white printing on a cinder- hasbuilt'l'fuiteanetworkbuying, bar-

•

Sonics hand
Rockets loss
In playoffs

both or us. -- Dell'rived and BiUN
· Deu Biasd'our husband 's problem is not what he is eatina --it's
what's eating him . .Anyone wbo is
100 pounds overweight needs 110111e
serious counseling.
And you need professional help to
deal with your anger. Impotence
need not mean the end of sexual satisfaction. You have many options.
and I urge you to investigate them
"'ith a sex therapisl. If you really love
that man. you will give him the sup- .
port and help he needs at this crucial
time in your marriage. Plea5e•make
the effort.
Gem of the Day : When a man
says, " Honey, there arc only two
minutes left in the ( OOiball game," it
is the exact.amount1&gt;1-tiute as when
his wife says. "Honey, I'll be ready
in two minutes."

pie for whom you spoke today. Your
eloquent plea for cornpassiao toUCIIed
millions of readers. 'Thank you for a
lemr thai will make a difference.
Dear Ann Landers: l.must respond
to the 70-y--old widow who said if
sex is no longer a part of a DllrTied
woman's life, she should be willing
to accept SO percent of the blame.
l .say BULL. i guanntcc you I'm
not to blame for my husband l!eing
100 pounds overWeight. He chooses
to overeat even though the excess
weight causes his bloOd pressure to
skyrocket He chooses to overeat
even though it means he must take
medicine for his high blood pressure
that has made him impotent
Why should I accept SO percent of
the blall)e? None of this is of my
doing. It's my husband 's fault that
ours is now a sexless marriage. I love
this man, but I am angry about what
he has done to my life -- and to his.
His refusal to shape up has cheated

llinders

949-2676.
By the way, the theme for this
year's celebration is :'freedom, Family. Fun•. ·

"

the heartfelt zntitude of all the peo,

Ann

by Bob Hoeflich
. Wow! 'That wliS quite a weekend.
Again we experienced the heavy;
rains and again some residents
became too familiar with Dash Dooding. Somehow things have got to get
betiN.

Ohio Lottery

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate
Democrats are conceding they can't
block an election-year push by Senate Majonty Leader Bob Dole and
other Republicans to temporarily cut
the federal gasoline tax .
• "They're in the majority. They
have the votes," Senate Minority
Leader Tom Dasohle, D-S.D., said
Monday.
DeJ!Iocrats are forgoing a fight
even though many are criticizing the
reduction, saying it could amount to
a windfall for oil companies if they
don't pass along the cut to . con- .
sumers. And environmentalists maintain the tax cut would encourage
inore energy consumption and hurt
the environment.
Repu~licans were · hopins to
unveil details of the bill today-and, in
t~e Senate, possibly vote on il. Dole,
the presumplivc GO!' presidential
nominee, said he would discuss the
timing of the vote with Daschle as
well as the possibility of voting on lhe
minimum-wage increase long sought
by Democrats.
Rotary .Club and the MJHS Academic BOoet·
· ·While under heavy political presera Club.-ln the hOI)OI'Bd group wers, from 11ft,
sure
on the minimum wase, Dole, Rfront, J(yle Smlddle, Stephanie Wigal, Adem
Kan.,
propo~ on 1pril 26to repeal ·
Shank and Jentmlllh Smith; and back. R.,_
StewarJ, Sflvl ~. II, Joahua Souten ~ . · a 4.3 cent•urcharge added to the gas
. j tax· by President Clinton and ConWasleY TIIOinl.
.

gress, without a single GOP vote, in
1993
His call came amid increasing
annoyance from motorists over gasoline prices, which have jumped
around 20 cents a gallon since February. Republicans have sought
relentlessly to exploit the issue pqlitically, and Democrats defend against ·
it.
Action by Republicans was to
coincide with Tax Freedom Day,
also today. As calculated by 1he business-financed Tax Foundation, Tax
Freedom Day is the date the average
taxpayer has earned enough to pay
federal, state and local laKes for the
year.
. A rival sroup. tlie Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, CJlculates
the cut would shave less than hall a
day from Tax Freedom Day. B~t Dole
said Tax Freedom Day was "a great
day to send a message, a small message, but a message, to the American
taxpayer that relieves at least some of
their burden."
At the White House, spokesman
Mike McCurry said Clinton wanteli
the tax cut-considered as part of a balanced budget. But that doesn't mean
Clinlon had decided to veto j!.
.
"If it Comes (O US separately, we'll

look at it separately," McCurry said. :
"We would hope that the CoJlgress would give equal priority treatment to :
raising the minimum wage.'"
. The measure being prepared by
Republicans, according to aides who
spoke on condition of anonymity,
would start the repeal in mid-May or
June I and end it on Dec. 31. Republicans said they would make it .permanent in the 1997 budget due 10 be
sent to Clinton in September.
The leading proposal in both the
House and Senate for paying for the
temporary cut ~as ;e~arate legislation strcngthentnl( the government
fund insuring sa:vings and loan
deposits.
·
. That plan requires a one' time premmm payment from S&amp;Ls and
.
under budget rules, the money
can be'
used to offset the $2.8 billion cost of
the tax cut through December. House
GOP leaders also are looking at a cut
in Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary's
travel budget.
. ·
S&amp;Ls don 't mind their money
being used for the tax cut because the
deposit insurance measure would
require commercial tmnts to share
the cost of paying .off S&amp;L bailou~
bonds sold by the government in the
late 1980s and early 1990s.

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